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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1975-07-16 - Orange Coast PilotAnti-Bol~ce Plot Ailege- Helicopter Crash Tandy Executive 1'.ills Huntington Wins lmtnDity .Pilot, 3 Others In Hinshaw Case • DAILY PILOT 0 0 OSID * * * 10< * * * W EDNESDAY AFTERNOON, JUL Y.16, 1975 VOL 61, NO. 197, 6 SECTIONS, 70 PAGES n ~%plosives Found Clemente Cops Cop~ N. · b 4 M . Accident a armes . ByJACKCHAPPELL Narcotics detective David Kills 4 0tt1>e oa11r Puo_isu11 . Munro alleged ·t hat the ex- San Clemente police raided ~n plosives were to be used to "blow apartmentTuesdayand~ateral-up a narc"_ slang for a !~ged they b~d confiscated narcotics officer. t;nougb explosives to blow up Four Marines were arrested in this apartment. c?,mplex and half the apartment. Police identified tbe-o~e next t~ it. . . . the suspects as Richard M. Alex- ()(f1cers said th~y had .•rubalJy ander, 22, Jaston Johnson, 21, been on a ~arcobcs raid wbe~ Jelte J. Jansma, 20 and James E. they broke m the door and al-Sharp, 19. All four are stationed legedl,~. found so~e of th~ occu-at Camp Pendleton. pants JJl a euphonc state. The four suspects were booked on charges of being under the in- fluence of a narcotic. T ... ~# T Alexander was also booked on J '".ce e ... osses charges·of possessing explosives and Johnson on charges of at· Cha•~-fl. Out tempting to destroy evidence. • ~.......,. Police said they confiscated , one half-pound of military TNT, On ,., __ J. E -three-quarters of a pound of J. Ulll.i/V xeC plastfc explosive, .10 feet of ~x-. '.l · plosive C'ord, and detonation By GARY GRANVIUE caps. 0tu.eoa11r Piiots.." Police allege that the material SUperior Court Judge EVerett Dickey dismissed bribery, charges against Tandy Corp. Vice President James Buxton Tuesday and granted him im- munity from prosecution in mat- ters related to the Orange County .usessor's Office scande\l. . Along with Assistant Assessor George Upton, BUxton was in· dieted last March by the county Grand Jury on three bribery counts. But by the time he left• Judge Dickey's courtroom, Buxton was free of the bribery charges and ordered to testify as a prosecu- tion witness in cases related to tbe assessor's office scandal. Also granted immunity from prosecution was Tandy tax. manager William Hughes Jr. Monday, .Jlnother Tandy official' Paul Taoor, was granted im- JDunity. ·Buxton, ·Hughes and Tabor were witnessess during tbe Grand Jury's investiga'1on that led to separate criminal indict- ments against Upton, county As· te8SOI' Jack V allerga and Rep. Andrew Hinshaw CR-Newport . Beach). Hinshaw was Orage County .assessor from 1965 to1972. It is expected that Buxton, Hughes and Tabor will appear as pro1~Uon witnesses in Upton and Hlnshaw's upcoming separate trials. . However, none of the three are expected to be witnesses at V.allerga•s trial h\ Ventura Coun· ~ant week. . The iuues ... at stake ln • <See 01sir.1ss. P••" AZ> was stolen from Camp Pendleton. The four suspects are from B Company, 1St Enginer Battalion, Camp P endleton. Del. Munro said six San Clemente police officers broke in the door of the apartment at 225 Granada, A.[>t. No. 3, and found some of the ""Marines in a dazed euphoric state. ·He said .Tobnson . was attempting to inject himeslf with a syringe of narcotic solu· tion which be allegedly attempt· ed to destroy wben the officers burst in. . A small amount of cocaine was seized, Munro said. Munro said the raid came as a result of a ~ontinuing narcotics investigation by the force. He claimed evidence indicated the explosi\1es were to~ used in an assault on a narcotics officer. ! FIRST COUPLE >BOUGHT ITE}I. ., ' 0r~ very happy ~th the ad.' The fU'St couple who came to see therefrigerator,boughtiL., ,, That's the success experienced by the Hunt;ington Beach woman who placed this ad in the Dally Pilot: ,tRlGIDAU:tE Refrig., wht. SW tall, good work cond. $65. Aft. S, ~· xxxx. If you have a used appliance you would Uke to convert to cub, call 642-5678. We make it ~uy to put a few words to work !or you ln the Dally Pilot. > A J-luntington Beach helicopter pilot and his three passengers · were killed today when their chopper !altered and fell just after takeoff from a remote rocket test site in a San Diego County canyon. The fiery crash -its cause un· determined -ignited a brush fire battled for two hours in re· mote Sycamore Canyon .northeast of San Diego and near Poway. Killed in the predawn crash near the General Dynamics re- search and test center was pilot James W. Burns, 40, of 19842 Tri- dent Lane, Huntington Beach. . General Dynamics officials identified the other dead men as senior electronics engineer John R. Ehret, 48, of Ontario, plus manufacturing test engineers James Walls, 36, of.La Verne and Donald Hanson, 38, of Etiwanda. Investigators who collected pieces of bodies and debris strewn over a quarter-mile area in the rocky canyon near the Red Missile test site said the victims were killed instantly. The helicopter piloted· by Burns apparently lost power just moments after takeoff for Pomona to return the three passengers to their homes near General Dynamics' h ead- quarters. "I beard this big noise right after midnight and saw the fire,·~ said rancher Chuck McLaughlin, one of the first to reach the scene in rugged hilly terrain. Bob Gough, another area resi· dent, joined neighbors with shovels and garden bo.5es in an effort to control the gasoline-fed flames before State Division of ·Jo~orestry flre trucks arrived. Gough said he heard an ominous r umble and boom, then followed by an eerie glow in the sky as th4l1ueled helicopter burst mtofiames. Susp~t Booked COVINA (UPI) -James Donaldson was booked Tuesday on suspiclon of soliciting the murder o( an Irwindale policeman who allegedly saw him burglari«e a state unemploy· ment office last March. In· vestigators said bonalmon. 29, owner of an auto body abop, paid $1,000 to an undercover sheriff's deputy to kill the policeman. .. I ______ osm.ona-Uts Dally Pil•l Plllto by Richanl ICCMPllltr THE OLD TROUPER AT 72 STILL WOWS A CROWD Comic Bob Hope Packed In 15,000 at OCC Fair 15,000 Cheer Hope At County Fair By ARTHUR R. VINSEL Of11Mt Dally Pilot sutt A standing-room-only throng of up to 15,000 flocked to see one of America's most celebrated come- dians, Bob Hope, at the Orange County Fair in Costa Mesa Tues- daynight. His appear ance on what was designated Senior Citizens' Day was consi.dered the highlight of the 1975 fair. "We fibally had to tum many away, which was unfortunate but inevitable,'' _said Peggy Bayless, publicity director forthefair. Hope cr·acked jokes and quips for half the two-hour show which also included orchestra leader Les Brown and bis Band of Renown and singer Rosemary Clooney. He carried the performance with customary pepper and flair, delighting the crowd includ· ing Edna Belshan who came all the way from O"nard and stood in line seven hours. "I've loved him tor years," said the 52-year·old woman. One gray-wlgged woman and loo,Ume Hope fan quipped that. she almost tossed her apartment key onstage. "Groupies come in all ages," 6he remarked, and business acumen has made him one of the wealthiest entertainers in tne world received about $25,000 for the free admission appearance. "l'm-<>lder than I ever meant to be," d eclared the humoris t whose career bas carried him from the rough-cut boards of Vaudeville stages to the fanciest nightspots in the laQd, in addition to the jungles, fields and trenches where Americasi Gls fou.gbt tbreewars. "Fair audiences are the (SeeBOB HOPE, Page AZ) Test P r o blems SAC RAMENTO CAP> -.-The Rancho Seco nuclear power plant, already shut down because of turblne blade dam., burned out most ot it.a control rod motors during routine teetin.g Tuesday. Officials aaid th• inc\dent pro- bably would not detay the plant.1a reopening in September. Min Or Problem Repaire d HOUSTON (UPI> -Three American astronauts easily fixed a minor problem in their Apollo today and bore down on Russia's two Soyuz cosmonauts more than 1,000 miles ahead for a union Thursday 136 miles over Germany. The flagships of the two space powers circled the world every hour and a half in the second day of history 's first international manned spaceflight. Alexei Leonov and Valeri Kubasov opened the day's ac- tivities by gunning their 15,000- pound Soyuz into a near perfect "assembly" orbit 138to140 miles high to wait for Thomas Stafford. Vance Brand and Donald "Deke" Slayton to join them. "Your friends just finished a circ (circularization) bum and they are in orbit waiting for you," Robert Crippen at Houston control told the three Americans. The astronauts· first chore of the day was lo remove a stainless steel docking probe hung up because a wire connector shifted. out of position and blocked a re~ moval tool. Crippen radioed in· (SeeSPACE, Page A%) . Or:~:a.:-•• Weather Low clouds through late morning Thursday, otherwise mostly sunny and a bit warmer with beach highs near 70 rising to the low 80s inland areas. Lows tonight 60 to 65. I NSIDE T ODA. Y How .ore our new Comp .PendUton emigrants faring ,along the Orange Coast? Some have jobi, m4ny are in 1ehool leorning Engliih -. and . oU haw tfaeir own personal com· mention America. See stories and photos P.age 89. Index At..._ S.r•kc ,., "119&..llMlel't CJ INtt .. ., Mt.,... ...., l..M.::.r. AfO Molt1i1l ll1tftlll& M Call • AS ...lloMINe.,.. .... OetelflM OMO =:c.-tr .... CNlll<• •• CM 0-...,. •• S.•·~~ ·~ DMUltWktt AJ .,.. .,., ............ A• S.llMlt11.U ... ...,..._., . .., T ... 114.._ ... ..._. • .. s ~ ... , "--04-14 ..... ..., ........ Cl ......... M I , 41 DAIL 'f P1"¥T S Wed!\!!day, Jll!y tO. t1175 New Gas Hike Seell Before Labor Day W0 ASHlNGTON <UP f> - Federal Eneray Adrnlnbtrator frank Zarb predicted today ~a'solinc prices will increHe .mother two lo h ve cents a i;aUon by Labor Day. Ht!insisted. however, there was · 'M> collusion by the oil companies o raise prices. Zarb told a Senate subcommll- lee that curbing or 1as r efining by lhe oil companies was due to "a combination or unto~een re- lining problems. "We have seen no evidence that lhere is a conspiracy to pro- mote a shortage in anticipation . of higher pnce levels," Zarb said. Zarb s p ell ed out tbe Ad- ministration's outlook for the near tuture as both the Senate and House locu1ed attention on ~rgy, particularly oil prices. I l legal Entry FBI 'Burglaries' Reported WASHINGTON (UPI) -The-FBI apparently conducted dozens and sometimes more than 100 il- lt?gal burglaries a year in the early 1960s to gain in- form~tion in criminal and security cases, the Washington Post reported today. Quoting a source who said he approved many of the burglaries, the Post reported tha.t most of the break-ins were directed against the Communist par- ty, extremist groups, embassies and otHer targets in the category of "security cases." · But the \lnidcntified source also told the Post a number of <Jthers were conduc ted in ordinary criminal cases such as hijackings, bank robberies and kidnapings. The story quoted former Attorney General Ramsey Clark as saying he ended the practice in 1966 when he got a request from then FBI Director J . Edgar Hoover to burglarize a foreign consulate in Washington. "I refused, s aying I didn't see how an attorney general sworn to execute the laws could authorize lheir violation," the Post quoted Clark from New York. $121,152 S ought Nix on Staff Fund Cut by 40 Percent WASHINGTON CAP) -The House is likely to approve a bill which would give former Presi· dent Nixon $121 ,152 for staff, of- fi ce s upplies and other expenses for the new fiscal year -a 40 per- cent cut from the amount recom- mended by President Ford. By comparison. Nixon was granted $200,000 for office opera· tions between the date of his re· signation on Aug. 9, 1974 and June 30 of this year. And that amount was a huge slash from the $850,000 then proposed by Ford. The $121 .152, up for a vote lo· day, does not include Nixon's $60,000 annual pension or a Shoplift ing O n Big Scale LONDON (UPI> -A magistrate has t ined the wife of an Arabian millionaire the max- !mum pen all~ of $960 for shoplift-ing. She admitted carrying near- ly 100 garments out of a depart- ment store with the help of her children. .Anissa Abdul-Hassan, 40, the wife of a Kuwait finance com- pany director, admitted stealing 96 garments worth $480 from <1 central London store. The prosecutor said two of Mrs. Hassan 's ei~hl children helped her fill four large bags Wllh the cloth mg. · ORANGE COAST :. I •JJI £1 QI!•) I Rob<•r l N WN•d I,,. .. nr •l'V1 ~ ... b .. , J,1( k R CurlP\I v , ,., ... , ..... "' •nd c .. ,,., •• ...,..,..Qll, Thom~~ Keevt1' Thom a'> A Murphme ~fl•ij1f'l9ll'Jlfl)f Chari!><, H loo<, RirhMc1 P N.ill "'' •1•n• M1•n·••••"·•• tl·lvr-., Offices ('' '•M• " 't./11• t&"v\11.-,t N_.l-~~:',!,n;~:h. ,'_•!·~1:,::;,~~:srtt Huntit,,lfOh "'"'•(" HU\ f-W1H'h 8o\Mfl"'Mtj Wddl•b•<• V•"tv 11to• u Pu llo.od ,, ~fl (hf"\111 , ,,,..,,,, •• T•l•PhOM (714) 642-02t CIHslfled Adv•rtl,ln9 M2·S671 ~•ddf•t1¥ 11 V•lfl' ~l''tlr 0Ct1tt 511-63 10 ', ·"" ... ,., t ~ "'• 49~ 06)0 t1D,..,~in,.tf'l('f • '"'""'"''' 5"0 1221) •'f' ,,.,, ' ') .r.g ""'~ ""t't ~_,,.. • I \ ,, ... tt•f ' • I• , i.• "" t • Y' "I t , ..... p • " JI I rJ •• ~y\1• M•'·· (4' t t ,o.111 -.f0 "(• .p• .. t t ttr6'f U til.J,,.,C'>ntNy. """ ., • , .. oo ""o"•l'li , .,,. •.• tff, •••tttA• .,-,, ,> oe flli"•'" t number of indirect costs related to security, courier flights. storage space and other purposes. Fnrd asked the House Ap- propriations Committee to ap- prove $203,000 for Nixon's office expenses in the fiscal year which COLUMNIST ASKS FOR NIXON TESTIMONY, A4 !began July 1. That would have in· eluded $96,000 for staff salaries, $8,000 for staff fringe benefits, $15,000 for t ravel, $50,000 for equipment and communications, $10,000 for r e pairs and equip- ment services and $14,000 for ot- fice supplies. Arthur S . Sampson, ad- ministrator of the General Services Administration, at- tempted to bolster Ford's request by telling the panel that Nixon has a backlog of about two million pieces of mail lo answer from his San Clemente home. The committee, however, set- tled upon the $121,152 figure - about 60 percent of lbe request - by pro-r ating Nixon's ,..e~n­ ditures in the most recent'tnonths and then adding 5 percent for in- flation. His higher outlays in lhe initial period following his re- signation were disregarded as unrepresentative of c urrent needs. Booms Due From Toro J e ts Tonight The Orange Coast may be bat, tered by sonic booms tonight as El Toro Marine Corps jets take part in a massive training ex· ercise simulating combat with enemy bombers . Air Force, Air Nationa1 Guard, Navy and M arine j e ts will. scramble from bases between San Diego and Merced this even- ing in an exercise simulating a West Coast enemy attack. . El Toro's F-4 squadrons will join the m ass lraterceptor mission in the "early evening hours" t onight, said an El Toro spokesman. An Air Force spokesman pre- dicted that some sonic booms may be heard in inland as well u coutal ar eas. "While superaonlc rught ii not an objective of the exercise, some ol the interceptors may have to maneuver at s upersonic speed over the Pacific," lhe El Toro spokesman said. "Should atmospheric condi· Uons be unfavorable at the Ume, It Is possible that some offshore somr booms may be heard alont the co~stJine. "The exercise will not involve the ti.ring or weapons and bas bffn coordln4ted with Federal Avtation AdmlntstraUon o(ficJalt to prevent lnlerference with dvll a viaUon traffic,'' beaald. , The Senate Tuesday approved a lil<·month extension ot oil price controls and Speaker Carl Albert said the House would take the same approach . Later today, President Ford is expected to submit lO Congress his proposal to more than double the per-barrel cost ol oil over lhe next30moolhs. Zarb said barring any oil price increase by the oil-producing na- tions, he estimated gas prices would rise from between twd to five cent.a a g aJJon, varying in dif- ferent pa rts of tl\e country. "We don't anticipate shortages although there could be spot con- ditions. We see adequate crude stocks on hand and we see no . need at th e moment f or shortages," Zarb said. The F ederal Energy Ad- . ministration, Zarb said, found there were ·'abnormal gasoline stock drawdowns, with gasoline • stock levels being reduced to 196 : million barrels at the end o{ the. first week in July. "It has been suggested that de- li be.rate decisions to delay in- c rea sin g refinery capacity utilization were made to firm up prices, even at the risk of creat- . ing a s hort age. We have no evidence to demons trate that this was the case." The reason for the lower levels of refining, Zarb said, were due in part to "an uousua1 number" of refinery· malfunctions or acci- dents, s urplus inventory stocks and underestimating gasoline de- mands in the early part of the summer. F ro• Page AJ SPACE .•. structions on how to fix it, and the astr o n auts reported a few minutes later that the probe had been successfully r e moved. · "Aha, the probe is out," Staf· ford saJd. The probe was used to clasp docking latches when the Apollo hooked up to its docking module Tuesday. ll had to be removed so the pilots could move into the module and later the Soyuz. After clearing the hatchway, the astronauts moved into the cylindrical docking module .to start preparing it for the meeting with the Russians. The problem was considered minor from the beginning and flight directors said there was no concern about it affecting this week'1 rendezvous and linkup plans . Russ ian officials in Moscow, however, expressed some concern and were assured by U.S. t echnical representatives lher e that the problem could be overcome. "In return, we bugged them a bout their TV camera pro- blems," said astronaut Robert Overmyer in Moscow. One of the four video cameras in the Soyuz failed during launch Tuesday and detailed step-by· step repair procedures were radioed by Moscow to Leonov and Kubasov at the same time Houston was seqping repair pro- cedures to the A4)ollo. Soviet controller Viktor Blagov said the camera problem was traced to a defect in a cable. "It will not affect lhe flight," he said in Moscow. ''The only suf- ferers are the viewers." Stafford, Brand and Slayton awoke more than five hours later than the cosmonauts this morn- ing. A few m inutes later, Slayton spilled some s trawberries he was eating for breakfast. "We have strawberry colored spacecraft," he radioed Houston. ''Spill much?" asked Crippen. "It d oesn 't take much up here," Slayton replied. "If you think your TV is look- ing through rose colored glasses, it's only because it's covered with strawberries," St.afford said later. Al one point, Crippen asked Slayton how befell. "I can't believe it," replied the man who has waited 16 years tor a chance to fly in space. "Never felt better. There may be something better, but it's been so long since I've seen it I couldn't tell you." : U.S. Output, ; Income Rises WASlilNGTON (AP) -A ope- time 1peclal Social Security pay- ment tri11ered a record jump in Americana: collective income Jut month. The rile. coupled Wjth increased industrial output, 1ltnaled that the economy ls clf mbln& out of the deepe&t re- catlon 1lnce World War Il, the government reported today. The Commerce Department 111d personal lncome advanced $30.6 bllllon in June to an annual rate of $1,244 .9 billion. Tbe Federal Reserve Board reported Tuesday a four·tenlhl ot one per- cent Locreue ln indmtrial pro- ducUoa, lbt tlnl IA n.lDI montbs. • • ' J . ~ • Deity Pllllll ........ ., ltlcM,. 11-• -HOPEFUL HOPE FANS HAD TO BE TURNED AWAY IN DROVES AT FAIR TUESDAY NIGKT One Lady c.me From Oxn•rd •nd Stood Seven Houra to Join Thi• Throng D es ite Protest Conspiracy Trial Ordered to Go On Orange County Superior Court Judge Wa lter Smith ordered the trial of accused conspirator James Be rtolino to continue Tuesday. The order was made despite protests from Bertolino's al· torney Donald Thamer, that the prosecution failed to prove that a conspiracy existed in lhe Orange County assessor 's office to help e lect Andre w Hins h aw to Congress in 1972. Along with eight other e mployes in the assessor's office, Bertolino was charged in a grand jury indictment last December with participating in an alleged conspiracy th a t u sed county employes to help elect Hinshaw to Congress. Six of the nine indictees have pleaded guilty to some charges in the 33-count indictment. But Bertolino pleaded innocent to charges of conspiring to sub- mit false documents and grand theft. By mid-day Tuesday, pro- secutor William Evans r ested his case against the 52-year-old de- fendant. And Tbamer, who delayed lUs opening st ate ment until Evans DOORS OPEN AT 10 A.M. HO EXCHANGES OR REFUNDS OH SALE MlllCHAHDISE PLIASI completed bis case, charged that the d eputy district allorney · failed to prove a conspiracy ex- isted. Furthermore, Thamer added, if there was a conspiracy Evans bad not shown that Bertolino was a participant. But Judge Smith derlied his plea to dismiss the case and or- dered the defense attorney to present his side of the case. For openers, Thamer insisted that his client bad not been grant- ed bis constitutional rights when he spoke to investigators and testified before the g_randj~l}'.· Fro•PageAJ DlSMISS ••• Vallerga 's trial center on Orange County's sale of a computeri zed appraisal system to Spartanburg County, South Carolina. Vallerga is alleged to have act- ed illegally when be purportedly accepted expenses and consulting fees from Spartanburg which were related to the sale of the .$2,045computer system. • \ Front Page 111 .HOPE ..• greatest. They're here for fun," quipped Hope, who obviously shared the night's good limes. "I love it here," he also said. "It 's a thrill they took the cattle out before I got here." Typical Hope huinor hurled barbed jests al the CIA, the economy. the alleged horror movie "Jaws" about a monster shark. and singer Cher's highly publicized musical marriages. Costa Mesa police had to detail extra patrolmen to crowd control duties due to the Hope show alone, which drew more visitors than lhe entire fair did Monday. Virtually the only misfortune to mar the event occurred when one woman fell and sustained a leg injury when briefly trampled by the crowd. Hope was the most renowned celebrity ever to appear at the ·fair, in his first local show since a 1973 benefit performance for St. Joseph Hospital. · The 72-year-old performer wowed the crowd with several song-and-dance numbers, show- ing them he is nowhere near ready for St. Joseph's himself - or any other hospital for that mat- ter. . 3 Plead ~uilty SAN DIEGO (AP) -Three persons will be sentenced Aug. 25 for smuggling 800 pounds of hashish into the United States. SALE STARTS THURSDAY, JULY 17th ALL SIZES ON RAClCS FOR !ASY SELECTION -• • ~ ,_ .._ --.. .z. -=:-r--• • ... _.. ----.._ W9dneeday. July 16, 1975 DAIL V PILOT A 3 3.5-cent OC Tax Rate Hike Seen They Walked Lost Kids Found at VCI A two-hour police search of Lion Country Safari in Irvine for twp little boys Tuesday ended happily when the youngsters turned up on foot at UC Irvine, six miles away. TIM DAVIS, 7, and his friend Charles Murft 9, both of Newport Beach, got lost in the crowd at the 'Wildlife preserve around 11:30 a .m . Tuesday .. Larry W. Gressley, :n, of Newport Beach, who had ta.ken the boys to the animal park, searched the crowd uns uccessfully. A sear~h by park employes an hour later also was fruitless. Irvine police, Orange County Sheriff's deputies and the Costa Mesa police helicopter started a ground and air search for the boys about 4: 30 p . m . THE BOYS LATER told police they decided to walk home after becoming lost in the crowd. Afte r walking almos t seven hours, the boys wandered onto the UCI campus and found tt:ie campus police at 6 :30 p.m . &15 W@lill rr ~@ [{WO ©@ The column appears dally except Saturday~ and Mondays. Bo•enaade 0..1. DEAR PAT: My kids love lo visit the Orange Julius stand at South Coast Plaza. Is there any chance you can locate a recipe for making this drink al home? • · P . L., Costa Mesa Place one-ball of a six-ounce cu of frozen orange juice con- centrate in a blender. Add ooe- balf cup milk, one ball cup water, ooe-qaarter cup sugar, Olle-hall teupooa of vanilla and five or six ice cubes. Blend UDtll smooth, about 30 seconds. This recipe m akes a boat three CUlJS. • Order Delaged DEAR PAT: I m ailed a $12.20 check ·to Surfer Magazine in Capistrano Beach for two T- shirts by Adventure Designs. They had been advertised in the ~ magazine. My check has been cashed, but I haven't received my s hirts in spite of a letter of in- quiry sent a month ago. G. W ., Huntington Beach Surfe r Magazine will contact its ·advertiser to find out why your order bas been delayed. U you don't bear from Adventure Designs within two weeks, let me know . Th e m aga:d n e's spokesman said that all of its ad- vertisers honor orders, but oc- casion a I delays in processing may occur. Shady Deal DEAR PAT: I need to have some rattan window covers re- paired. Do you know of a firm in the ar ea that does this kind of wor k? I 've looked but can 't locateoneon my own. M.B., Corooadel M ar Contact "Shady Deal," 929 Baker St ., Costa Mesa (phone:' 549-3325). If restringing or re- novating ls required, &.bls firm cu help you. If more enenaive repaln are necenary, you will be referred to another source by Shady Deal. Trl••er Replaced DEAR PAT: (n summer 1973, 1 ·purchased a Village Blacksmith Hedge Trimmer, a product of the McGraw E dison Co. of Geneva, ru. The trim mer quit operating after I'd used it a Cew times. A Jocal garden supply store made a few repairs but suggested that I , contact the company for full service. McGr aw-Edison advised me to return the trimmer for a n<>-'Charge replacement. I did so last, August, but I've never ~ ceived a r eplacement. I have telephoned the company several . times, but still no results have been achieved other than a sym· pathetic apology. E .H.,SanClemente J .W. Pierce, otncer tufervllor for tile portable tool.I dJvbioa of McGraw·Edllotl Ce., apoloclled · f.w..,. tacoavealea~ aDd 9etlt a r eplaceme •t. Tbe company •* a nam.ber of oftlces, aDd year manled orter 1ppareat11 wu mlt ... ced. \'• re,iort blV· ..., .recelved a "better p-ade," aewer model trimmer tbat 11 .... ..., ..... IMd. ..... Kidnaped Girl Flees Her ·captor A 22-year-old lab technician who spilled out a story of abduc- tion early Monday escaped with serapes and a bitten arm, Costa Mesa police said today .. The victim, who sustained the abrasions when fo rcibly dragged out of her car near the Holiday Inn on South Bristol Street, told investigators she was held cap- tive about 10 minutes. She said she was flagged down a few moments before midnight Sunday on the Newport ·Freeway near Bristol Street and Paularino Avenue by the hU'Sky, six-foot male who claimed his car had broken down. The victim said once inside the vehicle, her kidnaper declared he was armed wilh a gun and in- structed her to obey his orders as lhey drove aimlessly around, changing direction . The spunky kidnap victim said she waited until she thought she saw a chance as they proceeded along Bristol Street and made her ultimately successful escape attempt. The abductor struggled with her and finally dragged her out of the car, then turned and fled himself. : Fair Attacked LOS ANGELES (AP) -Plans for a 1981 world exposition in lhe ValEncia area have been at- tacked by residents of the area who predict the fair would cause chaotic. lrafCic problems and un· bearable smog. O.lly ""' tuff ...... Aftnwtlao"8•t Som e o b server or the c hangin& political scene de· cided to d o h is own editing by add ing an "X" before PTesidont e on the San Diego Jor eeway offramp leading to former Pres ident Nixon's hom e . ' Doctor's Murder . Trial Set From Wlre Services RALEIGH, N.C. -Onetime Army Green Beret battle sur- geon Dr. Jeffery MacDonald of Huntington Beach must stand trial for the 1970 butchery murders of his wife and two daughters here -and soon. A new date of July 21 was set Mon.day for trial of former Capt. MacDonald, who lives at 20652 Mariner Drive, Huntington Beach, and is an emergency · room pbysic.ian at St. Mary Medical Center in Long Beach. Feder al District Court Judge Franklin Dupree set the date after the U.S. Fourth Circuit Court of Appeals ruled defense attorney Bernard Segal's appeal against an earlier ruling by J udge Dupree cannot be ap- pealed . Several additional defense mo- tions for dismissal have yet lo be ruled upon. Segal,$eeks dismissal of the tri- ple murde r charges on grounds of double jeopardy -the Army initiated proceedings once and dropped them -abuse of his right to a s peedy trial and im- proper judicial maneuvering. Segal has also appealed for a change of venue to permit trial in the Los Angeles area. while his co-defense counsel, a woman, has argued the federal grand j ury that indicted Dr. Mac· Donald contained too few women and minority race members. A writ of mandamus also filed by Segal charging Judge Dupree abused his powers of discretion in tossing out the original appeal and his action may yet be or· dered changed. Charges against Dr. Mac: Donald were revived late last year after a long battle by ~e parents of his dead wife Colette, who was beaten and stabbed to death in their Ft. Bragg duplex five years ago along with the couple's two daughters. Sticking to his s tory, Dr. Mac- Donald has steadfastly claimed a band of drug-crazed hippies chanting "Kill. .. ~ill ..• " broke in a nd butchered Colette. then 26. and the girls, aged 6 and 3 years old. He hims elf was severely stabbed in the abdomen and did not obtain help for some time after the p redawn murders. Nixon Says 'Will Stay' In Clemente By Associated Press Richard M. Nixon has no plans lo leave Southern California and reports to the contrary are "com- pletely false," an aide to the fo rmer President said in San Clemente. In the first public comment from Nixon's seaside home here on published re ports that an East Coast move might be in the of. ring, Col. J ack Brennan said Tuesday lhere are no such plans. Brennan's remarks were in response to an article in U.S. News & World Re port quoting as- sociates of Nixon as saying he was "definitely considering" moving to New York. According to the magazine, Nixon con- templated going into business with Rob e rt H . Abplanalp, aerosol can m agnate and a longtime friend. A spokesm an for Abplanalp promptly denied the report, however, saying the industrialist knew of no such venture. Al the end of May, the Los Angeles Times reported that Nix· on advisers had urged. the ex- chief executive to move to New Yor k to establish a new base oC operations more accessible to world and national leaders. ·Busti(! S~tting Visitors to the ninth annual Sawdust Fes tival in Laguna Beach's Laguna Canyon look over the m e rchandise. In the first three days of the festival, over 26.000 vis itors we re on hand. The event runs from 10 a.m. to midnight daily throug h Aug. 24 . Stones Entertain Sellout SF Crowd SAN FRANCISCO (AP) Rolling S tones stage sorcerer Mick J agger screamed, "I know it's only rock 'n roll -but I li ke it, lil<e it!" And 14 ,500 frantic fans echoed. "I like it! I like it!" as 'the English rock g roup returned Tuesday night lo the San Fran- cisco Bay area for lhe fi rst time since 1972 and the second since the f969 d e bacle at Altamont. This lime around, lhe same sexual magnetism , raucous sly le and songs sold out the Stones' two-night stand exactly one hour and 27 m inutes after it was an- nounced in May. Essentially the same Stones - with the addition of a star·shapcd stage ana a confetti-breathing dra_gon -had some fans camp- ing outside the Cow Palace for three days a nd others paying $100 scalpers' prices for the $8.50 tickets. "I hocked my guitar lo be here." said Linda Padgett, 25, of Concord. As the Stones emerged from a backstage area specially out- fitted with tropi cal murals. potted palms, exotic birds and a daiquiri m achin e, a fanfare trumpeted, the house lights went out and ... With a burst of spotlights, Jag- ger & Co. crashed into their familiar leado ff number - salaries Included In Guess By WJl.UAM SCURF.IDER 01 lll• Dally P•IOISt..H Or ange County Tax Collector Treasurer Ro bert Citron s aid Tuesday h is preliminary estjmates show the COl4flly's ta rate for the new fi scal year wlll be about $1 64 per $100 of as- sessed valuation. Th at would amount lo an in - crease of about 3.5 cents over last year ·s rate, whi1..•h was $J.605 per $100. Most coun ty propert y owners would have paid higher taxes even if the rate had stayed Lh e same because assessed valuations in the county jumped 14 percent. Citron's "best guess" of the tax: rate was made in a presentation to the board of supervisors on the operation or the county treasury du ring the past fi scal year. Si nce adJustments can be made in the tax rate before August . Citron stressed hi• figure is •·projecled, estimated and approximate.·· Citron's is the first lax rate fi gure that has included the average 6.2 percent pay in· cr~ascs for county employes. Agreement on all but a handful of employe contracts was re· ached only this week and all tax rate c uesses prior to Citrou's have not incl\lded the salary rabc figures. C'See related story. page A8.J The tax collector-treas urer said his rate estimate also takes into account the 14 percent valua- tion increase rather than the 10 percent hike predicted in prc- lJminary budget reviews and in· eludes certain additional budgt:t adjustments supervisors will al'l. on next week. Citron told s upervisors the rah• could end up at $1.63 per $100 based on an inc re ase in his estimates of the amount of money the county will cam this year on short-term investments of its tax revenues. Earlier tax rate guesses were based on Citron's original predic· tion the county would earn .$2.5 million in interest. Boy Returns Walle{, $110 To toast Coed P t T "Henky Tonk Woman." About 10 l1S or J UTrlpS . persons fainted in the hot crush A youn g Newport Bt••H·h al the footli ghts and were carted woman is in Hawaii today, ..1t 1IH· "C' C away. wuversity there, with $110 n1orc .6.' rom Qnf(jrs For two hours and 12 minutes, fina ncial backing in her pocket, r the widel y hailed "World's thanks to an honest Costa Mesu WARRENTON, N.C. (AP)-A Greatest Rock & Roll Band'' boy. Virginia ministe r came out with hammered out m any of their best Marie Fleming, 20, daughter or only cuts and scrapes when he known creations" "You Can·t Mrs. Anita Fleming, of 4810 Park jumped from a car speeding Always Get Wh al You Want.'' Newport, laid her walJet•atop the alonglnterstate85about60miles "Midnight Ram ble r " a nd car last Monday while loadmJ,! per hour to escape kidnapers. "Brown Sugar.'' some items into the vehicle. "I asked them what they were The sinewy J agger pranced in She drove off down Bristol going to do with me, and they red shoes and gloves, bared his Street forgetting it, but Doug said they were going to kill me," chest under a pink a velvet jacket Rrown. 13. of 54 1 Spurgeon St , the Rev. Harmon s. Volz of and kicked pantaloons lu('kcd in saw it fall from the roof while h•· LaCrosse. Va., told the Warren sparkling a nldets. Each time he was waiting at a bus stop for .J. County sheriff's offi ce after his caressed bi's microphone. ndetothebeach. escape. nogged the floor with the cord or The youth retrieved the walll·I. "The only thing that saved him beckoned to the sea of waving containing $110 and had a serviC'c was excess flesh.·· said Warren arms, there was a roar. ~talion att.danl call the f-1cm County Sheriff Clarence Davis of Swinging his hips, he rode mg apartment so he ~ouldn I Volz' escape from s~rious injury. across the stage. and hurtled miss the bus. • He noted that the 5-foot-10, high over the c rowd on a rope. lie He then telephoned Miss Flem 220-pound minis ter is about 20 to ended the concert oy throwing ing, who drove to Newport Beach 30 pounds overweight. two buckets of water on the au-to meet him and r etrieve the lo:.L .----------------=dience and one over himself .. ____ wallet.~---------- G ell};.. Talk 1311 J C.111 ,\lf'lllW~S AN INVESTMENT IN PLEA SURE AND PRi°DE We have consistently said th at 0 OMEGA ... "• '11 14ml,,. "' ,, \.. I• ~ l•lt ('('I• 1'1•11 I' .. , llJ<.• t f,4:.Jw •I• I launc,.1 ... ~u D SI • . . gem s and jew elry s hould be og 8 Y1l1g I . bough t fi rst as something to wear · I' with pride for their beauty and Pl Th arted meaning . . . only seconds as an w purchases . w h ich h ave a good PHOENIX, Ariz. <UPI) -The ch a nce of. being an excellent Arizona Gr eyhound Breeders As· financial in ves tm ent. sociation is threatening to kill We ar e jewele rs , not financial racingdogstoattractattentionto counselors but believe you a dispute with trac~ owners, but . should k now' what happened last has been temporanly halted by · January when private ownership the sl~te g?ver'?ment. of gold became legal. In spite of · "ll 1s umusl, inhumane and Im· · • f · moral to sacrifice these dogs as economtsts forecasts o s~gmg innocent victims ot a dispute gold prices, very few Amen cans "• ,., HOW APOUO.SOYOZ WAS TIMED On th1, lhql•I 1111' A~lil'Mut• l11tl C ' YI• 1 i111 tnnrrj :.<im1•\h111Q l~···1'1Q. lhl'1r ,,.,.,, l''l~•I• , 1111 " 11m• I lhl' 111•\/<ll ol .inolhr.r SPdl'<'Crall Jll<I I' I I •ll I ~.n., 1ha1 •.1on1hl'1 0110 of lh<' """"' rno1r ""' , 1 t 1 ,• •v Th•' Oml'tla f.p• l'dm:t'l:l<.'f ha· hecn s1.1n1j.11o1 t11111 I <'•J·11p- m<'nl lor Astre)l'laulft (Anrl nn lh1~ t 1111 IN C :.<nci· nJUl~l ,fl('P 196~. ~n II f)IOv• 1 In '" 111•• 1111·, Chr0'1•)()riloh th, d with~l.Jlld NA ~r. q•u"ll•llq pre-t1tghl f P~IS · between two groups oC people," . bough t gold. Gov. Raul CastrosaidTuesday. It became quite apparent that J c. jJ ' J " The breeders announced plans m ost peopl e did not want to • ,1,. "' to kill 30 dogs Tuesday. They invest in bas ic precious metals as • • u.mp r U!:.1 ewe er ., postponed the kllUngs until commodltie , preferring to stick 1823 NEWPORT BLVD COSTA MESA Thurad~y, but the state attorney to jewelry and gems, particularly general s omce obt~ a court . fine diamonds, s till a girl's (and CONVENIENT TERMS l3an11Americard-Master Chargp1 order prevenlin1 ~he killing tor your) best friend .. -27 YEARS IN THE SAME LOCATION PHO.N1i5'8-3401 . ' 10 da)'I unUI a heanng July 25. :.: .. · • l \ ..,, ~~-f ....... _o_~ ........ LY~P~•L~O~T~~~~~~_.:.;W~ed~n~eed=:.;:ay;;A,t.:.J~u~~~1e~·~19'15~ • ~ · Just • Unneede4 .Si1rgeries on Rise? u many u 100 chlld.rtn may be panel pla ns to bold. WASHINGTON (AP> -tn the dauihlers. lncludlnC a bursl celved 1everaJ lluad.rod dollars. !i.llnl eaeb year because of · WOLf'E,.;_S PIGVBES 'a.me wint er of 190• Mrs. Marie main artery to tllc t>r aln, 111 each case, a court 'ruled the tonsUlectomies tbatshould never fTOm a hr13 study ol au:rcery Vlllenzuela of WOQdJawn, Calif • pneumorua e_nd hepatitis, and put tooelllectomies b ad not betm have been performed. • performed on members of two ~ · was told her daughter, who bad a MN. Valenzuela lnto the hospital noeded, she told thcJlousepanel. Tbe cost to patients for un• New YoM.Cltypmons. wiila fever, needed bere tooslll re-· suCleringshockovort.becoodition neceuary surgery may be as. The New York City su~y To... moved. · of hercbUd. DR. SIDNEY M: Wolfe told the h.ilh aa $4.S billion a year, Wolle ''shows a 17.6 percent rate ol UO• BefoM--this doctor was ThestorywaarelatedTuesday panel that smuny 3.2million t titled . nece$saryoperations. • .1!17.6 arplaine ftnisbed. he bad removed t.be to a House C.Ommerce lnvestita-' surgical operaUon.s may be 'The s ubcommittee is looking percent of the 18.• mlll1oo open. tooatls of rour of ber chl.ldrtG&Dd lions subcommittee looking into performed needlessly each year i nto bow many operations tions done in this country are UD· •' those of a niece, Mrs. Valensuela unoece11a.ry surgery. in the Unite d States. Wolfe, pe.rformed each year are done necessary, this me~ that theta toldaHousesubcommiUee. M".Valemuela's dauabter re-director of the RaJph Nader-neooiessly howmanypeopledic are about 3.2 million un- covered her heallb and received affiliated Public Citb:en's Health as a resuit and the cost to lhe necessary operations per year .· THE OPERATl()N caused $25,000 '° a malpractice setUe-Research group, said that 16,000 American pubhc. Tuesday's being done in the U.S.•• .... .he W hither complications tor one of her ment. Tbeother children each r~ deaths occur as a result and tbat hearing was the !~nst of three th~ :ia1d. • • Tell the Captain! .. T he C o ast? .· I• WILD COAST: Consider the artt of the best or all possible coasts which lies along the hills and dips of Pacific Coast Highway between Corona del Mar and Laguna Beach. This ts some stretch of shoreline. Miami Man Sets Self on Fire A board A irliner .1 1f we do indeed reside on the best of all possible coasts, this one area may be the best o( lhe best. This fact may be attributed to conditions e lsewhere on our beachfronts. Elesewhere there has been much planning, mucb bulldozing and much developing. Between Laguna and Corona del Mar. however, there hasn't been much of anything. JACKSONVILLE Fla. (\]PO _:_ A bearded restroom and· apparently doused himselt with ?t'tiami man returning Crom his aunt's funeral in lighter fluid. . • n· ·· t • • S8 Philadelphia set fire to himself in a restroom • The New York to M1am1 igb • C3r:Ymg aboard a National Airlines DC-10 Tuesday night. -passe!11ters aN~ a c~ewT~~enda;,.r;~:~~n~~~~ killing himself and forcing the plane to make an . W~mUlgton, · ·• wti. :fi after bo~g the plane.· • emergency landing. said behaved erra c Y , Police said Anthony George Townsend, 23, en·: walkedtotberearof':heplane.. . tered the restroom about 10:25 p.m .• about 55 Townsend, weanng ~ T-~)urt •. se<:luded himself minutes after flight 1001 d~parted New York's ~n· in the restroom, and set himself afire. nedy Airport for Miami. About 20 minutes later, a d. ts ed fi stewardess, apparently alarm~ by a flash of light . MO~GAN SAID.FLIG~ atten an us a ire from the restroom, discovered the fire and found extmgwsber to confine lhe fir.e to the restroom. He Townsend's body on the floor of the charred said no smoke entered the_ca~moCtheplane. bo restroom. George Pizarro of M1am1, a passenger a . ard POLICE SAID NO suicide note was found. Jacksonville police spoksesman Bob Morgan said a preliminary examination showed Townsend died of carbon monoxide poisoning. He said Townsend had spread papers on the floor of the the plane, said no one was aware anyone was in thE!. restroom until some passengers and crew members spotted a "flash of light." . • "Slewardes..;es were running down the 81.Sle h l . • ,, shouting, 'Tell the captain, tell t e cap am. Pizarro said. Thus t he Coast Highway traveler is treated to scenic vis- tas of sandy beaches, rugged bluff promontories without blockhouses on them, rocky natural shoreline and the slopes of unfettered hills. OH, ALONG THE WAY you'll · find a fruit a nd vegetabfe stand, a horsey center and even a date mall shop. You will find damn f ew signs, however, and no billboards. None. Not orie giant placard with a young lady in black velvet look sultry and sug- gesting yo u guzzle Old Hackmore's Vodka. UPITe...-U ·Center Destroyed The turn-of-the-century civic center in Trenton, N.J. was destroyed by fire early today despite efforts by the city's fire d epartment and companies from nearby cities. Flames which shot 300 feet in the air destroyed the four·story buiJdin·g which housed city documents. ·Mediators Wrestling ·union Bids - ........ Colu~nist • Asks Quiz_ :~ . For Nixon . ' Thus we have the last virgin stretch of coastline in our region ; unfettered, bucolic, natural, non- billboarded and un·bulldozed. But it is being planned now. This has been going on for some time by The Irvine Company, which owns a ll the property, and 21 other public a nd private agen· cies. They form a committee. This group is known as the Irvine Compa ny Multi-Agency Plan- ning Program. They call it TIC- MAP for short. IT NEEDS TO BE called something short. The first time I heard the group referred to as TICMAP I figured it meant they were getting ticks from looking atsomanymaps. Anyway. from · TICMAP has come some recommendations on what should happen lo this last vestige or virgin coastline which the Irvine Company bas kept in that condition all these years. Irvine Compan y officers have their own so-called advocacy plan. This envisions some high density development along . the s horeline and inland, 7,000 of 10,000 acres would be acquired by a public agency for parks, greenbelts, hiking trails and lbe like. The stale has agreed to buy l,364 acres for a public park but this has been blocked by a lawsuit filed by Joan Irvine Smith, gr andd aughter of the founder. She says the price is too thin. Meanwhile, other public agen· cies may have to scrape a lot to come up with enough Long Green to plunk down for the other 7,000 acres proposed for open space. LACKING THAT, the Irvine Company would seek develop- ment for the whole area. This s uggestion drew a measure of criticism only yester· day from the Orange County Planning Commission. The way the whole thing is go- {ng, it looks like all of this is go- i n g lo b e a n extended bureaucratic debate. Meanwhile, you can still drive down that coastline and enjoy it. Egypt Action End to U.N. Force In Sinai Looming .. By The Associated Press Egyptian F or eign Minist er Ismail Fahrni said today Egyp- tian consent is essential for the United Na lions to maintain its · peacekeeping force in the Sinai. His s tatement, reported by Cairo's official Middle East News Agency, followed Egypt's announced opposition at the Unit- ed Nations to continuing tbe peace force beyond its expiration date July 24 without some pro- gress in further withdrawal negotiations with Israel. •EGYPT IAN OFFICIALS declined. however. to expJain whether Fahrni 's statement meant Egypt wiil ask the U.N. Security Council to withdraw its forces from Sinai after July 24. In Milwaukee, Wis., Secretary of State Henry A .. Kissinger said it was his impression the Sinai peace kee ping force might be able to remain despite Egypt's rejection of a further mandate. Speaking with newsmen Tues· day Kissinger said or Egypt's ac· lion: "This underlines the pro· blem and the urgency or the need for'some interim solution. We'll have to see if they (the Egyp- tians) ask for removal or the UNEF (U nit ed Nations Emergency Force) or simply are. not ren~wing its m andate." ISRAELI PRIME Minis ter Yitzhak Rabin said today Egypt 's opposition to a new term for the U.N. peace force in the Sinai could harm negotiations for a further Israeli withdrawai. In apparently restrained reac· tion to Egypt's announcement, Rabin told the Is raeli parlia- ment: "Whoever wants a continua- tion of negotiations ... should retrain from any step that in- creases tension in the area." The Egyptian move was seen as a tactic to bring Security Council pressure on Israel for a further withdrawal agreement. The mandate expires July 24 un· less renewed by the council. In Jidda. Saudi Arabia, a meet- ing of Moslem foreign ministers. representing 40 Islamic coun- tries r esolved lo 'Seek expulsion of Israel from the United Nations at the next General Assembly session in Septe mber, the Saudi radio reported. A REPRESENTATIVE of the Palestine Liber ation Organiza- tion said the r esolution was the "determined will of 600 million Moslems a'round the world" and a committee would begin talks with African and Third World na· lions to line up votes against Israel. The resolution came two days aCler U.S. Secretary of State Henry A. Kissinger warned Thi rd World countries in a speech against attempts to "manipulate" the United Na- tions. Youth Arrest ed PORT HUENEME CAP) Sheriff's detectives have arrest- ed a 17·year-old boy in their in· vestigation or the beating death of J eanne Lynn Park.er. WA SHINGTON (UPI) -A spokesman for federal mediators said today they a re "plugging along and hoping for a break" in negotiations involving critical rail and postal union contracts which expire Monday. If there is no' such break, the White House may be forced to ( JN SHORT J ask Congress to head off any strike. . The nation 's fresh ening economy could receive a severe blow from a threatened walkout by the 117 ,000·m e mber Brotherhood of Railway and Airline Clerks. But sources said it is unlikely officials of the ZS0,000-m ember American Postal Workers Union would call for an illegal strike. New Y ork Site? . . MIAMI (AP)-Democratic Na· tional Chairman Robert Strauss says the party is leaning toward New York City a s the site of next year's convention, the Miami Herald said today. In a Washin gton·d ateline story, Strauss was quoted as say· ing that published reports that New York had been selected are pot "inacc urate enough to be called wrong." A ngola '1'ar LuJI LUANDA, Angola (UPI) The guns fell silent today for the first time in a week in this bat· tered seasid e capital, but "Portuguese military sources said civil war still appeared likely. Portugal will formally hand over independence to a new gov- ernment Nov. 11. shedding the last of its African colonies to a still·unknown administration and with no constitution decided. Indian Law Told Th d t ' n · e e h . NEW DELHI (UPI) -Prime un e~· o~Q mums MinisterindiraGandhi'sgovern-~ 0 1 II.-0 _ ment strengthened its grip on the country today by making d . J\,J T foreigners· liable to arrest and Flood Disaster Declare m L ~ew Jersey imprisonmeotwilboutatrialfor up to two years and clamping Tena per a tum "'-"-Plrti-AlbuQuerq~ ., ~ Allilnloll ... 10 S.-e<\l~ICI 90 .. BIMNf<K 'M • ., Bol ... 'IO 6'Z eo-.1on 8ll 70 Bulf•ID i 81 " Clll<ollOO 81 n Oncmnatl ., !8 Clt,,.l•nd Ill 60 DAii•' ~ .. Otnv~r 116 .. Dl!•MotM~ <11 71 Otl•Oll II ., t1Qno1u111 u ,. Ktn\H Clly ~ 71 1.nv"•~ '°' IO MIMl'll u n Mllw ...... as •S MIMHCIOll\ ., , . NtwOr!MftS .. 71 At Hew York II .,, • I) Nort11Pt-"• ., .. CAlllN>l'NO ty .. ., Ornet\11 .. 1J Plltm*1~ lOI 12 Pf\li.ci.1111>1• .. 7t .01 Ptlotftl• 11 .. , Pltt*1rof> .. .. ""'11-. On. " '° A.11pld 0 1y •s ., ,_.,., n SI (I) \I l ..... ~ ., ., s.l\Ulo.eCily ., ll ~,.,_,_ ., u 10 ~Ill• ,. SI T ........ I 107 ,. W~lnql~ •• ll O' • CaUlonal• 9r1Qf11 .....,"'""' .,.,_ ~ ~lllOf'fll• w1111 wum ,.,, .. ,"'"' ~-., .. u...-11lfl9 ... ( .. 10.tn UafttAhltU ~~N 10~ • 111'1 WIA0411 I I Oil()(~. 11011•11---H ...... ~)HOW ' [YEJ...owt •• """ If~ .....,.._.,_.,.....,,_, A#W I .. Cl .... '*'11 lft0w4~WI -~-tlMll l•mPtr...,....._ ifllO M~yMC1i.ns, nw l'Ytlelwtl -.v.~ s.rnc...,.. 1-.-,..wlll ... llttle(.~lft~ ...... """ ""'" Ult_.._, .... ,,. lliQl'lln-tOWfl'-otA~lft~ lflO II\ IN.....,., 1ti. II r-....onT- .. l, ........ "'-"•Ill .,. "' ...... IOt~ tllt <.tu\ !ft llle ml41,..lft~ ~ v•lle.,,, In Ille mld-70. '° ~ In tllt ~IMM!d lrefft Ille lllwtO. a. IQllnll'olldllMrts. &aty wllldt.,.. •JISlleclM lfttN• ____ ......... ,_ ............ ... I Som• 1'1'1orn Int 'loudl1101S, ot ........ w_y,Cldoly . L.IO'lt v•rlet>M Wlndl fl'11N and morning houf's. HIQlll• todly ,._.1'0. ,..,_.._, •~oturtt wtll ,.,... M\wffn '2 Ud 70, lnl•t!CI leftl- l*'MW.• •Ill renee lllotw.tft eo.,,. IL Tr.t~ .. ,.._, .. .,,.wll11•61. s .. ~,. .. -. Tl•• strict surveillance on thousands of univers ity students returning to their campuses. The inclusion o( foreigners un- der the revised maintenance of internal security act announced by President Fakhruddin Ali Ahmad earlier in the day, ap- peared to have had no immediate effect, and r anking legal sourees •. said it merely "clarified" and made iron clad what. was implicit in the original act. D-6ty Piiot oe11 .. ,y laG ... ..tHd Mondsy-f!rlday: 11 you dO not flave yoor PllPO' by 5·30 p.m.. caH before 7 p m al)d your COl)y will be CS. hv~ed SaturdlY and Sunday· If vou do not ~Ive your coe>y by 0 a.m. Salur· day or e • m Sunday, call bebe 10 a.m and Yoor copy will be delivered •. C ........... T1'1' u Most Orange County Aro. "42-0 l l Nofthwest HUnllngtQtl e..cti. and We1tmfntt., • 14•1 IJO Sin Clement C11)111rano Bffcn, San Juan cap.arrano 0.N Poiftl SOutl'I Lagun1, LaouM NIOtJ•I • , •...•••• 4ff.MJt UPIT...,._.e Dead a t 86 May Craig, Washington cor- r espondent for Main e newspapers, whose flowery hats and carping questions ·on 'Meet the Press' -TV show brought her national fame, dfed Tuesday in Silver Springs, Md. Police Stag . Party Probe MILWAUKEE, Wis. (UPI> - . A fifth person was charged Tues- day as a result of an investigation into a police stag party at which a young woman claimed s he danced nude and had sexual rela· lions with several officers. Patrolman Joseph R. Tromp, 32, was charged with false swear- ing and wa.s released without bail. The case was acijourned un- til July 29. The complaint against Tromp, who previously wts given im· munity from prosecution except for perjury or false swearing, said bis testimony before a probe into the party had been con· tradicted by two witnesses. Tromp admitted appearing nude with a nude woman dancer on the stage at the club where the party was held last Call, the com- plaint said. However, it said his testimony . that be had not touched the woman or had been touched by her was later disputed. ·! WASHINGTON CUP J) Lawyers for columnist Jack An- derson, saying Richard M. Nix· on's ill health may be "exag- gerated," have urged a federal j udge lo make the former presi· dent testify in a case involving . ownership of his White House tapes and papers. Nixon's of(er to provide writ· ten answers to questions is mere- ly an "effort to avoid oral cross· examination on the important and novel issues in this cue.'' the lawyers charged. LAWYER WILLIAM DobroviP said written answers would be· "virtually useless" in efforts to explore Nixon's motivation for gaining control of materials "worth millions of dollars." IUr said an affifavit already fllecl by Nixon is filled with ••self· serving, conclusory and hearsay assertions." Anderson is one o! several persons intervening in Nixon's challenge to the constitutionality of a law awarding custody of his presidential materials to lbe gov-· ernment. His lawyer s notified Nixoq earlier this month of plans to ~ke an oral deposition -in wbtch the former president would have to answer questiona under oath. Nixon's lawyers ob- j ec led , saying a trip to Was hington would present "aia unreasonable risk to bis health." I N PAPERS filed Tuesday with U.S. Court District Judge Gerhard Gesell, Anderson's lawyers said they were willing to question the former presideo.t in California. "Moreover, the health problem may be some what exaggerated;" said Dobrovir. . . He said Nixon was well enough 10 February to drive 125 miles for. a "vacation and large dinner party" in Palm Desert to play golf in May and to undergo 11 hours of questioning for a Watergate grand jury in June. M~tr-e ·Sippi ng A Silly Milliliter Stronger W ASIUNGTON (UPI) -Should a person .drive home after drinking 500 milliliters ol gin? Nope. It's a bit more than a plnL Americans m6y IOOll have to learn about such meanre-~ent.s. ~b~ Treasury l>epaTt:ment proposed Tuesday that all cfls.. tilled 1pmta be boWed m SlX standard metric sizes by J an..1. 1979. • THE DEP""RTMENTs JH)R £AtJ of Al~hol. Tobacco a8d Firearms wUl .bold public bearlltgs on the idea to September . "The adoption ol alx. standard metric con1-inera sbouid re-, Sult ID poeltlve ,benefita for conau.mera u well aa for industry and government.'' eaicl U., ~au'a director, Rex D. Davil. notlna that bale booze now com~ in 10 dltf erent-siaed bottles with IWl mare a1Ms for aome cordlall and other specialties. • Tbe bureau bu already ordered ~ atandardbatlon of WIM bottl• to metrtc •Lie&. ai.oto be in effect by 1979. DA VIS IS PROPOSING the following botUe.: L 75 lit.en. about 5 ounces leas than a hall-gallon; l liter about 2 OUDC!'lll Jnore lhan a quart; 7S> mlllllitera (ML), rouibly a fifth of a gallon; 500 ML. a.n otmce more tban a p.lnl; 250 ML c:omparab&e to. balt·piftt; and so ML, comparable to the common mlnlab:ln... The lndu•t.ry a_tao ii pl'OpOling six standard ~a. but cWf .. with tbe covernment on nvo or tbem. ll waiats a 375 ML bcaWe. about f our-Ortbl of a p6nt, m.t.e.S ol 500 ML; and • 187.1 ¥1.llaWe. about t.belke o1 some pocket flub, balteadol2$0 KL. .. \ \ . ~ - W!dne!day, July 1 S, 1 !JS OArl V PILOT A& 4,S.·a&eBI~ ,: HeaTs.ls Ask Citations-Cut \ . : Court Actwn CDP 'Slowdown' Hit I going to nail ham " 700 Fire Fighters Battle in Ranchita RANCHITA (AP) -About 700 rlre ltfhters are battling 41 SAN FllANCISCO (UPI) -Tho parents of Patricia Hearst have petitioned to be named conservators of their daughter's estate. The petition was filed Tuesday in Superior Court by Randolpb a nd · Catherine Hearst. Hearst ls president and editor of the San Francisco Ex· SACRAMENTO (AP) -If anyone get..s killed because of the traffic ticket 1lowdown, tbe patrolman on the beat will be responaible, warns a cautomia Hiebway Patrol oflicial. About 25 percent fewer tickets were being issued irY the San .f'tancisco area, said Walker. Walker added: •·u the public feels they can speed out there and onJy get a warning, there's going to be more speeding and il someone gets killed because of that, the officer is going to have to bear the responsibility.'' Schiavone said 2.3 milllon J tickets were is8ucd la.5t year, from which about $1S million re- venue went to clues and counties. ~.soo-acre brush fire, bunili\g on terrain alee]> enough to test a mountain goat, to keep the blaie !rom reaching some rare big born sheep. The blaze, with flames 20 feet. high, bad burned to ~thin a quarter-mile of Anza-Borrego ~late Park early today. Fire fighters hoped to contain the flames today, but they kept a nervous eye on the weather. ••u we get a north wind out of the desert. we're going to have BOme problems," a spokesman for the California Division of Forestry said. . l~rftUe Baited SACRAMENTO. <UPI) -The California Hospital Association says it will consider ."all legal and legis lative ·remedies" to block Brown administration acr-. tion halting increased payments to hospitals for Medi-Cal services. Health and Welfare Secretapr Mario Obledo Tuesday an- nounced the increase cutoff, say- ing the action was prompted because the federal government has refused to allow the s tate to limit the increases to 10 percent. He said hospitals were using state funds to !'absorb" the cost of empty hospital beds. ( State J Blcut Rip• Ollke LOS ANGELES CAP) "There was no warning ••• everything just went blooey.0 said ,a stunned Mexican Consul General Fernando Fernandez after a bomb blast ripped through his office injuring fourpenom. More than 50 persons Wef1' in the consulate Tuesday when the 12:44 R.m. blast sent doors fiying from their binges and glass and d ebris hurtling 100 feet into Olvera Street Plaza, a busy downtown tourist attracticm lined with Mexican shops. aminer. •: 0Tbe petition :raid the Rearsts feared ''artful and designing persons" might t ake advantage of their d aughter, who was kid- naped by the Symbionese Liberation Army i n Berkeley Feb. 4, 1974 and then joined her abdu.ctors. Youth Killed . In Accident B"fllaa tt'f•• Seat GRANADA HILLS (UPI) LOS ANG EL ES (A p) -Richard Hageman, 16, was killed Democrat Teresa Hughes Tuesday by being impaled on a became Southern California's on-firebydrant. • ly woman legislator today, win-P olice said Hageman was ning a special election handily in standing in the rear of a dune the largely black 47th Assembly buggy, holding the roll bar, when District in South Los Angeles. it careened out of control and Miss Hughes, who is black and crossed a lawn. Hageman was an educational consultant, thrown clear and landed on ·the gained 7 ,230 votes or 62.8 percent hydrant. to 4 ,268 votes or 37 .2 percent for • the Rev. Henry Sellers, her white The driver, J effrey Warren 21, Republican opponent. was arrested on suspicion of drunken driving. Ralph M. Walker. CHP com· mander for nine San Francisco Bay Area counties, said Tues· day, however, that the slowdown participants "have every right to be Wlhappy." • Patrolmen have cut back about 50 perceht on traffic citation writ- ing, OD statewide average, in the~ campaign for higher pay. They bad been voled a 17.5 per- cent raise b y the Callfornia Legislature which Republican Gov. Ronald Reagan approved. But incoming Gov. Edmund Brown Jr., a Democrat, held it to the 10 pe,rcent ceiling he has placed OD all state raises. The minimum base pay tor un- iformed CHP officers was $1,162 per month beginning July. PATROL SPOKESMAN Kent Milton said patrolmen in the Riverside and San .Bemard.ino areas are virtually 100 percent involved in the slowdown, with officers iss\ling warnings instead of tickets. Milton said .. a little less than i:.> percent" of the officers statewide are participating in the slowdown. The campaign, which began at midnight Friday, is called a "Humanistic Enforcement Ef- fort." by the California Associa· lion of Highway Patrolmen, (CAHP) which says it represepts ro percent of the 5,400 member force. THE MANAGE R of CAHP, Ralph Schiavone, said comman· ders "can make a ll kinds of com- ments. No officer is going to in- tentionally allow a situation on his beat that is going to cause a person to get hurt. If be sees a drunken, reckless driver, he's He said the strategy is to pr& asure city and county olficials m · to persuading state legislators to override Brown's veto of the re- maining 7.5 percent. ASKED ABOUT possible dis· ciplinary action, Schiavone said, ••w e're wondering what they've done to warrant punitive action of any kind. They haven't walked olf the job. They're helping the public." : Sperm Bank Sued For .$5 Million SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -A man who stored a sample of his semen at a sperm bank and then bad a vasectomy has filed a $5 million lawsuit against the bank for accidentally destroying the specimen. GREGORY MARTON said in his class action suit filed Tues· day in Superior Court be has suf. fered "emotional and mental anguish" becau~of an apparent equipmen t failure at the Chartered International Cryo- Ban.lc at Cathedral Hill Medican Center here. Marton said when he contract- ed ~iih the bank in January, its president, Robert A. Quinland Jr., told him his sperm deposit was "Cully protected against destruction" by two "fail safe" monitOring systems. AFTER UNDERGOING a., vasectomy, Marton said that Oil June 22 be received a lett.er from the sperm bank saying bis semen had been destroyed in a possibl& equipment failure. Ma rton 's la wsuil a s ks $5 million damages plU.S $500,000 for any other s perm donor wbo might have suffered the same loss. Publi~her Guilty Of.Tax Evasions LOS ANGELES (AP) -A man federal pro- secutors have been trying to nail on pornography charges since 1968 bas been convicted on 22 income tax fraud counts. Boblfope and other stars in free shows! ·Sears op Marvin Miller, 45, a s uburban Covina publisher, was found guilty Tuesday on five counts of tax evasion, six counts of mail fra~d, seven counts of filing a perjurous tax return and four counts of making a false claim against·the govern· ment. The re turns were filed between 1968and1972. , U.S. DISTRICT Court Judge William P . Gray said he would remand Miller to custody immediate· Jy pending his sentencing Aug. 11. But after a de· fense plea, Gray gave Miller until July 25 to tum himself in so he could prepare for the care of his 18-year-old diabetic son. • Miller's trial was halted for two weeks while be recuperated from what doctors described as an in· tentional sleeping pill overdose. He is still under J*YChiatric care. ,,., · A reputed millionaire, Miller entered tbe sex book anct mm business in 1968, immediately draw· ing the attention of vice inv~tigators. . . Admission Sl.75 Childrm,.6-12 Sl.00 Children under six -f rtt His appeal on a 1972 misdemeanor conVlct1on for mailing -unsolicited pornographic advertise- mentiJ to a Newport Beach man went all the way to the U.S. Supreme Court. In upholding Miller's con- viction, the high court handed down landmark ob· 1 ~========+JI scenity guidelines that still stand. 1 .. ~ewSmog ·Target Revealed ....-~~------~------~.......,,......,..~,....,...~....,.......-=-:-.,...-~ • Shor/J SAN FRAN.CISCO CAP> -A new set o{ gJ-adu.ated emission con- trols bas been adopted l1y the s tat e Air Resources Board de- signed to curb the massive problems of. motorcycle, pollution in Cf]ifomia. • Top1 •Skirts Bathing Sui/I. . ~e new standards will Umlt motorcycle exhaust tb 19 hydrocarbon grams per kilometer by 1978, five hydrocarbons in 198> and one hydrocarbon by '1982. • SeparaW • SJJmmer Samples • Mlsscs a11djunior Sizes OPEN MOff .• Sf\T. 1°'6 m·1XestMe·• The smog board originally bad proposed adoption of the one hydrocarbon limit by 1978, but motorcycle in· dustry representatives told the board it could not acbi.eve such a stan- dard by that time. 29129 PACIFIC COAST HWY. 9038 ADAMS AVE. S. WESTERN AT CALLE MAYOR SAN PEDRO TQRR~NCE 547.3095 378-2795 HUNTINGTON BEAC (71 4) 963-222 1 traditional summ~l" whit.es ..• from HARRIS; easy care dacron cotton at:raight leg wash pant, wornwit.n G~NT 9lts111~ cot.ton knit shirt. with bold st.ripes, and whit.~ col\8.r and placket. @J~o@@J~@ 44 flilNOn ll&lnd, MWPOr1 Cit*' 644-5070 A .. This Ad Effective through Saturday,· July 19 Located on the Lower Level ·cuT. sa! Proportioned-fit Nylon Pants · Were $5.99. 299 Comfortable pull-on styie pants fashioned of 1 OOo/o nylon. Easy·care ... mochine-washable • Slightly flared legs. Popular solid colors. Misses' sizes. · Use Sears Revolving Charge Were $6.99 Pants· . ' Zip-front style pants with wide 1traight • le91, waistband. In snappy floral prtnts. Mi11H' 1lze1. 299 399 rc:=i So. Coast Plaza ~ 3333 Bristol St. Buena Park 81 SO la Palma Ave, Phone 128--4400 STOii H0\1151 Oran'e M.n4'ay thfv Mcloy 10 AM tat PM 2100 N. lust n Ave. ti>Os..:'!'~ PM -. _. • c-. Phone 540-3333 . . Phone 637-2100 s .. ....., n,.._ .. ,,. AC -. D . IL"\' PILOT EDITORl:'L P .L\GE ; .. A ·Lifesaving Action • Orange County ~rvison have made i( possible for res1dentb of lbe South OranJ:e Coast area to get . emergency ~mbulance service around the clock '4'lt.b minimal waiting time. SupervtSOr voted 3-2 last week to provide a $3,750 partial subsidy for the next three months to Hospital Ambulance C-0mpany to station an emergency ve· h.Jcle at South Coast Community Hospital in South Laguna .. The spec a al unil is intended lo beef up service to a coastal strip lhat is difficult to serve adequately because of ats geography. Supen•1sors were asked lo provide t.be subsidy because the city ol Laguna Beach limited its as- s15tance to bolstering service inside the city limits and not surrounding unincorporated communities. • Soul~ Coast Hospil.a.I bas agreed lo house. feed and train the men to a level just below that of pro- f es.s1onal paramedie9':' They will serve as a s topgap µntil county paramegics are stationed in the area in 1976 The cf fort is coaunendable and it is fortunate at lc;;c;t lhret: supervisors had the foresight to l ake favorable a<:t100 on the request. New Look at Old Woes No o ne could have expected the Laguna Beach C1ty Council to define and solve the downtown parking proble m in the three hours allotted l.o the subject at a . ~pec1al meeting last week. The council, however, did take an important step in reckoning the increasing demand for parking spaces. Jt ordered formation of a citizens' committee, composed of represenutives of the downtown basin. lo work oul a fanancing plan for a parking structureoo an ex:isting city parking lot oa Glenneyre Street. In late May, the city's electorate. by a JOO.vote m.ar~in. turned thumbs down on a proposal for a Glen- . neyre Street struct.u.re. ln the aftermath of the elec· tion. many have suggestec;I the failure was due lo the financing scheme which called for use of meter re- veoues from downt.ov.n parking meters to pay off bonds that would finance the structure. The council's renewed interest ln the GJenneyre structure is heartening. It's now up lo the new com· mitlee lo work out a financial package that both the council and the citizens can 1i \'e with. Worth a Reflection A community's heritage is als tap rool offering stability and s pintual nounsb.ment in lhe present. So it is with the San Clemente Fiesta La Cristianita. The 22nd annual fiesta begins Friday and runs through Sunday It commemorates the first Christian ' baptism in California 206 years ago near San Clemente. In the hubbub and hoopla of the fiesta's parade, carnival and the like, there needs be som e remem- brance of the solemn event being celebrated: the bap- tism or an Indian child in the young Spanish California territory, which took place seven years before the birth of our nation . The fiesta offers the opportunity to recall our land's proud his tory, lo h ave a good lime and through the many philanthropic clubs a nd organizations sponsoring fund-raising booths and activities, to con- tribute to an even brighter future. s ., NOW l'M A SELf-5TA~TlN6 IYPE.'' If It's ·Loud It Will Sell-:- Even lf Bad Drawittg the Line on Censorship . ( PAlJt HARVEY J White House daughter Susetn Ford, hosting her high school prom i.t the Whit.c Hou:.e. had mU('h dif- ficulty finding a group o f mod mu si- cians which could qualify for the nece ssa ry sec urity clearance -. meaning "no drug coovictions. .. ls noisy music with raunchy lyrics itseli a drug? From noisy music you can run but you can't hide. In the deep south or Mexico, even the smallest town is likely to have three concert bands whic h play everything loud, louder, loudest. THE ZAPOTECS, listening, are likely simultaneous ly lo chew plants with names like .. Tears of the Virgin" while they haJlucinate in the central plaza. Jtaly's stale-run radio and TV h ave been trying lo wean listeners away from hard rock music. A recent radio survey . showed that only 7 out or every JOO Italians I 1sten to this mod music. Yet the big shows on Italian networks feature the gyrettang, twitching, acrobatic howlers . 'fhe San Remo Rock Festival de- livered a TV audience or 20 million. In the United Stales some com- "nlunicalions industry leaders have sought to ban this "music to steal hubcaps by," but those Jeaders have few followers. In Vegas' posh casinos. whit'h certainly do not cater to sour- . smelling junkies. most music 1s electron i cally amplified fortissimo. EVEN MORE conventional en- tertainers. Wayne Newton and Debbie Reynolds, come on loud. Dear Gloomy Gos So the Sao Clemente city councilmen won 'l get a break from the cops if they flash thei r s hin y new •·councilman " badges. Perhaps if they s how Teamsters· Union cards? SUCKER Gloomy c;.,, comm•11ts .art \ullmtltn by ··'""~··""do not MU\Uroly ••fiKI I~ ..... o of Ill• Mw\p.t"r w11d rour P9' -••lo Gloomy c;.,.. D•1ly P•IOI. So the cacophonous juo~le music cannot be identified w1t.h any particular age group or Wlt.h any specific economic stratum. The preference which sustains t.he din is not race related. But one observation leads in the direction of an intriguing con- clus100: Most rock musicians are male. In the annals of t.he Met, and through the era or the big bands. maJe and female v<>caJists were almost equally spotlighted. If anything, pretty girls were out front. In country music and in soul, it's about half-and-half. BUT WHEN it comes to rock - with such notable exceptions as Janis J oplin, Grace Slick and Maggie Bell -most or these mod music groups are mosUy or all maJe. Personally, I don't dig noisy music. Cl think that's stiJJ an ac- ceptable expression.> I do nol pretend to comprehend its ap- peal. UPI ·s Bruce Meyer thinks it has to do with maebis mo, gutsi- ness, a kind of super-sexism. The same thing that moved the wiggly girls to the front oC the bandstand is now s howcasing tight-britches masculinity for the titillation of liberated remaJes. At rock concerts attendance is mixed. but the girls do most of the squealing, screaming and swooning. The very loudness or the music represents a calculated animali- ty which offers heretofore in- hibited females a free trip. Well, fellows, it is their turn. "And don't forget the mothballs." Obscenity Versus Pornography Totbe Editor: Mr. Provost's letter of July 8, which denounces ''pornography" and advocates increased censorship; has raised our blood pressure. We feel that a rebuttal is in order. Mr. Provost makes quite general remarks. but we are perhaps more qualified than he lo comment on censorship-having had first hand experience with it ourselves. As owners of the Fahrenheit 451 Bookstore in Laguna Beach. we have wasted about a year and a ball (so far) dragging ourselves and our two s mall children in and out of courts, fi ghting an obscenity ar- rest origrnally instigated against'" us by two narcotics agents of the Laguna Beach police force. It seems that these agents found in our store some racy comic books <not much different from what is commonly available) which they considered "pornographic." In carrying out their arrest they were given ''moral support" by a deputy dislrit't altQ('tley (who is no longer on our case> and a judge (who signed the arrest warrant even though -as he later ad- miUed -he hadh't even seen the supposedly offensive material). Howobscene! · WHETHER or not Mr. Provost regards a couple of underground comics as .. dirty" is beside the point. Nor does it matter much i1 he (or somebody else} finds sex, nudity. political satire, or anything else "repulsive." What counts immensely iS the fact that we a re all essentially d.ilferent people. and no two or us are going to see things in exactly the same. way. Why then should any person set himself (or herself) up as a literary custodian for others? Is not such a person "porno- graphic'' in the truest sense of the term? Mr. Provost speaks so ardently about the virtues of freedom. Perhaps he does not realize that a truly free country• entails a truly· free press. Our forefathers were wise not lo put any holds on the First Amendment. If he does not care lo see some of the material being printed today, let him not look al it. Thal is his privilege. A little tolerance will ge a long way and it will surely help to unclog our increasingly saturated courts. GORDON and EVELYN WILSO~ A Propn-luror'! Tot.he Editor: It is disturbing that a girl friend or Supervisor Battin has been appointed to the grand jury. Despite the presence of a seeming conflict of interest, the young woman in question has staled she is personally satisfied she will be capable of serving as an honest, impartial grand juror. She has expressed a desire to seTVe because it would be an in· t erestin g a nd fulfilling ex· perience for her. All this may be lure. BUT is this enough to satJsfy, the citizens of Orange County? Is it enough to sallBf y the needs of the gTand jury system? Faith in the integrity ol lhe grand jury system i.s cructal to our ability to govern ounelves effectively. And. I strongly doubt that anyone's personal Culflll, ment is sulficJent reason to risk im,airment o! that fajth, Jn no way would it be a ref'l~· ( ) Lettns from readns are ~lcome. The flight to ccm.deme letters to fit !pOCe OT eliminate libel is reserved. Letten of 300 words OT leS$ will be given preference. All letters must in· elude signature and ma.almg address but names may be witMeld on re· ~st if suffic~t TeG$0FI is apparent. Poetry will not be pubwhed. lion upon Miss Perry's patriotism, her honesty, nor her perspicacity to volunta rily vacate her seat on the present grand jury. On the contrary. such action on her part might be elo- quent testimony of her innate suitability for future service. REBA WILLIAMS Jtf~fUllriag Claief Dam. To the Editor : I find it hard to believe that Ed Davis is chief of police of the second largest city in the coun- try. When he announced that the new marijuana law would lead to more h eroin ad<'Ucls, I could hardly stomach him.' He couldn't possibly have ad tended college-<>r is il just t.haf he· has an I.Q. not much larger than bis belly measurement? MEG EN TiiOMPSON Drug Pridag To the Editor: ·Your newspaper recently ad- vocated support for Assembly ~ill 193 by Assemblyman,Barry Keene, of Eureka. This so-called consumer Jegislation seeks to re- duce the cost of prescription .drugs by permitting pharmacists lo s ubstitu te cbemically- equivalent generic drugs for brand name products prescribed by physicians. But is this really consumer legislation ? More than 25 respected national health or- ganizations claim it isn't. Their opposition to drug substitution legislation is based on the fact that some drugs with the same active chemical formula have different inactive ingredients. This may cause the drugs to have different therapeutic respooSes in the body. GENERIC DRUGS are widely assumed lo be cheaper. In some cases, however, generics cost more than certain brand name products. There are otber reasons why AB19J's claimed consumer benefits may be outweighl.ed by its drawbacks. Generic sub- stitutes are available for only 2S per cent of the 200 most common- ly prescribed drugs. Genericpte- scribing by physicians is current· ly authorized in California; about 10 per cent ot all prescriptions are now written generically and the riguJ"e ls rising. Current. law also permit& a pharmacist to sub- stitute drugs with the coment or lhe prescrtblng pbysiclao. U this law ls changed, neither the doc· tor nor the "patient will know ex- actly what. drug the paUent is re- ceiving. THOSE i n favor of As· semblyman Keene•s bill ma,y be miasing lhe point wbe.o they claim it is 1 consumer measure. Cost should nol be the only con· sideraUon. Other aspect£ of drug product. selection -quality, effective--- ness, u fety, equlvalen~ -ln· d.lcate that California'• current : , anti-substitution statute is a necessary consumer protection law and should be retained. · BARBARA S. PUETI' We t emoin convinced a substantial number of prescnptwn drug-wers WOtAl.d save substantial amounl! of money under the proposal.at rio toss of consumer protect ion. -Editor Dt!li•b19 'Strike' To the Editor: I was overcome with sympathy for Tom Robinson (M.D. who cbastized the Daily Pilot for us· ing the term •'strike" referring to recent doctors' actions-' Mailbox, July 9). As a teacher I have withheld services. which the newspapers and the general public insist on calling a strike. Where I teach, the community was very fortunate, the doctors' wives, all P .T .A. members, just hopped into their little station wagons to man the classrooms. This in spite of the fact that P.T.A. is supposedly a neutral body. As a teacher, I have often been told that we s hould clean out our profession or all undesirable teachers. Mal practice suggests to me that if the A.M.A. did so. their insurance may not be so high. Every profession bas its weak- nesses. Mine is that in order for my wife and me to have a stan- dard or living in keeping with our desires, we both have to haul our "bods" out or bed and take full· time job responsi bi ti ties. BEN BOELMAN, Placentia (Vacationing in the area) Whose Windfall? To the Editor: Your July 6 article ''Hike Hard to Swallow," confuses me. You s tate that the oil companies raised the price of gasoline J cents a gallon because of the fourth of July holiday. and that the President's "import fee ad- justment" was only 1 cent a gallon. The President put a lax of $1 a barrel on foreign oiJ. As one barrel or oil produces 40 gallons of gasoline, lhat makes the tax 21h cents a gallon, and ~ cent a gallon raise for the oil com- panies. THE PRESIDENT put the tax on to purposely raise the price to discourage consumption, yet the companies gel blamed. And the· Senate is now having another ex- pensive investigation to see why the oil companies did it. It might be better to investigatA! where aJI that t~ money is going. We im· port six million barrels of oil a day. Now that we have a tax of $2 a barrel, that ia 12 million dollars a day extra going to the govern· ment. II tbls money being used lb reduce our natjonal debt, reduce our individual tax burden, help our welfare rolls, or is it just another added tax to fuel our ex- travagant government! ll i•c:on- fusine. GOLOlE JOSEPH l11mnWeDci.,,_. To the Editor: I 1rleve tor lbe death oC 11· year-old Donald Bohnsack (who dJed as a resolt or a minl·bike crub loto a drivewa,y barricade at Oran1e Coast College). What a amselesa, rrealc accl· <Jeot-tbe cbai_. that so many people on bicycles and mini- oikes can't see as they pedal in - nocently along awaiting death in the making. There is just such a chain at TeWinkle Park where aJI four of my sons play Harbor bas~ball . I have seen boys hit this chain on their bikes or run into it by acci- dent. In my mind. l could never understand the folks. who strung these potential dangers. Nowarn- rngs, no red reflectors, no strings adorn these wires. On1)1ast summer, my then 10-year-old son was running across TeWinkle Park in his usuaJ boyhood abandon when he caught his neck on a guy wire strung to the park trees. There was no visible warning. Fortunately. he was only stunned and as I ran to his side when the air was knocked out of him, I f eared his neck was broken. I was concerned enough to call our local•police to the scene and file a report. The guy wires came down, but they were back this year. I see them at many parks and school grounds. The chain strings are still there. Wh y must it cost so much before hazards for children and adults are realized? Common sense and mother-awareness show me these potential acci- dents in the making . MRS. JOHN R. PELICHOWSKI Inviting Thie1'n To the Editor: A condition has developed in our city that is of concern lo me. For the past several weeks U1ere have been about two pieces of advertising material per day fastened to the front door of my home. (Sundays included.) This means that it's virtually impossible for an occupant of a smgle family residence in this city to take a trip for business or pleasure without advertising to every cruising thief th al their pro· perty is unoccupied. I believe this form of advertis· ing is unfair lo the resident and to the police department whose responsibility it is lo protect the property. I_ urge the city council t o senously consider the adoption or an _ordinance prohibiting the conspicuous placement or un- solicited advertising matter upon any property. JACK W. BARCUS I ORANGE COAST DAILY PILOT llobert N We~d. Publisher ThOltl(U Keevtl, 'f:dltor Barbaro Krelbit'~. Edtloriol Page Editor Th(' edltorh1l page or lha Dally Pilot ~teks to inform .11nd stimulate readers by pre~Ung on this PBite div('rse cornmrntary on topics or interest by syndicat- ed t'~lumnlsts and cnrtoonl1U, by 11rov1d1n, n forum ror readm' vir\\s :ind by presenting this ne14 sp3pcr's opinions and ideas on turrent topics The cdltorUil opinions of the Oaily riloc. appear only m the edttorlnl column at the top of the page. Opinions ex· pressl'd by lhe columnists and cartoon1<1ls and letter writt>rs al"C' their own ond no entJonsement of U1cir Vlt'"'S by the Daily Vllot sh<>uld ~Inferred Wednesday, July 16, i97s· , .. . ' • By Bil Kea11e ,.,, "" ..... .... w.ctntllday. July 18, 197S ·Roof Leaks Bug Albert , WASHINGTON (UPI) -Once be was a heartbeat away Crom the P(Uidency. He stlll is a man whose orders nobody on Capitol Hill can ig- nore. And now his root leaks. z House Speaker Carl Nbert. with characteristic Oklahoma equanimity, hints laconically that now the news media latched on to bis plight. the power or the press may succeed where the power of the politician has not . "IT IS NOT LEAKING TIDS mornin~,,, Albert said Tuesday, but conceded with a smile that it· wasn 't r aining, either. . With.lhe!.ublicity over his Y'aterlogged condi-U~ he adde , "I reel confidentpow that something "-;ill be done more quickly" -a friendly jibe that his landlord may be willing to ignore the speaker, but not the press. • Ume it was raining in my bathroom so I sent them a • sarcastic letter. .. THEN THEY SENT ME a letler saying I could ignore the raise in rent.•• Mrs. Katherine PoweJI, a desk clerk at the apartment. said Tuesday the entire roof is being replaced. · "They h ad about three-quarters or it done when · the weekend storm came up," she said. "The workers were up there all night long pushing ~ater over to the s ide or the roor that bad been repaired and using pumps a nd doing all they can. .. THE TENANTS WERE VERY NICE and brought soup and cookies and coffee to them since they.were there a ll night long Saturday and Sunday nights," she added. .... " ...... ,,........ ® Albert lives on the top fl oor o( the eight -story Chatham Apartment House in suburban Arlington. Torrential rains over the A few more days, she said, and the roof will be fi~ed. . • U Pl T•ltlpM4e ' ~- "Reod slower, Daddy. I can't liat.n that fost." Deaths Elsewhere NOUSTON (UPI) Thomas W. Swan, 98,. weekend exac~rbated a ·:----------.... problem that h as existed NA~1E for several months - buc k e t sful of water NE"~ws cascading througq_ the __ _.,.;.....;.,;=....:...:....;:::::__ _ _, roof. . Colµmnist Morris Frank, former dean of the Yale 73, who flunked public Law School and a U.S. · EVERY 15 MINVrES ON SUNDAY, building speaking in hig h school 2nd Circuit Court of Ap-maintenance workera emptied a SS-gallon barrel of but wanned the hearts of peals judge. He died Sun-rainwater Crom his apartment. Smaller buckets dinner audiences with st-day. were in strategic places under dark, spreading in~g barbs at people in wate_rsll!in marks on the ceiling. · _high p laces, died Tues-JACKSON. Miss. (AP) . 'fb'€""leak ls so bad in the living room, Albert . ~eantim e, the leaks persist in Albert's , hallway. •'It ~s disgusting," he said. "Like a swamp.'• . 'IT'S DISGUSTING' Speaker Albert .-rit--..<."s.----30 SPECIALTY SHOPS IN A TURN OF THE CENTURY VlLLAGE ATMOSPHERE ... ADJACENT TO ...._.,...,._..,...W:li-.' THE FESTIVAL OF ARTS GROUNDS. . NOW O,.EN day when pneumonia . -Dr. Laurence t. said, he has moved all his furniture into the dinin~· complicated a month· · Jones, 92, founder or the room. And his son David removed the ceiling light old heart condjtion and nationally known Piney fixture in the kitchen to relieve the water pressure. , ·pancreas ailment. He Woods C.ount ry Life The speaker said his complaints to the landlord ,, Some prime space aw11ltlble was a Houston Chronicle School, died Sunday at a have been ignored. When he got a notice recently columnis t. · Jackson hospital after a his rent was going to be r aised, Albert said, "At the lengthy illness. NEW HAVEN, Conn.--------- ( U P l ) -Fu n e ral services ·were held for Death Notices ltOANS AO BERT BORNS. O.te Of death July ··- 580 BROADWAY, LAGUNA BEACH, CA_LIFO_RNIA • 714 494-7915 ' DAILYPl\.O! Al 19Trees Poisoned In State BAKERSFIELD (AP) -Someone here hates trees. California Department of Transportation of· Cicials began noticing eucalyptus and carob trees planted a decade ago t o l andscapt! California Route 99 through the city were beginning to Jose their lush green color. An inspection s howed holes one inch or bigger in diameter had been drilled in 19 trees and an oily substance injected to poison them, officials r eported. r l\'O DOWN PAYMENT' I *WHEN YOU LEASE A I eotor J'alevision • FROM RENTACOLOR *Call about the many advantages ••• A member of the Reniacolor lniernat1onal Gro up of Companies. 714-991-1550 flf .tlflrringe ,,, 19H •t the ao• of 11, w.s a ~1 of L.onv kKh, C.. Survived by his-.. Aobltn Edw•rd Borns of Huntington Be•ch, one dauohter, M•rybell• \::==============:;:::================::::::::::::::::::::====================~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;::::;=::;;=::;;::::::;:;;;:;~ JollnSOn ol Huntington BeKh; lh<ee grandchlldrttn and two great- gr•ndchlldren. Mr . Born.s was a member of Plumbers &. Stumfltters Ent•r•O J11ly l , Union No. •'M of Long Be Kl\, Tiie Maclo., Robert Ve •nd Donna J. ~rlun L1t9lon Post No. 300 of SHI TenUlka, Valerie R;ie .ind Rlc!wrd BeKll, Tiit Community MetllOOls. Abey Olurch of Seal Beach, Fraternal O<der r;:.u:;:,a::,..rl:J""'othy Cllarlu and of £<Igles. and w;is active in tlle 91st In· CNmlc!Mel, W1nilr~d A and Ralph E. fantry Division of World War I. Oliver. CArol Ann ~nd William A Se"tices will be llel<I Fri<f.ay 10.00 AM, Luelf, Oav1<1 Ruuell .ino !.u,.-.n Sm1t11S" Mortuary Chapel. lnttf'nvnt, Ganecly Westminstttr Memorial Park, olrected Salmonson, Mary Lou dnd Jolln by Smiths" Mortuary. Maynard WHEELER • Huntley, Ruby Marie and James JAMES O. WHEELER or Costa Harold Me ... , ca. Date ol death July IS, 197S. F-.kelrnann, There~a A and Jo,l'llti Services are pttndln~. P<1cll1c View ~~~~~i'c~~r1':~"~11~0~igA. Memorlal Park Mortuary. 1>44·2700, SI-law, Ev111yn J . and Morton J. Newpon Beach. ~~~=~::~~ a~n;h::~t~am~ De~~~ ';;.~~~;.;~~~;r:.r~~~:S ~~ / ~:':'an, Frank Leon and M•ureen pending, Pacific View Memorial Pant Claore Monuary In NtwPOrt 811ac11.1>U-?700 Gar co a, Elpidla and Ciuo>dalupe WAHL Hanman, Hui~ and Lloyd HMold MARGARET E. WAHL of Newport Kallvoda. Jame' F . .ind 8.tr~ra Ann Be.ich, Ca. Date or dttalh July 16, 197i. Stuner. Joan Anene and John E., Jr Servl~s are Pt'nding, Pacific View ~;l"'<lflam, Ma ry Beth ana William Memorial Park Mortuary, Newport &lier. Patricia Louise and James Beach. "4'·2700 C.rlton I( ECKER Sch1ller,Vlilllam8ruceandJctnelLU KURTH. KECKER of Newport Frick. Roberta Donna and Jack Beach, Ca. Oat• of death July u. t97S •. Eoward 5ervlcu are pending, Paclfk View Hallula, O.ann and Lawrence John Me Mori al Park, Newport Beach, SUlal, Pamela Jean and Louis Allen 6"·2700 • U~ton, Charme1ne M. and Ronald KECKER of 11wpor aeach. c.. O.t~ot S.. • CINlh July 1s. 197S. Servic~ are peftO. Marchuk, Zona Evelyn and Carl Ing, Pacific Vlttw Memorial Pirk ~~~~!I, Tony l.Atroy ano Charlot&. Newpon Beach. ~-2700 ' Jones, PatrlclaJ.and Richard D. Bowlin, Joan L. •no Gerald A Pierce, S.tt• J . and Allen LH HudSPllll. JO'l'<.a Kathleen and Roblrt Elw1r<1 Pratt. Ethabelh Jane and Earl J~ ' ParSOM, ~ry E. and Otnnis R. Rogers, Anna Louise and Lonlo Riel!M, Nell B. afld)llrglnla L. CIHI, J41rl A. a"" 'Jlck W. Coleman, ~rgartt Lenore Md Peter llllan Huffman, Rosalie and Erne!.t Wayr.e RheledH, Phyllis G. end David Ray 8ar11es, Judith A. and Edwnrd w. Moofe, Ronni& L. and Norma J LffCIYc.!klY<a El•lne and Lury LM l.AtM, Either L. and Virgil o. Turvllle, Arthur S. ano Karen K. He~r Aio.tand FranclltoC. Schumach•r. Ch•rl• Lynn and Ml<J\MI Rodney Mo<llca, Mlc.hael Guy and Nan<y LouiH BwelwM, June L. and Will lam J 8eMO!.I. IC.alhleen LOUIH and Michael. Robert Goodwin, Maureen Laird and JoM EOWVd StuOdanl, O.nny and Debra Ann Irons. Thorn•S Edwards and Cl>r•SllM , aylor, Rob9rl Mtchatl and Calla Mercy Blunt, WlllTla J. and Sonny L e.rnarellno, Debbi• and Paul· Licerio. Rudy and Elunor .ArllffU, R. T. and Marilyn J. Heap1. Roderick W. and Donna HHpy PI04!ser, Patricia M. and Donald Rober1 Winger, Vick• ldaltne and Albert L. Haehnlen, Pamela J and Loul.l E. •tewart, Shirley Ann arid David 1IOn v anovu, Albert Oon1ld and May EHHbelh Hinger, Doris Kay ancl Retpn Vincent Bl.orns, Sarah Ellrabeth and 8yron Em6t Hlrdler, Jam•s Sher man and Sh.\rlone Liies Rin<llsbecher, Garry and Roberta Jean Bor11, Aob4trt Edward and Bobbie Sheryl Helblq, Vernon L., Sr. and Cheryl M. <la Silv•, Mary Jane and MOrgen ' Pereira l'tler, E. L. Jae.It ana M&ry ElllAlbeth Navarro, P•m••• Rae and Wiiiis OrOOrica Elliott, Kathlffn McKenzie and Brian Edwin Heffner, S.rl)ara Lee and Harry Un-, ULTI·HRGEROM AJHHALHOME Corona del Mar 673-9450 Costa Mesa 646-2424 IELLIROADWAY MORTUARY 110 Broadway, Costa Mesa 642-9150 McCORMICK MORTUARY Laguna Beach 494-9415 San Juan Capistra~ 495-1776 """ .. ACIFIC VIEW MEMORIAL .. ARK Cemetery Mortuary Chapel 3500 Pac1l1c View Drive Newpart Beach, Calllornea 644-2700 PEEK FAMILY COLOHIAL FUHUAL HOME 7801 Bolsa Ave. Westminster 893-3525 SMITHS' MORTUARY 627 Mam St. Hunt1ng100 Beach 536-6539 oon Gordon. John Gary and Carolyn ~----------·..-11 Mlchel9 Hommey, Madeline Beverly and JoM Trum.n Van C.mp, Larry Ev•r•tt and Hatti N. SchUMlldMr, Nena and H•rry Irwin Millar, Catherine A. and D•vld Wllllan'I • Cooclff, Rot.rt SlOlln and Dllt'othy Jo.ln voegei.. L~s J . and Lawlenc• Neukaemper, Elaine Angell and l(en· ~hFr9dr1CIC Collins, Walter Francis and Elaine ~,.. Gorsvans, J1nls John 1nd Anne Mlrdza MendoH, Cristina 11nd R•ymond Robert Gallardll, Lind• O. 11nd Edward Riiey, Jon C.rwr and Cathletn M- roett• MooA, Ja mu c. and Cynthia O. 1.Atwls, eiiward w. and Suzanne Blr,..r, Cleotltda and G.orgt w. M1c;arl, 'Della C. ancl Ronald L. JoMSOO. Lorena L. and Ronnie L. Risher, Meryl Giibert 1nd lrts C.Wmella Nevarro, Anlonlo Sal\tlago and BA~ GllS.. uraly, Maxine CeroltM 11nd Pllllllp SIMON • l!fattord, Mary and W•yn• .Araln, Mohammad Hasstn anct, Jamila > PUBLIC N011CE PICTITIOUS auSINUS NAMI STATIMUIT 'TM followi"9 p.rMllll ere dOlntMI ~ .. s: PIOPL5"$ PEE'P·HOLES. U).A VktOl'la. CMta M4tH, CA. '262' ROflald V. Ktlperlt/Wllllam T. Slaeltll, J$>A Victoria, Coit• Mew, CA. .,.,. Tiii~ bu'lrMtt\ It tonctucltd Dy a llmll· tC ~nenhlP, R-ldV, K1lperl1 Ttllt tlelt"'9flt wH Ill" wltll Illa County Clerk of Or•nO-County on J.- 10. ms. Admission Sl.?S Child""" 6-12 s1 .oo Chlld.A'ft under six -htt ~Jn? Puflll!Md Or1110t Coat\ Oally PllO\, J.!==========4t J1111a U, and J111, 2, t, I•, 1t7) 2'13 IS A wise wall inves Paneling is easy to put up yourself, and you'll enjoy its beauty for years. But there's another reason it's a wise investmen t. If you ever want to sell your house, th ose · paneled walls w ill look just as great as when you put them up. And th ey'll help sell the house for you. So choose paneling to cover your walls -for your own enjoyment, and for an investment in your future. A. CANDYLAND. LIME Triple printed luan panel. Light finish with l1ght·green wood tones. 4' x 8' x )~2" Reg. 6.99 4.88 B. CONSTITUTION DECLARATION Triple printed luan panel with warm wood grains. Durable, washable. 4' x 8' x ?.1'2". Reg. 6.9! 4.88 C. ROSEWOOD CEYLON Luan printed panel with the look of expensive rosewood. Dark accent stripes for a formal look. 4' x s· x Yi{. Reg. 10.49 7.88 D. HAND HEWN Abitibi hardboard printed panel with a rustic. hand-made look. 4' x a· xv .... Reg. 13.49 9.48 BIG STICK ADHESIVE Reg.99c 68c Energy saving is a breeze! Use nature·s Own breezes to cool oU your attic and your house Cut down air conditioning cost as much as 25% with a pair of 12" turbine ven111a1ors. Cost nothing to operate -you save money and conserve energy. Complete with ad1ustable 12'' base. TURBINE ROOF VENTILATOR, Reg. 34.99 each 22·.aa Amend your soil's constitution Humus Plus is a h1qhly orQ'ln1c soil r1ml'ndment wr11ch con1a1ns nelroQ<?n and phosohoroc acid. Use 11 for planting lawns. bare roots, bedding plJnls. bulb and vcqe1ables. Add 11 10 soil lor con1a1ncr p1an1s. Good as d mulch to retain moisture and mh1b:t weed growth. 50 lb. bag. HUMUS PLUS, Reg. 1 49 88c Solid value Rcadv·m1)(ed concrete is Pasy 10 use 1us1 add water! for foundalions curbs. patoos and po!.ts To palch l:Hqc holrs us" concrele qlue to bond new concrete 10 old. CONCRfT[, 60 LB. BAG, Reg t 40 88c Shop Ward & Harrington for all your home improvement needs. We specialize in quality merchand ise and help- ful salespeople. You'll find everything for in side and outside your home in ten complete departments: lumber. hardware, garden , pai nt. electrical, plumbing, paneling, housewares, decor, and building materials. ~?rtjLE§t l-!~rr~QQ~QD CAPISTRAOO 7707 Garden Grove Blvd. 537·9571 or 893·6523 301 So. State College 870-0050 6980 Cherry Ave. 634-7111 324 West Katella 532·2506 1275 Bristol 556·1500 34162 Doheny Park Rd 496 -5766 Open Mon. thru Fri. 9 to 9. Sat. & S"n. 9 t~ 6 except: Orange open tll 6 Mon. thru Sun. Capistrano open. Mon. thru Sun. 8 to 5. Prices effective Thursday, Friday. Saturday and Sunday. • • ' 41 I DAIL y PILOT Wedneedey. July 18, 1~5 All But Attonaev• County Pay Pacts OK'd By BILL SCHREIBER OI U1e 0.lly ~l .. t Swff SANTA ANA -AllD06t all of Orange County governm ent 's 11,822 employes have come to terms with negotiators on pay and fringe benefit raises that will averqe 6.? l>erceot. R. A. "Burt" Scott., county personnel officer, told the county Board ol Supervisors Tuesday on· ty the 1'17-member pro- secuting and defense at- torney unit of county Odd Couples .Party Ri~ Join Hands SANTA ANA -It took t he nation's bicentennial cele br a tion to get millionaire Demo~ratic l eader , Ri c h ard J . O'Neill, and millionaire Republican leader. Carl Karcher, to sit at the same table together and chat amiably. No t t o m e ntion millionaire, Dr. Louis Cella , a wayward Republican who likes Democratic candidates, and GOP stalwart, Victor Andrews, who sat at the other end of the table and spoke of each other as "magnificent Americans .'' O'Nrill sa.id the Democratic Party "will do it.a damnedes t to make the county bicentennial obser V'ance a rousing success." The g r eat co min g toget h e r of s u c h Andrews said,"Orange divergent views was the county has proven it has unveiling of the county's the leadership to guide U.S. Bicentennial Com-an effort like this." miltee organization al a William Ha rtje, the press conference Tues-committee's working day. , c hairman, s tressed O 'Neill and K archer throughout his remarks are h o nor a r y co. that unity will be the key chairmen of the comm.it-to the panel's activity. tee. They quipped about He r epeated bis unity their r espective holdings pledge each time one of in restaurants a nd coffee the main speakers got shops. Karcher owns up. the Carl's Jr. franchises-· "T his is what has and O'Neill a big share of made our nation great," Tiny Naylor's. he said. "The bringing ''The system we have together of leaders of in Ame rica made my divergent views to de- s uccess com e a bout," velo p comm.on de- Ka,rcher told th e au-no m i n a tor o p - dience of news men .and portunities." oUier invited g uests. He Among other things, r ecounted his rise from a the committee plans to sidewalk hot dog vendor spend its funds o n a to owner of more than 130 $15,000 parade float, a fastfood stores. . series of dis plays on "We need to think on women's contributions in the p os itive sid e of America, a county fair America because there d is p I a y booth , a is no other country on the magazine, a 30-minute f3'e of the earth where documentary film, a we have the chances to paperback book and a do what we do here," he program for high school said. students. Die drich Scott said be would continue working with the attorney unit to work out a settlement in com- ing weeks. ,'./ !1 !il1 1 :· From Pennsylvania • ·1 · • Dutch country \ ·:; 1ijl to your kitchen-..,. ,"'b! --,.,,__ . . 't1' .. ,,•°CALORIC Penn sylvania Dutch Country -where an 85-year ~ heritage of craftsmanship is built into every Caloric range. AUTOMATIC PILOnESS IGNITION · conserves gas. saves money, keeps kitchen cooler, cleaner! Sel f-Cleaning Broiler/Oven Pilotless Ignition in Burners, Broiler /Oven Ultra-Roy Infra-Red Broiler uses 30% less gos than conventional broilers Clock and Interval Timer Gas Appliances Save ••• ............ ~~1 ENERGY-and-COST ••. That's Conservation Schmit Blasts ·Press, Claims Un/ air Reports • • • 54 Fashion Island Newport Beach (714) 644-4m (),..: M-. • fri.Mtp.a. CloMds..My 'II E. Main St., Alhambra, (213} 282-3678 0,.. Fri. Mlle .. I ,... CloMd_., u .. y..,. -au·~•uJ] • II :··c._.. INTRODUCING OUR NEW 'FREE ARM' STRETCH-STITCH MACHINE! NOW $199 95. 'Price gots to $239.95 after Introductory Sale is over! Now, 'free ilrm' mobility in a St'llist* machine. Carrying c.isc or cabrncl,Wi th fl at·bcd extension, is extra. SAVE $200N A TALENTED ${)9~42 Has built-in blind sti1ch, cxcluslvc front drop·in bobbin, and more. Carrying case or Cc1b1ne1 extra. will regulate and oil your antique clock FREE OF CHARGE SAT 10:00 -6:00 PM AND SUN NOON -6:00 PM Presen ted by Alan W. Mc Kae & Company, "Elegance in Time," to acquaint you with Newport's finest facility for fine new and antique tjmepieces. ALAN W. MC KAE & CO. EL EGANCE IN TIME 260 N ewpo rt C~nter Drive Design Plaza Newport Beach "Sales and Seruice of Fine Clocf~s. A ntique Restorations -Fine Watch Repair." THE FABULOUS EUTURA • 11 MACHINE WITH f LIP & SEW• SEWING SURF ACE $809.f!ce Just nip a panel to sew in- thHoundf, Hu exclusive buttonfitting l·step button· holcr, many other advances. Carrying Glse Of Cibinet extra. 1 J.2 SELECTED DECORATOR CABINETS 2 YXJIWJI Clanm, Upright and uniuer, AIL ~ I~ Off Models 222 and 223 plus Att:adlments. Models U-50 and E-12. f 1 tltl Free 'tips o~ sewing knits' booklet I Just stop by any Singer Stwins Cenccr f6r your cbpy ••. it's oLr gift to you telM. 1· our I 24th birthday and the nation's 200th! ' l"'~ '"' Th<Only Comp'"y Minulochrlng Homo Sew;niM.dl.;., in Amcria Todiyl SINGER . • ,. ,_hi lhESINCEll~Y ~ Cicllterund piwtiC!plllng Aj)ptlMld a..... Flicks, ·Lectures At .. UCI The followin g ex- tension classes are of- fered to the public dur- ing J uly by UC Irvine. The schedul e : " TODAYTIUtOUGM ~ltlDAY, alY1'·ll "Multlcullurel Workshop for Educ•tors,·• Pelrlcl• Simmons, Ed.O., Mrnlnl!.lrellve <onsun..-.1 ID< pupil per-I and In-service traln- lno, Los Nletos School Dlstrltt, Rancho ·Sent• GertrudH School. A --ek -rlt$1\0p, 9 e.m.·12 noon ""'d I·~ p.m .• Rm. 39, Saddleb.iltk Hi9h ~hool, 2120 S. Flo~r. Santa Ana. Fee: $41. "M•na9emen1 Development Workshop-Seminar lor lhe Health C..re Industry," Howard WllSQll, pre-sident. Administrative Rewarch As.- !WKlatn, Inc. A one·week wmilwr, Monday-TNlrloday, 9 a.m.·4 p.m , Fri· , day.' a.m.-l :lO p.m .. M•Odle Earlh Rtsldtn<e Halls, UCI. Fte: $300, In-< ludts houslno, m eat s, clan nwterlats. parking and ~clal a<· CIY11;.son Ult ui;: Irvine campu~ TONIGHT ''The Golden Twenties," Paul Ballard, All History lecturer. LA9UfW Muwurn of Ar1. Part of tectur•-les, *'Let's Telk About Movies, The Herlt~ of the Fiim," 7 .)C).9:l0p m., Rm. 17', Computer St1ence Bk>Q. Fee:$ll. FRI DAY ANO SATURDAY, .... .,, ..... ,, •·Alcohol end the Schooh," Muriel 'Thomson, Ed.0 ., consultant, Office ol lhe Los A1199lu County Superlnt~ Clenl of Sci-ls. A IWO-wffk....S pro-9rem, Frideys, 7-10 p,m.; Setunleys, 9 a.m.-12:30 p.m .• 1·4: 30 p,m . Rrn. 140, Socl•I Sciences Lab. fH: $52, ln- ~hiOes books, meterlats and perk Inv. SATURDAY ANO SUNDAY, J•l'I' tt an• lt "Ctullvlty With the Wrlllen and ~en Word," Tob'I' Lurie, B.A .. e•· perlmentel poet. A weekend pro-Qr•m. 9 •.m.·S p.m., Third FIDO< Lounge, Geltway Commons. UC ca"!'pus. Fee: $-43, inctlHMs P«1tlno. (Or1ng W<k llA'lth). SATURDAY. J11I'( 1' "Effective Profuslon•I Selling,~ Jules A. Merine, LL.B. A ~'( vml,..r, 9:30 a.m .-4:30 p.m., 811• Room, C..tewrt Commons. Fee: $.IS, Includes """h· perking e ncl ct~t' rnelHi•I. • -SATUROAYS, Jiiiy tt,16 eMA111111tl "Self·Expresslon and FffdNtll," Barbera D'.Angelo. Ph.D .. essl"8tll proltuor, Gel Stete-Futi.rton. First in program, t a.rn.·12 n_, and 1_. p.m~ Rm. Ut, Social Selene.es Lall, UCI. Fee: "!Llnclueles.,.rklno. WEOHaaDAY, TMUltSDAY AND ,ltlDAY, _,..yU.l•llMU "O.ttlnt TllreuQh to ~: A <:.onimuni«ti-Worttsi,Gp,'' Herbe't, ..... D. su1111rvlSOt', Teet Ecwotlo", UCI. A tllro..O.y pro- 9ram. WltOIW$dey •nd Thurselily, 1-t p.m., Fr~, l·S p.m .• Rm. l22, :SOClelSdOMesl.•b. Fee: $-49. 'JMUltSDAYt J•IYM "Hum•n Sexu•I 8 e hovlor: Dysfunction and Treatment •• T.,. Roy, Ph.D. candidate, In An- lhrOOOIOO't UC Rlvenldo. Finl In pr09ram, f,10 p.m .. Rm. !St, Socl.a 5clontnL.eb. FM: $41. f'ltlDAY, SATURDAY AND SUNDAY, .llllyH,26eM27 "How T• Remember,'' Alan Ruskin, Ph.D., lecturer, UCI. A -ekencl pr09rem, l'rld•Y. 7-IOp.m., Saturday Mid Sunday, 'I a.rn.-12 noon, 1-4 p.m., Rm. 117, Socia l Sc~es I.Ab. F": $-Q, Includes p1rklnQ. SATURDAY, .... ., 16 Hfrom ,...n, Lobos to Polrll ReYH • • • A c.a.~1 Excursion In Tf!tW Dl,,,.nsi-:• w ni.y Mant, conMA· lilnl, Mtrlne Eltmenl, C•llfornl• Coutel Zone Conservellon Com- mlssloft -South Co.tu. A pre.trip .... uno tw .,. fletd-study tour from. ·AuG, l~A .... 16, 9 e .m .· 12 -· Rm. IOS, Soclel Sciences Lab. FH: '100, ~Mt IMJuOe meals, 1ren10CWW- t1«1 °' todllne. for further lnfOfma- tlon. --Mn Wiison, 17141 IU-712'. "Improving Supervisory Skills." 1-iow1rd Wiison, president, An· rnlnlstreu.,. RtSOljr<h Ano<llles, Inc. A--d•y seminar. 'l:lOa.m.-4:30 p.m .. Grend Hotel, I Hotel W•y. ANhtlm. Fff: $-4S, Includes 11.nell, p;irklno end class material. *'New. Careen for Teechers." llene<lellO P. Greco, M.8.A., dlre(tO<, c..r .. r Services, Gredullle SchOol of 8uslntU, U$C. A one·day Hml,..r, 9 a.m,-12,_, l·Sp.rn .. Rm.140,S«lal Sciences Lab. fH: $-40, lndudes a copy of ~eco's book "How lo Gel the Job That's Rlohl lor you,'' other materlelsendP1rklnc;i. MONDAY, J •IY 1' "Interior O.slgn Method§ and Ttchnlquu:· P•lrlda Wright, M.F.A., eulstent proleuor, l11terlor O.slon, Cal Stele Los AnQtlts 1nd Cal Slate unlwrslly, Long Beech. Finl o1 • lecture s.erles, with field trlpa IJO bO •rr•noed. 1-10 p.m .. \Am. 20•, twrnanlllet Hall. UC F .. : J7J. • "E•st-Wnt Symttolhm end Mystklsm " Ann Unter•lner. M.A., • teclwrtr. 0.IHOJnle Stele Unl,..rslty, Fullefton, Finl In 'our so, 7· 10 p.m.,. Rm. 111, S«l•I S<le11<es Leb. '-! _.,, MCHeOAY TUHOAY ... ow•DNH OAY, My-.zt8"• ''Wll>f~ In C..rHr Pt.Mine el'ICI C.rHr Ed vce llon," Stenlt y R. Ostrom, l!d.O, eulstent dlrec10r of Gulelence, Sel'tt. Ciera county Office of Edueelloft. A lfwff-claY pr09'ern, 9 e.m.·12 ,_ eftd l•J p,m,1 Am. 10S. HUmanltiM Hell. F .. : .. ~. lntllldts flO'klng. Wedneedey, July 1 a. urns ~----------------- ···~·····­.. ·~ • • # ~ 1• SELF-STICK '-------------~ "•A'IPl'"'A"s: SAVE OVER 1.00 on H .. If te Ille! • . ··-~···/ 12·!(.fitl TRASH BAGS. •0. ·II · I · d• Price 1 .. c1. 1 a Off on lalt4I ...... IC>Jt.OUICE ·a4c GIWM FIAMY SllAVE CRUM Chofce of Regular. .,..nthol or Lime for the best shave ·me. • lllCI SHAMPOO .. SUPll SPECIAL Now -get 20 01. for the l)f1ce of 15 oz. Choice of Ory, Normal. Olly formula. IMICIEl'I 11Uiiihii ...... ·:.59c , ..... ..... -.... l ~ .. :.~ C-OulCE ~59( llWGUAD DEODOUIT For the fullest & finest protecllon from odor & perspiration. =· --·--.,...=i,· I allll _, "' lfrllfl'. .--•::=:: §UA~ \ #• •• -.~ USE I# .CHOICE OF: ~ ~ t. \ •• IOI OF 30 IOI OF 20 ~ REG. 2.36 '4-0t.UtllH JO.W. ,,..h • 12 7 '• IOI OF 15 101OF10 # · • ))., ... y,.,h .... ,IMI law11 # • ## ~ ••••• --u . PLASTIC TRASH & GRASS BAGS Your chance to buy Kord1te plastic trash bags for everything at big savings. Use them tndOOfs and out. "One-at·a·llme" dispensing box of lipped bags for easier opening. and side seal for added s1rength. MOTT'S APPLEIAKE s.84c Fountain Valley· M ... e ttT._. each GALLON VINEYARD WINES From Northern Calif ornla! Dellc1ous wines lrom America's wine coun Fine. lull flavored Vin Rose. Chablis. Pink Chab~s & Burgundy • . Ideal companions I any meal. 10 add a gala touch any occasion. CU. ti U llM ltlla. lllr ................. i.• For Pool, Lake • Any Water! ~ ~~-R___.EC. i:f.9-~5 99 RUGGED ONE-MAN INFLATABLE BOAT A hghtweighl but sturdy one-men boat of heavy duty. 14-gauge embossed vinyl that will hold most adults Deflated s12e 1s •Ox60 inches. You'll be ready to float wherever there's water Easy to inflate - take it along on vacations. Lightweight but rugged, ex- ploded polystyrene that resists mold and wea1her. • REG. 3.99 KING SIZE AUTO SEAT CUSHIOI Deluxe venblated car seal cushion lets you drive in cool comlort Bu1l1 to last & last. 6( RAllllOW FUVOR 5110 COIES "Big Treat" Sno Cones in cool, delicious Ra1nbo,w flavor6d & eoloied "snow" Huntinc)tOR leach ,... .. ........ ~\ Thrifty 2'' Price 19" METAL CASUAL PATIO TABLE BUY Table wi1h sohd ""hite or avocado & floral pa!lemed top. brasstone no-mar legs. . . . . 20 ii~L,- ~r99c ~ 20-EIPOSUll 126 COLOR Fii.ii Top quahty color film ti a Thrifty Discount ~ tot vacation picture taking. • I. Wedneld9, July 1&. 1975 Club Building· Fairview Zoo • By A.IAN DllUCIN Of .. Delly""" 5Wtt A club with a name like Cosmopolitan might be expected to have an identity problem. ··1 usually quip that Burt Reynolds is our logo when someone says be ba.s never beard of us " s aid Guy Baker. vice president of the Newport-Mess Cosmopolitan Club. ··euT WE DON'T REALL y MAliE an effort lo ~u~licize ourselves. We are just a bunch of guys en- Joymg ourselves. We're willing lo take on just about any project." Cosmopolitan is a service organization. There are eight clubs in tbe Golden St ate ~ederation, which covers Orange County and Whit- t1er. Baker , a Newport Beach insurance un- derwriter, said that the federation is expanding. A Newport Beach Cosmopolitan Club was formed recently, and soon a breakfast club will be established in El Toro, meeting on Wednesdays, and a luncheon club in Irvine, meeting on Tuesdays. the avera1e age -and we emphasise service a.nd manpower over money," Baker said. He claims the dues are lower than at most service clubs, $12 a quarter, compared with $2S for ' some groups. THE MAIN PROJECT THE NEWPORT· MESA club is presently involved in is building a pelting zoo al Falrv,ew State Hospital. "We must b~ve a bout $3,000 invested in it and we need about that much more in materials " Baker said. "About six to 12'guys go-out and wo~k there about once a month." The Newport-Mesa club is primarily composed of Costa Mes ans, and the name is being changed to Lhe Costa Mes a Cosmopolitan Club. The m e mbers hip is varied. Bill Schwarz, an ac· countant, is the president, while Ken Fait, an at- torney; Oono\•an Thomas, a banker, and Bob Gervails. an insurance agent, are the vice presi- dents. Bill Blatzer, a distributor, is secretary, and Dave Meirovitz, a dentist, is treasurer. , . QUEENIE By Phll lnterlandi Mexico Trip Signups Set As L1u1unaos gath r may sign up. Cost is around their Christmas about $200 for student.I trees and brightly under 25 and $248 for wrapped presents this adults over 25. • Dec. 25, about 35 of their Participants will take number will be on the a bus from Laguna warm sands of a Mexico Beach to Puerta Vallarta beach on the sixth day of where they will board a wilderness expedition. boats for the trip to · · isolated funta da Mida. The e~pedallon lo Pun· They are urged to bring ta da Mida near Pu~rta , fboards and diving Vallarta is sponsored by sur_ the. Sierra C lub, the eqlllpment. Laguna Beach High ACTIVITIES WILL in· School ••alternative elude wilderness hikes, school,. and the ~alos study of native cultures, Kagatbos Foundation of deep sea fis hing, and Laguna Beach. survival instruction. •'WE LIKE TO KEEP OUR MEMBERSIDP a l between 35 and 4S." Baker explained. "Clubs don't work well when they have more m embers than that.'' Further information THOUGH THE exped.i-on the trip may be ob- THEY MEET FOR BREAKFAST every Tues-lion is geared to high tained by calling Dan day at 7:30 a.m. at the Reuben's restaurant at school students, anyone Foster,494-2032. Harbor Boulevard and Adams Avenue. There is a :..,......;..--..------------~ ~---------------- Where does Cosmopolitan differ from other .service clubs? speaker each week. r1mc;a.n~'!0 '™'!\ Anyone can join by going to one ofthe break( a.st "ll m.ust be darn important data." .....,_ ____ ~:'I:-~-~-" DAILY PILOT "We have a younge membership -about 30 is meetings or by calling Baker at 640-3023. ......, In the When TO Die? Consider those people who live to be at least 100 years old. What do they eventually die of? Medical experts looked into that. It was learned that a rema rkably high proportion or the m die by decision. In other words, they sirpply decide on a time to go, lhen go. Studies have turned up an unu s uall y l arge number of people in that age bracket who predict- ed beforehand lhe week or even the day they would die. Theory is they possess better control of their menta l machinery than most others . WAS NONE OTHER than Lord Rosebery who averre d , '"No man . ever knows what true ha ppiness 1s until he has got a complete set of faJsc t eeth and has lost all interest m the opposite sex.·· THE HARD FACTS Those dandy ladies who teach col lege classes ea rn o n the average $3,500 less than ( L. M. BOYD ) do the gentlem en who likewise leac h ... A CANINE SPECIALIST insists that half the pup- pies grow up to be frac- tious nuisances instead o r decent pets ... REME MB ER, s wim- ming a mile burns up just about fi ve times as much energy as wa lking a mile, the medical men report. "PROTEIN" was named for the Greek word meaning "first." HYPNOTISM Q. ''Is it true that a hypnotist can't make a s ubject do som ething contrary to that person's moral convictions? I mean, for instance, Uke cause a girl to take off all her clothes in public?" A. On the contrary Some fairly fascinaung research back 1n 1947 proved that a hypnotist indeed could cause anti· social behavior. Just by convincing the subject that such behavior was necessary. If that girl, for example, were led to believe that her clothes were infested with biting ants, she might very well strip to the buff in front of an audience. Address mail to L. M. Boyd, P .0 . Box 1560, Costa Mesa 92626. Cqpyright 1975 L. M . BOyd .. Coast Coed Wins Award Chapman College stu- dent Margot Cather or Laguna Beach has been named recipient of the scbool 's annual Wall Street Journal award. The award, consisting of • 1ilver medal and :1 ~ar 's 1ubscrlpUon to U. news pa peT, is pre seDted every year to the oul8taodlft8 gnduatlng senior in economics and busiDeN adminittnUoo. · (nuPONT NYLON SCULPTURED 100% DUPONT CONTINUOUS FILAMENT NYLON PILE. 3-LEVEL COBBLESTONE DESIGN. IOW SAU Pll(ID ••• COMPAIAILI IUAll ••• $7.tt H'RCULOI® SCULPTURED . 100% HERCULON · OLEFIN PILE IN A TIGHT LOOP WEAVE FIBER. MANY COLORS TO CHOOSE FROM. IOW SAU Pttal ••• COMPAIAIU lfTAIL ••• $7 .tt ·11~lllft TWUl&ft 01 IU<Ulll t•C. 'lfll•PIGIO• Dll .101 llS OllllM llll KODEL® Ill TIP SHEARED 100% KODEL · Ill POL VESTER PILE. LUXURIOUS Hr-LOW STYLING COMBINED WITH A GENTLE INTER· PLAY OF DESIGN AND COLOR. IOW SAU PllQI ••• COMHIAIU lfTAIL ••• SI.ff IODEL~ Ill PLUSH KODEL · Ill POL VESTER PILE A DENSE. SHORT PLUSH MADE OF LUXURIOUSLY RICH FIBERS. ADDS NEW BRIGHTNESS TO YOUR HOME. MANY COLORS TO CHOOSE FROM. IOW SAU PllQI •• , COMPAIAILI lfTAIL ••• St.tt . • IST OUAUTY UME llAID CARPEn AT LOW DISCOUIT PllCES • SELECT FROM THE LARGEST CAIPET llVEITOIY 11 THI WEST SO. YD. SAVI Sl.00 • EVEIY ROLL OF CAIPET IS MARKED AID PllCfP fOI YOUI SHOPPllG COIVEllDCE •ALL LAIOI UICOIDITIOIALLY GUARAlnED 99 HERCULON® COMMERCIAL CARPET 100% HERCULON·• OLEFIN PILE. EXCELLENT FOR HIGH TRAFFIC AREAS -OFFICES, HOTELS, DENS ETC. MANY ' ATTRACTIVE ·~ COLORS. IOWSAU PllaD ••• CCNIPAUIU IRAll ••• ss.tt DUPONT IYLOI DEISE SHAG 99 100 1 DUPONT NY~ON PILE. EXTRA DENSE , LOW PROFILE 11 SHAG IN LAVISH MULTI-COLOR COMBINATIONS <OMPAIUU llTAll ••• $7.ff SQ. YD. SAVI Sl.00 llr.1\11111 IUOl•U~ 01 "''111111 lllC WR•"'IOp DWIUll 101 11\ SQ. YD. SAVI $2.00 THAT WILL BRING HIGH FASHION TO ANY HOME SO. fl. COllPAIAILI llTAIL ••• s ••. " IOW SAU PllCll • • • ss"•' Olfflll ... INDOOR OUTDOOR . CARPETS DO-IT-YOURSELF. CUT AND CARRY 100% POLYPROPYLENE OLEFIN FIBER. IDEAL FOR PATIOS, POOL AREAS, PLAYROOMS. AVAILABLE IN MANY NEW EXCITING COLORS. NOW SALE PRICED ••••• COMPARAILE RETAIL ., •••••••••••••••••••••• $3.99 . NO. HOLLYWOOD VINTUIA . WHITIIER 7007 leurtl (Mytft 2501 l .. Strttt I St I I I. WWttitr llw.I. llw4. -taJ.JJOO (IOS) •••-so•• fU·O"t s. 0 so."· SAVI $2.00 GRASS CARPETS II .Mii.Ti-COLORS " 100% POLYPROPYLENE WITH RUBBER BACK PA'STEL DECORATOR STRIPES AND TWEED COLORS MAKE IT A NATURAL FO~ INDOOR.AND OUTDOOR USE. 'NOW SALE PRICED • • • ; • ·• • COMPAIAIU lDAIL •••••••••••••••••••••• $).99 LONG llACH MONTCLAIR FOUNTAIN YALLIY JOOI Wflewtr .,_,, ................. Ut•S~llw4. •21.ltlt (71•) •2•·lS'7 (71') IJt-1701 -HOLLYWOOD · TOllANQ 'ASA DINA CANOGA PAii< COVINA W. LOS ANGIUS • HO. CAUPOIHIA LOCATIONS 1 UJ Vt• Street UH Art11MI It,~. MIL(lhrMellfll. 2 IOJI ShttlftM Wey 2M l Arrew lliflt••f 11S2S Vnkt 11\14. •CAMlllU •SAN CA.iOS HJ .. JJJ 542·"'' S71·1tl0 U7-2U4 . ...... 71 Sff·tSM •MIUllAI •SAN HANCISCO .. f t t Wednesday. July 18. 1975 DAILY PILOT A I I Droug~t Threatening Millions . in East Africa NAIROBI, Kenya ('UPI) -More than three million people are facina lmmlnent starvaUon in East Africa because of the pre- Yailing drought, We.stem relief officials fear. An estimated 50,000 nomads and millions of cattle, abeep and ca~els have already died in the drouibt which swept acf06s A!nca from the AUanUc to the Indian oceans in recent years. CONDITIONS HAVE IMPROVED MARGINALLY on the horn of Africa following recent rains which have turned the landscape from a searing gray-brown to 9ree11, but the situation remains critical for .millions of nomads l.n southem Ethiopia and neighboring Somalia. According lo relief officials, more than lhrue million persons in the two countries are facing imminent starvaUon. The situation is wont in Ethiopia, the oCflclals said Tuesday, where the military government bas still not been able lo come to grips with the drought and where the bulk of the three mHUon persons a(fected by famine are stili receiving no supplies. THE GOVERNMENT ~ RUSHED 100,000 persons lnt.o hastily constructed refugee camps and has also launched another worldwide appeal for more aircraCl, helicopters and emercency relief supplies lo feed the starving m11llons. SP EARHEADED BY A $60-MILUON SOVIET rehabilitation loan and a fleet of Russian' transport aircraft, the Somali gov~rn· ment has moved at least 30,000 famine-stricken nomads from re· !ugee camps to permanent resettlement areas in the last two weeks alone. Eventually. nearly 200,000 famine victims wiU be resettled. S>-v,:.;0~"'1 SPECIAL ,~~~l.~~"1 SPECIAL ~F'-~io~Qn·1 SPrCIAL (~&~¥0»1 SPECIAL ~~~-:9:ri: SPrCIAL ~---~ SUPER /~. SUPER (~/SUPER t ' /~'SUPER ~1 SUPER £' CHOCOLATE 9ARS Your I avor1tcs! Auto "BINGO" SUPERIOR -Children match objects they see 99c with the auto· rnatic bingo card. SHUl.TON Old Spice MOISTURIZING Shave Cream Regular or2 , 1 00 Menthol! 0 6 OZ. R 8 ~:::d~-r~Aric Pressur~ Cooker Speed ~ooks economi- cal meats to juicy tenderness in 113 the time! ~,~110.88 ALL DETERGENT Bleach, Borax & Bright- eners! m • LOOSE POWDER • PRESSED POWDEk • LIQUID MAKEUP · EA.1 ~ 75 THERMOS Cooler Big 58 quart size for family outingc; 19 88 #7758 ~ • .. ' 1.S OZ. ~ '!!' BAN 111111 Anti-Perspirant R~. ular or Un~cented 1 m ... A Registered Phamac1st is on duty durinr, Sav-on store hours to prepare and lo consult with you on your prescription. COMPAR f OUR PRICES 64 oz. KING SIZE ER A ~\ Liquid Detergent .. 1 iBJ l • • .._ ....... _ ., ---::::J WISS Grass ~hear '"f loatmg blade" .icl1on! ANVIL Pruner • Two position 1 99 catch! Hard· ened blade! • EA. Magic Window • WHAM·O-Creates movinr, changing pictures with amazinr. "volcanic action!" •• 1 ·-~ .... SHOP 7 DAYS A WEEK 9:30 AM TO 9:30 PM MON .-SAT . 10:00 AM TO 7:00 PM SUNDAY llCUMT .A1M'VAWY-M1p 1l1 a w....,. FREEZE~DRIED COFFEE Rt•gular or Decaffeinated sfD oz. ea. 7-UP The Uncola Drink PAK OF 6-12 OZ. CANS REGULAR Storage Chests A,,mtcd di' .i~·n'i to store cloth•";, h!Jn• els, boo.,s. l 1~. W1ldllov1er or Walnut Wood;r<11n 1n l•1mbo S111• or ggc C1:d,ir Gr Jiil 1n L.in•1: Sw~, EA. Pearl Drops TOOTH POLISH With Fluonde! 88C Regular or Spl!rirminl ! EA. 3 oz. scHouFoot Deodorant Spray or Dry Anti -Perspirant FOOT SP~~~. 89~a. ·KAL KAN .. ,.s. CHUNKS for DOGS a TOI0-24171 .....,..., \ ..tJ2 O"l Y PlLOT GM R ecml 0/98,000 Cars Bared . ' DETROIT (UPI) -General Motors is warning the owners of 98,000 small cars that the long bolt used to secure their spare tires may not be strong enough to prevent the tire from breaking loose in a n arcident and flying in- to the passeng er section. GM s pokesmen said they alre~dy had one report ol a Ure s lamming into an 8-year-old girl shortly after the rar she was rid: ing in was involved in an acci- dent. It would not discuss the in- cident because of possible pend- ing legal action. THE AFFECTED item is the "J" bolt whose hooked end may not be strong enough to withstand the strain of an accident. It could s traighten out, allowing the spare tire to slip loose, a GM spokes man said. GM said the "J"' bolt used in approximately 98,000 hatchback . model 1975 Chevrolet Moo.us Olmmobile Star!ires and Buick Skyhawks must be replaced. GM SAID IT would mail new ·thicker "J" bolts to the owners or the cars. They may e ither replace it themselves or have a GM dealer do it at no cost. Even though GM is notifying the owners of all 98,000 cars, a spokesman said only about 9,300 are affected. AVOID HIGH COST OF DYING CREMATIOM IURIAL A.TSU n. ..., .... S.Cl•ty ,.. •• ,_ • .... ~ •• -...... ic. ... .. 1 # ....... Tk•f• .. ..... ... -......... .. -.............. .. 4Jf'•••· Ye•r Seclel S•c•rltf ., ·--·-•I-ref!• ..... -.. , co•.., ..,. ,_..._.. a.w;.lce. Ow ---.... llo. •• ..,.. .... ..., •• -toe•Hy. Wr1 .. er Celt; THE NEPTUNE SOCIETY 2400 w Coast Hwy s .. 111e F Newiion eeacn ca~• ~ 24 Hours ·646-7431 ft/f""f':f:'P'r 8' •t1"f Bv'\• r OUtcau No l>.l<l' m.n y,,11 C•ll t Sena Fr(Ce Pcttfv·io lo: "'"'"( ···························· AOORE~ ....................... . CITY ............................ . CCM·BK~ BobHope and other stars in free shows! Dfnetl D molorcycle races rodeo • TV shows horse show hundreds of exhibits! AJm1.,.,ion Sl.75 (h1IJrrn. t>·12 Sl.00 Children unJrr \ix -frtt Schiel< an nounces NEW Weight Control Center If die flllllfi .. tM11ds likt vew. ........ •ScMt W111ht C..Vel t.w. 0 a.._....,.,. .. ,. 0 L• millM fW H lllMU OLM ..... fMf ..... ~ 0 ............. -.. ...... 0 ............. IVlHTIMl Hlff -MT L-• At.MOST a •YIA OtlAlf'OllTIH f~ll· ..... ,.. ....... _ .......... _ ....... .... "" ......,,. ii ..... ,,,,._ ...... -..... ....... .. ~ ..... .. ................. ........................... 'rflif #ttrtlltf CAU.MOW I W9dnelday. July 18t 117S Slaot, P.Ufdaed, StafJfJed It's Real W_olll:an Convicted UnfinisMd In Husband's Death Symphony . Trial BBlted"· Attorney'• Zipper Fmls SpQKANE, Walh. (AP) -A murder trial lipped to a stop here when tbe defeme attorney told the court be could not cootinue until be obtained a new pair of pants. SANTA BARBARA (UPI) - Mrs. Mabel Glenn bas been found guilty of first-degree murder in the death of her husband, a Santa Maria postman who was shot, pobsoned, beaten with a frying pan and stabbed. Mrs. Glenn, 51, broke into tears when the guilty verdict was read ·in Santa Barbara Superior Court. JH1'orcf!d Actor·d irecto r Jo h n Houston, 68, has been sued by his fifth wile, Celeste, 35,· who asked the court to award her living expenses of $6,573 a month. THE SAME JURY will de- liberate whether Mrs. Glenn should receive the death penalty. The prosecution la asking for de- ath on grounds that the woman was behind a m urder·for-hire· conspiracy to kill 54-year-old Edgar Glenn, whom she married in January, to obtain his life bl- surance. Glenn was found dead in the living room ·or their home March 15. Mrs. Glenn took the witness stand to deny any knowledge of her husband's death and said she was away on a vacation at the time of the slaying. Two L06 Angeles men, Kirk Douglass, 19, and Michael Steele, 17, previously pleaded guilty to Glenn's murder. Willie Hen- derson, 33, of Los Angeles, is scheduled to go on trial for the murder in a week. ON THE WITNESSstand, Mrs. Glenn admitted she drove the three to a location near her home on an occasion a week before the s laying. T he prosecution said that, al t hat time, an unsuc- cessful attempt was made to kill Glenn by putting bug poison in his bourbon. She admitted she began to take lovers a month after her mar- riage last New Year's Day but said •'it was no big thing." CLAREMONT CAP) - Sponsors of the Claremont Music Festival were forced to cancel tonight's scheduled world pre- miere or a work by British com- poser Oliver Knussen at the last minute. Knussen cabled sponsors Tues- .day from London that he had "abandoned the work at 3 a.m." ahd was not planning to complete' it. . The 23.year-old former child prodigy bad been commissioned to write the chamber music for the month·long festival. He did not explain why he wasn't going to finish it. Festival s pons ors tLen an- nounced they would replace the Knussen work with a coacerto by the 18th century composer, George Philip Telemann. A spokesman said paym~t was to be made on delivery and the festival is s till willing to ac· cept the m usic, if and when it is completed. No fee was arranged at the time of the commission. Sidney Wunburc told Spokane County Superio~ Court Judge John J . Lall)t ln chambers that the zipper on bis pants had broken during a recess. The court was in recess unW Wunburg's wife could ... rush to the· court with replacement pants. It took about a balfbour. "It's embarrassing to stand ~p like that before the jury, to say tbe least," murmured the red·faced Wurz burg. · Inhumane Treatment Of Puppies Probed WASHINGTON CUPI) -Rep. Les Aspin (D-Wis.), bas for some time been concerned with the Army's use ol beagle puppies for test purposes. T h is week he asked Agriculture Secretary Earl Butz to investigate charges the .pup- pies, used in · chemical warfare 'ests at the Edgewood Arsenal, M , are being housed under in- tolerable conditions. Aspin r~ferred to a r~ent in· spection of the fa.c1hty by humane society officials. They !Olmd that at least 30 of 500 dogs were being kept in a building where the temperature was over 100 degrees. Others were kept. in overcrowded conditions, and still others were confined to cages with wire mesh floors. WEEKENDER Gets It ALL together Fridays in the l•MUJQl!tll ff you got inashed in . the elevator with your soft pack try • • 17 mg. "tar: 11 mg. rmi•, n. per cigarette. by FTC Melhod • ••• new hard pack. &· ges· • Regula r and Menthol Warning : The Surgeon General Has Determined That Cigarette Smoking Is Dangerous to Your Health. i - ' l cessiv has re want Ange Sud morta 6whe starts outin he wa 6-0 1 pound earne .. I sis ten ••so f astb Sp Sixt pl aye open ·Lea CalS next DOWlC The check tionaJ star nisH r epo A :MI Garv .Ange ,have -mark artlcl G ~ , l I _ .. ~ -----~ --·~ Wednwfmy. July 16. 1975 DAIL V PkDT' ., . Depth Is Difference Between ps-.;.Rose MILWAUKEE (AP) -It isn't that the American League doesn't have players as good as those in the National, according to Cincinnati firebrand Pete Rose. The National League just has more of them . "It's our depth," said Rose, an almost perennial All-star who joined the Reds in 1963 the year the National League began its All-star game domination. The NL made it 12 victories inthe last 13 games by winning 6-3 Tuesday night. "They have great players and great teams ," Rose said of the American Le~. "but it seems the guys on oul' bench are better than the guys on theirs." Reserve strength paid off for the Nationals in the ninth inning when Reggie Smith singled and Al Oliver doubled, setting up Bill Madlock's tiebreaking two-run single. All three were late-inning replacements. decision I'm glad I made." Winning left-h ande r Jon Matlack of the New Yo(k Mets. the fo~rth pitcher used by Alston. provided further reserve strength by striking out four bai- ters in burling scoreless seventh and eighth innings. . "I really think the National League bas ipore talent," said Matlack. ''This is the cream of the crop from both leagues and it should be an ,even match, but it hasn't been. We have a lot o! pride and we want it to con- tinue." Madlock, once an American • Leaguer with the Texas Rangers, said the NL players displayed more confidence in the dugouL "I couldn't believe the guys OB the be.nch," be said. "It was fun. What they were 1 saying was uQ,believable, getting on their guys and eveeything. Ballpl·ayers in the National League are more aggressive ..• The American league bench looked like they were just sitting there, waiting to lose. "We have more s tars ·• Madlock added. "Maybe not 'as many more since they got the de- sienated-'iitter rule. but we have •more stars as far as all·around ballplayers ... UTIONAI. .tllrlllll '0 2 ' 0000 , 1 '0 2 000 0000 • 0 1 0 I 0 0 0 • 0 1 ' a 1 2 1 1 0 0 0 2 t t 1 2 1 1 D J 0 1 D 0000 000 0 1 ' 1 0 2010 10 00 tlOO 1 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0000 1 0 1 2 AMl•tCAN •II r 91-' Bonlbd l 0 0 0 Scott 11> 2 0 0 • cw-a so 1 o MwnsonC 2 0 I 0 c.w~d1010 JKk$0ft ff , 0 1 • o.ntu to• o Rvdllf 1010 Htl!drldt rf 1 I I 0 G. ,...ttina ' o 1 o TcNCclO 3 100 ~-2020 LyMcf 2 0 0 0 Blu.p 0000 Aa.-pft 1 0 0. llu\byp • 0 0. .... 9"0\IC... ' 0 •• kHtp 0 0 0 0 Ye~lptl111 ~ Hwr*fp 0 0 0. Gou.egep 0 0 0 0 ~fl.Mph 1 0 0 0 Tot.is » 6 ii 6 Tot.ls 3' s to :J ... , ion.t 021 eOo 11113-6 ~ ooo cm 000-.1 E-ConCtPCIOf\.1. Tenace. l 08-Hi>tl-1 60 ..,,_,~.,,I. 28-Qllwr. HR-<;;irwy 111. Wynft 111, Yulrtemilll (1). S8-8l'CICll, C. MsrllngtMt, Hefldrk k. G. Nettles, SF-Ro9e. If> H It ER aa SO RelAS 3 3 0 0 0 I SuttOft 2 3 0 0 0 1 Sff11er I 2 3 ;J 1 z ~lledl (W,t.O) 2 2 0 0 0 .. JoMs 1 00002 Blue J S22 01 Bu~ 2 41100 kH\ 2 0 0 0 0 •• Hunter (l, 0-2) 2 3 2 I P r Cios~ 1 1 1 1 0 • HBP-by R~uss (Munsonl, b¥Go$Wllllf (8owltl. llillk-OU)by, T-l;lS.A--01,s«I. · Dally l'tlet ~ lly ltldWlnl ICMfllcr A NTHONY DAVIS ESCAPES HERE AFTER COUGHING UP $500 ANE TO THE SUN. Oliver said N L manage r Walter Alston of the Los Angeles Dodgers told him he wanted to save him tor the late innings. .. I've been pretty successful get- ting some key hits against the Dodgers," Oliver said. "Maybe he wanted lo save me for a clutch situation. I've always seemed to come up in a lot of key situations. I Jove to hit in the clutch.'· S hares Award N o Cons i s t e ney Fighting Himself And Umps - -Ryan "Sometimes,,. Nolan Ryan said with a gesture of helpless- ness, "1 have no idea where the -ball is going. I felt, at this stage of my career, that these kind of erratic streaks were behind me." They are not, however, and the renowned California Angels ~ametbrower is repeatedly get- ting burned himself these days.·· Tuesday night at Anahe im Stadium, Ryan tried to celebrate his third n omination to the American League All-star team . He tried and failed. When he recently dropped an 3-5 victory to the Baltimor& Orioles it marked his fifth suc- cessive loss -the first time he has r eached that unlikely and un- wanted mark in bis 3 ~·year Angels career. Suddenly. Rya n is acting mortal. He is winJess since Jllne 6 when he was 10·3. In his last six starts -including a no-dedsion outing against Minnesota when he was unsuccessful in ho1ding a 6-0 le ad -Ryan bas been pounded for 50 hits and 34 runs, 26 earned, in 38% innings. "I just don't have any con- sistency right now," he said. "Sometimes I can get the fastball over and sometimes l Sp~rts in Briel can't. Ies the same with tny breaking pitc hes. It's darn frustrating." Ryan suffered a groin injury June 18 at Kansas City, the night he lost his third straight, but de- nies he is still adversely affected. He has ·been fighting himself and frequently the umpires when borderline pitches are not called in his fa vo.r. After the Minnesota game he angrily revealed , "I've never been more upset with myself." Following the loss to Baltimore, Ryan was ushered into tbe office 'C>f maaager Dick Williams and they tried to iron out the dif- ficulties. .. He's throwing more breaking pitches than he should, and l think be realizes this now," WilJiams offered. "With his velocity ·he has tQ establish his ~astball. I don't think he's any slpwer this year than last.•• .ky~o. however, is not on his customary strikeout-an-inning pace. In H3 innings he bas fanned · 138. Unless he enjoys a blistering second half he is un- likely to reach his announced goal of becoming the fi rst pitcher in history to whiff 300 or more bas;ters four straight years. Connors in Cast; Rams Open Camp NEW YORK -Jimmy Con- nors' right leg is in a cast and his manager, Bill Riordan, describes as "questionable" the possibility of the 22-year-old ten· nis star defending his U.S. Open title at Forest Hills later next month, the New York Times re-- ported in its edition today. Riordan h ad earlier reported that Connors to re a tendon in the leg during his first match at Wimbledon. Jla111St0 Trafn Sixty-two Los Angeles Rams players including 38 rookies will open the National Football ·League team's training camp at Cal State (Fullerton) University next Friday, the team · a n- nounced. showdown between the pair. Tanner rallied Crom an opening set deficit Tuesday night to beat 'Mike Cahill, 6-7, 6-3, 6-2. Martin defeated John Andrews · of Fullerton, 6·4, 3-6. 6·1. Joibing Tanner and Martin in the second round were John Alexander of Australia, a 6-~. 7.5 winner over Jose Villarete; Sashi Menon, a 6-4, 7-6 conqueror of Charlie Pasarell of Puerto Rico. WTT Result• • Plthbvf9fl 27, I ndiMY 22 •Women-Meyer tll bNI C-ley W ; t.\wley• Mldlel CP > beet Meyer·Overtonl>-2. Men -Gerulallis IPJ t»at Stone M ; Rullels- •SI-Ul but Cox·G•rulellli 1-1>. Ml111tCI -Co•·Mlcllel (P J llffl Rulftl5-0...er1on w. • A-J,l.SS. At lnlllane Pftot11lx 25, Les A•IH 2i Women -~••s Cl.A) bc•I Durr 1-1>; O\irr-Shaw (P) 11161 SW.r\·C•HIS .. ,. Men -~he (Pl beet Lul1'·2; l.Ull·C.5" CU\) bMt ftocht-Austln l>-3. MIMCI -st~rt·Mastt•S CLAI bli&I SMw·Auslln ~-A-3,1.SO. At Pl»enli. Davis $500 Poorer Alston said h e initially had planned to use Oliver earlier. •·nut he was m y last left-handed hitter on the be ncb and I thought I might use him better in the ninth," Alston said. "That's one Getting MVP· Nod ' Shock to Matlack The M e mphis Southme n weren't the only ones angry at AnthQJ\y Davis Monday. Davis had a disagr eement with Emfo Wheelwright, the Southern California Sun backfield coach, during preparations tor the game with Memphis, and was fined $500, the Daily Pilot learned this morning. .. It was ao off-handed crack. and our coaches won't tolerate those type of things," said Don Andersen, Sun vice president in charge or public relations. . Said Larry Hatfield, Sun pre- sident-general manager, "he bad a back that was really hurting him a nd s marte d off to Wbeelwri~t when be was told to dQsometbmg." llatfield and Andersen said Davis bas accepted his fine. "He admitted he had it com- ing. He is no prima donna," said Hatfield. Davis' disagreement didn't af. fect his performance against MemphiS Monday night. The 5·9 tailback from USC scored tour touchdowns-three on runs of four, three and one yards and a 17-yard pass reception-and two acticm points. :WOMEN PEEL , OFF J ERSEYS .. SEATTLE (UPI) -It was a sight to behold -members of the United Business Sup- ply -Pacific.· Multiform women's slow pitch softball team Jost the league cham- pionship 11-6 Monday night, then peeled off jerseys. "I beUeve,it was the most . lady-like of the infielders who started it," said the coach, Al Mauer, of the winning team. "Then some others just d~ cided to follow suit, doffing thelrduds, you might say.'' Said another oppcM1ing teJUn member, .Terry Johnson: 1 "They just waved their shirts . and bras over their bead, kind of like a salute. Then they all laughed and put on their clothes -it was kind of _strange.'' . Splendid Splinter Returns MILWAUKEE (AP) -Jon Matlack couldn't believe he would win or s hare the AU-star game's most valuable player award. He was sure it would go to his sound-alike, Bill Madlock. "When they called the name right after the game, I thought sure Bill had won, .. said Matlack, the New York Mets•·. lefthander who was the winning pitcher in the National League's 6-3 victory over the Americans Tuesday night. . "But then I looked at Bill and ( saw him looking al me," Matlack continued ... Then I realized maybe it was m'e. Then some guy •grabbed both of us and told us we !><>th won. Fantastic! I was awesttuck ... Matlack. firing •hat bat- t.erymate Johnny Bench of Cin- cinnati called ''an exceptional fastball -faster than usual" - allowed two hits and struck out four while pitching the sevenlh and eighth innings. UPIT ....... Baseball Hall of Farner Ted Williams re-. Williams had been at Bangor in 25 years. turned tp Bangor, Maine in search of Williams is the ltst .400 bitter in the ma- salmon when he learned of 50 fish being jor le~gues -doibg it in 1941. caught recently. It was the first time Madlock, whose .353 batting average for the Chicago Cubs leads the NL, broke a 3.3 tie with a bases-loaded, two-run single in the ninth inning . ''I t hr ew mostly exploding fastballs, really lively." 'Matlack said. "In that situation I was try. ing to put my best foot forward. Thal meant fastballs . "I was n't going to get beat by some slipshod curve. I was going to go with my winning pitch and make the m prove they could hit it.,, Matlack completed his two in- nings by firing a bullet past Boston rookie Fred Lynn, one of baseball's hottest hitters, in the eighth inning with the tie· breaking run on third base. "Jim Palmer of Baltimore had been talking about him like be was kind of a Greek god, an un- believable hitter with cork on his bat or something,'' Matlack said. •·But I decided to keep throwing fastballs, move them around. l got. rum on the inside corner. kneebigb ... Madlock's decisive hit was a hard grounder, about two feet in- side the third base bag and just oft the glove of New York Yankee third baseman Graig Nettles. "Nettles had to play off the line on me because I spray _"the ball around," Madlock said. "T hit a changeup on the inside. Cat!isll Hunter had thrown me two balls away and I was looking for · something off-speed." Hunter. the Yankees• ace. wasn't his us ual tantalizing self. •And Steve Garvey of the Los Angeles Dodgers said AL starting pitcher Vida Blue didn't have his c us tomary overpowering fastball. Former Angel Duren Loses Liquor ·Fight MADISON, Wis. CAP) - Former Angels pitcher Ryne Duren took his campaign against excess use of liquor to a commit- tee of the Wisconsin Legislature, but struck out. Duren, a former New York Yankee fastball er and a re· formed alcoholic. runs a pro- gram for alcoholics at Stoughton. W'lS. But be drew litUe supporC Monday when be en~ a pro- posal to require a warning label ()0 containers or liquor and beer. The remaining 28 veterans will check in July 24 and three addi· tional players at the College All· star camp, Mike Fanning, Den- nis Harrah and Geoff Reece, wiJl r eport Aug. 2. A pologies t o Ga"'f!fl :MILWAUKEE -Ste ve Garvey says "four or five" Los .Angeles Dodgers teammates Jiave apologized for critical re- 'J'IUU'kl about bim made in an article last montb. Dlle1u1na: Oimrd Das Crush on MVP "No person should suffer what I suffered out or ignorance." Duren said. "'It's imperative that this society recognize that the thing that comes out of bottles and kegs is an addictive drug." . But members of the Assembly Excise and Fees Committee were more interested in baseball trivia. One asked Ddren if be felt Yankee pitcher Catfish Hunter is worth bis salary. Another asked ii Dureo 's eyesieht was really as poor u hitters believed it to be. · Garvey, here for the AU-star game Tuesday night. told the Lo. Angeles Tima that ''lt's de- Ftnitely helped matters. I think Jt'smostly cleared up now." Jffardtt R~lb CHICAGO -Top ·seeded Roscoe Tanner and W\IMleded Bll· ly Martin, ln his !int pro start, SCOl'ed lmf.res&ive openlnac round victories n tho $50,000 Chicago. Jnternatlonal Tennis cbam- . piooshlp '4ttUng up • Tburlday . . NEW ORLEANS CAP) -Dave \\'ells knew his Biddy Basketball team of 10-year--Olds were poten- tial winners, but he had a pro- blem: the guard had a crush on the center. lt was the first time Welts bad come up again.st that problem because it was the f'U"lt a.e~ that the New Orleans R«readoil Department basketkll ~ue was coed. "'· • • Chanel Current. wbo1Narlrlb- bons in her hair, w.-U.startinl center on Ule t,aln J!1s put 1euon. She avera8ed l12. points and nine reboundra same: "'IJMt belt ou&alde lboottr CllJ ,,, the team, oiie" of our sta.rtlng., 1chance at the boys' team. Wells guards, had a crush on her, and .: recruited her. he wouldn't shoot the ball at the "Chanel was going out for the ~." Wells recounted. "He pis' team," Wells said. "But we kept.,..ltne it to her so she could u.-bow good a player she was aet all \be polnta.' • aDd we· knew a bout the rule let· ~act.fully, Wells convinced the tins cirls play on boys' teams. So 1naitten suant that Chanel didn't I asked her ·to come out for the need ~. help and the team boys' team and she agreed." fitUbC!d the season unbeaten. At first the bo)'11 went out ot ltill. ctianel waa s<*'in1 about their way to treat her rouahly, a tb.lrd of Che leam's points. At but lt didn't bother Q)a,peh "I the aeuon•a en4, when her team have two brothea Jnd a lot of won the Upto•n DtstJ\ct cham· couslns who are·bQya." she said. plonabip, 11le wu named Most ''I play 1port1 with the boyt •i Valuable Player and' startlng school.'' center an tM All·etarteaau. To handle th• 1ltuat.kln, 1be Sbe d.lcba?t have to ftlbt tor a ~· .,lfottoo&b." ''The boys were trying to dis- courage her from making the team," Wells said. "They resent· ed a &irl playing with them at tint. even though she competea with them aroun" t he neighborhood.'' Chanel said boys ahouJctn•t try to atop girls from playing buket· ball. •'If they're not good enough. they won't make it anyway," &he sajd. · And when she grows up, if ~·s &ood enouah. &be &aid : "I wouldn't mlncl "pta1tn1 pro basketball. They mab • b "' money, you know.'' Duren said the hitters also SUS· pected be was bung over. State brewers and the Wine and Spirits Inttitute opposed the bill, while committee members noted lbat •am.iJlP on cigarette packages did not reduce s moking. "I don't think you're ,oing to . teach the irresponsible drioter by e~ pectin g him to read 10methinf on a can ''said Robert Marotz o( Milwaukee. apokeaman for the Wlacomia a.Brewers AuodlfScllL • • . . .. . . • • • •• • ••• ' . ' .. , \ . . . . .• \I . . . . ' . ... 81 OA!l.Y PILOT 1 500-Shfiping Up. Berens ' H~~~ Shaw, Naber, Goodell Top Entrants The l ,SOO·metel" WU alxth at Concord in T~lor Howe bu tla.med Keg Lead ft1!esty1e ln men's com· the t ,SOO·meter free, in a nifty 18:17.75, whJch . petition fi gures to be one third to Australia's Steve also makH hlm a poten· Haw t borne• s Art of the major attractions Holland during the New tlal threat t o Sb aw,. Bereos continues to lead atthel915Mlasion Vl•Jo Zealand Garnes in NaherandGoodell. bowlers com~Un1 for lnvitaUonal swimmi.Dg January , and set the Howe la headed for tJie Wea( Coaat match champioo11hlps Aug 1-3at Canadian record in lhe UCLA after belpin1 Mis· a•me.UminaU001tiUe . .Marguerite Center with 1,500witha16:0..95. aJon Viejo. alon1 with Thirty two of the world record bolder Tim Mission Viejo resident Goodell, to the ClF •·A cmatnaJ 120 bowlers will Shaw paelna lhe li$tof en· Casey Converse bas a cbamptonahlp. appear at Kona Lanes in tries. 15:52.23 to hia credit in Othtt 1,500 contenders Costa Meaa next MOGday S h aw. a rec en l the event, giving him the are De Anaa 's Mik'e · nlaht. The championship graduate of Long Beach aevenlhbesttimeever re-Bruner (1!5:41.0) and wfll b e determined Wilson Hi1h School, corded. Tacoma's Dlclt Hannula ·Auaust 2S. and the win· snapped the global slan· . A,nd Mission Viejo•s US:5'.20). ner will compete for the dard with a recent We1tem States tJtle in l S : 2 O • 9 1 . H e a I s o San Francllco this Sep.- possesses the 800-meter E l • c II l tember. markof8:09.60. s anc1a 0 ec s Berens bad a ll~pin Confronting Shaw is a lead entering last Moo· group which includes day's action at Kona Jobn Naber . Brian o o gill' Sh l Lanes, but bad a sub-par Goodell, Casey Converse ll r S 0 111'1 for five games. His and Taylor Howe. pin total after 25 games Shaw 's toughest com· Ray Orgill scored a ""'""".,-...c.,1 is S,437. only 42 more petition , how e v e r , basket with two seconds~,.., '1 ·~~':than Garden Grove's figures to come from rema ining Tuesday Sci-111e 3 o o • Butch Soper, who rolled Naber and Goodell. night to give Estancia a ~1• ~ ~ ; 1~ an 1140 Monday. Naber. 19, stopped ,..,,,ck a o :i • Fountain Valley•s 50·48 win over Fountain er i. 2 1 1 s Shaw in the 1,650-yard v 11 1 H t · gt Re~ , o o i John Haveles bowled a freestyle at Cincinnati a ey n un JD on v.1f1t1"*' ' 2 1 • 1029 and is in fifth place Beach s ummer league Doody 2 o 1 " with a 15:09.51, ahead of basketball action at Hwi· Pl;~r.11:i. , i J .. ~ with a 5280. Shaw's 15:13.9. tington Beach High. s.cwe.-,o!!11 • .! ·--..._" .. " ... ..,. . Goodell, a 16-year-old In the other game at LosA1em11os 21 10 10 ,1-..2 ........ "'-h 11 be · · Mis """'°°" Herw 16 l2 • 11-it 1. llertns1.H•w11'tor~ ~1 ~ o' .. a JU~tor ~l • Huntington Beach, the 2·~•.oe•~Gro.-s:it5 s1on VteJO High m ~e host HB Oilers ran off to "-•tfll11Ve11e, <4'> !=:.:;~~~!""• ~ fall, h~lds the _th1rd. a big halftime lead, and ft rt ,. -. ~~~':~';!':.v.ii.., : fastest tame ever an the held on to defeat Wilson, Hon~ 3 0 3 , l.Teyt0f'.~no1990 sin 1,500 free. 55.50. c. .. 011 o 3 l u e.l(nltM,GerdeftGro-.. '"1 H d d 15 34 7 T~lef' I O O 2 t.~.S.nD.... S2SS . "'. ~ec<?r e a : · Al Marina High, Villa z-" o 1 1 10.8' .. 1e11,wutm1nmir su1 m fm1 sh10g second to Park r.allied from a =~~ : g ~ ~ ~t~:1~~~1m m! Shaw when the latter set halftime deficit to beat ~a'm ~ ~ ~ : :U~,":r~C:~~~~,::,i.r ~ t~e record. Goodell, a Edis 00 , 7 5. 65, a n d lot.als 21 • u • ts.NorOs•ro""""''"''m s196 nsing star who ap~ Lynwood whipped Los aaianc1at1 1 ,., n •• · i..JMNOfl.Lonv&eec11 s 1.o headed !or Montreal in " ... Othffs: 11. No,..1k11 1s. .. 1e ...,.., Amigos, 107-62. O'Vtll 7 • • 2 II SUI; II. Tribe CSylmerl SIM; lt.81~ 1976,. slashe~ 21 secor:1ds 1 n t w 0 games at KrOMltldt ~ 31 ! ,~ cc.oat• Mes.> J1)4; 19, corrw•ton off hlS preh ms clocking M<Clo~~., 1c.os1.a Mn•> s1:u; 21. BIKk 1CW1on1 Ed i s 0 n Hi g h • L 0 s \Ian Hom 4 0 , • SIJA; u. """" (Seit 01...,, m2; 23, lo push Shaw to the re· Alami·tos, outscoring Blw:hOtt ,~ : : ~ R1ct1111 cwes1m1n11er> s1u: H . d TOIA!l !>l••IHll (Hunt. Buch) SIOI; H. cor · . Newport Harbor 10-4 in Foun al ~·~°"~!1"~2 11_... L•M•vn• coranve> S099; 2'. And Goodell was .third ·the third quarter , won, Esta~•= • • ., 11 " u 1~ ~.~~,~~:1•e!:~~» sS::} :;: to Naber and Shaw~ l;he 6249, and Lakewood de-~'"' .. l•K011C1lcto> sou: "· van l ,6SO-yard free at Cmcm-t eated Westmi·nster H1111t.•.,c11<sn eei.r1A11•11e•m>J01t;io.S<""""""1s tv " pl ft1 CCosl• Mew> J07'; JI. Hammond natl with 8 15: 17. 78.. 46-42. · • Herbin 2 2 2 0 CGarcllne) »J7; n. BIJll (Fullef1on) . At the ~IF finals Fountain Valley and ~:!ut ~ ~ ~ ~ . .5016. Goo:dell was JU.st a shade Estancia took turns in Soowett .. J 3 1~ • behind Shaw in _the 500 leading, and Fountain ~~ ' ~ ~ ~ ' . fr e e . c 1 o c k 1 n g a Valley tied the score at w.1r ~ : ~ 1~ Tries Out 4 : 23.~8 -b elo w the 48 with 10 seconds to go. ·l~ 2 o ~ ~ estabhshed American on Mike zumbo's basket. ~'i.1, J ,~ 1~ sl Bob Stafford has been playing volleyball for Oil· ly 2~ years, but the graduate of Newport Harbor High and San Diego State colle1e will be training with the Unit- ed States national team at UC Irvine be(inaing July24. rec~rd-but ~f course T hen, Orgill dribbled · sc-.-,ou.11.,.. ... : beh~nd Shaws record· down the court for his r."1~11 .. <11 a j~ 1~ '::::: sett.in~ ~ace. game-winning shot. Additionally, Goodell Orgill had 18 while Phil ••-1'1l s ,. Angels Set Carroll had 15 for Foun· lain Valley. Other area standouts in this league Tuesday were Edison's Bob Vogelsang (24) and Hun- ........ Hlrsoft ' 1 4 la flMOttt 3 016 TltnmermM 4 o 2 I VllplMllQ • • • 4 ,. Geli.tl*. 0 • ~ 0 Fleu>e 3 0 2 6 McCort 2 2 0 • Wllllwns I o I 2 Totals l7 H 17 6S . tington Beach's Jim Over 800 profess1orial Spowart (11). Tryouts . SC.....,~ Edison 16 17 20 Stafford. the most valuable player on Su ~~ Diego State's volleyball baseball hopefuls are ex·. pected at Anaheim • Stadium Saturday and .. Sunday for the annual · Angels Tryout camp lDl· • der tbe direction of : Chuck Franklin and Paul Frey. High school graduates ;_ through age 23 are eligi· · ble to try out with em-~ pbaais placed on throw· I ing, nmning the •yard ~ dash and bitting ability. Boys with last names : beginning A·N should re. : port Saturday at 9 a.m. at Gate 4. Workouts VIiia P9rk U 1S 26 team this ·past se~ made the national team's D Se R Bee squad at a recently . ee P a eport concluded Olympic train· SIAL •EACH -1.0 enolen: .., l'O<k Cod, l c-Cod, 310 wnd beu. 115 CAiieo bus, 3 halibut. 8arte -172 --v•e•s: n bonito. 10 barrec\Allllt, 2 Wldbeu,Sl\ellbul, 1SOmacl<~••· it•OONOO -116 «nglers: 3 """"• -bau, •n CAiieo !Mu, 656 bh• lieu, SI macltu•I. •~••• -139 WlQlers: "2S mackerel, 1.~s ro<llCOCI. NEWPOR'r (Art's Lh41 ... I -SS an9lers: 177 ban, 20 berrecuda. IOll ... .,-1 Locll9"1 -122 en9let'1: 2 banlto, 3S1 bess, SO rock cod, 1 "-flbllt, 1't1 roe kc oa. •AM DIEGO (M1111lc l••I f'terJ f ....... y 's IM"'1) -706 ~!en: n1 elbKO<e, 11 .,.1iow1ell, 20c.eflciobeU, '3 b«racuda, M rock cod, I tiaw, #J wt\llUH baSI, 1 bonito. MOIUIO I.AV C ... Mes' 1..a-.1- -uenor ... s: mroc1tcocl, lJllnocod. ingcampinDayton. OClAMllOI -1ot anorera: "•· Stafford, 23, is a middle re<Ude, 37S lieu, 2 Wh itt Me Mu. t blocker WhO graduated NII~. M ro<k cw , 1n m•~-•. DANA WHAi" -m enviers: em from Newport Harbor in bes,, 2 11trrecude, I hellllut, 29 ro<lt 1""0. The 6-5, 19S-pounder cod, l'l31N1Ckerel,3e lt>a<.ore. "'' SANTA MONICA -SJ •nCl(en: 24 at.tended Orange Coast roc:ll *'· 22 cellco ban. s JMld Mu. College for two years 30 w1111e s .. lieu, J llell!M • ..,... - .,. .a1191en: 200 meckeret, u t«1t, before golng to San Diego *5, S llellb<lt 4 CAii~ lieu.. MAu•u rlu -74 en111en: 2A0 State, Where be pl~ c.e1K.o 11ess.11w111Mit, • Mnd Mu. tit· e volley all VINTU•A -SOen9len: JOlulloo ·compe JV. bMs, 11 Miid i-s. 12 rock~ • forthefirattime. l\Allllul. • UN'TA ........ -S1 9"9111n: CM Cag Loop llS roCll UIS, U <•lko MU, 1t 11,. e cod, lNlllM •. l'AltADIH COVI -132 iflQIWs: ' '1• lleu. 7" rock cod. • begin at 10. Each in· d.ividual should bring his · A's Lose, 8-1 • own equipment, includ· · . · '°ltT HU•M•M• -42 ~: •c.ellco beM. tO NlllM!t, 2 Wl\l\11 s .. .._,70reckCMI. Mo\"*A DU. 1t•Y -37.ntMn: ~ f"kll. UIS. ?-. ing glove shoes hat and LONG BEACH-The • uniform.' • Huntington Beach A's AVILA UY(....,. S.. Lllkl -:11 enelen : 2 .. llngced,au rockcOd.. ;1 Sunday's tryout is for were knocked out ol a . last names from O·Z. share of first place Tues· : A m e r i c a n Leg i o n day night u the L<ing · players must have writ·. ~ach Reds s~ell~ ~e ten permission from As, 8·1, at Blair Fi~ld m : their coaches to attend Long Beach Joe D1Mag- LOHO •UC.H -12 •nvten: u u lko llMt, 10S rock ben. 16 rockcOd.. < .. ,_, .._I -"' e119i.r1: 1J CAiieo Dess, 6 IW9<ktrel. •U ro<kcod. UM r•o•o -7t en11en : 21' Calleo bess, lJ Miid beu, 34 I f'Odl COCI. IJ2M S'-Ullfl .. I -IO engl«S: "'2 CAllcobess,.Omecurel. -t be t ryout. gio League action. OXNAltO -IOI W19lers: 1'2 ceCko bess, 3«I blue bess, It Mnd t>eas. 6lO roe: It cod, II llng cod, 2cow cod. f' ' '• , 4x4 SALE ?J LAMDCatHSIR SOFTTOP W-HuM.etc. ()37'VY) '2999 . "7J L.AleCllunla • ~ ---"'*-tll ... 14199 Baseball Standings AMERICAN LEAGUE East Division Boston New York Milwaukee Baltimore Cleveland Detroit W L Pct. GB 50 37 .575 45 41 .523 4Y.a 46 42 .523· 4 Y.a 41 44 .482 8 40 46 .465 9\.ia 39 47 .453 lOY.a West Dlvlskla Oakland KansasCily Chicago Texas Minnesota Anaei. SS 32 .632 47 41 .534 8lh 40 4S .471 14 41 "9 .4S6 15~ • 39 48 .448 18 • 40 . 51 .440 17 Tuesday's Game All-star Game National 6, American 3 Today'a Gamea No games scheduled Thursday's Games CaJHornia at Milwaukee Detroit at Chicago, 2 Minnesota at Baltimore Kansas City at Boston Oakland at Cleveland New York at Texu NATIONAL LEAGUE East Dlvlsloa W L Pd. GB Pittsburgh !5 33 .625 Philadelphia 49 40 .551 6\.ia New York 43 42 ~506 10~ St. Louis 42 -44 .'88 12 Chicago 42 . 48 .467 14 Montreal 35 . 48. .422 i7~ West Dlvltloa Cincinnati 61 29 .678 Doctiera 49 42 538 12\.ia Su Francisco 41 47 .'66 19 San Diego 41 49 .456 20 AUanta 39 •9 .443 21 Houaton 33 58 .359 29 Tueeda1'1 Game AJl·ltarOame National 6, American3 Today's Games No games scheduled. Tbanday'1 Gamea Houston at Pbiladelpbia Cincinnati 19t Montreal AUanta a t New York Chicaao at San Diego Piltlbur1h at Los ~eles St. Lou.la at Su Francllco GOLFING PRACTIC£ NOW CAN PAY OfF t.AT£At 1111 Arnold Palmer booklet. "Pttctic.," 1t1o1iws '°" ho'# to prldlct el tiom. tor pow1r play on~' lttv0rlt1 courte. Stftd lOc 111d • 111niped retur~ 111ve6ope to ,4rnold Palmer, rJo thla n9WIC>IP"• Los Alamitos Race 'Results "'"AlamffM ....... T--..,, Jlllr 1', ltU CM.,, Treck ,.est FlltST •ACE -~00 .,.,di. 2 ~r ol<I maidens. Claiming. Purse '1900. Fast Brtoer !Call) Sl,.0 UAO S.lO Maclte.,'sJo., CBroollsl •.mi 1.00 LAne'' HobOJoe CCardOiel 2..0 Tlme-20.SI. AIM r111 -Mll1'1 Cooy. Beflllft's 9'\ller, O.bOln Eyn. 11nllet" a.m, Tra,k Encl, O.Cll ~nt, CN e.r. S<retc._d -I'm A or .. mer FINt Mlulon. Rertle'N SNp, Bull'IMOdtl. '2 Eucw -.. P•tl ,,.... •• Mlcllay .. -., ,..10141..._ 'SICOND ltAC•-JSOyerdl.2VMf' OICll& yp. Oelmlng. PvneSltoO. VenGtau ITreeiure) '·'° l.tO U.O Smooth It Over IC.rdou) ·a.• UO s'-".,0..'99 Cllr00111l •.40 Time -ll.10 I c.ti Bt...-ILillf\am l Tlme-47,12. S.«> Also·~ -Ftil Eddie, One A/ld()n. ly, Gold Llgllt, S<ooper Sporti ~ LitlM. • HoKNICllH. 11T.,.1Hl Mar11Htll Wiil• Heim Charles Mike Hiii GrMnwoocf.' Slll9h Hol....., Dt-lle• Tote11 .. " • 2 4 s 1 0 I • 4 2 0 0 I 0 2 0 4 0 21 IJ M9Mot(741 t9 It Blll'llff' ' s Cook lJ 0 Gll:IC>J • t Kenter " 2 Ullland 3 0 'to\ets u I S<-•., Ollertera EIToro 9 1l '' IMrlne 10 12 2t Ulliwrstty C4'1 .. " : \ 2 0 ,. ,,. Diahlos' 2 10 0 13 l 2 I • I 10 :z 0 0 2 0 • I I I SS Defense Allows 9 s • ' J t •. I •. 2 , " .. ,, . ' 4 J 10 • 10 t • J • 0 • t 10 '° Ml " ti> Mission Viejo rolled to ; ~ a 14·1 halftime lead, and 2 9 whipped Santa Ana, 39-9, ! 1~ in a Foothill League " 74 basketball game Tues· 18-iS day night. ~· In a nother Foothill ': ~: game, Mark Gilmore hit > u a basket and Clay Harris 1 " added two free throws id AIM> Ren -c;o., Wltcll Creek Olk., 1<1ueme11, ~llfoml• srnoe. THlltO ltACI -.00 yerch. 2 ~ • OldmeldtM. Cl•lml119, Purse it• WINltl'IMdGIOry Los Al Entries overtime as Garden Grove recorded a 46-43 win over Laguna Beach. Mission Viejo was led ·hY Steve Sawyer (11) m and Mitch Adams (10). m Santa Ana scored cmly m three field goals all' ::: night. c llrookll t . .O 4.IO uo s.tln Row <Wei-) 400 UD SwDlr LMf Crffll CWelll9") a.• f lme-20.lt. Also r•11 -Oreclev11.,, ~ Stretch, Flckl• Su•, AOO.C•d'I C.Ul!Mlr. Oldle'a MIMI, Swl!llM N--.ir, Velley Rulle. S<retclle6-P'81teo•s Motlt, ,... .. Su,.r , eultht ltoltl1t, T11r11plke Tr_._. POUltTM ttAC•-l'O.,...l\llW old$. Oelrnl119-P\lrw $UOll. I'm A SUt9 Tllllll CCerOGl.el S.lt SAO 3.41 ,,,,,. To CMrge <Wetso11> t..e S.IO B.,..cl8'1ln CCler1SMJ 1A Tlrne -1e.u. Alto ren -Mr. Gold 5"4, Fl-11111" c.ot1o11. w--""' ~ Of c-.... ~I NHI, ,..,..,... .... U Eucte Pint lt- US-CVa•,• •• • ltMll ,UllST UC• -250 yeta, I \'tit ... l'NNtM. Purw S1tOD. ~OlrectCBtwlra) • ftt 0."91111tle CLl•etnl 122 ....... Mllr9 ..... <Wirt) llt WletN{CC.llJ 122 I.JIN•'• 111t9er* CT,....) 122 MlllMe Hotlay ~) "' 09'N 8er (Hwt) llt ~Nbsy l~) Ht fl9nlDome '"' ""' (Cf•l9'f) 122 '1CkleN-"9 <Cler1SM) '1t HeotlDltACE -l70yeNl.3~ etda lo 1111. 0.11111.,., Plll'M '21GD. Ottm111gprlc• ~-ttftlve TWI at CLIPflllrn) 1 If c.m. Oii 0t(ll <Cterlue) 122 Moltlle( ..... I "' l'l"H ltAC• -350 =·I \'tit f'lell\Alert IWetlOll) 122 OICll. Allowence. Pune s..ar DllPt CHerO Ht Dlcll•YI itocll c:.nci., Pley Howe (CrHger) I 11 C<Mdolel 4..0 1111 UD --• ~te c.opy ccre .... 1 ... 3M TH••o·•Aca -uo n* I y.., ~·•'-Miu IWerd) u o .i.!NfOlftS. PuneSltoO. Time -11.os. Sir Gel8-llt CU ptwlft\) tt2 Alto ren -Go Men's lOIAef\, Dal 'itutllAlkeCHlrtl llt 0,.1 Poise, #MI tst., Slslef' s.llle. SoMltlfl'S CHl<ll ( ...... , 11t --"911eo'aMoan <Cr .... r) llt SIXTH ltACIE -JSO yerds. '.,.., Dtrr1ck CClerl .. ) 122 Olds. Ctalmlng.. l"urse s.2IOO. Beck In BuMntU <C>Nyert U t Dlll ltn c.net • l'eat Allft (W•'-1 122 rw.i-1 :ruo 11.00 s..e W111111tta5oll9 1c.111 m ltote 0oo T-(Ll-.m). tM ._. ~--}Al$$ (TrNMWe) Ut Dti-GoC.11(11111c..r.1e) J.• -· OH-MIMJff...._( ... rt) ,... *•TM1tACl-U011NLs ..... 11' Garden Grove had a m . chance to wln in regula- llt tion. With tbe score tied MVINnt •AC• -3SO .,.,., I Y"t•r okb lo up. l'llllts &. m-Al· io--. rvn. MOOO. ll\e ~le at42, Garden Grove blew a layup and two tips at the buzzer. Club. AmW0"9 CHe rll M• au Pecllk CWataon> M11 l'le« MoOll (Ll"'9m I L.to'V•ncr.,Glrl ICMdoitl wtwta 0.llN ICMrlnel Go Go Too (Ade Ir> Mlclnltllll 9ed1y CWerdl OtlfOleGlrl nr .. Mirtl . s..a.-... , .. , m ~ " ~ -I It' °""'*"" 4 0 • I 1n Hutc1111191 I 1 :i 17 119 Wll .... rtll 3 0 3 6 llt OllYW 3 0 2 6 "' Mll<l\111 , 0 0 .. I It Horve111 ' I O lt IU Tot.ali; 29 2 11 to Scw9i..,OIMrten .,.. u 13 ' 11-41 SlnC.lt,,,.nte U II 17 ~ NU"*-VMJ• (3tnl Mems '1 2 ~ ~~ $iwyer " 3 2 11 122 Hettrup 2 , ' s "'Co• 1 01 2 1n Gen1'11eft 2 1 1 .s '22 E•kkloA 2 o o " "' • ._,., 1 0 0 2 1n Tot.ls 16 7 10 2'f :: H•lrtlme: MIUIOll Viejo, 1~1. IU U2 Tlme-ILU. ... lo 1111-Cleln'tlllf. ,_,_. Ga AIMre11-tlC#tAl1hC,H1..,.,. Clelll'llllt pt1ce $2000. Tiie __.. SC Dunked Roclil't. TNly It. Miii, ""eci.ac:io.r. McC..y "9tl,.ment Perty SlrOuitt9teellw.~aMw. kllolsEt•CC.111 122 · • 5're1Ched-,..,1MN .111.,,~ ..,..OtyCHart> 122 _.!tlNTHltACE -.oo.,."'s.3~r c: .... Clemente u :..a.•s Hltllt. TllrMQl'aMcCut. · DllUmlta<Werd) 122 -CJehnlr19-l"llrM '2000. OMN,. ~ ~ OH-O.Mlleet. °*""'90\e"r1i. 1eal'deuJ 122 prk•PJOO.. summer water polo team I.Mr "-Ott <0 •rt•w> 122 ~ '"t~.,., IW••,d> 117 absorbed a 13·2 lacm· g Oll-SUdctell Cllptleml 122 _.., '"• CAdalr 122 Ei..''""' ter• ... •> 122 :t° ... ~~::~:W-' ~:: Tuesday night at Orange DAVIS Imperial • • /l I ol NIKE TENNIS SHOlS 111 1ntt". 23,5 ., ........... , .... ............ •·"'Kai lllO•tlUCI t IS,_ V'....._ IW. Jn.&SSI I· """"'8YOI IUOI "°' ...... ~ 171~SS~ c2 ll) St1., Mn 1rnescr-Toocc1er1U111 rn Coast College at the band Klklr1kl l~oelll) 11' ""· T°"°"0 ' ceau> "' of Long Beach J ordan. 1, .Jet Account ICanl01e) '11 Tb · · ped to 1 T011to&env1c cwetso111 1n e wmner JUm :~--~-1 __ ~•_n_1H_•_r1_1 __________ 1_22 ___ an __ s_. __ 1h_a_li_t_im __ e_b_u_l_g_e_.~ llt llt llt 122 122 122 lit .. . CUSTOM WHEB. SP.ECIAL 4~99 for most American cars • 511..--513 x 5.5. 1ll x 6 75 • lnofudes cop • fully polished • fits both drum and disc broke wheels • eosy tire installation • one piece die-cost oluminum • oddltionol cost tor Supertug ruts one week only • sale ends July 23 1:1- 'Wtre me orte"guys • 6 WQf\ lo ct.cwoe ~u11 r .pr,.u ~·('< cnooe. ~ oaioe. Bon1iiVno •f\:(11'1 COile Almer-" f~t ~ B.F, ,-~ driCh 204t HAR'"" -.LVD .. COSTA MISA\ ~ .. • • I ' t. . .. • • ' s ' .. ' . • . • ' . ' Cumberland Cup .. . Newport's Kialoa First to England PORTSMOUTH, England : (AP> -John Kilroy's Kialoa of , Newport Beach crossed thP. : finish line of the Trans-Atlantic • 'yacht race Tuesday and leads the :~chase for the Cumberland Cup as the first vessel to arrive from Newport, R.1. • Baron de Rothschild's French craft. Gitana, however,Jlas until 6 p.m. Wednesday to reach th~ •Nab Tower Light at Portsmouth and t alre over the lead from Kialoa on handicap. TOE SEVEN other yachts l"e- . tnaining in the race that began June 29 were spread out over 500 miles of the Eastern Atlantic. Warren · Brown's Bermuda- based War Ba by dropped out with a broken mast and the English boat Mad Carew was also forced to retire. Ted Hood's Robin was reported to be lying close behind Gitana. Robin is the small est entry and a Fmland Team Wins Junior Snipe Title KOKKOLA, Finland <AP) - Heikki Haimakainen and Timo Karlsson of Finfand won the seventh and final race in the Snipe class at the Junior World Sailing Championships taking the title in sensational style. They won all but one race and thus captured the world cham· pionship with zero points since only the six best races are count· ed toward the final score. :.Dougan ~Captures .R .egatta favorite on handicap. THE RACE, jointly organized by the New York Yacht Club and the Royal Thames Yacht Club, marks the bicentenary of the Royal Thames Club. Lord Mountbatten is to present. the cup at a ball here July 29. Kialoa a lready has won the Emmett Cup as the first to cross the line. ,, BOATING Islands Race Won By Hurricane Deck Morrie Kirk's 40-fool two- tonner Hurricane Deck was the overall and Class B winner Sun· day in Balboa Yacht Club's 18- mile Drilling Islands race. the fifth or the 66 Series. A southerly w.ind provided a colorful spinnaker run for the Tace fleet on both legs of the course. OVERALL -l, Hurricane Deck. 2 ? Chinook, Tom Schock. NHYC; 3 , Raider, Jim Lin· derman, BYC; 4, Andiamo. Bob Sodaro, BYC; 5, Drumbeat, Don Ayres Jr., NHYC. IOR-A -1, Raider. IOR·B-l. Hurricane Deck. IOR·C -1, Wildfire, Ralph Mack, BYC; 2. Canadian Robin, Jim Warmington, NHYC; 3, An- tares, Alan Andrews, BYC. MORF OVERALL -1 . Vivac iou s II, Bill von K.JeinSmid. BYC; 2, Big Maggie, Mike Ha rvey, BYC; 3, Sail Le Vie, Don Dubose, VYC. MORF·A -1, Vivacious II; 2, Big Maggie; 3, Aloha JI, Glenn Reed.SSSC. • MORF-B -Sail Le Vie. Cal Club Sets Jimior Regatta California Yacht Club ;;il Marina del Rey will be host to the Southern California Yachting A~­ sociation J unior R egatta Satur- day and Sunday. T he regatta is open to sailors 18 years of age or younger. Three boats will establish a class. O n ce classes arc established, entries will be ac· ccpted until 10 a.m . Saturday. Classes invited to participate a~e Laser. 470, Fireball. Snipe, L1do·14, <;yclone, Coronado·l5,· Windsurfer, .Win'ard Sabot and ~aples Sabot. HAMS "So Good ... It Will 'Haunt' You 'til It's Gone" s-. ,. ~ .......... s-. .... IM7 American Beagle, a Soling sloop sailed by Pat Dougan of the host club was the winner in the Performance Han- dicap Racing Fleet class or the second race in Bahia Corinthian Yacht 1 Club's Summe r Sun Spiral Sliced Whole or Half TAKE ALONG A TIHDllt. DBJCIOUS SUCED HOMEY IAUD HAM ,._......, ......... ....,. PHOHE ouas ... CAU. 67).9000 , Serit;S, held each Friday 1 .. everung. • lNdy to Strlt witti H--r '• S,lct Glcrtt • s,ir9 5lct4 f,... Top to lotto. • Wt Ptldlogt md Sllip frOM <:Oftt to Cood • f.I Srrict Dftc .. ttMtl ·~c-......iwiMs 3700 E. Coast ~. Corona del Mor -673-9000 ·--... -,~-1122 s . .,,_....,.,et w act. AMMi• 63S-24'1 Runner-up wa~ Two- Bits, a Cal·25 sailed by Tom Monn, BCYC. Win·l---------------------------------------------------------' , ners in other classes : LASER -1. Bill Wheeler BYC; 2. Kevin Kirk,BYC. LID0-14-A -1. Roger R a wlin gs, BY C; 2 . . Joanne Stone, BCYC; 3. ·Rose Mackie, B.CYC. SABOT A -l. Steve Otto, BCYC; 2. J on Pinckney, BCYC. SABOT B -l . Tracy Garra, BCYC; 2. Scott Patrick, BCYC. SABOT C -1. Ste phanie Norman , BCYC ; 2. Joe Bilsborough, BCYC; 3. Jerry Thompson, BCYC. Tempest ·-Class Won By Italian HEND ERSON HARBOR, N.Y. (AP> - ltaly's Giuseppe Milone is the new world charn- ' pion in Tempes t class 1 • sailing. Giuseppe and crew LOCK IT ••• OR LOSE IT OVER 504Yo-OF AU. AUJO TIU IS AU NOM PRIVATE RESIDIHCIS, APMTMBnS Oii IESIDBmAL S1UITS. WHERE ARE YOU.R KEYS? . S--.0 tly .,_ Locll Pt>lic» ~ ....... . . I ' .. Wednesday, July 15, 197S OAIL Y PILOT 83 Ragtime_ Loses Lead Yachts Race the Clock Bv Al.MON t,,OO{ABEV oiJl;-..rlOC ... ti ... £11110< 1'he f arst to finish race is over And with seven yachts safely snugged down in . Ala Wai Yacht Harbor at Waikiki. the long battle for corrected time honors in the 2,225-mlle Transpacific race from Los Angeles to Honolulu 1:-. on. It's known as the race against the clock . Ragtime's handicap lead was short lived, sur- viving only the next two boaL<;. Ondine was the second to finish and lost to Ragtime by over an hour on corrected time. THIRD TO FINISH at 4:50 a.m. Tuesday was Windward Passage, the pre-race favorite for fir!>l to finish. She failed to save her time aJlowance by a bundle or hours. The first yacht to unseal Ragtime from the han· dicap lead was Bruce Hedrick 's Warrior from Seat· lie, which finished at 1:57:08 Tuesday, one day behind Ragtime who gave her more than two days FRESH TRADEWI NDS WERE blowing 2S to a~ knots and kicking up ::.ea::. of 10 to 16 fe e t m tht• Molokai Channel which ('Ould ::.pell trouble for some of the smaller boat:. Among the boats still at ~l'!.i It is a seesa w battle for overall handicap honor' As of 8 a. m. Tuesday. Henry Grand!n 's 35·foot !>1001> Tinsley Light. a Class C entry, was 321 m1lt:s out with the best chance for the corrected lime win. She has a tot<il time allowant·e of four days, e-1cht hours. 19 minutes and 58 seconds. about one d1:1y and 15 hours better· than Sunset Dlvd. The surfing conditions created by the big winds will help the ultra-light <hsplacement boats such as 1.Ato Vwnte 111, Panache and Chutzpah -if they hold together under the extreme condition::.. Panache is leading Class B with Loco Vienle third. and Chutzpah has moved up to second in Class D and fifth overall. .--~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~· on the handicap scale. .-G.)@<!>@®'<!>©<!H!>-$<iH!)$@$ $ ® $ $m . But even Warrior's lime did not last long. John @ -w Calley's Sunset Blvd fini shed at 6: 10 p.m. -about @ Wh d t t ®' four hours behind Warrior who gave her about IO ~ ffe 0 YOU go 0 ge YOUf © hours. : MARINE SUPPLIES and get : OTHE R CLASS A YACHTS finishing Tuesday i wereBallyhooat2:11 p.m. and Sorcery atsp.m. them at DISCOUNT PRICES? cv: It appears that Sunset Blvd will save her time for Class A honors, but the eslimatcd times of ar· rival of the lower rat<.'<i boats in classes B, C and D • ~ indicate~ that she may be as low as 14th in fleet han· * >:7 cticap s tandings. $ @ Expected to finish early today were Serena at $ ® 12:15 a.m.; Aorangi, 2 a.m.; Constellation, 2 a.m ., $ ~ and Loco Viente, 6 a.m. $ W'. If Loco Viente II, skippered by Jim Seals. $ ® Balboa Y.acht Club, made her ETA good she would have taken over Cl ass Band overall handicap lead. $ <!> Weather reports from Honolulu late Tuesday $ (!) indicated that the boats arriving today may be in $ (!;; for some wild rides, if not trouble $ 0 ·-----------1: ~ : : * Civil Grumbling ... Gloomy Gus t in the DAILY PILOT • 0 ~ 3048 PULLMAN, COSTA MESA 557·9906 ,._.® ... $<fHtHiHiHf>$$$$~$@®~ as ites Double Belted Polyglas Tires for Compact, Standard & Big Cars A78· 13 Size rits Vegas, Pintos, Colts. Gremlins, ralcons, Toyotas and Ot_her Compacts Cuttlom HmerCt1\hion Po~iglas Tl11s j-; /\ml'rtr ,, r. l:iri::< ~I srllin•~ tir1· -for Joh or s:t•ncl fl'.P.on;. R ..... i111 Ill pnlvr<;ll'r n1r1I hnth for.,rnnu1h-rirlm1•1.omr11r1 Tn .icl farming fthC'r l,l!;S ht•ll5 ror road-holding trJrtinn. /\ U~l' prov1•d tr1•ml drsign th.1l Tl'illly drli\'f'r'. 1111 mil•'.a~'.''· Th1::0 is •I IHI! rrJIUrl'cl 110 mnny nf llw l'li5 mnclrJ l"i'ITS. SIZES l .00 13 87814 C78 14 07814 [781 4 £/81'> SIZES r1a 14 c1s.14 f78.J5 G78-15 SIZES H78·14 178-1¢ H7815 J78·1'.. l 78 1 'i s322s s3s2s s42so Pfu., ti 77 to H:?l f .[ T. per tare• clrprndani; on <-1zc .ancJ C' ti fi r Roberto Mottola~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ dominated the six days of sailing competition on Lake Ontario be fore wrapping up the world ti· tie Tue.sday. The U.S. team of Glen Foster and .Peter D ean or East River , N .Y., w on Tuesday's sailing heat, but finished seventh in the over-all standings. Let the Good., ear Professio11al: Sen ice }bur Car l\'o" · In the 470 class sailboats of 15.5 feet long the French swept the first five places. A Swedisb sailboat was second in the Tem· pest competition with ,-aailboats or 22 feet in 1. Jengtb as J . Albrechtson 1. and Jngvar Hansson ! earned runnerup honors. <. lJwe Maref and Franch Webofif ch of Wes\ Germany were thir d, followed by fell ow ~· trymen Horst Nevel and Jore Schmidt. The French sallboal uewed by Mar k Laurent and Roger FU rm ln cap- tured the ,.,o class com· petition with Frenchmen P. Foltenlant leading Ule aecond place sailboat. J .F. Fountaine and Marc ~uet of Franco each captained lhe tblrd and .fourth place aallboat.ii. LET'S GO SAILING ••• IM IEAUTIRJL DAMA PolHT HARBOR . SAILOR'S SPECIAL! ! ! ! VICTORY 21 •••••••• $8.00 PER HR. ·OMEGA 14 ••• : •••••• $4.00 PER HR. . CORONADO 23 •••• $12.00 PER HR. ALSO RUMAIOUTS AHO ASHING SKIFFS RENT A SA~LIOA T a thrfl you'll ••er fOl'C)et •DryShr-.p ............ .... "-.... ................. • ...,stcn' 1 ....... a. .. , ..... s.. ·S.....I_.. ............... •St t 40ll,,...h EMBARCADERO I " MARINA . EMarc •11 o ~ Oana PoW ..... CA. Phoftt: 171414tMl77 Special Alignment and Balance SJJ95 Anr 0 S , .. o. c11 Pt•t' 11111 o•ay II n,.dtd l•<luOO ltOlla IWhf'I dt1vt CtrS • Cnmplrtl' lront·rnd nlrRnmrnt • M rer.11on • lhlanrf'I two lronl wh~··I 11,srmblles • llolps lncrcasl' stnrrin11 ulrJy •nd 1mprovr llrc m.tr.'11" Special lunc-l p Adjustm ent ,$888 ~a~~~~=~<• • Uur prort',t.ionnl' • h1 t ~ ·''"' '' t th,'"11 lo rr·commcnci1•ct 'JH'C If,, 1h 11•,. • ·r1ml' Pnl(&nl' • l\da11,l r ..rh11r .. 111r t11r th·· nlO!fl ··Hiri. nl IUl'<lutt· t I t i .inti V.·'" • t\U inw<prn\l\'tt ~,.,,,,, cJ1•,,,1)(1u•1t lo help )011r rar run snu1uth wit •.,1\11 \Oll mh1w\ t•111 Brakes -'our Choice Disc or Drum T}pe SJ695 ~~~~1d0:~!:e~s Oi1cr· ln,t.dl ""'' lrunt •'10., ftt.11..•• 11,11h • f{rp:ll ~ ''"'' "' .. I'''' t tr•,nl \\h1•1•l lJt•;n1n~" • lu~rwrt h\'(h.H1l11 ~\ ''''"' .1n1f r1'1111 • Drum l11"tl.1!l 111 '' l1t.1~,, hum~., 1.ll lo11f ~ h•·PI' • •frp.u ~ '" nt "tu• l h1 .1r1n.:' • 111 'l'•'I' tuu"•' li)ch.iUIH ··'"''''"'· •• d.t 1111111. Oral.., Acl1u•lmenl 99( 7WaystoBuy at Goodyear • Cull • 0.1 DWll C1slomsr Credit Plan • Masttt Cure• • lankAmericard • Amerann (rpru1 MttltJ Card • Carte llanclle • Otters Club ~e Your Independent Dealer For His Prrce. Ptices As Shown ~ Goooycar Service Slores. 1 1. GOODYEAR Tl~E CENTER ~ COST A MESA ... EWPORT IUCH I 596 Newport·~ at 16-th St. 548-9383 Ho.tt: MOft.·Fri ... , • S.t. 1·4 .. . NEWPORT TIRE CENTER 1000 E. Coost Hwy. COIOMA DEL M>Jt 644-8022 HMtt: Moft..fri. 1-6 • Sert. a,.5 . •. . . . 84 I.JAIL Y ... tLOT Weoneso.ty. Jutr 10, '"' :» { "_frospects for Common Market 'Looking Better' BRUSSELS CU PI) -The ed by crisis, scorned by· 1onorllsfuture. ' ) . • I ~ • l ~, . ~ope an Common Msrket ls Washington, often ignored by its The result Is a. new optimism, ""'E W.'{ ~ .~LY IS cy~ 'f beginning to revive from two own members -has scored both in lhe curved corridors ol ,.. ,., • 1 years of torpor and defeat. some quiet victories rtcenUy and Common Market headquarters Thl! nw~ nation bloc -bulfel· bas adopted a mo~ modest VLS· here and at the summit meeting .JI wtotN lhi.s week or the bloc's oine na· . Then ln April, former Common Uoo.s. Market vice president Robert O ver June Marjolin submitted a report that DlNMAIK ~f mEBE ALSO is a new willing· called the community less united T IR\1'AIN ness to take progress one step at than in 1972: It said the nine a time. Grand desiens for a should concentrate on small pro- "European union" are being left jects and ro,gel about uruon for tothemselves. the mom4tnl. This report, July 1-10 Period Auto Sales Up 5% Those grand designs peaked al pes.sirnisUc as it was, cleared the the Paris summit meeting in 1972 air. EUROPEAN COMMON MARKET whep Common Market leaders Then in June, Britain voted set out a detailed timetable Cor overwhelmingly to stay in the lull "Europeaounion"byl980. cpmm unily. The Common It's been all downhill since.• Market learned that somebody DETROIT (UPI) -The slumping U.S. auto industry, fueled by a stong Ford Motor Co. performance in the first 10 days of Ju. Jy. countered a normal montbJy downturn with reports tha t showed a 5 percent gain over early June. Monetary upsets, the oil crisis still loved it. - But car sales still were nearly 17 percent below the July 1·10 pen od of last year and 32 percent down from record levels of 1973 before the Arab oil embargo began. and the recession battered lhe Common Market lrom outside and shattered its embryonic economic and monetary union - the ground from which political unity was lo grow. IT WM THE best month-opening period for the industry since l3st October when the 1975 models were introduced but the lowest July 1 10 period since 1971. Britain, with its own well- kriown troubles, joined France in stifling progress from the inside. Industry executives said the jump over June, instead of a normal 8 percent drop. showed a continuation of the moderate sales recove ry th al began in late spring. Ford sale s, with new Pinto, Mustang ll and Bobcat MPG (miles per gallon) models accounting for 31 percent of total sales, were up just under 1 percent from last year and gained 26 percent over June. Secretary of State Henry A. Ki ssin ger openly complained that the Common Market could never make up its nine minds. In· creasingly, member slates set· tied pro bl e m s between themselves, bypassing the Genera l Motors was up 2 percent from June but down 6.4 per· cenl from last year: Chrysler, which began a new rebate pro· gram July 1, fell 9.2 percent from June and 8.7 percent from last ·year: and American Motors was up 9 percent from June but down 8 percent from a year ago. Brussels machinery. THE 1980 TARGET for "un· ion" became a joke. Morale hil its nadir s ince the Common Market's founding in 1958. One of its vice presidents confided he wanted to quit but could not "leave a sinking s hip." "THE AUTO industry is moving into the second half or 1975 with excellent prospects for increasing sales,'' said Bennett E . Bidwell. Ford sales vice president. "The economic climate is improving, and in the past three months the industry experienced a one-mill.ion unit increase in annu.alJzed selling rate." The "sinking ship" is more buoyant now. Another encouraging figure was the sales r esults of trucks and commercial vehicles by the "Big Three" auto companies which were able to top year-ago levels by 4 percent, something their cars have not done since last September. The turnaround began in February with a treaty with 46 former colonies in Africa, the Caribbean and the Pacific. This treaty. which attracted little at· tention then, is seen now as a model for the West's relations with the third world. For Europe,. it was a win after two winless years. Commercial vehicle sales were up 4 percent over a year ago with Chrysler up 8 percent to a new July 1·10 record; Ford jumped near ly 7 percent and GM 1 percent. Truck and com- mer'cial vehicle sales, however, still trail the 1974 sales pace by 20 percent compared with car sales that so far this year are lagging 17 percent behind 1974. Call 642-5678. Put a tew words lo work for ou. r--~----1 I LOA~S I Actor Offers Acreage For Washington Port •• $25,000·$400.000 I PORT ANG EL ES, S.15YUU Was h. (AP ) -Actor I se..~ Grid & Auoc. I John Wayne of Newport Orange County Ot11ce Beach, has offered to I -·~ "-s.;.. 11s I g i v e 2 3 a c r e s o f ,....._..._c.uu1 praised al $335,000, and consists of 1,100 feet of waterfront at the enclosed harbor, just east of Sequim Bay State Park. coosiderable environ· mental opposition in past years. Bak.er said he hoped environmentalists would find the Sequim Bay proposal . more ac· ceptable. I 752-6550 I waterfront property at Mr. Scott Sequim Bay to the Port I Mo.._.y of Port Angeles, but only NEWSOM BAKE R. a · " if the land is d eveloped as port commissioner, said "WE DON'T HAVE I UF1 .. S11aAMCa.•~""'·,..0·-apublicmarina. negotiations with Wayne the problem with the MUTVALOfl'fw•o-• The property is ap~ have been going on for Dungeness Spit in this lllil - - - -----~'------------.some time. The land is proposal -plus there ~--------------------1 handled by Bay Land would be a lot less land Partner s hips of Los fl.ll," Baker said. "It's Angeles. our feeling that there are ' 1 Order Yours NOW f -~ c· .. ·1 1000 • • • .-\\ ':Y, {;f;~ ~ Beautiful ~~ ..-___: Stick-on Labels v---Y~ •PERSONALIZED •sTYUSH •EASY TO USE •ORDER FOR YOURSELF OR A FRIEND St4APE ANO SIZE Of LA BEL ~·• John Doe U:J Maoft S treet Aft'rlOWft, Aft'ral e le UJ4 S La b eta Do No t Hne A ,.riftted Border. Styliih Voguo lyp• on fine quolily whife 911rnrnecl p•per, r-------------Fiii r" thl• co~. clip •nd mtll with $1.50to: Piiot Prlntln9 Label DI.-., Post Offk• lox 1 S60 Cfft• M.w, C•lifornl• 91626 .. ••re t• we ,_ ~1., c• • I ---1111•11?;48&. I I _____ ,.-' "We've been trying to much fewer problems locate a boat marina in environmentally." the Sequi m -Dungeness Wayne, an occasional area for a good many visitor to Sequim in his years now and think 200·foot yacht, Wild we've come up with an Goose. also owns 150 offer that's very much in acres of upland property the public interest," near the proposed Baker said. "We're look· marina s ite. Port oC- ing at S50 or so moorage ficials acknowledge that s pots, plus a boat· the marina would launching ramp. We'll be "enhance Wayne's hold· following the complete ings to some extent." permit process as well as Construction costs preparing 'an environ· have been estimated at m ental-impact stale-$1 million lo $2 million, ment on the property, if with the possibility of wepursuetbedeal." federal assis tance Tb e prope rty i s through the Army Corps several miles southeast of Engineers. Baker said of Dungeness Spit, where development of the pro- s i mi I a r marina pro-ject would take from posals have generated .three to five years. Pilotless Range Conserves Fuel A new gas -range with an ignition system that eliminates pilot lights and reduces range gas consumption by approx· imately 30 percent bas been introduced in Hunt· ington Beach. Tony Tovatt, owner of Tovatts. 401 Main St. said the ranges have generated exce ptional national consumer in· terest because or gas conservation quality ancJ lower cost of operation. Nationwide, the Caloric ranges have the potential to reduce natural and LP gas con- sumption by approx- imately 135-billion cubic feet a year, the amount of gas that pilot lights on some 40,100,000 gas ranges now use, accord· i n g to Tova ll. The estimated total cost oC gas used by pilot lights is more than $200 million. The pilotless \gnitioo gas range was developed by Caloric after more than eight years ol re- searc b. It uses a spark ignition to light the top burners and a silicon ignitor to Ii ght. the oven/broiler. California Beer Sales Show Hike Special &. die l>a"-1 PUot . SAN FR.ANCISco -Despite a de9rnted ec:ooomy, beer tales ill Calllomlta d.urtna tbe nrat six months or 1975 were up slighUy from the ume pace a year ago. Georae w. Osoeke. vice preslde.nt and West.em District dlrector ot the United Stat.es Brewers M · aoclaUcm, uid Callfomiam consumed 7.4 mUllon bant-la ln 1975 compared with 7 .3 milllon barrels a yearafo. Re wamed lhat the lndust.ry 1s faclnl 1ep1a· Uon ln Sacramento wblcb would lncreue t.be tax on bf::e~· ,, TllEN GREECE asked to ·become a member. Not only sur· vival but growth seemed possi· ble. China officially recognized the Common Market -something Moscow refused to do -because it saw the comm unity as a Euro· pean count erweight to Soviet power. France rejoined the Common Market. "snake" this month, 18 months after dropping out. The ''snake'"is a European currency bloc with tightly linked exchange rates -a possible forerunner to a single European currency. UPl....,,.fNIJ EUROPEAN COMMON MARKET DOING BETTER Nlne-natJon Bloc FeeU119 New Economic OptJmtam Fina try. most forecasters believe the recession will end soon. European nations have sul · fered throughout the slump but they have not collapsed. Nor have t hey trie d to survive through beggar.thy-ne ighbor competition, which they <lid in pre-Common Markel days. Can Recycle Program Grows Consumers in Orange County have turned in a record 48 million aluminum beverage.cans for re· cycling under the Coors "cash· for.cans" program operated by The Rayell Company of Tustin. that r eprese nts 7,580,256 aluminum cans . During the same period las t year, collections amounted to 56,879 pounds or 1,365,096 cans A new s urvey on prospects for future unity is in the works. Meantime, the summiteers here concentrated on energy, raw materials and the economy --, all short-term problems that will de· termine the future more than a dozen grand designs. J . Ray Lowell, president of RayelJ, said local collection totaled 315,844 pounds Cor the first 51h months of this year. Al an average 24 cans per pound, The RayelJ Company has paid $47.376 to consumers for the shiny metal in can form. For the same period a year ago, $5,688 was paid. · · O ver The Couuter NASO LiStiftCJS Thes. Quotalloru B<lnk\ tn 1~',',~ 1~~ EEqut nS&~ 91/, 9"-Key Dal• ,., 3•,.~o Frr U w 1•' rm Oun 11•. 12'• w.umn I supplied by lhe Ne. 8'Ndv F • ~ ,.,. tll.t ... 23"'1 24't• K"YH Fb 1H• 141 • t Coal tl I• rwtn Oos 7'' • '3' • W.e<len tlofwl Ass.o<l•llon o Br-n Iv 3''> • Eice<u In 8"9 8•11 Keys1 tnl 21 29>,. IT'Onl &\o • • T vm•llr 199• 1 2~~\. ~11111 wtM Se<urlloe\ Dealers, llu<k~ H• HI Extracp 12 13 KMS Ind •'• •\o Pabst Br )1'• 37•• UB F1nac ,. ·~Ing Me bKlS •11<1 ofrer Buckey 11' • 11~• Felr L.ne Sli SI Kn-VI 13'/• 14'/• P•ccar 2& 71 Uni Capt 1'• )' • W\lul Pl Qu04f:O by over-lhe· Burnp SI 1~ 110 Fariorl El ll'4 u • KnuOS Cp I \, '" Pe e Gem 19 71µ, Union Spl 1• U '• Ws KyC.s c.ovnter deeters Butler M 22\• ll Farm Br 11~ 11' KOC)tr Pr 1•\• IS'-i Poe Lum 59', •1~1 Un T Bnc 20 21•.1 WI.Inv Cl 14.. IV• 91 I 10 JI. IV• I\. •' • ... " 4\t U', 1S',J ~·. s1•. lih IHe' 20' 71 14>. 1SV. Nitti Olher •s ot C.tl Mc.rw 12~· 13\~ F¥m Ci< 6l~> "4~. l(fuege< 91, / 10\• Patktt 0 23', 2' UnAn Th IS 16 .,._.Ur F<I clOMI CEenern CllWI Sv 2S.V. 1'~ Fi"9f111 2l\ H~ L..tcl" s 1 JO~, 31\.a Paul Rev n~. 13', us Svoar SA S6 W•ll•ml I time.) Tiie QUOle· (Am ''°" Fst 8os1n 2:2:W. 23 L..tnc:nt q\, ·~ Pytu Cas 20 20~. us Trk L 13'' •• Wit~ H J lions do nol Incl ''° 19S 1st TaFin 10.,. 10 Lanc.e 24~. 75,,, P9y N Sv 20• 21 Univ Fos 11•, 18 Winos Str = "'!!""f0tr.~{s~ ~T!\'1 ~t: ~!~: ~Vni~ tt~ ~' t!~n ~~ ~~"~ n., ~nfn~ :~~ n~~ ~:::c·o~ 1r• I~~ ~rit PU xi:,~ 1::~ 5'on; and 00 no Ct~ 1'1• 1\.1 ForHt OI 16'"' 17 L..twter C 12;i.; IJ'I, Pt1 H&H IH• 131,, V.,. Sll<k ,... ''"' Wh< PLI 11 11"" repf'e~nl .ctu•t CAJer Bk 10'4 I~ Fr..-El J~ I LAIY 8oy w • 14~ ,,.lrolle 11'·· ., V1<tor1 St 19>.. 20' , Wood Lth 22~ 23• • h'inS.Clions. CftM1g RI 3\, 4"1 Fr•v Mg 101• 11 U~t Pl I~ 9 Plnllrtn ~ '"'' VI-I Sc 6 It>.. IM>rl<I !>v 4"4 S• • INOUSTlllALS Cen VIP!> 10~ 1n. F<iend le 1•11> 2SV. Lit ()Imp ''"' •'• on HBd .)I';. J\\, Vol si-l h n. Wtlght w • .. •• AND UTtLITI ES CFS Cn11 IS~ 16\4 Frot FdE 91. 'H· Liml<I Sir 11• • 11v. °"'' w Sl t ·~ W•r EBlt 11'. I 1.1· Y•lfo Ftt JS 3H· TueS<lay Olmc> P\ •l\ 4>, Fullolr H 12 ... 111 .. Lin< lklst 9n 10 ll1 N<p lO~ )1 Wash NG 10•. II~ Zions Ulh 22\. ll'n July IS, 191S Olenl Co 10 IOY, V.te LrJ 8 8\f> Lo<lita 1s11> 1• et ~n u•,, I•"· OTC 10 u 0 ., .......... u. N.me G4\ N.~1 AdVnu A Ad Mluo Mvnt Cp Alu AIX Alu Bal Allco Inc Altc;in F'tor Ailed Bnc Allied Tel Am ...,,,,, Am Eapr Am Flnct Am Flelll Am Furn Am Gree Amini Gr ~-;,rtr Am Telev ...,.. Weta A~kg Anheusr Ac>exca Ardtl Myf Arvl<la AUO Cota All~ Ll All Slffl At.-d Ocs Belrd Ato 8elrd Wr S.ktf Br S.k« Fe S.ldWn L S.lly Mii Btem Rll Barne! Fl Bu.sell F Bayless · 8elo.1n C9 8en11y Ls Beu L.eb Bibb Co g:~13 s:;,~ BlkHI Pw BBlo<k Og BlueO. S BMA Cp BOii EvnJ Ballem• Boolll Np Btenco I Bid A 01em Cp 21''1 2.2"'1 V.W. Tr 6V• 1 t.one SC•r I\• '1\lo Pred Mt 101.'t 1l>'1 m P ts.,,,u....-s•,, •'to Chi Br Ir "'h 91 ~lco Cp 12''> 1l UH\41" Fb Progres 7n I '• OCll . . .••• Volume BldASked O.... II 12'. OU'b SK Gn Aulm 13'11 14 119 114 P!>N Cir 9'1't 9h r Eirprtsse 152,500 40'h 41 .-r, 2'/a 2 120 113 Gn AutoP 2~ 26'\'• t,..oews Co ""'-42¥. Puln Cap tpn Coors 140,ICM> J3~, 34 -\• IHe ,.,, Cllut>t> Cp JSV• 3)"1. Gen Bind 17'' 1n> MOermi 8'1• 'lh • 3-1' • 7 lit Oorclle'>ltt Gas 121,800 12 12•;,. • 1 l 'h IO'h OI Ft Olk 11 11~ G Energy 14 ... IS'11 Mt<I Gas 12~ ni.. kr Ch 14 75 Pltnn Olh Gas 10'9, 100 12•1, 12., -\• 3'..,_ SS Otz So~ ''" 7•• Gen Rein Ma j Riiy 1 ... 1"-en Q 17'1> 13•,, ined Ins 81,700 12'• 17~ • ~. • 1' 191n O ltns UI 7'1\, 301; 16' 173 Ma llckt 4 V. ,. Raycm Ken•one Fas l>8 100 17 17•,, I '• 1:\-. CJlr UIA 7''\w JCI'/, c.nt stlale 11Va 12 Merine c 21 H"" 27t 233 BankArne•ica .s,800 44'• 4S'I• :»·: 16V. 11 Cl•r1< Mf 76'1> 27'1: GUl!ef't A. 21V.. l•V. MArll Frt ."'° 1V• R•vmcl 9 10 tmlel Cp •0,000 n>, JJ>.•-'• 17V. 111/. Oevepti IJI/, U 'I• Ginn MS 5V1 • M.lry Ky 17 11 RllM Pee 9~ 911 Amer C.reeling S9,400 11\e 13 -1 • n v. 12~ 0.v lrlv 3•,. 3"' Godlrey U~) 15V· -Cmck 3''h J11h Rec09 EQ ' , •• Butnup&Slm~ 52,400 ,,. ,.. I _!:I~ , 41h ~ ~p 81/l 'I Gold SFd 18 1' j ""'°"'' E ''I• 9\, Regt Belo 12•1, 13'·• ..., · • ...,.... ... ti 17 18 ~hm MJJ 9-\< 10•1> McOuey 11 11\-, Reg Elec 2•'• 2H• NASO Volume today •,961,600 12•,. nm cotl\Wn 0 I l .,'l 18'.'> Guy Toi 1911• 1''111 W.tsur 21~ 711;1 Rell Univ 81 • q Advances SSl 19:\1.o 20 Co<aC LA Ila 16~ Grel Adv ,.,, I Me«m 7 2'h RePUb T K 32"" 37'11! Otctones 311 31.4 3\'o tomm Ct 16¥. 11v, Gui ln"t 7V• 1'11. Me<nm 4714 •3 Ro Ptas 9\• 101, UncMn~ 1i,:i.c 12-i.. 1l Cml stlrg 13'11 25 H•dl Ch 12\• 1J\, Menllnt l•:V• 1St/, Rex P Pr 81/· • Total 2499 59•,. "°'"' Cwl NtG~ "'"' 1111> Ham EW 7l'I •~-Me,.,,'ll\ <k>'t. 4714 Peyn &R 16~, 11 G · d l · 18¥. 19'1• CmwTI P 2S 2H• Hamll Br 180,'> 19V. Neyer Fr 17v1 18 Rivel Ml 731,1 24''• allfl'Tll an ,,()llt!TS 11'1• 11 ... (plr Aulo 1011• 10:V, Harper R 8~1 9'lo Mld'TeK C 1oi, .. 11 v, Roed Ea 4' •H GAi HERS IS'll 16Y• Cp1,.,,IS I~~ 9'1• Havt•m 10 101h Miller HS I a:v. Ro~ Ois 1'2\~ 131,, t Baker Brottv' 3~. < .... UP 1011< llV• Conn Fct 13'11. 14'1• Hawth Fl Illa 9 Mllltpor 571,) 5q11> Rollins 8 70''• 71'. 7 Pralll<enr 16 131,, + 70, Up / 70 22 conn ~ d 43'1> Htnred F 191/1 70\/o N'llS.ht A 40'1> o v1 Rue~• Ph 9• • 10• . 3 Strallo•d oil lt 2•. , '• UP iv 1. l6'h 37 Cm P•Pf' '1 42 Huc•I C 11\f. 19 MIM Feb 7\'o IVo Ru" Slov 1''11 111 • 4 ta BeelPkr wt 1H . + 70, UP 1'. ,..,. 15\1. Cor<lh qi .,.,, SI•·~ Higbe Co ll\IJ , • .,., Mogul Cl) 22 23 Sclleru 17\• 13~. s Fltx,le<!I 28 , •.•• 1\o Up 18 . Hlo 2 C.ouslns 3 JV> Hl"'S EL 30 l2 MDl"ea In 29 31 Scholl In 17\• 13-1-. 6 AmEaport Ind I \t, 1,. Up 11· 2 6Vt 6Vl CTos. Co 13,.. U V1 ~r 14'\lo 1S\4 tlo«t Se 19~ 20~ Scott Inn I\, p , I BloO Eng1ntg 1"-; •. Up 111 U V) isv. Curt Nott 1• 1'~ ~t Cp «IV. •111• Mof'en 8' 4 4-\lo Sc.ottsl G "" g , 1 Rewtttnc 40g a• + "·• Up 11.2 g:~ a:, ~rt"' ~I 20>r.l 2131~ ::t'°"f 3112,~ ~3VlV. Ml>nltll 24V. U"1 r9-H '2 U'~ q Ptochemca' In 11,+ ~. Up 16.7 ,, , 12~ o:u. IOI> :,v. "., H=, ~ 9 6i~ 11~ =-~ ~ :~v. u~ / ~~i a~ m: :~ ~i:~~~r;·~ ir · : :~: ~: :n ~ •• 0.ytn Ml 2611> 21V> lyster C 16~ 16~ Moear Cl •V. 4~ ,,, 2llt) 24•~ 2 1n11A1um1n :20 10'. , 1•, Up 11 • Sh • Oecls 0. Ylt .-1MS tntnl 9 t V'J Ms ~It,. 11 11"' n Up JSh 36'• 13 MOckm ~re 13'1\o+ 10,1 Up 1i• Jt , • , g:~ 1~: 3~ ~~ ::: ::, 1;~ 20"' =:,;~ ,~v.\1v. 1r· 1:"" :rn~~~~vc F~~ ~ •• : !; 8: n:i J:t;·:~.,., g-~~·cJ, ~~ ~~ :=·~b :: :~::like..~ 1;_.. tt~ ~;~; ~"' lt ~ ... ~o~5 1~ 1~!:; l"'° ~: ll:s 8'> 'I Qi.,n Hd S S lntf"C En '"' 10'h N9t Llllh lh 4\. 10' / 11'• • \.OSERS 11 • 12h 1l oVll C""' 3'4 • lntmt G6 11h 12 HllN'll sq JI\, 3'11. II'·• Ill, I Magic ~ricer >, -'• Olf 14 i 21 21~ DIKu\el 11~ 12 Int Alvm 10V.. '1\lo NCHB Cp 11~ 12\, 11'·• 19 2 Ke~dy Conn 1>. -•, Ott 17.S 9 'I~ Dottr c;.11 I~• '"' In BkW A 3\. 4'11 NHOllm S"' Sh 171 • 18 3 Col'T'tl\ll•r Nlw 71, ->• Olf 11 S S\~ 6V. OofwllCIS 70 m . lnlerSll IV. I'll Newll Co 710 1\li IS 1Sl, 4 ArabSlll Otvel 2' -1, Oii 'I 1 16V• 17 Oofc.fl Gs 12 12V• lnlrst QI o, SV. NJ ,.._1 G 13 13'1.. 11\ 19'• 5 GfllEnr~ .?Ob u >,-1~ Olf 8.S o •;, ., Dow Jons lllh ,,..., I• So Ulll 14\1) 2S Nicolet In u IS 9\, I I 6 lootT'li OSb s -'I Otf 8 l In ''"' Oovte OB 11¥. 1211. b 13''> 14V• Nielsen A 704'. 21:n 22'. 23 1 Wst•n 1git•1 7>, -'• Olf a·J S'" 6"• Oucamn 11~ 12VI n Em 5\• 6'" Nielsen B 2\1/t 21h 11 4. 121, 8 (mptrvi$1\ Cp 9>,. 1, Otf J 9 4S'n 41'1 Dunkin 0 It 6'111 !VIS EF SO sew, Noroslr )O'• 30\• 22'' 24 9 Ao-Fut 12b 6 • 1 Otf J 1 3' )7'1 Earth Sci •~ ''"' yn M 16 16~ North Kg 24 24\<o S\1 S ~ 10 Ormon1 Drug 6\• -~, Oii 7:, 171/1 13 Easlmt 11 11\:i Kelstl' !>I .av, •4 Nws NtG ~ t yrc S..., 15'1• lb'M 11 Isl Bancorp Nev 11. 1. Off 7 1 ,.,. 10 Econ ub 31>;t ll\Co ~lv•r c 4'14> .,.. Noaell Cp ,. 10'• ally Crp 3'. 3n 12 1SIMpllRI IOb 3•. • • Off J I 1Ht lH EDS NUC 1':V. 2~ ~men c 11•1. 11.V. 0c-Dr «>¥. 4\h Tempe. 3'1• lS'1• 13 HON Inds '.78<1 9\. •• Off 7'1 22V1 23 El Puo 10'1> 10~ Ke,,.,. Tk '"' 1 Oc-' E1t 9 9-V. Teytci< W 11' • II\• 14 Pl'ullps c.eo 91,1 -;i., Off 7' 1 11'11! 11 El H"'el 10h 11~1Cally ~,. 11V. 12'!4 Olfsh I.cl• 16 16!/l Tennent 27'1> 29~1 IS Com!rllare Inc n . •;., Oii 49 2W> 2SV. Emenn 9 t lh lterrc>ef ISV. 1''h OQllvy liA 1fl4 20\1'> Tlffeny I 'll I~ 16 Rocke\ RKll a•, -\• Oft 4 1 2l V. 24:\j, Energy c •:V. sv. Keufl ~s 13\1> W h OQteb Nr Sl SI Towle Ml 81/• '"' " LAlyttU 07b 1.i.. h Off 6 7 MUTUAL FUNDS \ ' , .. . { • • Staying Dome Americans Slow Down on Travel .., By MILTON MOSkOWJTZ . There hove been many recent signs that economic tienda are running against this COWllry -devaJualli>n of the dollar. foreign takeovers of U.S. fums, littJ e or no growth m national output -but one of the most telltale indicators showed up last month Americans are no longer the globetrotters they once were For the ftrst time since 1961, the Com- merce Department re- ported, there was a year-to-year dechne m the num be r of Ame n caos tra ve ling abn>ad. AS AN ECONOMIC INDICATOR, FOREIGN travel is highly reliable When times are good and Jeans jmgle with coins. people l ake trips overseas When times are bad, they stay home More and more Amencans are staying home In 1974. some 6 5 .rmlhon Amencans traveled overseas That was down 6 percent from the 6 9 million who went m 1973 The major factor m this decline was the raging inflation that eroded the purchasing power of the dollar Amen cans needed more money to feed, house and clothe themselves And if they did decide to venture overseas, they needed much more money than previously to pay for the'r airline tickets, hotel rooms and restaurant meals abroad. HOW MUCH MORE IS CLEAR FROM the figures on expenditures by Amencans who did manage .to go over- seas in 1974 Even though their ranks dwindled by 400,000, they spent a record $9 2 billion, up 8 percent from the amount spent m 1973 When times are bad, travelers tend lo stick to points c:loser to home In 1974, the number of Amencans traveling to Western Europe fell 16 percent to 3 l million And 24 per- cent of all these travelers were on business tnps -a sharp Jump from lbe proportion 10 1973 On the other band, travel lo the Canbbean area re- ma.LDed strong Nearly one out of every three Americans who went abroad last year traveled to the Canbbeatand they spent $700 m1lhon, up 20 percent Nol too long ago, m the years followmg World W ll. European nations vied to attract Amencan tounsts --'and their dollars One advantage of foreign travel m those days Yi3S the ab1bty to buy locally produced goods at cheap pnces. Amencan tourists used to return to these s hores laden. IT'S A SYMBOL OF WHAT~ happened in the world that this situation is now bemg reversed Foreign tounsts are coming to this country to take advantage of cheap pnces You may not consider them cheap but that's because you're not paui.in Japanese yen or German marks Foreign travel to the U S was formetlY a tnckle Last year it reached 3 7 rrulhon and these vis itors spent $4 8 billion here -up $715 rrulhon from the amount spent m 1973 Leading the invasion were the Europeans .They ac- counted for 1 5 million of the foreign tounsts But the big spenders were the J apanese Even though the number of Japanese travelers totaled less than half of the European tounsts. they spent $2 5 billion or more than one-half of the amount spent by all the VlSitors lo this country. That's yen power and it gives you some idea of how the forces are moving m the world econqmy The balance of power is shining -away from us MARKET HIGHLJ GHTS INDEXES NYSE Index ASE Index Dow-Jones Ind S&PSOOStocks Gai11••rs 1u1d l .. 01wrs Nsw Yortc IU Pl I -The followlno list Ulows tri. stocks that have 99lntd most Mid lost the mosl based on pe((tnl of ctwinoe on Ille New York Stock ~c:r.angr Nt't and percenlaoe chanqes are the .itterence bet-n T~ prevtO\A closJng prlc.e •nd the G~~;{:~15 closing price 1 Ouplaf'I Cp J~ + ~~ Up 24 0 2 Uld Brands II~• t ""• Up 22 1 3 F•rah Mfg B"r• + H• Up te 6 <4 Ollnkrafl I 24~1' + 3'11.1 Up 18 2 .s GenHosl '40 11~ + IV> Up IS 2 ~ ~8~~v11~~ 2~~ ! 3~ ~~ U g t RelG pf 2 llO 12Vo + 1•11 Up U I 9 Katy 1nc1ust s•111 + h Up t3 9 10 Utd Brnd pt • 7'111 + >o Up 13.S 11 C C I Corp 7' •.; 'A Up 13 3 11 A J lndustrs J•/• + ~ Up 13 O 11 Genesco Inc SV'> + 'Ill Up 12 8 ,. Phllllps Ind S'h • 1'o Up 12 I 51 24. 96 86 88181 95 61 up up up up 0 25 0 72 5.95 0.42 J\•••r )'ork J :> ltl1t1d A~iiL·e 1S MOST ACTIVE STOCKS NEW YORK CU Pl I -Tiie IS «tlve stoclr.S traded on \lie New Stoel< Eac~ T~sday L.ev•lt Furn Ramada Inns ~~~~Air Boise Cs<de ~arle Gel Gulf Oil Otcdnll Pet Btanlfl Intl ~nQl'!se El G9f'll Mtrs ~LH~ Pr Eaton Corp Texa<o Sales 326,100 317 700 281 600 217,400 231 400 226 soo 210 700 1'19 300 197 IOO ,,, 400 190 700 1911 JOO 18' 700 171 300 1H 'IOO OOM t>4 sin 3911t J~ 271/o 18'1'1 2l~· 221111 l '!c '"" ~ 26'\>o 311> 271/a 211'/o most York +°'t + ... -~. -"• + w. + '• + ~ .... '11 + \lo + 'Ill + 1111 + .... -1\/o + Hv -.,. U Ramada 12 S•ll + "' Up 12 I 16 Vl<IOl'C 2Sll S'>!i r \\ Up 12 S 1----------------17 WltlbUI Cp lilo + Vt Up 12 S U Uld G<Nrty 12 + 1'1• Up 11 • "'CNA FlnacJ 1v... \, Up II s 20 Techn<;OIOI' l :VO t ~. Up I 1 3 1 qRtadllO Co 2 c..rt w •1 40 3 ,,_,.Am Air ~ GU.rd Mtge s Beker lf'I 21 6 (.oolt Un 24e 1 RapdAm SO t Q Readg 2Pf • unlvWll • to 10 Plckw<k Int 11 ~~ Et 12 PeM Centr ,3 Slngerpf 311> i• IJ'lsllco C 70 1.S LMI lnvtttr '16 Olvrst M!Qt 17 lntercon Ov 11 <:omwOll • ,, SlnQllf'Co ., s v..-1an 20 LOSE AS '1 -v. Oft 8V1-IVi Off 3~-" Off 21'>-'Iii Ofl 23111-2~. Ofl 3~ -¥. Ofl n.-'l't Ofl ,~ -v. Off 141/•-IV• Off 17 -IV. Off 10V•-~ Off 1¥·-"" Off 3S1h -2V1 Off 911• 'Ill Ofl l'llt-'II Ofi 2 -~oOfl l~h' t: g:: IS\1-h Off IS'lll-~• Off Ne11~ 't'" rl.: Sales ¥ ol 11111•• B~UPI AMElCSALES • '60000 , 141,190 ~1 tSO,ooQ 'WOGO 11 merif.o" 10 !tfost A f"ti~e NEW YORK CUPll -The 10 a ctive stocks traded on tht Aftlerlc.M Stock Exchallgr T~sday STP Corp • O\amp Horne N<lt Pat Dev Grt Lit Chm DamJOn Oil Onan Corp Frloltronlu AtOls Corp warner CpfC Cons 011 Git Sales 167,.500 116 'IOO .. soo 6$.200 63 600 63,100 61 400 S9900 S7,600 SI XIO ~lnrk~i Trt-11d NYS& MARKET TltENO Aclvancn Declines UnchllnQld Total T~J~ $» 562 »• 4\0 ,. 18'1 AME.le MARKET TRENO Mvanus OKllnn Vnchafl9td Total (PrellmlMry <Wlltl T--y~t • 470 "' 2114 2tll 301 317 , 10.1 IOJI " ,. ,Ju 1075 OAllYPILOT • T u"sday's Clo~ing Prices NEW YORK STOCK EXCHANGE NEW YO~I( IU Pl l FollOwl~ •rt prlc•t> on ""' ~::, Vor Stocc~ exchllnQC •I SalH Net ~~h~Sl~IO~ CllQ AA>C>ottL 1 '4 11 IOS el • ~ AbllOllLbwl 1 Al ACF1nc1 t to t 3l .. 11> va AcmtClv SO s e 91, A<lmDr ~b 10 113 4Vo • ~. AdExpr •7b 34 to~. ~ •1e AcMnis Mhll US S1 o Adelrsgrph II lll ai,. I.. Ad\'lnv 20I> .o 9 Aetnalf 1 Ol U J<IO ,,ft • .,, MlnaLf pt 1 ' 41 Ahtruof\ 20 I 40 10ft AllMl'I lncp t 14 A~ ~ • • AlfbFfllt ~ 10 tt$ n , n Air Prd )OQ 19 Jtl 1S Alr<Oln< .til 1 103 21'1<.-•to A J lndi.iitr~ 1 tS7 l ' • t n Akzona I 20 38 )V Is~. • ~ AlaP pt I 21 i110 11~, AlllSka lf'llll U 139 16~• 1-~ Albn'flnt Ml I> 8 11 v, AlbertoC SI> U u. '"-+ I• Albertsn 60 10 21s 20 • • Aleen Al 80 7 133 26' • + ~. Alco Std ~ s 91 12~. + "' Alcon Lb 14 26 32 26 \lo Alex•n 161> 9 20ll ,,,, AllsnMt 48b 11 n. .. 'A AlleoCp 20I> 10 20 9~'. V. AllOLUd I 80 3 SIS 2>~• + •,. AllO Ludclf 3 l lS,._ 1-.,-.11119 Pw 1.52 9 11l 171/t t '/\ AllenGrp '40 13 89 I 1'11 AllldOl180 e 2Ao 38 t 1 AlklMan S4 9 16 14'1•-Vo AllledProd I S 30 IA•'tt; Vo AllltdSt 1 SO 9 383 40 , t •1, Alia Supmkt 49 H. Aiiis Cha 26 7 414 171, Allr!lf\IA '6 1 I H. • Alph.a Pl n S 13 11•• AIC04 I 34 10 1 IS AM• t ~li~7~ 1~ 2n ~V,; AMAXpl S• • 2 129V, + Amoec 60 1 S3 u in-""1cord 26 1 u t s , Amer6C I 20 s 4 11v, t A~rpt 2 60 3 321/• ~ Am Hes 30Q s 1162 22'1'1 + 1~. A Hss pl 31/J 711 SSl/1 + 2•1.t ""'AlrFI '4 U 83 21 Am Airlines 1049 ~"" 1. Am Bak .a ~ IA\. , "" ABrand 2 68 B 174 .,, , , v. AmBrut 80 8 1319 llh + .\oo AmBldo 34 e 19 11'111 -t 'l<o A Can 2 206 6 1•0 30•1, • A can p1 1>.t. 1 22~ • Ameen Mto 14 2"'-t "' A Olaln 1 20 6 11 1avo + v. Ar(ICyan 1111 I 333 28 + ~ .. AmOstl Uh b6 ta a v. ~~1~_:i1v~~ u ~: 2~~;. :~: AO\it pf &Aa 3 U :\11 + '1• A.mElcPw 2 9 S07 201• AFam1ly 24 9 A'I 11.._-~~ A FlnSys 20 2• 2 s•,. A Gr\B 1 IAb 38 23'1• '• A~n5c I 32 19 IH•; '1• A Gn Ins 61! 6 20 13 + •I• A Gn pf I 80 23 12V.. AmH01>1 10 o '18 IS •1, ~ Hom • 26 1831 3811> 111 A Home pf 2 l n.s 2:... AmHosp JO 2S 1 '1 J3 l1. 1,, Am I nvestm 33 A 1• + v. A Medici 12 9 168 6~ • A MA!<h~orp 1 812 7 -•1. Am Molors 1>32 7' • ~. AmNG 2 SAg 7 120 J.411, f •, Am Sealing 17 11 8V. t ~t AmShopB 71< 2S 32 11~. , Am s1n0 80 1 441 16~ + ~. AmSldpf H. e SH. t ' o AmSt~ril 28 12 90 8' • + 'to Am Stores 8 23 28\11 AmT & T 3 .a 10 1314 S0'1• + ~, AmT&Tpl 4 160 S4~+ '• ATTpfA 3'.l>C I ,...,,,, __ ,.,, ~-W!~r3 l! S ~ 4f ;+ Vo Awtr pl I 0 l1S10 1s~. Ameron tn t S 9 201 • ~. AmesSt IOb 6 s H• + v. Amel ell In t 8 69 19'• + +. AMF In 1 24 15 162 21 Amlac tnc I 3 98 f7\, +I'• ~~~"' !~ ~ 2~ ~~: :· ~: Ampex Cp 8 I 10'1 1 Y• • 'to A.mrep Corp 41 J+.,. ~. Amstar 2 40 2 8-4 JO),,. Amstr pf 68 s n. Arnst.cl 3 60 7 •2 69 Amtel In 32 • es 1~ • Anacnd• 60 s 2d 18\. + AnehH~ 1 20 9 1e 22' • + AnderClay I 1 9 32tt + Angelica 12 10 S9 e + Ansul Co 41 • 7• 17111+ ApacheC SO 9 108 141; Apc:o OH 41 8 1 to2 21'• + 1 n Ai>eco Corp 128 3,.. APL Cp I 20 1 35 24:\oo + v, APLCorp w1 15 12 '+ l~ ~Cl Q6 2 19'11<+ ~ oed Mg 27 J"" l/1 A A Sv 1 46 IS S el >-1 .VutaN 311 8 31 11 + "• Archl'O 2Sig 17 109 33Ve + V• Arcetc Enti> .. •9 l'n + 1,/4 Ar Isl.ff Inc 39 3-1<. + •1• Arlz PS 1 311 7 340 lol<lo t •10 Ark Bst.llb 21 4~•+ I/• ArU.a G 1 10 1J9 28V> • Vo Arlen RttOv J38 H•+ "" Armacs.J Cp 11 S\• + V• Armco 1 60'9 u 2 29 1. Arm pl 2 10 2 28Vo-1V• Armurpl '""• T.lO 4111> Arms Ck 80 24 80 261'. t Vo Armst Rubb 12 17 13"'-,,, AroCofptn 1 6 s 13• • ANln Indus 28 111 1'11. +-~, ASA ltd 80 106 •6 -~ As.arc.o 1'11 s 2l3 18!it-V. ASlllnOll l 'n S J69 24"8+ ~. AshlOpf 2 40 I 41' 2+1'1• As~yG I AO 1? 147 30~> + i,,. Atlllooe 40 l 94 91 • All<o M 1Sb 32 • AtlCtyEI 11n 1 28 18~ + Vo AtlRlchl '1~> 14 400 109~ • 1~ ARch pf 3~ ZIO 48 + 1 AtRc pf 2 80 S8 7J + 1'1• All Reh prl 3 S 185 + 3'Ji Atlas Corp 383 • ATO Inc: 20 6 222 e¥. + lll Aut oat tOb JS 131 64te • l'h Automt Inds 6 379 S'li.t • ~ Avco Corp 226 Hr + '• Av«> Cp wts \4 1~ A'tCOCorll pl 71 22' 2 + \ /lweryPr 30 26 10S 29V. \, Avis lncorp II 21 8~• • ~­A.metlnc .AO s 363 9 Avnet pt 2'1> I 4S ~, Avon Pr t 48 2S 463 A9V• • 1 AlltcOG 20 19 A4' 2JY• + I 'to -88-Bab&Wll 80 9 10 2sv. BIKheG 20b 14 307 1 8a~er In 20 II 114 II + v. BakerOll 41 23 e2 SA Vo+ "t Baldwin 60 6 12 II BallC«p 60 9 IS 19Y• t •1• BallGas I 96 1 182 21 BanC..I 1 34 8 1 llV• ~. Ban<!.tQ Inc 2S 1~9 36'1• • Banoor Pn 61 •"• • ~~~~f~ , ~ m:: ~: Bank Va 88 6 39 13"-• •• Bank Trust 3 4 103 J9V• ,. V> BatbOtl I 60 72 30~• + •10 IHrd CR 20 16 61 16\\. + ~1 Baslctnc oo 3 10 111/1 + v. ilates Mf 20 3 H 2S~-~ BauschL llO 17 26S 311/, '• Baxter L 19 3S 197 46~· "'e &aySly 1 80 1 t S 16h Ye BayukCQ 24 I H• Burl~ 32 10 18 22:\-v " Beal Fds n 13 489 22~-V. BeaFd pf 4 1 112~;-2111 Beckmn 50 14 134 361/• I '"' BectonO '40 21 188 37 BeechAr 70 6 135 14'1•-"• Beker In 28 4 10... 23'(> 1119 BetcoPI 30b • 173 71 + ', Belden 110 s 13 lo • '• BeldOH 309 11 47 8'1• • I/ Bell Hw1 84 9 156 21V. Vil Bemis co 19 • 11 hlll V. Benell• I 80 9 32e If • I Benell• f.' 3 2S 66 + 21 • Ben Cp 1S S 131 t•Vo+ \lo BenC pH 30 3 SO + V> BenCl»I 4•n 12SO 49 -1 Ben Sid Mtg 31 3Vo + ''• eenoeB l1b • 1•1 2-w • Berkey PhO 130 <41/• + V• Best Pr0cle1 14 278 10 +-~ 8elhSteel 2a 4 263 311"'-+ If• Big llnd 48 22 2S4 }9~-~' Bleck&D <40211106 29'h + \• 81114rJM 32 29 II SV2 811~110 S J 1011+ II• BIOtl! R '40 tO 2 IS~-~. 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Or Aclet I 2010 21 11Vt -Vo Slltllrpl 1 3S 2 16'• l<r ..., • .,.? .,.. LmMg 1 ASb S 121 IJ~, * 1 Otis El 2 210 6 144 311/• + "" StlerWil 2 lO 47 ... +. • 'll W•ll Bus SS 9 • 22:\lt IJl<ltwn 30b 5 •6 10 • V• Outb<IM 1 2023 34 1~t 11. Slerr•Pc 92 21 10"' WaliMur 60 s 26 IOVt-~ Lont S Ind I e 681 18~ • 1 • OulltlCO TS 6 11 tS\oo-'Al SlgnalCo 90 1 2M 18~; ~ WalMtr1 122S z700 lS~ Lont Spl .~, 1 H OvrShpn a S 307 U V>°' ft SlgnalCopl I I 11 W""9 l (Mb 11 SJ I'°"+ lit t...oneSG I 60 8 107 28' ,-~ e>verTm 10 9 •t 20 + \. SlgnodeCp I ll 18 AO'lt ~ II Ward Foods 31 37 10~+ "' L.on911Lt I' 1 7 107 15-'19 OwenCF • 24 120 0 1/o + lh Som Pren 12 11 121 9:\1, W•rN«> IO 6 '1 10~+ -., LIL pl N j3 dO 112 -'It Owenlll 11' 9 9S O l/• + '• SlmnsC 841112 288 20''H 'I• WarnCm SO t 790 22 + V,, LIL ptJ . 2 1300 71 -'h 0-11 04 H ll 8 1S • 1.\4 SlmpP•I 40 2S 18' IS WeCme>t ••• I ,. • I LIL plE A JS 120 0 't-1 Oxtordln e4 S 11 14 -\'> S1119t/CO 40 541 IS • '• W•C<r4>f IV. 120 ""'°+3~~ LOnoOrg 80 28 1e 61 •• v, -P ,._ Slngerpr 3112 32 lS .-2~1 W8f't...am 92 19 lOl •~•-Y. Loral Corp '1 90 tJ~• Vt AilcAlft 120 14 13'• SkaQOCO 60 12 233 24'~ ~I~ Wemr5 12010 30 JO~+ ~ L.al.olnd I 12 I? 713 J'l4-+ I• Pa<Gal 1 .. 7 .,. 21~. ~. Skil Corpn ·~ • ,.. .. ,,.. Wasl\G$ t • s 20 19"'-'4 t...aPacllc 20 II S99 I~ .. If• PiK LIO I 68 S ,. 17'l!o .. ~· SkyltnCp ,4 SJ 1107 ~ t "' WuhNll 80 S U 11\'>-\!\ LouGn I 8A II II 2l -t V'I PAC Petri 80 10 41 731/o ..,. 5m<thA0 60 SO 1' 10 ~ W1Sh W I $2 9 30 19\jk • LOwSttln 40 S4 IWt+ VII PacPwr 110 10 152 It~-\Ill Smilhlnl 2• IS 138 35\'t wawJ!•nJMntgt t12l 11~ 3111~+1,_. LTV Corp 2 161 1~ Ila Pc T&T 1 20 9 JO IA~+ h Smltllkllne 2 ll 2' S2'1l ••~ Ge -,.. LTV CpA lk ' 19~. ""' Pa<lfTln IO s s • .,. Smltns T AS 8 S2 11 ~ .,., worie G 40 20 l s .. Ill LTV Cp pl S I IA 4-t'lo-I P•lneW tOb S 259 n , Smucker 80 8 S IA!/•-'It \lllHlher 40 I> .,_+ "' LubnolC;i n 81 s.i~-1 RalnepfllO 13 1J;i..+ 111 Sola Bas 60 6 111 llYt+ ~ Wtbb0ttc111l 17 S -~ LuckyS 12 IJS 14V.+ Y. Palm Bh 2S 5 (IO S'I•-•1i Sonesl• Intl 2S l'h+ Vt MllM(L 60 • IO 9 + V> LudlowC 1 10 S6 9'h Pamlda 0)1) 1 t 12•7 t~ SonyCp <Mb 3S 929 12'1/i + V. WtlsMlll tO t • 2 19~-"-L.uknSll I 60 S 33 2s.\lo-V. P•n Am Alt 2749 3~.-~ SOoLln 3 ISb 1 IS 31VH 1 WelbUI Cp II tV-+ ~ Lykes'!' HO I 121 IS PlnNndlt 2 1 .O 32h-•,. S CMEI 1 Al 9 127 1S>4-'A Wells Fg .. I 22 lt»-14 L'fkt pt 2~ 86 29\la ~fl ~ • tt IO'/.o -\/I SoJ Ind I Sii 1 3 141'.--'141 M lli F ,IOll 24 7ei, •• Lyncf'!Sy 10 12 12000 4'" Plfl)lls .. 1 u u SouthclOwn 3 n 9,,_ V.. wucTr 1 IO 1 • 21 + 14 --M M -PerltH!I I 12 1 12 n -... Sdwn pf I IO II 20\lo--"" WPlel'l>I 41/l 110 jO • MacAnF 110 9 10 814 PerkrPn 32 11 116 18~ + '• SotU Bk IO 10 31 ISV•-~ WstPI Arp 2 I Jlt ·~· \11 ~Oontd .. 62 3¥. Pesc~ inc: 11 tu ,,,,,. • 1v. SoeutPS 7k • 26 ' • ''" W.tnAr 40a • 231 •'-• MK Jlte 30 9 24 •:1r PeyLH5 :lS 9 1S ISV1+ \• ~~!~ l ~ : n~ ~~~ ~ ~.~llCeo'...4.!: I~ .it m:.: ~ 1Mcml11 2.S 1 4t 4 •,,. PltabGI 04«> 13 14 21 \11 soi'n'GE l 18 1 IS ~ "' ~~ .. §A14!! • l~ !!"'• ~:::'. ce,n~~JO ~ s~tr ~ SON Res I u ' 11 SS ,,. =~·~·~ : ~ 1~~ ~ MAd d JOb • 11S 1011>.. """"O~Jlt t• 6 ua •11.. + ~ SNETtl J .. 10 10 32 • "" WllnlOfl I 40 S4 ,.. 1•-lot+ ~ Mad u•r~ 13 S'"'+ ~ Fruit 9 3 SNETI n·~ 11700 UV•-'• WHtll El 91 43 1111 1~ + ft =~:o.J2 1:l ~~ • PltnnPL uo 7 tt 1~ • v. t;PA!l1 n; l& ~~ ~.,.,= ;~ =~~bl :: J 4l ~ • " M•R•ryColtS 2S 22l'w-'A ~'P'rJl~ !~~I~ ·,~' SoRailpl SO • 4 +Vo Mymn IO U 2ft 41'"+ IA ~In In 1 •.\4-V. p Pl. II( I 60 130 .,._, SoR11ll pl 3 I 56 wtllfr.,... 40 U JJ• U"' • :.:. M•'1f>""' ~ s 1 1,.... + v. .. Pl. pf I 40 i.UO 12\lt. v. SoUnG$ I 60 t w JO\t. "' ~·rs 1 OjC) I :19 U \!i-.,. Men Hn 1 n. 7 6S 38 p Pl. pt 4 «> 1110 .. ,,.. • '°" =~!~ J: 1: ?~ ':~: : ~SI Of s mo 47~' MAPCO 70 10 322 ·~ .... p Pl. Pl uo 1310 47..., • ' SWFMpt 1\lt Is 11¥>+ " =:=-=~ >:t ~--; ~~ Me,.lllOf'I M S 43 11 P9flWlt I • I 79 U Vt t "' SowslPS 90 11 91 10'.!tlo Maf Oil 1to10 , .. S2 .. 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SC>rl'IQMI ,)j 2 ,. ~ • WIMDll 1 "IJ .. ,..,._ y, Marqt JOI> 6 ~ 10* t ~ e nc '~ t 14 1S 1ok SQINfO I 10 14 la 30 • 14 Wlnn011 CIO II •914-"-Matlott 1..,11 21 lA6 u-i. t Squibb "'II 1'2 ?,I~•'"" WI~ 180 Jt't IA :.~,: rnt ~ ~: ~ ,_ 1~~ :· ~ H~-.. ~:l= i ,i ~ ..c· 11' ~::: iU ,, z: ~v.~ ~ Nlert "' 1.# 6 II:> lM't'i' ~ ~-~51':~:-a ~ .,, 5tel•rr, J $C1 .. -~ ~·£) pf 71\6 aoo .. + v. ="er-:~·; l:tu '7t~:1:z ~,,. , ~:: mr!'.,., ~:~.~~i~ , ~· t ~:~~ 9 n :~~· ~ Mate.oc.> 31 u f>• ..._," ..... ,.r1 ~ b : n1-.. "" led 0111~, , m .. 1" WlkO c, " • tS ,.~. " Mat0nti. $4107 10 ~ ir i,. '°'+I.lo $tQlf01t1,1'11 • -•t1tWI 0~13 il ~ ,,, Messey'' 1 4 ~u 1f + -11 o t ' ~ "'• t StdPMr I ., • " • ~ Ylolbmtco S6 10 11" t "' MsCpln ICM> ti t VJ (.t 1 I ' 14.. " SUI PrMI .AO S ~ ~-~ w.oo.c;p 41 t ~ \ MJ 1n1v ~, S1 I -• " E•llf 4 l B Id Ptlld i • • tllll •·• 'MIOIWfl i 20 9 150 "'* t 'Ii M Mtlv .Sib ' JI mt.. \Ii Ellll : 0 ---" :::rt., .. ,J ~ ~ WllOI 11n to 10 2t • '"' MetsuE .Jlbtl 11 11\\ .. 't... °''es . a1 ~. ~ \Ill'• • : 10 L•.,.. WWMI Alrw' 20; +" ~~~~11 'U :~~ l: ,..,,,t;ro,',!:.,' ~·It; , t •' •" :t,'fJ.',~~! J "-.~ ~VSJW tt 9 6l i \4...... Pnl~ Cl pf 7 • ~-t Mil ~ ff 1 IA •• • Wyff CArtl • IA- :tlli11 = ~~ 1it =· ~ ~1 I :I ;a"'°. r..i ll~1.,. """'rt:ll • •il ~ ... -~.'°* c.-:-;tvt-,o~-~ M C A In< I 11 104 llyt-'-Phi W> I t n~-• fr-'f ll \~ l ~ • .. y,,.rt Ill( J!lll t i4 \t + \Iii ~~~v l: • ~~ 1J:-~ l'l'o•ur.MD 1• •t• • 1.,.. ttrloi-o 10 1• * 11'-+1~ ,. '~A i '; ~ -= """"' ""' .... a,,,_. r li:" •: 1::· • ,._, : ·,o 11' l~· 14 le~ • '! ·~. M<Olrm •I ll SA"'r--t , ... ll t» St\\ =I '2 " " .• ~ tat. .0 s ...... \*1 Mc.n• CO SI ... 16""+ * ~ 1 a 114 +-"° *'"V I 10 S 10 It.A+ "° ~~.»\ \',• ft~f\4i=+a -~. Mc D .411 • 211 'II l • ~11 11 -114 01'1 M J 1121 Ii • \ii """ ,.. =~ 111: ll ~~ ~:~ ~ 0 4 16 l'14 ~W I ~ 11 '1 n +,.. r . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. . --.. .-~....:D;;.:~:.:l:.:Y~Pt....:.l;;,;O:.T.;._ ______ ..:..:.:Wednesday, July 18, 197$ TV DAILY LOG Wednesday Evening JULY 16 1:00110 Qg Q)~Q)Mtn Q)OllroA1Clll8 ) ..... 0 00 hll•lll• QWMWWWnt G)Crtn en Q)hl s.~.,. G M111f Ttma (tjl Tlit I nJ4•u fll)DtdrlcC......, m hc*y ' f rlttlds l :lO J9) Men Critflrt SllM G) TMI Clrt (J~il)IS,, m r 11 Clll tll'Mll <l! OC> 0t1ltf's a.a fl) Trl'ffl R• CE Callepill( CM r111tl al Lrttlt llucels 7':00 II 0 0 l1 m CE "••• LV lrt11sWe 0 lowlillt '" ~ D a! (I) Q'I m PRUlllH fit r • .-..... ifrlan lte1tll. Jolln. Mills. 811ry Morse ind liU1 '•111111 sl11 in tlus 6 f"lt m1ni·sa1les ~Std on a Paul GalliClo stoiy. re.1th, Mills 1nd Morse portray membtrs ol • sma~ JIOllP ol lormer World Wu II unotrcround h&hters who reunite 25 yem artlf the war and co h ck un · deftlovnd to lialtl •rain -this hme lilllUt I cnmJ!W plot that UtmJ to 111~• M n "'°" serious 1mplbtlons. Eaeh mtmber ol the 11oup reverts to his wartimt pseudonym -$ucll H foi, the Ti&lf or Ille lt0911d - rnul1tn1 ill thfir colltclM ntek· name, "The Zoo Gane." Min Palmer appun as the owner ol a ule on th• rrelldl ~ whte11 SHVtt is tht -11111 place for the c•n1. @ TM.,.....Wts • l19l hit: (lltr) "T1lt l'ic•• T\at TIM ...... (com) '62 -OlarflOll Hulon, Elsa Mut1nen~ Harry Guar. dtllO. Q) Tiie loW Oets Ell) TN tltlu: Ulldt S.11 C.11 YM Sp11t A Di11t? ':lO O NNS fl) Nocflts dt T rtpiu Ill EIJYtsHia l•) Mtd $41114 10:00 II @ (]) .... MHll'dball" _(R) I&) Trutll tr CM~1t1Cfl Mann11 acts as a tool for • cr1m1- -WMr, My lillc? 'nal's revenae lo ~ve the ltfe ol -badly woundtd Lt. Makom when G) I lne Urey the two Ire taken hostace by I m The Fii crook, ex1pin1 durin& a court hetr· fl) LI Mujtf ,,,,... ina. Oti Tiit 111 Vllley 0 mm Nnn w lHllllt Wtlt W1tll • • • Cl) ~ITJ MaM• c~ l)I a.ullll O I~ CUI (]) al a.ntu "This ~Ori•• Ain't My Bae·• (R) Sent lo a posh ThrH Slaoan C10mmun11y to hnd a m1uin2 wife 7:l0 II ltrnt Crtt11t'1 Last of Ille W14 who rs rrdt and buutrlul, Barella Q llla111t Thal fuN learns 11111 lht &irdens art tht Giiiy e lo'ff Aaltflct11 ,.,.. lhin1 that smell sweet in the sub· , U ~ SWtt~" urbs, and yurns for htS re1ulu (t 1 J1, Tt Tttl tllt Ttutll turf-lht cilfHumplrttls. 0 Mlllio1 S .... It: (C) (Zllt) 1 Tilt fll ~!Ml of dlt Rlvtf'' (wu) '52 -m Cft Srll•rt Jamn Stewart, Arthur ll&nntdy. 'l C Acn Julie Adams. Rock Hud'°n ~ rtt1 J I ,rice h llicllt Ell) Mill-LI Ord!cs111 11 OrcllH· Hetu'' Htfta In Hall i.!} lof1 Mak A Dul Tlit c..t "Tllc f une"I ~rne" lO-.lO f> Clr1ler T,. Alllls1rotq lltdia Tl,alits O> Nnn ,., eta tllt tewt11 ~ Nfrt4 ~ Celdwlty .... ., n:i Ntclln r.,,lils LitUt bacals Uil &.'00 11 ll1l m 00 r.., ON• , 11:00 11 rn o al m ED...., Orn 111n°"Y R1ndan and Cllaro 0 (()di QJ 00 Mtn 1utlt. 0 lest of Grwcht o t:z1 Cil Q"i m Uttlc Htase CtJ sit ..._, 911 tbe 1'11irit "lht CtKUS Man" O Tiie LllCy st.ow (R) Red Bulloll$ r¥tsts H • one I Mission· lr11fllll$lble man tro elln1 circus and faith hul· Med S.;,.. tr, wb0$t "miracle mtd1C1nt" alm<nl T't) [~) l'eler Canw kllls Mrs. Oltton. 7'The Ulltoudll~ 0 lttlw11: (C) (21tr) "Tiie Stcrtt ( 'l~) YlmfJ 11 Su Life ti Walttr Mitty" (com) '41 -\J!J Dinny Kaye, Vrr11ni1 Mayo, Ann 11:15 al Cint111a 34 Rutherford. (!)Wild W".W West 11:30 0 IH'l m (j) CIS Utt "'"~: 0 (1!; (j)) m ED l'Ut's .,, (C} 'ii. CNlltdiclR" (dra) ·72 - Muu "Kont"J Day" (RI Chllon, Ch1rits Ournirir. R011nic Cox. Zohra M11111 1114 l1.cy face hrlarlOlls con l1mpert sequences lliltn tlley pltdc• lo tel. 8 (lj (j) Iii m Jtlt.., tan .. only the trvtll few one whole d17. Th IMMJ-rs I Dt*t's Qeict m Mmt: -s.., ..... Cd11> ·u-w..;., lllfW f!Wq Randclplt Scott, Grace ltk[loa,ld. D """'-~ 0 (~ Cl))@W"• htd MJ1-~ IMrie: (C) (111r) "Ocae'J 11" tery "Oulh Cruise" (R} (com) '60 -frut Si111t11, Oun 0 ,...: "ti's A lit C..ltry'" Martin, S.1111111 ()ay,s Jr. (dra) '52 -~ry Coooer, Janet I fttfiq C... Leich. Ethel BafTYlllOfe, Gene Kelly, CU.,_,.. Wmtllc V1n .lollllSOll. ,,,_. lMICsllt ,,..,... 6) n. T\ia Ur• 1:Jo o 169l > rn m AK ._.._ l?:OO o c~ day Mtwit: (C) (!O) "Tiit Sa ~· Q) hie: "T1lt Ii( Strttt" (dra) W' (R) (dr1) '74 -Connie Sttv· '42 -Henry ronda, lucallt Ball, ens, Shelley Winten, Jack Carter, Sim ltvene. W1lh1m C,nUe, Don Ml.llllJ, James Q) Ctt Stnart Olson, Ne11tm1111 Persotl, Madlyn • Rhue, Wilham Smith, lrt Rlon Selller. 12:l0 0 Tnrcbt Z•te A starlet rockets 1o lame u the l:OO 8 ~ TttHITW ution's number one pinup 1irl, dis· · (I) (I) Q100 ltN'S cowrlnr the thrMI ol wccess •nd the loneliness it brrnrs. 1:45 II Mmt: "In tht Frericlt Style" G) Mtf'f Crilfirl Slltw (d11) '63 -Jean Stberg, Stanley Eil! Mu l•illls, M111 Desl107' Baker. 9:00 II@(}') (jJ Cl1ltltll "1he Man 2:00 m All-ltirbt Shtw: "A Yan• in tht Who Couldn't Forcet" (R) C1n0011 11.A.f." "They im bJ lfirltr btcomu imolved w1ll1 an atlempttd usassi111tt011 and the search for •1 l:JO II MM: (C) -ntalldtf Owtr Ari- war c11m1n1I accused of World War ZOlll" (wes) '56 -Skip Home.er, II c.oncent11tron ump 1troett1es. · Ctorae MKiud)'. Thursday DAYTIME MOVIES '9:00 0 "E~ (rom) •49 - 01v1d Niw11, Tertn W11clll, hr1cf Cranrer. 6111 PerreMi. ( • 1 "tlpl.I• llted" .Jtd'll '35 - £rrol rlynn. Otrv11 de Hn~land, B1sil Ralllbooe. U:OO G) "tm_,. (dra) '!IS -Arthur Kennedy, W~h1111 Belld11. Luther Adler, Geoe Enru. 1:00 0 "flit lut Chrtpest"' (1dv) '35- Cary Grant, Cl1ude R"ns, Gertrude M1c~el. ti49 (C) "Tiit Clacbtlaw" (dra) '65 -C11111ts Or1>.e, Geo11e Sanders, Dennis Price. 3:00 !9J (C) "W°lll(S tf Fwt" (dri) '67- Sutanne Pltshelte, James ruentrno. Lloyd Holan. tu 00 (C) "''"" Frrt" l•d't) ·~s­Grace Ketty, Stnmt Granier, P1ul Doucln . John Cr~11. J: 30 3) (C) "ll4y ill tlle Dar*" (mus) ·44 -Ginaer llocers, Ray Milland. O <C> "CeM 11tirh11tr S.111" Cond. {com) '64 -Jack Lemmon. Romy Sdlneidet, Dorothy Provine, Mike Connors. 4:00 0 "SMdlody Up Thtrt lites Mt" (dra) '56 -Paul lfewm1n, Pret Angeli, S,1 Mmeo. .. KOC~ Television (50) Wl:DNHDAY l :H llo..Yttl Wllll MUtll"e (C) OtOC.El l :a Ellctrtc ~·CCI ICTWI 4:• S.wme Slt'Mt ICl I :• Mister 11 ... n H•l1Miw.._. Kl I :• VllleA ...... ICl IPBSI 6:• ~yakel 0.9P••llY CCI "Sol.r Enern •I'd the E\rtll's Anoons." 6:a ..ist ... J' et Art CCI "Ard,.•C • Gr"IU -t:tt'\ISc•nt" 7:H Y•e• Wlllt M1•tll11t ICl IKOCE I 7:H Or•,.I• C•1111t., P:elr CCI IKOCE > I :• Ml-Mu TIINtN fCl IPBSI Vpstel~. Oownstelr~ -Epl50de X: "'W1141t Tiie Footmen S.w" t :• Cl ...... Ill tM Ad ICI f PBSI "A111n ~<Kinnon end .Jerernleh Bwl>em" Conway Boosts Career Carol Burnett Slww to Break His Spell? New Holmes Film Slated LOS ANGEi.ES (AP> By BOB THOMAS LOS ANGELES (AP) -Now that he has ~en annoWJced as a regular member of "The Carol Burnett Show" cast, Tim Conway may have lo change his persona Li zed license plate. -British actor Nicol he and the late J oe F1ynn r an a funny airplane . "We Williamson will portray found out people don't like runny airplanes, eitber.'' 'legen dar y detect ive Length of run : 13 weeks Sherlock Holmes and Sir lt reads · '13 W KS" -testimony to the.length of the moon-faced funnyman's television series. Ex· cept that one of them lasted only one performance· -11 minute!t in Conway's native city of Cleveland. More about that later. NEXT, "THE TIM Conway Comedy House" - "it wasn't." Again, 13 weeks. "But the record came with George Schlatler 's offshoot of 'Laugh-In.' called 'Tum-on.' ABC pulled it after one performance, and in Clevel and they yanked the plug after 11 minutes on the air, that's how.offended they were. Conway will jom Harvey Korman and Vicki Lawrence in weekly SUPPOrt of the multitalented Burnett during her ninth season on CBS Saturday night. Conway has been a frequent visitor to the show and a semi-regular last season. He is the first to be added to the permanent cast since the show began. "George saved money on the premiere party for the cast and crew. 'Turn-on' appeared her e three hours after it did in New York, by which lime ABC had already canceled it. So the premiere party was also the going.away party." CX>NWAY .. CAROL IS THE ONLY star I would go on as a regular with," said Conway. "Harvey is of· fended by the term 'second banana,' but with Carol you can't be anything else, she's that great. "So now H arvey and 1 are fl.Iced with a whole year of breaking each other up. ll's hard f(>r us to look at each other without busting out laughing. . "That has been true ever since we were dis· cussing a pe rsonal problem of his in his dressing room one day. "He was dressed in a chi cken costume and l was outfitted as the Avon Lady, but we were both very serious about the conversation. Suddenly we realized that he was speaking through the beak of a chicken, and 1 was wearing a dress. "WE HAVEN'T BEEN able to take each other serious ly since. "Now Carol is beginning to break up, too. That's all right. 1 think the audience likes it, as long as it seems genuine.·· About those series. The first was "Rango," a comedy western. "We discover ed the folks in the West don't like comedy westerns.•' he said. ''Nor do the folks !n the E ast the North a nd the South, and even those m the · middle don't care much for them." Elapsed air time: 13 weeks. Next came "The Tim Conway Show" in which MESA 1884 Newr.ort Costa w.tc1 s• 1 ss; NOWIN IT'S NOWTHRU TUESDAY IARIRA STREISAND .. ·a .... JACI( MICHOlSOM JAMES CJ.AM "FUMMY LADY'" CPGI -rMIFORTU..,- *'Sl&POID W1vts• 11J 11TOMMY11 "EARTHQUAKE .. ~'JUGGERHAUT"' IPGl ""791 VOT A&l OF SMAD'" -WUTWOILD• IPGt -.nuaM OF 1Hl PINK PAMTHH• tPGJ ~~~ll)lil.;.l,;,I.~ ""SWPORT TOUI LOCAL StBIW' "'THE 7tllYOYAGE OF SIHIAD• .... "'OMCl IS MOT IENOUGH'" IU ,_a SAMCTIOH'" llU "DOCTOR ZHIVAGO" -rH1 LAST DETAIL .. .,.. MTSTBIOUS ISUMDOf CAPTAIN t-..o• WIMHEIOF 6.ACADEMY AW.AIDS FOUNTAIN VALLEY• llllUOM HUii\! Al IUINl..111 .... tlJ9 ·1~ OneofGUr DlllGAUIS lsMlsslng l:OS.l:.20 5;1'-7:50 -Plus - "CINDEREUA" FOUNTAIN VALL.EV it IWOOK HUii\! Al I OINC.lll 8J9-l~00 All-TIME GREATI ,. , i THE aASSIC • !Qj nocroR ZHl"GO GENERAL CINEMA CORPORATION COME TO THE FAIR WITH CHANNEL 50 See our exciting LIVE color TV speciaJ of . the Orange County Fair. TONIGHT at 7:30 ---( NEWPORT 673-8350 COME EARLY -STROLL NEW LIDO VILLAGE TH •SUCCESSFUL •EVENTFUL MONTH .._ P11C1 tt.M -Nts.-.-.1 Ul.lllSM •IL & SUN. 11°1-00 IL TON JOHN e TMI WHO .. 4-TaAat STl:HO TOMMY ll'OI MONTEREY POP lfGI \ Laurence Oliver will play his arch nemesis, Moriarty, in the film version of ·'The Seven· Per·CenlSolution. '' AJso a ppearing in lhc Universal feature will ht> ~~Arkin as Freud. ,.. \,.r.i, -- & .. MIXED co Mr AMY"" Rfl TO OUI CUSTO.-.: SOL CUP OF ... PAMYMH LIMOMAm 'J'lu• lt'frif.11ing rrwlion. pid ure {rQm llw terrifyi11g .\'o. I bexl sdltr. .JAWS . ., ·,' ', ·' -~ °i ," ~~' f I .?. • ••. :v ~1;\yd~ '. ·-.'l\ • \,• .. : :: .. -· . \ \ •• ~ •• 1. A ¥f'UI ... w Ot ""°" 1 , ...... t'o,•lll."1_:'Cl'0- WOODY DIANE . AljljEN KEATON "WVE _. and DEATH" en B argain Matinees $1. 50 T it 2_:30 Senior C1ti1t'ns . I. 50 at all ttmes SOUTH COAST PLAZA THEATRES SAN OIECO FWY. AT BRISTOL ~1111 w.....,._,,, .. f:JI w..-.- l:J .. J:J .. lc)t 7:J .. t:Jt So COAST "SMILE .. IPGI • " , ... ,,...., , .. ,_ 1:15-7:1 .. ,_ PLAZA H Sff.Jm "PRISONER Of 2nd AVE.." 6:25-t:JO S.t/-J:lM:ZS-t:Z .. "WHATS UP, TIGER LILY" 7:SS-IO:SO S .. /S.. Z·5·7:U ·IO:H .. DEATH WISH" .,.., 1:45 WfS-4:454:45 • ~oo Gang' Twice Double Headache B1 JAY SRARBUIT NEW YORK (AP) -Connoisseurs Cl( really bad TV s hows have a double· bwreled lreat tonight at 9 on NBC. <lwmel 4. Treat No. 1 is •'The Zoo Gena .. for an hour. Treat No. 2 is a Hcond "Zoo Gang" hour. The show1 are in a six-part mini- series b.sed OD PauJ Gallico's book about a )lroup of former resistance fll,bters who batU~d N~zis in France iD World War II and reunited y~ars . Jattt to fight peac~time evil. Prominent vlctl~s are involved in these British-made, filmed·in-France epics .. They a re America's Brian Kelib and England's John Mills, Lili Palmer and Barry Morse. Why are they called "The Zoo Gang?" lT lS B•CAUSE of their wartime code names -.. The Fox," "The Tieer," •'The Leopard" and "The Elephant." One suspects after doing two episodes they, code-named the aeries •'1'be Turkey." But I digress: 1be first opus establishes that a Berles of art burglaries is afoot in the aeaside· resort of Nice, where Miss Palmer runs a cafe and Mills a jewelry shop. So far, so good. Then comes "The Wolf." · He's a former "Zoo Gang" member who during the w ar betrayed the gang for Gestapo money. It led to their torture and imprisonment and tl)e de- ath of Miss Palmer's husband before a German firing squad. He's since vanis hed and assumed a new name. But he's spotted by Mill& when he enters the jewelry shop to ·'bave a ring fi xed. Mills t.ells Miss Palmer. who vows immediate yengeance. : .' ' BUT THE WOLF, Mills r emmas !)er, "belongs to the four or us ... And Ustinov 'Last Man' LOS ANGELES CAP) -P eter Ustinov as the last person alive in (TV REVIEW) Keith, now a New York businessman, and Morse, a grimy Canadian car mechanic, are s ummoned by tele- gram for a Fateful ReWlion. We soon learn the Wolf is behind the ~ ~efts. tba~ the gang decides to get him Jailed for that (Miss Palmer has fir:st option on 1thooting him if tbe plan fails) and that ber only son. a nice police lieutenani, will get involved in all this. There ens u es mucn skulkin g, trickery and dialogue ranging from "I'm going to c ry when I see them" (Mias Palmer before the reunion> to Keith's upon-capturing-the-villian zingie: "I hope you have the good tuck to die there (in prison). Because if you don't , we'll be waiting for you when you come out.'• The whole thing is ineptitude writ large by Regina ld Rose, who de- veloped the series from the book. THE SECOND episede, concerning murder, extortion and jewel tbefl.s, is far more satisfying, at least for bad· show devotees. It features such great lines as: "What is going on here? 1· cannot go to lbe john without tripping over a cop" and "you have a law against laundry?'' My favontes are, "You everlasting louse" ~nd, "a good police officer learns to pick up .a scent even when there isn't one,'' NBC plans to air two more episodes on J uJy 23, followed by two more on Aug. 6. It originally planned O!'\IY one "Zoo Gang" a week for six weeks. Speaking for bad-show buffs, I protest the new schedule. We need much more time to digest each episode beJore throwing up. ENTERTAINMENT 3 Movies For New Director LOS ANGELES (AP) -Another Broadway choreographe r is t ap · ping his way into film directing. . M icb a eJ B e n n ett, whose credits include "Follies," "Company," "Promises, Promises," "Coco." "Seesaw" and the current "A Chon.as Llne" -which he also directed -bas signed with Universal Studios to produce and direct three movies during the next five years. One of the projects will be an=rig· l -i\Jo!!s2Jl picture m cal bY"Ben· nett, " · · ps." He will set up bis own company. Bennett will be follow- ing in the dancesteps of such cboreographers- turned-filmmakers as Bob F osse "Cabaret." ''Lenny," ··sweet Chari· ty'' and Herb Ross "Fun- n y Lady," "Play It Again Sam,'' "Goodbye Mr. Chips". Washington, D.C.? That's the role he will play in MG M's "Logan's Run." In the film Ustinov will occupy the U.S. Senate chambers with 500 cats. ~~gan's Run" lakes place in the 23rd Century. S T R E I S A N .D & C A A N IPGJ Oo-•U l O.MO ·. ~·· i.. ... Wlll.I "SUPER SESSION'' llPl.OSIYl,~1 ... A HOT lllATllOAIDS nHAL~ 1: ."WET n1LD" · 1 .,,. ·.~ ..... ~ COWU119"0WS-114S e 9:4' WUIAM HOLDEN FAYE DUNAWAY CALL FOR CO-HITS AND SHOWTIMES r ~ ltd.P 1a..1;1J1 THE SfEPf-ORD WIVES · Wednesday, Juiy 18, 1975 I OAIL 'Y PILOT "' Summer Shows Score Sloivly .. NEW YORK (AP)-Two newsummer variety series, ABC's "Keep on Truckin" and NBC's .. Gladys Knight and tbe Pips," fared poorly ln their naUonaJ debuts last week, according to A.C. Nielsen Co. ratings. ''Keep on Trucltln" rolled into the r atings cellar, while NBC's summer entry was ranked 42nd ABC); "All in the Family (CBS>: "Ro<'kford Jt'1lef'" <NBC); .. 'Rhoda" (CBs); .. Sanford and Sol'{" and •·Sunday Myste ry Movie" (both NBCJ ; .. Car1bc" (ABC): "Medical Center " and ''Mc>ses: Th(' Lawgive r '' (both CBS), "Harry O" (AHC) and "Kojak " <C BS). in viewer popularity in Nielsen's audience samples. t-;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;.....-•••-... ••;;;.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;::;;;;;;;;;;;,,;;;;o. __ .;;;;;;-.--, The ratings, made public Tuesday, s howed a national prefe rence for reruns. Out of the 20 highest-r ated shows last week, only one -CBS' ''Moses: The Lawgiver " -had neve r been on TV before. According to Nielsen esti mates, the 20 most watched shows last week were ''Hawaii F ive-0 " and "M·A-S -H (both CBS); '!Police Woman" <NBC); "Mary Tyler Moore," "Bob Newhart," .. Barnaby Jones" and "The J effersons" (all CBS): ''The Rookies," "Barella" and "SWAT " (all "lhe Fort\ne ... a farce of a rare order" -- . 'JACK .-.. NICHOLSON .. NOW WARREN ~~ 'PLAYl ..... G BEATTY /~.'" . . .n ..----: . , ' IHI '.llJl"I plus . . ~~Iv (PG} 11TH E STEPFORD WIVES" • • IN HARBOR SHOPPING 'CENTER • • EDWARDS HARBORc~1:"1 HARBOR BLVD. AT WILSON ST. COSTA MESA 646·0573 ~AIE .• It • -,.d.., pie(. of pktw. .tlwg •• h ...... pkhn to ........ plctwft. .. Owles~.l.A Tlmt!t ~411 •• .tfedi ...... ,,i ..., retl1tk, .. ""-ctd '7S -II .... . Mou Seyu. HY. T"""' Jacqueline Susann's bold best seller that explored all the avenues and darkest alleys of love among the intemational set. "Once Is Not Enough". '' le ..... 1alirw Su.~ ",~·~:;iw·~:;.·p;;:h..... It ~1i; Xti Enou~lf' ·· · ll:t'4il 0111111 '""'·lllf•l1.1f ht•,(,t'llo I ~irt~ ,\lr,\j,~~ Dlr~Ja....,.. l~Hu11h11e >6rfia .,...ri llmlUW..art llPtMnAl llalCia la.M• " . .,. • tH " \l...uuo •· _, .... ,,, ''"''\! \\m-..ft-tl ~-.... '--.1. I • ' .., , .. ~._~Julou•Ht..int• .... ~J~ .... ~lll l..ol• • ~1, .. t.n· -fR-i11-1_-ST=~--=1~~~ ............ -•-.. '"'-··•·-~ ~CllllMA IV ~AT ~ IOUIM COAST~ MIA $40-7444 ( I N SHORT ) SUMS it up. In thel ••• , .. .:. .. , f"\'9j.-Q111f1111 { 111111t } .. j JAMESCAAN .. t• NOfWAN JEWISON. . . ROLLERDALl. JOHN HOUSEN.AN MAJJDAC\AJ..A.5 ·JOHN OO:h · :1.0SFSGUNIJ PAMfLA 1!1 N\ f'f ·l'\MDAM lJlfNTW..\'. RALPl-l RICHM\DSON . ... ~ ; •. Will IAN\ HAN\ISON. M" .. Ai :(;11.i. PfV VIN I· • •dl ,J ... P.AJRJCKPAi MER 1-.,; .... j,,, .• •l'("• .. 11.,,,N()'\M.AN JEWISON · 1 ,,., .t • . 11ST111rnD-cJ1t Cl'......, "°'°' .,..,,, "' •" · :-. · • ·• J Umhtd .... , ..... °"' • -......... tlJ\AW,AlAlul!')IW~•,.iA;. • l_/1~ • Artnrts Thurs-Fri-Mon-Tues 7:30-10:00 WED·SAT·SUN 2:1~:4>7:30-10:00 AND 12 MIDNIGHT \ NEWPORT CINEMA FASHION ISLAND e NEWPORT CE NTER 644-0760 "JAWS IS A MOY• WHOW FfaT SHOCI: IS A DlYAU ATIMG ~Sf.. IT IS ~Tl. A..0 WOllDU~UT ClAFTlD. COM· TAlllS Cl O SI Sl9UIMCU OJ SUSl'IMSL Tift JCl>Uol u nu IS l.ITRA.U. Y ~OSIYL" ' ~ ... I . . .. U DAll.YPtlOT -~ 1'" :P1~ce?. ~~ Fl~! .. . . . . . Wtdnt!d!y. July 1!. 1975 bf Wa. F. lrowa mcl Mel c .... byTomK. Rym ; ;~· TUMILEWEEDS HEV! M Ml? VOWN ! OM,NO ! I HAVE PIV ANOTHER NAUGH1Y! MOMMY WARNfP Mf lUf WORl.P WAS FLJL.L. Of KINKIES ... FUNKY WINKERBEAM 1l::ll ME, COA~ , WHAT 00 YOO lHINK OF GIRL& A~D UTrL.E L.EAGUE BALL ? FIGMENTS DOOLEY'S WOR~D : · .. TODAY'S CBDSSIDBD PUZZLE ACROSS 52 Thetlp 1 Pulled along 56 Elucidale behind 58 Pronoun • .. . 6 Sorrowlut 60 Interior word 61 Army 1 O Cut into cubes cluailicatlOft ,, Dla~novs 62 C.talogues i 5 Sui tat law 63 Knights 16 Ch~se 64 Cervine 17 The.lier -antmal 18 Happen 65 Sibilants 20C.use10 DOWN decay 1 Ruas11n king: ~ 21 Pour f()(tll Var. 23 Trus1.11e --··: 2 U.S.A.r""'4' VaJwal>le find 3 Alb«1a n.ttive 2• Comf()(ted 4 Moray ·26 Welcomer 5 BurHu 28 l ine t>etween 6 01d Can.and somelhlllO J I u.G.A 1 Cootung • 30 Serge and Ingredient tweed 8 --rule· " 31 Of anarm Generally borle 9 Coin or JapM 32 Bizarre 10 Lower 36 Observe 11 lmbectle . :-37 Destroy 12 Cut mro . . slowly pieces 38 Kind of .,.,e 13 Arab. title: 39 Slugg11hlle$S Vat. -42 Tr'"1ty 19 lnscnbed I• '4 Aspect of " stone slab I problem 22 That g111 45 Auto p1r1' 25 Prole$Sional. -46 Movable US<'!t group: Abbr. 49 Card 26 AtltKlt¥t 50 Urgency thing 51 W1ter b0d1es lnf0<mat Yesterday's Puule Sol¥ed: : .. it It H 1 I~ IP S 1 A c s ,. !~ U I II II iC A 8 II l "u ,5 11 r AT 1111 E 8 ti( I !S A ll C A z [ 11 10 :a ,_ T I l 1 0 IF IA Ill II A , s f y ( A II 0 E s -l 1 . ( s 0 • 1110 ll l -• • nllllC I II [ 10 I" t IA II ~ •I ~ A S T 11 E l I S 1• E lllG 11 H l ~IP ,I II U I -IU IC S H IA l I II ~ I 8 u T T Ir ' fl Ill . I !'. T [ L A U fl A I~ 11 -~ H ~ " 0 U II L I T I~ T o E IE ~ ID IS ll T E H S 27 Kyle-: NFL 42 Scottish star emblem 28 Piece of 43 Object: u w sculpture ~ For what c;a1JW 29 Tet>le spreld: · 46 Pe>Qr tnforinal count..-s • 30 Ptoduoed 41 Asian CIPital AOYeis '8 Actress Miil 32 Cross- eaamine 33 Silence 34 USSRrl\'ef 35 Football players 37 Shalonest '() Chattets glibly 41 Pl.Ce 1n I 9ra¥e 49 -polo: Aquatic sport SI Nota - 53 Italian community ~ Mrs. Trumar. 56 0ne·sroom: Slllng 57 Seafood 59 Pronoun I I i . t ! r . .. PEANUTS by T °"' latiuk I LIKE CHOCOL.AIE FU06E 'ICE CREAM 100 I by D•Hale by Rodger Bradfield DID )t)<J ~ YOO COULD S~~ M16H C fRaM UP~~E? IT'S Ml( THf()RI( THAT 6EET~OVEN WOOLP HAVE ~ITIENMN ~~ IF Hf HAO SEEN MAAIJS)! JUDGE PARKER MISS PEACH MAIZ'Cl.A , YOIA ~EEM ~ MUCH HAPPlf~ AND M~E OPTIM~T'IC. THAN iHE ltE5'T OF lA-S. CAN fT ee TH.Ai LIFE: OFFf~~ 'YOLA MORE TMAN IT OFFE1li7 U~ ? NANCY DR. SMOCK GORDO WHY ARE 'WOlJ SNOOPfNG? o~,~~IEF/ IFYOU CAN'T L.EARN ;o SAY 'No' NOW, WH,AT1W. You BE L.IKe WHEN 'iOIJ GROW UP?? • KJ'l ... , ........... --- ANIMAL CRACKERS 82I MA ... 'I'M Nut._,~! ... .......... ,by Chsles M. Schub _..--~---..---~._.., ................... _.... ----., IT CAIJT 6E ~OVEO ()lE WA'< OR THE OTHER ! by Mel J f I T HIS :'/ .. STORE 1$' AI R ~ CONOJTtONEO I Hi= l<OLLS //.J. I 12J.JMP1-F:O AND J.IF'.S/ICK'lf • MOON A'SKED ME, "Yot.J1R6 NOT ~OING 10 MISS ALL ii-I' FUN iONIGHT, ,AJ<E you ? 11 ·~ • • ~J.--~-L1.4t1::~;...i:;...-------'.;:::.-- THE GIRLS DENNIS THE MENACE # OH, NO-IT. OFFEJCS M~ NO Mott~ TH.AN IT Ofnrt~ ANYON!. E~E ... ... ,,.~ J tA-ST' "J)i~1 MV OFr:E1t INCLLADE~ .4 >.f,ONEY-8AClt: cSIAAllANTEe ~ ~· " • " ,.~ ,.,./ :t I -~-!!!!!!rW!d.!!!!!IOli!ll'-'· Ju1X!<!!%;1!.!f.!· 1!Jll9!!_ __ _.EDN:!J~l l'!'.!illt.~o!T_fft~p 1 !_Vietnam Rf!fUgees , Working, Learning on· Coast . . ' •, ' -• ~ t E~lish ''''Kit ' ' . 8 .... ~ .. Re~died ,., • Survival En1Uab Kits are prov .. ·lnr lo be i'baudy tool for persons -arrlvfDg .tn Costa Mes.a or Newport Beach who do not speak .. English. The lriU contain three tape re- cordings In bolh English and a foreign language and are ~lng produced by the adult education office of th e Newport-Mesa Unified School District. . · RETIRED COLONEL Fathar Dang !lat " \ ~ O.Olly f'illlflWff -s BARIL Y ESCAPE> \llpn p,ng Phi KMnh '· .•. Si!. ' ....,..,..~ .~--........ • llyf'llet , .. ,.,.kllwtjwh. TWO VI~ ClllLDllEN MULL QUESTION AT LAl~lt'ALMAS SCHOOL '.~; Pham T-~2, HTil Anewer With Nil.n.,Dal, 1,,, Thlni.9 Ho_.-· ~fietnamesf ·Ch~~d~n·~bia~~ng· ~~ew b~age!,;&i·. oc· School 'r.HE SURVIVAL KITS are av.Ulable in Vietnamese, Man- darin Chinese, Swedish, Spanish and Japanese. Additional kits are now being prepared in French, German, ln- doqesi,an, and Manhallese. Dis- trict officials say lbey are anx- ious to increase the number and particularly need tapes in Arabic-English and Armenian- .English. Viet Busboy Recalls _Escape From Reds . I Time was when schoolchjldren, be they 6 or 16 years old, gath·ered in the old one.room schoolhouse : for their daily dose of reading and writing. A modern variation or this occurs daily at San Clemente's Las Palmas Elementary School. TIDRTY-TWO VIETNAMESE CIDLDREN or all ages each morning troop inlo a single classroom to learn the 1,-.. ,,guage of thei r new bomelanJI. The st\llllenls are refugees evacuated from Sout.Ja. Vietnam b~fore il3 fall to the Communists. They are members of refugee families ~tbg sponaored by itldividuals in the Capistrano Unilied School District. , The "English as a second language" class is conversational in approach. Students are tausht common phrases, names of colors, shapes and com-mon objects. THEY SPEND AllOtrr IO MINUTES to two .Church Rents ·~Laguna Home For Viet Kin By FREDERICK SCHOEMEIIl. Of Ill• oaur P11e1si..tt Members of a South Viet- namese family separated in the man evacuation or Saigon soon will be reunited in·Laguna Beach. under the .ss)Onsonbip of• St. Catherilte'st-B~c Q)urch. -houri each morning on basic EngU:Sh, then get the opportunity to test their new vocabulary in otfiet" summer school of(erings held later in the day. Harold Hester, director or curri-~ulum for the 0 .scbool'dlslrict, said the students are learning fast. "We've been more than a tittle surprised at how rast they've been picking up verb lenses and u.se," Hester said. - THE CLASS IS TAUGHT BY A teacher.who speaks--only English and an instructional aide wbo speaks'VietQamese nuenUy. · , " , . Hester said the district is tookfug for volunteer instructors with knowledge Of both Jwuages Who can work with small groups of studeritl: Prospective vol unteers were urged by Hester to call Las Palma! Sc hool , 492·3456. The class will continue lbroulb Aug. 1. Similar claues will be held this fall if the need exists. ''We expect it will;'' Hester said. • A printed script is provided along with the tapes, which ue recorded by a native-born speaker. · For exampt~. the Vietnamese tapes were 'produced by Ha Thi Nga Price, a Costa Mesa resident bom nea11-Saison who met her American husband while he was a civilian working there. ' MRS. PRICE CAME to the dis· trict'& adult education office last year to inquire about getting ber hi&b school diploma and wound up with botb a diplOma and work· ine Oil the new tape project. She now· attends Orange Coast College. The Japanese tapes were re- corded by Mrs. Ryu Kalalklnl, also of Costa Mesa. Mrs. Kalaikini recorded t'NO levela o[ formality, for adults and for children, which are cooimonly used in Japan. mg· MANDARIN CIDNESE ~pes'"ere:done by Richard and SyM•&n:Of Huntiqtoo Beach. .Their scripts included lessons in addresses and locaUons, q ues- ' tlons, pction words, common classroorn activities and direc· tiona, Instructions and com- . mandl, foods, money, telepbon- ing, transportation and impor· tantslgns. · · Alifohe interested in helping with ,translations of tapes may call the adult education office at 556-3300. By ANNE COOPER O' .. DMtyl't•a.... Dane Phi" Khanh left. Vletnlm cllngtn1 wltb bis barehandstotbP. landing gear of an aJrplane. Ahead or\ G~am wete:-his parents, his sister and his two younger brothers. Causht behind in Vietnam were his two elder brothers, soldiers fighting what already seem ed a loot-caUs~. HANDS REACHED from the plane, ;md Dang felt himself be· ing lifted to safety. Inside the plane, he discovered be bad miraculously. been spared injury, · altftoua:b tbe'~wind bad torn tbe' &bi rt from his back. Just two months Jater Dane. now called "John," works as a busboy at an El Toro rer;taurant.. Back home the 21 -year old youth had been a soldier, following in the fool.!!teps of Dang Bat, his father, a retired lieutenant col· ooel. The Dang family has bten sponsored by the SaddJeback District Y 's Men, the men's Club of five South Orange County YM· CA's. Until they move later tfils month to their own New World home in Laguna Hills, the Dangs are staying with tbe Burl Hobson family in El Toro. HOUSED AT THE Hobsons' 24292 Fordview home are John's parenb; his sister Dang Kim Hoa, 18, who has taken the name "'Ann"; and his two brothers, Refugees, Sponsor • Groups · Doi.._g Well . Dang Phi Hung, 17, called ''Tony", who works with John at the l'fl8taurant, and Darig Phi Van, 11, called" Peter." . Jol\n's f~ther who taucht hi gh school French in Vietnam before jo\ning the army, says that ·although present JieOOs or his family are being met, he feels no confidence in what the fu~ure may bring. "ln Vle6ram I was an army commander and worked as ;_t, translator for the Americans," he sa15. "There is no need for my skills here." DANG ALSO WORRIES lhat the real Of his family will be han· dicapped because they speak Lil· tie tngUsh. •·John and Tony may be fired because they cannot ex· press their thoughts and feelings iDEncliab,"besays. As Dang speaks his hands flut- ter in agllaUon. The family left Vielllam with three ~ suitcases among them. Although Dang says the American gove rnm ent responded with great sensitivi ty to the refugees' need ror clothing at Camp Pendleton, he says the clothes do not rit. ·;Americans arc so big!" he exclaims. THE DANGS SPENT 59days at the Marine base, a barren place to people accu5tomed to the lu sh forests of Vietnam. ''Andit was so cold," Dang says. "How could it .be warm in El Toro and cold 2S miles away at Camp Pendleton?·' "There is much here I do nol understand," Dang says. ''There is much to worry me. My tv.•o sons are stilljn Vietnam. I worry about them. But more, J worry how I will take care oC my wire and the children .')¥ho are here· with us. I must find work. I must find away." The paruh • .;i..u bu vol<d lo rent a Ramon·a Street house; stoct lt~ with furniture and household items and turn it over the Nguyen Van Nhue, his wife and their five children. MRS. NHUE AND the children left Saicon April ZS. Nhue,.a state senator, was not able toeet out of the country until May11 s. He escaped on a smaU fishing boat that later landed in the Pbilip· WASHINGTON <UPI) -A "vas' majOrity•• of the Viet· namee:e refugees have been suc- ceafpJJy ,reaetUed in the U.S. with only a few Cases where a .apoDlor. and -a refugee for one reason Or another didn't get alona, .. a eovernment official 58)/li. Escapees, said there appeared to . Ant" A • be a "'very alarming rate ol'. • I• mencan pines. He had no idea where hls fami· Jy was. Nbue wrote frlendl established in Laguna Beach five years ago -Mn. and Mrs. Rud)'Burfun- on the hope that they migbt help locate his faiDUy With the 8.$· sistance o( Geo~ge .,Plelts, ~a former Laguna Beach polioe lieutenant, and hil wile Heleia. ; r lheydid. It was no easy task, CounUess VIET COUPLE WORK AT PARK'NEWfiORT COMPLEX telephone calls were made to re--N•m Hung Ho.•ng.(lllft) and Wit~ Tfi:.nh Ding ·Elinor Green, speaking for the 1~,,e·ncy Refugee Task .•. F , said· figures from two or the four resettlement camps in ~ country &bow . there-have been,'qnJy 15 breakdowns. ' ,, - . IN 'cdNTRAST, SHE said 1 -48,$70>refugees 1ha'Ye beeli reset- tled successfully. Earlier, Dale Dehaan, sta(( director of the Senate Subcom· miltee on Refugees and breakdown'' in the· resettlement process. Spokesmen for· two of the largest of the nine voluntary agencies working tinder govern· ment contract to ai.d in resettling .the refugees also denied that there were·any major problems. "WE'VE HAD RELADVELY few problems,'' sa.ld Chuck Austin, a spokesmaa ror the Lutheran Council in the United St.ates, which bas resettled about 000 refugees. ·John E . McCarthy, national· coordinator of tbe U.S. Catholic Conference's program, which has resettled IJ,213, said there were few reports of problems fugee camps and as~iatan~e 1 • :;~::~~:.:i::t~~~~f~:. Trio ... F,ind New Home in 'NJ'wport ~ sponaonhip, said' 11.n. Nhue arid . 1 .. , her children the at the Cam}> • .J.. , ·Pendleton refugee center, await-By·IOLARY KAY~ ~ vietiaamese. Thanh admit.I she cooks rice mainly for her husband ! ing c}q[ance to ti:avel to their ot111e'O.llWl'li.tMaM· andbrother-ln -law. · new home in Lacuna Be'ach. For Na:m Hun1 Hoauc and Thanh Danc. llvin& at the luxury They both agree that Camp Pendleton food was pret~y bad, Nbue, who has been notified ot Park Newport Apartments is like a dream. · but Nam Hung bas a simple explanation for that: "All mititaly , ' his family's "1herea~, has After ibe trouma or their sud(leri ntabt from Salcon and the food ii bad ev.ery;where. '' . '-ten Subic Bay for Guam and it crowded tent conditions at camp Pendleton, they consider their Several times they were served Mex'lcan food at the camp, ,; ~ed in ~he United States newsun:oundings "magnificent." end did not know it wasn't Americ8n in origin until an American ;i~,Zitniksaid. · . _J . , . . · atthecampexpJainedwhatitwas. • ' :·~Zl.tnik said the comlliitlee will TH~ YOtJNG COl1PLE AND NAM IJUNG'S older brother, "Actually, the hamburger is my favorite J\tnerican food," · do all it caD io proVtde fooi:t, N8m Ki~ speat two mon\M al the Marin&;ba1e ¥,ore 'arrivine Nam Hungµ:\oealed. . t i l clothin& shelter and tnmsporta· at the New;ort Bea~h apartments about two weeks aao. One thine that surprised the couple was the lack of rashion· : tiOli to ihe Nbue fernily durinl , GordolWe1t,beadolPatkNewportApartments,saidbewa1 conaciousnesshere. •1 t I ihe resetllem enl in the Art (_~ed o spOnsor the ll)ree re!!l&ee• be<ause of hb own ••· , ~ ~ony. , · t1 VJ~taam' ... 111N SAIGON, PEOPLE DRESS UP TO •o out on lb• atree~; I ''. t • I · ti'ot hH pr0Vltf<illjobs tor.,. ~It, w\th Tftanh, 22', W.rk-~~·n:-hcan dre1S lnfonnal and no~~ looks at yau tunny, •' ~-~ •tnaua11da1dandNam,ffune,JO.ai1·•ardener.,t"t.beconlplex. an · • ·, ..,J, i Naln Klltm 3G baa• ma1ter's c1e.-1n pharm1tolQ1YOad Weat Nam HUllf nodded In --O!ld-pointed to the ~ogi., •: ' latll'lnltqit;;;li.1mololl'lnthatflold. - . -':boqtlth•tarepartolbla1art1o..:ll#m.. ,. i I • : -i 1 ~~I-Jt: ~4 ' r . l ., ••yOQ~ldneverW81l'tbeMout'bt.~.~ ...... a1d. , •' '. .U...1BRl0l 'U\'Jlll IN · N P.W. to tlie '•mart-. · ~~'th.,. .... -••~ tot. v1.tq0m·.,,a their.,._ ! 1 • ov1c .. 11cn, OJ\lt Uolll llrlt II · Hinol lnJ11S4.,n&nh i..-and.~~elr lee!IDI• "very b~..,. •V:t fod." I; ' rPlleb ot.a pHHte bfali 1<bool' illl>'Hunfla>u 4 lleut..U~i. "We'•••l'J' h•-to bovo '!"'II ·• Com ... illill on4'to ' v the Vlllnam-.~ 111111 Nam· llioar WU ,,_ ... __ tar }lie llvlnf hi_~b_ folce place. ·Bill. l' .. te wb olMI to ~1)'1 OUr ~ ' us wi..-~ • · • ') ·~ • 1fi'--·1. PIOPlt.' a~Than.b. " , " / / I.' · " ... 0n111el'ooiru>wJu11,u.el1UDU1;..~·--AIMtlc111· .. •1 ucsim:t tusY:a~n'(on. p ·P~~'" • • bolid.,,o(oplC11~ottlle~\~fl¥. 0 .'I' • •II ·, X };_' vlallfil-·U.Ui.:athereandlllidU..Na{';.;(nfUsMofil'O , ~I ~'. ~~ . ' u·. ~ .. ,. Tbub, wlio I ..... t....i ~ ho!'dil.' -""°1•· ... _ rolbll' IK ..... , ..... 'to leave~ ... mp, to ~ ... real, .... .I I__ .-v ble,'' ••Y• boldQ8'la~etum 1are al. 'mllltuy ~ bocu •· · ' f"f A' .. • .• 11· _, w1d11lnlle•d0f~.aiidplcale1. ,' , · , , ! , " I • ~ Tbanh ond Nom Hlllil •u1.d wlilf"i* kind Uc! i.· ~· · I ~ , , All three iwero am-al the, col>W..'where ' bolpll@l1llleotherParkNewport oallbave-tolbei!i• ... . ... ;,..c...~tL Uicyoblen"ed·bundredroflicl1m atti•~---· "Bifore I came1 I waa a Utth: 09C«Ud, iibout '#bether dMy ' · ' "''·'' ' "It wu ve.., 1m'*tna, but vert ez . In v1'161m,'"We're ,woWd •tr1..S.ly ~But., everyone baa been v.flY nice," aakl Nam 'One• upon• time. wh-.n poor and wOUkl aev•bavecam•llk•thil~' 1aldNam Jlq, b1I ttuna. . : J. .. ,_,,..,,. "",. h.,.. rh.,. '1f"I wtdenlut at the l:1MfnOll ot the contest. • · · Nel&bbon at the apartment complex ha Ve 1Uml1hed tnem .., • .,.r ~ • • · · ~ 1 w\\b Un-.., pota aod pans, a bicycle aod other amlll ntctlliUtl -JIOOD RAii lll'lllN ANOTRJ:8 lllG adjuatmenl lot the YJ>WIC ol bouJekffPIDl in •new laud. I . . 'I I l ~ I Leaflets Hit By the Associated Press U.S. government olficials have confirmed that pl"'l>Communist Vietn;1.mese students clrculaled anti-American leanets among the Vietnamese refugees at "Lil· UeSaigon'' at Camp Pendleton. Nick Thorne told newsme n Tuesday that the leaflets urged the refugees to return to South Vietnam, calling tbe United Stites a prison. But the leaflets and lbe stu· dents were met with ridicule by the refugees, Thorne said. Refugees Still Arrive At El Toro Refqees who fled C..ai.. bodia and Vietn1m follow-- ing Cal'nmu~lst tak.civer 1 continue ~o trickle into ~ Toro Marine Corpa Air St.a· Uon. according to public in· formation officer· Capt. 'Tames DIBernardo. · Weekend arrivalf' in· eluded 372 VietnarDete and 256 Ceimbodian ref'Ulees, he said. · The refugees are all be· inC temporarily placed in 'ho u t l n I at Camp· Pendleton, be said. · The Cambodians arrlval. fr.om U\apao Air 8ue in Thailand,' accordinC to a U'5. Euibassy spok8'IJllU). Tft.• -..eek e nd fllCh't broollbt the total dl..Qltri- bodtus brought to the V .1£. from Thailand to t,.2&7 1lnc-e May · The Vletnamesi were brought ln. from a ""-cee en~ampme.nt on· ·Gffin, said Di Bernardo .. The stream of rlf\aeees, he 1atd, contia.ue1 to "trickle in" at a r.ui of -llGO, • .,, ..... . \ NEW ~75 PINTO MPG ·save 1633 ,,._...,,..._ YOU PAY ONLY . 28 MUS PB GAL 2300 1V 4 cyt., (5) B78x13 tires. front and rear bumper guards, plus more. (Y151610) S2 877 28 MIWPEIGAL. 2.3 litre 4 cyl., (5) BR78x13 steel belted radial tires. plus more. (Y155975) 171 FORD WGN. V-8. auto. trans .. factory air conditioning. power steering. pawer disc t>rMes. radio. heater. whitewall tues, wheel coven. (416CMS) $1976 '70 TOYOTA WGH 4 speed. factory air conditioning, radio. heater. tinted glass. (043CCY) $1476 172 PLYMOUTH SEDAM Auto. trans.. factory air conditioning. power steering. Power brakes. radio, healer. 27,000 actual miles. (940JOU) 2276 170 FOID TORJHO GT V-8 . auto. trans .• factory air conditioning, radio. heater. whitewall tires. tinted glass. wheel covers. (538AGO) $1776 FIR ST IN SERVICE e FIRST IN SALES NEW 175 MUSTANG MPG 169 FORD WGH. V-8 . auto. t rans., factory air conditioning. radio, heater. tinted g&ass, wheel covers, (YSG990) $1 576 172 PLY. 2 DI. V-8. auto. trans .• factory air conditioning, power steering, power disc brakes. radio. heater. whitewall tires. vinyl roof. tinted glass, wheel rovers. (940.JOY) $2376 169 MIRCUIY MAR9UIS 4 DR. V-8 . auto. trans .. factory air conditioning, power steering, ~ tlrl*es. radio. heater. whitewpill tiree. vinyl roof. (ZDZ185) Nioec:ar1! 51376 '70 FORD MUSTAM& 6 cyt., stid shift, ridio. helter. tinted glass, wheel covers. (YCM571) 51376' Show Us ·A Good·. Credit Statement .11 WE DELIVER 01 THE SPOT O• Sale•Hm Have The Fincmce 'Know How'. Just Tell Us The Payn~ You'd Like I • NO DOWN PAYMENT PROBLEMS REMEMIER When you find the car or truck Of yow cltolce. cloll't hesitate tO make CUI offer. · We.'re llere to ta•set yolli. I '69 FORD MUSTANG '72 PLY. 4 DR. V-8, auto. trans.. AM/FM radio. V-8. auto. trans .• factory air heater, whitewall tires. vi"Yt roof. conditioning, radio. heater. whitewall tinted glass, wheel co vers. tires. vinyl roof. tinted glass, wheel (031HHW) cowrs. (73-'ESO) $1476 $2 176 ' • '65 CHEV P.U. 174 FOID RAMCtBO . V-8. auto. trans .• factory air 6 cyl.. stick shift, ractio, heater. oonditloolng, radio, h ....... whit8Wlll ti'9S. tinted glass, wheel CXMW1. (Stk. (R28544) ff'661) $1076 $3876 ' . ~ NEW '75 GRA NADA. 2DOOR ' SUPER BUY .. 250 CID IV 6 cyl, deluxe bumper group, (5) '78x14 tires, many more factory extras. (Ser. No. L241222) S3666 20°/o DOWN CASH or TR.ADE· 33. MO. for 48 months.' Cash pric8 incl. tax & license is $3885.96. otf~ed pmt. price is "4829.04. Annual percerage rate is 12.67%. o~ approved credit. SS! 161 PLYMOUTH WGM. •it '°RD ·2 Dll LTD V-8. auto. trans .• factory air' V-8. auto. trans., factory ai r conditioning, radio, heater, whitewall OOAditloning, power steering, power tires. tinted glass, wheel covers. disc brakes. tinted glass. wheel ~196CYW) <XMn. landau top, vinyt interior. (184DIV) S976 $1876 '71 MEIC COUGAR XU 172 FORD TORINO 2 DR. .V-8. auto. trans .• factory air V-8. auto. trans •• factory air c::ooditioning, power steering, power conditioning, power steering, power .disc brakes. AM/FM radio, helter, disc brakes. radio, healer, whitewall whitewall tires. vinyl roof, tinted tires. tinted glass, wheel covers. glass, wheel covers, landau top. (488GGJ) vinyl interior. (872CIG) $2476 $2776• '72 MHCURY 2 DI. '71 FOID MA VEllCK ·2 V-8. auto. trans .• factory al~ DR. conditioning, AM/FM radio, heater .. 8 cyl .• Auto. trans .• factory air whitewall tires. tinted glaa, wheel conditioning, power steering, .M/FM c:owrs. (781GIA) radio. heater. whitewall tires, tinted glass, wheel coven. ( 19400L) $2476 $21 76 ' . '64 DODGE 2 TOM V AM 168 IMTERMATIOtW. P.U. 6cyl., 4 speed. ($49181) • cyl ... tpMd. (717890) $1476 • ·$1376 . . ~ - • BEi ANDERSON, Editor CAROL MOORE, Food Editor ...... ,, Jvtr 14, tt7S P191C1 • • ) Get Pickled Properly Formuta·'s Fresh The joys or pickling are many. To the con- temporary culinarian, pickling is an exciting and tasty outlet. For the nostalgic, aromas or vinegar laced with herbs and spices conjure. up fond memories or grandma's busy ptchen. And to the economy-mi.oded, pickling lets one capture the goodness oC in-season produce for out-of-season eating eojoymept. More people are returning to all forms of home canning. And pickWlg -food preserved by the combination of vinegar and heat -is one of lhe most popular techniques. Actually, the process has tour categories: Quick Process Pickles .•. vegetables are prepared, simmered in spiced vinegar liquid, packed and processed. Brined Pickles . . . vegetables are pre- pared, soaked for several hours or overnight in a brine; then either packed, covered with boiling spiced vinegar and processed; or, simmered in lhe spiced vinegar, packed and processed. Fruit pickles ... such Q watermelon rind, cantaloupe, pumpkin and pe8fS are simmered in ·a spicy sweet-sour liquid, packed and processed. Relishes . . . a variety of vegetables that are chopped or coarsely ground, simmered in a spiced vinegar liquid then packed and processed. Here are a few hints to assist you in your pickling project: Use distilled white apple cider vinegar with a consistent acidity to insure proper preserva- tion of foods. A void copper, brass, galvanized or iron utensils which may react with the vinegar .. acids." Make small batches as the recipe indicates; oever double or triple a recipe. Test for a proper seal, following ~ recom· .. • • \ mendations of jar/lid manufacturer. V . Be sure to use standard canning jars, caps or lids that are free from cracks, dents or rust. Defects such as these will prevent airtight seals and cause spoilage. Jars from commercially packed foods are not suitable for home preserv- ing. Follow all directiQllS carefully. Use only fresh.\spices, either whole or ground. Old spices impart a musty taste to pre- served foods. A colorful, 32-page booklet offering 43 pickl- ing recipes, plus processing methods, storage, common pickling pitfalls and a bandy weights and measures table is available free. Write to Pickling Information Center, Heinz U.S.A., P .O. Box 28, D-178, Pittsburgh, PA 15230. Allow four to six weeksfordelivery. ZUCCIUNI PICKLES l quart distilled white vinegar 2 cups granulated sugar l/.a cup salt 2 teaspoons celery seed 2teaspoons ground tumeric 1 teaspoon dried mustard 5 pounds (5 to 6-inch) zucchini, unpeeled, cut into 'A inch slices 4 or 5 medium onions, thinly sliced Combine first six in~redients in saucepan; bring to a boil. Pour over zucchini and onions; let stand 1 hour, then simmer 3 minutes. Continue s immering while quickly packing one clean, hot jar at a time. Fill to within lh inch of top making s ure vinegar solution covers vegetables. Cap each jar at once. Process 5 minutes in boiling water .bath. Makea 6 or 7 pints. Start With Finnish Save Sunshine, Conserve Fruit Everyone is conserving something these days -energy, money and natural resources. A most delicious resource to comerve is nectarines, the sunny summer fruit that's a fabulous breakfast food, a popular ingre- dient in cold salads and desserts and a tantalizing treat served bot with meats. These recipes make nice gift jars for new neighbors or special friends. SPICY N ECT ARINF.S 4 pounds fresh nectarines 2cups sugar lcup water % cup vinegar 1 whole nutmeg, cracked 4 small bay leaves 4 lemon slices 4 lime slices Pour boiling water over nec- tarines and let s tand a minute. Drain and slip off skins. Cut fruit from pits into quarters. Combine sugar, water, vinegar and nutmeg. Heat to boiling, stir- ring until sugar dissolves. Cover and simmer 10 minutes. Add prepared nectarines, br- ing back ~ a boil and cook 2 minutes. Pack into hot pint jars, adding a bay leaf, lemon and lime slice to each jar. Fill jars with syrup to lfz inch from top and seal. Set jars on trivet in deep kettle with boiling water to half the deplh of jars. .Add more boiling water to cover In Finland this creamy soup is prepared as a celebration of the .. short fresh vegetable season. The finished product, as seen at a recent cooking demonstration at Design Research in South Coast Plaza, makes a complete meal or may be served with fancy openfacesandwiches. There's a lot of chopping of veaetables but tbatcan be done in thecoolofthe morning. And let tbe children help. It's an eKcelleot chance for them to leam whe ... food really comes from - notaoup trdm a can. Later; they may want to help decorate the sandwiches with alicem ol rad.lab or cucumber, ~of dill or parsley and enaorst\lftedolives. Spread · u.e hndwiches with Dill Sauce inatead of mayoM.\lSe. Or \lie the aauce -so good and unexpected -over steamed, dUlled veeetebles Ot' as a dip for abri.mp appetlzera. su••n VEGETABLE SOUP 2oaion1, coarsely ~peel 4 1mall cattota, diced to \4 · I Inch I jars by 1 to 2 inches and bring back to a boil. . Pr<_>cess for 20 minutes, count- mg time from when waler boils again. Remove from water bath at once and cool before storing. Makes 4 pints. NECTARINE PINEAPPLE CONSERVE 2'h pounds fresh nectarines 1 can (8'h ounce) crushed pineapple 1.4 cup lemon juice ~ cup chopped maraschino cherries 71h cups sugar (3 pounds) Y.i botUe (6 ounce) liquid pec- tin Pit nectarines but do not peel. Finely chop or grind, using coarse plate. (Or, dice abouJ, 'h dip at a lime into blender jatand blend at low _:;peed just until they are finely crush ed, not until blende<1 smooth. If blender has a "chop" s;, use that. With a 3-speed ble er, flick switch on and off unti fruit appears coarsely crushed.) Measure fruit -should be 3 cups. Combine with undrained pineapple, lemon juice, cherries and sugar in a large kettle. Heat to boiling, stirring until sugar dissolves. B{>il hard for 1 minute . Remove from heat and stir in pectin. Stir and skim off foam for 7 minutes . P our into hot, ~cup fresh green peas 1 small head cauliflower, separated into ~ buds 2 s mall potatoes, diced to ·~· inch lh pound string beans, cut in 'A-inch strips 4 small red radishes, halved •;, pound fresh s pinach, chopped · 2teaspooos salt 2l.ablespoons butter 2tablespooD8 nour l~mil.k 1ege)'Ouc v.cupcream ~pound all.rim p \4 teppoon white pepper 2 tal>Jespoons finely chopped parsley er dill 4 tablespoons chopped scallions Place vegetabl~s tn pot; cover with cold water and add the salt. Boil uncovered lor 5 rnimrtes. Add the·•Pirlacb and cook aootber 5 minutes. Remove the pan lrom the beat and strain the liquid. Mel\ 2 Labl~spoons oC butter in the pan and stlrin lhe fiourslowly. Pour the bot vegetable stock into .. sterilized glasses and seal at once. (Or, pour a thin layer o1 melted paraffin over tops of glasses. When cold, add a second layer of paraffin over tops of glasses. When cold, add another layer of paraffin.) Makes 9 (8 ounce) glasses. FRESHLJMEAND NECTARINE JAii 2th pounds fresh nectarines 4 limes 71h cups sugar 11_. teaspoon salt 1 stick cinnamon 1t2 bottle (6 ounce) liquid fruit pectin Coarsely chop nectarines to measure 4 cups. Coarsely grate the rind from 1 lime; halve and squeeze out 2 tablespoons juice. Pare other 3 limes and finely chop their pulp. Put grated rind, lime juice and chopped pulp with all other in- gredients except pectin iD larg~ kettle. Bring to full rolling boil and boil hard 1 minute, stirring constantly. Re move fr om beat ; im· mediately stir in pectin. Skim off foam with metal spoon. Stir and continue skimming for 5 minutes while it cools slightly, to prevent fruit from floating on top. Ladle into sterilized glasses; seal. Makes 10 medium-sized glasses. the pan while beating constantly. Beatinthemilk. In a small bowl, combine the egg yolk and cream and beatin 1 cup of the hot soup mixture. Reverse this process until all the soup mixture has been combined with yolk and cream. Add the vegetables. Simmer until the soup boils, reduce the heat and add the shrimp. Simmer 3 to $ minutes more. Season with pepper and sprinkle with dill. parsley and scallions. Serves 4 to 6. DlLLSAUCE ~cup Dijon mustard 1 teaspoon powdered mustard 3 tablespoons sugar 2 tablespoons w bite vtoeear -Mt cup vegetable oil 3 tab~espoons fresh •ped dill or 1 ~tablespoons dry•· Combine mustard'J, su'9r and vinegar to form a paste.. sao.ty beat tn the oil 1o fonll a thick mayonnaise. Stir 1D .the cllll. nttck~ns ln tefrlaellltar. Keeps several days. , I .. J J , .. .- (I rlYPILOT Wednesday, Juty 16. t975 Community Gain Doors Open The gala premiere of Women's Clubs, Junior the n ew Broadway, Membership. Laguna Hills will benefit The a ux i liary has about 70,000 Saddleback Valley r esident s as all pledged funds for the proceeds will remain in purchase of a d.iagn~tic the communaty. ~dti:a-~und d~v1.ce which co. s pons 0 ring the ~similar.to rad1o~raphy event with the depart. · m that tt prov1d~s a .ment s t ore will be method for ex~mm~g the Laguna Beach Junior structures ~ h ich he Woman's Club and the beneath the skm. Auxiliary of Saddleback Ultra-sound has been a Community Ho!>pital. t r emend o us aid in The Juniors will dJS· diagnosing abdominal tribute their share of the and heart problems. earnrngs to the Girls Tickets for the event, Club, Marine Studies which will begin al 6 lnslllutc and the Laguna p.m. Salurday, Aug. 2, Greenbl'lt are available from any The dub's outstanding member of the sponsor- work m these on-going ing groups. Music, enter- projects alre<.1dy has won tainment and refresb- them both district and menls will be provided s t a t e honors in the onthelhreelevelsofthe ' California Federation of store. Reality Hard to _ Face DEAR ANN LANDERS : A while back I read a letter in your column about hyperactive children. I have a dear fri end who has a byperacti ve ctuld. She re- fuses to admitit. Ann Landers I wrote to the Association for Children with Learning Dis- abilities for information when you printed the address in the column. I asked them to send my friend some reading material a nd enclosed her na me and address. Guess what the organi&lllion did? They sent her MY letter along with the brochures. Now my friend refuses to speak to me on the phone. When we meet on the street s he turns her head and keeps on walking. The ACLD sent the material because you asked them to. You asked them to because you want· eel to help the child. Your former friend obviously does not choose to face reality and I feel sorry for ber youngster. saying, "Thank you for the gift. It was greatly appr_f1_cialed." These scrolls went to l!'veryone. I de- e ided it was the best way lo handle it. No bride should be expected lo write700thank-younotes. I hope you will print my letter and reverse yourself. People put a lot of stock in what you say. - PINK ROSES You, Ann Landers, are sup- posed to help people and look what you've done! Bet ween you and the ACLD I have lost a friend of over 15years. -DOUBLE-C ROSSED DEAR ANN LANDERS: I am troubled by some advice you gave recently. I hope when you hear my personal story you will change your stand. DEAR ROSE: Sorry, dear, I don't care bow many guests there were. Every person who took time and 1pent money on a wedding gift should have r eceived a note of thanks ID them ail. DEAR D.C.: Sorry about your friend, but her reaction isn't ra- .tioaal. I come from a large family. My parents have inherited money. They also have many relatives and friends and didn't want lo leave.Dul anyone -so there were 700 guests at my weddinf[. Handing out s crolls in· discrlmlnately, without eve11 knowing for certaln Uthe pel'SOll· had sent a gilt, was ln very poor taste. Ushers banded out small scrolls Horosco~: Cancer Change, Challenge Due THURSDAY, IULY 17 By SYDNEY OMARR ARIES (March 21-April 19): Collect, con- solidate and classify. Build for future, plan ahead for security. Refuse to sell yourself short. Insist on quality and top dollar. TAURUS (April 20-May 20): Avoid rushing, excess hurry. Applies especially while driving, while around m achinery or electricity. Don't write letters in anger. Gl!:MI NI (May 21-June 20): What was once loud and clear is now likely lo be subdued. Means even if there is no cheering section, do not be dis- mayed . CANCER <June 21-July 22): Changes occur which lead to challenge. greater creativity. Your -own style is more important than usual. Regard it as an asset, not a liability. LEO (July 23 -Aug. 22): Home, personal en- vironment, responsibilities, saving for the future -this is lone for you. You cannot slip tbrougb - inslead, you face tasks as they exist and you tackle current proble ms. VIRGO <Aug. 23-Scpt. 22): Travel plans are subject to change. Neighbors, relatives are not in mood to be conciliatory. Know it and tread light· ly. See people, places, situations as they are. Now at. .. · Part-Skim l\tilk .f \ <.\ F!nMER CHEESE ..,;::_~~ .~~· -'! ,..-1 /. >r . ::_"'~j ; ... ~ .• I ; ' ~ I . -~· ~ . I ' • . f; . . . I ' I .,., .. ..,..,..,, ~ ·,;.. ·~. ~ . !~-"'1 I 1MI & 1•Vtl'4f_.,..'#,OU HACH rHO ... l: 642-0972 Moll."'"' 'Til' s.t. 'Tl' s-'TV s . .. . .,,. ..... - LIBRA (Sept. 23·0ct. 22): Organize. Accept responsibility. Know that relationship will in- tensify. There is no free ride. Accent is on money, payments, collections, ability to un- derstand values. SCORPIO. (Oct. 23-Nov. 21 ): Give special care to contract, arrangement. agreement. Stormy weather occurs in partnership, marriage angles. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21): Highlight independence of thought, action. Refuse to be backed into corner by negative expression of im- agination. Means don't fear the unknown. CAPRICORN <Dec. 22-Jan. 19): Accent on hopes, desires. romantic interlude. What you wish could come true -faster than you might imagine. Aggressive individual issues challenge. AQUARIUS <Jan. 20-Feb. 18): The more flexible you are, the better for you. Means if you insist on only black or while, you will be set back. PISCES (Feb.. 19-March 20): Check state- ments, bills, correspondence. Communication barrier does exist. It's your task to overcome it. Tear down for purpose of rebuilding. 20% OFF EVERYD DISCOUNT PRICES '"1 47 NATIONALLY ADVERTISED BETTER QUALITY BRANDS OF JUNIOR Br. MISSES SPORTSWEAR & LINGERIE •Sweaters •Pants •Shirts •Shorts • J•ns •Dresses -FIRST' QUALITY - •Shells •Jackets •Tops • Blou'" • Skirt• • Coordlnat81 •Halters •Tennis W•r • Intimate App9rel • Sleep;.,..r • LoungewMr • B1thlng App9rel I PIN MON. • FRI. 9 a.m. • 9 p.m. SAT. 9 e.m. • 6 p.m. CLOSED SUNDAY ................ '-c-.w....c.. f'-17141 645-1114 .,,..,,,~,, r ''' r;J ANNE KLEIN SUMMER GROUPS 1/J OFF J'41oln~ WESTCL"' PLAZA MIWPORTH IMN Mapping plans for the gala premiere of the new Broadway, Laguna Hills is A. C. Young, manage!, Sh8>ron Peters (center) anr:J Jackip Smith of the · -~1·1 c0~sp0ns ring~groups. ~;ii ~ J • ***************************** • * : The Shoe Tree a • * t "Celebrates" ! ~ * • The Bicenfer.niat t • * 1~tff~~ ) SHpE SALE ~ Guaranteed pool salety in 2 : STA~JS JULY 17th ; weeks. Children 6 mos. and : ~ up. iC * Al~~51 f..~~es! ! ~lal Group of Shoes. : "our 11911<• 1on1ng .... waler'""~·· • s1 p * 1 "" ~. • Not in all sizes. * t ..... w•&n.n. .. 's Register Call Saeffle : NOW • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • : Now! 548-847 4 iC * ·~~~====~==~1· * •1 iC * We cover the waterfront In the t Joyce ••• Bandolino. :· ~ ~~:~.'~.~~~·~~: ...... ~18'° a it * I~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~~~~~~~~~· * iC * DAILY PILOT SEWING COURSES for young people ages10-19 Make 'your thing• ON' y prizes or awards! in class as you L Saturday classes, learn to sew, ga~ and weekdays or sew better. \f' during vacation Eight 2% hr. periods. Enroll lessons, $17.5~. PER HR. early! ~roup And you can win rates available. SINGER ~ Amatfl • : •• l<lmal • • • * iC e....-.. :it ~'I ·.. * ~:'.1~.~~~~~ •••••• ~2290 ~ • . * . ~ • * • OPEN m * : SUNDAYS fl1I] ! : 12-4 P .M. . IMWtlalWt :: • * • * • * ! THE SHOE TREE i ! 3 4 I 0 Via Lido : ~ * ·• Newport Beach * i 673-5521 : ,iC * • *******************.******** ~ I MOW AVAILABLE DOG TRAINING IN YOUR HOME 11Where The Problems Are11 PROBLEM SOLVING To incluae: House breaking Digging Jumping Bartcing Biting Running Away Taking Fcrod Chewing and more PROTECTION STEVEN D. COii Nation's Forttn01t Dog Trainer OBEDIENCE To Include: Heel Sit Stay Down Come Mr •. Cobb features an "In-Home TrainJhq 'concept by which the owner can learn the art of proper CIOCJ tralnincj in the convenience of their own home. This Instruction will In no way inhibit the playfulness of your pet. CALL NOW FOR FREE EVALUATION" IN YOUR HOME 494-1222 ·····---···· . .. Wednesday. July 115.1975 DAILY PILOT f:J Her Beauty's 'ln·heirent' EARL'S ~ ..... , ... ••eo.. MrftC.I ftlilt I Y AaTt • ' T04ll llOOll l4tM411 J ... , __ ,_., muc.....c.1•- Q Trlo :. • BALLOON R "' LTD. .:J .1:t By LAURIE KASPER OttMO.llJPOe1Su11 Following in the footsteps of one's older sister cou ld bring on some sibling rivalry but Robin Carr says that's not the case with her. Miss Carr, the 1975 6J'ournament of Roses L .. queen, said she and her ~ister Janet, who was crowned Miss California just a few weeks ago, are friends as well as family. "She is the one I go lo and talk to and we just help each other. It's .a. good, deep love we have for each other ." She asked those a~ tending the Mission Vie- jo Chris tian Women's Club meeting to pray that ber sister be suc· cessful in the Atlantic City Miss America com· petitions in September. Then, s h e sa id, perhaps h er sister could give testimony to the Lord to even more peo. pie. In 1973. Robin Carr .. then a sophomore in bigh school, was c rowned Miss Temple City, a title her sister had held two years before. Adding that at that time her siste r was a Rose princess, she ad· milted , "I'm kind or ~ ~"wt .. """' ,,._, llM~IM..C.-- follo wing to my sister's Neither, however, can ~·~~.~~~~I ~ "4"4~:1-~17~1~J~I ;;;;;~ footsteps. fl pinpoint Why they have r I PROGRESSION won so many of these So far, the y~unger contests. Explained Miss M iss Carr has won five Carr, "That's hard to beauty pageants. includ· say because beauty is in ing the Junior Miss. the eye of the beholder." "You just kind of pro-In Nove mber and gress," she explained. December. as queen, she But she and her sister was called upon to attend also are selective in de· 100 to 125 different ac- A Jc\cmon's SPORTSWEAR ·SALE An• Children'• and Young JunloteWear UPT050% Off Regular Prices AT ALL lermining which con-. tivities. most of them f"ASHION ISLAND tests to enter because promoting th e New wt~JGIFfPtAJA 'BAlBOAISlAK> Newpof"18uc11 Moaos 3 STORES • 'l here are better Year's Day parade and ..... -...n-h 216Mor,neAvt FASHION SQUA"c ts ~·~ ~~*~ pagean · to go into than game. 548-41:>1 675.1904 HUNTINGTON •CACH others." Now, the number is <11•>8461666 She considers these considerably less. Most-~~~~~~~~~~~========:! competitions to be for ly, she is called upon to girls wha t sports is for speak to men's groups, boys. In particular, she probably because "men likes the public relations, like to see t h e Rose speaking to and meeting queen like thls more than many different people. women," she said. Her s is ter, a singer, FAVORITE T HINGS especially likes the op-So she told the Mission portunily lo demonstrate Viejo women s he was her talent. .. pleased to have been in· She hasn't decided if vited to speak with them she'll continue following about .. my three favorite her sister and try for the subjects" -the Lord, Miss California and Mjss the United States of America titles but ob-America and the Touma· IF .YOU MISSED OUR SALE OM PAGE A2 ••• DON'T MISS OUR SALE! JASHIOM IUAMll THURSDAY, JULY 17 IT'S A BIGGIE! . ... WPOI T IU.CH ·viously she considers the ment of Roses for which !!::==========~.~.~.=.~.~.~.~.~.~~ option open. It's just that she is the 56th queen. the recent high school To be select ed Rose Add Life to Your Fur Garments graduate wants lo wait queen from among the unlit she finis hes two 858 girls who initially years of college. tried for the title, s he had And she d efinitely dis· lo go through four dif. agrees with fe minists fer ent j udgings in a who object lo beauty month. pageants. During t he last, she GIRL'S CHOICE was asked if there was Miss America, she ''something special" in conten d e d , promotes ~er life . She lo~d the som ething good. Fifty Judges about a lnp s~e percent of the judging is had made to the Holy based on t alent. The re. Land and what it meant mainder is split between to her as a Christian. formals and b athing "Little Qid I know that FUR ·STORAGE Summer Rates on Repairs, Rellnlnga, Restyffng . Ft-u Pick-Up le Delivery Balboa Fur Factory 4 yerrerolzons of 1"111.: Fur .\fonufoduring .. ,, .. ~. ,, ~ 305 Palm St. Balboa Peninsula near Ferry 675-1192 ,. . ... ......... ~ .. ._. . ._..... ............... . JEAN CARR (LEFT) JOINS. DAUGHTER, QUEEN ROBIN CARR suits. it was the starting of the She added, "It's the most tremendous year." BRUSH afld BLOWER SCISSOR STYLES Betrothals •• Dates Set Young-Hawkins Betsy Lyn Young and James Mazet H awkins are planning to marry Sept. 7 in the First Unit· ed Methodist Church, Costa Mesa. The bride-to-be is the daughter of Mrs . J ames Warr e n Youn g o f Newport Beach a nd the late Mr. Young. A graduate o f Newport Harbor High School, she attended the University of Southern California and affiliated with Delta Gamma. H e r fi a n ce is a graduate of We bb School and also attended USC and is a member of Phi Delta Theta. His parents are Dr. and Mrs. G. William Hawkins of . Miss York, daughter of the Donald A. Yorks of Rossmoor, is a graduate of Bowie High School, Bowie, Md. and now is a senior at Chap man College. Her fiance, son of Mr. and Mrs. Harry R. Leu of Huntington Beach, is a s~for at California State Un i ve r sity al Long Beach and a graduate of Fountain Valley High School. The affianced couple plan to marry in August, 1976. * * * L owrey-Larkin Robert D. Larkin. son of Mr. a nd Mrs. Richard La r k in of N e w po r l Beach, will m a rry Sheri Lowrey in rites planned to be performed in the BETSY YOUNG H owel I-Thrash The betrothal and fall wedd in g plan s of Virginia Claire Howell and Ma rine Capt. Ralph Merryman Thrash have been announced by her parents. Mrs. Robert Pal m e r Yardl ey of Newpo rt Beach and Richard Dean Howell of Santa Ana. Her f1ance is the son of Lt. Gen. ~ret.) and Mrs. Willi am Gay Thrash of Corona det Ma r . He at· tended the University of Arizona and now is sla· tioned a t the US MC base at El Toro. Mi ss H owel l , a Children's Home Society debulante, was gradual· ed from Newport Harbor High School and San Diego State University. She attended Oran~e Coast College and Cal Western. girl's own choice that she She believes her selec- wants to go into these." tion as queen was the "Women's libbers" Lord's "way to use me have done a lot of good for His glory." things, she said , but then Noting that the Rose she added that she dis· Parade w as themed agrees with much of the Herit age of America, she movement. objected th at .. people Her mother, Mrs. J ean are putting our country Car r, enjoys sharing the 'down. s u c c e s s o f h e r •'There is no country d a u ghters. the only like our country," she children in the family. "I said. She considers the feel it has opened a great last four letters of the many doors for their word American as most future s uccess," she important because "we added. can do anything." HOW TO DO THEM STEP BY STEP Anyone can care lor a Brush & Blower hair style. or our other curl co1olrng. fuss-free. full functional • • SCISSOR STYLE S which are as easy to do as just sham· ' PoO! Our lamp cuts, finger tumble cuts, curling iron cuts, wash 1owel dry. brush 'n fluff cuts or simple wash and wear cuts are SCISSORED. all take·care-of·yourself . styles. Good for any age. any hair. No teasing. no 1 rollers. no 01ns. no POLLUTING HAIR SPRAYS ALSO. NO SIT , ......... HT WAVtS. YOU .... ,. HIYH ........ r TO sn YOU•""" AGAIM. OPEM JOSEPH'S SCISSOR STYLING I 011t • I 0 fl"' SAT. & SUH. 9.5 356 S Tustin Ave . Orange 9564 Hamilton Ave .. Huntington Beach 305 N Harbor Blvd . Fullerton llOC:AllOAT 111l F#\"tCINATING Vlll.A DEl SOU STARTS TODAY 997-1193 961-JSJS 879-JI U JUST ARRIVED THE GRAY WOOL FUNNELS 50-75% OFF WESTCLIFF ftLAZA MEWftORTH INN Orange. * * Comm unity C hurc h -------------------_.:.. __ _ WE SPECIALIZE IN SIZES FOR WOMEN WHO WEAR 121/2 to 321/2, 38 to 48 and York-Leu Si. Wilfrid's Episcopal Churc h , Huntington Beach will be the setting for the nuptials of Carol Elizabeth York and Steven Forrest Leu of Long Beach. Con g r egatio n a l o f Corona del Mar Aug. 23. She is the daughter of l't1r. and Mrs . Robert Lowrey of Sanger. The bride-elect is a graduate of Sanger High School and her fiance of Newport Harbor High. * • * Le0DS STONEWARE PLANTERS ~ glazed with water proof, lead free glaze, one of a k ind pots. ~ . HANDMADE ON OUR POTTERS WHEEL SAVE UP TO 60% t f~· AT OUR FACTORY j /; ij 1 Buy direct from the potter Hig h quality hi-fired pots. handmade, and glazed, one of a kind stoneware pots. Dealers welcome HEAVY DUTY MACRAME 4 FT. LONG $9.00 VALUE ON SALE FOR $3,50 8" Pot Reg. ss:oo ou.r $350 Price 6" Pot Reg. S7.00 ou.r $250 Price . 4" Pot Reg. SS.OD OUR PRICE s2oo ; ' ~~,, I f, ,· ,1 1() ~ ,~ a r~ ~ SlonEWal'E WESI ! •. · '''lt'c c:A(J. Out c!).,. !JJ~ °" ,L.it1tw" ~1.-=-~A 1904 f. Edinger Ave. Sana Ana Phone 551-1714 HOUIS: MON. TO NI. 10.S SAT. lo-3 CLOSED SUNDAY Complete coverage of county government •nd court1. DAILY PILOT those chic, hard-to-find I 0-12-1 4 -1 6-18 and 20. Coordinates, Blouses, Skirts, Slacks ..... ,om Sins md Sfytff Re<J~ to s50 DESIGNER LONG GOWNS sa.s 12 to20 .As low cn Reg. to $150 524 . Y2 SIZE DRESSES SD.. I 21/i-241/J As low as Reg. to $36 sp SLACK SUITS S... IZ1/J·24'/1 As low •• ..... $70 s2p to BLOUSES a.,. to $21 DESIGNER DRESSES s-. 12 to20 up to ltg. to $250 7 5 % OFF BOAT HATS Reg. 4.95 $1.00 SCARVES Reg. to $18. Yi PRICE MOM. THIU SAT. 10.5:30 SUM. 11·5 FOR SALE. OPEN FRIDAY I 0-7:30 • .: ..• for bountiful women who are a cut above the rest! .. 3477 VIA OPORTO PH. 673-8530 UDO VILLAGE . ' . . ~ . . £4 DAA. Y PflOT Wednesday, July 18, 1975 iemperQture Co9king? Co-o-ol It 87 BAllBARA GIBBONS The Cool, cool, cool ofthe even~ lni -or rlnt thing tomorrow morning -is the best t1mc to make tomorrow night's dinner. Especially if you're a Slim Gourmet! Make-ahead is a great idea for summer cooks ... avoids slaving over a bot stove dunng the day's peak heat period. For work-all-day cooks, do- ahead is often tht> only answer. BlJt even if you have no job and have air condit1001ng, make- abead still makes sense for calorie-watchers Canny Ideas Basil' 111format1on about home canning, preserving and pickling 1s available in U.S . Depa r tment of Agriculturl' book lets. Smgle coµu~s arc free from the Office of Com- mun it' a lio n s, U .S. Depar tm e nt of Agriculture. Was h- ington. D.C. 20250. For faster service they can be obtained from the Consumer Product In- formation Center , Public Qocuments Distribution Center. Put•blo. Colo .• ~009. for prices listed ~low . , Order by number and title, and don't forget to 1nclude your name, ad- dress and ZIP Code. Home Can ning or Fruits a nd Vegetables, G a C35 cents). Home Canning of Meat and Poultry. G 106 (30 cents). How to Make Jellies. J.ams, and Preserves at Home. G 56 (40 cents). Making Pickles and Relishes al Home, G 92 l45 cents l. It you make tomorrow's dinner tooight ilnd chtU it all day in the refrigerator. you'll find that all the rat (and fat calones) have convenienUy congealed on the surface. Simply lift off those greasy g lobs and toss away yqur weigbt worries! Almost apy slow-simmer dish where meat is cooked in liquid is a candidate for the make-ahead method. Or try these: ROUND STEAK MANANA 1 pound round steak or beef arm steak. trimmed offal 1 tablespoon diet margarine Cannrng, preser ving and pickling booklets also are .ivaalable for nominal sums from jar and lid manufacturers. AU'tCA BETA · 16·0Z. LOAF · REDUCED Hie CRACKED .29 WHEAT BREAD For information about varieties of high-acid tomatoes and the best one for canning. contact your local Agricultural Extension Service, 774-7050. SPEARMINT · HONEYSUCKLE · NATURAL · LEMON Amw.CK"SOLID '" 49 AIR FRES~ENER • No Mystery AQUA · GOU> • WHITE · PIMK 5-<>UNCE BAR · REDUCED 3c .29 DIAL ~ . BATH SOAP Salad's Dressed Grocery Reduced Prices M a n y c ti e cs a nd TUNA . LIVER . BEEF. GOURMET . 12·0Z. BOX housewives who have de-TENDER vrm.ES 5 8 velope~ a ~a~ad dressing MOIST CAT FOOD • to their hktng tend to , s hroud it in mystery. 100·BAG Box 1 2 2 But the fact is that MJB these dressings arc TEA BAGS • among the easies t 1J1-oz.9l.0PPYJOE seasonjngs to prepare. SCHILLING 2 6 · It may be as basic a ~eA •SON MIX • · blend as three parts oil to ~ one part vinegar. plus 6·PAcx 12·00NCECANS 117 salt and pepper to taste. LIPTON Or its flavor range may ICED TEA • be e~panded to include BA™ SIZE . 4.114.ooNCE. BAR garlic, d ry mus tard, CLAIROL 41 parsley and other he~bs. HERBAL BAR SOA So long as the ratio of P • three parts oil to one part 3&-0UNCE •ox 1 50 vinegar is maintained, a BIZ PRESOAK & cook ca n hardly go ADDITIVE • wrong. 1f you prefer a lighUy 20 MULE TEAM POWER . 22·0Z. BTL. 9 9 seasoned salad, try a SHOWER, TUB & ·dressing of pe:tnut oil, TILE CLEANER • vinegar or lem on juice, ll·OALLON SIZE . 20·COUNT PKG. 7 5 salt, pepper and a touch HEFTY of dry musta~d: WASTE BAGS • For a SplCJer. more LAWN BAGS . IS BUSHEL SIZE . 5·COUNT BOX 116 tobusl dressing for a ioo-SOUARE FOOT Rou saJad main cour~e or a GLAD 38 salad whic h accom- panies a hearty evening WRAP • • bleal, try tbis dressing, GARBAGE aAGS · 30·COONT BOX .67 -which ~bbJ.lld be served HICKORY AEGUUA . HOT . 14·0Z. BTL 61 al room temperature. CHRIS & PITI"S SPICY DRESSING BBQ SAUCE • ~ eup peanut oil 23-ouNCE ta0nu .111 '" cup vinegar I 2 tablespoons finely t:hopped parsley 3 cups tomato juice 1 tablespoon red wine vinegar 3 tablespoons chopped onion 3 tablespoons minced celery 3 tablespoons minced green pepper 1 teaspoon garlic salt 1 teaspoon oregano \4 teaspoon cumin Pinch of hot pepper to taste AHEAD : Brown meat in diet margarine in a nonstick $killet, turning once. Add remaining in· gredlents; cover and simmer one hour or more over very low heat until tender. · Cool and refrigerate, covered, au day or overnight. BEFORE DINNER: Remove from refrigerator and lift off hardened rat. Reheat to simmer- ing. Allow to simmer, uncovered, until liquid is reduced to a thick sauce. Serves !our, 208 calories each. SUNRISE STROGANOFF 1 pound J ean beef roundsteak, trimmed offal • 1 teaspoon prepared mustard l tablespoon dtet margarine l cup tomato juice 3 tablespoons dry white wine 1 beef bouillon cube 2 onions, sliced 4 -ouncc can BEFORE DINNER: Remove s I i c c d from refrigerator and lift off hardened fat. Add ca nned mushrooms, including liqwd, and reheat to boiling. mushrooms l cup evaporated skim milk 2 tablespoons flour Salt and pepper AHEAD : Cut beer iut.o 2-inch strips and coat lightly with mustard. Heat diel margarine in nonstick skillet. Add beef and brown lightly over moderate heat, stirring to brown evenly. Add tomato juice, wine , bouillon cube and onions. Cover and simmer over very low heat about 30 minutes. Cool skillet and refrigerate, covered. Simmer. uncovered Wllil mo.~l of~e. liqwd has evaporated. Sllr ev porated mllk and fl~ur, to tber and add slowly to s1m- m ng skillet, until mixture si~ m~ and thickens. ason to taste. Makes four ser ings, 26S calories eac~. ----Call 642-5878. Put a lew word• to work lor ou. NOW OPEN 'til MIDNIGHT by Graham Kerr the Galloping Gourmet® THIS WEEK: Complete IDAHO CHILI PIE Dinner ebO\Jt • 9 5 ~~=VING AVAILABLE ONLY AT ALPHA BETA GRAHAM KERR IS BACK at Alpha Beta. Pick-up this week's FREE Summer Creative Menu at your local Alpha Beta. REGULAR · DIP · 9·0UNCE BAG · REDUCED 11c ALPHA BETA .67 POTATO CHIPS 10-t/2·0UHC'=. CAN CHICKEN RICE· 10·3/4-0Z. CAH CREAM OF CHICKEN · REDUCED 3c .19 CAMPBELL'S SOUP .. 10-CIUHCE BAG . moZEN TA~RLAN .19 SHOESTRING POTATOES Grocer~ Reduced Prices 10·0UNCE CAN LAS PALMAS ENCHILADA SAUCE 100·S0UARE FOOT ROlL SARAN WRAP 30-0UNCE CAN ROSARITA REFRIED BEANS 1 1n·OUNCE FOIL ENVELOPE FRENCH'S SLOPPY JOE MIX .27 .81 .59 .23 CHOCOLATE CHIP · COOKIE JAR ASST. · FUOG£ 'N CHIPS MOTHER'S 99 COOKIES • Delicatessen Reduced Prices COTTO · MACHIAEH · 8·0UHCE PKG. OSCAR MAYER SALAMI SLICl!O · ll·OUNCE PACKAGE OSCAR MAYER BRAUNSCHWEIGER &·OUNCE PACKAGE OSCAR MAYER LIVER CHEESE •·OONt:E PACKAGE ROSARITA CORN TORTILLAS .. ·OUNCE Tua GOLD-N-SOFT MARGARINE .83 .87 .79 \ .19 .59 WITH coup0N BELOW BROWN .69 " MUSHROOMS ~ CRISP .12 .. CUCUMBERS GARDEM FRESH ·.29 .. BELL PEPPERS Frozen Food Reduced Prices ARRiVEDERC·l28·0UNCE BOX2 19 PIZZA . • BRIOGf'OftO · 16·0UNCE BOX BAKE 'N BOX BREAD BUTTER SAUCE · IO·OUNCE BOX GREEN GIANT NIBLETS CORN 12·0UHCE CAN TREESWEET ORANGE JUICE 12·0UMCE CAN TREETOP APPLE JUICE fflEHCH SLICED • 20·0UNCE BAG ALPHA BETA GREEN BEANS .36 .43 .54 .54 .68 VANHDE KAMP':SNEA . 12·0Z. BOX 5 9 ENCHI DA DINNERS • ;;wEDISHUNCE LOAF · REDUCED 14c 54 LIMPA BREAD • c'iNtrAM'or~r TRAY. REDUCED 10c 6 9 ROLLS • .89 IS·OUHCE LOAF · REDUCED 6c: ALPHA BETA 'APPLE CAKE 1-puc;n gu1r1n1Md 10 be oilo<h•• .S..ly 17 July :13 USDA INSPECTED · FRESH fROZEN NEW ZEALAND I LAMB SHOULDER ROAST "~.'i,'0 • 8 .. REDUCED 1.21 LB. COOKED& ~ 88 PEELED SALAD SHRIMP • u HORBEST · FRESH FROZEN · USDA GRADE A WITH ~TION OF WING, HECK ANO GIBLETS INCl.110£0 48 YOUNG TURKEY HINDQUARTERS. LI. VEAL-t DAY'S ECONOMY MEAT Tcnllcr, flavor ut veal is featured al all Alpha Bela st<m~s <JI r m;r.s much tower than beef-trv ~umc now. Non·Food Reduced Prices SUPER DAY · REG OR UNSCENT · 8·0Z. A.ERO. ul.TRA BA3NYPES . 8·0Z. AERO. 119 ANTI-PERSPIRANT • M>UHCE BOTTLE · BRUT33 I SPLASH-ON LOTION STICK DEOOOAANT · 2·3,.·0Z. .87 12·0VHCE AEROSOL SCORE N~TURAL MEN'S HAIR SPRAY 7·0UNCE AEROSOL RIGHT GUARD DEODORANT COMPLETE KIT · 1t SHADES BRECK HAIR COLOR 3-0UNCE TUBE PEPSODENT TOOTHPASTE 1.77 .88 1.09 1.47 .47 ~~~~---~~~~---(·~ FRAhRANT & COLORFUL c~;;~;~;; .89 .u ---~---....-.-~-----~ ALP~A BETA'S NEWEST MARKET NOW OPEN IN BURBANK AT HOLLYWOOD WAY' VERDUGO. 8' 01.Mrl lWlk. I Alfl1l( ·,t ,-;•., r t1l AIMU t< 1 tf ffa.I, """"1Tt MAIO· rAOll.11 • &-o.-( •·1 3 .... ,. '"~'fl•\• •~nn ( •J-MI 0. V.tt t t M .. I ···~. 1.23 GlAO TRASH BAGS 1.12 Jr 01 J•tt 1.28 wt«TE KING D DETERGENT 1.43 INSTANT SHAMPOO 1 29 UTTEA GREEN V.!11,ttfWJifllflt•o tt t.f\lt•C' ''''· •''OUfrf'"'-t.AAHUAf~\'fl ,..•t 1.88 ORANGE JUICE .29 fl AIAOI. 0UtC I IOUCW • COMl'UTC w •2 teaspoonpepper 'fotH((,U1Jllf tfNM"J''• 't\11 .. , .,,,,~11i ~tJJAn•t \i(A;YOAYrsw..E J P1llESOl. ~ UOUIO .77 CHIU CON CARNE •O.Oz. c:Nol.26 NEST EA INSTANT TEA 1 teaspoon sa t ,, ""'' CNt .. 0"' ,., .. "''", e''"" ~' """, .... I l"l le asp 0 0 n dry VEG ALL ,31 SALT SUBSTITUTE .61 WELCH'S ....... ustard ,, 0""" JAR ,, '" ". •• ... "'l "'" ....... Of',\PE JAM Off JEU.Y •&6 -----o"" 1.oe o"'°" POWOEA ,.... • .e:J •• fllJN• 1 , .. , Jt,,. , ,. l/• teaspoon. dried -""'"" ........ .,..... .. 'oregano or basil 1 clove garUc Place peanut oil, 9!!1111~ vinegar and remaining ingredients in a pint jar with a tight-fitting lid. .IJ. MiX' well. Remove garlic clove b efore s erving. Makes 1 cup dressing. Entertelnment ttfeppenlngs ..• Fiims Theeler Dence . - T•lnl9Jon In the WI 41 In~• • ~ ~f(lAM JUI' ~fl W C&.AU$5EN • Iii,,, I NY ( .... I I .,. ()UH('( (HY KOSt*A PICKLES 1..C>e $CHIU.ING SEAa()H MUI .28 ~ OUHCI P41""•' • ~"' '~ ~•11<.r .,,. • 1 ttJ Ol t Hv JI PILLleURY SWEET 10 KRAFT MAC& CHEESE , M/4-0Z. 800( 1 \I R•lt•• •·u~ 1 TANG BREAKFAST DRINK APP\.E SNACKS 25 1 "'' •t 1• •• ll>uHCt r•N .96 I/.,,, • ., I '"~A<.• GREEN CHILI SALSA 1 611 HAIR PAINTING KIT 3.011 t 111 -.u t kf •;f r4 • t4 fUfH('C ~.\Of WILSON'S CfAT"IED . Ytlf '1.lk' W1f"H•••-t ,. f • JAR 1A,IL n \I. t l•i ~UUffJll"• '" lll I •1 1.05 BACON I Jll 1• GOOll!.R PEANUT llUl'TER .114 FIStfS'TICKS .117 <• .211 CAANATION f'ISHSTICKS .117 u ALPHA BETA MARGARINE CUBES • H.8. Pf(Q, POUMTAIMfAUIY-4JttW__. ........ TGMllA0---"41..._ HUMJ1M4tTON&\CH-al•Jl •1 Pl .. ~TOMllACK-fUll M. ... St. IOUTHU._. IOIUl.c..tt ... w., COSTA ... ~ ..... lh-& COl1'A .. lt aett.IMSt. LAe.uMAee•s-UMI C6•11Lllhe •YM-1'"4c:.t.w,Ulll••••' ... ...... /, II ' \: \ , ~.July 18, 1875 DAILYP!lQT ~ Ho\A/· to Get 1·nto a Jam Plum Peach Jam captures seasonal flavor for year-round / enjoyment. Freshness Preserved 1 cup ljght corn syrup 4'h cups sugar 'h cup lemon jwce 2-ounce package powdered jam and jelly pectin 1 cup light corn syrup 4 1h cups sugar •I 'Tis Cherry Time 'Tis the cberry season, so buy or pick these luscious frwts and enjoy them whjle you can. Serve them soon after purchasing or picking for they do not keep t.oell. Too many? Make some cherry marmal~de or jam. Jam made with pectin -uncooked type, must be refrigerated and used within 3 or 4 weeks. It will keep longer but may mold. If it does, dis- card the jam. For longer storage, put the jam in the freezer. Frozen jam is safe from mold. CHERRY JAM (Makes 2 plots> 4 cups fresh cherries 3 to 4 cups s ugar Butter Wash and crush fruit. Sfix the crushed frwl with sugar. Heat the frwt and sug- ar slowly and stir con- stantly until the sugar is dissolved. When it comes to a boil, add a knife-tip of butter to reduce foam- ing. Boil quickly until thickened; about 10lo15 minutes. Skim; pour hot into hot, sterilized jars Ud seal with lids that have just been scalded in boiling water. & UNCOOKED JAM FROM FRESH CHERRIF...S <Makes 2 pints) 2 cups washed, pitted and chopped cher- ries 4 cups sugar 1 package powdered pectin plus 1 cup waler or 'h bottle liquid pec- tin Combine cherries and sugH. Let stand about 20 minutes, s tirring oc- casionally. If using powdered pec- tin, combine pectin and Jam will keep 4 weeks or longer. If mold de- velops, djscard jam. For longer s tora ge, put jam in freezer. CHERRY MARMALADE (Makes 3 plats) 2oranges 4 cups pitted cher· ries (about 2 quarts) 11.i cup lemon juice (less if cherries are tart) 3 to 31t2 cups sugar To prepare oranges, remove the peel and cut finely . Cover peel with wate r and boil 15 minutes. Drain off liquid and discard. Remove white flesh from fruit pulp. Cut the fruit pulp into small , pieces. Remove seeds and as much membrane as possible. Combine orange peel and pulp. Add water lo cover. Boil until peel is tender. t Cut or chop cbemet into .quarters or smaller. Add cherries, lemon juice. and sugar lo orange mixture. • Bring to a boil and boil , rapidly until jelling point is reached (219 to 22L t degrees F. }. Ladle hot" marmalade into hot, sterilized jars. 1, Seal at once with lids that have just been • scalded in boiling water. water in a saucepan. Br·-;;;;:;;ifti;;;;;;;;;:::---;-;-;;;;"'iUi1nit"iii1:;-r:m;;-.c;-"&i;r;i"ii~.-ing to a boil and boil 1 · HAMBURGERS NEVER .' minute, stirrin g con· t t d ood' stanlly. ••• as e so g • Add pectin to cherries and sugar. Stir about 2 minutes. Pour into clean jars at once. Cover with clean lids or aluminum foil. Westem Barger• To each pound of hamburger. add 2 to 1 4 tablespoons of MWoody's" Cook-in' 1 Sauce and I beaten egg. Mix thoroughly and make into thin patties. Press two patties together with a filling of finely chopped raw onion. Press edges firmly together and grill over live coals. (Works just as well on your kitchen stove any day of the year!) WRITE FOR FREE RECIPE BOOK & BASTIHG BRUSH: ·woody's·ieox 1788/Long Beach. CA 90801 Artists value the beauty of plums. peaches and other fruits in still life paintings. "Kitchen artists" capture fresh fruit taste for year-round enjoyment in this Plum Peach freezer jam. Since the fruit is uncooked, the jam has a fresher taste. In large kettle stir together plums and lemon juice. Slowly sift in pectin, stirring vigorously. Set aside 30 minutes, stirring oc· casionally. In 4 quart kettle mh together GELSON'S • JURGENSEN'$ · MAYFAIR • RICHARD'S LIDO ground plums and peaches. Stir ... and other fine food stores Let stand at room tem- per a tu re for 1 hour. Refrigerate until set. Store in r efrigerator. Stir in corn syrup and. sugar. Heat mixture, over low heat, to no hotter than 100 degree F. Stir constantly until sugar is dis- in lemon juice. Sift in slowly 1 r-----======------------t--------------------- In this method the jam and jel· Jy pectin is sifted over the pre- pared fresh fruit. Com syrup stirred into the fruit mixture helps prevent sugar· crystals from forming. : When buying fruit for jams and jellies, choose ones that are full-' colored for their variety, fully ripe yet fairly firm. ITALIAN PRUNE PLUM JAM 3 cups finely chopped Italian prune plums (about2pounds) .17'.l cup lemon juice 2·ounce box jam and jelly fruit pectin solved. 1 Ladle into jars or freezer con· tainers. Seal. Store in freezer ; refrigerate if jam is to be used in 2 to 3 weeks. Makes about 8 ('h· pint) jars. Note : Fine blade of food grinder may be used to chop plums. PLUM PEACHJAM 1 ~ pounds plums, pitted, ground 11.4 pounds peaches, peeled, pitted, ground package jam and jelly pectin, -stirring vigorously. Set aside 30 minutes, stirring occasionally. Stir in corn syrup. Gradually add sugar t o crushed fruit, stir- ring well over low heat until mix- ture reaches 100 degrees F (no hotter) and sugar is dissolved. Ladle into sterilized freezer jars or cdntainers allowing "4 · inch headspace. Seal accorrung lo manufacturer's directions. Store in freezer. H jam is to be used within 2 to 3 weeks, store in refrigerator. Makes 7 cups. , MESA PRODUCE ..... .... OPEN 1'rw SUNDAY Mla.7/JI WE ACCEPT FOOD STAMPS 1854 •-fEWPORT BL VD. cc~·=::~t:o~·y OPEN 7 DAYS 9 to 6 Phone 642-6025 Mushroomz69~ ITALIAN SQUASH 10~ Whelher you choc»e Regul~ o r green lobel Oecolleinoted, you'll profit lro m lhe money-soving coupons below. Cut out the coupon along the dolled lines. ond you"ll sove ~I • o n the 8-oz. or 10-oz. size jor of II Tos111r s Choice. Or, dip lhe coupo. along the solid Jina ond sovo 251! on the •-oz. or 5-oz. size. r-------------------ti-rntl I on th e 8-o z. o r JO-oz. size jar of Taster's Choice"' I Ei1her woy, you'n get fresh. perked Oovor thot"s o cut obo ve tho overage. I 1003 Freeze-Dried Coffee, Regular or Decaffeino led. I I !Coupon not good on 2-oz, 4-oz, or 5-oz. sizP.I I I OFF .. ro fHE O£•Ut '"'-•co"~ ""It tt~ nrf ... fl1t1•..1 o"'i I I a• fcllo*• I • o~ovM •r•<•'••d o•v• ~t I , '""d'" 1. 1 rro•J"'d rQ"',-"" '' •"'Cf'•w .. d f,.l-M f\l~•c.--1 ,,,. r • ,,. 1•f' "'' I ., ... rf ,..,., t-~ f.v•. "'""' r,f r.,,,,.u,,. t J '"'''''""''' I \ r;, l'lll._tf .. IH'I•;,, ... ,., (f°'ll"'f ((\\jf'f"A"t I STODE COUPON "°"'·"•d ~.,, b• cu<• •••1 •' 11 .. i..~ •o «~· r\ rht mo; wn 1 "" r "' '"'""' ,,,.,, lcH '"d""""'I ''"'A I I f .. t.f ..... 1:'11 "' fl(tf .,,...,,.. f"' 1 I'°'•'"\ 1'-t fl,,.,, (,I Off'lf'I I o,.;•,·d"-01~,. , .. , C "'~ ,., o• .. ,.. "''•01"11f~1ot--. Of'd 1 "0 od ,f VV'I ~-Clt\fl.•tt-·~. '"""if. •••h <tfod. f'I liii("'flV" ,, lf"l'-''"'~ ('u\l~I •· ,, rov l)flV ..o••• to• Cn\h I .oo1 ............... 1 ION ~OtHr.IM,TIOf'4.,tlUNJ I TO OU• Miu ...... Ot .... a TO TKf NUTIE COl•"At'Y. INC. P 0 IOJ I JOO. fl~ CITY.NC. I ,, .... Off ft GOOD 0Nl' IH us .... LIMIT I I COUPOf" ,[l fAMllY. (11~,.. L'~...!.. __ _ __ VOi~ ~UTILA TE~~EFACED_:!~'~ 1~s:._J Ct-ltl9 25c OFF Only one coupon may be used. / on the 4-oz. or 5-oz. jor o f Taster·s Choice <i 100% Freeze-Dried C offee, Regulor o r DecaHeinored. STORE COUPON FROM Fash ion Island t Newport B_each STEREO SOUNDS OF THE H~RB R I ~ R . OAR.. v .PILOT Patio "" Plans Ease·d For Supper Combo Tempts It's flavor e d with orange. RHUBARB PIE Pastry for a 2·crust 9-inch pie 4 cups l ·inch pieces rhubarb 1 orange, peeled and diced 3~ cup firmly packed light brown sugar 3~ c up ~ran ulated sugar 14 teaspoon nutmeg 1h cup flour lf.J cup butler or margarine, melted Roll out half o! pastry and fit into a 9-inch pie plate allowing a o/.&·incb overlap Mix rhubarb, orange •. s u gars, nutmeg and flour; turn into pie shell; spoon butter over filling. Roll out remaining pastry and cut into 1-2· inch wide strips ; weave over filling to make a lat· lice lop. Press ends of strips to bottom crust; fold the :i~·incb overlap ov~r the top lattice crust; flute. Bake in a preheated 425-degree oven 40 to 45 minutes. CLAM COR N SOUP Our way of using a new canned soup. · ·10"2·0UOCC .can cream of onion soup . 2cups milk 17·ounce cun cream· style golden corn 8 to 10¥.i·ounce can minced c l ams, un· drained Pepper to taste Into a medium saucepan tum the spup; 1raduaUy stir in tbe milk. Add corn and clams. Heat, slirrlna oc· cuionally, unW boiling. Add peppe(. Makes 6 ~gs. Company? Spoon sliced fresh California nectarines in· to goblets or over size wt-"' flaues. Add 2 er 3 Uny scoop• ratpbe.rry sbel'bet. Top with cldJJed dwnpape or glD1erale. loo~ tor Ihm ligs. Tney m3r~ tempora ry ex Ira savings all om lhe slore. Stock up' YOGURT Lucerne Quality All Flavors ~ s ·, h 1 .. 1 .. a.~ 1-l p l'IO( ~l.oi• Ovolott • DINNERS Bel-air frozen (Btef 59•) MAYONNAISE Piedmont i ·•::Q .. r199c 5 .. Jar . n .. •· 19c P\9. Ice Milk e Cooking Bag s .... 29( •v rk1 .• Aul. Yori.Ii~ lonqutl Ouol1 lvc~n~ 85( Holl II ot. 29( Goll on ,lg 10 or 39c ESKIMO PIE '~" FIDDLESTICKS 31·ot 69( p~q. 24 o(OU}1~~ 10.01. 35c ,~9 Plq. 0 Cut Green Bems ~ Fordhook Limas 0 Potatoes. O'Bden ~~~;~ 0 Broccoli Spean BtoM RAGU .SAUCE · Pooch Dog Food i 150L 12c Can • For Yo11r Spaghtlli 5 9 c e 15~:~%. ~NECTARINES ~S\. VllCA Lorge Size Yellow Meated lb. c c ~~·PLANTSA7c LARGE ·SIZE . lovely Fresh Plants ... each II · VOCADO !~~?~ !!~,~!~ ........... ~~~· s 3'' Asserted Ferns ~· S J 25 =.; ''29( 'uch \ CHEESE Safeway Chtddar·longhorn Style · In Random Weights 15!~!:!_151 c PUPPY DINNER i,~--~ • ~ Purina ~ Chuck lijl. Wagon - S-lb. s119 Pkg. AT SAFEWAY Every l•f Steak and Beef Roast We Cut Is ... USQA CHOICE lb. ~!~u~!~~h~« Half: .... rb. S 149 ~~A~ ~i~~h~~~.~9)...~. s21• ~~.~!~!~.~ ~, .. ~:'~;": .. ,.g. 8 9c !':~Sp~!~~.~~~.~~., 69( PlUMPFlll CHICKEN . Manor House s 1 '' Frozen lO·Piece 2 ·•· Pk1. ttdt BAKERY BUYS! I Reisin Bread ~ • Oronge·Roisin 5. 9 • Nut-Raisin I •Raisin ' 1 .... nceltaf JN. OUR DAIRY,CASE FABRIC sonENER Par ~ ~~:~~79~c • Bottle Grode "A" Whole. Body Southern Unaer 3·fbs. lb. SltmSS FRANKS Steriing Quality Always Plump And Juicy! 1.11 •• 6 7c .... ~-!~.--a-r-.12c WINE BUYS! !_"'~~-~ 79c !!!e..!"!-S 18' ~'2 .. :~ .. ~'. .. ~! ~ 51' ~!!,GJ~~.-~-s22~ • we welcome FOOD STAMP SHOPPERS AIR WICK . ,~! 49c S-'Kt ARRID •htroD•y s109 Anli•fM"pironl 9 .. vnct USDA IOllUSS IHF CNUIC( STEAKS •BeefRound ~.189 Tip Steak •Top Round •Bottom Round SAllWAY SRI• POIJCY "ONa A CAN OR PACKAGE IS PRICE MARKED, WE WILL NOT RAISE IT'S PRICE!" ·•••~wse.a-... •J4.._...., ................ ,....~ .... ,.. .... •Mm91f U1f11l1, t1 M J•INdl •1441~ c.htfDr.ttW .... lntlt • ...................... I . .. -.. ,11111'"~ ""' --.,_ ., •• .,.. .... -••• , .. ' '• ' I ' # , t t , , • •., ,9 I • • ,,..... • I' ~ tt .# . . • • . I Poaching Recommended SPRINGFIELD PRUNE JUICE QUART BOTTLE ROY AL Y AMI or SO-LO YOIURT PIMT CARTONS ·COFFEE .. PINEAPPLE RANCH FRESH LARGE GRADE AA EGIS SUNNY DELIGHT R.ORIDA CITRUS PUNCH 60LC• YAM DE KAMPS DINNERS • IEEF • CHEESE • MEXICAN STYLE FRESH BEEF mm GROUND @mm Adapt your cooking to the weather thls summer. Eliminatu oven beat by preparing a quick· nx entree ln one pan on top of the ranae -Eggs La Madeline. Jn this convenient dish, both egea, the m ain protein source, and the vegetable cook right in the milk-based sauce. By adding toasted iin1lish mumns and a lettuce wedge salad, it's a well- rounded meal-in-a-hurry. Easy on the c hef, this im· pressive dish will impress !amilv or gu~sts. On other occasions when you want to servo an impressive but qulclr and eaay meal, poached egas can be done in most any lt quid. Try mUk, broth, wine or beer instead or the usual water. Cold eggs will poach better than eggs at room emperature and the fresher the eggs the more the white will cling to the yolk rather than spreading. GenUy slipping the eggs into the liquid helps the poached egg form pro- perly. EGGS LA MADELINE 3 tablespoons butter 3 tablespoons flour SMUCKERS GRAPE PRESERVES .GOLD MEDAL R.OUR 5 POUND IAG SPRINGFIELD ALUMINUM 10-.~ t FISH VAN DE ~~MPS FILLETS ,~~ WCldneed-r. July US, 1975 1 teaspoon salt 1 • teaispooo nutmeg 1 cup milk DAIL V f>1LOT Cl 1 cup chicken bouillon smooth and thickened. Add trozen peas, stirnng to blend well. Heat unlit sauce ju.st begtos to bubble, stirring c.onstanUy. 10 02. pack <Jge frozen peas 6eggs Split and toasted EngUab muffins or toast points Mell butter in large s killet; blend in flour, salt and nutmeg. Cook, stirring until mixture 1s smooth and bubbly. Stir in milk and bouillon all at once; heal to boiling, stirring constantly. Break eggs, 1 al a l.lme, into sauce d1sb ; slip into sauce. Spooo 6n0Ugh sauce over each egg to coat it slightly. Cover; cook over m edium h eal, bas ting oc- casionally until whites are de· sart.>Q degree of doneness, about 7 -10 minutes. Serve over English muffins; spoon sauce over top. Makes J ~ervings. · 3FOR CUKES 29c. LARGE SIZE HASS 4 /SJ '>AVOCADOS YELLOW FREESTONE CORONET29c PEACHES .,. FANCY THOMPSOM 1RA;Es39~ EXTRA FANCY LA GRANDE .NECTA·29~ ·RINES FRESH ITALIAN 15C SQUASH .,. --, \ TRIAL SIZE 9c • ~··· I \ PRELL ·~ I ~· SHAMPOO {fl JOHNSON'S .-21-. •-. $249 §SHAMPOO .... ~ ~~f~o~.!~~s 99c SUN TAN LOTION 5l.39 ~ CALYiit1~5. 99 c:. t_;;..-----------1 SCOTceqr. 55.99 Store Hours: 8 to 9 Daily-Sunday 9-8 C EXTRA LEAN . $1 39. lb. STEW MEA 18 • · Prices lfhctf•• Thursday thru Wednesday. July 17 to July 23 Pricft ~ .. SMctt -.... Wtt Glocly Accept Food Stc.ps BOSTON Bun $1 39 TURKEY ~P_R_K_R_O_A_Sl~~~·~·~~DRUMSnCKS 39~ ·51.19. EXTRA LEAN s 1 49 NRK STEAK . •· • FRESH. FRYING •ARM AssoRTED sl. l 9... RA. 1111s. LUNCH MEATS a.;....-A-i u-M S_H_S_A_U_S_-.-1~5~1-~ ~1-0:9.~ ::., 99c· r15rrltAY6ER 9c iitNERS 89! BACON ~ ~g.Rs •· DELI SPECIALS .. COSTA MESA.19th and Placellffa· PLACENTIA ··710 W. Chap~n '• I II I ' ... " Q DAIL V _,.LOT Wednesday. July HS. 1975 • .. , . •' ·Three-way· Dish Homemade Dilly Beans ~an be eftjoyed as an appetizer, a salad, or a vegetable dish. DILLY B EANS 4 pounds of green beans 6 teaspoons salt 3 cups vinegar don't bave craclts or nicks. Check lids to make sure that they fit perfectly. Wash jars in hot, soapy water and rinse well just before using. Wasb beans thoroughly and cut in small pieces, or use whole small beans. poon bot red peppec for black peppers.) Fill with boiling vinegar to >A inch of jar top. Wipe oH any spilled food from rim or jar, seal. Makes 6 or 7 pints. TO P ROCESS Take jars from the bath, taking· care not to disturb the seal. Leave screw bands on jars until cooled thoroughly. Place jars, well separated, on a rack or folded towel away from drafts or cool surfaces. Beans Spiced 3cups water 1 tablespoon dlll seed or weed or 6 beads fresh dill 18 whole black peppers or t '1', teaspoon hot red pepper. crushed. PRE PARATION Use ,only canning jars .that Combine salt, vinegar and water. Pack beans hot into hot, clean jars. Add ~ teaspoon dill seed or weed or one head fresh dill and three whole peppers lo each pint jar. (lf desired, s ubstitute >A teas· Process in a simmering hot water bath. P lace the filled jars on a rack in a deep containet. The lope of the jars should be covered with hot water. Bring the water to a simmer t n simmer through the rest of processing period. Process 20minutes. TO TEST SEAL: The next day, check to see if jars are tightly sealed. Press center of lid, if lid stays down the jar is properly sealed. TO STORE: Label jars and store in a cool, dark place. YOU Al ~YS .. SAVE .I WITH STATER BROS. 10W·LOW PRICES • • •• ·STATER BROS. MONEY BACK GUARANTU ON QUALITY MEATS f\IHY PllCl OF MI A TIS UNCONDITIONAll Y GUAllANTllO TO PLlASl YOU .. 0 11 YOUR MONEY Will I I CHUllfULl Y RffUHDlO Jre~h • J roze n J;~/,, FRESH • FROZEN TURBOT FILLET ........... La.89' FRESH • FROZEN . Fl LLET OF SOLE ... ll. 69' FRESH • FROZEN • 16 to 20 COUNT s 39 BAY SHRIMP .................... LB. 3 &ROUND CHUCK BEEF ~ BEEF ·~~ST ~!!K!N! FRESH ANY SIZE PACKAGE Extra Lean $1 Ground Beef .La. c LB. 09 BLADE CUT & DE-VEINED 79~ 79~. FRYING CHICKENS U.S.D.A. GRADE 'A' WHOLE BODY ST ATER BROS. GUARANTIED • CERTIFtED 53~. 39!. CUT·UP FIYERS ............................ ll. 59' · ioucND aoNE ROAST .. Ll.9 a~ BEEF • MANHAn AN THICK SLICES 79$ SLICED BOLOGNA .................. 12.oz. STATHllOS CllTIFlfOU lF•OUAUNTUD 89 C 'l'OUICHOIC~Of STEAKSott aOAST •lllflOUHO $189 CHUCK STEAKS .............. u. SIRLOIN TIP .. ; .................... La. CHUCK CUT •GU.IN FlO HEf • $1 03 7-BONE ROAST .............. u1. MANHAn AN SllCED 79$ MEAT BOLOGNA ........................ 12.oz. IEff•IOHllUSCHUCK $159 STATllllOS.CHllfllO l fH $198 FAMILY STE.AKS ............ L1. CUBE STEAKS ...................... LI. . IONfllSS • IHJ •CHUCK $159 ROLLED ROAST ............... La. OSCAR MA YER • ROUND 011 S~ARf $139 VARIETY PACK .......................... 12.oz. llAN•flNOH •GUAlANTUD $159 WlllltlMMlO•TlNOUllPlOIH s22s e BEEF RIB STEAK ............ LI. T-BONE STEAK ............... La. llff•SMAUIND., ll 1179 $149 OSCAR MAYER 79t COTTO SALAMl ............................ a.oz. lllf •• ,. CUT $198 w m TllMMfO. OUAU NTHO • lflf LOIN $2 29 RIB ROAST LARGE END ............. .La. PO'R1K3 SHONULDER .. EACH $3 89 OSCAll MAYEll s119 SMOKIE LINKS ORCHRSE .. : .... 12.0Z. CLUB STEAKS ...................... LI. PORTERHOUSE STEAK ...... LI. lflf • IOHIUSS aOUHO STIAI( .. ll. Sl.59 $147 -STATH,laOS. CUTIFllO•lftHOIH $249 SWlnS All WHlll MlAT WITH GRAVY s339 ROAST TURKEY ................... 2 La. ,KG. -ROUND STEAKaoNE-IN ... i.a. TOP SIRLOIN stEAK ............ LI. U ATOMOS CRTifllOllU •OUAU.HT&O $147 UAN•IOtolWSSl&f $149 STATH HOS c~u· CUT $1 89 HAM SLICES ........................... L1. SWlnS LIGHT & DARK MEAT W/GRAVY s298 ROAST TURKEY ................... 2 La. PKG. RUMP ROAST ~~ .. "'...... STEWING MEAT . ._ .... ._.L1.· BISCUITS ~:~ ............................................ 1.s-0z. 18• IVORY SOAP SHELL NO-PEST STRIP ·---.. EACH sl .69 PERSONAL s1z1 . LAKE TO LAKE MILD CHEESE 24-0Z~2.39 4-UR PACKA; RESCENT ROLLS ~r ........................ 54• S 1 i lEST :~~" ...................................... -...... -nus 93 c !~~!,!~RRY JAM__;:.~~ • l'ttMlllM·llVt• 3oc 71 c SKIPPY DOG .FOOD ... 1 •. s .0 1. • · CH.A RCOAL BRIQUETS ........ 69c • NESTEA ·sl 13 REYNOLDs 10050.fl. s131 . INSJANT.>.oz.slu .l.oz. HEAVY DUTY FOIL .......... . l 5-0UNCE PACKAGE c CHEERIOSc1a1AL-85 . . AMERICAN(( CHEESE _ $1 °3 * DEL MONTI• 17-0UNCl c WHEAT•Es 82 c FRUIT COCKTAIL _ 38 CEREAL GOOBER GRAPE::~ 80~ ....... :=·l 84• ASSORTED • 4 2-0UNCE $1 3 5 IRISH SPRING ~~r .. 1~UG( ~r.-26' CHUN KING D1v1D1a PACK ........... .. DRANO AEROSOL PLUNGER S-01. s1.65 REGULAR OR DIET. 12-0UNC( CANS $ 05 w~~~i~~'. __ ~:1~~1~12 PEPSI COLA_ ............ -.. s-racK 1 HUNGlt'( ·JACK •COMPLETE 7"' c PANCAKE MIX .. 24-o z .. '..~"'~:~ ~ ?• * ~ ...... . CANTALOUPl~S _ LARGE SWEET VINE RIPE /~/; --). t Sc ,.~ .. ~; ... '\o';-. _,··~'·;, LB. PEACHES LARGE SWEET YELLOW MEAT SPRINKLE SWEET·~v ... --.. • J.OL 45• CREAM CHEESE~-... ···-... t-<>L 44' 35:. .) JAR CHEESE g,:.,7~:::::g?~ .. -M>1. 45• ' ..... ···u ··aosA s 3 5 c -CMlRlllS p L (t ............. \.II. 5 c HO"l4~!'.1.; ~ao« ............ iiiN£5 ... 3 45c NEC1 (t ~lO 19c ~. ON'iONS ..... · (>tOl'lftt( $151 APPLE PIE ....... -...................................... 31-01. w""•c 34c HASH BROWNS ............................ 2-La. M°i'NP LEASER DINNERS ......... 97c MIH\lll .. 1.10 45• -U&t ...... , a&· LEMONADE '"',, BREAKFAST STRIPS i.o, CRfAM1P'iis • <HOCOl&ll IH>f s&· 'GiA;('j ulC[ --t oi 31 • liflON'IN'UllU 39 c ORANGE JUICl_·······-··· .. ············•2.oz. \14NOfllAM•'~"'ACll • 107 BIEF ENCHILADA .................... :, •. 01. iiONEYWHEAT BREAD ,.J.l •. 7 4 c CLING FREE .. ........ . .. " ............ 7-0L Sl.15 WATER CONDITIONER ~-·-11.35 LEMON FLAVOR TEA -1u -.. 4.0L s1 .21 KRAFT PEANUT BRITTLE _ 11.()l 62' NEUFCHATEL~~·wm _ __ ... 1.01. 42' MRS. FILBERTS ~()lt . 11•.01 71 ' ~~. '!L~-~~·•-•••"•••• .. J•ll . 8 9 c GRAPE JELL y WRCH'' ••. -·-.4M>l '1 .58 KRAFT KOOGLE .. uoua> -· -12.01 63• NIAGRA SPRAY STARCH _,M>z ~ NESCAFE INSTANT COFFEE .1o.oz. '1.97 ~e,edtJ{, & g'~ ~ Sau6tt}L ELBERTA PEACHES ~~ -•.oz 33• CUT GREEN BEANS::kr ... e.oi 32• BUFFERIN KOTEX BRECK CARNATION SLENDER ~=no 10.01 21• TABLETS MAXI PADS SHAMPOO SUGAR SUBSTITUTE .. -, .... 1'\.o1 79' DIL MONTI 66C 100., $1 l 9 m664.,f1 IJ u.oz $1 49 PIAR HALYl l ._ ...... n .02. RED GRAPE JUICE....an ,~? 59' BPIESPMTOOL BU~°'ftl!~N SUSAHVAEMPBOAOBY SMALL RED BEANS~··-·--u t.01 n- :g~~:~~NUACCt =;~~·:.~:::~f. ... 65' IM)L 79' IM)l 69' BREAD AND BUTIER PICIUS ',=: 47' NEW FREEDOM MACLEAN$ ARRID X·DRY ROKA DRESSING ....,, ----M>l &er llNI PADS TOOTHPASTE DEODORANT SALAD CRUNCHIES ____ t.()L 4r 11 . .A1 '.:1'4 ~99' INSTANT MASHED ... 93c POTATOIS -.,. ........... .02. OLIVE OIL~IM>L 11.59 ___ a.oz. 93• CORNED BEEF~ 11.03 __ 1.ot, as· RA&U SPAGHml SAUCE u~z.58' CHIU w /BEANS -toT. ·--.. UJ.OL s1· DOG FOOD:..ulllfU'IB -.. -14J.OL 21· RY -CRISP~ 11.s.or 63' _ .... _..oz. 51 ' FAULTLESS SPRAY STARCH .: ... 22.01. 7r FAULTLESS FABRIC FINISH .. ~z &7• llMBIES TODDLER DAY,, NtGHT ..... n -s s1 .26" . mG PUSTIC CUPS ~z. ........ •oo-s s1.01 14600 So. lroolMrtt A.-.• w ... ..-..~eoo &at com.s ••• o,....t PRICES !FFEC. 707 W•••M-.. ..... St ... CottaMeM u1w.,.......,.11.4.wwnn~ · •:~=~:::: .. :cW.:.._ 7·FULLDIYS HU~A•t .......... •IHC.• OOWtstU.C.A•e • ......._ • ' °' 260J w.-t s. • ....,. st .. s-. •• no 1...., ..... s..t. ._ :: 171 .,... ..... ,_.. JULY 1nH .... c•.,.... ..... G .... Gft•• 1210 McfedM ..... s-te... . .n ~= :::: ~ .. thru JUL y 23RD " 2160 Morftl TlftfM AH .. s.t• AM 564 Weit ........ 9¥ •• ...._ llOll MIJl'•I• • ...._ ..... v.-.y. P-W ... !!Wlfl~~P!W'!'I .... ~~ I \ .. ,. e if ess the oot, .. I . I ... . .. . ·~ ' . I .~ . • . \ .. _,.., •L ,. -.:; . ~ '· , Wednelday, July 18, 1975 Home life of a circus family is more natural than you might expect as indicated by 4·year-old Oliver and his parents, Sigrid and Gunther Gebel-Williams, parading with an elephant for Circus Spirit of '76. DAILY PILOT Q Cooking Under Big Top • I I . Lower I 1· S.rving Su9991tion Tip Steak 79 8"f Rout'C!. loneleu •.•••••. Le 1 7·Bone Steak 01 Beel Chuck ............... · .. LB 1 Top Sirloin Steak 1 8onelesa. Beef loin , ••••••••. Le2" T-Bone Steak leef Loin(Porterhouu 2.58Lb).L8248 If we offered a coupon, • • it W 0 U Id I 0 0 k These days you're seeing more ond more coupons advertised by super- markets: They save you o few cent~, but they usually limit you to one item • or require you to make o $5 m1n1mum purchase. Rother than a few I . k h . coupons that limit your savings, lucky offers lower prices overall. Thol's reol savings, the kind thot odd up and reduce your total food budget, and that's why lucky is still the leader 1n saving you more. Al lucky because I e t IS our pric~s ore lower ~veroll o~d your savings ore greater, rust think of us • as one b19 coupon, with no l1m1I to your savings. . ·' Beef Prices! Stewing Beef · 11 Boneless ................... Le 1 Young Turkey ~5:'~ c Hlndquorten, Qoril Meot •..•. La48 Cut-Up Chicken c Frying, Fresh, USDA Gr. A .... LB 63 Frying Chicken 01 Breast, Fresh, Split, W!1tibs ... La 1 Game Hens c Cornbh. USDA Grode A ••. 20-0Z 981A Young Ducks c USDA Grode A .............. l e 98 Sliced Liver · c BHf. Skinless & Oeveined .... Le 88 Cooked Fishsticks Mr.Boston ........... 1-LBPKG 5~ ~Kraft Dinner MACARONl &CHEESE ............. '. ................ 7-l /40ZBOX oA~~~A~~~ ~-'-~~~. . . 1'0ZIOAF 44 ~ oA!:!.~~!lii~r.t ~~~~~ •60ZCAN 49c oA!:T~~~~ !~-:-a. 9>,.0lCAN 55c oA~.~~~5.. ~~iced l'Jle~!~""' 33c oA !:!.~!!~O~~OP~~o!H ~'.~.~>~Zl~F 29¢ oA ~~!;I~~. ~~~~~ail . . .. .. . '60lCAN 35 ¢ oA~~~~~'.~ ~'.~~~ ~~!,~! 95c Rib Steak 71 Lorge End, BHI •..•...• , . • . LB 1 Rib Roast Lorge Et'C!, BHI ..... , . . . • LB 171 I Frying Chicken c USOA GrodeA.Whole lody .. La 56 Frying Chicken 09 Drumsticks & Thighs .. g~~~· .La 1 ~~.~~-.!~.".~'.~~~~ .. '20ZCAN 12¢ Smoked Sausage 19 Former John.,, .......•..... LB 1 Sliced Bacon i 1 lody lee ............. 1 ·lB PKG 1 Rib Roast 11 Smoll End. Beef . . . . . . • . • . . . Le 1 Rib Steak 11 Smoll End, Beef ....... , .. .. l B 1 ~e~~~. ~!~~~~ ......... LB99c Canned & Packaged Foods the finest quality produce available ..... No limits to your Savings. -MMrYH .... • • • '" ~ ColMty ArM tvuatoee 120 ltO. UYMOfilD AMMO 111 W. &A rAUM AVW. 111 IO. STA ft CIUMI .... .... ,. .. a1 I.A PUA A~ QllYA MISA t1M llAllOI llVI. OMOU. OIOYf 11171 IVCUO STlln 11172 IUOMOllA nttn IMllll•GTO• luat .. , AftMIA AVINUI , ... IOUA C*CA AYflllll LAGUNA IOlU um CAIOT IOAO AT µ '" LA MIUOA lA MlaAOA SltO,,_G COOll OIA!fGt IUO I. CHAPMAJI AVDIUI SAJllA AMA • >:att so. •isTot s111n ttA#TC>tl )0JO I 'frlll "VI fUSTIH U2t • ll'VO 6 V[Mlll WUTMllClHa ttOO WUlMllCSnl AVl,UI ll011 SNIMODAU mm wtt1mla ISOSJ I MUlllHY Da. ff .. Mlttt<* an NO. 1ua10 narn ' f' , U HUlln!4GNN NAO! ........ llOf) HOOCHURST Slr 1 . • lRMAnm LA ..... JOI MO. llUllCol ·~~c l~. u.. ~GI COUNTY ""' .• AllA AllA TO SllYl YOU. . . . '*' SOU'fll MA• nun nOllS OfltM AT •.OO A.M. Because they are con· stantly working and traveling, one would SUS· peel life toge ther for a circus family would be one or constant con- fusion. Nol so for the Gebel· Williamses, now appear- ing with their trained horses in the Ringling Bros. and Ba rnum & Bailey Circus at the Forum through July 30. Gunther a nd Sigrid do their best to make sure their childre n g row up in a home-like atmosphere. "Our private car on the circus train is quite large and I have all the regular kitc h en ap- pliances that I ne ed to cook meals ," s he ex- plained. "No matter how busy we are, I think it is quite important for families to sit and eat together. It i~ a quiet time when we can Lalk to eac h o ther without the uproar or the show intruding." Here are two of the "' Gebel-Willia ms' favorite dishes: WINE·CHiCK EN 2 pounds fryin g chicken, cut in pieces 4 tablespoons flour 3 tablespoons olive oil 1 teaspoon salt 'h c up s hre dded boiled ham 11/4 cups dry white wine Season the chi cken pieces with salt and pep· per and coat with flour . Heat the oil in a large skillel, add the chicken pieces a nd fry until brown. Add the ham and saute for two minutes. Add the wine, cover, and bake in the oven for 50 minutes at 350 degrees until tender. Serves four. PLUM DUMPLINGS 21/" cups sifted flour 1h teaspoon salt 4 tablespoons butler 2 eggs, lightly beaten 1h cup milk 20 fre s h p lum s seeded 20 sugar cubes 2 ta blespoons butter 1 cup fine dry bread- crumbs 2 tablespoons sugar Powdered sugar Sift the flour a nd salt together into a bowl. Cut the butter into the flour with a pastry blender or knife. Add the eggs and just enough milk to make a stiff dough. Roll the dough out on a floured board. Cut into 20 squares large enough to enclose the plums. Place a sugar cube in the cavity of each plum and wrap in a square or dough. Pinch the edges of the dough t ogether with wet fingertips. Cook the dumplings a few at a lime in simmer- ing salted water for 10 minutes. Remove with a vegetable s poon a nd drain. Heal the butter in a skillet and brown the breadcrumbs a nd the sugar. stirring constant- ly. Roll the d umplings in the br eadcr umbs . Sprinkle with powdered s ug a r . Serve i m · mediately. Sources Identified Organ m eals, such as liver, are the b est sources or iron, but red meals, egg yolks, sea foods, legumes and iron- fortified foods, such as cereals, are also very good sources. Dried fruits, such as rais ins, prunes and apricots, are good sources too. The amount of iron in a single serving or whole grain or enriched cereal is not large, but the amounts or these food.$ generally consum ed in a day ran make them very important sources or iron. -----. ~ ,1,lES in tue DAILY PILOT ' I \ .. CA.IL Y PILO'T Y4ednesda ,Jul 16, 197~ Bread Appealing Grated apples make . Favorite Predicted the delicious difference in this The fi'rst apple crop in lhc New World was harves ted from trees planted by lbe Pilgrims. And thanks to the ingenuity of our an- cestors lht> appl<> has beeome the key ingredi<.>nl in many delicious ,dishes. :i close second. Rome Beauty or Golden Delicious appks work best. APPLE BREAD 11:. cut> shor tening .:a cuµ sugar 2 eggs, well bt•ah-11 2 cups s ifted all-purpose 1 tablespoon gr ated lemon peel ;.o a cup chopped walnuts \ream shortening and sugar tmtil hght and nutty; beat in t•ggs Mix and sift nour, baking powder. bakin ~ soda and salt; add altt•rnah.'ly with the gr ated upple l o cg~ mixture. moist bread which could easily become a favorite Undoubtedly. 1t is out of this long his tory thut the s aying ·:American us apple pie'· sprang. Apple bread may not ~ as American as apple pie, but for a delicious lastt• t real at should rate flour 1 teaspoon baking powder 1 leasµoon baking soda l tc:aspoon salt Stir in kmon peel and walnuts <bal kr will be stiff). Bake in ~reased and fl oured 9x5x3-inch loaf pan al 3SOF' degrees for 50 to. f.0 minull's. Oo not slice until told. at any home. 2 tups coarsely gr all-d rnw Jpples Sole -------are at Mate By TOM HOGE 11.P ... ~l••lwrH Writ., Some people believe that cham pag ne should be r~erved for gala OC· cas ion s like la unching ships or p riming wed· ding receptions. And the re is something festive about liste ning to the pop of the cork and wa tching the s moke-like whiff tha t s pirnls into the air just before you pour the sparkling golden h· quid. But there ts no reason why champagn e should not be served before or during a n esp ecially good meal. if you have th~ funds to buy a bottle. ft 1s a lso a wort hy aid lo cookery. 1f you realJy want to splurge. And that does not mean the many wines m asquer ad ing as ctulmpagnc. )'he only wine with the right to be called cham- pagne is made from cer- t ain legally s peci fied gr.apes grown in certain parts of the FrelJlh pro- v inc e ca lle d Ch a m - pagne. f 'ILET 0 F SOLE SIMME RED IN CHAMPAGNE 12 thick fillets or sole 1 :i bottle brut cham· pagne l s m a ll oni o n cbopped fine 7 ounces butter 6 tablespoons fresh cream 4 egg yolks Sa l t a n d fr es h ground pepper Lay fille ts rt ~t in p<ln and cover I w ith cham- pagne. Add salt. pepper, onion and 1 t ablespoon butter . Bring s lowly to boil, reduce heat and sim me r ge n t l y 7 minutes. Whe n cooked , remove fillets with per forated fish ser ver , pl ace on serving dish and put in slow oven. Put remaining butter in pre h eat e d thick saucepan and allow to m elt off the fire. Add cream and egg yolks. B ea l m ix tur e 7 minut.es with wire whisk. .Add enough of the sim· m ering liquid lo obtain a fai r l y liquid cream sauce. lie al sauce but don •t boil. Pour over fish and serve with <:ba mpagne. Serv1::s G Marinade Chokes ·ideal Good added to a sal;.id o r served a s an hors d'oeuvre. MARINATED ARTICHOKES 14 cup olive oil 2 ta l.ll es poons tar ragon vine~ar 1 l e1blespoon minced onion 2 t a bl es p oons minced parsley ''" te aspoon pe pper 9 -o un ce pac k aJ?;c frote n artichoke hearts, cooked a nd drained Whisk together the oil, vinegar. onion , parsley a nd pe pper ; add the artichokes and m ix gent· ly. cover and c hill 6 houn or overnight. There will be about 24 ~icboke p ieces. For sala d use, add a~ mllllY as need ed . along with the marinade, to salad creens a nd toss ~II ; if necessary, edd utra olive oU , vinegar, sail and pepper. I'« hon d 'oeuvre use, senewith plclrs . • of super fdyancla low price at Sweet, fresh peaches are great any time, but this week peaches at Hnlphs are at their best. Now is the ti me lo enjoy them - al breakfast. a snack or wilh ice cream. And part of the pleasure is Ralphs low price of just 29c a pound. Peak of quulity at Ralphs low price. A Super combination. Super Bakery White or Wheat Meat Master Meats All Star 16oz. 29 US. Grade A-Southern Whole ~Fryers Beet Chuck -Blade Cut Chuck ~steaks ~ ~;~od Beef Roast ~ B;rTip Steaks D F~uh Beef Brisket 8 Oz. Package Farmer John-Link lb .52 ~sausage ... 39 Ralphs E~clusive-A Blend ot Ground Beet and Soy Protein Concentrate Super ". 78 ~Burger lb .• 49 ~Bread ~ p~~nd1~k;; D H~~b~;~~ Buns ~ Alppf;opj;~e Goodness Super Flowers Oecorative-6' Pol O Round or Sirloin 2 49 M 1b. 1.48 ~ Boneless Veal Cutlets lb. • um lb. 1.68 ~B:;tc~Ne:;~08~mtos 15~a~~ .79 OPlantS loat • each .79 pkg. 39 of 8 • 1 59 D liarvest-water Added ~ HBoangSintgo-6n PoFtemS 1b • Boneless Ham -:.:: tt>. 1.68 ~ each 3.87 Super Produce Large, Freestone Yellow ~Peaches lb .29 each .79 each .15 each .10 lb .• 10 lb .• 10 bskt. .39 tath .39 o BReeot Uchnucd1c-Boshoune1der Roast F , L L Pu c ~D MG•drou• tromn ad··c' chhudtuck " 1..29 ~ ~;;·c;.;1;·~~· ••""'' lb •• 99 "' •• ., '"w'" """··5;p;;"Grocery----------~ ;;;;less Stew Beef :: !~: ~ ~k~ ShrimP lb. 1.89 e;st•F.iOdi" RBIPl!;:Frozen ~~o:~;;;b lb.1.15 ~B~PerchFillets "··89 ~Mayonnaise ~1;.98 ~Lemonade ~ F~~h1dp0~niR~st lb .• 89 Super Deli As:oned Flavors 6oz. 13 can • Ligh t ChUflk D 'i=~h H;;;"Turl<eys "· .69 "''1 "-' '"'" HI C Ralphs ".:~ .39 ~Tuna • I Ground ~ 1~;k~zy'" B~~t;"·'"'" -lb"'.' 1.29 Ralphs • 3 ' ~Drinks D Margarine 1 lb. • Old fashioned ~ Fresh Frozen -Defrosted 89 ~ r!~~~ii{;;;,der Chops lb "1 :10 ~ ~~t~~rgarirH! ·: :: ::~ ~ ~ehs Cream ·~:~ • 79 ~ c:nee ~ ~~b1Sh~~lder Roast lb .• 99 0 Wiener Flavored Health a Beauty Pantry Fillen ~ Mealtime Winners 12 oz .• 63 O Johnson's .9 89 Western Yearlino Beef D Solicaedn-o41xa7 oHr4a\lum4''1 97 ~Baby Powder . p:~:. •99 4 oz. • ~Regular or Herbal • 49 0 Yearling Beet loin-Bone-In 119 Cut p I' h R .. oz ~Sirloin Steaks lb I 0 MSors.ftFilbMer1sa-r1gaor2n:uneb 85 ex 0 I~ emover bolll~. ~ 1 tb • ~ Mu sengtll '!;._aBorlingneeeet-SLtoeain ks lb. 1.89 0· bl Do he ti oz 49 I ' 0 HSaebrleawmNa1,.iocnahl-UBoblosgna or 1sposa e UC pkg:. ~ 12 oz 1. 7 4 9 1 ... UI 0Pl1sfaoyt11be'ex-PB1cakabgeyotBo100 ttt~ ~ P~rt~~o~~ Steaks lb 1. 79 ~ Ch;;;w w;dgeon S~ead -~ ~v .eap. 1.ffl U vReaOr11Ungnedee18-cohunec:k Roast J oz. • 0 Analgesic ~oo c1 2 49 ~ lb .• 99 0 PSoarkaft'(-Ml oar 2r lguab n'ne • F.·3 ~Anacin 1fablets ' bolll~ • ~ 11b .• a ~eyBrut . 0 vReairb1ingSBteeaet ks r H . Co I S 7 oz JO ~ ID. 1.39 D Roalraphsn-gePure Ju1·ce halt . 85 . . air ntro pray* ca~ .\ ---------------' gal. • ho~e~ FoPcl H'!~!.~!?!~-!~l~~es s~~~ .~~irits ~ BridQk,ro Brea& Lysol Sandra ~ M;;i-p;;ed<var.euea ~Disinfectant 1":J. 39 ~Vodka .~:~ 3. 79 ~ o;;;~-:,~~ ~ c,Y~·r~~0bl~;s D 8~1~P~ns 49 O Ralphs -6 Year Old'. ~,k~6 • · ~ Straight Bourbon tiflh 4.29 ~ 1 89 D Brewed in Oregon-12 OL Cans 5 pk. 1 29 each • Aspen Gold Beer canon • ~ T~;r r~t;d Varieties ~Mi;~v-btes lib. 39 pkg • aoz. 27 pkg .• 1201. 59 can • 21b 89 pkg .• 10oz. 31 pkg .• O Non Dairy Cr11mer ~Rich's Coffee Rich * c3a2n~~ .57 [] Auorted Colors-Porous Poinl Flair Pens 54 D,Jblrgundy -Chablls-Rhine halt 3 34 each • Almaden Mtn. Wines gallon • Prices effective July 17 through July 23 \~ •••H•rr•~ff•.,.~r t•t• L ~V•"O~lt•M•• IHf Oristan Tablets ••• 1.33 lV Enchll1d1 Oilf!err; ll t ~Oitl.,,. • Q~• 4 •' ~~ fitoH••ll C•tu1•• '"~ .29 ._J Black Pepper .... 73 l"£.J Refried Beans Dc.,.-.,,,io"-'-'' .. 14.tt .:~ .59 Evaporated Miik U Golden Grain ~Macaroni & Cheese 7'•0Z. 25 plcg .• ~ t<;~fi'ca;;~s 1401. 89 pkg .• ~uq~icisi~~~ 10c~~ .29 U Motl s -Cinnamon or Plain 25 oz. 53 IY'J Apple Sauce jar • n Burger & Cheese-Beel & Chic -3 In 1 29 ~Skippy Dog Food w 1c~~ • O Ocean Spray ~ Cranapple Juice ~ i~~~~i c~ttee ~ rid;-o;t~;~nt O Rice A Roni-Eacept Wild Blend._ ~Rice Mixes ~i~·r~Mi~e ~ Joy-L1rge Size ~ Liquid Detergent O Flnul Vegetable ~Crisco Shortening ~ o~<>~~~r c~tt;k ,. l J 'fl..-1111 •~•••vnt S•••,... • .~~ .61 'N' Beel Franks 32oz. 87 bollle • 10oz. 1 31 ju • 49 oz. p~g. 1.21 pkg .• 39 ~oz. 99 tar • 32 01. 1 09 bottle • 3 tb. 1 87 can • ~~ 2.87 .,., 1.29 kh•,•• '''"" • ·,:~ 1.09 V. French Green Beans ... :· •• 34 v e99' s:b~titute f tlf •_ ~ l •tMI '~ \ '"'°"' fl1,., t t M r-:l O·t~°"d A lulMI •" .45 IYJ lco Tea Mlle ,,, .18 1'£.1 Cut Green Beans 1~ l-~ ,Of'Mftel~H -OJOtf•K \ ,;; .69 !'£..I Ivory Bar Soap \choc:• Hot Lather Rellll ''°' .9f Balsam Shampoo Spray Deodorant ,, .... , ... 111..,. TWln Eyebrow Pencil J Cl""'t ,.,, !It.ch~ rv Drive Detergent t ~ ,,.,,_,e-, '1.• t.t1•"'' .:.~'. 1.57 tv:JWhile Bread l A,.,,"'' h•r>r1•d "'•"• .. •• ,:·. 1.37 1X..1Cheese Cakea r ~v-o. ... ,...,_,,., .. ... A4 ~J ChetH Enchllad11 [ ,#, ,Ch•t•t ffetff ·~:: 1.93 l'£.I Mhced Vegeteblea• Asterisked items not available in the following stores: """' ...... "' "'....... . .. . ....,..... _ .. . .......... -. .,,,. ,..,,., . ~ • •·1 t' ~ t..•"°" t -UMt« "'"' •• • •• 89 oc.Jlce Tea Mia l). l•tOfl't ....... ,., 1.29 1'£.1 Mak• A Better Burger ,... 01 o~··-c-,. .. · .... ,., 1. Paper Towel• , • ., rl:'""'-l·•fl• ••• . ,,9 .79 OCJFreeie Dried Coffee , .... ,. ... ._ . , .. ..,....... 'v .............. -<•-,.,, ... •. I .. . , \ .......... c , ....... tt..'W l .. 4flt•t. IYOI. , ............ •J« l ... ~"'•l The ~r llD'ket wltl1 l!l.P!! ~prices ~ ,.. t A"".,......••• ,.,"' • 7 5 ~ Poliah Sau11ge 1f.01 o ,,.,,,.,.,._1,_oc•wvntor ,,, .62 Ko1htr Franks 1, I IU ~ )., hftt<I -htt• ,,,.. .. et L":J 5Ytty • -&\e '"' ,,, .46 ~ Apple Juice ...,.; .69 1'£.1 Fabric Softener [ ~S,•Uil 1t0ft,IR U o N• .. tc.•-'11,,_1""" P•• .49 rY 1 Biz Pre Soak o~ .90 Saltine Crackers ..... 1.49 •Jo•. 1.51 1 m [ ~Vt•CtwM"-".,_.." 110, l .J!''"'•·lltt•So• ':,. .45 !')(' Granola Cereal ,., 1.41 OCJ Freeze Dried Cotlee I '' l ~ ',~.,~ ..... '#l'ttrl' 1Aoit1o1tf•ff It} ,., 2.51 !'L1Bleu Cheese Oreulng ••• .79 ... L~l-l9"'J~L.Mt•nt"'-''OL"41 ~L·• ... •·L••'-'"" .. ; 2.51 IY, Ice Tea Mia ,._ .. "'" 1.64 1'£.1 lct Tee Mia ,.. o ..... , .. ll ... ,,., ·"• 1., 1.19 Jimmy IJHn S1u11ge ... h 1.09 .............. ' ' .... , .. ._ ........ ,.)\•• \ ......... I t"'4\•"•~ ~· ,.., ...... .... .......,....,,.>, .. , LM,.,......1f'0\'1' • • ......, .... .,,, ....... , .... ""', •• , .... 1 .. f,._••""'O•h -__ .. -·· " I ~::-..,.-;. • " ,... • W~ reserve the right to llrnlt or ............... '• • rtluse salea to commercial ........ '• · • • • dt1ler1 or wholesalers. r••dl•·-• ., r •• ,«•·-. ., ; Clleaf IDi~-·~ ;; i;; ~ ·~ '" ~" '~~ . .,, ; 1 Cereal ·~~ .89 11 Wrap ·: .• 69 1 I Unlll OM ltttl'I •fld 0111 COllPOfl hr Cll1t1111ef 11 Lilllll Oflt lie• 1114 O... Coupo11 ''' c11a~1 f ~ ln.cttte July 11 lllroutll JllCy ll ""'°" ln.ttlwe Jul) 1f lllrcuitll Jllty u L COUPON J L COUPON " I ----------------~ 9901ADAMS8lVD., HUNTINGTON ltAOt ISC71 S. IAOOIHtMST, MSTMINSTtl ~1 N. LOAlA. ANAHEIM 6942 WARNER, HUNTINGTON IEAOt STOM Halm: 9-10 DaAy, 9.9 Sunclar RAllHS STORES AM lOCATEO AT: 380 E. 17th ST., COSTA MESA 2'167 ,ASIO Df VAUNCIA. LAGUNA HIUS 171.61 17th ST., TUSTIN ' T t • lllAIFAST UIKS • llUIFAST ,ATTIES • llUIFAST S111PS . e BREAKFAST SUCU soz. 79c Pkg. ea. e CUT CORI e PEAS •. MllU VEGETABLES 1ooz. 23c Pkg. ea. . , . . . . . . ... FRESH GROUND BDF (Any SIH Pai chge) JIMMY DEAN PUBPOll IAUIAGI l/••··· ~AlllllY P"CT QUAUTY MJBCOFRE 1 LB. s 1 09 3 LB.$ 32s CAN CAN •ITANT 10 oz s 1 s• COff& JAR 0 HUNT'S KETCHUP 33e 98~ ... s11• llt. s11• .... $109 lb. s1s• llt. $149 •• IVORY 22oz: 69( BOTTLE IN<;LUDES 10' OFF '-ABEL Fleischrnann's EGG BURRS 16oz.pkg. 79c Treesweet Florida · 49 6 oz. 27C ORANGE JUICE 1~:~· c can 16 oz.,. Can 7 ? GRAPEFRUIT JUICE 1201. 49e Can 6 oz. 27c Can Oscar Mayer Oscar Mayer Luncheon Meat :..~=~"~~~: $ J 11 :.:::~:.:;~~ .. $137 •oz. 39c Jar Lascco SHRIMP COCKTAIL IMPIRIAL MARGARINI 55c SWEET -VINE RIPENED· THICK MEATED ~~~' ~~~~~R~H TENDH s'c\':~FOANIA LONG GREEN LARGE RANGES cucu•RS .. J SLBS.$1 00 ICJ!A. EGG PLAIT 19!A~ 19~. RmD RIPE CALIF. CHERRY TOMATOES 3ftt PT. ...... BSKT. ~~~ 99( GARDiilisSMystery G~~~0" 99¢ 1 f~l LIQUOR .NGLISH ARMS GIN s2" SIR SCOTTY SJ" sth Scotch Whiskey sth JIM BEAM • STRAIGHT ' s 5'' MILLER ~ s 1 s' WHISKEY sth BllR u~.~~· · No purchase necessary ADULTS ONLY .&Fabulous nights ot Th~BROADMOOR Colorado Springs. Colorado SKIPPY CHUNKY PREMIUM PEPSI. COLA 6 1202. CANS 99c Diet or Regular PURINA DOG FOOD . LOVIN' SPOONFULS CAT FOOD . . I, , . ~ .,..,. / .. .. -t 14~~~z. 27( 212112 oz.5 5c · CANS --~w:ww-PAITH VALUAIU COUPOll MiW...,....~.......,..,., TIDE"T;:o;~o"79c INCLUDES 10' OFF LABEL REGULAR PRICE WITHOUT COUPON Sl.22 LIMIT ONE ( 11 WITH U.00 PUllCHAH l!XCLUOING ALCOHOLIC BEVERAGES, TOBACCO, MILK PRODUCTS, TIDE AND FLOUR. LIMIT ONf? ITEM (YOUR CHOICIU WITH U .tl l"URCHASE. BOTH ITEMS WltH SI0.00 OR MORE PURCHASE. LIMIT ONE COUPON OF EACH ITEM PER CUSTOMER. COUPON GOoD JULY '' THRU JULY ?2 GOLD MEDAL FLOUR 'CORONET KITCHEN TOWELS BIG 43c ROLL RICE MIXES 100 ~PUTIY VAl.UABI.£ COIN WITH THIS COUPON . Wesson$139 OIL~~:; R..,tar !ll'lce wm..ut CWl*I SI.st • Limit -Wtle per wt'9fMf' c-..n ..-Jvly 16 """ July n PANTRY VALUABLE COUPON al Wini TIRI COWON ~I lftAlfAST CllU1 45 CORI C TOTAL ~k0;: elANTAAllA 2721•• ........ •IUIT• 1112WaL_. eM.LIRTON USl .. Hallt•mw.L •PLACINllA 1120 .. llla11sen. Aft. I I I I I CJI pA1L Y "lOT Berry • Good Idea. Capture the fresh flavor of s ummer fnlits now, by canning or freez- ing them. Be sure to use ripe, perfect fruit and follow the in1tructi003 carefutly. .. STllAWBEaay JAM 4 cups 'prepared strawberries 4. cups sugar 2 tablespoons lemon juice . Wash, hull and slice strawberries. then measure into large saucepan. Add 2 cups of ·sugar. Heat and boil hard 5 minutes, stirring constantly. Add lemon juice and rest of sugar. Bring to boil and boil bard, stir· ring constantly until re- ady to jell. Pour into shallow dish, and stir oc- casionally while cooling. · Let stand overnight to plump fruit. Pack cold in sterilized glass or jars, and seal. Makes 2 pints . .Jell Test: Dip a clean metal spoon in boiling jam; hold up edgewise. When 2 heavy drops form and slide together at edge of spoon, jam is ready to jell. (Takes from 2 to 20 minutes, depending on pectin in fruit.) For more delicious, tested recipes like this, and a complete guide to canning, freezing and jam and jelly making 'fiith fruit, send a self- addressed, stamped en- velope to: Sugar Kitchen Can- ning and Preserving, Dept. K, C and H Sugar Co., One California Street, San Francisco, CA9U06. ·Anytime Shrimp Spiced Whether at the beach or at horn e spiced shrimp are good served for· a summer s upper. They go great with a • glass of chilled beer, potato salad and rolls: • Strawberries and ·cream add just the right touch of sweetness for dessert. SPICED SHRIMP l can (12 ounces) beer l small onioo, sliced · 1 clove garlic, minced · 1 bay leaf 2 peppercorns lh teaspoon salt . 1 teas poon s eafood seasoning , 1h lemon, quartered 1 pound medium size •shrimp (approximately \35-40 shrimp) Simmer a ll ingre- dients, except shrimp, f.-10 minutes. Wash shrimp and aJ. !'Jow to simmer approx-~imalely 12 minutes in li- ;quid. Cool in beer 45 minutes. Serve in shell with ·seafood sauce, iC desired. Serves 3 or 4 persons. ~Ham .· . !In When the weather gets drippy bot and you feel like slowing down, that's the time to try this new recipe. HVaa YUP HAM r 1 ha m slice, about 1 1ol~pounds • l ·pound can fruit cocktail .Y• cup firmly packed : brown sugar 1 ~ cup prepared )ellow mustard 1 1 tablespoon corn starch Brown bam on both , sides tn lar1e ungreased · elcUlet. Remove from ' uillet and keep warm. « Drala fru.lt, 1avln1 l)rup. Ad d water to syrup to make 1 cup. St.Ir tocet.ber brown sugar, • JDUIUT'd , and corn 'Starch untH smooth. Add ~ to 17rup, 1llrrin1 to mix well. Pour .. 1k Ill.et and eoolr over medlum heat, .atlrdn1 coutanU1, until I thickened . Stir lal drained lrult; heat 5 1ni••tea. Ser•• over ...,. ......... I FRESH OREGON WHOLE OR HALF HEAD OFF -4·6 Las. Silver Salmon 'f~I ( . .. . '' . - CENTER CUT' PORK LOIN CHOPS FINE FOR 8.8.Q.I Smoked Loin Chops 'I!~ . . GOLD BOND QUALITY STEER BEEF BLADE CUT Chuck Steak 0 WILSON SLICED BACON •• 11~1·:~0 ••• s111 D ZIPPE BURRITOS •• ~:·~~ ~~ • • 79c 0 CHICKEN WINGS ••• :~:~1~~"~1• •• 59~ D CENTER CUT CHUCK STEAK °:.~~ 87& D JIMMY DEAN •••• :':~~!~~,": .... '1" D KOLO KIST ••••• M::;;~.1:;:~~~: .. 11'' D BONB.ESS CHUCK ROAST .~.~ 11~! D CHUCK ARM STEAK •.. ~~·!r: ... 'llI ~10 Ol l+O vlO • D BAR·M SAUSAGE ••• ':~ ~.'~ • • 98~ D ZIPPE CORN DOGS •••• .:i~~~~~ •••• '1!1 D FRESH DOVER SOLE FIUET : :!'tt!'°: s1~ D FAMILY STEAK •••• ~!11.ss.ll.u.c~K •• Grade'AA' Large Eggs SUNNY VAllfY • DOZEN IN CARTON , Boneydewi.:':~.G~~~" • JADE GREEN ITALIAN SQUASH -POUND . • . . . . . . . . . . "----~-- EVERFRESH 18·20 OZ. BAG FROZEN ALSO:• PEAS •CORN • GRN. BEANS .. llOSff( 17 oz lll()l .............. 59c 48' CantBl o u peS av ~·P~NO •U.S. NO. 1 WHITE ROSE POTATOES -POUND ...... . Ellplant ROYAL PURPLE ·~ D KOSHER DILL SPEARS • ·~~'.~ ~ 31'1 t ~' GRAPE JUICE WflCH'S '1Jll'lf Hi-Ori 97t Jumbo Towelslil LE ONADE MIHU!f •o •o 111()/(H 1101 110/IN D M . . .............. . BY THE POUND 0 PANCAKE BAmR •W~f~~ ~fllN 65' ~ .......... . • U.S. NO. 1 BROWN ONIONS -POUND •••......• D CHEESE 1'1.rrg WA m ri,::c7;.,-;~;u-m s10 c b """I: . . . . . . . . . . . . . . u. ucum erS"RISPE~~~CHY D BANQUET CHICKEN PIE ! ; :~.P~1~ . 29~ ooe10N's noztN c • BOSTON, SALAD BOWL, or RED LEAF LETTUCE -EAC::H D SHRIMP STICKS •••• ~~.Of.~:<!'. • • • 89 Chunk Light Tuna 6-0Z. TIN IRIS QUALITY Fish .... 99c Sticks •. ·. ::· ~ ~ . D MORTON'S DOIUTS IANOl.tl • U QL D IAllOUET TUIA PIE • ••.. •.0! • • • 2r o IMOUET BEEF PIE •••• ::;,h .. 29'u. 1110. -n I MUI 0 BO.I Mii 1ft ~ll 11 IAa IOX 95• rur-• • • •.•.•••..••• A»TO WH~T Cl D GOOD HUMOR •• '':": ~": -:"".":"': ~ c: • • 99' ST (II 6J YAllll) $1 ll D DRISTAI Ml •••••• !~· •••••.• lK A CA cw•~ ..... ct 65 D BUTTERMI P I KE *'!'f:-;·~0•1 :'?L • Flt9 l11111111 HUH 990 ·=0•2•• • l'Oli n 1 s' 1 Flllllll .~!~·2·· Hall Gallon! Tequila ~~'·II 80 PROOF HALF GAL Hall Gallon! Scotch s~~~s $ 1 •• HALF GALLON CHAMDIGllE JACOUU klMI UllA s .. • q~ SllAIGHT $ D l'ft II !>'!~.c~o.~~"':'~. 3 0 AICIEIJ AGE 86 .~~.\~~. 10" D NEW YORK BIAL Y'S •• ;t~~1';'. 71 c D RED CARPET BEER • :'.6n:~s. 12i'2" D FUNTIME DRINKS •• :1;,;~:?f ... 69:,U D WOLFSCHMIDT VODKA 80' ~ ~·} 'r' D PEN I QUILL •• !!~";'°'; ~~;: 39' 1 D GORDON'S GIN .86' .... ~ ~·~ •10" ,... ~ CA()I( YAilff 0 ILEU CHEESE DRESSlll • I~. 89' D SLICED JACK CHEESE • '!"~-. ~. 39• o IEEF10l.081A .. ~~~~ •.• •111 ~HUITI KETClllr ..•. ·:~ ..•• 31• · lllced lwlu Cheese "'°'"'~ D DllllTAR l:APIULES ••. ~'! •• ftllleftM TAii r:ft.' (ll 4' YA4.' D """''"" u:: • • •••• ,~ •• Oil ~ 'JClllNlOH 0 IAIY ..• !°! r·.·~ "'~ l ••• ~ • • • • • .~o.z • • • • • • • 95~ ~-iHUNTS PORK I BEANS •••• !~;>1~. 79c ~-iRICE·A·RONI MIXES .~~:~:~~~ '?~~:·: . 39~ D POTATO BUDS· •••• ~~:~~. • • • 95c D E680 WAFFLES Smart u Final Col lee • R1E~· I~RIP " • f • ELEC. PERK New.· IMPROVED EA BLEND " Co •.. ee • -.. !19 ' Rich ••••. :·;· ... Si • Wednesday, July 16, 1975 Raisin Spreads High Power Nutriti~ Why is it that even the pickiest eaters seem to develop the ap-· petites or football players the .minute vacation begins? Plan ~o pack a variety of porta- ble, nutritious nibbles to help satisfy the hungries caused by excited exploration or a new en· vir-onmenl. Dried fruits such as raisins ean play a key role. Not only are they' appealing to children, but they are cxtr.emely portable and re- quire no special storage. Besides tangy raisins, raisin spreads contain a protein ingre- dient such as peanut butter or cheese. When used op crackers, the y make a particul arty nutritious, satisfying snack. Use a blender lo take the work out of chopping. Simply oil the ~lender container and bl ades and chop 12 cup of raislns at a time. Store the spreads in plastic containers with lids and keep in a cooler until ready to use. Both taste delicious on graham erackers but, just for fun, make animal cracker "sandwiches" lo treat children. Adults wi ll enjoy these spreads, too. especially when served with fresh fruit such a s apples or pears . HIGH POWER 2 cups rai'sins . 1 can (6 ounces) frozen oranJ(e juice concentrate 1 package (8 ounces) neufchalel cheese,softened ~ cup peanut butter In blender, whirl raisins with orange juice until partly chopped or chop on board with sharp,· oiled butcher knife. Pour into mixing bowl. . Add remaining ingredients. Mix until blended. Pack into plastic container with tight lid. Store in refrigerator. Use as a s pread for cr ackers or tumdwiches. Makes a~ut ~~ups. MORE HIGH POWE!t 2 cups raisins .I/" cup peanut butter 11" cup grape jelly 1 tables poon pre pared lnustard Oil blender blades and sides. In blender, whirl 112 cup raisins until partly chopped. Pour into mixing bowl. Repeat process for remain- ing rais ins, Jh cup at a time. Or, chop on board, with sharp, oiled butcher knife, Add remaining ingredients. Mix until blended. Pack into plastic container with tight lid. Store in refrigerator. Use as a spread for crackers or animal cookie sandwiches. Or roll balls of mixture in alphabet or other cereal. Makes about 1 'h cups. Eating on Run Mapped Do · you anticipate a good d~al of "eating on the run" for your family this'summer? for family m e mbers to turned to tht:ir pl.ice in load up on non-nutritive the car so easily - ON THE ROAD to eat all the lime while driving. Fruits, fresh or dried, nuts, cheeses. cold chicken -even pretzels -will probably take the • Oil blender and blades before chopping raisin's for a nutritious spread · th at no one can resist. SEAFOOD SPECIALS LAIGE ,.......,_., ,,....,. w-. -2l Ollly WWII ~ l.Allt!. COMPARE OUR PRICES! 'Raw Shrimp 5 Lb. lox at 1.85 Lb. SMALL Lobster Tails IASTHM Deviled Crabs HOURS: MOMDAY THRU FRI. 10-6 CLOSED SAT. & SUM. . . Here is a i:;eries of tips that could he lp make vacation m ea ltimes more ·run, und more nutritious, too foods which curb the ap-. petite at tne expense of furnis hipg a caloric overload. Fruits, for instance, 'curb the cravings for sweets . Hard boiled l. "Ealing off the edg e off appetites. land" was routine lo particularly for t he Th FISH MARKET' travelers just a genera -youngsters, but because e lion or two ago. Stopping Lhis type of s nack food is · I BEFORE YOU START eggs furnis h protein and at a farm house for in itself nutritious the J im and Sandy C~r • lomaloes,corn ,orcvena eater has not bee n 145 E. BROADWAY, COSTA MESA • occupy little i:;pace for • 1. Consult your stale the traveling family. maps _ for the location of Carrot s licks. an ex- roadside rest areas~ and celleot source of Vitamin for stale or even national A are a lol less ex-p~ks . along the Jenera! . p~n s i v e tha n c'andy directi~n of your rol..llt:. A sticks. fry in g c hi cken wa~ deprived of worthwhile • routine. People didn't food . I __ 645-5223 _ ___ _ travel as fas t, parllY .--------·--------------------- because thal super fresh !,_ .................................................................................. -. ................................................................. .,. food wai:; so delicious. few mmules of checking the maps could assure 4 . PI a n for food you10f a cool and inviting s t or age. A portable roadside haven for your cooler can be a great picnic lunch or dinner. idea,' and it doesn't oc- 2. Cons ider other cupy· much .space, but r 0 u t es th a n s u pe r all-too-of~en it becomes highways . With a na-th~ repository for canned lion al s peed Ii m it of 55 drinks only· But consider this route to some exceptional eat- ing experiences as well as an opportunity for your family to observe the farming lifestyle. Biting into a warm, vine-ripe ned tomato could prove a rewarding ex p e ri e n ec for a youngster and possibly have a worthwhile effect on his nutritiona l future. you 'll not lose much Be sure to insis t il also time, a nd soml! of the carry some fruits and less traveled routes can milk to p rovide some turn up som e welcome balance to the inevitable s urprises in scenic vis-snacking. 2. While "eating on the ta s. i nt e re s ting r u n " is a fami liar landma rks, and s ome . For easy handltng of routine for Ame ricans unusualopportuniliesfor items not r equiring who want to cover as good eating. refrigeration -such as many miles as possible Remember, at least a sugar, bread, flour for on a given day, try to s ub-theme of the trip is pancakes, and cereal -ease the tension for your probably to "relax apd lake some sealable family with at least one :;ee the country." 1 • pl~lic containers. combined meal and rest 3. Plan -ahead for food Th~ can be fitted into _JU.op. breaks. Besides com-a cars nooks. and cran-The old clicbe that the plele m eals this would nies, and they'll h~ food will digest better is inc I u d c th e a 11 -t~o-keep the foods fresh over ti'he ' enough, a nd if the fre quent s nacks th'at the trip. They are ideal food is prepared by you, m a r k vacation-lime for preplixed fruit and chances a re it will be automotive travel. Don't other drinks. t oo, better for your family, p ermit th e trip lo because they can be too. become an opportunity washed ·quickly and' re-3. Tbere's a tendency SMOKED FISH 1;1".zs FRESH ALBACORE Cocktoll or Salad SHRIMP ~15 ' , S-. f'ricn C.oodTilnl s-.. """ 20 i..----ALSO IACKY FARMS FRESH POULTRv----1 SV2¢ .. ' 2~29¢ 39¢~ 9¢ .. · IOMAllE LETIUCE ~15~ / PORK SHOULDER SMOKED CORNED BEEF PICNICS AUOUIO flAVOIS Hl-C FRUIT DRINKS 39~ SUCID nuow WIK .) ) PEACHES 0 t€39 i! ·::: ~ . -... ,. ·-:--· .. -· ·: :-.· .• Coi'lled Beef· c .. 1a~s '6f $249 PORK •· •••••••••••• U.S.D.A. Choice beef •.• deliciously cured for finer flavor, lean .11a can be tor value! Whole or point. halr. Lean! Eastern! -for sweet. 'n' 1o1>ut! GIANT s 113 TIDE Still the favorite (Inc. Ilk off) Ivory Liquid • • • 99c For dishes! 32 oz (Inc. 20c off) Rain Barrel ••. si ss Fabric softener ••• 48 oz. size litter Green • • s i ss For the cat box! 10 lb. size Sweetheartliquid49c Lime scented detergent! 22 oz . Kai Kans11.uG .•. si 19 Crunchy bites ••• large or small PUREX 63 BLEACH ( f or wh iter whites! Gallon size Mushrooms • • • 33c Brandywine Stems & Pieces -4 oz Spaghetti • • • • 39c :-:iµringfield -long -1 lb. package Spaghetti Sauce 55c Rag-u -choice of 4 kinds! 151 ~ oz Hawaiian Punch 49c l'omes in four varieties! 46 oz APPLE 79 JUICE~ ( Tree Top's i:-oodness! 6 ounce cans : • : • • • • • • • • • : • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • CHUCK 99c. STEAK • !'o cook-out is • e more fun I han a : kabob conk-nut .... • and El Rancho : assures the success of : yours with this fabulous • array of tantalizing : fixir1·~~ ... Boneless : cube;; of mrat - • U.S.l).A. Chnict' beer : ... fresh lJ.S.D.A. Choice : lamb .. , and lean Eastern • pork! How can you i.:o 1,1,·ron~ : \~·hen the quality is El Rancho's! • ........................ , Apple Sauce ~;~E.29e ~1 11de from i;:ravenstein apples, for finer flavor! 15 ~! ounce jar "" Coffee M.J.B ••••.•••••..••.• 9 8( "li'our choice of grinds, in a brand that you know for rich nt1vor! I lb. can Bread 1% LB. LOAF •••••••••• 3 9e Choose white or \\'hrat -round top or sand1,1,·ich! Sprin'l'.field premium quality R ool Beer six PACK ••••• 8 9( Regular or Sugar free , . , Mug .•. for old fashioned flavor! l l 07.. btles Facial Tissue ...... 39e Chiffon -soft as it 's name .•. in assorted colors! Package of 200 tissue,:; ' Buller GRADE"AA" ••••••••.• ase Dairy fresh quality, priced as low as lhe law al\0W11! Springfield quality; I lb. RIB BONES 89~ Meaty! U.S.O.A. Choice beef! leef .~f: GROUND ·S 119 BEEF • &:lra lean! Bulk 'or patties! 1l51. Leun tender cubes of loin cut of bee£! on 8 inch skewers -8 ounces each I qml. u.s.o.A . l.1111IU CHOICE J{l,n1elC>ss cubes of fresh leg of lamb -ready for your marinade! 8 ounce1' each , ·Park -~~, tl!I. Lean tender morsels of leg of pork, on skewers ••. 8 ounces each Beef with Vegetables ..•.•.••.. , •• sis! U.S.D.A. Choice -loin cut -ske1,1,·ered \O.•ilh selected kabob favorites. 8 oz. ench Complete your cook-out plnns with luscious, golden, sweet, tender corn ~ Compare the quality -you'll agree lhat this is, indeed, a ,, very special price! HONEY DEWS ' 25!. Sweet melons ... mellow•flavor! Chopped Steaks sic?· Leane11t ground beer (3 per lb.) · · s111 Veal Roast111m•ss • . .. "" \Visoonsin shoulder clod·rolled Veal Stew ~ •• sis? \Visconsin ICICU9 WAl ••. 159 •I • " .. . ' • . . • • . . Sliced Bacon .•• sic? · ; El Rancho's thicker ranch style • ( . ..-=-------...... ~ ~ STiffll • . Chicken s219 ri Breast 111. : '~ Bonelei-s Cordon Bleu (Ham, Cheese) BWE Fii! FRESH TUNA Fo• o '""!"at? s 149 hy the piecc ... lb • FRESH TOO STUKS .......... 1.19 II. S · sics napper PACllC 1llD • • .. Fill els of fresh favorite fis h! Mini Salmon . • 89~ Average 9 to l:l oz! Fresh frozen . . .. 1 .• .. ' ' '. . ... ' . ' ' . Fish Sticks~-• 69t .. llreaded, too! 110 Ll IOI ... SJCll Cooked Shrimp si1? .Just right fo r shrimp cocktails! ITALIA125c SQUASH 1b. Garden fn:sh and all green • • • .. ' Liquor Dep't. Values! • • Wines that make the meal! Mateus Wines . s399 1·our choice .•. rOie or white! fifth. Cribari Win, •. 5219 JWse, Branco, Burgundy, Chablis! 1/2 gal_ Colony Wines • • s2s9 It !llinn Sv,•iss, burgundy, chablis! 1• i gal. Sco tch sAvE s1.oo oN sa'' ~ HOLIDAY TIMES •••••••• Bottled exclusively for El Rancho -that explains the quality and low price! Half.g111Jon • Gordon's . Gin • si04 9 N~w save 50t on the half-gallon Teacher' sScotch sg99 ·rhe quart reduced by 1.20! Vodka or Gin •• s399 El Rancho·s floliday Times! quart : l.W. Harper ••. s&•9 i Now you save 90(' on the quart • . • VermouthlG ...... s325 ~ • Martini & Ro6si -Extra Dry or Sweet ! ' . Whiskey llDllll ••• s4 99 ~ •. El Rancho's.own label! Quart. , Delicatessen! ~ Frozen Foods! Prices in effect' Thu,, July 17 through Wed. July 23 ·• Open daily 9 to 9, Sunday 10 to 7 No sofe11 to deolertt • ' . • Orange Juice ~~z.. 27e Treesweet., from Florida's Indian River country! (12: OZ. CAii ••• Slc) Yoglrl ...... 29c Johnston's. -all nav0f1!.! 8 ounce Wild Rice :::-• 49c Green Giant ••. 12 oz. packap:e llBLETs39e , COIN Green Giant w/buttn sauce!. 10 oz Gino's Pizza •.• sio9 Deluxe combination ••• 16 oz Enchiladasw-K.111' ggc Beef or Cheese -family si7.e 19 oz APPLE · s 119 PIE .John11ton'a -9 inch -S8 O&. Can·ned Heim sLa .. s6 91 ' Harmony Ham • , • lean and luscious •• , with the Otvor that you'll love to serve! ' Braunschweiger 69C From Jones -8 ounce chub Sliced Muenster &9c Dorman's, from Wisconsin! 6 oz. Spiced s 119 Cheesenl.. · Contadou. (rom Lft\,\lhlng Cow! 5 pt Beef SaPSage -f 139 Also Italian and Polish! Beat -12 oz Bits -0-Bacon · • ggc Wilaofi'a -100% real bacon! 4 oz Blue iheese !!~~~~~ 89< Fi1hennan'1 Wharf .~. 16 oi. tie • • • ARCADIA PASADENA SOU T'l PASADENA HUNTINGTON REACH NfWPORT Hf ACH f ~STBLUFF IRVINE .. • ,,,,1 M•H•l•"'i. '/'IV 'nit"'"'' 111 ... ,1 1, • · ,,~ 1•,.,•.,• .',,,,,, ,,,., l\•,r w,,,.. · •J .,,, 1 , • • "' • '' 1,,,.,,,.,.,,, ui.1 t,11.,1,,,,.,. f l,uvt.., 'R<"I•" f nt <Jrllr>~rov<> '•,•I, A~! ro ''"' !~~r<Jw"I~ (-Of11•'f \)t, llu •'f'liin-.o 1 I .o•!I ,,,•I V111 "I' < ~·111•" if>ll k VID"" Of>ntP• \ itillilll Doc Feed •••••.• 31c Black Pepper • : ......... 73c lrirl lllm.., ......... $1.13 Mu PuClllRl-.'. •••••• $1.15 lllainl Y11111 ••••••.••• S1.6t Schillinl"'• fmc fffnd! 4 ounce ean Gr~ Juice ......... _. .. 99c Wilcb"I r•m0\11 ~ .0 "*" fMtant Con'ee -4 t>t (I -•.. 1JIJ \ s.u .flllll... . ..... , .. $1.53 }l,ady in ..oond1! ' O& I• -... , UI} Skippy -t hoice o( v•rieti•! 14 \AJ OS can ~ WI 11 P*1! •••••• , • $1.09 ~nada Dry 12 ounic• ~ -• • .' •J "-'· or 'Dtct~ Ptfti'.J t2 •· eaa Mulm 11&11_ • : ...... $1.13 lmtant CotT• -4 oz. Cl -••• 111) Mocha JM <Rtt. or Electr•) l lb ctn 1i1st1nt sni11 .a ., ... s1.39. Wonl k•p you awake! (I -.•. utJ \' --.--.. ,....--.. -.,-_, .. ,,..,.. " ...... ,,,.,,. .. _~ ....... ,. .. ~ .. , .......... .. . ~ ,. -. ' ,,.. . .., ... • I • .. • .. OAJLYPtLOT DJ TOP PRODUCERS : • HARi.AH HAMSON •AHHEkOEH •WALT KORTKAMP • WHIT PLUMMER • IARIARA RIYHOLDS. . • JULIE STURDIV AMT W WESTCLIFF RANCH 4 BDR-POOL $103,000 Spectacular entry to formal living and banquet size dining rooms. Gourmet garden kitchen. Fiesta size rumpus room with bar. Secluded master am.l childrcns suites. Lush quiet cardc11. with sparkling porltls and rushing wa tcdulls. A unique sw\mmers parad1:.c. Call loday Lo pre\'lew! ~-i$7 1NVEST $4,250 DINING ROOM SEATS 12 St ep down to l 7x20 family room warmed b y crackling fire place. Oversized living room gives feeling or oe>enness. After originaJ investment of $4,250 you will be s urprised with low monthly payments. T o see call 646-7171. CRAFTSMAN WORKSHOP J usl listt:tl ! Never before on lhe market likt! th1i. castsidc Costa Me:;a pool home ILkc you have never seen a craftsman's workshop, a huge family room with big brick fireplace, low maintenance landscapinJ?.' Lots or fruit trees. 3 Bedrooms, 2 baths, plus dining room. Jl won't .last. it's only $48,900. Call ~2313. FRENCH CHATEAU 2 STORY-BEACH POOL-$32, 900 Stately entry to elegant living room. Large garden view kitchen for the ~ourmet e loque ntly serves formal dining with courtyard view. Stairs sweep lo second story suites featuring a huge hideaway master. 23' grand ballroom for the entertainers. Hurry. Owner bought another -must SACRIFICE PRICE FOR SPEEDY SALE! Call 963-7881. $5050 BELOW . VA APPRAISAL Winding tree-lined drive to spectacular four bedroom two story POOL home. Fonnal entry to spacious fonnal living a nd' dining rooms. Banquet size kitchen serves a UNIQUE SECLUDED SWIMMERS PARADISE. The private master suite overlooks the -custom lagoon. Sweeping stairs lo an unusual· double cbildrens loft. Government appraisal is $55,000. Owner asking $49,950. For a unique experience call 963-6767. VIEW ESTATE OCEAN & LIGHTS BARGAIN -$44,900 Rustic charm abounds in this unique beach estate. Circular drive. Huge living room with dramatic comer log burning fireplace + breath taking view throug h W A~L OF GLASS. Gourmet k itchen d e. ~parate winJt for hideaway m suite with a view + children & g uest suites. Hurry for this once in a lifetime dream home al a bargain price. Bring your imagination & paint. Make $$$. Call 963-7881. LAZY HUSBAND'S SPECIAL Upper Bay living at only $38,900! 3 bedroom, 3 beth, two story plus pool & lots of g rass & trees -but no care. Discover this pleasant way of living - call 546-2313 • GOLF-BEACH ASSUME $241 MO. R a re alley access to boat-trajler -camper pad! Exotic and lus h picnic backyard! Private entertainment center with bar and B.B.Q. pit sheltered by soaring vauJ~ ceilings! Workshop areal 4 rumpus sized bdrms -fa m rm -service porch and formal dine! Assume FHA 71h% AT ONLY S241 PER MO. No new ca;ts! Just listed! Call, be first, 8'7~10. ST ARTER HOME " $29,950 ·Keep 8% loan. Cozy cottage -white picket fence. Room for large vegetable garden, R-2 zone, get starter -to see call 646-7171 .. MESA -$28,500 + GUEST HOUSE F\all price $28,500 includes detached guest cottage plus storage and shop ·space! Preferred Mesa loca~. F_'resh paint .. Windin1 drive. Wbi~ packet fence. Shady paloi entry. Beamed ceilings. Comfy kitchen inclu~es ref'rig. 85' x 160' lot. Can build uruts.' Take advantage. Call 'r.i.2·1700. LA-~UESTA 2 STY-4 BDR ASSUME $32,500 Negh::cted 2 sk>ry 4 bedroom -walk to the beach. Spacious Jiving and formal dining rooms. Separale convertible den. Gigantic family r oom with roaring country fireplace. Separate rhlldren & master suites. Secluded grounds. Child safe street. .Be l'irsl Lo sec it. Call 963-6767. 11ABANDONED" CLASSIC CUSTOM 4 BR-BEACH fo'ormal tile entry. Huge living room with massive firepl a~e. Vaulted ceilings. Delightful garden view kitchen. Dint> Family e nte rtain in g room with commanding view or {!rounds. Separate wing for bedroom s uites, including huge masler retreat. Owner s have bought another & moved. Mus t SACRIFICE! Hurry for bar gain price & terms. Call 963-7881. SPANISH FRANCISCAN BY THE SEA 4BR ASSUME $32,000 Jog to ocean from this magnificent ex· ccuti ve estate. Formal entry to elegant li V· Ing room. Barcelona fireplace. Formal banquet sized dinin~ room. Gourmets d e-- light kitchen. Huge fi~ta party room wit h nat'Ures window view or dance pavilion & ramblin1' grounds. Dramatic stairs lo massive h ideaway master suite with retreat & childrens wing. Take over 71/4 VA Loan. NO NEW LOAN COSTS~/ mo. pays all. Hurry owner transferred. Will l>c VACANT soon . Cllll 96.1-7881. VACANT $3,000 TOTAL DOWN That's all the cash it takes. Owner will finance. 3 large bedrooms. Dining room plus fire place. Move in quic k. Call 64&-7171. TRILEVEL -BEACH ASSUME $34,200 4 BR-POOL The safrty or a cul-de-sac· \\Ith an a wesome yard! Terraced d1c·ondr<1 ! Spanish tile entry! Lavish living rm. with soaring bce1mcd ceilings and l':uropean fa.repl ace! Spirnling staircase winds to mammoth m aster and hu2e kids rooms! Separate mom-in-law qtr&! Gourmet kitchen! Dual backyard for gardening and slab for camper or boat! Grecian pool! Low, low $308 per month to assume ! Owner desperate! Ca-1847-6010. AT THE BEACH K eep cool this summer in this charmimg ' 3 bdrm h o m e.-comp l etely alrcondilioned &. upgraded to a tee - separate fHmily room and formal·dinm>! -professionally lands<'arxod Located on a lovely C'ul·dt.>·sac :>tn'c.>t Fir::.t time advert1;ed. ~50.~IOO. Call ~.231:1 SURFSIDE HIDEAWAY Steps to the pounding surf! Cozy rustic charmer . Cir cular stairway to loft. Sunfilled gall ey kitchen. Handnarted wood panelling. Bay window looks out on the shlmmenn~ Pacific. Owner anxious. Low. low pncc. Hurry, C'aJI for a private showing. Call 842·2535. POOLSIDE PLEASURE $412.00 PER MONTH Jn Mesa Verde. M ajest.Jc 4 bedroom 2 story. Step down living room warmed by crackling fireplace. Large formal dining. Large family r oom. Wa ll of glass overlooks elegant tiled pool-Jacuzzi. Super for eotert&ining. 1''1rst lime advertised Cal I 646--7171. CAPE COD ESTATE 5 BR-BEACH ASSUME $262 MO Rare opportunity! Estat e grounds! Terrazzo tile ·entry into a"esome living room. Entertainers Cam rm formal <Jane brkfst patio! Winrlin~ staircase to immen:.e bdrm complt·x ' Separatl' quarters for mom in-la\\! Assume "'1th NO NEW LOAN COSTS' Only $262 p{·r month. flurry, call 847 6010 MAJESTIC CASA GRANDE BEACH ESTATE ' Short walk to the beautiful C'hummg white surf. Sweeping corner estate grounds. Secluded entry. Sunken parlor. Mammoth rumpus party pavilion with wine tasters wet bar. Garden view kitchen serves formal dining room. Kmgs master suite. Separate wing to family sleeping chamber s. Ro om provided for boat/camper storage. Owner says go -so take advantage. For preview call !!42·2535. MESA VERDE GOLF-POOL-VIEW SPl'Cl<icular Mesa Vl•rtlc tri-lcvel on lhc fJ1rwav. b:nter a wallt•d c·ourt\'ard lo lu!'.h .i.:ardcns and a cu:.tom :-\\llnming pool. Formal cntry LO unaqul! !'.Unkl•n Ii vmi.: room and be1nquct s17e d1111ng room. Gourmet garden kite· hen with gull t·oursc '1cw 1-:NOHMOUS EXl't\NDI·;o Fi\Mll.\' BONUS HOOM WITll CHA CK LI Nti F lll~l'LACI•; AND FOHE\'EH VIEW. Private guest :-uill'. SWl'l'Plll.J.: st:..iirs to d11ldrl•no; win ~· ,1n<I TWO Lt:Vr:I, MASTEi{ SUITE. EH·ry ntrJ. !:>IJl!.j(J() C<ill to prl'v1cw. ~>:J oiti7 CORONA DEL MAR SELECTIONS RARE FIND ln th e wond e rful world or BAYSHORES. Tastefully decorated. Three bedrooms plus a large family room with a fire place. Good location. f:ood condition, priced reasonably. Better hurry -call 673-8550. NEW LISTING SPECIAL DRIGHT Lovely 3 bedroom and a study home. • Decanted with charm and beauty in a graceful garden settin g. An unforgetlable tiome in one of CORONA DEL MAR'S prlvale communities. Presented on a n appointment only basd. Let us shAre iL with you. Call 673-8550. DECORATOR'S HOME THE BLUFFS Just hstcd -beautifully apprnntl'<l 3 !)edroom c•cmdomin,jum w\lh :-µac1ou-; master bedr oom suite• 1'car pool and s hopping. Lots of privac·y. Low maintenancc dues ;ind lt•;1-.ehold Price to sell :it 568.500. Call G73·8S50. WITH PRIVATE BEACH 'Lovely one s lory, s paclous four bedroom home with spacious family room. BuJlt on a secluded comer lot with ample room for swimming pool. Trul,Y a great new listing so call us quickly. 673-8550. · BEACH HOME CO RON A D F.L MAH l>ehs:htful. spotless. two ooln)Om humc• Ill Old Corona on an R.2 lot I ligh bt·.1ml·d ct•il an~:-. hrcpl<1cc. pnvalc } ard lor tht• young a l h eart. Only $61 ,000. Call 673-8550. SUNSHINE, FLOWERS & CHEER Describes th as ajry 4 bt'ilroom. 2' ~ b ... th, Cameo Highland home t•<i::.r t'itrl' yards -private bcachci. only $9'l,SOO. Call 673--3550. LAKESIDE con AGE HUNTINGTON BEACH .HO DOWN G.I. Steps from prirne fo1hin' hake. Entry to 1:1i•,1 t outdoors only stepe1 fr6m your htlllll' Your d11ldn·n wall love 1l. t;oltti~OUS FUL'H YJ::A R NEW n . \!:>SIC JI O~H; Garden k1tch~n. SµJl'IOus II\ 111~ .111d d1n1 og rooms. St•dudl·d ma::.ll'I' aml t·h1ltlren:. suite:;. 1':H·n l'Xtr;.1 ;-.;o l>OWN TO VI-:TS ! B1!..l• 0 10 llc;H·h. H1111g your fashrni; pole. C.dl :11;;i ti7G7 DOM!TRENT ANDRAVE BUY & SAVE!!! $32,500 F.xrlusive listing on a 3 RR Newport Vista home. Financm~ 1s great with an a.'l!'.Umable VA loan al 7': interest and owner will help .\ )'(rl'al starter home ma fam1lv commu111ty JU::.t mmutes to beath Call 546 23 l:J for detaab IRVINE -$39,900 ~O DOWN Big family or li want:; out Buy no down payment on VA! Full pritl:! JUSl $39,900. Fine Irvine ranch location. Air conditioned. Gil.hcdral ceiling Huge fireplace. All t1llcd kitchen. Hideaway master. Mirrored clost•ts Large pal.lo. Spnnklers. Don't wail -call ndw 752 1700. VACANT ON GOLF COURSE l.rivt•lv lonl·iv & rc.-adv for ~ ou l nu-.ually ~harp hidden 2· story Lu::.h .J!arden settin.J! S74.950 fuJI pm·{· C<ill 646-7171 SPANISH ESTATE 3 BR-2 STY-POOL BEACH-$18,500 Large entertaining s11.ed ltv1ng room. Kitchen large enough to pr epare banquet and largt> enough dining room to serve it. Sweepinl! stairs to bedroom ::.u1tc~. llui,ic h1dcaw<1~ ma~tcr. Take over 7~~ FHA, NO Nt:W LOAN COSTS. $196/mo. pays all. llUHHY FIJlST TO CALL GETS THIS BARGAIN 963 7881. "OLD SPANISH ESTATE" BY-THE-SEA W 1 n <l 1 n ~ I> n 1· k & l' uh b I c s I 11 n c walkways cnhann·d by ivy coverc-d walls. Age-old tret•s of a by-gone era :,,hadow the n-d Lile roof 1n a lazy, hazy-day setting. Corr idor foyer . Sunken living room lightened by alcove bay windows. Candle light formal dining beneath massive domed ceilm~s & separ ate breakfast nook with built-in hut<'h. Sl<'p-down panl'llC'd den Heavy bcam l'eilings. Wall of gl ass v iews hu~t' <·ovcred lanai. Featuring flagstonc setting with R. B.Q. and 2nd fireplace Walk to sandy b cac·h .Ju-.t n ."Cluced S7.000. Want something different & unique? SacnfiC'e al $69,900. Call NOW' 842-25.15. ABANDONED "SPANISH GIANT" + POOL!!! 2 story. 4 bedroom. J lavish haths. Oinin~ room. Sunken livmi.: room. Fireplace under ruit~ed beam ce11Jni:s. Ual..cn b:..inn1!>lcr :-la1rcase. Romeo balcony decor . Rt•d tile roof. Few blocks to golf coursl' Near the beach. ARE YOU READY FOR THIS? Only $42,500. act NOW! Call 842·2S35. DEN+ GUEST $46,000 • 8°/o LOAN Owner will fmance al s c-?-30 yrs! ~ + <'OSls huys. J UST REDUCED $1900. Prime l\1t'sn location. Quiel s hady cul de S~•l' Curved drive. Shady palms. S<-cludcrl living. Massive wall or stone rireplal'C. Extra large t'hef's kitC'hen. Giant family room -bit-in stereo. PRIVATE GUEST QUARTERS + llUGE DEN 1 2 large patios • Oagstone covert•d. Waterfall + pond .. Greenhousf'. $46.000 fuJI price. Hurry C'all 752-1700 . BEACH RETREAT 3 BR + FAM RM . $39,900 PC'aC'eful evenings or rolling surf. genlle ocean brc·czcs and swaying palms. Dancing moon beams among towcring trecs on a storybook street ! Days filled ~1th s uns hinc and sandcastles' A vaC'ataon paradise in Uus rambling J Hdrm with Tahitian family room. Retirement forces sale! Try $3900 total down with low mo. payments! Bnng an offer ! 847-6010. 2 STORY 3 BR HIDEAWAY POOL $30, 950 Cottage walkway thru lush tropical paradise to sel'ludcd entrance into step down liv. room, ankk deep carpet sq ueak y C'll•a n paint -dining entertainment i:ourmet kitchen "1th sunshine aC'c·ents' Windang staircase to bdrm retreat with mammoth master and chHdren s uites. Assume 71,'h-FHA loan at $199 per mo. NO NEW LOAN C~IS. Hurry fo r appl. Call 847-6010 t41WP'OlT HACH COSTA Mu.A HUMTOUiTOH RACH .... ~----1700 Newpof'I Blvd 2790 Harb<)( BMS 17931 Beach OIYcl 21030 Broolchum 0014 Warner Avo FOUH'T AIM V AWY CO.CHA DIL M.AA 18109 Broo1'hurSI 332 Marguf'nle IMVlSTMIHTS 1A61'12 M&eArthvr Blvd Suite 103 846-1171 548-2313 842·2635 936-6767 84 7-6010 983-7881 673.a550 lrv10~ 7S;.' I 700 ' . :· . . . :· . ,. I , • ·t ' . " .. ' ' .. .. I ... ' ' / , . . . . . . . . . . . -. . . . . . . -- \• •• .., > * ,. • ... ~ • OA"" Y PtLOT • • • • "' j :·,~:·consumer Aid .~New \l arranty Law Proposed _ , WASltlNGTON <UPI} -The Federal Trade • .. ~ion bu proposed rules to help consumers -=e ~tter compa.riloo shop~s by makini It :· (or them lo atudy product w&rTaqties before · '·tbey make their purcbues. ·., Under the proposal made public 'l'ue&oday, '~•would have to keep copies of '11 ,uarantees ·i 8"Uab.le tor the customer to see. In addition, com- . .-nles 1n11klng the products would have to give con- sumers a copy of the warranty if they asked for it by ~fttl~phoae or man. THE RULES ALSO WOULD require com· .,,. 'Mn!es which offer dispute-settling plans for dis- . ::. 'fttisfied customers to install toll·free telepbope ~ · ·llaa for customers, and provide that such panels ... , ... idilpose of all complaints within 40 days of receipt. '~ ·~ The rules. on which hearings will be held later ~. s year and whlcb would probably not go into ef- ect until early next 1ear, are intended to imple- lhent a l11w Congress J"Ssed last year. . That law, the Magnuson-Moss Warran- (. CONSUMER )' ty Improvement. Act, is . • •. aimed at correc\\ng con- -sumer complaints about warranties which pro· vided incomplete or misleading information, und ..• wbich left the buyer with no recourse. THE LAW DOES NOO' require companies to of· fer warranties. But it does spell out what must be , • done by those wbo do for any product costing $Sor • • •••• ,IQ<>re. The FTC rules spell out the degree to which the law also applies lo catalog and dbor-to-door sales. In ~ · .\be former. there would have lo be a brier description of the wa rranty close by the prod11ct.in the catalog, '· along with a note that the full warranty is available by mail. · DOOR·TO-DOOR SALESMEN would have ·to. itve their cus tomers a copy of any warranty before any sales transaction, and the customer may retain tbe document r egardless of whether he makes a purchase. ''Since the warranty is an important legal docu- ment, the consumer should have sufficient time to be able to study its provisions in length," the FTC staff .report on the rules said. "Unless the consumer is -able to retain a copy of the warranty, , the legislative aoal of inter-warranty comparison shopping may be curtailed. " · One important provision orthe law and the rules · . involves a requirement that ''lifetime'' or other time periods must be spelled out. <·Male Prostitute .... ; JFTrial Opening • 1 . : • I i' t I • • • .. .. . • ' . .. . ,. . ~ \. .. ' .. .. .. . ~ -.. . i . .. ~ . ' I • . . . . ~ . . ~ . . • .. -. .. . -. _.·BROCKTON, Mass. hire." Police said be bad .. ·roPI> -Fred Doane, 15 to 18 female clients a believed to be the first month for his mass.age man ,ever charged with business . pro s t i t u t i o n in Doane's attorney, P. J. Massachusetts, joes on Pis citelli, sa.id the case trial today. against bis client is Doane, 31, says he is absurd because "by de- not a prostitute. He says finition, a prostitute is a he is a masseur, a busi-woman." 1)ess he started. after he ''All the statutes speak broke hislegandlosthis of are women," the lloor-waxing job. lawyer said. "Have you ' '.DOANE WAS charged liQder a law prohibiting a ·woman from offering her body •'for in· discriminate sexual in· tercourse with men for .OCC Gives ' Fall Guide ever beard of a male pr<>- stitute? Prostitution is stricUy a female affair.". HOWEVER , Brockton police Lt. John Bukunt sai d , "That's bis interpreta· lion. Another will come today. Let the court de- cide it." Doane, who !aces up to six months in jail if con- victed. is married and lhe rather of two children. The s-root-11, 140-pound resident of Brockton said the pro- spect of facing up to six months in jail if convict- ed is "kind of rough." DOANE SAID h e Orange Coast C ·o l l e g e ' s p r e - icgistration planning guide ror the fall ~emester will be avalla· ble free of charge begin- ning July 2S in the OCC Counseling Center. ,·.The booklet provides learned m~sage from a )9tep-by-step information fo~mer gtrlfrien~. Ile fQr studenu enrolUng at. said ~e began placmg a~­ OCC for the first time." vert~sem~nts for his The book also discusses services m a Boston ()CC's day and evening newspaper at the ~nd ~f 'programs, graduation l~t year. He s e1d ~s ·requirements. occupa· wif'~ was aware of his tional programs, and bUS10ess, _and he ne".er rst1 requirements for engaged in se_xual tn· gt'\.adenls planning to tercourse with any .. -. f r to lour year in customers. ~uans.e · · Doane was arrested atitulions. . Registration for fall M~y 26 after pohce re- cluses runs Aui. 12-27 ce1ved complaints lrom hv aooointment only. neigbbou. UPITt....,_ Prhe-Wi1111er American singer Maureen McGovern has won the $10,000 grand prize in the fourth Tokyo Musical Festival. 2 Coast Coeds Run State· Girls representing Corona de l Ma r and Newport Harbor High Schools were elected to office at the Califonua Girls Slate conrerence held in Sacramento. Newport H arbor 's Christine Si pp!, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Charles Sippl of Newport Beach, was ~lecled Secretary of State. Sue Cuyler, of Corona del Mar Hi&b, is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Robert J . Cuyler. She was elected to the Board of Supervisors of · the mvthical county, Larkin. Girls from throughout California attended the conference, s ponsored by the American Legion Auxiliary. They were chosen to represent their schools on the basis of leadership, citir:enship. scholarship and interest in government. Minor Ruling ~-------------~ __ .... ______________ , _ __,~------------~--·1----------------------1 -~--~---------------PUBLIC NO'ACE PU8UC NO'ftCB PVBLIC HO'llCB PUBLIC NO'nCE PU8UC N011CE PUBLIC NO'nCE • PUBLIC NOTIC£ "CTITIOUS aus1NIH NA~IE STATUl\ENT Tiit loetewlnt pet"°' I• Ool119 IMS• IW\)t\: CALlprOftNIA WEIGHT AND HEAi.. l H c1..u•. uo •••<II SI., ug.- bH<ll. (Alllornle '1U I B•rbe,. A A11ttltech, 1n HTQ!t or., ug11n• 8tKll, C•llfornle 9'lt)1 Tiii• tiv•1neu IS con4N<leel "".,..Ir> di ........ Barllolr• Autrl>e'lt Thi' 'ltltmtnt •U lllM ..i111 the County Clerk ot Ortn~ Cwnt't Oii June 1), 1'1). fl4J01) P\lllllWltd Or•ll9' Coast O.tty 111101, JllM ts, end July I, t, 1', 191S 2'1H! ...... SUP .. ttOaQ>URTOPTM• llluCllJ..-Or•nge Co•" Dally Pllol, --------------;:~~~~~·::;=~~~" J-U.•n1t.tu10.9. ••. '"' t»n PUBLIC NOTICE • FICTITIOUiaUSINaU , .,. AVAIL.AaU.ITVOP He.A ...... rtAMl:STATIMINT ANNUAl..Rl.-OIT HOTICIO"MIAIUIOOPIPllTlflON c NOTICE IUPUIOICOU11tT6ffnt• l"' foilowlnil penon It ootno ttwl· Thi annual NPCM'I ol tllt CMI'-""'• l'OR f'ROaATa OP Wll..I. ANO l'Oll ___ P_V_B_L_I ______ ._ STAfaOPCALl~ORN14'llOlll 1•11u~· $ocMtly ot PltUlk &lif9'Qfl .. I•.~ ... un1111 Tll'TAMINTAllV TH• COUNTY Of' OllA .... J O NAlHAN CONSTRVc;flON bit •or IMpeCllCWI •t 1111 0111« of E'Ule o• l(ATHl!RINI H. IUf'l!lllOltCOURTOPTM• ..... A ... l,. C:O~t40T1•JutM,l..•911nelta<h,CA. ~riO M.Gruer,M.0.,trlC.,1401 MAUSEY ..... l(ATHflllNI! tTATEOFCAl.t'°""'."°" tfOTICI OP NaA .. INO 0 .. mll Avocado A ... n ... Suitt SOI, Newport HARIC.NESSMAUSeY. bec••*· THI OOUNTY OPO .. ANOI NTITICMC "°" f'llO•ATI! Of' WILi. Oon•IO F R•O.r, 'NO Tia J-. lt«ll. C.lllornla, ~. durlnog,.. NOTICEISHERESYOIVENlh<llO. Ne.A• .. a.t ANO C:OOICH. ANO FOii LeTTllll Ulgvna Beech, CA. tt•lt lllll•r llu1lneu hou,., by tny U.S. FAANI( LANGE htt flied herein a pell· HOTICI! OI' MEA•ttNGOP f'ITITIOH TUTAMINTARY Thi•°"" ... '$ IS Conducted by an Ill• <lll•n wt thin Ito den •fltf July "· llotl '°' ProlMll•ol Wiii •nd tor 1uuance FOR PRO•ATE Of' WILi. ANO LET· Est•teol t!OWIN L. GARONE ... tM CllvldU•I. lt1S o1 Letters Tol•M•t1l•ry to llW pttl• TElltSTESfAMl!NTARV E.L.GAR ONEA,Oeceesed. OoNld F. R•O.r Pullll .... d Oren99 CN il O•lly Piiot, iloner , ... Nn<I to wlllch 11 l'Ndlt let EUate of VIC E.N TA GAftCIA NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN li'ltt Thi~ \t•tement _, llled wttl\ tlll July 16, tt1J 260H S ""1htr per1lcul•r1, end thA1 I,_ time AftEVALOS,0.CteMCI. C ROCM; EA NA Tl ONA I. BANK • Coul\ty Cieri! Of 0r•"9' ceunt,onJuly tnC!Plat•of llffrlng IM WIN N6""" NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVENINtO. lornwrly Mlfte<I C::ro<:k•t c111-.... ll,tt1S. PUBLIC NOTICE . wttotJIJlyt2,tt1),att:•a.m.,lfl\lw 9lANCHE •REVAl..OS llH flttd lloMlho\k,h.nflledMrtin•PttlflM ....... 1 ____ .....,..,..,.....,..'""""""='==" __ ..... 1cour1room Of C»perl,...nt NO. Sol Miid ,,....1,,•lltllllontor Probettol....,llef'd tor Pl'CINlt ol Wiii •nd Codicil W for Pu1>11sr>ed Or•nge C°"l oa11v Piao., 'ICTITioUI iul1Nus c0\111. 11100 Ch•lc Genter orl'4"'1Mt. lft '°' 1...,•M• of IAtttrs TesteMMterVto luuan<t of t.etttn TestemtM•r '° Julyt•,23,lO,•ndAugu,U,lt1S2'21·1S NAMllTATaMINT tNCltyofSM\laAne,C.tlfornt.. tht pellt'-r refttence 10 'lllfllcll .. IN Ptlll'-r ftl•rence lo 1111111<11 Is. PUBLIC NOTICE FICTI TtOVS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT 'Tlw lollowlng person Is 001nci ~· ntUol\ s u RVCILLANCE SYSTEMS .• , w tl\h .s1,ee1. Cost• Mei., C.lltoml• t2tJ1 Ro1>1rt M. e1a<1i.bum. U, Joann Street, Co\te Me••· CAllfornla '1UI Th•• bu•oneu Is cCWldUCltd by Ml ln- OlviOUoJI Rot>trl M. Bl•c•burn 1'h1\ statem.nt wn 111eo "'4111 II• Coulfty Clerk of Oriin;e County on July "'IM fotlowl~ penon h dolno Ml· Oelttel J11IJ 1, 1t7S. 11'\edt tor tu,.ller l)ertleutara, efld !Nit INOt tor furttwr pert1cu1er•, M1C1 !Nt MUe\; Wll..LIAM tl. StJOH", lht time anf pl~t ol tw1tlng t"' -tN lllN and place ol l\eerlflt the..,,.. TRANS·WEST ENTERPRISES. CounlJCletk l\M betn Mt for July tt, 1'1', et t :JO ...... bMn Ml tor JulV 19, 1t7S, of t :IO 1SOSS Ad•ms St .• Mlowey City, CA. 0.. f'llANll 1.ANOe •"" In Ille cout'ttOO"" ol o. .. rttret1t t .m., In lllt courtroom Of Oe-11Nftt mlS Ml ,..rtlt El C:.ml.,. llHI NO 3 of w ld court •t 700 Civic Ctllter ND. l of wld court, •t 700 Clvk Ottlter Roy Frenk Dan lets. *' Jar,..tt s... , .. _" ... C.11*"'' '2'7t o.-i ... Wnl, In tM Cll'r Of Sanl• AN. Ott~ W.SI, In '"' City of Sant• AN. Cr .• HunllnQtOfl 8tacll, CA. '2._.. Tel: OH i ffl·~St Qtllotnla. c.1t1ornla. This bu~MU ,. Clndu(i.d by an In-"9ti0•1Wrlft ........... , DalcdJuly8 nu D•ledJulyS, lt7S dlvlou.1. Pul>l lShed Orengo Coast Dally Piiot, WILLiAM tl, SIJOHN, Wll.LtAM E. SIJOHlf. Roy F. Danit I• July IS, 1•. 21, 191S 2~7S Cl>WllY Clerk County Clerk Thia statement we' flltd with'"' ... Nll,SMITH, ITANi.•YSllVILLA Oluflty Cltrll 01 Or1111ge County on Jil"' I PUBLIC N011CE •t.Y •NOWAOLEtGtt A"""'9yat Lew • 2', lt1S. AtwlWYI et uw 1 ... '911L11 MenlU at'NI. P4JUI -------------IMSI 9"111111'MI !koltt 11 s..tte• P\/1>11 .... d Ot-11199 CoHt Dally Piiot, a..eN16 HWltllllt.-i ... <II. etllforlllltu46 LeSAl!ol9Mt. C.llfefl'lt 'IOMf Jvly2.t •••• n. t'1S 1~1S SUPfRIORC.OU•fOl'TH• ... MY••w: ... tltl-r Tel: UU)a71""20;t1 .. 1444 STAT•OPCAUl'O .. NIAl'Olt PubllaNd Orange Coe$I Delly Piiot, A..,,..., .... , ... tlttoMr THECOUNTVOPOltAHO& Jlll>'1,, 1',22, l'1~ l61CHS Publlthff Ortngt coac1t Qalty fl\lot, • PUBLIC NOTICE 1, tt1S. He.A-MJH , ---------..----! Julyt, lO, i.. t97S · ms.r.s "Utn 1--------------1NOTICE01' M•AltlNO 01' l'STIT10N 1• Pllbll\tled Orange coast O.lly PlloC, l'ICTITIOUS •USINESS "°" PROaAT• OP WIU. ANO"°" July9, 14. 1S, l0. 1'7S UR-IS "AM• STAT•M•NT UTTEltl TllTA.MaNTAltY PUBLIC NOTICE .PUBLIC N011CE PUBLIC NOTICE FICTITIOUS BUSI NESS NAM£ STATEMENT Thi tollow1n9 persons a re OOing bu"· rwuas· DIVERSI FIE D BUSINESS se RVt c es. 100 Quell, Suite 100, Ntwport Btacn, CA ,,..0 Carla AM Rigler. 29601 Prt<>IOI\ Drive, u9una Niguel. CA. 92411 Judith M. Tuttle, 6JS W. Bilktf', NI>. 1018, Cost•,.,.,._, CA 9UU This°"''"''' IS 'ondu<ttd by• llm1I· ed par tnersh1p. C.•laAnn Rlgter "Tlll\ statement w•s f llf!d with the County Cler II. 01 Or fn9e Counl y an Jul Y 11, 191S. F41671 PllbllShed Oron0t COfft O.lly Piiot, J11ly 16, 23, 30, and MlgU$I 6, 197S ;lt.2'-IS PUBLIC· NOTICE FICTITIOUS SUSINESS NAM£ STATEMENT Ttw following penOfl Is cloll>il l><lsi· iwuas. NEWBROOK ENTERPRISES, 190'11 Brookllurst Ave .• Huntington 8Ht ll, CA. '12'46 Kalt1erine Jun Slt inke, 1100 OaM Pl•ce. Fu11enon. CA. •2tl1 Tnl• buslne.s Is lOnducted by en 111· Olv10Uat. Kather ine Jun Steinke 1'tHs statemet1t wn lll•d with I~ County Clerll ol Orangt CouftlY on July 11, 197S. F4Mll Pl.ll>llSNd Or•ftll8 Coe't O.lly Pitot. July lb, 23, lO, and Augu&U, 197S ~1S PUBLIC NOTICE The tollowlllg per)Oll ts ooiflil bus!· bl•le 04 e MA e REGINA HARBISON, i'iCTITIOUi liJ1ikiU NUM: eke MAE R. HARlllSON.OIC .. Md. NAMllTAT•M•NT l'ICTITIOUS aUSINIH EUIU!>CPOltT, 2118' Cornell Of'., NOTICE IS HER&IV OIVE" ttwt TMfOllowlftlP'f'IOtl"'l''dol119bull-NAM•STATl!MENT Q)la ,,.,.w.CA.ttO• JOSEPH W. HARBISON 11 .. tiled,. .... : ThefOllowlngpenon1 1reCIOiftotMI Jean M•llltvtt· FemonQ. 2l84 Cornell herein uielition for Probate ol Wiil •nd p t M A c A p 1 T A L iwi. a : Or .• ~1'Mest, CA. '1'2~• for IUUtrl(t Of I.Allen Tetttmemeryto OE V ELOf'M ENT , 16168 8e•ch CLA BOURNE HOM ES, U03 Th•~ o..Mntts I> 'oodu<ted by an 111· Ille petitioner reference to Wllkll b Bovtevero, S1111e t so. Hun11n9ton tqrtior Boulevard, Suite K·ll, Gott. 01 .. ldual. m..ie for tvrther parttcvl•n, •1111 tllet Dte<h. CA. '2447 MllK. c.1110,,,la 92'?6 JHI\ Malhewt·Ftmll>il, thr11me Mid plec:e ol hetrlt19 llW Mnw c;. LOUii Grail&dlo 111, 1'16' tltec:h Mlkt Clerll Oe~lopmtftl, Irle., a Thi& ,1ttcme111 w as fllld wtlh lhe ha\ llMft 5el for July Jt, 1t1S, et •:ill Boultvard , Suitt 1so, HuntongtCNI C..llfornl• Cor1><>ratoon-. U03 He,_. county Clerk, ot Orange Couroty on Jun~ • m .• tn the counr~m of Otpannwnt &each. CA. f2M7 8o111tvard, Suite K·l 1, Cosi. MIM JO. "'S. No. 3 olnd of ~aid court, a t 700 Ovlc 0.ftltl o . Tompkln5, 40l7 VI• C.llforni119U26 l'OOU Cenltr Df'lve WHt, In Ille City Of Sant• PllNI, P.IOI Verdes, cet11Mnl1 Eat>ourn• Propertlu, "In<., • Publo~ Or•nl1't! Co•sl Oaity Pllol. Ma, Calllomla. Jefwl uul119, 2>04 Vt• Pedle<o, C.lltomlt Corpoullon, 561 Sat\ Nl~n Junt1S. •ncl Julv7, t , 1', 19H ?ll2-1S Diltd J11ly 7, 1t7S Palo• VefCIH e s1etes, CA. '°21• Dtln, Svllt 10., Newport .. .-ch, Wll..LIAME.SIJOH.. Tiii• 11on1,,.u IJConClucted bytllllllt· C.llfomla'2'60 PUBLIC NOTICE CountyCltrk edper11Wrtl'll111. Tllli bu1ineu Is c:onduded Illy a THOMASJ.Jaf'l'EltS,Jr. G. t.oulsGrezledlo Ill general parlnenhlp. FICTITIOUS •USIN ESS ANrMYtl L.aw Tiiis '1•t1m1nt Wal llltd wllh tlll Miiie Cl•rk Oewl~ lrte. NAM a STATEMENT 2S2t ltOMfulll Aw. CDuftly Cltrll of OrtnQe County on June Ml~hHI W. Cieri\, T11e loUowl1141 Pl''°"' are doh'I) b<dl· _,..., C.lll•ml• '10lt 17, lt1J. PrnlCleftl ntt1es· Tel:,.._,.., ~ This 1letement wes flttcf 9'ltl ti. THE STRAV·WHALE. 314 ND. 2 ·~~~:0,..111""(!:_ t Dally Piiot Pullll!Nd Oren91 CC>fsl Dally Pllol, County Clerk of Orange County on July F-orest Aw .• Ulguna Beech, CA. 927S6 Jul 14 11 22 1~~~ge s ,.11•7; July t, '· t•. 23, 1t1S 2«X>-1S 1, 197s. • -~ · • • R-rt Wucllmlrtll, 23191 Apt.~ __ Y_._._.________ Pt51t Marlrwr Or., U19un• Niguel, CA. '2711 PUBLIC NOTICE --------------t PubllsMd Orange Coast r»lly f'llOt Frida weschmlrlll, ,37'1Apt.102 PUBLIC NOTICE Julyt, t•.Z3,30, 191S 2$1~7' Mariner Or., ugun.1 Beacll, CA. 9ln1 • This buslnes~ I' conducted by a SUP•1ttctlt c;1)URf01' TH• gener•I p.lrtnershlp. STATaOPCAl.lf'ORNIAflOlt • 90425 Raber I Wescllmlrtll T'Hl COUNTY Of' ORANG!! NOTICE TO CREDITORS This Statement was Ille<! with Ille Ne.A ... aal SUPIUllOltCOUllTOP'THI! County Cieri! of Orange County an J-NOTICI OP Ml.Alt I NG Of' P'ETITION ITAT• OP CALlf'ORNIA FOR ,,, ms. flOR PROaAT• Of' WILi. ANO'°" THE COUNTY OF ORANGE Nt%7t t.UTElll Tl!STAMENTARY C90ND NO.A·tl7tS Pl.lt>ll"'9d Orangt Cotsl Dally PlloC, WAtVIDI E&lll• of Ol..IVER L. MATHESON. July1, t, 16, 2l, 1'7.J 2'-'>7S Ettat1 of MILD~ED M. AOUOOT, eke 01..IVEA MATHESON, Otc.taMtd. •k•Mll..DRED M. MA)(EV, Dtc:tHICI. NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN to It'll NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that creditors Of tM •t>ove nlmtd dtcedtftl -------=..,,.....,....,,.....,,.,..,.,.,,..,,.,,.---JOSEPH M. ROU DOT hH fllect twreln INll all perlOnt having <talm' 9911ln&t FICTITIOUS aliSIN£SS a petition for Probelt ot Wiii efld for 1 .. Ille u ld decedent ••• required 10 lllt PUBLIC NOTICE NAME STATtlMENT WM\Ce ol Lelttrl Ttsl•met1l•rv to IN lhel'll. wttll the ~·n•ry VOUC:he'1, II\ TN foltowlne penon I• C1olr19 lxdl· oeltti-r C8ond Walvecll l'elerence to the office ol IM clerk of tha ilbl>w Ill· "'"as: wtlich I• maoe tor furUwr pertle.uten. titted <OUrt, or to pre sen I them, with the MARI MA OFFICE SAi.ES, 70101 ar1C1 lh•t lhe Ume •1111 pllKt of lwtril'IO IWC"YTY vouchers, to lllt 11ndet-.19Md Moftttu• Clrclt . HunttngtOfl O.ac:ll, the same h.n been set tor Augu$t s. at Ille olllte of Ackttmen, I.Inv & CA fl._.. lt7S, et t :JO e.m .• In the courtroom ol Ruuell, 1000 B•n• of Celllornla 81d9-, Vlrgll J. MeQfluton, 20501 Monlaut. Otper1,,.,...,t Ho. 3 of salCI court, e1 700 4'M w, Ocean BlvO., l..Oflg 8'e<h. C.Hf., PUBLIC NOTICE •·M412 NOTICE TOCltlDITOH SUPl!IUOR c;OURTOfTH• STATE 01' c;Al..IPORNIA l'Olt THE COUNTY Ol'OltANOll... Ha.A·Ullt £jt•te of EMMA ELIZAleTH OIT'. TV, DI ceased. NOTICE IS HEREBY GIV!lt to Ille <radii~ oC lht ebovt Mmed dlcedtnt lhAI all persons l\e11l119 cl•lms ag1~sl tilt Miid dK~I are required te Ill• thtm, witll the nensury ¥Outhwl, In the Offk t of Ille Clffll of tlw ..... - 1111«1 Cow., or to present I~ nt«SS&f'J VIU(htr5, IO ltw Orcte, HuntlnQIOfl 8eecll. CA. 92'4 Ovlc Geni.r-Orlw Wut, In ttie City ot Wllkll ts Ille piece of t>u•lneu of tlle un. NOTICE TO CREOITOAS This blnlneu Is COflduClfG by llfl In. s.tlta.,,., C.lllor11le. dllt'tlf"ed In ell ma tit" pert1Jnlng to SU,.ERIOR COURT OF THE dlvldllal. DettdJuly t•, t9H. llw tstal• of sekl Clectdent, wllllln lour STATE OFCAUlllORNIA f'Olt VlrtllJ. MtgnuloOn WILLIAM •• SUOMN. monthleOerthell"lput)lk atlonof t111$ THE COUNTY 01' ORANCOE llllt stet-ftl was flled wltll 11• (Ovflty Cllr11 Niii~. Nt. A ... 111 County Clt1'1P. ol 0Un9' County IWI .MM jMUltWIT'Z, HURWITZ AMO IRaMtill Del:M J11M t•, 1'7S. SAN FRANCISCO <UPI> -The state a Supreme Court, in a un- animous opinion uphold· iog state law, has ruled that juvenile courts can declare minors wards of the court and take them from their homes. The court made its decision Estate ol J, RUSSELL MORTON, 2', 197J. Mllnle,tatL..lw • JudteAren'lekl alr.o known HJ. R. MORTON 11nC1 "4sm ... ,_.SlrwtP.O ... atlaS Aimlnh lull.oftlwestate JOHN RUSSELL MORTON, OtcNMd Publllhed Orange Coast Dally Piiot. ~ 9N<lil. Ge1Ue'114aat61 ottheebo.,.nenwCldtcedtnt NOTICE IS HEREBY CilVEN to the Juty2,t, 16,'3, 1'7S 244-75 lei: 014,.JJ.toJt ACKaRMAN,t.INO& llUSSEI..~ creoitors ol the •bo11e named dltceOenl MllnleY• tw: ,..tltloMr t• 1A111! et C.t"'"'I• 1.-.. '""' a11 oersons hev1no c1.1rm aoatn5' PUBLIC NOTICE ~1s11eo Or•nge co.tit Delly l'l1ot, ... wu10c .. .-atvd. Ille said <ll<•Oent ere required to file July 16. 17, U, 1'1S tt12·7S l.tftl .. eclt, C.111 . ...., llltm. with thl ntcessary VO<Khtr5, II\ FICTITIOUS BUSINESl Ttl: (llJ) t)4."tt tllt office ol thc clerk of the at>o~ tf1-PUBUC N()(J'ICE A.IWMYIWA...,,inhlt.uia :!!~';!~~;~:~::!'s~~nth~~:,:.~:= 1'he fo~:.::g s;!!:n"'i~~~ng busl· rr1T1ous aUSINl!S"" J~~~~ J:.~n2~.~~~~1~allyi::~:i at lht Law Olllce of WOOLSEY, HEWE.LL ANO THATCHER, ... s.<I Joaquin Hiiia Rd.. Newport llMCh, Cllltornte "'60. which Is lht llMc• oC bullness ol Ille u11ClentQMC1 i.. elf met ten pertalftlllO to IM "'•t• tf Mli a. (edlfot, wltflln tour rnentltla .,. .,. 111"\l Dlll>llcetloll ef llllS llOtl~. Delff J-It, tt7S -Jot Cl\atlell• E~cutot ef 1118 Wiii ofttlt abo¥t Mrntd de<edeft& ~UY, N5Wal.l.AND T ... TCHeR . ...SH~vl11Nllta1t•. New"'1 .. ac11, C.tlte""• ntee Tel: ..... in a case brought by a minor who was convict· ed of assault with a dead· lyweapon. PUBLIC NOTICE ~ICTITIOUS 111,USINESS NAM• STATl!Ml:NT Tll~ looowl"9 per$0n) Are <Soong l>u~•· MUH: FOUR SEASONS SERVICES, unt Vtnable une, M1u1.,. Vil10. CllllOMla tU7S Wllllam Tllom•s Milflon, 141?) Vtneblo Lene, M I HIOn Viejo, C..lllom1• '2•1S E vtlYft Jove• Mtrlln. ,.,H Ven•l>lo Len•. Mt u lon Vl~Jo, C..lllQrnl• t2'7S This bu,lneu Is conducteo b" ., '1'fttrtl partntrsl\1p Wllll•m T. Ma rtlft 1'111' llttemcnt wh fol.a w1111 tr.. County Clt rll. of Oran~ County an July 11, lt1S. ,.,.,., Pl.ll>llSlled Or•noe Cout O•lly P1101. J11ly 1', 13, JO, anCI A11011•14, 191S ~J·lS PUBLIC NOTICE NOTICe IHVITINO alD$ NOTICE IS HEREBY (;IVEN lh<ll walecl pn>POUI& wlll ~ rec.et"" WI tt.e Clly. Coste MIMI -' the ertlu OI lht Oty Cl.i'I! et \tie City Hell. 77 Ft•r Df'lw. Cotle Mew, Cal 10ri1le, W1lfl the nour of 11 :00 • m. on Jvly 79, 1'TS. al wnlch llmt ltwv will be opened put>lkly wWi rHd alO\icl 111 AN C.vncll Ctleml'•"\ tor h1rnltlllng a'"ll labor. maltr••I\, equipment, tranu>ort•llo11 and svch 04her fokllltltt u m•y be requlreG fM Ille SEVENTEENTH STREE T WEST EXTENSION SUPERIOR AVENUE TO NEWPORT BOULEVARD ANO MOOll"ICATION OF SUPERIOR AVENUB ANO NEW P O RT BOULEVARD INTERSECTION. A set of plans, s~il1c.111on~ al'ld ~ conlr.cl docum•nl~ may tir oo- taineo at thtolll<•ol the City EnQt.-r, 11 Fair Drive, Costa Mew, Cahlomta, upo11 • non·rtlvndable payqient OI 00. &ell bid •Niii be m•de on ti. pro. I fotm •lld 111 Ille me111Mr 11'9'olldltd 111,. cOfltrect doc-nit end tllllll be t llf'llC*li.cl by e certified or <•IN.,'• •t 2110-0 VI• Puerta, UgUN Hiits, MU!~·T CLEA~VAND ASSOCIATES, .-N'-AME STATEMENT• C.lttornl•, whlcll lstht placeolbUtlneu "" of the unottslgned In all matters Plf'· 20J7 So. '°'" Hwy •• No. 1', &..a!llJM 1'1\e lollowlng penons ire doing l>uM· 1 t•lnlnQ to the utat• of MIO OKedefll, BHcll,C.llfornla ntun: wllllon tour monllll alter tl'le ftrtt Arlh11r JolWl<leery, 7037 So. eoa,1 R.O.CONVEYORC0,.113•K1IMr, pUblocatiew1ot tlllanotlce. H¥ty., No, l•, i...vune S.ach, C.lltoml• Irvine, CA. • ..,.,, Dated J1,1ly IS, t91S Thlt b\lilMH II tOflClvcted bv Ill\ In-. Andrew GIHsell VII, t•2 Wl'Mlll NOTICE TO CR•OITORS M•bel M. Morton dlvldUal. Pl., Tustin. CA. 9UOI SUPIRIOR COURT OP THE , Art Cleary John Grenger Walsll. I07 S.n ITATI OF CALlf'OllNI• FOR lEaramff HeynesWl Tiiis stettment wH h ied With the Oltnes, Canyon Rd., San Dlmu, CA. THI COUHTY Of' OR ANOE 1~e:::sn~.!:'d .,.~:C:.,,t Coul'lfY Cieri! of Orac>~ County Oft July Thlt ttuslnes1 Is conducted by a llmlt· Ne. A"'371t A08ERTM.WM1Ttl 7,1'7S. edptr\Mf'shfp. Eatat • of I.ENA FRUMKIN. 1'4N,. AtldntwGlusell Ot<M'90. ., f?On•tt Dr. Pul>lllhed Orange C:oa~I Daily fl'~ This ttllemwit -· llled with U. NOTICI! IS Hllll!IY OIVEN to Ille ~~~r' S::.:· Clltte"'lt t2IWI Jiiiy t, ••. 2l, l0, nu 2»6-U CM#lly Clerk o1 Orenge County on July crMllM'$ ot ,,,. et>ow nemw detedent Att-y IW Euc11tw1 1•. 1tU. • Ht e ll llersoftl NVll\I <l•I""' egAtntl J.::~~~~~:~u~~:t~~r.~~; PUBLIC NOTICE P\tt>tlW<I Or•n11t coast oa1rv ~ :::i:.~::-.:c:~:.~~~=11e~'.'~ F1tTit1ous auSIN£SS July t•. U,JO,enctAugu,1•.ius-..1J ._ offl« ot tl'le clerk ot IN •bcMt- PUBLIC NOTICE NAM£ STATEMENT tltledcoun. or topr .. eftl lhtm, .... 1111119 ™ toi1ow1ng Pl''°"s ere oo.ng11u11. PUBLIC NOTICE '*"Ml'Y vouc11en.10 ,.,. unc11r~onee1 "'" •• al lhe Ulw Offlct of WVTH, ROSTON NOTICETOCONTltACTOllS MISSION AUTO SHINE, ?l362 f'tCTITIOUSaUSINE$S ANO PAVITT, INC .. 4U1 Wlhlllre CALLING f'Oll a 1os ~rguerllt P•rkw•y, Unit No ••• MIS· NAME STATIMENT Blvd., Ste. no. I.OS AnQelo. C.llloml• School Ol&tn ct: Newport·Mesa 1lonVltlo.CA tUH to010, wllkll IS Ille place o1 buStness ol ti• Ave . <:Mt•Mts.i. Calllornla. Glen H. Metc•ll. 16436 Voa Del Sol. TM tolloW\ftg perwn Is Oolng bu:sl· tl\I ...-nloneo In all m11tt r$ ~IAlin- B•d OttOllne: 7:00 o'cloc .. p.m. on Miu lonVle)o,CA 'l'l•lS .-ss:~~ SHAPIRO COMPANY till lngtOll\leatateotwloci.cecsent,..tthln tllel01hdeyotJuly, 19H. J .P. S.Utrlltld. 1~1l la Z."jt , 1 D • tour months alter the llrtt publl~tlon PIKe of Bid Rectipt: lfP Pl«entli SeftJuanCaplstrefto, CA. 9241S ~t111" 11 r ., Newport Be.ch, 0H11t1nollce. AWllYI!, Costa Mes.. C•l ltomle .,.,, • Tlllt buslneu 11 conoucted bv • 1 torn••,,~ Deltd J11IY I, t97S MA ILi NG AODR ESS: P. O. Bo• gllfltral perlntr&lllp. Arthur Sll•plro, lStt S•ftllolQI> Or., E l..LSWORTH R. ROSTON 1368. Ntwpon Beech. Calllorn,.<ni.s. Ciltn H. Mttull Newport Beach, California '12!>60 E .. cutOC" of the Wiii of P roje ct lden tolteallon Name; Tiii' st•temtnt wts fllNI wltll llw .1.hls t>uslness is conoucttO t>y an In· tlleal>ovenameddtcedtf\t Rtplacemenl of C.oue M .. a Hlth County Oertr. al Orange CO\IMY on J-dividuoll. SMYT ... ROSTON ANO P'AVITT, INC. 0 hool s~t m P I " c l l•tlon J7, 1t1S. ArlhurS.llepll'o ay· •119-111 It ltaUM ... " oo .. e rc u NJVe Tiiis st•tement wn llled Wllll Ille ~WlllMre llW Sy~:~ flllfans are on Fllt : teS7 Pla<en-PvbtlShed Or•noe Coe" Daily Pllo\, Coutlly Cl.,k of Or•nge C.untyon June Ste Sit • • ti• A.,.., cos ta Mew ' Calllornla. Jvly1, •. t4, ?l, 1t7j 2 ..... 1s f1, 1t7s. ~A ...... s,CAlltlorftl• ttCllO F 4SaJ At••'fl W £ •ec"'cw HOTICI!. IS HEREBY GIVl!.N 11111 Pul>llW<I Orano-Coast Dally Piiot. n..~1 • .._.. Oreft-c~st "•tty ..,1-, lht abow nemtd S<hOOI Dillrlct of PlJBLIC NOTICE Jul t 1• 23 )() 1t1S Ult 7S rv"' .,.,. .. ,.... ... "'"' .., u• PUBLIC NOTICE "'*"'" 1or Eucvtw Pl.lbll.tled Oren91 Co.1st DllflY l'llof .Juty9, '"· 23, lO, ms tnt-1 PUBLIC NOTICE ....... NOTICE TO C"EOITOllS !UPEltlOR COURTOI' nte STAT a 0" CAI.I l'ORNIA l'Oll THE COUNTYOl'O .. ANGtl Ne.A..,. estate of ALBERT J. POOLE.WA. J . POOLE, .nd es Al.SERT' ~N POOl..E. Otctued. NOTICe IS HERESY GIVaflothe creditors 01111e et>ow 111med-....\ lllet •II Plt'M>M hevlne clell"tll .... ns\ IN YIO oeceeltnt are requlr• M Ill• ,,.,.,,. wltll the NCnury ¥OUCftert. In I.he office ol Ille clerk of Ille ...,.,. _. tilled 'ourt, of' to pre,....t 11\tn\ _.ttl the rwc:euarv "°"'""'•to Ille un•!........, attht Law Of lice of IAVIN.A.. f'AASSE._ ESQ., 110 N ThlrO 51., Sift .IOS• C.lilornia 9S11J, which I~ the_. oe, l>uslneu of Ille ullelersig<lff In ell milt tars pertelnlng to tllt t$1•1• oC Mid Cit cedent, w1tllln lour mOfltlls aftM tM 111'$t put>tlcatoon ot\llis not I,~. Dated July I, 197S ANNALEE N, POOL• Eaecutrlaot the Wiii of the •t>ov. named Cle<...-1& tltVIN A, f'•ASS&, aso. I If Ne. Tltlrll St • Safi Jese, C.tllenlle HUI Tel: l•l ltt•l4M AltDtN'tfOI' EMClltrla Pul>llilleCI Orenge Coast Oall'I' l'ltol Jutv9, 1•.,i.~, l'7S USl-1 Orange County, Calltornla, ec:llng bv Y • • • • • July t, It, 23. JO, 1'1S • U)().75 ano tllrougll its Governlftg Boerel, ---.. -l-CT_l_T_l_O_U_S_B_U_S_IN-E-55---I -------------'--------------- hHel nalter referred t o u NAMESTATEME NT PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE "OISTRICT", wUI receive UCI to, but Thtfollowlngperson isdo1ng1>uslneu PUBUC NOTICE not leltr lhtn ,,_ atlOvt staled lltnt as i.eeltO bklS'for ......... of. c-rec:t THE INT I!. It NAT I 0 NA L NOT1c;1of' INTINOIDSAI.• tlirltw•boWP'OJKt. 800l(MAN, 3411 Via loOo. Newport . SUP•tttOltCOUllTOl'nt• ATP\llUCAUCTIONO,. Bids shall be r~elved II\ lht 111ec:1 BHCll,CA .,~ ITATIOprCALlr<>ltNIAl'OI\ TA>C DllOIORUl.PROPUITY ldeflllftlO •bo.,., •nCI sh.II be eeierwd Mot\roe s Miiiar, tlt I.lei<> Parle Or., nt•COUNTYOf'O .. ANOI T.C. Safe..._ 1t'N eno 1>1.1t>llcly rNO •10110 et the •Dow NewpOr't Beech.CA tJM>O Ne.A ... m PUBLIC NOTICI! IS ME.-E9V GIVEN lllel on tM llllldey of July, lt1S, •t )laltOllmee l'ld piece. Tho\ Dll&lntu It conducted by all in N 0 TIC I OP "a. A 1111 No o,. t11e '*"of 10:00o'clocll A.M, olthat iey, lnU.offlct ef Ille Tu Collttteretl!W! Th•rl' wlll De a N/A Ot~ll AQUlrea PETITION FOR PROIA TE OF WIU. Ceunty of 0Hftl', llalt Of C.llloml .. V.. und9rsl91'1td, ROlltrt I.. Citron, HT .. tor u cll ut of bid oocumenh t.o dM Oull. AND FO• LITT-"• T•STAM•~ c.llKIOf' of "'Cl Couftlv of 0r..,.,. In purwonce of law llld the -111en gutrerolll' thl rel urn In goo0 canoitlon Monroe S Mlllf r TARV Eitete Of SIONI ~l!On,.llOI\ of the llalt Controti.rof Ille Slate of C.lltonile, dated Mey It, ttlS Within N/11, o•ys •lltr Int bid OC*\tl'lg Tho\ SIAttmt nl •H llltd wtth ,... NOTICE ts Hf~~~ •. fltYAl'Cr H i lrt<l•d by'"' ... ,., Of Suott¥h0" .. Ille s.14 Cltvftt)' OI date County Cler• or Oran~ Covllty onJUl\I THOMAS OAKl..AV JAMES het fll«I ._ _ _ •to Mii, wlll otlerlorNllandsell esprovtdM tty Dlorisle(I t, ,..,, E•ch bid must tonrorm end bt ll. ltH. ,4I036 htrelft • petltlen for Pl'"'9teol Wiii ef1C1 "'~•t 1,""" lteveftve •nd Taut Ion c:eo.. '" MMrtl• IN!'cel• at f'Uauc ~sl,,,. to tjlt contract*-''· Pvbll,.._O Or•"V-Cool O•ll'I Piiot fllr llWAflteol IAtt.,1 Test_,,.erylo AUCT Off to tl'le lllllflHI bidder tor cesh In ltwlul "'-Y o1 the Ulllltd St.ces. or Each Did lllell 1>1 eccompenledbytlw Ju...U •nCIJuty• , i. lt1i nM-7S h .. uttontt rtlt-.n<t to llllfli<ll 11 ftt MfOllabll peper, tl'le rt•l-rty t.ltuelecl in Ille Count'tof Ort1119'eSUhol totC-..roty r ... rreo to 111 tlle cOl'llrect • ... • • INdt.., hlrttwr tNrtkvten, .,._""' GMHtf'lll• •ltd dtscrtllM et follows. ti...it: d!Kut'Mftll •1111 11111 tM 1111 ol IN'tllOMd tflt time.,,. piece ol llHrtnw Ult"""' ""oPtrty *"'" 111 Mjllll(anlractors. PUBLIC NOTICE .... """HI lor Jwy 1t, ms...... ~IM<hCit'I' Mr. Jemea M. Hel•Ulld. Ol~kM' a.m. lft ltle eowtlMf!I Of ~t Scllool FecllllltS, Mel11tenence aflCI HO.* tf Mid C9Uf'l. at 1tO Ovlc CM* k or • bkl ~ fw Mt le• then 101ot Gt the amou11t of Ille bid, medt yellMlotNClt"Of (ette Mew. NOTICE IS HlRl•V OIVEN lhet ---------------------------.·111e Clly Covncll ••said City has 00.rtllons. wlll mttl wllll ...... f'ICTITIOUI aU5fNMS Drive Wut, IA·~ City Of ..... ,..,,.. _._.,s IMtrttleCI t11 1ovrlno"'9•"• ti NAMI ITATIMeNT C.ltfomle. , ... '°''' MIM High S<llool, loUi.d ~ r.... totlowl119 penon~ .,. C1o11111 llull· DettclJuty 11. 1t1S Nell 8Mdl Htl9flll UiUSl'l91k• Alt1*'<rllledatAPSMIWO • ustetttnff •••• so11111e J . 9'tUl•r MllllltlW'I KC:epteOla ltMI .. . . .. .. ~. .. ... 4 -• • ~ . .. ~ Laguna's Price . ··Feted by Legion . ' Laiunan 0 . W. Price bu received the top bonon given an individual at the American LcJiOID convention in San Diego in recoenitioo 'Cl community service. It is the fifth time in six years lb at Price. a 56-year member of the Le&ioa, bu been so -· booored. + Price, 79, retired In lMl from tho Veterans Admln11tratlon. He continues to WClf'k wit.bout pay to asalst veterans and their dependent.I. Durint lbe •••t year. Pi'tce aided 385 veUrans and widows with clatm. for benefltl, made 185 tr! r.s to visit veterans lA VA hospil&Js. nun nf homes and ln their bomN. He loggM 2,800 miles doing such work. In addition, Pr1ce collect~ SS,900 worth oJ • • 11agailnes. book a, cards, atampe, clotbinl and other Items for use by patienll. n.retelore ••l•llllU..CI • PNvelllnt •• ,. M4I K•I• of w991s, In •tcorcloltKI wilt\ la•. te lie peld In I,_ c-ttuetlOfl al tJ11 *"' enlllled lmpro.,.nw11ta, TNlt Mid rate Md K ele WH e4lo0Wcl b" the City ~II tty Ruoh1llon No. 1H on 1119 J\h .. Y flt Januery, tt1J. and h on Ille 111 '"• etfk• of 1111 "City Cit•-ol w ld Cltv. Thll wld rell' and tc.81fl ts herein ,.,.,,., 10 aftCI adopted IX) thi' notice u t'**' fulltr .,,. cempletely WI tor111 Mi-.tn. •110 , ... , t..tld K•lt u ~.-Dy Nld ~tMl\ltlOft It INde a pen of tlll\ niMlct by re le reno. Tiie Centr.c tor ihell, 111 tllt pertor~ et 11\e _," •lld ll"C>"I.,.. -nn. con™"" to tll• Lew Codt of ""SU.le of C.lllOMI• •llCI other '-Of 'ht St•tt 01 C..llfernl• •HllUlll• IMftlO, wllll the 1•U11tl tof) Ol'lly Of MiCfl 11erletkln• es INIY ti. rtciull'H .-1 ... _, ...... hit" PVrW•"1 .. """"'" .,. ....... ...._.. ........... ~ .... ldl lle\'e M4 llelfl ......... .. .,.vllMM "' lllt ~-c:o-. ,... "'lftC' to l.W , ... ., be t i.aft en1., lfl .. ....,._ """' ... .., .... No~ tMll lllt c0fl11Wred "'"'°'•fl I• ,,.,... 811 • ___ .. '°"" fvr'll "* Cly "" City of C.Ste IWlaM M4' h ,.,.. l'I M• ~ -'tfltM ..,.vlU.•• .. .,.. .,...a~llWMMt. .__....,_ .... ,I( ....... 111t ~110.-•• r•~lrwt "' 1-""' CJty (Oufl(ll of tM City of Cotll Mn• rtw""" ll'le rlOf\110 rtlK1 •Y Of .ii bid\ Ell..111'1 lll,"4lfl~llY C.11y c. .. r11 Cllyof Coile Mu•. C.llfot'lll• "'*'"'" °""" Qlul.o.lty ,. .. '------------"'."""~----::-------.J .l .. r~.a1, "7$ • Ml>IS ~ f1lrvi1w ..... , at 10 A.M., Jiiiy MUH: WIL.Uf!M •. IUOMN ms. VAlllANT MANV FA(TURINO covntyCltr• TM 0 1$TAICT rtMN•t lllt f11lht '° COMPANY, 10.21 81oomlltld Strtet, IOWINW.CMAf'PI& i.)HI any°' ell bids or to •etw any Ir• ND. 7, l.<>\Altmlloi, Calilornle A....,.Y •• Uiw "9glllerlt1eur lnformat1t111 lneft'1'"* Tlll1 bu•IMU I• conoucteo by • P.O. ..... , .. A...,'-t~..-. or In the bidding. ftlc11t1d J, Rln•ll•. 114 Stanford s.tCJeiN•, C.llfilf'M• ft'1l Thi Dl~T RICT lies Cleltrmlnecl Ille I.Ant, SHI e .. ch, Ctlllornl• '!0140 Tttt 11141 ..a•ttt oeneral povaohnQ rate of s-r Clllm P11trl<ll £, o ·su111va11, )17? Tutk" MW-.v•: ,..tlti-r weQ9' 111 Ille tocetllv In w11lc1111w -"' ~,...I.Os Alamllos. C•lllOrnlio 'IOno ""'911tlled Or•no-CoHI Dally Pllll. ISIOl>lperformedlorucll<r•ltOflYPt Tiiis b11$lno~ IS (OIHIUCllO •Y. Jlllylt,11,2t,lt1J • ~,. Oii workmtn -lo eaecut• tlw tet1· 19t-••P•rlnershlp. trA<t. These ratn •rt Of! 1111 •I 11H Alcherd J . ftlnell• Plaontl• Av•-· Cost• """"· Coot*• Tllh llate""l\1 wet lllld wltll t!M PUBLIC NOTICE INY DI OOll ll'ltd on """'"· A (09\'.. County Clerk ot 0t•ft0' Cou11ty on JWM -------------ttltte ••Ill sNll be posltd at tlw jell '°· ltl$. • NOTtc• OP SAU! tlM. .,._. Ol'AIANOONaO TII• fore90I ... Kl\Mult ol ,... diem 111\11111"-d Or•n911 CM,t Otlty "'°" HRIONAL PRO .... tTY ~\ It lleMd ""°"JI WOrkllll •Y • -"-U. eltd July I , t , ,., lt1S i:aeo.11 Ntllce II httMy tlveft ""'1lllll\lt to eight <el llo<ws.. Tht ratt for llolloay llll(tleft UIO f;T 110, 9f U. Clvtl Qltll and-rume work "'II be•' le..t Umt PUBLl.C NOTICE tf tht Slttt O.f C:•lllOl'lll• llW 1111-.,.~. • •nftnM Mll'CUltY IAVINOI t. I\ illell .. lnt!Wlato,.., _."'"'GOH-\,MN AllOCIATION wllf ...... ,..._ TllACtOlll -_,..,. 11\t ""1rle1 I• "C'TIT10Vt1Ul1N.... ~ .. WIA-"OILll"Q.-a, .. ...,.., -..... •"Y \llktlltnacw MAM• nA'HllllNT ~ "941tY. Qlltlnl&a, .. = ~ lllA'I, • pey flOt "" "'-" l!lle MN Tiit "41owft1t .--. wt ..... llutl-~ .. • *Y ti JULY, tnS.... . '"'"lfltd ratu I• •II "'orl!men Ntlat: ~~~ ...... ti .,,.....,.. .-, tlleftl In tllt ellt<uCltll.. 011 I N JIANS AHOC .. t•l IOlltlWMlloflct ...~~1. .U....ac ...... .,... .. ecll.CA.-.St MHOTlll~TD ... ...._, ""l' wlllldraw llltltltlfora 1te11ei. Lu Ma< ••ntllUtl, 161 IU (J),l'Cl aGWl.-S ,.,._., t111tV "°' •Y• .... r ...... ~1wac .• i...twM9eMl\CA.t11tt ta(J),,1•0-11•1:; .. .... 1Neotfll111et1H•ei. ~"' Dl\'tf .... ,."'·,.. .. ._ ............. "",_, ........ A-~\ tleftf tlld • "''or"MICt a!!..~e..11.CA. .... t 111• lleft •C ••• 11111•tr• ..,,. ftf' _,.wlll w N4tutl'M ,,,., ._,~ Tiii• lllnt-.. la '"~ttf ..... ~ ITOfl.AOI In H --t ti IMlAO "h <ontHtl. "'"-lllAY"""' ...... """ IM~ettCI MtKlallOfl Olfl* tlWI .......... """' co.a.a of MVtnfllfll ellll 11111111 IM'°'"" set twtll 111 Vie tOl'llrect ~nerllll,, ~of ..... Al.I. •IOS Will at CIOC""*11L lllonetd Ut Mt0'"11hUll SEA LEO • o.wrm111 a.ard T1111 state"""' .., .. th• ._,.. 11w 0e1ec1t11111111d1veu111y, ttn. '' Doftllly ti•rvey Fllflolf CM!mY Clark of 011net Ceunty M Jiiiy ChtK• Sllrlten 11, 1'U. Adfnllll1trat1vt .. n1lc;a Ptll"dlMl"9 A4tfll '416>6 "'-t"U'l' S.Wlfttl ""'~~~~.., .. cont o.u~i.:s ~":'r.~~.?:=..~:.~.~:iv:o_~ ~r.110r-.. c.tM o.ttv.~ Art.II Beach HtlglllS l.M 26 In Bllt SO Altodticrl!IM 11 ,_,, S$.J1Wt List ............ ..,,,, .. J . "9ulel' Mlftil!IU"' t<'-\lblt tMd p00 An:ll .. Kii Htltl\11 • t.o111 tn suuo Al••tcrlltilel .. AP SWlt•n Lltlt ... tNt , , •. aollfllt J, Mlll'tr 1"\lnlmum KCtflMI• ... ~ .. ,, Houses f o,. Sd. 1 • •...... • • • • • • • • House~ For Sale ' · Hovtes Fot Sale • ••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• The Bluett Market""' ~-.rol I 002'~1 I 002 • . on tL.. ... n,..__ ..,,ICt • •••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••~ ........... co.ut DAI LY PILOT CLASSIFIED ADS Yov Con s.n 11 r,nct II, Trode 11 Wtlh o Wonl Ad [642=-5678] One Coll Servi((' Fo~t C1cd1t Approval ERRORS: Adverti sers sh~uld check tMir ads daily . and report er- rors 1mm•diatety. The DAILY PILOT assumes liability for »-fil"St in- correct insertion only. RE ~-lLTORH 644-7270 SPYGLASS Bea!JlifuJly decor ated in Spanish ~ot.1f. 4 Bedrooms, family r oom , d 1.ning r o o m + bonus room . z F ire pl aces. Pro f essionall y landscaped. $154,000 2828 E. Coast Highway, Corona def Mor PROPE MANAGEM N 1111 IOO•ll 10' llY111G 110(•~•1 HOMES FOR LIVINC NCTWORK WI U• IHI' lff f~r 1111 01 JU Of U ll'l.A(( I• l#f llAflO• Publisher's Notice: Gfttttal I 0021 GMeral I 002 Allreal eslateadvcrtiscd ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• m thts ncw:.µa))l:r 1::, sub JCCt lo the Fe<.lcr•tl Faii lt oustn~ Ad of l!HiR which makes 1t tllcl!al lo ~.1 ti vc rt 1 s c. • .iny pn: krencc, It m1tal1on. (JI" d1scrimat10n h;i.scd 111i r.icc. color. rehi.:ron. '>C:\, 11r n<1l1onal ur1,i.:111. 111• wt tnlcrition tu mukl· a ny such prefcrcnt·c. limrt,1• lion, or d iscnnunal1on. ' 1'hil> ncws papt•r will not knowin~ly <H'<'l"lll any "dvcrt1s111i.: for real t•!-.late which 1s 111 viola lion ol lhe law ' Houses for Sale ••••••••••••••••••••••• General 1002 ••••••••••••••••••••••• YOU QUALIFY oflnJa !J~fe Reing remodeled; custom 5 BR. 5 Ba. 6500 sq. ft. home on point, pool, dock. Beau~ifully decor ated 5 BR. 411:.t ba.1 paneling, 3 frplcs. Boat slip. $260,000. Custom 5 BR, 4 ba., View, 80 ft. on· lagoon. Boat s lip. $295,000 BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR 341 Bayside Drive N B b7S 6 161 G~ral I 002 I Generol I 002 •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• I WESLEY N ~YLOR CO. REAL TORS s ince 1H46 ~!.~.~ ...•.•. ~-~-5:!:. ••.•... J ~~!!!.~~ ••••••. G...,.al I 00 G1•ral I 002 GIMnlt t OOZ • •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ll·ClMTf:HHIAl. SPECIAL C HOICE COLLEG t ,AIU< Buuhful ComeU2istory, 4 bdrm, & farruly room+ O<>nus room. ~a·s in· elude, S ton a.ir condi· tloner. cerumic tile. up· ~raded carpeung, lathe &. plaster construction. Super location , 111'1 blocks l o <:ommunity vo<>I. All of this & more, only $67 .soo. 545-9491. ----Wal-ker R lee Ruol lstete Eastslde C..._ ,...,.. Convenient to schools & p11 blic transportation. Spacious 3 bedroom, 2 bath wtlh lots oC extras includrng used brick fireplace, covered patio a nd garage door opener. See this new list in g, won 't las t long!! al $41.900. Call S40-ll51. ~HERITAGE REALTORS OCEAMFROHT 4-PLEX 4 F urnished l ·bdrm . apts. Ga r ages & ba l con i es. s u;n - m er/winter r entals. Owner will trade. P riced at $135,000 673-3663 548·9673 eves associated BR01<£RS-Rf AL TORS 101', I/II 6olbo>o o •' HI> I SKINNY DIP SPECIALS Two 3 bedroom pool homes ·bea u tifu lly landscaped in the most LAST CHANCE!!!! to eoj~y the beach this ~ummer in on'" beautiful 3 bedroom, 2 ·bath unit am. rent the upper 4 bedroo m, 2 bath. Both ha ve O CE AN VI E WS ! N ewl y pa i nt e d •.. S UPER CONDITI O N ... n eve r b een s umme r /winter r ented. Owne r anxious to leave area. Asking $99 950! Call 546.t141. ' MESA VERDE CREAMPUFF Upgraded 3 BR with custom kitchen. You will place this lovely home at the top of your Hst ! See this new listing in the heart of Mesa Verde, Priced at only $47 ,500. Call 546-4141. HIGH A TOP SPYGLASS Beautiful 3 bedroom PORTSMOUTH MODEL Spyglass Hill -me. Many decorator upgrades. MAG'NI FICENT OCEAN VIE W. You own the land. New, exclusive Listirfg. $159,500. Call ~161 SWEEPING CHANNEL VIEW. u ane und e r the s t ars i n this outstanding c ustom built 5 bedroom home. F o rm a l d ining room h as electrically controlled movable roof and opens to the sun or t he stars. Courtyard pool with jacuzzi. This h o m e i s id ea l f or executive en~ertainin~, as well as fa mily living. Prime I rvme Terrace location. Call for details. 640-6161 -TREES TREES Country living in the city! Pa rk iike grounds s urround the 4 bedroom home located on quiet cul·de·sac street. New kitchen floors & new carpet s too! Homes in this development don't last long. HURRY $48,500. 962·4454 RAMBLING RANCHER This charming RANCHO MESA, 4 bedroom, 2 bath home is s uperbly decorated and has formal dining and separat e family room. Only $56,450. CALL NOW, for full details 962·4454 S3000 moves you rnl11 this 1'harp condo 1n an•J or lu:\ury homes. Nu quJlt· fying lo assume cx1:.l1ng FHA Joan. ~.!Ml. lull Jmcc. CALL 962·7788 DOVER SHORES -VIEW -POOL d es i r a b I e a re a of Luxurious features in lovely 4 BR Newport Beach. One has h a f ull y equipped Wednesday, July 1e, 1816 • O~LY PILOT D3. Ho.ft Fw w. .._.. Por w. l ..... " For s. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• G••ral I 002 G1•r.. I OOJ .,..,.. ' • t OOZ. ···•••••·············•· ·•••••·••·············· ...................... . C.W.soc Street a n d many upgr11ckd features are Ju."il a p.irt ol this Jov~·ly a + Jen or 4 bedrm home. Olfered .it $57.9:IO. ~U f'ERB f-f OIVIES 3841 C1MpU1 N O 549~N55 AM IMYITATIOM . .. to gracious liv1n g. Prestige Dover Shores home; 4 bdrms. + l>luc.ly · warm ramily rm. & formal dinin~. l<'ront \.'ll· lf'y patio with pool Spec· tacular view. $11:14,500 C. F. Colesworthv Realtors 640..0010 JUST $5200 DOWN INCOME property nr. Costa Mesa Wome n 's Club. 60x300 lot. zoned R-2; 3 BR. home w/lge. fam . rm., dbl. gar. & workshop + 1-BR home w /encl. porch & laundry rm. Zoned for 4 a<tc.lt- tiona I units. /\SKIN<.; S52,000 *DUPLEX* Best Costa Mesa loc. 2 BR, I IJa. ca. unit. Lgc•. cem ent patio; sluvc & rcfrig. incl. ,Sep. encl. garages. XLN'f liUV · ONLY $52,500 11C 11 THOMAS REALTOR 224 W. Coast llwy. N'pt. Beach ~-5527 EVES.: 545-5643 VALLEY REAL.TY PRESENTS BAYSHORES .. r ight next to sandy beach. Larges bedroom. 5 bath h()iJJlc on huge 101 First time on market P rivate comm unity . $172.000. , ''N~ TURE Lovas UMITE! This proud Portofino sits on a IA ac.re lot in Harbor Vi ew Homes overlookfng a nature park. Inside, ther e's rough sa wn cedar pa n e l ing. tropi~a l shutters, ma ri gold color carpeting and 4 bedroom s + a loft and bGnus room. This is fee land and the price is $ll4,900. Na turally, we thought you'd love it! UMl9UE HOMES, • ....._. ..:..675-6000 2443 E. Cst Hwy. C--.. ..._.. · · G....,-al 1002~G~ IOOZ •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• IRVINE TERRACE • View Large home with \ iew of harbOr . 4 Bdrms., 4 baths, game rm. Offered. $285,000 NEWPORT HEIGHTS . Newish 3 bdr m .. 2 baths, fa mily robm Offered at $79,000 ' ( [U ~~IN-M/\~TIN lite) --REALTORS---- 644-7662 CORONA DEL MAR G.-erol I 002 Gfftttal 1002 •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• *** Ben List 15 5 Lexinclon lft CostaMeH You are the winner of TWO FREE TICKETS \$13.SO TICK~IS) Rin9linq Bros. • KEY . ..REALTO RSiii ome w /view of bay & city li ghts. darkroom, private patio Center garden room w/huge wet bar. anq glassed·in family Cryst_a l, m a rble, prof. ldscp. $215,000 room. T he other is super PENINSULA Beach cutie. sle ps to beach a nd Lido shot> p i ng . Attractive 2 bedroom. $62.500 Barnum & Bailey Circus CA MEO HJGl-U.ANOS· 4714 CORTLAND. Newly decorated & s parkling clean. Four bedroom or lhrec & convertible den. Pri v ate b each , fruit trees. J usl S87 .500. 2111 S secluded with giant EASTSIDE an J~ Hils Rood hedrooms. Priced in the DOLL HOUSE NEWPORT Ca(TER, M.B. 644-4910 SBO's with 10r;; down G~ I 002 'Getteral I 002 Sharp Coi-la i\h-sa 3 e I ............................................. . bedroom, :! bath with '\ Quail ~ b ca u t i 1 u t tarp l' t s G~ral I 002 Gettttal } I 002 Plac• • PACESETTER HOMES RANCHWOOD thruuut. Lari.:t· toveretl ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• Prap•rtiea patio. dblc garJgt· ltoom lnine HH ·S39,990 _______ , 752·1920 ~ CLOSE OUT SALEll for boat or trat ll-r. BURRY. Plush newH OPEN DAILY _••oo_ou_A_llSf.NIW"°ITHACH • •• llurry. first ttmt> olfercd home. Lge familv mov-OLD BALIOA Sellirig 4 decor a ted models + 2 rePO's ~~6d_c!'.,'"01cel.l S42,000. Call ing from a rea. Features Boat s lip, + qwet. lux· $79,500 at extra low prices! 8% Financing .,,.. "°° unous. 3 bedrm. game I SPYGLASS RIDGE Beautifu l Sandpiper 4 bedroom. family room. pool and pat10s plus view. Exquisite an.:J. $134,950 . LUSK BEAUTY Call 675-5511 Cole of Newport .J uly 31st Lo Aug 12th 1\nahc1m Convcnlum Center, t!OO W. Katel"1 T1l·kets may be ex · _ Realtors __ rhangcd for ,reserved 1:-'0H Si\L fo:·Heal Estali· ~~ats al the Convention Orftn:. 11110 Sq. fl. of ol- 1:nter a hl'ad of t11ne . lice in tlo\\ nluwn llunl. ~-~11 642 567K •. ex~ 3J:l tu tngton UeJdi. 20~ Mam claim your LtckelS. St. !''urn_ & fixtures smo. * * * Rent Sl25. mo. 545--t~~ Getteral I 002 Getteral 1002 beautiful cstm cpl'~. room Townhouse. Look Location. Location. a so a v ailable. Quick sale extr as ~t!~~t, lge pvtyd. It's for the sig n. Plenty of Location. East Bay on inc_lude: front la n dscaping a nd ~HERITAGE 4 Bed11>om Guadalupe, ••••••••••••••••••••••• profession ally decoral· .. ----------------• ••••••••••••••••••••••• CAMPION&J\SSOC. µarlung ins ide. Ctuldren the Penins ula. Im · s prink lers. rear fencing, upgraded Calls49_1001. welcome! Open l·S. 4441 maculate 2 bdrm. 2 bath carpet, oven /range, dishw asher & REALTORS ed. w ide greenbelt view. Close to pool. S89.000 GeMral 1002 Ge.raJ 1002 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• •' .... , - , ... '\ •• J• 11 1 ··~ ... j I macnab I Irvine realty BUY THE BEST OR DON'T BUY AT ALL! Best of Sp yglass Hill ! Sweeping Ocean, City VIEW! Gracious, Jg. pool ! Exqujsite interior decor ating. Laszlo Sharkany 644·6200. (K80) · A PLACE WB.L PLANNED. A separate bonus room w/bedroom & ba th for p arties, t eenagers, in-1 a ws or g u ests. L o v e ly 3 bedroom, 3 bath, family room home inc luded for $95,000. Lois E gan 644-6200. CK81) HARIOR VIEW PORTORMO! B ea utiful · 4 b ed r oo m h o m e w /fin ished bonus room -bedroom & b a th for tha t teen ager. An excellent buy $97 ,500. Tom Queen 644·6200. (K82) MOVE IN NOW! FIV E l ove l y, br a n d-n e w condominiums! 2+den and 3+den on Lido Isle right on the beach overlook in g Newport Cha nnel. Newly r educed to $155,000 a nd $167,000. J eanne Newman 642·8235. (K83) "OLD IALIOA CHARM" Trad itiona l brown shingle, 2-story, 2 bedroom + den cottage w /white 1 fencin~. Kitchen has wood burning stove con verted lo gas -sleeping loft w /cano pie d built-in beds. Hardwood fl oors. $125,000 Beverly Morphy 642-8235. (K8'4) PEHIMStJLA -OCEAMAONT! The perfect owner /tenant property locat ed on prime beac h front property. F antastic workmanship & less than 2 yrs. old. 4 bedrooms, s a una ; laundry r oom up and 3 be drooms dow n . Clint Moses 642-8235. (K85) •'LOYEL Y TO LOOI( AT" Lg. & homey 3 bedrooms, living room. dining room & family room + .. breat h tak in g t o see .. - glimmering lights on bay & sea . $174,~. Jack Cus ter 642·8235. CK86) .. GIU T PRISI09f1' HOMIJ With pool & view! 4 bedrooms, family r oom , dining room. $125,000 w/land. Lasdo Sharkany 644·6200 (K26) • 642-12JS 644-4?00 tot Dowt °''" '"'" Mac"'"'"' Newpof1 0.Kll, Clllllolllle tHU West Coast High way, home could easily be d · · NewportBcaeh. converted into greal ts posal. Ask ing from. $44,950. duplex. Huge s un deck. Hurry ! ! For more info rmation . Call 675-7225 Must see ror m a ny Call714:581-2444 "-• ..;" 1 " • '•ft J \' ..... ' •I ' . poss i bi Ii ti es. 313 E. Bay. !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~ 545.9491. \.\IJJ~~)· HE \l:l'l @ herbert hawk ins RE Al TORS 6 46 ·3255 -GeMrol 1002 G__,.al 1002 BEST BARGAIN IN ALL COSTA MF.SA· large 4 bed room. 2 oath on over s ized Mesa Verde: cor ner lol. Now VACANT. out .or town ow n er desi res im· m edia t e sale. Needs some paml and TLC but c heck this price .... I only S47.500}. First. lime ad ·Yrru!~n~w !!Yr ••••••••••••••••••••••• e1ER & SLIP a re included with this beautiful, c'Mllpletely r e· modeled lo·llew 3 bdrm, fa m rm + much more. Ask 'g. $149,500. Why don't you volunteer your own terms a nd price. JACOBS REALTY 675·6670 4 Br. 4 Ba &Gallery 2 fireplaces, wetbar Deluxe kitchen Pier for yacht lo 60' You may select the ---------ftmshing touches .. 675·8120 IEACH BARG.AIMS Duplex . $59,500! Duplex -S72,500! verlis ed, hurry!! Call ~~~~~~~~~I 546-5880 = HILLSIDE 4 Units· S79.500 ~HERITAGE "'. REALTORS WARM SPACIOUS SPRAWLING CALL 675-7060 RETREAT w i th gorgeous HUMT. IEACH whitewater view from 2 BR .• l 'h ba. Newly re· this :.pac1ous 4 bdrm, 3 furbished. $21,450 bath V 1 P resjdence on CALL 556-8800 qwet cul de sac street. Balboa Bay...._ Situated in one of the • '-r- m os t. prestigiou s o f ~~~~R~e~attors~~~~ beach areas._ ••••••••••••••••••••••• EASTSIDE FIXER UPPER Needs work but gr<?ttt potential. 3 Bdrm, l bath house w ith s torage ro om s & s tudy, playhouse in large yard. Zoned R ·2 with room for ,1ddit ional unit . Only S29,950. 646·7711. Open Eves. -. . NEWPORT CONDO 3 Bedroom , 3 bath . fireplace. overlooking pool. Su per sharp, and only S45,500. w/lO'ic down.CALL PRESTIGE HOMES R~affo" . 645-6646 A BERu lNTERPRISES U) JUSTLISTB> S Bedroom , 3 car garage. Large f a m ily room . dinette, form al dining, 3 bath, near new 2 story. Don "t wait. See this up· grad ed l a r ge family home. Offered al $71,500. Call 540-1151. ~HERITAGE REALTORS COUNTRY RUSTIC $36,!lfO·save thousands! Assume 5114% a nnual percentage rate loan. 1/5 Acre. Rust ic ranch style 3 +den, country kitchen, gourmet dining, huge lot, boat & camper access. Privacy galore! Beller hurry-ca ll 645-0303 FOREST OLSON IMC. Neatly lucked away in a qu1et1 street nestled un· der a s h a kc roof and wa1t1ng for you. this 4 bedroom. 2 bath hom<> must be sold now since owners have boug ht another. Only $46,900 T ransferred seller very --------• motivated. 641>-7711 0pen LOWESTPRICE G~Mral 1002 Gfttffol 1002 .Eves. in Big Cmryon ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• - Beautifully landscaped, view. Dover, 2 bedrooms . . & dejl. Owner anxious Asking $119,500. too. , ________ ..... l,,.Quail ~ liilPlac• Prap•rti•• 752-1920 . l•OO QUAil ST. HIW~ HACH *CASH• j PETE J BARRETI ··· REALTY FOR ANY HOME!! f\Jll a ppraised value -paid. Free home evaluation. Back paym ents OK. Call anytime. Rick Byers Bkr ____ ............ -• 542·3676 Have something to sell? Classified ads do it well. S©~JUµ-l&~trs · That Intriguing Word Game with a ChucHe 141!.4 ..., CIAT a. POUAN ----- 0 Rearrange leners of the• l<>11r .:rambled -•ck !Ht- '-to fa<m lour simple WOidt I P E L P I H I I I 11 11 I I L U R Y T Ii I 11 I I I· C E E P I I' I I I I M~ 11,,_ by the l•w or· supply 1'ld dem•nd. They de- mend ind you -. ,." I· K l S T CY I 0 C~leM the ~ .. qvoted I I I I I' ... '''::! ... """"? _, yov de-lop ,_ INlp Ho. below. EASTSIDE DUPLEX Excellent location. never a vacancy factor hen•. 3 Bdr m, 2 bath &2 bdrm. l bath. Huge bdrms, large t i le d balhs. & deluxe built-in kitchens with dts· hwashers. J u:,t lts ted . Owne r leaving slate. 646-7711. Open Evl'-" - Pool·+ 3 ldnn. Super clean 1 mi. from beach. No mainl. lawn. Only $54,900. VIiia ,odfic $8500 dn·t nke 7% Joan. Quick possession on lhll 3 BR Charmer !! S~shH9dftda 3 Br, for mal dining. sep fam rm w I frplc. A.u ume 7% VA loan of s:M.800. • Cal96M405 Salespeople Needed • 7 5' STREET TO STREET on exclusive LIDO IS LAND. Secluded lot size patio is enclosed by spacious 5 bedroom home with separate children 's wing. Priced to sell at $169,500. URE NOTRE DAME Pl.AM Popular but scarce 2 bedroom, 2 bath t ownhouse. yreat location near adult pool, on l reenbelt. Very clean one owner home. Jn Village 3, at $49,500, including the land. HOUSE WITH GUEST QUARTERS Bright, clean, fr~h Harbor View home with separ2te guest quarters. 3 bedrooms, 21h baths in ma in house. Den, bed room & bath in guest house. ~.soo. OWNER PACKING University Park, steps to pool & ten- nis. 3 Bedrooms. s pecial master sit· ting room with atrium. Beautiful fenced yard. Own your own land. Call right away. ~.ooo. COUJMS ISLAND -NEW LJSTIM~ Marble, ony x & r ich w a lnut paneUng tastefully accent this gracious one-of ·a·kind home. Large stmdeck ove rlooks 60' slip & view ol main channel. $395,000. MIWPOIT llACH '44-1766 A COLDWELL IAt«a CO. I ' Kt~ALTOHS 644-7270 OPEN HOUSES • . llVINE TERRACE J UST L ISTED in one of the best ar eas in Newport Beach. 3 ~edrooms, 2 baths , family rm., fireplace bltn kitchen. Sun around the Po<>l and e ntertain on the pa tio. On large lot. Attractively offered at $85,000 .. 2006 Tahma Tew .. CdM ...., NEWPORT ISLAND Dlft.EX ~OW NE R U N I T wit h S . bedrooms, 2 baths, fireplace, e lec bltns, 10' ceilings. Lower unit 2 bedrms, 2 ba ths, fireplace, elec bltns. 11 Years old -same owner -an excellent buy. $117,500 · QUAUTY . ~ NEW DUPLEX that is ste1;>-5 to llJI th e ocea n a nd s hopping . Spacious 3 bedroom, 3 bat h upper; one bedroom, one bath lower. Each unit h a s plus h carpeting a nd firep la c es. Invest now !! Als o available for annual tease. $118,500 MEW ~ ON BALBOA ISLAND. custom U bu i It , with many e?C tr a feat ures. Large living room area; 4 Bedrooms (m aste r s uite bas fire p lace & wet bar ). A gr eat entertainment home and just steps to the Bay. Also ava ilable for annual lease. Submit. ~ CONTEMPOUllY DESIGN U ON LIDO ISLE, close to beach . tennis & clubhouse. Spacious 4 bedrooms, gour met kitchen, formal dining room, large master suite with fireplace and sundeck on a corn e r l o t . Ide al hom e for entertaining. $169,000 • CAMEO SHOlllS • PRIC E SLASHED $7650. 3 Bedrooms, den, lar ge living room, breakfast room overlooks custom pool and patio area. Coppel.- plumb i n g . Qua lity built & ·u p g r a d e d . I d e al for family entertainment . Rare view of ocean & hills . Private beac~es. Owner anxious. Presented by our resident s pecialists. Shirley & Mars h all Ric6. $139,000. ..... 6IT IN THI SWIM IWJll W ALIC TO THE BEACH f roqt t h i s South of Hi g hwa y DUPLEX. New upper 3 bedroorp unit-r emodel ed house h a s 2 bedrooms . One-of-.a-kind in Corona del Mar. $112,900. • -....... UYllK ., (H ""' fM MT. lllA.. .. ftAN l lOCllllll\ .. "'"' • ,_ IMMll • J l ... 1 ' • • • . • r. ~ • • , • • • : • • .. .. .. • l t • .. ' ~ ' .. .. .. ' .. ' • . ... .. \: " ... .. l . • ·''··· .... 1t ·- HCMKH For S. YcMllet ,_.·~ Ho.tH For S. ................•••••••..........••..•..... ; ...........••••••....•... iftgtM leech l.0..0 .....,.... leClch I 041 tWwport l•adl I 069 Mobll~ Hofftff btew Property '2000 R...tdfs ••••••••••••••••••••••• ···~·· •• • • ••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• For Sale 1100 •••••••• ••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••• .... •• D·• DAIL y PILOT * "-ses · Wednettday. July 18, 1975 ••••••• ."-S. I Hones For 54* H.s.ff Fo• r ~-••••••••••••••• ·•·····•• ' ~ Ge•rtll G •••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• WALK TO IEACH QCEAM VliW IUJFfS PLAN W •• • •••••••••••••••••••1 6 UNITS HouM1 FtlM1l.a.d -· 1002 , .. ,.. IOOZ C ta M I •• •••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• OS •Sa 024 oRty Sl9,000 COMDbMIMIUMS End unlt·4 bedrm, it\1-a ba * * * Easts1dc Co8tu Mesa. ln· ••••••••••• •••••••••••• -i ...................... . Easy te rms, 8'k inltte:St. Overloolun" Ahl-0 UeJch & fom r m·prlv yo rd IOR l•dgumdt da vldua l ho\ac:I In a Cotta MHCI 31Z4 COUNTRY CLUB ~: ... atmospher e. Golf, t e nnis & sw1m~1n g a t y our f in gertips. Bca utafully decorated, s pacious 3 bc!rm .• 3 bath home -lge. ramilY rm. ,w_alh w e t bar. C onve ni e nt t o ~.ansportation. $64,500 •.r ~~ IHVESTOR1S OPP. • We a.r e fortunate to have a wide ~"tlect1on o~ DUPLEXE.5 to fill ali;nost nJiy need, 111 CdM rangin~ in price r..o>m $69,500 to $124,900 -some brand new -call for details. ,, VCAR POOl CLUIHOUSE 2 Bedroom Dou bh:w1de Mo bi le h o me o nly 3 blocks from downtown C05l Mesa. ()wn(•r a~k· ang $9,995. ~xccllcnt f111an c1.ng a vallallh' Brok\.'r S.S7·9300 JUST LISTED! Iowa St. Condo Best ~nd U1ut SOUTHLANDERS ____ ti4~·6Jti8 'ollego Park, 4 tlr, 2 lin, bllns. la und ry r m . Beaulafully landscaped w /£'overed pal.Jo & gas H UQ . H y Ow n er, 545-4~26. Vacant, coiy 2 bedr m •-" M a n Y u P IC r 4l d e d 1700 17.a. count ""' set•1-·'· By a "" ••••••••••••••••••••••• h •pier . 1•2 & 3 bdrm . un-kt•lures. lmmed occupy. ... '1 ..... 6 r ... '"d 3 b 2 ba all ••• ume on ~x UHt lot. 'i•· close l r...... & ..... wport •--h pomtment onJy .... """ e r, • U-..u. ·1 •• ~..a R 3 C ... 0 s,..,,,,pan& Uy o wn e r S~9.500 . " _._ Ph d I -..ncu .. uJl;a~me. beach.StartinRat $36,500 tl44 1360644·73M Youar•th•wlilllttrof o ne , a a r e ner o• SCOTT RULTY TWO FR•ETICkETS I m jQuall ~ e luded . Ca ll G-8pra. 536 753) m~A-TQ~ .. u h ..,... -'" Plac• Ferg u son Re altors# -uu ~u c... "' ran: s a""" 1 story 5 ($l3.50 VALUL~) c• • 94S2 ----~©Il6~ Dr. 3 841 . 3000 :.q rt, hkc RI r "' Prop...ti-.... 1> ______ _ 12, FOURPLEXES 499·2BOO new. $220,000. Lado Isle, "CJ in9lros. 7S2-19B-L091Ma leoch 3141 __ Prine Only 1 "'·'" ... 1t Ba--m & •-'a.v 1.00 ou.-1tn NtWPOllt HACH ~ ....... 9819"111i'J -----························ Only one year old. Ex· IY OWHEA C irc.is DELUXE 4-PLEX 3 BO house, hall btc to ll•nitlvely u vgr ade d . 2 Blks to the b(!aeh. l;rl Pty waols to buy J uly3lsllO A~l2th (,'··r·• .. n <·.ro v " Bc•Ch, $300. a wee k. IJwll I r lt>l-i E h c direct from owner, ·ra).cr h Co " u " -. on ~ g1• " _' ac harming 2 lir homt•, Anu cim ownllon Fart•placcs, pool. 1 1. 2•2, _4~7-2265 or 497·1156evcs. unit has 1ls own pnvale wood beamed .ccilin~s u PP er· h s e 1 n NP l Ccntl'r, ~00 W Kale Ila 3 yard. Walk to beaches & w/used brick frplc. 1.g1.• Heighl!i. 548-5<>11 cvt>s or trackcts m ay ue ex· 1 b1.•ilr?om:1. en ~·I. Summer rental cottage :.ho pping . LarJ.?e 3 atrium, 2 car carport early AM ch a nged for n•s1.•r vcd ~ttrnl{\.'S. Xlnl up~rt•cia-il75 wk l Br l block l~ bcdrm, 2,lh. bath 1>wncr 's w/lower & uppur sun· IM YFRONT Vasta c1::i ~eals ut the Convention lll)ll arl'a. Only IO', down beach. 4~-&n9· 494-0159 uaut. J.race.d rag~t . deck . B e autifully Center ahe ad of tame. puyment.Cull!jJJ.l544. ' 4 La ber.al finan.c1ngava1la· landscaped. $74,500. inc.c: l,ido. S pa c 1Br+lanu1 Call 642-5678, ext J33 to Sparhn g Investment Mewpo .... each 3169 '·I 1• II .. V>N Condo. Sale/lsc opL own Corp. ••••••••••••••••••••••• u c. "a a ny .. me. Catalina St. Laguna Bch. 675·S8S3 claim your tickets . SCOTT REALTY 49'-4150. * * * 536-7533 JUST REDUCED --- ---Outs tanding location : HEW UNITS * * * FOURS & AVES leth Hughff ~__..;:;:;--~ 3 BR. 2 Ba, F'rplc. bit-ins, bayfront apt.; 3 bdrms .• xtra lgc lot. $41 ,opo. 2 ba ths, lge. deck on EXTRA Ml~ llunl Beach. Your lax 2314 ColCJahDr.,, 20x48 2 Bedroom, loc3lecl t.heltered property 111 ap Costa MHa vMlan REAL ESTATE Owner. 963-4339 wate r. $99,500. Owner wanls act ion! No Down o nly 3 blocks fr om p rccia t ing oir.c j s. y 'h -~ downtown Costa MesJ. SJt; 2579 ou a re • e wj nner01 900 [," llllt•y '' .,, Gttteral 10026.....W 1002 Pyrmt 3 BORMCUT1E GOURMET ••••••••• •••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• MESA VERDE 2 •. th b It . I uJ s. w. ans. arge Bea med , m assive fplc, 49.tQJ1, ~~Q('}ll> LIDO REALTY :U77 \ ui l.i1lo. '.\. B. *673-7300 * Next lo pool & clubhouse ---------TWO FREE TICKETS an ult r a clean pa rk. T WO (2) UH HOMES on l ($13.~VALUE) S9.995. lot, C.M. an ~ood repair. Rirt4jlit19 lros. . Peninsula Point uce..ani.iLlc Carlstxid R t; ANYTIME master bdr~. co~ercd detached gst house. huge \\:all. lu .~·'' .:I. 11l'Nl1 l'u nla l't ' Ro b e1 L 752-7423Agt. patio .. & freshly painted fenced yd. sewinl! rm, lrom th1' ~ Im & larml) ShJp;1rd, Jkallor. 603 ~~~ L'Xl er1 or. Best buy in many trees. 2 Bdrms. • "' l1111nl• 1·111111' r\.'· Mll'htJ:,in, Ocean:-.idt• ___ , __ Hunlangton Meach al on· $84 500 mrnll'h01I & 111..\· 1w" 111 & 722 7ti:!:J VETER ..... ..._.S ly $33.000. CaU963-567l or1~~· ~~~~~~~~ .~:ft ~.500 l11d l.111d -- -"'" 556·7035. 1- CA YWOOD REALTY Balboa PeninS&lla 1007 STOP HERE!! . _..;-..:.._ CIRCLE • 548-1290 • ••••••••••••••••••••••• RARE VA Duplex s~;j.500, T riplex in Costa Mesa THESE MESA VERDE Sl:!.5,000 TIIREB 1.-'0RONE: buill • M.lt!>hall Jtlty .,-,5.·•"•w• no down payment. Mes3. l ""I b r u .,..,...., • on 3 L OTS, 3 BDllM. " 11 e:11Jl1 ul w:ir m and ----Verde. Jlal<'crest, Mesa l I t C d I M • 022 home w /3 CAH gara••c. 1n vi 11114 wmp 1t1s .in or ona e er Woods. Call anyta'me, 1 ° I Lge. iv. rm. has w /w •>Mr~1,e1 lJm1ly room, ••••••••••••••••••••••• 752·742:J. /\gt. ON LARGE ovc·r:-tll'U ~:ii aJ.!t' :.and NIC:t-: tJuplc'C So. of Hwy • carpeting , CF:NTER uver s 11.\.'tl l o l. J in t't.IM .lleaut.gardcns. MESA V t~Hl)l•;, <.:ul-de· CULDESAC FJREPLACE&opens to l~dronrn,, 2 b<1ths. a nd Owner$9l,5o0.f>44·B6l6 sal', ~paciou." 2 slory, 4 · • • spacious sundeck WJTH l1r .. ,,1 .11·1• t'l11!>t.' l o UR . l>c n. 21~ n :i, 2 3 Be droom, H • bath OCEAN VIEW. A real :-.chooh :s 18 .~ 1''rplcs. xtra lgt· pool Mze home for only $46.750. buy aL lot, fruil trcl'~. l>caulaful· Sharp, c lean in lovely $69,500 Welton®.Company l,_.Quail ~ liilPlac• ll'raperties • 7.S'l-14>'20 • 14~ OVAil U NlWl'OllT BUCH Real Esta~ Sales Y. ~ IJ l' r • c.J l' µ1.• 1111.1 h k. 4-M'Op.1l1blc n·JI l',,lJll' :-it~eswoman fur ::.ale' & H'nLab: full or p.ll'l l1m1.· •rr'open hou:.eonlv Salisbury HcJI 1:Slalc Jl5 i\l Jnne,\\t'. _BalboJ blan<.I lii:l woo .. t A ~ T 0 W !;, .IY l aud:.ca)ll'll 10',n nc1ghborhood.Den-0fficc , • •. Cd~l lt-2-cutc 3 + :! UH Down, S78.000. 545-3-lt>.5 ()ff master oc"<iroom with $1'0~ T HE WORLD. uml... Xlnl cund. Urive ;--------private outs ide entrance. Heres a place lo get. off. U) iu~ l h:llolroJ)l.'S8!J.~IO. t:ULI~. Park :J br, 2 ba, !Iv Screened rn patio, newly Unique conte r_npora r y & fam r m . Many extras. painted. Sec t o ap-ho ~e w /dela1led ex· l'harmang 2 llH w :ip-~1usl !>ell $48.000. Owner. prcciatc. tera or of all wood & l'X µro,~c.J plan!> tor .!ml un-_M.19-1 1~-----l'Rl • I lens 1vc use of gla:.s, 1l. 7\3 Lark~pur.Sl~t :'JOll. fountain Valley 1034 yfUf:I~,gn ljffJV'J WITH OUTST ANDING ••••• •• •• •• • ••••••••••• 962·4471 (r.::)546·8103' 9CEAN VI E:W. ~rawl· s p A c; E M A K ER J 1 mg 3-story arch1lccturc • . • • -features 4 DORM. & ----Green brook s ~mest 5 lnine 1044 DEN PLUS301''1'. FAM HV Hills-Charming Ur, 4 lla, huge ':"mpus ••••••••••••••••••••••• RM.' W /Fl REPLACE: l l "-1' 1-l •~•" H1ghwc1\ l urci11 .. t 1id \1.u 1,;-.. ftllPI 1 Ocean .B:iy \'1ew. large room w /~pcC'aal ~ealurcs. Tur t I c Broad moor Master s uite has dress- lul. :J Br. l .IJJ, formal _siw.950. Uwnt.'!:_~·&l03. Twnhse 4.Br, 2Yzba, F R, ing area & Roman bath. .!111 rm :! lrplc's-~!is· HwwtinCJfonBeach 1040 DR •• $70,000. P.P. For l~osew~o ca~aff?rd ~•on lalt' l'nlry. fam. rm & ••••••••••••••••••••••• 833-2708 • the finer thmi:;..s m hre, 5 lkdroom, l'AO ::.lun ~l~l'h p.1nlry Owner L~OMARK UNIVERS I TY Park-this, is an outstanding wuh torm al d1r1ing, :J .-;i·r :>:IU.1100 Uy Appl. only home for 1; i.1.115~;1 . & POOL Deane Home. 4. BR, 3 BA. $129,900 c..11 Pn'c.-. 11ARBOR VIEW >':Ir. on ' .• rd ,Jl'f'l' 1111 . U d d ,_ "" ·r hb '' 1•-.,1h 11111· 111 Eleg~ntly dcco~aled_ & p g r a c · A I C· HURRY ONTHESE ! '" I' . . Charm ne.~ m c t ll· u lo u s ly m:ian-P re mium lot. $77,500. MISSION R~'"'TY •H""'PHl'l wadi ... 1111•" I .......-11111> 0 J;;At,. Har,-:lH r llonl"' 111 01·• taincd. Only J years old! wn er. 551·2843. 'orlUI!~. .11111 1t "di "di .. "' 985 So Coast Laguna Americarl ~7-9390 N1ce~t. Mollvat.edseller. Barnum & Bailey -Yeager Heally 5"56·6171 c · ----~·Dual Wide. Ucaul.Jfully -----~ trcus Hi\IWOlt VIEW HOMES Ind 'sept!. fenced yd 19 U .. "'TS July 31st to Aug 12th 4 llr 2 Ila F.H. Montego w Ice m c n l pa l i o. "' Anaheim Convention on oversize comer lot. Sacrifice! L uic >nl. $l!J0,000.$29,384Gross (n Center,800W.Katella l''ec land. For sale by 91>8·1840.Hu11l.Bch. come .CM.Ukr.871·5151. Tickets m ay be e x· o wne r . 1730 Port --, ---c hanged for r eserved Westbourne Pl 644-0,172 SlLVE RCRt:ST 24x!i0, ~ NEW 4&5 un1ls . studio seats al the Convention ------·---BR, 2 BA, Den. Like new. »pts. muny extras. lsl yr Center ahead oC lime. 84 YFROHT Many xlras. capistrano. writc-orr $11M. Ope n Call 642-5678, ext 333 Lo 5 S t ar Adull l.>"'rk ho use. Call fol' lil)Pl. l . t k ... By Owner-Fee Land 193-7156 .. • 536-2579 c aim your ac e...;. '* l>OVER SHORES* ----------' -----*-*-*---- 4300 sq ft., 48drs,. each '52 Sparlaoelle. 35'. Space 3 2 UNITS wilh. pri v. bath. Curved 60. lnq sp. #51. Wrought Iron strurcasc. 327 W. Wilson. CM. L~c formal dinin~ room, • walnuL pa n'lg thruout. C~rctal Va:.il by boat or mtrcar. Property 1600 Houses Unfurnished A d • ', 'd f ••••••••••••••••••••••• "war wanning pra c o '--1 ownership all adult units. ~enera 3202 Sc h e dul e d i n c ome .••••1>•••••••••••••••••• $67 ,260. P ri ced al FREE . F_REE No trarfic, even on ••••••r•••••••••••••••• wknds. $315K ~o·,;, dn.1---------- 0pen 2-6 $470,000. •J>rofess1onal Serv1c~ OFFICE BLDG. Pnncipa ls only pleas~ *LANDLORDS* Air l'Onditioncd. 2 Story 4 U .... ITS Home finder 5 * Sat & Sun. SiS-1589 333 MornmgStar LanE\ Low maintenance. Wdl " 642-9900 localed. Lots of parking. California's• --ge C $175.000 VA as:.umable loan. 10~,, ..,.,.. s The Bluffs down. SC'hcduled 1nrome __ •H_ental Service!• $62.950-S P LlT L t-:v EL. Roy McC~ Tot.illy cuslomizcd, 12· Realtor 181 o Newport $ti.7so. Pnccd al $55,500. :5. Ana $1 35, 1 Br sngls ceilings in the kil£'hen, COSTA MESA548-7729 S. Ana fixer-upper 2 Br. laving room, & d ming child, yard &Gar.$195. room. 3 Bedrooms. xtra -. S. Ana 2 Br appl, kids bath. French doors to 8 offices, Laguna Bch. pets, patio, fncd. gar. master suite, wcl b..ar. $18.000. gro~s. Parking & ----_____ 1 llBch $125, 1 Br appl. ca s y m a rn l c n a n cc EASTSIDE Furn; NABcgth/~00obile l Bt" $84,700-l y EARS OLD. $200.000. Terms. lwrt HI .. Near ele mentary & high ty .494-0509-~-__ INCOME HOMERMDERS s~hools te nnis dose by. Will Yo r Q ·Ir ., TJIRE~ H OUSES ANO •642-9900* 1-.xtra big rns adc, :1 u s u.i a y . /\ DUPLE X. $105 ,000. be droom!>. :J ba ths. 401 full pnCl'. 10'/u Down-HORSE ranch 2 Br, c•dlclllt! <.11n1ni;. par-/0 Owner wall ~arry. Earns singles welcome, C.M. qi.let floors, Kara:.Lan i~ total commbsion you 15% net. Rent::. can be And 2 . br, 11 .U .• kids. carpet. BKll. pay for <1uulificd r eal ruised.CALL pels. singles. Try Uus i 540-1720 l'state whe n you list PRESTIGEHOMES LI.'" $135,, singl~s. pets, kl ''!1~1 .c.u :; Mar••u•>1,t·~. One of the most popular · • •tUll' • Y .it .1 n•a.,1111.11Jll· ~ " ~ ,.. .. .. Ph 49,.0731 · U"1wr 64-1-~. s ubdivisio ns in Hunl· one .. =>~:>.000.L\1 .1.~ ..... ,_,,.~, . u 5 •syou . -----mgton .oeach ! 'park1ing ""' C SELECT · SHORECLIFFS heated pool on cornerlol, LIKEIT TARBELL persunally with Charle~ R alt 645 6646 C.M. Ab o unbchcveablo Quintard, Healloc-for e ors • La•» Beach l br, ~ .• NEXT TO o ~ OCEAN L'RONT 2955 H bor 81 d top-dollar sales. Numbcr ul1l pd. pels ok. CdM 3 br. .. ar • ·• onc(#l)indollarvolumc garage, kids. ""'lS ok. T'PROPERTIES & ideally priced al only Dramatic. upgraded, : • _ Charmin~ :l HR, 2 BA. $51,950. Call ~-5b7l or greenbelt 's urrounded •iim--------•I pool + hJ\L'ly view of 556-7035. .ind pri ced at o n ly uct'an & l·anyon. Just -$45,000.A 2 bdrm .• 2bath f AIRVIEW la!>lcd SlJ9.:>oo. 234 Morn w i t h r e c r e a ti o n mg Clj nyon Rd. ~eot racilities, lig hte d FRONTAGE 675-600<1. . . . walkwa ys a nd shopping 246' or C 2 zom-d pr<>P<'rlY Costa Mesa I 024 ('Onveniences. Yours lo • t. • d 1 1 1 ••••••••••••••• e njoy .•. lheirs to main· 1~ 1 ca y or < <'Vl' up •••••••• $6,000 !Jan tlte'l'll. f.rH·al C'd neac $48 950 Nl!~'porl ll lv1I Co'>IJ • M 1.• :. .. {; J I I f 0 r J UOH M, fa m rm. quiet JWrlll·u lJr:.. Wall Jca:.e locati o n n ear Sout.h or Coast Plaza. Comer lot, $300,000 CASH lrg. back ard. HURRY! Price Redul:ed Assumes~ VA loan. L ge 4Br, 2~ ba, frml DR, FR;Submit t.erms. ~ VISleN RIA\.TY 552-7500 Shaws Cove. N. Lc.1guna C.M. DUPLEX, C.M. ,,_ white water s plashing • fo r listings solc.J an 1!174 by Two 2 bdrms .. l bath; And swim pool C.M. 3 br, rocks. lanal. and va·ew ·---------other fi rms. Over 5000 kids, pets, sangles. N,'1.. I 1 & 11 garal!c. Sell or trade for L' 97 decks,pool andJacuzzi.2 ~ rt•-h sa t·~eop C' a 9 uruts. • i·ee. Y-8430 B d newpo IR:OC Orange Counly-mulUplc r. a ult Ot" bach. pad, N e w P o r t C r cs t l1sling boards available PYRAMID penthouse'+ I bdrm apL Townhom es. 5•,;, down. t h ' EXCH • ~oRS Userorholneorin""me. a no extra c argc. '"'"""' Zagrodzky Rltr.494-8611 l I Ufnfar . -.v 81•' o AP R, 2-4 bedrms, e • d 833 1768 enc gar , poo • tenrus. H 'lf I 050 fr. SSS.875 Ph. 645-6141 CICJUI'~ ' s 12 Robon Cl. (from Cst REALTY -UN ITL' · ••••••••••••••••••••••• SINCE 1946 ;> •~. ocean view. 2 O WNHOUS E (N e w World) 3 br, z ba. cpts, drps. bltns. $31,500 . 846· 7582 or 581 ·3622 --- Hwy north on Superior, 3355 Via lido, N.I. Suit• 29s yrs old. llltns. crpls & 114 mile lo entrance). ""a.-642-2991-Anvtim• drps. 1 unit w/3 br, 2'h ---------•I IL is our intent to con· b,1, rrpk. Annual income tinue at 3'/o ur 4'1~ until Sl:J,980. J'rt('C $121.000. BIG CANYON pre payment penaltil's ll30 V1cluna .St. C.M.. Balboa Peninsula 3207 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Most Exceptional home on the Point, 80' lot, 28' hv rm, frml. din rm, 4. BR, 3 BA. sunrm, elev,• gardens & lg. Cabana • ~agnificeot panoramic view of bay. Lease by Own er. $950 mo. 67!>-9644 or 1·538-3998 $124,500. Lowest. priced 3 a r e 0 u l J a w c d 1 n !179 50!1!l -Corona del Mer 3222 £,\c.'lu~IVC "llh : . SUNSET REAL ESTATE 963-8991 or 557-8623 ev LGCJUM MiCJuel I 052 , __________ ...................... . Br. 3 .Ba in the Canyon. California. f''u lly landscaped, patio -• •••••••••••••••••••••• FOURPLEX lf.V. Ho mes 4 Br. 2 Ba+ DOLL HOUSE DONALDM.BIRO $211 t Auo<1ot•s. lleahon •per"'°'· ----3 Spacious BR's (one· a ABANDONED mast.er suit.e). Man size _ __ d e n, cop p e r ke t.lle , $28,500 kilehen has all the latest. S ANISH ESTATE + GUEST HOUSE bltns. candelite dine. . P~OBR0-2L Sa!?RCYH Unbelieva ble value a t crackling bri_ck fplc, dble ~ S28.SOO! VACANT·RENT gar. & oversu:ed lot ! As· S2 8,500 TH EN Buy! Preferred . sume 6% FHA loan, $211. l.atge e ntertanung 1'izcd Mesa locat10n. Freshly f!!O· P~YS ~II OR r e· hv an~ room. Kitchen painted board & banc n finance .5 Mm.tobeach! luge <·nuugh to J>reparl.' ext erior . DET,\CllED Bkr962-S511. oonqud ~ large l'nough GUEST COIT,\liE + clmanJ!. room lo i-crve 1l. )!arden ! Winding dn~~ Sweeping :-lairs to le.ids to whale pickel bbdro·om !>Ulk:-. l lugl.' rencc & swaymg palms hi4'e away ma~l!·r TJkC entr y. Ilea med ceiling over H'• f'llA. 1';0 N i-;w l1v1 ng r oom. Com fy • V J.t\N COSTS. Sl~ mo kalche n in d udes r efrig ! p a· y s :.a 11. II U !<It Y . Loads of storage & s hop PlHST TO CAl.l. lit-;Ts :op.ice. Awesome 85' x Till~ UAl<CAIN! Call ttiu · lo t ! Qua int & !ltlJ 7~X I. ,· cunou~ly refreshing. Sec • ., 1 Q ·".,' f1 • r •" Lo believe. Take advan- r ~ ~ tagc·<.:all fa st. 752-1700. AbondoMd 2 Story Garden Est• $32,950 TOTAL PRICE! Bnng paint. & save $$$. Gr acious garde n entry gives way to a breathtak- in g W O RLU 0.1" E LEGANCE Gourmet kilchen with enlertaarung serving ba r. Large fami- ly sized h'Vlng room with S E CLUDJ-:O PATIO. Sweeping s taircase leads to hideaway master & g u es t. s ui t es. BKR. OWNER HAD TO WE HAVE IT 1f You are looking for a 2 bdrm. townh ome , around $50,000, in 'fOP CONDlTlON. we have theftnest! RAISOR'S REALTORS 4523 Campus Dr .• lrvinc Campus Valley Shop Ctr. CALL 833-8600 SEE THIS!! 2 Bdrm., famaly rm.,' 2 bath condo; in Irvine. Nice carpeling &drapes; many upgrades. I.,arge pallo/yard. Beamed ceil. in mslr. bdrm.; use of pool & rec. a rea. An xlnt bu,y at $32,900 JRVINE HOMES, REALTottS 552-7000 BOB PETTIT R ealtor-Owner OWNER AHXIOUS! Vacant love ly 3 BR, garde n home. Den, Ten· nis & Re c. Center. Guarded area. $76,000. WEBSCO INCORPORATED 639-4800 MUS T SACRJlo'IC f;! Leaving area. 3 HR. 2 Ba, fam-rm, + formal din ·rm. L g c l ol w/privacy. For sale by orig. owner. Principals only. $62,500. 495-5341 ('Over . l s tory, 3 n 11• Condominiums garage. for s ale 1700 PAUL W. BRUMFIELD & ASSOC. 549-8505 BYOWMER HARBOR HIGHLANDS 48r, 211'l ba, Pool. $68,500 . lmmed occupancy. 1524 Sylva a Lane. 548·73b/. BAYCREST ••••••••••••••••••••••• HORTH LAGUNA CONDOS Ocean Views· 2 &3 bdrm. units from $54.000. Call 675-7225 t1, ... I W ' ' .. ,I I"•' till•' f • "61\1( \ . \ I , I , 1~:'. H E.\I :1·, A BERG ENTERPRISES CO Gracious 3 br, 2 ba, frml. dm r m, 2 frplcs, lg. ba!>c-OWMEA m c n l w I g r c a l S. & S. Townhouse. 11683 possabilltcas. Laundry & Garden Grove Blvd. 1600 sew'g. rm. Prof. lndscpd. sq. fl., 2 bed rm. den, 21 ~ u t · E ba .. rplc. former model. o l.'au . patio. xcep-taonally clean. S!/8,500. SJOOO. Under new unaL~ at 6"6·228 i $39,500. Assumable 7' ~· .• - ---loan.638-1769. By Owner. Linda l!Jc. ------ Single Mo ry 3BR. JliA XLNT. VIEW beauly. Easy care home JBR. 2ba, on .Bluffs in w/pier.slip.Lowestprice Hun t.in g t on Be a ch . a l $175.000. Shown by lmmed poss .• no quali· app·L only. 673-6630. Pnn· fying. Will help fina nce. cipals only. Ownr./ Agt. 536-8821 • • . 1''.R.Spectvieww/pool&: Excellent .1'~asb1de loca· Lennis els avail. $525. lse. lion. M an 1 mum upkeep 644-2877; 830-0890 rcqu1 n•c.J. May assume ----·--· low rnlcre:.t Joan. Ex-Costa M~sa 3224 c I u s i v t' s a I cs p ra c e • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •• • • • • • $79.~50. Call 545-8424. As· A\'ail J uly 15, (Col. Pk. )3 soc1ate d ~oulh Coast br,2 ba,lrgfamrm&dia Brokers. rm. Shown by appt only. -S375 per mo. 642-9731 5UHITS ------ Lovely large owner's un· 4 Bn. 3 HA Condo. Nr. at, 3 bcdrm, 2 bat.h. Top Back Bay. $385 mo. No loc1:1llon, near San Diego pels. 642·5777 1''rc~w;1y. Excellent m· MESA VE-l-lD_E_·_3_B_u_z l'Ome. Sl45,000. Qill for , • '"' dctaal!>. Red Carpet Ba. Crpls. Drps, bltns, lteJllors 536·883(; ' Ced.yd. Kids & s mall pet O.K. $395. w /gardener & . * 1-;,\STSllJE• Jl1\CK llAY ARu \ J Sharp Houses . S69,950 For All CAMP ION &ASSOC. • (;i\LL 549-1001 waler paid. 54>3621 NEWPORT Hls duplex. 2 br, Coed yard. no pets. Pref. m a rried. $225. 673-2256 1''Rl::E & CLEAR 4 PLEX Sep. House ki• N r. Lo m :i 1. i nd a 3 br, 2 ba , range, cpts, University. $5.5,000 tra de drps, $325. 548-7437 as down pmyt on large , :~ ~[ijitiiiJ O,en Daily 1-7 305 Broadway, C.M. l.:iq.(C dctadaed ~tutJao mom w /bath & fpk Plu!> =~ HH. c·omplt·tt·I~· n· l1,1rlm.hed. lge wa1tlrobt· C'lo:.ets. l1v rm. 1lsnsni.: an•a, top i:r.11le i-haJ.;. rtpl:. & rlr p.->. HoJl 111 I rsokr ~ate on all\.'\ 6'46 -3 928 . e•~s . Niner 2br 2 ba condo. O.C. home or Inc. Prop MESA VEH.DE, 3 BR. 2 can ad c ash or other pro: Ba, crpts. drps, bllns. pc riles. Rick Alderettc Av I. J u l Y 1 5. $395 • WOODS COVE DUPLEX. llarbor ViewHome,3Br, REFURBISHED llltr.547-6469. w /water & grdnr p<L LEAVE! Call LGCJ91M1 l•ach I 048 842-8854 ••••••••••••••••••••••• TARBB.L Oc Vu. S9l,500. ARCH 2 Bu. Fee. Avail immcd. in S anta Ana . Ne w -.--979·7836 __ a_ft_._6 ___ _ 549·1532 Nl•w t:rpt k1tthl'n frpl 2 rar g.ir ~!l.!JOO. 91;g..9732 Secluded $46,500-Socrifice Owner leJves area. Forf'"l or trees. lu!>h tro1111-.1I )Jrd. Has a IJrJ.:l' hadeav.ay den, full c.J1n1n l! room. eating •n••••••I an·a. br e akfast bar. crackling fireplace. 3 BIG HAY REAL ESTATI!:. ---------Sfii,!loO , Owner /Brkr. d rps/crpls/stovc/paml. (8) 2HR HOUSES. fi xer-3 BH 2 BA d I , AS A IARH 499-2277 *WE KNOW * tiiJ-4899. 2 liedrm/2 bath Condos uppers . gd. C.M. loc pro ~ 2 00'0 ~P e~t a"Z M a j es ti c 2 s l o r y • HIGH ON A HILL on lo ve ly s paci ous ;'S:,l~~~~t.YeagerRealt.y, Fireplaces. RJ~co;at• Shorecrest home close lo OVERLOOKING THE LAGUNA MIGUB. 4 HR, 4 Ba, Fam~m. Din-grounds . Only $19.950. _:. ------ed. Plumer St. $375. mo the beach in one of the SEA·2 Lrg. homes avail. •BEST* rm , A 1 r cond. Pool Ask ror Frank, 839-8321., Mountain, D~sert. w/gardener. Call Robb. mo s t d es i r ab l e Both have pools; g uest MONARCHBAY-Exotic, Home . Sl So,ooo. By Agt. Resort 2400 540-8833 weekdays. • neigh borhoo(ls or Jlunl-qlrs;a ndreduccdpriccs_ Conte mporary home. owner.645-9729 D ••••••••••••••••••••••• in g ton B each. This Steal one. ARCH BAY one-of-a -kind 4 bdrm. 4 ----'exH/ Sun Valley Idaho 2Br + 3 Br, 2 ba home M~ spacious 4 bdrm, 2 bath REALESTATE,499-22'77 bths, designed by Chris SanCleRMnte 1076 Onitssal~ 1800 loft. 2ba,' Fully. equipt V e rd e . $395 mo. home offers formal din t---------•I Abel. Ocean view. Just ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• mode rn kitch. All r ec Owner/AgcnL642-5000 . ing room, large family reduced. $179.500. BY OWNER' 3 hr, 2 ba MEW 4.PLEXES fa cilities a vail. $200 wk. IMMAC., newly decotat· room,spaccage kitcben. MONARCH BAY TER· Custom. !'!any extras .... near t.he ocean. Good Cap ~75-9139 !or ed. 3 br, 2 ba, pool & &Jushgroundswilhcov· RACE. P r estig ious e anv_1ew. quick tax shelters, apprecia-avaalaballty. patio.$450.lst&wt+ 540-1720 ~rl~:cy~j~~u:OO\:~~! OWHOMUSTMOVI ~us~mhofbt,~ea. pgssess1on. $68,000. l1on.lllO,OOO.&up. Motcl·12 Uoil!i plushome. $100. C /B. Gardener lo TARBELL ly $59,500! Call 963-5671 PIUCEDTOS&L fam:::::wetba · $ .ooo d o wn. Dal. Byowncr.LakelsabeUa. pool maint. incl. 2211 f L . $50 0/m o . at 8 1/.i Y'o -$9S,OOO.·$JO,OOO. down. Raleigh Ave,$a8-6797ot" Bedrooms, xlra bath . Near South Coast. PLaz.a. BK lt. Harbor View Hills A ho ml'. lall·rally SU I{. RC)UNtH:IJ HY Vll;:W Sfot• '<Ill t he· w.1y from 1•11~'\ln.1 to Lon~ 8'-L1<'h 0.,lyonc nc1~hbur. I BH. J ·h a t h :., m.t r\'l•l ous ff;1Lur~~. PoolMl<'Cl lot $µ!1,SOO 2955 Harbor ll'fcl, orSS6·703S. You mus t see this two-t. arge am pool· 544-4 294 494 .• ,".,.,. 631·0088 • • · ··•• s tory beauty in one ot Great fa i ly home. "'"""' --------- C .M. lill Laguna's finest private $129,500. San Jucan R"" &tat• -$100. 2 Br, ~ild &pet. . communities . T hre e LOCJ9C1MlCJll'lbalty Capistrano 1078 REALTY INC. E h Poot. 2 Br. 2 Ba. Appl. ASSUME VA bedrooms, two baths .. ,, .. O .. O-••••••••••••••••••••••• 71"'/I IC CllMJ«!' 2800 teenager,n4>t,patio. -• -. _.. -. ..... BR B _ .. 46-1371 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ,.."" $222.PerMo. . Jargefamilyroom.Walk 830•5050 ·I • 2 a, 1800 sq ft, -c aiftSell Due To Taxe• .. $165,2Br,child,sngl& 3 Lr~. RR + added ram --.i..------.._:.-lo .PoOl a nd tennis courts, ----PI a Yr o om . pal i o . Hones to be " 3 Br. 2 Ba, child, pet. Rcntdl pnvatc beach parking. MiHiOft Vieio 1067 landsf aped , Lge lot nr moved 1900 T r ade Cus tom 3 Qr FUrn, Bach. $95snglslltil ~~e:~~~~~e v!;:;t~t.sL.i~: le•cWool $92,500 ••••••••••••••••••••••• bch . As k m g $54,000. ••••••••••••••••••••••• g:r1cx;s l/Jq Newport pd. Agt /Pee eluded . W1llnotlas~caU $35,900 1963S.CoastHwy. Aliso Villa 2 s tory 3 !~~~;f · occupancy. QUIC K t-\n l e ! 2-tx40 otT~~s 6~~.357ginhome HOMIFtHDERS 'today, 540·3600 u NB EL 1 E V A' LE! Laguna Beach Bdrm l Ya .Ba upgrad~ · redwood building to he · * 642-9900* COM,.ANY l< Jo~\ I.TO I!~ "I 'I I· 1'111 6 73-4400 --: .. 5~~666 ~ .. twport HeiciMs POOL P aradlSe 2 Sty 2 lk-d . for din. f"P. rarn 4B R + fo m rm 'w/frplc: kit t-guest rm & b.a 1 ransfd.5-40-Jtiti6hl(l. l'tg. boa\tlrlr New list -1.nl: all (or $511 !6> iRR, family faxcr upJ><'r, -HAL PIHCHIH IK'' ram room Cull R~ALTOK ~ 3066 Aail :_; 2127 fl Coat tlwy RY OWNER 3 hr homf' JI\ I '75-4lt% IR . loc. J hlk~ rn11n ·' , lfledAb .Jf • ' J:Jackbuy . XlnL. cond. $42.900. ~2-0SY7 $35,900 TOTAL PRJCEI 1~~~·~4~!M~--07~•~9~·~~~I $33,900. by owner'. Ra nch-style home. 48R moved. All offcr1> con· leal&tate .Ranch style llvina in a 1-586,...565 2ba. pancl'd ram rm sidered. J.oc:alcd ut 'l'hc W•ted 2900 Sharp Mesa Verde, 3B:R- BEACll TOWN. ~njo)' IUSIHESSOPP. He__.leocll w /w e l bar. bea ut. Ame rica n Legion, 2U .. ••••••••••••••••••••• 2 B~duplex.$33.S.IJ¥>.:ift. tho privacy or YOUR New. well built mfJ( •••• ;::;.: ••••••••• ~~!~ lds c p g , n ight-li icht J5thst, NB. 673-5070 IRVIHECOVE ~g;~deoer, ~ OWN POOL. Enkr you.r bid.I. or approx. 4,000 sq. BAYFRONT system. beaut. appoint· ltteome Property 2000 R espons ible pe r s on • r~m1ly room thru 3 slid· tl. Plus 2 bdrm., den ments and room ror pool ••••••••••••••••••••••• would like to buy direct LARGE 3 Br ra mg wa ll of glass whlle holbe, which can be con· 2 Custo m Homes loo. Sl 19-,950. R3t !MU Me:.a Vcrdc Home ~II or from owner . Home or lot. frpl c, dlning/kl~b~ y o 11 t' n J o y • vertcd to commercial BALBOA PENINSULA llO~O n_F.ALTY l~C._ ~>~c h r, or u n 1 l s. Please call 831·1400. Ex .. spacious yd, covered PANORAMIC VIEW ol uae; on La~ Canyon fo;xcellentlocatlononlhc s.taAna 1010 _ ner /A.:cnt.642·5000. HOUSE WNT'DHOUS E patio, bltn B.BQ. fnced ~i h 0 em ~ ~ o 3 uk ~ ~ ~ ~ :,CS~~~c!~::=.1ocallon Ba y & only ''t block to the •••••••• ••• •••••••••••• HOW IS THE TIME 1-'orclosr, delmq OK. gar~lng area. $32S. 2.U5 ""URML~T KITCll"""' •. Ocean. Each hom~ hll:S 4 r b k Qwlk Cash• 67s.8849 range. 54.5·3040. vv "'# c.i ... • TURMEi ASSOC.. b d rm s. 4 baths It or JO sec ers to check -· -__ u wang bar . Separate llMN.CslHwy.,Laguna Gallery, z rareplace11. STEAL! the Uai ly Pilot Help 8 lo 10 Umls. Coeta Mesa COl.LEGIPAU parent r e treat & 494-1177 wetbar , ultra modern oneofthese2 bedrm.2 Want~rl11SAH1couon II or co . fo'ur pr1nc1pal. 3 BR, 2 BA. fam mt Cc.hallldren ·~ wing. BKR. kitchen & privalo pler. ~ .. ;~,.c0on0d1Yos,.19v.~1. 1r!~,· the JOb you w11nt IK.not 546-9556 bllns, ds hwbr, cov'd l oow' <)c:eanfront Woodscove 6 Jo·ee land See ot 1200 ... ~ ,,.,.,.,, v . there you mhtht coru11der ~· S350 /M0.557-Jlt4 1424154 Dd .. ' ba . $350,000 . .£ut Balboa Blvd., or Down. romplote ly rt· u~fcr1ng your s ervices TRADE !>O acres produc· Classified ads sell a.a. ttern.t, small items cir_, ltem. luetc•U&o.51n8. TARBa&. Ter m s. 7 ·~ ~. call675·81.20formorcdo· furbish e d . As k fo r with an Md 1n lht< Job an~ Lt1mon Grove. Clear Own.'494- 7156 • t.alll. Fr11nk. 839 8321 Agt. Wanted catc.iory. Phone $250.000 equ.ity. Sboppinl( 642 6678 Center Property. 546--96.'56 ,I • • • 3 B • 0 a • it ,, ... ·, -. ' ~'J • , , , Apa lacata u.ftn. Apa lac aft """'"-A,. latfth ........... Wedneeday July 16 1975 DAILY PM.OT N H U t •••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• •• ~ ""'"".... ....... u ....... d ....... u... ....... .. Mw ll2Z Ceshl ... ". 3824 Newport leac.h 3869 s.n.n.r Rentolt 4200 Offict RHtal 4400 ......... C •••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ..................................................................... ············~·········· •••••••••••••• ,........ ••••••••••••••••••••••• ()~ 1001 otto Mua 3224 •-1--BR 3 BR. 2 BA. Nr. Westchrr $33S 3 B 2 & blk BALBOA 1'1-:NIN P1' PHOFESSIONAL 0<r1l·e. •••••••••••••••••••••!• ..... .,..,._ 3244 S-ca. .... te 3276 t + sep. fuest rm.. & Drps cpl.I bltM enc r. · to c . bt • J lilt •1••••1••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• bath. $275. ato' dbl ~ar $32s 39H nch G.rage. Yrly W l>t:~lr .tlJle dui,th.-lC, upper, Jnnt!I)' area. mu~ • . . ge ot,nrl7lhSt. 497·220SEves P i,: ... . NewPorl642·1603 s p.tcrous, tile. <·pt, i·o rnp1tt 1b l e with Afl11late Shopping Avrul Aug. l ,WAJ..NUTSQUARECON· HDVlow 2 8Dblllstde · "A Woodland Pl .. ------<bhwi;hr,di:,pv:.cll Week Arrhrlcctsof11('C tncl ! PARTTIME ' S32S mo. 642 47S8 DO 2 BR 2 8 .. 1 .......,.. home. Carpets, lrplc. Co.ta Mesa 3124 675-2150 1 Blot k to ocean. 1 lk , ly, Sum mer 01 lon••cr tlr..1fl1ng IJoards, aru.wer ---· ' .... :r ... vuu., d1shwH htr. 13'/.5. mon $18c. I II 1 ° ol "K nt LEASE/OPTION, Me::fa pool & rec. area. $275. lhly.4P9·3946. • ...................... NEY(. 3 BR. Z Sa. E'lplt, .,yr y,ut 111c . 673·2039 hl~ep~~;Lv~:~t1 u&el·on eep pt'CJe l>cl Mar. Dcaut 4 ur 2 mo. 833·0618 Off leateftP-"' led yrd, patio. RW> BUQ, ----6-75-·-~----1BAl..BOA Pcn111. 2 IJr l~rt'th'e rm. 675·0090 1·ob" Bu . f"1un Hrn. fr1;1ic. Turtlerock 3Br, 2ba. FR S-Ju• 1, 2 & 3 Br. Adwta no gar. Nr Houg Hosp. 16th S•CltftUtnh 3176 hou:-oe. Rik lo hay & Newµort J).i t I 0. f{ cl s $43~ lrml DR r 1 B 8 Q ' Capistrano 1271 pets, dshwhrs. ahag cpts. & Orange. Adults. S325. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~ach. Avl July. A1:>o2 br la. --lMo SeflhMJ tnYOlndt tr79·023H. · · close lo ~~0~· & ~u~k'. •••••••••••••••••••·:~· closed garage, frplc. mo. 833·1437 orll70..8800 Large 2 Br , 2 Ba. nil blLns. ..apt avl lst 2 wk., &:vt. ~ualneu Rental 4450 Responsible person, men p . Avail Augu1:1t LS. Ls\! $450 4 Br, 2 Ba. Har~r .&..oO. BBQ. Gas & water pd. tMthtgton leach 3840 w h 1 l c w D tcr v LC w . Sl 25 wk. 962·861111 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ck women to refill 4'-4:ol· rtvncy + 3 BR, 2 BA. fpl, mo c.c2.1237 Home. 1 yr. WI. $325 mo. Pool <198 3097 lect money lrom coin l:Jr .• p(ltio,no pets.S29.'i. ..,,, ,.. · 498·0429 LAMAMCHAAPTS ••••••••••••••••••••••• · OCEANFRON'r L.owc1· :! THE COLONY o pe rated di»penaets. _CM 646 41,ll University Pk. Terrace. s~ ,.. 1280 778 Scott Place. CM llKE TO IEACH Santa Ana 3880 Br, a vu ii 7IHI1112. s:itJO Service company sop· • SH Brand new Cambridge -.a,,,_,.. G42 -S<Y13 HEAR SHC>f'PfHG ••••••••••••••••••••••• wk. 673·~~Uor!.?.l 254ti 30 HETAJLSHOPS plied accounta. $1200.·rc· AHP 4 80 3 Ba, Condo 38 2b rd ••••••••••••••••••••••• B1:autlful ne w 2 UR 2 BR, I VJ BA, eve-level Prime r~a11onabl~ i;pace qi.Ur~.* Car •. Call ~'<>l· Twnhse hit 1n f I FR . r . a. upg BE U 8 8 I 2 I W " Voe ti R tol 4250 " I •· ··'I • 1 s, P . , c Pl d rps nr pool A T . 3 r. 2 a • It JI.OFT s h tdio a pts. l''rplcs. adult Conllo. Puol. W /W a on en s avJ1laulc arge '"'s mcu led ror info. abou-.~ ~0165jat1o, ~-125 lbt.• Jac'uzza. '$42~ m o'. Townho~so, dbl garage, PvtPatio,(rpl,lyrlse bltns,dishwashers,2t·ar cpti.. drps. pa.tio, gar.••••••••••••••••••••••• Old world charm w1lh 1Hea. 833·1596. p vL patio. cpls. d rps. Avallable June 1st. gara1e. Sunde<:ks. f'rom u ca u l. park. 11 k c MAM M 0 T II I. a k es ~'r-..nch windows, ~ables Federal Service O>rp. EJ Toro 32 bltns, pool. K1ds OK. HAYLOFT APTS $260. 536·2579 grounds. Ass·n. fee pd. D e I u x c C "' n J o . & t rcci. /\dJaccnl to 213·~2'325 •••••••••••••••••••••~~ RENTALS $295.644·6399. 2llA•ocado.CM . $215 Callcoll.J-496·20:18 Evt-ry thing Cum d .t-'e :1 t1vul of Art !> ~ .• L.A. KI:: 1'' R ONT· 3 br. Irvine Soutt. L-3286 LARC E 2 br studio. enc. aft 5. anytime Sat/Son. Sl25/D5 per wk 846-5456 Grounds. ltAUTY SALoM 2 BR, 2 Ba ........... $350 ••••••••-,,••-···-··••••••••• 645-0141 gar, patio & rncd. fnlanl --eves ~80 BROADWAY .. --atrium, central air, clb 3 an 2 Ba $425/435 OK & no pelS. ~77.50 mo. Apartments fwnished LACUNA 81-:At:ll OPPORnn~n • pnv11. S395 mo. 58H881 • .. · • ·.. · OCEAN VU 2 Mear Co= Warner & Beach area. or Unfurnished 3900 New S. Lake Tahoe cahln All scl up. rud)' t.o go. J Br.2lh ba,F.R ..... $450 r th. · 1· • g CED""R OODS 847·4~40Ava1·1now inlrees.sl""8,$1SOtwk Best local1·on. Costa Fountain V 011-. 323 Newport Beach rom is spacious ivin ,.,_ .. ••••••• •••••••••••••••• ..... 4 9 4 791 5 •••••••••••.":! •••••••• 4. 4 Br 21h ba wntr $800 rm w /wood beam clngs, 329 University Dr near h 7144~ 2245. O~ • Mesa. 2 Sh bowb, 3 sta-, • . .. . panelin g & frplc. Pvt . • NEW deluxe, beac area. 1'1\(7,...;..1 .. nhll l n(KY; llons. + S rms tctal to Prestige n eight>orhood. RAISOR~ Back Bay. 2 br & den. 2 Br, 2 Ba, dosed gar ~V l:")\t1 ~ .u l,..ake Arrowhead. Silk> 10. - ---. nt I.to converted 3 BR. 2 BA. 2 .> ~~~teb d ~u~l: &ps~~1;~ ~0~37 $27~.s.~::lside. $275. mo. All ulll pd. Also llClllllC 11£W coacm! TV. Al I <:onvcnien<:c:-.. TCH' LOCATION ~~~~rg3~f :~;r ~~pe:ea. car gar .. covered palio, REALTORS downstairs. Int. laundry · or 3 Br. 2'h BaN84f6'·13ll or ~~1l!:~:~~~~~~~c 837Nc..a.~06Lake. $200 wk MESA VERDE Agt . 646.;1255. \'&Cant. s:f75. per mo. Ask area w /storage cabin~l. CASA VICTORJA 846-4938 Agt. 0 cc. \ · .... · DRIVE PLAZA lor Keath or Fay, likr 4523 Campus Dr., Irvine Direct access from 2 car 1 2 & 3Br Deluxe Un •Bachelors M 1, ." A1o·1·11 '-ror store or orh«~ Ample ~4·'71 C SC ' • '$200.LGlbr.Gus &wtr 1•1 BR ,2BR ., .• ,.. ..,1erra Un1form Mrg. __ ___ ampus Valley hop 'tr. garage w /elec. opnr. furn/ pd. Clsd gar. 301 15th. Mountains . lish. hike. parking Town&t·ounlry ( H f--' CALL 833-8600 Very pvL patio w/wood or Furn. gas/wtr. pd. 979.0342. 675.6245 evc •2 BR & Oen tcnrHs, pools, ..chost town alrno:.phere Drapery M g. Ult e • ..,,on Beoch 3240 decking. THREE Attt:H Adults-No Pets Sec. gate ' 'From $175-$485 l'·•aut fully ... 11up. <·•)n 1525 Mc:.a Verde Or. C:. Liquor Stores ...•••....•............ ~ ~~ ' Sharp 4 BR, 2 liA, bltns.l -OCJUft--G-h_a_c_h __ 3_2_4_1-1 ~~a~db;~~~ a~i~':c~Y& p':'~~i~~~~:.~~~or NJ;~l~~~~~~.c~.1>~~;·,3,::d MesaV.rde East&Adami ~~;.tt!:~ps ti. Sl~. week. Co:.tJ M<:~J ~15 4l2.1 _ ~l:~~LL Husinesse8• • "'\ ~-4~l~~-~i.;sa6$350. mo.••••••••••••••••••••••• t ennis privgs. avail. , . . yd. 2002 Hunl.ln&'lon Sl. 540 -lBOO For le<isc, '1 room house. HOLLAHD IUStHIS5 _OCEANFRONT Laguna Move in Aug. 1st. $000. Costa M ~1a ~Finest Loe. 536·4022or539-6779 Lake Arrowhead. Ue.wt. SJSO. rn•> C·I. 1" blck tu 645.411or1..~540-0808 Super 4 bedrm, 2 l>ulh + Royale Condo. 3 br, 2 ba. mo. Call Holly for appl. Only kmii an the area. home for rent. wh ur 17th, CM (inc:ldg 2 Rm I.LL~~,~-~~~~~~~ Wkd 498 2300& k d Quiet.garde n·like ·adull Deluxe 2 br, 2 ba, Hloor in ..,.. w k nd ra tcs • owner, bca u t y :.<1 Io n) A gl I~' d en. crpts, drps, R/O, 2000 sq. fl. Bar, frpl, Sec. · ays . w n s Living. L.:c 2,3, Br, 1,2 Condo complex. /\/c, pvt re .... o1 8J0·965ti. 646·3255 FOR SALE· Beauty Salon, S350. Nr Westmins ter g ua rd. $795 mo. Lse. &niles 499·3293· Ba. WW crpLs, drps, pal. 2 car closed gar. 'Tl ( 7 stat ions. Beaulilw de-- Mall 963·4569 Bev or Joe Adults only. 544·7678 ApartnHtnts Fwnilhed patio, bltns, some wood frplc, pool. bltns. Brand " ~ Rentals to share 4300 T 11 E I-' A CT O H. Y cor. Heasonable. Loc-.1.- 4 + FAMILY + 2. avcJil. No. Lag. Ocean Vu. 1 blk ••••••••••••••••••••••• burnin g frpl. Beaut. n ew. Will lease S295. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Newport. Ide al s hop e d n r . Huntington 8 /14 . Lsc. S335 6962 bch. shops. 2 Br. lg deck, G....ral 3702 landscpd, heated pool & 842·2026 COHON,\ UELMAR Gal to share lovely l~c 2 uvai!?~r~~e mall. $HO. HarlJour. 1''or info. call l'aula (213 ) 283.1~ frple, gar. $350 mcl util. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Allracllve rent. 2 Br Townhollbe, frplc, br apt, Pk ~ewport. Ten mo · Belly 846·5000; Wlrnd'4 -------499·3727eve. ABBEY R ENTS FURN. Martinique.Aph. DELU XE 3 BR. 28"· r S275 1 B f S20S nis ct:., spa, ~y~ C'.~1.1 3Storcs nr. N'pt. Post Of. 846·5858. .• HUNT. LANDMAHK 1925 HARBOR BL. CM 1777 Santa Ana Ave. CM frplc .. eryclsd. gar. Conv. rom . r rom . Anita 8· 30 • 5 al 557 bl:.!2 ficc 290 Sn ft. ea. $100 CONDO L.se .,,..,5 23brreml'dold C 772 cc•" loc Avail now $290/mo Pool. tennis. continental oreves""4.7•"'c ·• MoneyW.tH 5031 · .,... .. ' · ALLC714>64.5·4 . Mg.rAptllJ 646·"'""' 962:8118 0~979.i3J1. . breakrast.Someocean& ""' =-> __ -Moeu Good parking ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1BR.~4m1.tobeC1ch. Laguna c harm hse . \ ttH624l l $250. Lse. Agt645·7221 lrees, yrd, nr beach. Balboa Island 3706 STUNNING Lg. 2 br, 2 ba. • C • 2 b Catalina views. Close lo Wanted : Female Hm/--' s:en . . SOLAR ENERGY CO. - -Dia m ood St. Wood ·s ••••••••••••••••••••••• Garden apt. Pool. rec SUP E R lean 2 br: a s hopping & fme ooach mate app SO yrs. Nu pct.:.. Industrial Rental 4500 --.ge successful Dir. (30+ 3 BR. 2 BA. all blln:., 2 car Cove. 494.7953 BACH. Apt, partly furn'd. area. $205. ~10 W.18th St. ~~~.d~4~c;;:~~ ~7';':5 Nr. 1 644·261 I. 751-1441 ciller l P:\1 _ ••••••••••••••••••••••• jobs a month) needs ~arage. focd yard. Kids Gar. prkg. $150 mo. utils -___ ------MALE OR F t::M ALE N t::W BU ILDINt;S at $10.~. loan 1mmed. LO ok. No fee. $310. mo. 1st Minion Vieio 326 7 pd • yrly • ,675·2797 or OAK RJDG E VILLA 2 Br Apt. Shag crpts, nuly T it E EXCITING 21·25. to share (oc house 0 C. Airport. 2400 lo 8000 add mvenlory & expand P ioneer Rlty. "•''·44"1 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 675·6527 • 3 BR 2 Ba bltns d d ~ ( I k area Sec Xlnl retum + O'u. ., ch1ldre~ welco~e. $2:is'. pa1nte , rJ?S. ga:. :.love PALM MESAAPTS. inNEWPOHT.&15~ s q l amp e par ing. . . --JBR,2 8Anew condo.Air 3724 858 W.Center."'5·11"" &garage. Sorry no pct:. kl lNU'fL',STONPT --SOM £ UN ITS rOH s hare. Box 1747, Ra ncho :I BR, 2 BA. (rpl. den. cond'g., frplc. $300 mo.CostaMesa .,. J• or children. S185 mo. .. B,.Cll f'EMAl..I:: Rmmat c $1\1.E AT 10•·;. DOWN. Santa 1''e, 92067 oc Dshwshr. & :.love. 1 thild 581-0887 Avl. 8/1 • ••••••••••••••••••••••• 425A 12th St Huntington · wanted, :!1·26 yrs. Slnct· Koll1 Irvine Ct-nlcr. ~II 756·2268 eves. ?.,~;. mAcor.osBstwnfromN•lOsnch&I. 2 BR. 11~ BA. fncd. yd, LOW RATES ~~lio~=~~·1.~:r.~g:. H~~ Bch. . Bach . 1&2 BH. from $165. ly bu:.ine:.s. <.:o-ed. NB Dan Curlis. (7 14 ) 979.9205 MorlCJOCJ•S, T-Nl--.--- +.>-AJ •Studio & 1 BR AplS pets. 642·l603. /\dulls. No Pets apt. 1·omplcx. 879-5510. -- 4:30, 848·8322or 898 1~1 c amper /boat access. •Water8eds *NEAR Bl-:ACll •All 1561Mesa0r. llll.ti,!.17!J.65~ $95 Deeds SOlS aft. 5P M 830-1683 or 581-8036 •TV & Maid Serv Avail 120 ALBERT PLACE utilities paid. 2 & 3 l:kJrm <5 b1k~ East of Newport -• ••••••••••••••••••••••• l STY Townhouse 2br 2 Hewportleoch 3269 •PhoneServ,Hldpool Deluxe2br,Jba,adulls, studio apts . private Blvd) OfficeRental 4400 400SQ.FT. LOANS upto80% · · · · Ch.Id S ci· n t $185 Call gara ges, f1rcnla ces. 5-16 ~iO ••••••••••••••••••••••• • ba, dbl. gar, put10, cpts. ••••••••••••••••••••••• * 1 ren e 10 no pe 5 · · : ,. • 11 La9una ~ ~;~~~~:·:1~:uc~~~rt:O~:~: oilur~et;co~~o ~8~;· ;q~t 237~~:~ro~~~~~M :.~:~ 2 lir, 1 :·~:~ ~:~~tNS2~t,~L'1~~. RES 0 RT IL~e~awsl·1ponW9rto~~cr~~Sapo1~cL~e· __ 831-1600 lstJ~~c;,~t>/• nr. beach. s:no. Lsc. crpls, rlrps, many xtras. lachcd gar , 1 Child OK. "' ,.. :!OOOSQ.1''1'. w/3ofc's Lowesl rates Orange()). 645·2803/968·8495 L.se. $475. A.gt. 894-643.5. 1 BR Furn • $185 $190. 1942 Anaheim St. HUNT. HBR. 2 br. 1 ba. <.:all on Site Man11iwr Orange Cty. i\lrport Sattter M'9-Co. J Br, 2 Ba, frpl. fnc.'tl yd. BA-YS H 0 RES. 2495 Lots of bltns. pool. walk 642·6682. bltns. nu drps & pool. No -'~4_Jli·12 Jlllcxt:!.\6 ___ %2·787_8 ____ 642-2171 545-06lt l h · '<.! m pets $250 mo 581·8844 Servin g Harbor area at • Crpts. nr. RTD • Fwy Crestview Dr. Lovely J 0 s opping. ·· " LOVELY new adult I br. -· · -1 SHO up store-office~ \'pls 2500' Ml. n r 17th & $3.55.Waterpd.846·~72. BR,2 Ba .$425.p/mo.yr. beach.931 W.19th St. J>'rplc.beam ceilng,pool. CLEAN 2 br. 2 ba. nice LIVING drps air b..ath. 1730 1 Pla ce nti<i C M. 220 years F I 3 BR ., 8 ,-ly. No pets. (21J)799·4d56 548·049'l From $210. 399 Bay. area. Bllns. Child OK. No .lie<tt h HI ll. B. ~2-~14 pwr /prkg/cxhsl air. 1~ Pvt party will buy Znc:I irep acc. •., '"nu or 646-6219 646·1456 pets. $165/mo. 968·9174_ ---rt 646·1252/644·22:.!8 T D 's. Min. discount. cpts, drps. $315. mo. licv W ATERFROHT -- -Call 642-3573. or J oe. m;3.4SW Ocean Vw luxury 4 IJr. -l.ge f\im2 Ir ADULT 1 BR. frplc, pool. NEW 2&.3 BR. D/W. frplc Hewportleoch 1200 Sq. n . M·l w/front --------- -D l S70 000-h --Newport Crest w/sw1m & Bltns, w /w. drps, pool. $185. mo. 1~5 Pomona, Adults only. Agt. 536·7528 L've"ulivcoflice:-. office, tgc r ear door. ~ Announcements/ ' eau ·11 · d omc. ten club.1 Yrlease.$475 $200 . Ad lts. no pets CM.Ca11645·1956 or536-4095 fROM $185 ":,"'150'"·""2S Mcinth 3-Phasc.Unit16,$185.6~ Personal5/ orma iving, mrng rm mo. 962·0807. 963·7744 642-9520 " -T · I W C t L t & r_:_.1. lge. Cam. rm. wcl bar & --H•wport leach 3869 Oakwood offers t he View of boats&w<1tcr MerminaD ay54•0 5°7:.10 3 os roung • i MEDITERRANEAN BILL GRU"-'DY esa .. a.ys · • •••••••••••••••••••••• I rplc. 1 Br. dwnstairs. 4 Big Canyon view; 1800 Sq. Cozy £-Side Bach a pl ••••••••••••••••••••••• finest in resort hvmg at a ...., ~ 5 I OO Br, up. 3 c ar gar. Custom ft.·. 3 BR, 2~2 Ba .. wet w/frplc. Just redec. Util VILLAGE p ""RK .... E~RT price you can afford. Realtor 675-616\ evcs.1>46·06!H_ --AftftOllllcera 1 Bed ,.. " n ru • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •• • • • landscaping. Avail. 8/1. bar. $500 pd. $185 nfo. 675-2913 room There's Sl m1Uron 1n Large M L Lot. bldg. :n x $525 mo. 10·6. 003-45SI, & Eastbluf'f Rily 644·1133 1 Bedroom & Den APARTM&ITS r ecreation fuci lit1cs. F BLOG. 60• w /lrvrng quarters. wknds 1tfl 6.7516461. BACH. Prtly. furn'd . 2Bedrooms Hachelor lor 2 "JGHT LJGHTEUT1';N BEACH For re ntor will consicter --------TOWNHOUSE 2 br. 21h Frpl, ulils pd, gar. yd. 2 Bedroom Townhouse Bedrooms an<! NIS COURTS. J\ foll lime , • ., • ..., '"""o••• trade for houst: or uruts. • * * FREDWOOO We have 2 houses w/fplcs. b a . po o I. b 1 l n s. No. pets. Quiel person 2400 Harbor Blvd Townhouses act1v1t1cs director who ~.., Cond1tlofllnv Terms. 642.4610. 3 BR, 2 DA. cplS. dr!)b , wash/dry, gar. No pets. pref'd. $160. 548-0401 Costa Mesa (714)557-8020 Fr . $229.S00pen9-6 plans partic:s. lJHQ':-.. v,..c.~..-11,..,_ ~ ------JCJ I 0112 Rinr An. blt.ns. $335. mo . .liev or 675-9188 .,1'TuA.c . l 1 & Daily trips & more! Free Sun· v:wu.-COST A MESA J oe 963·4567 Sl85. " " · qwe · LRG 1 Br, pool, n r. shops, Spa-Pools·Tcnrus day brunch. ./ E ... -Sl"-'•G Newport Beoch You a re thewirmeror TWO FREE TICKETS ($13.50 V ALU!::> Ringlin9 Brat.. • Barnum&~ • ---------BLUFFS CONDO. 3 BR, den, patio. bltns. garage. adlts /no pets. Ulil pd. Across from 1' ... as hion Plus beautiful singles. " ~~:.;:.~~-· HOW LEA ni lnln• 3244 2'h BA. Be auL decoral· t Adult, no pet. :a34 B. 1884 Monrovia, 548-0336. Island a t Jamboree 011 1 &2 b ed r oom a pls. ./ $..,., ... w1e• .. ..i. Deluxt: ind ustrial units ••••••••••••••••••••••• ed. Partial Back Bay RUTGERS. San J oaquin Hills Road. furni~hed & unfurnished. ./ •fl'tllle ...,."'° wilh <>ffitc:. : 1380 lo 6000 Univ.ParkTcrrace.JBR, view. Avall 8/l/75. $:>25 MESA V~RDK Spac. 2 (714)644-1900 Rents from $185. Pnccs Howartl sqrt. ti42-44ti3or&t2-7604. l BA Townhouse nr. pool. per mo. 979·7422 rif,rs . NEAT, CL~AN 1 Br, walk HR., 2 ba. Completely re· vary by locaU.ill. Models 6101 Ai.rt. on premises 711 W $390. 552-7896. l<mg. ~~2.~~~pmg. $175 mo. ~iri'ls~ragl~~riandcr open JO lo 7. 85rry no pets 17th St. C.M. ----Circus R T wnho Bi C Home MESA VERDE or children. Hoom matc SS' PER SQ FT Lease 1000 sq.fl. w/office. Jlir. FR. D • 0 use. CJ anyon . Huntinc)ton leoc:h 3740 2 BR. ulil pd. children 2 Bdr ms .• 1 •fl balh condo service a vailable. 1617 WESTCLI FF -,\1 8 110·220 voltage. Heat. hot J uly 31sl to Aug 12th • Anaheim Convenuon Cenlcr , 800 W. Katejla Close to schs/park/pool. For Lce._aAsLeL ,,~v.,a;!8Sept 1 ••••••••••••••••••••••• welcom4?. No pets. CpL'>. wilh pool. $335 Mo. AGT. 541-5032 water. New bldg. Good $450 mo. s33·270S U't"l"""1• NO INCREASE in sum-drps. patio. Mgr. 1960 STEPS TO BEACH Oakwood --lo" 6-15·2244. · Ticket s m ay be ex- cha n ged for reserved seals al the Conventioa (;ente r ahead of time. Call 642·5678. cxl 333 to claim your tickets. UNIV. PK. Terr. New 3 Harbor View Home. 4 Br. mer rent. Beautl br furn Wallace, Apt6,642·7364 G "" rden FULL SERVICE -- - - -2 BR, 1 ba, unf. S2l:l5 ~ R t I Won....__. .. 600 br. 2 ba Twnhomc. Nr. 2 Bll . nr. all schools. park apts $165 & $175. Spanish SEA Wit-ID EXEC. SUITES .~.~.!•••••=•••~•••• clubhou&e & pools. $385. & playground, comm. style bldg. pvt end gar. ~35p~.2 d~~~. 2ve8:;.· ~~~: 2 BR. 2 Ba condo$475 Apartments FROM $180 Marn e<! couple w/dog on· Lsc. 833·9442 Eves. pool. Avail. 8/15. $525. pool, sauna. lndry, adll:s. H VE ort ~ a. Gard inc l. 833-1861. 17301 Keelson Ln. l blk 1130 Victorra. ~9-S099 WE A ""•P oc Airport Area 8l:t.:i64ll ly Nd house i mmcd. *RENTALS* -W. of Beach off Slater. LGE studio w/loft. pool, SUMM E R RENTALS SBO Irvine -Under S250 Refs. Ph: UNIV. PARK Beaut. Bluffs Condo 842·7848 Al l 6tl"t NO. Co~la Mesa Dcnl:JI/ s.is 724H *** Jacuzzi. encl. gar. util pd. 6 45 OSSO u d I /Of te -a q11 - ---Lost & Fo .. •d 3 BR, 2 Ba ....... ~/450 3 BR. 2''2 Ba. S475 · me 1ca C SW s \'u . ... 3 BR. 2,12 Ba ..... $42S/46S Easlbluff Rily 644·1133 Lagma leach 3748 ~-d11~~ ~~'j tf~~i~~a~~ Rooms 4ooo From S345 /mo. Mr HEfl N ~l) m an 55dcs1res ••••••••••••••••••••••• 5300 COLLEG 1.· i>ARK -••••••••••••••••••••••• O 'Kecfc. 549·8131:l lo rent room 111 pvt home. LOST shaggy black med. "' 1 be B 642 1960 days "•5 •411 ••••••••••••••••••••••• -------d N ( J \I Ocean Vu. ge aut.J r, Summer&Winter · •.,..., 1-;mploye JO ewporl. dog. 6·30·75 ro m r . 3BR den 2ba $400 ROOMS .. .,5 wk up With ··ou s·11 L'T , c·r1>ts .. Jrn;.,. h I Terr C dM . $100. • • • "~-• '.11 3 Ba home. 2 frplc"s yrs R tats eves ~ "' '~ r ·~ ,, Would e n JOY l' ping Rancho San Joaqw pd · en · k 1 l" h"' n 548-9755 or "'"; per m<'. ''·ti ""'·21"" w D ~ II 3.,...,... . 1 • lse. grdnr & waler 1Blk8ch&Town.Ocean .. ... "'"~ •'-Al .,..u ""around home. rite REWAR . ca 67-.-.... 2BR.2 ~ Ba ......... $600 $550mo 548·2928 vr·ew. Frplc. 4 UNITS. I BR w /rcfrig, s tove. &15-3967 __ ----or679·:flW. Classifi ed Ad No. 146. beforc l0amor673·644!!1 TURTLE ROCK · . crpts, porch. 717 W. 18th --p I p o Uo 3BR 2 Ba ~,..,.._ 3 BR f dbl f I 2 $150 lo $350 per mo. SL Apl"D " $140. mo. NWPRT. Bch. 1 blk to SP/\C. 2 llm. Suite. Pvl D~uly 'ol, . . x LO"'T/"'OUND . . ......... ·~ am rm e P c, 4tu.5145 wknds or afL 6 r I 1560, Costa Mt.'Sa 9'.!626 "" ,. ClllNACOVE ba :s co ~ner l ot. .,.. 962·8936 beach Work g. em<t e, la~·.&lorlet.CdM .Vl·ry -APET? Summ erllental Garde~er & waler paid. wkdys. 2S to35yrs.675-1706 attracti ve. Sl25. Mr Christian Low Income. 960·2900 Actoption,Low ~· M 2 BR nu cpts & ~......,, r efr. ,. "73 • •'"' y d ..J. 6BR,3Baths .. ......,.,., o. Back Bay AdullCamily .... ewportl•--11. 3766 .... ..., b h urccr,u .. , .. "'" net!ds h ouse. ar · CostSpay/Neuter foact, ro ... -... .., range, carport, e nc l Balboa Pcnin.pvt al --f s435. m o nth . 2298 ••••••••••••••••••••••• pal10. No children/pets. &cntrant·e .. Ycarly. PRIMEOFCSPACE ll e c r2 ~ ~c c s ·LOST: B l k . & T a n Redlands Drive. 642·0596 $40. WK UP. 1 & 2 Rdr & 731 A W. 18lh S l. $2?0 673·8656. l 'd V'llOC)e & 5"8·7934 175.... 1 minature, neulered ma6e- or642·4387 Bach. Color TV, maid 673·7787 s · ----1 0 1 ... _a Bu•iness/ln•est/ Dox1 .. ''. Vic. Pacific Csl. V,5'.N 1 THE MESA Refri~ralor. ccunly UAL. tSL. Sleeping room. Shop,,...,.. • " HARDOR HlGHLANDS3 serv,poo . ' $llOLa.,...Zlr Pool,J~zi.Rec.llldg no kitthcn.Qweladult. Lido. ND.:! Finance H w y & Ma g n_o l i.a.. alAlTY b r , 2 ~1\l ba. gar . dr. 644165968N.1Newport Bl.NB. .,,.. w /exerc1 se rm . SllO.p /mo.(213)799·41:!56 ~~:l:s~1li~prox tj()(1sq.fl ···~··••••••••••••••••• 960-:l267aft.3 • 552-7500 opener, soft water. no · It's underpriced. Billiards. Color TV. or 646·6219 e .. t. or l suite approx. 1200 8&HlftHI • LOST Macaw .. large par- ---------.-pets. $550. 548-6640 AVAIL. Sept lsl. l blk to New crpts. drp:;, stove & IRVINE AT M&SA UR. ------sq ft. Vil'W fa('ing Vra Opportunsty 5005 rot . red-blue wings. in .BEAUT. New llantho~an heh 2 br $325 &$275 yr· rrrg. Purified waler, ore 545-4855 Room for renl·Exclus1ve Lu.lo lnq. owner. L>n •ycr ••••••••••••••••••••••• Newporl HLs. Famlty Joaqwn Twnhome. 2 Br. JBr, 2ba. 2 Bl~o; to Bch. ly 631.1479or97s.5157 s treet park. Covered CdM area. St50 /MO. Co ,,;7;;.7oo:! R d ~2054 2 \12 ba. 2 s tory. Overlooks Poo I /Tenn 1 s. $385. • ~arages, green lawns & EASTBLUFF·Beaut. i.IPl 640·8707 afl 6 PM. -pct ewar · · golf course & lake. $ti00. 1s t /last. Refe rences. OM THE IEACH lrees. Adults. no pet.s. 2BR 2ba, bltns, frplc . 2 ---CdM 200 1750 SQ rt. l'p~ Attent1·on Lost Cal. Yellow/wbl 547·7044/552·0055 642-5608. 1 Br furn~ars lea se. 2020 Fullerton Ave. Cl patios. pool avail. $350. Room & loard 4050 Drps. ,\ 1r coml d. l'lev. * *" p;.iws Male. declawed. $4-50. U-;;1v. Pk 3 Br.2ba + NEWPORT Crest Condo 3 $185 mo. ioilw°cFadden Blk E . of Nwpt Ave .• 1 Ph: 644·0355 ••••••••••••••••••••••• µrkg biJ 4120 ·1 t-:aslblufr. Wearing ID. & P I Pl 675 1865 Blk S. of Bay, CM > 1-:lde rl y m an WA NTS -Ret~I Ans lo .. R a ise n .. t6x25' den. Pool. 18221 br . 3 ba. lenrus oo · · · · ., .• 2.o""" RICHARDS·LIOO arc':', J room & board. CJn l>JY :'ll, EW plu!>h omce blclg. 2 '*"' W "'"50 L 64" 0781 "" OOJV 8 b U ta Heward. 640·5729. Meadows weet y. <" mo. se. ·.r<J ~·nts r , 2 a. gar. ps irs, $250 mo. 642-~t5 to fl rm SllllCS. l°Orl Bus1·nessmen 3724 Ullfurnlsht'd Easts1de, 2 BR. Refs. re· pvt. Adults. $350. mom·--~--ferencl' rm . xerox Costa Mesa 3724 Costa Mesa ••••••••••••••••••••••• quired. $175. a month. clud ulil. Yrly. 673·0844 Room & Board for eldl·rly ropier. Nr. <.K; Airport, Sh Q LOST toy poodle, btk ~. Initial "'G" on do&. l.4'f. Reward! 536·7821 '·" ""'-• •••••••••••• ••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• 3102 Agent 646·3255 person. $250 mo. 54s,.m52 833·3&10 OP WflefS __;;;.._--------1LJDO Unique Charm! aft 6PM. ·------ AMBASSADOR INN BRAND NEW No Cleaning D~posit $35 Up No Lease Required Sincle Studio Apt. Speclol cOf'lalr;,ctl•n , ... ( llmlt-4 th.,,. enl1) • WHllly ..... 111 '""le• • Joc;iuJ ,..1 • 9Cltd••rt fecllllw• .... 11. • C.• llQ'a • tll4M4"91 ""'"'""'rel • ltec•-"--e T~•left-ileltl• •All '11llltl~t jtOid • S...ltch....,nll _,,,<e •Wet ... , .~,"'~-ii. • .... t.d,... • Olt"Mt dl•l p.._, .,,.11. WATERFALLS . STREAMS• LAGOONS 2909 BRISTOL AVE. SANTA ANA (At South Coa1t Plata) 540-2300 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Extra Jrg·spaciou.o; 1 BR Beaut. decor 'd. 2 br. lg. · NE w L v Decorat ed. Craftsman RENTAL REFERRALS apt. Encl gar. $185. No brick patio. frpl. 675-6359 r Rentals 4200 <·arpeted 2 room offices. ~ LOST; 713. Blk male LAR, Vic. Hunt. 8ch. NMds • All types. Pacific Coast pets. 642·6500 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Easy to find. ample Ch a r l e r s R ent a I -'---------OCEANFRONT, I BR. y r· EANFRONT Lag Bch parking. xlnl. locatfon Division. Fee.~ or EASTS I DE nde w 2 1b9r1, ly ls38e.23a11 ulil's pd. $325. 2 Br $250. wk. Great 77!! w. 19th Sl. $75 & $85. 548-8638 bltns, c pt. rps. 6i5-locaL;on. 536-0.121 548·1945or 548·1951 Wa lnut. $225 No pets. __ lalboa ltland 3806 adults only. Deluxe 2 BR. ne~ly deco~. BLK. to Beach. New Con· F:X EC UT IVE s1tites on ••••••••••••••••••••••• 673·6041 549·2170 Lrg gar age. Udo sho~ g do. Jacu.izi/volleyball. Newport Harbor 400 tu DELUXE 2 br on Grand area. $275. Yrly. 673-2:828. Sips. 6. $125 wk. 968-5700 2200 :-;q rt. 6"2·4644; Canal; Lillie Bal. 15. QUIET LUXURY 3 BR 2 BA frpl $350 .,,0. -&s:H405 Bont dock. frpl, r adiant Quiel IMDg in 3 Br, 2 ~a Palio, cpt~. drPs. 3 car leps lo heach. Corona del -- heal. Yrly. $400. No a pt with frplc ~patio. gar . Pool. Nr. Hoag Mar. 2 BR. 2 BA. charm· NEWPORTllEACH pets/children. 673-0207 Carde n setting with pool. Hos pt. 548 .9341 , t:vcs . ing ocean view collage 5,10 SQ fl. Jlx. suite ........... Penlltlllkl 3107 Adults only~. 646-2348 CQmpl furn . dble gar. 2 Ulll. pd. Sl95 Month -THI ViMDOMl Adults. 1 or 2 children. Realonom1t!' 675 6700 J845 An~~mSl. UNFURN. bachelor apt. Avail Aug 1 thru Jl~l. - - 2 BR nr. beach & ba.)'. re· 545-8628. utilities p.aid. $130. mo. $225. Wkly. 673~1> • 1 MO FREE RENT • decorated , lndry, prkg. 1----------1 960 Agt l 2 3 Hm ofhces from Adults, lease $2"75 mo. 1 Br. Apl. in' good area 6'2· 1 · C OM Verr S tecia~! s 1j5 pe 0 r mo. Nc¥r Al\. 673-6210 waler & aas pd. $150 mo. NEW 3 BR, 2 Bo, Frplc, Comp. furn d 1 ~:uiaS: u1rporl. No Jca.'Y«?rcq. 542·3379or 548-1238. • Ced yrd, patio, 1Jas BBQ. for a ve ry pa • 833-3223 9Til noon 1 BR, cpl , drps. aarage. iar. nr Hoa« Hosp. 16lh mature c pl.. no pels. Avl. - Yrly. Leue. $210 mo. No E.SIDE,Adult. 2 Br, ~I.Al & Ortftge. Adults. $325. July 21. Auf' .• Sept. $150 8 o o' 0 f c + 4 0 0 pelS. 963·5353 Ba, pal10, encl gar, like mo. 833•1431 or870-8800 wk. W\11 reduce for war.ehouse. epl . htcd nu.644·0878. month, season or yrly. ce1I g prkg ML ~Onl Bayfront·Ocean Vlew. YEARLY 3 Br. 2 Ba.1 blk 673 1265 $225 mo. 646-l2SZ luxury 2 Br. 2 Ba. Q)ndo. 1235 Lg. 3 br, 2 bL Lower. to Beach. $335 mo. Avl. - Complete kltcbe.n. Pvt. ChOdren OK. n o pets. immediately. 6'$-7~. NE W P 0 RT Steps lo 2 Executive Suite:> ova1I ••••••••••••••••••••••• medicaLion. Reward. Join the ne west ronecpl _968_'_·_1_435 ______ _ in retailing ·hoppe rs LOST : S m all fe male V1llag.e -a lowover:nead 19 mostly white w/blk tail shoppu~g .mall design~ cal. Nr. Merrimac Wa1 to max1m1ze your pro(1t. & oc College area. CM. F'or a very small invest· Reward. 751·8183 mcnl you can be one ·of the fi rs t s mart busi LOST, N.B. Gold chain ncssmen to open a store nee k I a ce. Deceas!'f • in ShoppersVillage ·look hui;b;.1nd 's treasur ~ a' the advantages. Wrdow w /give reward.~ RENT INCLUDES; <714) 998·2022Colled. .• • ·All ut1hlles pa.id --. , ( PlannedAdvcrtislng FOUND: Siamese <'••· 24 llrs Security Vic . Newport Cenler . l\11s1st.ance in mcrch3n· area. 830·9061 dlSlng FOUND: Med. size male. And much much morel dog, black & white. Vic 1'.:ven .if y ou :ve never Irv ine $52 3497 or bten 1D business for 552 3659 • yourself before · We can __ · _ _.._· _____ _ help you get started 1.0· Found. 2 Pckln~ do(is. day! Mission Vtejo arc:.. C11ll Shoppers V1lln~e 586-6481 oow1 ----------Marina, lull security. 557·2593or644-4847aft.6 beachmod.2 &4br.$165 AUil 1 , rn Nt.>wporl Adult llvin,.R.ets.Req'd . . 2Brpool aar.pn.sundeck to$4.50wk&42 3400 F1nanc1al Ccnh•r $1'i: 714·834·1~1 F o und : Young 0 °&· $800mo.lae.l73-3068. 1 Br. ut1I pd. Refng. olderadulll.No pet.s.Not -mo rncl l'elephon• 2724N Maln,SantaAno PossiblypartOobtnnan. -,..22 laund, crpt/drps. Buy St. a •urpmer rental $220 lotboa lay Ctuib ans wer 1 n I< .s,,. (In the main slreet shop· 1-'rlendly. Blk w /wh~ Coro•tcuhlMm-.-$170 mo.331·92'76. S48·4.922. Available month o r Si•c retanal ovuil. , .. uul pin g cent e r . nt•>.t mark ing~ on chest.Nds. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ... E~POIT ......... ,...... Auaust. Extra l11tge. 2 640 832~ Rullock:c Fash.ion Sq ) home. Vic: 190\ lW L> 2 Br. 1 Ba, frplc. patio. s. $\10 1 Br. 1 Adult. non " • .,.... """""'""" br .• 2 ba .. tunushe<I w/ 1---------1 C.M. ~·1775. ot t\wy. Avail July 15, smoker only· No pet.a. 948 919 leysJ• Ori•• bay view la nt:xtlo pool Nr O.C. Airport, t~t t-1oor. sns M'l 0993; 496·1981 W. 17lh St. 548-0358. Spacloua 2 Br & den on $l500 r()r mo. Will coD· gd off ~tr\!lll ptirk1nti J anitorial $3000 ptt mo FOUND: lrll\h Setter, B f · wal "rfro Dt . Pvt. Bch, sider 2 week opUon. Pn. (.;rpW. drpd. i.ur cond & gross. Will 1ell all or AboUl 2 yra okl. male lD I Ad .... & over Jo-Iv aarden. must see Party. CalJ a..tll...'Wtl (o .) urn ccs · .,a. pa · · · • --. • Bachelor. UUI. Included Util Pd, redoc. 1 r, n l(, "' ff r 3 Offi $110 • rt loqu1r P 0 Box Vic~B"YC .J~ ah. 4 1""0 mon'h, no .nels. ran•e, poo · \&1'"3 ,-~ • , ~) c:~o "'l"" 70\ H 8 92648. ...... e ., • IF 9 t<~A <.uNt •-ap-eC. 8'1a.M.14days. aod844·2486 (aunK • .....,.,, _, _ ' ' • '"'11 .!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~~~!!!~~~~~~~=·"="'1==="=•==67=~=7=42=1=·==:::J~35==·":::=40=m::=o.=..........,===='=--:-I..., r J___:-=-=-===========-:i:================ J l I I : I ' I . : I j ; I ... . .... \ . . \ ... OAILYPILOT ' ' I ' . ' WtdnMday. Ju,ty 18, 187b dd it ... Build It... Diaper it ... Ha mmer it... arpet li-.1 •• Cement it...Wire it ... Hoe it...Clean i t ... Move i f...Pr~ss 1t .. Paint it... Nail it ... Plaster it ... Flx It ... .. I DIRECTORY Acco.tht4) Cwpet S•nlu CCMl1 odor Gardening Houttcle anlng MoYl'"J rahttfncJ/rop.rtng rroperty ManacJtmeflt Sewing/ Alterations ...•...•••............••..........•••...••••.••••••••...•.•...•......••••••........•........ •······················ ..••••............•••.............••....•.••.. •·······•••••·········· ...................... . Bookkeepln~. Systems Cu pe t & Uphols t ery 1-'.H Gcrwick&Son YARD CLEANUP Wtinl j k EAi. CLEAN ?11 o v \ n g, 11au11 n t:, QUALJTY Wallcovt-rinii PHOJo't:SSIONAL We Ill & udjust your~~· Cons ultanii:. <Aish 1''tuw Cleani11g . .S tea m & Add/RemdllfBl-114321 CompM aint 645_0309 tlOUS{o;'!~'Tbl'Gln~ham Cleanup. 2 C-Ollege Stu 3l Rusoooblc Pril'cs PROl'l-:H'fY tern. You sew al. l'aAt$ Pla nn101:. 752 lSlO. S h am poo. }'r ee e:.l 673-6041 S49-2170 Gari • Esi.s. 645--5123 denl1>. Exp. & Reas . 1.)oug Rebhrd~845·•1727 MANACEMt-;NT too• Palturn filling & <\<f 646 7811 '"I T k -644·2369 JU~l_1ng ~vs. 61tHM85 . Accnyl'g&liookeeping . Nooe Beuer! Dick Huff. --R~~~~rlsl .i n g~c~,0:0; •HOUS~CLEANING • _. •(JUAL11'YPAJNT1NG• 31,;.orGroi.s ----- 2U rs c~p . inJohn's Carpet & man & So n Add Lnt.Jscp 'g .t 10 Yr~ in ByRellableCouple Moving/Hauling. Student lnler1or&Exterior Til~ Neslaurant/ <.:onstruc Ul?l1QISl~cy. Dri shampoo Remodel·Patio Shelter; areu. G4tl-~093. Gd ratcs/Rcfs5''8·til'71 w /large truck. Reas. Call Lee 83().7278 l\pl!I Commi.'n·1al ••••••••••••••••••••••"" l 1 o n & R \: l • 1 I • ( i.o ii retardants). Decks. lie t borid. 644·7598 ------Barry. 548·9723.&839>5779 15 yrs. J£xi'4.'11cn(•1: <.;!-;RAM IC TILE. Ni?w & :>47·~/640·8:!.!7. Deg"ea.sers 4' ~II color G d 1__ General S•r•lces Wiii do any t y pe of rtasttr/R•palr Kcmo1l cl. Fl'L~: c:>L sml ... al..I -R brtghtners & 10 min er en .. .., ••••••••••••••••••••••• houseclea ning. Exp rainthlCJ/Popering ••••••••••••••••••••••• :l111 k Devdo"llH:llt JOUl-Wt•ftot)lne.SJ6.2426. --A· oom uleacb, for ,your white ••••••••••••••••••••••• "TJllNGS" b M . f''urnish own cqwpment. ••••••••••••••••••••••• PAT<JH PLASTERING 131 Tu~t1nA\1' --..... -··•••••••••••••••••• carp41ta. save money by Quallty/Maint/Ldscpg Cen w~wor:. re~~.~·~: 5481061aft:J. _ . 1\11 'l'yp~,!). l"r~~ t;s. 'Tuslirt ~17 ~ Top Soll 81gsavmgsbybean~your sav1o' me xtra L.Pi -. sod, sprklri;, soil <.'Ond, pluml>ang "'l""·•·•._.,1.1 E h k 1, Pror Painter honest L1mates.Call!>40G825 - --••••••••••••••••••••••• "" t t f t ... ~ 1 • .. ~ .,v. . ..., · xp ouse ee~r. .cas k • -----• .,wn con r ac or. reees. Clean 1vingroom,dining c ea n up. 642·J:J31 / -rales Lynn 6.iz !J7!i7 wor , reas. lnl/ext. free VEHY NEAT PATCH •TopS01l •COJnpo.<1t• ~c1%t~2~~~ultanl. Call rm & hall Sl5. Any rm 646·4908. HAN1?YMAN ll?mes & before.9:30AM & ~ft 4.:io e:-.t. llcfs. 5·18 -2759, J OllS & Rt:STUCCO. Attn: Unit Buyers • )tulch• Ht.'l'f~uoc1* _ _ $7.50,couch$10,chrurS5 J G d ~pts Consc1~nt wu:. l'M 642·3913 1''ree st 893.(.139 Turnthc prol>lcms&JO)'> C.:allS8tiU930 __ _ LOOK lS yrs. e xp . ...ii;: what ~p<A n ebe ar cner. (;rall~man.645-6S58. t: ·-of manaueml•nt uH·r l11 I ! 22-t Sq n o{ new counts. DOl me~ I d'A c.:.o '". p I e l t: _Ma Int.. -----L d I ., Tree s~r· ce ""ooni Only ..,.,CA r .. 11 •v C 1 ... l R Dri an scap ng .... W IJ H . Phlmbin9 Tobin Realty W1• h.n•4· •••• •• • •••• ••••••••••c -• • .._,.,, "4 work myself. Gd. ruf~. e.a.nup • .-ree Cb • emo•e ••ways .. a n..per angmg • -,, Id Med I c ~ y ••••••••••••••••••••••• .--••••••••••••••••••••••• full serv1t·e a\,111 llU & . 1. now ..... o a on· S3l --OlOl. U79·362~ Incl. Grading • DIRT & ROTOTILLlNG S25 By F ormer Instructor fV ly $lJ. xi miJ ix:r frl'e llt•nlll\ al. 1mbmg '& -lraclors 11.B. 842-8806. -DEBRIS S33-2l24 Landscaping·Sod Sales. Carl {lebko. 646-2449 JUST PLUMBING? ton · · · Shrub d~arang. Hototdl• •. .:i••ss S•r•'1c• Cement/COMfete '~leOaB'SU G'A&RN.DENLlNG ---}'"rec csl. Master charge !nt/~'· Free ........ t. 1 Bu F.ii;t Scrv llcas Hates uni . CALL !Hti t:ll t 111~. G42 21.i24 . .->..... ... ,.. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ..., ·n ps ew awns H 1• I.) / c 9602170 .,..,, n • JustOncCullTo : -----••••••••••••••••••••••• 548-8773 °"1119 -uy~ cv s · Apt. 9. WedoAcoustic. JUST l'LUMBING _____ t-'or'C1's 'J4·ceService We print anything, Guar 8 RICK -BLOCK & T T . . ••••••••••••••••••••••• fl'ord"s Landscape Greg, 960·2766/ Pt:lc * 642 4111~--Remodel & Repair Experienced Crew. J.Js l service. Quality STONEWORK ree rimming, Cleanup, llAULJ NG l\NYl'lllN<i Sod/Luwn~/Sµnnklers 536·1943 1-.R. OTIS Plum'·1nu ••••••••••••••••••••••• _I.1ctln~ured. 962·7817 work-lo prices. <.:ast:y * 64S·286i * H a ulin~L S prinklers. G It 1 Lie /Insured ~ 7817 -u .. Pr&nlJno. 714·~ c~ Free ~SL 545.2943_ arfaltC cleanup. ~ta --.. _·_ --Pa1·1ll1ng /,Repalr·35 y rs . Water htr~. iJll sizes. dis· Cslm .kitchen .& Ut!,th Window Cleaniftft I ., .....,.....,.... ble .i::.Lservwe.9f>3tM.'i.2 DE"'P ROTOTILLING H di alter t n!> l n1 ·~ Phillips Cement Co."' _ "' k •··k d posals, st oppage!>, r e m g, a 111 1 • ••••••••••••••••••••••• NANCY BARNFS Cstm Work ... -..,...,est. Japan ese Co m pl e t c Soil Prep & Tractor work wor g uar, "' e Ci van· <1 ue & un u!>UJI Wf rk ,.,.._,, S 12 a Load tage of my exp. 536-7056. pairs r cmoddrng amt · RHide nce/Comm Typing Service. Reas. lic/bond·7Sl·~7 aft t>. Gardening Ser~1cc 1''\Jll Landsca~Services -------rep1pa'ng. New Construe-welcomt'. Mcmb llB f ' t 640-80-;i r a tes by the page or Plant1n g /cull1ng / <:ctr1dof un.s1gh1I~ . ~6882 J1mllutlon U &JPa1ntmg.Personali-Lwn. 24 Hrs. lie & bond Bu1'cau962-ti31~ rcec:-. ·---~- hour.640·S885or640-59"ll. Child Core c l eanup. Free esl. THASll&DEUl<IS --------Coll. Slue.lent 541S·li4:!X Lawn Maint &Clean Uµs ty Painters w1h personal 642·6263 ____ Roofing CobinetMakiftg •••••••••••••••••••••~· 642·310_2.· -------Pracc~You Cm Afford toucb.6:!_0·8656 MARV'S P LUM UING ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• My home. f!_eavr athlellc Landscape, Maintenance. •HAULING• •*CALL 833·2124 • * "'XTERJORS SAV .. ~ SS" program. F·unJob. Rare Sprklrs C l eanup Yl\HU CLIO:ANUI' ---'"' ,.,. •• *646·!~)7 • CSlm Cabinets, boat find.673·2W3 •TREEW~rk.542.2773.' **556.0Jil7 •• Maintenance H·.L. S inor Sta l e _NOJOHTOO ~MALL_ k ---------------••••••••••••••••••••••• Lice nsed Insured Call ;~di,p~~~t~~er~~i:~~ ParentorPCIF'l'ftb 1 ~ ~ ~ G<1ra!!e. House & l\pt,, Gen. Maint.·Yd, Hou.se. 1 979.3335 ~RAINCLEARED.$6.50 646-5219. G . V ·f ., J AIANESEGARDENER Clcanouls &llaulaway. Gar ... ,::c.llauting.Wktlys ---Evc /Wk e~ds-Same .01!"8°n . aca ion . lOyrs exper,allpha.scs ~5.5475 &557_!S487 55t,·:!3U3 CWknds /cves PAPERHANGING Pncc Carpenter Unh~ited time. <;ompl Reasonable/Estimates · 979-9949.) Charles Bruce. Professional-ReasonablE Guar ·-558-7380 -- ••••••••••••••••••••••• nee:1.s t°t:eiyour ~hildr:n Call 751-1937. HCMtsecleaning I -Frceest 67J-5829aft 5 A Pl b Use the Daily Pilot "t-'ast HOOFSCltJ-:CKED' llepu1red & Replan•d Direct Factory Sl·rvlrc L1c1'nsc c:m t5!HV1i PH . 54!1 2'.xll me ~n. r own. ome y •••••••••••••••••••••••Masonry --ny um m g .waler SAVE & Profit. Custom quahf1ed female Home JAPANESE EXPERT •••••••••••••••••••••••Professionals will pain.t scrv·l eaks-marolit e R es ull " Service remod, repair, add-on. Executive. Yrs. of ex· GARDENER Jndustrial, HOUSECLEAN ING 1s our WI LL I AMS & Son s your home a nd do it enclosul'l's·reas. 832·U68 Oiret'tory Your ~ervice ins ulation. 1'?-ee e:.t. & pen e nce . Loca l re fs. Commc rc1al. Hes1dcn-Bus int:ss. Call Janice s Masonry. Uri ck/lilock/ right. Jnt/Ext. Reas-is our specialty. Call Designs. 645-3439. f''ree to travel. 675·2393. laal. 548-7958/548·5182 Raggedy Anns. 675·6553 Slone Call 581 ·7829 Refs. 497·3169 & 751-0684. Want ads Call 642·5678 642·5678. ext 322 --!-- USE THE DAILY PILOT °FAST RESULT" SERVICE DIRECTORY · For Result Service Call 642-5678 Ext.322 ' . . I Lost&Found 5300Lost&Found 530( JobsWanted, 7075 HelpWanted 7100He4pWonted 7100HelpWanted 7100HelpWant•d 7100 HelpWonted 7100HelpW•ted 7100 .............................•...••..................................................................••............•.......•.•..........................................................•...••.•.............•. , FOUN D : Bernard Mix . WST: Grey female cal. Wht dog w I blk spts. short-hair. Vic. HH. Qill Male, atfecl. rope on aft6 960-3268 HELP! COMPANION ••OlSTHIBUTOR want· JUNIOR SALESMEN neok Florida/Yktwn HU --·----- 636-4573 Personals 5350 Need a willing student for yard work, house cleaning. baby sitt1n~. lxl>. boy. uus ooy. stock clerks. etc·? Call Mission V11:10 High School Career C..:t'nter. 830·5750. We can help you. ASST MANAGER PYt. Country Club Must have college uack- g r o u n c! 1n hold & restaurant adm1m!>tra lion. Contact Mr~. Km~. 714·644 5-ltU BOAT ~ BUILDERS L1ve ·ln Palm Springs for ed. mature. lntcrcslt:d m un elderly couple. earning ~p to.~ per mo *Up To $600 Per Mo.• ~·Call 639-6123. FOUND: Black male 1..ab. Jpprox. 2 yrs Orchard Ur. SAHgts. 979-80'.!l. ll'OU ND : 7/12. male short h.ur cal. whte, grey & black. 548-0177. FOUND: Set of K eys, vie o f Ma ~nolia & Wt>stmmsLer. lnq. al 25U ~hsgnohJ. c~. t'Ot: ND: 6 26. smaU ~1lg t-'e male Siamese. \'1c. All3Q \·1lla,;. lllSb. V1eJO ~·1'•19 FOU~D: Mm. Coll.Jc. nea coUar. Vic. Newport 81. & Westm rnsl e r, NB. ti73-7324 Found: Collie. reddish brn & whl. male. Vi e 16th & Dover. NB646-2821 --------- Lost. 7 /9 Our dear 18 year old dog. mixed black & lan female. Nnrth Laguna. R ey.·ard, Please Call 4944816 LOST: Very lrg male Irish Setter. no ID . "Reward ! 640-4366 , 831·0730 LOST v1c. Spy Class Hall , small black.long haired nit le cat w I flea collar. 644·8433. ••••••••••••••••••••••• PREGNANT.! Caring conf1 tl enlial counseling & rererral. Abortion, adoption & keeping. APt:ARE 547-2563 Drinking problem·! Call Alcohol Helpline _ 24 hrs a day 835-38:10 PHOBLE.M~f! WE CA RE 0.:-lE WAY HELP CENTER 24 hr I lot Line &tS-~ Abroxas Massoge 10 AM-12 PM 7 days p/wk. 173J r-~ullertonA ve,CM .... 631·1184 •• WITNESSES ·SOUGHT SEEKING P ERSONS WHO RODE ON TIJE •·SEA HOR S 1':" SPO RTFl S HINU VESSEL OUT OF DANA <POINT) WHAR1'' ON WHALE WATCH ING C RUIS E LINCOLN'!:: BIRTHDAY, FEB. J2. 1973. ALSO SEEKING persom who were aboard .. Sea H o r s e " for whal< wutching or spor'\!1shlni:. within several days ot Part time, 3-4 days per wk. Mainl exp. Heating- a ir c ond -plumbin g · minor e l,ecl-sprinklc rs. llave lools1trans Bill 536·129.J Help W Gt1ted 7100 ••••••••••••••••••••••• A Beller Temp Pos1lion URGENTLY NEEDED * R~ceptionists •Sr. Typists *Secretaries •lookbepen *Keypunch Oprs •r•x operators • Interim Personnel Service · ~.I 7581 lnine Bl•d Suite I I 5 Tustin 838·5460 Equal Oppor. Employer l.t,IST male German sb~p. Vic. Bolsa Chica & Edinger. H.B. Reward. 840-1066 the above dale. ---------• Investigator for man in Los'l : Pearl & Pers ian jurt:d on the boot will ac 't14rquoise Hing. Gold ccpl collect calls. Cal i.ehing. Vic : Mi Casa. Charles Curtis at (21Jl CM. Sentimental value. _966_._·1_7_36_·_.-""------ ACCOUNTING SR.COST ACCOUNTANT AUTO. Mechanic Cenerul mechanic lor new car dealership w1Lh expcrienct! & class ··1\ .. lice nse. 40 Hour work week w1lh xlnt. pay plan. \•acat1 ons , 1nsu1 antt·. C'lc A:.k lor Darrell Sickle. Ser\'1ce Manager Roy Carver, Inc. Rolls Ro) 1·e ' BMW :i:l4 E . l 7l.h St. <.:o~la M csa 54ti-4444 Aulo Parts Bookkeeper Experienced CaJ~~~l~s We pay lopwageb Excellent co. benefits including co. paid he:Hllh ins & life ms for our employees. PACIFICA BY KIPPER YACHTS 928 W. I 7Lh Street Costa Mesa wanted. 1-'ull time. l":x-1----------peri c n c e. Could use woman under 50 Apply in person. Hub Auto Supp· ly 2120 Harbor Co::.ta l\t cs a. 646·24&-i AUTO parts·countc r s ale:.man wanted F\Jll llml! & exp·d re<1u1red . Apply in person. Hub l\uto Suppl y, 2 120 Har bor, Cost a Mesa. BOAT BUILDERS Westsa1I Corporation ·,Ha!> Vacancies For. loat Mechanics Gelcoot T outhup Marine Electridans Boot Carpenters Applicants should have own tools & transp. Xlnt ----------1 co. benefits & top wages. AVON Let The Kids Do The Housework This Summer Apply To Security Guard 275 McCormick, C. Mesa lo at C arpet'ltlft"S Must have extensive ex· If ca Ith & Family <..:.ire Agency Call for appointment 7 14 /7 52-0'J'J2 Equal Oppor. Employer COOK. Apply in person. :i-4 p.m. 1262S.E. Bris lol, Costa M~a. Cook qualified to work seafood dinner house. DRAFTSMAN ENGINEERING Pleasant office. top pay tor experienced ura(ts man. RA UB. e t 1N. & FROST ASSOC 1401 (Jua1I, N.B. 833-0070 Ages 12·16. Earn $20·$40 per· week . getting new subscribers to the DAILY PILOT afte r school and Saturdays. No d e l i v e r ies or co llec t in g ... Transportation furnished. Huntington ' Beach-Fountain Valley areas, call .· 840-1Z70 Equal Opportunity E mployer . . 4!M·3050 DRAFTSMAN/ DESIGNER Exper't.J an all phu:.l'., of yJcht l·on~t ruct1on. bill -ot mat"I, mcch<Jn1cal & Help Wanted 7100 Help Wanted 7100 COOKS dectncal systern:.. rigs, ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••" Expcr . onl.v for busy t•of-deck hard\\ar<: rl'r(d by llOUS ECLEANlNG • ... fee shop. Must know egg ex pandin i.: n ·ui:.ang GENERALOFACE Serv. Mature. Bondal>le & broiler work. llend1ts . yacht builder P time 2 day:. wk. Over women wanted NOW~ Ap ply 1n person, )'ton Call Hoh l'uok 30. Ask for Terry or t\45-5123 th ru l''r1. betwn 2 & 4pm. Down t:.:asl Yachl:. llerk. t;7J.4700 _ __ ---+---- 2278 Newpurt Ul vd , CM 700 E . I\ I ton. S. Ana llousekceper /&bysiller Ask for office GIRL FR I 0 1\ Y needed Eng. Speaking, 35 to sp --979-6850 fur Yacht Broker. Ty1>· yrs. Female. Live in or C 0 UN T ER G i r I , DRAPERY 1ng. good bkkpng, outgo-oul. Sep a rate livin-g. <lrycleaning p/l. Mature. ang personality nccess. quarters. 644-8009. 17 yrs or ovr. &14-6113. WORKROOM 67:i·9360 AM OnJy. 644 ''512 Expcr 'd tablers & ----HOUSE PL" .. ,... _._.,_ machi ne oprs. Beac h !JOOU GRlEF MANAGER ... DECORATING Drapery, 900 W. 17th St. Clll\RLIE HHOWN Must have experien~. CONSULTANT Costa Mesa. 540-64&1 I\ N 0 T II E R HE ,\ I. P lant lest given. &16-392.s • ---,,.. ---EST1\TE ask for Raul. f,xp 'd sales person for Elderly Lady nt.'WS com OFl-'ICE ---------- retail sales of wallpaper, panion. Live an 2 days I need a n even dm:cn. Housewives & Mothe~ ~a rpets, drapes_. ~tc. perweck 830--9681 plu-. five young , ex · ea rn S20-S40 se ll ing Salary + comm1 ss1on. -----E 1rovcrled. aggn·ss1vc. Beeline ~ash1ons voe Apply al THE COLOR ELECTRON l<.:S mun<'y motivated. work. Up to~ in free CO., 91 22 Adams Ave., ASSEMBLERS d1vortcd/separaled , lull samples. Call aft f>, _!!..8. AND' Lime . nt•w or used 9t>3-235J,963·7470 ~ Deli He lp, 21 or ovr. Musl OPERATORS salespersons Our offices ---- have cash reg1s. exper . Openings <1vail on Isl & are :.tratt!~:t<'ully located llSKPR. f /t1me, live· Sales &/or wait ress ex-i nd shifts an processin1:. throu~houL t-:UsC Orange in/out. Neal, mature, re· per h elpful. F /llme, & assembly. Will train Lo Counly: Irvine. Tui.un lia . adult. No s moke. perm . Call aft 1oam, work 1n clean r oom ll1lls. T u!)lln. /\nahc1m ~2·348 __ 1 _____ _ 675-3407. w /m1crosc•opc~. Bonding Hills &. ~o C:ua~L l'l.t7a Ideal Summer Job penence along with the Oehvery m en ovr 21 perm Gel out & meet people, <tbihty & desire to do pit early mom LA Times add new interest. earn cus tom quality work. de hv to NB homes. $<!Z> & soldering. \and would you behcH~ STOCK ROOM Chino1 ;ind no" 1ls time c LERI< lo move in on the baggies here in Fl Valley / Hunt Swmg ShJfl. Heh. 1''or show and tell money selling quality Pa c1f1c Trawler. 350 per mo. 642 ·4800. product s. Interested ? Kalmus Dr, Costa Mesa. 7112/75. Reward. 832·0242 Lynn or 675-1779. Call: 540·7041 or Zenith ---------0 EL I V E R Y I P ART - 7·1359days. Boat Repairmen TIME. Must have small * * * ·Expanding co. located in ~~~~~~~~~~l Work for the meanest car & be neat appeanng. Must be able to use call : calculator & maintain in- ventory records. WiUing to tra in nghl person. Jane Kapp Or ange County, Irvine -ma n in town. Must have Day or eves. $2.10 per hr Losl: Diamond Dinner 281.2 Serang. Mea, desires innovative Babysaltcr needed Mon· wat..erfront yacht repair + bonus + gas a I· JM MED. OPENINGS R 1 n g / Robinson • s Costa Mesa ~l Accountant. 1-'ri 6·9. 15. Sal 10-6: 15 $30 & refinis hing exper. No lowance. Ph: 536-2100 for Xlnl oppor. & benefits Jim Reddy 963-9777 Ranch Realty 18964 Broolchunt 1-"ountain Valley ( Part·T1me Hou.rs) Work 4 hrs a day in our new cool ofe across fro~ O.C. Airport & ear1;1 $1()(1 + pt•r wk. The wor\Q is fun & perfectly suits people who enjoy pulti~ their verbal capabilities to work. Permanent posi· lions avail. Students, h o u s e w i v c s • '8:"' moonlighters are welcom~. Call for more inio & personal intervw, Time Lile Books. 833-8098 f!as hion ISi. Sal 7 /12 You are the wmner of Position req·s complete per wk. 54_9_·_1264______ losers please! Blackie"s _i_n_le_r_v_ie_w_. ~M_r_._R_a.:..y_. __ Apply In Person Re ward. 645'5291 TWO FREE TICKETS knowledge of Burden & Babysitter lo take over _Bo_a_t_Y_a_r_d_. 5_7_3-6834 ____ Den la I assist a nt. ex-FRONTIER, INC ~:-Female lnsh Set ($13.SO VALUE) G&Aforecastmg,1>.0 .D. careofchildren&house I kk p e r1cnccd . Lagun a 2955 No.AirwayA\·e la\","Lady".Approx.112 RinCJlilMJBros.. conlracl6&atleast5yrs while molhcr wo rks . 00 eeper BeaC'h. Exray license Costa Mesa fh, vie. Euclid/Slater, I & Boil-exper. in cost accounting Li ve in. Must be 18 or IOI IUR ..... S ne<'l'!>!>ary. 494·97J7. _Equal Op~r-E~ployer f:'l, 962-5444 a~":' ~Y preferably in manuf. All over & have ~ood rcb " ------Exec. Secretary • 1rcm others need not apply. Call675·9441AM. RESTAURANT Dental Assis t, exper 'd Expanding Newport 14d·Ma le Samoyed. All July :u st to Aug 12th Salary open. ------37 Foshion Island c hairs1dc . N.li. area. Beal' h Fi rm n eeds ~ ~dy. Blind·right eye. Anaheim Convention Dabys1ller for 3 yr oltl Call 644·0595 ~ Friend-548-5600 Center, 800 W. Katclla c 0 m p 1 el e r esum e boy. Overni~hl al time1:1. ----versa tale career mmded Tickets may be ex· w /dat.es Refs req'd. 673-.8392. Apply In Person DENTAL ASS(STANT, individual to provide ~T: Blk female min. c hanned for reser ved & 1 h. d ---Tues&Wed.2·5PM. ex p ·d c h a)rstdc, en· secretarial support to 3 --------- GUARDS · lmmed. employment, (/time, p /l1 me. Inside work. Work any shift. Uniforms furn. Newporl Beach, Costa .M~sa & Anaheim arnas. Age 2! or ovr. Un1wrsal, 1226 W. 5th Sl . Sanlu Ana Equal Oppor. Employi?r Insurance Agency Girl Commercial Lines. Up- dcrwriling & Rating. J1x. per . neccss. Sal open. Health & retire menl plan. Fr ed S . James, 494-1087 or 549-3058. (Ask for Mrs. Bradley.) P-O odle, Vi c. Not · " h Co . sa ary istoryreq·: BABYSITTER n eeded thus1ast1c.Call548-8844. corporate executives. 3 GU•RDS ~ I fr seal!> al t e nvenuon f IOOKK~ER d · · "' l glham & Westc 1 . Center ahead of time. CO ..... TROLLER 1mmcd. or 2 chi)dren 10 m--yrs a m101stral1ve ex NOW lllRlNG ~ I"( . Reward. 642-8833 call 642.5678, ext 333 lo " & 8 . Hrs. 10·5:30, Green PART TIME DENTAL per. Using good typing & Ex p e r · d f /lime i 0 • • 1 m 0 r kets Classified ad 00436 tree Homes in Irvine. Ortho Assist., Chairside. s h o r l hand <S k i 11 s. du st r i a I sec u r 1 t y L.(2ST: Please relurn my c a1 Y uric . c /0DajlyP1lot 552·1692 Approx. 24 hrs. per wk. Expanded duties. Full or Initiative a nd organiza· Guards. Uniform & peppy, male sable & wht * * * Keep books lhru trial p/lime . 552.1800 tion arc musts. Call eqwp. provided. Co. paid ciJhe. Vic. College Park - . . h P.O'.Boxl560 B ar t e nd er. f e m . & balance. An exp'd . ---------642-75ll ext.3. & I b f.l <zM . 7 /2. 556·3837 or A_m eri ca n Dish was er Costa Mesa, Ca 92626 Waitress . 642-8361. Little person wanting a gd. pt. DENTAL ASSIST. -ans . ~ nt e ne a s . . 646-0539 (ask for April) i:;peaks fluent Englis h Equal Oppor. Employer Big 0 , 1943 Placentia. lime Job is who we are Periodontist needs ,ex-EXEC. SECTY Challeng-4 12PM s hift & 12PM· • will at·eopt employment CM lookin" for. Gd. steady ing career opportunity 81\M shift. Send resume IRVINE PERSONNEI:. SERVICESG-AGENCY- 488 E. 17lh (l\llrvine) / Suite 224 <.:osta Mesa Call 642-1470 ' • T.. nJ Co -,., per'd f/llme assistant. t J> o B 2630 JAN,: Fe m . Irish Setler & an IJUiln;. o Y· nWld ----jol.J. Apply at · l\MA for antell1genl, motivat 0 · ox • nfllle Silky Terrier. Nr. TV John . Costa Mcs.t, Ca Accountant Bl-:1\UTICIAN for mN\s Enlo(tntri!rrng co., 1895 I:;xpanded duties oppor. ed, organized individual. Newporl Ucal·h. Ca . ---- Goldeowest & Slater. 92627 PayrollClert&Sr. Newpo rt Beach !lair Newport Blvd., C.M. Xray cert reqd. 842-6631 , Superior skills required. 9'l663. ,.... -----:$4 58"·.~.:,,.R37eward . 847-6592or SETH Group Bcg1~ning. Nnrmc o Materials, a Salon. Henl space. Good PH: 833·8320forappt. 11.8 . Opportunity increased --HAf R_D_R_E_S_S ___ S __ Janitpr, f/time. Apl'' ._ ;1\1 opportunity for young & - ----Den ta 1 Assistant , Ex· respons1balily. Call Vicki '"" Mesa Verde. Conv. Ho!! • I nterest e d '! Phone sub. of Celanese Corp., att racti ve g irl. Cal l BOOKK~ER h f Call6457337 661C t St C M FOUND. Female ,.._ ..... on ""'7089aft 9·""AM ~""ated ·1n Costa Mesa c A6 2 .....-per'd. 4 \.:a days. N.8 . Bus ,i44·1890 orappt. •----· en er • · · • ~ .,...... • .~ "" • • U"t • 716. F /C for s mall manut . ..co. area. Call 644-0032. -Seller. v1c Warner & h 1 --d as an o pening for a 32.40 hrs wk. Anaheim. _ Female & Male wanted Hair Dreuer L99ol Seaetcr, :,a h am . 7 /14. Lonl(S a rp •. onely,.r etire ·person with 3.tos yrs. 8e a~l1c1a n want.ed, ex· 956_9630. Dental Asslstantw/2yrs ruU&p/tlm~.ApplyKen-Expe rienced w/sQme Some. experlence 1'• ch~.M6-425ZaCl~ youngisb.nochi!dren,no Payroll exp. an a Mfg. per d only. We f urn. c hairs ide exper. for tuckyFried Chicken.693 following.Call549-181l. qui·red. Mi'sslon VieJ. problems. ref s . man Co ·lb · · r r t I A k f M p meet similar lady. Photo . WJ ll mwmum o c 1en e e. s or ag· BOYS/ GI RLS to Help growmg ofc in So. Hunt. S. Coast Hwy, Laguna HA IR STYLIST-Male. Sttrt$500mo.496-9685. FOUND·. Small g reen please. Let ·shave run. 200 em etoyees. U np· gae. 673-591 1 or961Vil67. S P o rt s Al h I e t i c Sch. Send resume to: Beach. For Established Beauty de rslai;id ng of ED Organization sell tickets Gary D. J ones, DDS,,___________ LITE liousekeepin(l 5 a • p-.r rol Vi c: Bul boa Wrileadno409,Daity Payroll C>reparatlon _& Beauty.Operator. new forSporlingEvents.$208 t002GAdams Ave,Hunt.•• Salonnr.<;>ra ngeCounly ..per wl<.Toppay.Calllt. Peninsula 673-2481. Pilot, P.O. Bo)( 1560 taxes a rp us~. Benefits tn· s h?P· 10 The. Colony. mo sulary + Bonus. Only Beach. 92646 FOOD SlltVICE Airport . RedKen Ol'lent-2PM : 644·5694 FOUND; Boys Bicycle nr ,~t4llifesa.Ca'92626 elude a Denta~pwn. Pill. h~avy Walk 110: New neat appe aring apply. WORKEll ed helpful. Call for m- Peterson Sch, vie. Reach l:Mploy.....at & Apply: Narmco, GOO W. l.1cense ok". cal B!ll. The 536-2100 ror interview DENTAL (For Relief) ~e_!. 833-0304. I•--------.. Blvd & Atlanta. Owner ,,......affcNe Vict oria, Costa Mesa . PnmeC14tHaJrfash1on Mr l'"ox OFFICEMA.HlGIR 4 Daysa week.All s hins -L I VE 1N HOUS l • mus l identify. II . 8 ••••••••••••••••••••••• _548·1144, t:.O.K 494·0078 --·-New of~ In Irvine. Great Hos pital exper. pref'd. HICKORY KEEPER Full charge ~ Police Dept. 536-5622 c:-1..--ls & p b "" IEAUTY OPERATOR Cobinet Maker oppor. 552 7$00 Apply in person. Costa adult no drinking r ~I ....__.u 7005 Account.I aya 1e, R.c.. h . Exp In ull phases of Mes a Mc m o r' a I fAbMS s m o k I n g. 0 w ri ~t-Sm. Fem. Shepherd •~"°" con.-.truction co. Call Mr <JS • s ampoo assastant. custom cabinet making. I•---------Hospital, 301 Victoria, K LraJ1$p0rl•Uon. wolic t .., Vic. Newport & l!illh ••••••••••••••••••••••• T.hom1ea , WillUun Lyon Guaranteed salary. 1'\Jll Must have refs. Gillman DISH MACMIMl C . M . A II k Cor F ood Atlent100 H°'"cwivcs' Ce re n c es reCJl.ll r e • Reward!541J.7160,PleaM IE.... Co.N.B.saa_-_3600 ____ 0f/e~~!~mHeairFasbions Cabinets. 19314 Bcuch OrlRATOI Service Supervisor . P1Ume~aleslnpleasantll 492.191oor492·2SllS HeJp! • "" AirtiM Laguna Hills 586-2'170 _B_l_v_d_. H_.B_._968-__ 31.23 ___ Heavy lifting p/Ume EOS • ~~~roMundTlnhgs dayl1mSo·.1--------• -TRAut'I Supervisor passenger <weekends &eves>. APP·1----------_,.. r . ompson. . Jo'OUND· Sm. wht·bk>ncl IU. a&v. requires minimum!•--------• Cocktail Waitresses ly In peuon, Costa Mesa . ,. , . .C03st Pla7.f. Lower Mall. ,.,,ale d olt. prt. Cocker ENJ G yrs. Tickel Counter ex· B & G•rl Bartenders Memorial Uot,,.l..al, 301 l--liillli••-• ..... -.. - Vic. Garfield & Elli.a, AG per. Musl be willing lo oys I s TIFFANYS Vlclorla, CM. Ask for ' # HOSPITAL Ha. tea-7~9 work sbl.fl.I & holidays. 10 to 14 yun o( ase. Dal· Pvl Club" Discotheque Food ServlceSu.pervlsor. GENER~L STORl lOQM PoUN D · Sm bfte Si.•mcsc ~. fem, lovah'c. 17 & ~onrovla CM 646-1175 ·-LMt: July 4. Brn/Blk • Shepherd. P1tron•toed. vr~ llarbor 1Pnnccto., Ave.. C t . R ward . sa 11&.;; ~ LOST Reward '°' amaU ttl'•Y COf katiel, Vic K~hd 4': Ediflll:'r, FV A••· t o • ·s119ray " ..,!!1237 or 631 ~·. ·--.. -' ... _, CLAS.SBSSTART Send re.umes to Ad. No. ~S·~~t .~:fi:bJ~ 1~ouy~; Forlntervlew: 675-6080 EOE. · MN~ ~wt CLlllC MONTHLY 480. Dally Pllol. P. 0 . 1 •SecNtanH 'Rrce lve, stock ~ rill or. Earn crommi.asfon Box 1560, Coela Mella, area: Ear n prd1l r~r de· Col s\udenls, p/t sL<J, de-Dlab•ather needed for T ..a h ders. Due.Jes l(lcluc.Jc us· while you lcun c a . 92626 bvenes & caatf. tnps or Uv. Eves/Sal. Car, phone eve shift. Ap ... 1 .. 9-JlAM * Yr• Ing offset printer. rACtAC ------merchandise for selling nee. Mr Lyons848-t004 t·lPM 145."17 2400 W. •ClericClll , SAN CLEMENTE ASSEMILMS Ol'W 1ubscrtptlOM. l'"or ---------•K•r,•ct.; . ; • GENERAL HOSl'11'AL TIAVB.SCHOOlS Soldenoa, mecll . os lnfo1'mation J)leas~ call Cout Hwy,N.B. •Clertcs ta4Camlnodelo6 Marts 610F;17lhSt.S. An• sembly or dnll presa ex 642·432 I ~rom San To P lace your DIS,ATCHIA 714/400-\122 5414655 ... c M 642""""' C l tm ~n lc -San Jut1n "Fast R esu lt " •rlXOprs I '•If aAu 3:30PM per rcq u . . . ........., Gra,,.eyard stun Apply P'I' Atcrcd1tcd by NAT'l'S ----Capls tnno nrea, cull $er\llce Direc:torv · -Approvedf°' Auistant Bookkeeper 495·0630 and MUSion Vh· ~ mperton, TIMPO Veteran Triunlng w/k.-ypunch knowledl(e jo El Toro nea, call ad · ···Call Now YILLOWc;.AI Temporary llclp f:st~bli.shed 1963 or ability t.o learn. s.Jary 5111·6310. 642·16 71 . 186 E. 16lh, Olit~ Mes.a 17802 Sit)' Purk, lr"lne Pln•nelal Aid Program.' commensu.ra~ w1uper. Equ<1I OppOl'. Employer NO PptJLO£!~~~ Call S4'MW Jrvane. 540-7171 bt. 122 . .&. .-.-,~ _ • .. iy._ ~. . . ' Oon'l fiVti UP Lhe Bhlp ! "l..1tl' ll In dlassltled. • hip t.O •horo retulla t M2.JITI. ..,., L.V.N. or Lic'd Pay ,.. 'reeh. Full time. J;venl • shirt. WJcods olf. AI kJ wknd reuec & oo ci I d~ys & eves. JlY·Lo ~ Home. 9811 W. Utlt : ~ SA. 531-8741 MAID, partUroe. HARBOR INN Mon: 87~ 34&1 ---- For Classlnod Ad .· ACTION 1 Call a Pally Not.. AO·V180Jl • 6'~'8'11 ' ' '- ••••• ew·~ . Sm} 126. ••••• • ,• ... ~ ing '& toll II• Ce T I I in or iving- ~ liv~­ re. rc- mok e. ob open. me nt. a mes. . <Ask Ad -. • '::.. .... { W -L . ..11 W..t.cl W.t.4 7100 ......... 1001 Wedlwct!y.Juty1e.1m *. · OA.tl.Y Pft.Of ·V 9'ftV 7100 w..w 7100......... •••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ....................... --• ................... .. .._,,,. w.w 1 100 HEAVY BRASS BED ""to Yo.a 1045 Miscd••-IOIO Mhcel••Olll •oa• M .. 1ow . • ···········•••••••••• •••••••••······-······ SAUD MAN *TELLER FULL S lZ ....... CI\ " AN1'1'D . * ~....,., ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••• .. Part 1'1me * ci.u M RE "'L EST:..TI Somecexpcr i.n i amish. 67S·S9S5after103m Bout While Sheph"rd W .._ llll...ITED ·•~· t •• • l tosuMolld •".,.""'" on'-Oln .. -v A A See hef Mike after l PARTTlMI-: v1crao-·.... .. "'" Cu.al.Om t re<auuuo o your U't<) auol . ·~ , 65 70% Comm. Su ..... rb P M. SebasU""''" Dinner lmmcd1ale opening in y -Male. :? yr~ GcnUe Wtlh s ....... , Gifl:s Nu bros& Ward ...-""" '' M o( Lar3· <"l" bl••h , ....... h1 ldre n . ""'9·489"/ T OP C ASH DOl.&-AR .. ~~ ' · . ca.., •• M,ile & Fem. wantt.."il , .. 11 prt~at.e a nd .emi-priv"te Thea~er . 140 Ave nue .... osta esa fl ee. Sav .. ~ a ... '" ,,.. " p UR day bed 640·S21.2 .... r A. p/tl " om cc& Ed t · J Pico S» Cl lngs and Loan or bank w 1 e, 2 5 •' dee P ) 9'19·5195. A I 0 i'' 0 R Y 0 ---Y-me Apply l\en L• .. · uca iooa • • n crneote. ..r .. nsw1·,.k (B~·nswi"~· JEWELRY. WA'l'CH&S, .. s ~al s bow a::Juatluin ttJc ky ftried t:h k lfe lra1nin• a nd Crin ge experience prefe rred 0 .. .. ,_..., .. 81 k 1 .... T OBJ ,...,..., ''OLD 2929 E .Coastllw ic en, benefits. Realdentlalund Salt?s Cl~r k fo r Phot o Must be wltlmg to work Blake-Collendur Co.. ac m x.,., puppy, fea\, AK E",J, v w1 s\-.nd & I equip. ~-lnSU in vestment 01)t..'nini:s for Drive-'lhr u, fl ex ible Sa tur days. 1-:xcellent Put. 1918) Pre-electric, 6 weeksold.645-5l 76 ~-\~~:l!::u~~R.~1 ~~: KeasonableS4S-OOOll_~-~?n ageria l Trnl· & ranee Broke r s a od S a les-hours.646·236'&. solar)', workmg cond1 · wiod •UP ~l c:trQ llil . KITTENS3 mo's lwht 1 TIQUt-!S.645.2200 Weber cov~red Bar-1\...Q :>ale~num. i-'/t, l)t.•1·m. fur c persons . lion~ and benefits. Call r ahoata.~y tn1sh. H~s <·alico, 1 blktwht, 2 yr kettle. Xlot. cond1taqa . '8.;.ld10 Shack, llU So. El O. QUAIL.ft.ACE SALES oupply atbnrnch. i ve b u i lt o s t or age calico, l yr t a bby. M •TTRESS $40.496-4180 C'a mino Real, !'i. ,.1• SALES p•o•ERTIES R E Sales . ~MERIC .._ ~ sp11ceii. Plays excl.!llent· 960.1290 A ...:.:.:.~~----... crn "' r · "' "'" IY-Ready to refinish. .. .... 40~~ Dottlenw • • $250.00 Phone 675·0342or NEED GOOD HOMt.: for *M .._D .... ESS* llOM- (7 LE"'DS• LEADS! SA VIMGS A " Age un.known. dou.bht SUPERVISOR I .. ) 75"'1920 ~ • 675-"""0 L'emaJe HUSKY 7 "' ~ Due to recent Increases H25SunflowcrAvc """°' ..-· mw.. •ALL SIZES* :lb e. Headboard 4¥1 f•~ MASSAGE TECH Young lady 08·214) for lcg.itlmate full tune POl>I· lion. No exper. nee. We se~d to :-.c hool, cam while you learn Apvly in person any allcrnoon or '1"'0. 2112 llarl>or Ulvll Costa Mesa. ' . lm.medi_atc openings fo'fl Re al E st ate, l'c ensed in our sales activities, we Costa Mesa Applla.ces 8010 646 ' 1623 high, toolboud 3 f~wt: ., " I s I b d Mr. Hw'zeni>a "'"' """"' ••••••••••••••••••••••• FREE .,, ......... s Priced to Mov•! rugh. Metal r ail.¥. Read.>' ""a es upervisors inthe s ales people. Wh y not ave a nee for addi· .. ,,,~...,.,., 3 YE d d · al " • • ....,. A Orange Covnt y a rea. work m the hott~t ar• ti o n n l ex peri enced ~qual Opportwuty AR ol A rrur up-546·6910 aft3::l> 833-!Hi25 &&M).8686 lo rehoilih. • $75.0v. llcavy recruiting necc~s. llunllngton Beach/Foun· salespeople. ~mployer Mii" ~g~~ f~~;i~r &25'p~:~ Tenais Membenlh1p r<>r p h 0 n e 61 S·O!UZ o.r Income & growth polcn-tain Valley. Call Phil FOR INTERVlEW ~~~~~~--1111111--•I 75r.1163 e · fvmltun 8050 sale 1m m ed. J>restige ...:6:..:.7.:..5·~9988.:..:.:..·-------. lial u o l1mlled l hr u McNamee at Village C ALL 6 7).7601 The Girls Club of La.;una ••••••••••••••••••••••• local c lub, 833-3643/ R a r e wjne. Cb ate~ua l>alary, over1<tes & com-Reid l!.:state 963-'567 offers part time position Whirlpool wa:.he r. gall ~1·7800 Lafile-Rothscbild. iza. m1ss1ons. Full Company---------to an adult w/recrea· dryer. S m os old. $350. CreatSavings on Used ... Call4.94·2482 fringe benefits program tiooal or school ex Wht.561-19170'rfield 1'\irn.,Appli.&Misc. * •IBUY** M c~h a n ic -tla l>s A ava1lable,as well asfully RECEPTIOHIST perience. Mustdnve and S . . C . Wilson's BargwnNoolc Good d . Typewnter . elec. ~., F /t1me. Willing lo work paid '76 Conference in Good telephone voice , have access to car. Tcm-EARS oldspol rerng 2 545 W. 19lhSt. C.M. use Cunut~ & 1'~rp lc grate, sc reen. wknds.Comm.w/guarn. SAN J UAN PUERTO must l ypeSO wpm,ap-porary position tr9m mons.new.~or offer. appllances,.or l wtll SeU tools$10.552-0tJOaf\6. Apply :.uoo llarbor 81 RICO for those qualified. pllcattons can be filled Aug. to Oct. Send letter Call: 493-3588 • BED, king s ize mattress, for You. _..:.:.....:...' _:.,__ _____ _ CM • INTERESTED? out at 32518 Ca m ino r · od box s prings, frame, xtra MASTERS AUCTION Moving Sale: 6 & l.2 istring ---• Call Mr. WaJker, . Capistr ano, San Juu o intr uction to Girls Kenmore Ele<'ftic Dryer. firm, stHl pckaged, $215 646-868 6 & 8 33-9625 guitars , water & snow Mech anic Wanted for at 547-7749 Capistr ano bee.ween 8:45 Club,Ll~O Temple Ter· 4 yrs old. Xlnt cond. $50. (val. $525) Queen. $195 ------skis, ski boots & a ccess; N.8 . a rc<1. 'lCla:.s A\~~~~~~~~~~ am·5 pm. r-~~~~~~~~~i~r~a~ce~·i.'ii·~·---iiiiiiiiil Call 646·5374.-' <v.al. $425). Uellvcry in GRUMDtG clocks,kitcheostuff,eLc. Smog Li e. rcq'd) Call for __ ..;;,__ ______ Sales Rep To$14K 8 RA N D N e w G . E. cl d. 6Jl -048S. MAJ ESTIC STSlEO _963_:...-6"_ 65_· ------attPL ._~t>4 aftc_r_5_P~ ~~~~~s~ Aides, mature. All RECEPTIONIST/ IMSTIT\ITIOHA.L TOOL & DIE Washe~ & Dryer & s_ide· Spanish wood table lump AMtl"M & rl'eord player. STORAGE BIN SxlOx6, Call 642-0593 Co Car + Exp + MAKER b Y • s 1 d e"'-~ f r lg · SJ(). Spanish wood end la· Older model hut plays S65. Almost new. alum n. • MECH ..... IC ---. BOOKKEEPER w/1cemaker. Must sell. ble $30. 646-4268 ll(!a ul1fully s;,o. 546-~33 :>46-43l8 • "'"" Bonus &15·6437 ev,·:-. & wk nus ·• lla rbor View Shell has anl---------•I 3.5 Yrs exper. in factory Fee Paid <M old Making Exper OCCAS. CllAIRS. new up· ----SECTlONAL. beige cost. °' P e n I n g I' o r a NURSES payroll, A /Pay, posUnt Cream of the crop seeks Also Desirable) MOV ING ! Washer: & Gas holstery. $-15. cu. U1nclle, T1ffJny La.mi>. dr<tpes & made. Xlnl cond. $.100- r(l cchanically inclinc<l m· of misc. journals. Must toprep tojointhcir suc-S.ma ll .precision tools. Dryer ,avocado,like new $25. Wed i;:c wood gas Del MJr Woven woods. Alumn. Awning, 9~ ~vidual w/a neat up· beable lo typeat lcast50 cessful tea m! Co. oCCers l!:xper. in shor1f~stam-cond.Call642·9101. range,SS0.536-~ Like new. Anxious to $125:540·8379 P;l'arancc & pll•a s111 ~ RM 's LVH's wpm. Nice personality. xlnt territory, demand pings . & p~ecis1on pro· 1 ----scll.ti-14·!J~U5. ·---~-: p.t:rso11:d1ty. Prcf,•r . Practic:al$,.AidH. S alary commenllurate products &great benefils gress1ve d ies. Able to I cycles 8020 Double bed, t·hcrry wood XEVER U:.ed Tapedcclc. r(larned. ~encf1llt incld w/exper. Xlnt co. paid including r etire ment. work independently & ••••••••••••••••••••••• fram e and uuukcasc girl"ij 3 s pd. bike. like {,11 rn1ogs in cxc~ of O r d.rties b e n e fit s . B e a c h Call Gary Hunt, 833-2700. have own tools. Small Ladies Suburban Schwinn he ad·board. Mallr/box GOING FISHING? new. b~sl offt'r. 960-1964 ~000. p/mo. paid val'a Ma nufa cturing, .Hunt. Also Fee J obs. Dennis s hop, g ood wor king 5 sp. Xlnt cond. $75. Call sprgs ind Like new. I 'S WORM FA.RM KIN<; O ' LAWN t)on s. rn s urun ce, Join a la rge profess. 8 De nn i s P e r s o n n e l conds. 837-5680 Sa crificc at $2:l5 !J61H323 OpenUa11y7AmlotiPm eplployee dtsrounlS, & nursing organiiation _c_h_._898_-_ss_1_s_. ____ s TA cos WITCH us" MOWER $.50. new in Orange Co. We Service of Irvine, 2082 'LO speed l!:uropean racer. 6' SO FA. Xlnt cond. NiteCrawlerli,Meal •556-0137 * c-o m m1ssion progr am . need all classes of nurses Recept/Sec'y Michelson Dr. IMC. Never u~cd. Best offer. Study. Neutral color. $75. Worms, Afncan Night ~t>f>ly.inRpderson. 2500San for private duty & hosp. for counseling agency. 1139 Bake r, Costa Mesa 493·14i M 830-5689. Crawlers & Rt...od Worms ELEC. Kenmore Dr)'f.h xlot cond. S8\l. 1890 Rock- ing Ch air, SlS. 6'xj~: !paquin · CdM_. __ staff r elief. Work the Lile book keeping & typ· SALESWOMAN 549-3041 --l7362 Gothard.118 t.t_ECllANlC. exn.•r. pre· area, days & shifts of ing $500 pe r mo. Hrs. p / · ...,...,... h EqualOppEmploym/f luildia9Moterials8025 F URN lT UHK Mu:.t be 'ALL &47·514l "" M Wed Fri " -t e rm. P lime~-~~~~~~~~~~!·•••••••••••••••••••••• sold! Best ofrer. lt'rrcd. Top pay, in-your choice. on. · · ~a ... o per wk. Specialty shop.= Bumboo r encing, SJ. ~­ .\' Doughboy Pool fr!Ulle SlO. lf62-ti477 . I :-.urancc, profit :.haring. BRENTWOOD • 6pm. T ues. Thurs . 12 Call 84.2·4.234 ---------.i800 r~ct of l "x 8" Cedar 9G8· 9559 eH!S ~vercst Standard manual A I l "h 11 7 th & noon to 9pm. Clll for in· :.1d1n~ T. & G. l side ---L' PPY a .., e' 1 Murse1Rf'C)istry terview 536·88>4. TRAINEES rough, l side surfaced. lirown_IJordan furniture, ty p e wri t e r c.X l ra lr\'lne, N.8 . 4500 Campus Dri ve 645_9392 aluminum w/vmyl lac· cha rat·tcrs. S25. Good JUNK WANTED -----Suite 560 Newport Beach RECEftTIOHIST SALESWOMAN ing. Lido lsle673-9l09 cond. tall 642·7320 blwn Mech. m1H. for st>rv1c:e Enjoyable rewarding W'll t . d. d bl Camera s &-------lOAM to2PM . fo r scra p metal. Toi) dollar pll id for autos O(' bodies. Also appliam."e:I, etc. bauled away free . Ed Slone. 968-:n!O · :.talion. Very Good loc. Collect ion Processing outdoor work dealing 1 l r a m epen a .e Equipm•nt 8030 DOUBLE BEO. xlnt cond. ------ ~ •n d r"s u 7 302 _,...., Mariners SaVings · h Id b 1nj e ct1on mo 1n g , 1--84 ----------- salary+. Must have exp. PIX A.nsw~· r--Apply In Person w/busioess people . Avg ~p e t~ become 1PdlB:SllC ••••••••••••••••••••••• & clean. Ma ll. spgli & * * * • ~e '-me. 14 Locations. I shifts e a r n1 n.;:s s o u e operators. Must be a·bl" B&CBARGAIN ra me.$65. 2·3234 8orbaraSt~ (k·canfront N.B. !J:_lt_i6J __ , avail. Full or p/time. 1515 Westcliff Dr, NB $200·$400 a wk for a " BULLETIN 320 L • Equal OppEmploym/( ca r e e r -m inded self to stand entire ~hilt, 1r P .. R.,l ..... GLOTS .. LE Must Sell J apanese & YIJO"ilO. Medical E.0 . E. 540-1962. · d F' necessary. Operungs on ""' " "" "' Chinese furniture. C...11 ~ewpori Beach WORK 4-40 llOURS Reproduction Moch. motivate person. 0 2nd shirt $2.29. Rruse in SAT. July 19, 10am·5 pm. 213/43l·26t>O You arcthe Winner of 26 ..,G /\ L. TA NK. fu lly ' equip. w/Diaton filter. S45. 833-2219 ' llOM l!:MAK~RS PIX OPERATOR We need .a s harp en· per son a l appt. call 60days. 2843 W • Ljn c oln , -----TWO FREE TICKETS Uf'JOHN Answe ring service ex-thusiaslic person for a 631-0454 dayl 9.5 ° Anaheim BRAND New Simmons Urgently Needs per. P /tim e. Apply 657 long term position near 960•2803 eves/wlmds.' APPLY Ne w & us ed ca meras, Bea uty rcst Quecnsizc (St 3 . 50 VALUE) Window Air Conditioner. Fedders, 25". 1200 BTU, SlOO. Call 673·5C~. .1' ~xpcrlenced W.19th St,Suite H.Costa O .C. A i rport. Gr e a t SECRETA.RYEX. OrangeCoastPlastics da r k roo m . equi p .. Box :.prg .. m a ll. & Rin9lln98ros. P4urns Mesa . 642·1403 career oppor. No Jo'ee. Newport Center. To $7 850 W.18th Street telescopes. Store wide fra me. 645·64:n BanHtm & Bait.y -P lease Call, Sandy, m o Ve r y demand1'ng Costa Mesa sale prices. . . C ircm ~ompanions · ~~~~~~~~~~ *82l-1550 • L1 v1n g R m . Scl. Top Substituta Mothtts PBX RECPT. Grayhound Personnel, employe r. 2 Girl ore. _ ___ __ --....---1 ~uali ty, New, Bt!auliful, July 31st to Aug llth "' 213/927·2]66. Need xlnt sh &typing MI NOLTA SR'T 1 M . An<1hc1m Conw nl10n HorMmakers Opp. for a person w /gd. ----1:------skills. Send Resume to TROPICAL FISH 1 lOl, :, oving. 968·tl822 Centt r. 800 W. Katclla SC HWINN 10 spd. :.1s IS SGO. ~lee. GUJlar & ca!ie. S60. 557·6156 R t t Part Ti • lenses met fl a.o;h & ac· --Housek•epers te lephone skills & ap· es auran · me Classified a<i no. 437, c/t . Mn<Jr {Trfll~ cess. $J~O. 642.144;z1 w rgl Iron Lb! w/-1 chrs. Ticke t s m ay lie ex- Car ncl'·Refs r~·d. pear ance lO handle busy COOK· Omelet exp. Daily Pilot, P. 0 . Box Fish knowledge essen-6':12.8471 ced ar chest, dresser . chan ged for r e:.erved Please Call f'or Appt PBX Boa rd & act. as Dl~~~l~ER 1560 Cos t a Mesa, Ca tlal. Call 64:?·5.522 baby furn. redwood sw seals 'al the Convention 752-0992 Recpt. in a busy com Call S40·Sl20aft2 P M. 92626 Cah 8035 ing set, chopping block Center ahead or lime. 'f} 10 E 1 pany located in Costa ••••••••••••••••••••••• 644·2902. Call 642·5ti711, ext 333 to _ _,:.qua PJ>O~P oycr Mes a . Gd. s ta r t •g. SECRET.ARY W A.ITSlS ---claim yourtickelli. ·lttc~R THNE To$10K s alary , p lus Medical RETAlL Sh & good typingabilily For exclus ive cont1ncn· ~ERSIAMKITTEHS Formal game table&. 4 * * * HARDWARE plan, including Dental MC.R TRME $800 req'd. Pleas ant N.B. ofc tal reslaurant. Ei<pcr. in Cl' A ~egisterc?· S~ow upholstered chairs. S325 --------- 1 • 0 1 J Sharp ind iv. will ap· near O C A' rt R b Class·1c Cu1··1·ne wtnes & prospec!s00• &AUi so. stud or best offer. 642-4738. ~1 "' PL L' c h es l s or Treme ndous potentia l P a n · c s · a PP Y: preciate the tremendous · · Jrpo · au · " · service .• 1 p. '' " "' fur ent husiastic indiv. Narmco. 600 W. Victoria, potential offered by this Bein, Frost & Assoc., service essenUal. Age :?8 Call 1!~2•2970 Whl 1 l undl bed dr aw c r s. $40 for w~o seek:-. to develop Costa Mesa. No phone 1401 Quail, N.B. 833--0070 to 48 pref'd . Apply, Am -----bl · spoof I 1 rbol· et &' both/sep. S25 &$20. Anlq •·ai'rccr w /c.~tab'I "O thal _c_a_ll_s..:.p_le_a_s_e_. _E_.o_._E_.__ nat'l fi rm. XJnt oppor. brosia, Rm . 211. SOS 30th KITTENS. lFA. Cameo ue ora 7s e rs milk l'an S25. Mangus " ·• '" w /all major benefits. · SECRETARY St, Balboa Peni n, NB male, lh mJl.,'an Male. coverlet. 673·~ · chord orga n ~. antq. lak~s a personal ~rest Per s on 2 1 ·40, tr n ror Call Gary Huot. 833-2700. For social service agen-s75 to $lOO. S46-996S. Gar"OC)e Saf• 8055 crock $50. antq. rockng m 1 s emp oyc.'CS. ma· mgmt. $150 wk guarn. Dennis & Dennis Person-cy. Ass ist exec. dire<:tor WAITRESSES ----••••••••••••••••••••••• chr. $45, old school dsk Jor benefits. Call &:ott Col pre r. Mr. Le v i ·nelService oflrvine,2082 in admfo. duties, PR & Cockta11Waitresscs DOCJS 8040 $25 . & lots of misc. ~awyer, 833·2700. Dennis 848-1004. Michelson Dr. fund raising. Sh & typing Walters/Bartenders •••••••••• ••••••••••••• 2 Fa""ily M is l'. Sale, 1008 548-7800 or 645-8161. & Uenn1s Pers onnel1--~-------------~---"' ~rvicc of Irvine, 2082 PEST CONTROL req'd. Call 8311-4700 for Cashier-Hostess •PET WORLD• W i n d w a r d • N U Michelson Or. Will train alert indiv. for RN-CCU a ppt. E. O. E . Full & p/time Cockers , Chihua hua, <Baycrest) 9 5· 17lh & • _.-;;.-_-__ -;.-;.-;.;;;;;; route w· o rk & sales 1·n Expe rienced Only Poodles, Shih-tzu, Mim· l8th. 646·125G. SECURITY GUARD Apply In Person · ----Ora nge Co. & Long Bch Nights,' full or p/time. Exper'd. P art time. Xlnt Mission Viejo Inn S,t:hnau7.er , Do!'-ie, Dobie. Moving! Refr·off desk· MOLD PRESS OPERATOR areas. P d group health, ()ifferential pay. Xlnt wor k ing cond. Pr iv. is742 o so Parkway I it Bulls ,_ Coc kap?0 · s let eo-pw mower & vac, p ro(it s haring. benefits. Contact Mrs. b e a c h c o mmunity. Mission Viejo S~loumd . s1_ovos mmix05edl pbupcpi~s. edg.e r -typowriler -new Uniforms « truck furn. Ba le st r e ri, 642-2734. 492·3938 or 496-9128 No Phone Calls Please .,., W 7 h . t F . r ~ s. s tainless s teel 10 pc Sal. based on how much C o s t a M em o r i a l -~25 .1 ta airview. c ookware -bi ke l'rt b work you do. can Mr. Hospital. 301 Viclon<.1, SECURITY $100-$250 weekl y. stuffing _SA. Opel_! eves. 531-5027. 557-2679 To operat e tra.nsrcr_& in· Price for appt., 9-12AM, C.M. EOE. OFFICER envelopes , 1 hr dally . UASS ET HOUND M I 9 -jcct1on mold eqwpment 546·557:?. \~~~~~~~~~~ Leading N .B. hotel. Ex· Rush stam ped ~l'lf atl AKC a~t Furn. clothing. toys. fo r fa bricating small larden'sPest per. pref'd. Call Dick, dr ess..e d e n velO Pt' m~s. 'papers. . misc. f'ri/Sal 10-4. 1525 The fastest draw in the West. . .a l.>aily Pilot Cla ssifie d A<I . .Phone 642·56711. -------1 -----· 1/2 Off! Regular prices on furn. a p pli a n ce:.. books . clolhing & misc. USED USABLE.')· 25tiO Newport. Bl. t:M. 10 AM. TOS·JO PM. l!:nds Friday 7 18/i5 _ SCRAM-lETS ANSWERS Nipple -Truly - Piece -Sticky -- SUPPL Y Muggers h v.: by lhe laa4' of sup ply and demand-.. They dt:m <t nd and yo11 SUPPLY . prec1sion sw1tch compo· C _..__. arter 7pm , 644-1700. ~nnon &ru.:.0e1atc!> w!godld & brown spo36Ls. SantanellaCDM 67~ lS S II ho W II 0~ RN St t C JI Bl d• Fine og. $l OO. &W-57 -ncn . ma s p. I 696 Ra ndolphAve,C.M. E.0 .E. a e . o cl(~ v). --. ' ELEC. Film S plicer, ttam. EMERG&ICY . _a e1m._Ca !01()tH D1 > •Al'TENTIONP~. Elec. Slide Projector, STACOSWITCH, IMC PET SHOP/MGR · SlJE~eY/fi~K..::·s.Jtfot WHO WANTSTOWOllK" t!°ardin~ : Gn;m1~f' Clothing, etc. 19921 Le:\.· For Clft A.d in Wa.ntn's Wortd 1139 Baker.CostaMesa Must have someexpr. To rotat e shifts(PRN)in typ ~-80 .Po~ti n g' ORIVE ACAU! . pree,p1c lu~~ e ingtonLn.H.B.t'ri.7/18· Cal Sue 642-5678. bt. 330 549-3041 CALL 642-5.522 small dept (lo cover ill · t e I e p h o.n e. a cc l ~ CHOOSE your hours, _ups or sa e. . -~o~7 /21_. ----- Equal Opp. Employ m /f I---------ness & vacations). Ex· pay / r ec. N ewporl work Cor yourself. be A~C Wire haired Fox Tcr· DEC 0 R I t e rn s L . Photo Lab Printer per. pref'd. Contact Don· Beach. Call 673-4850. your own . boss. Men or rier Puppies. $125. (714) Mowers •. Toys, Etc'. Sal *** W AMTEi> na Roache, lt.N. Costa Wome~. Can be :.llAhlly 992·52 19. • July 19 !l lo s PM. 18762 P rofessional Blk/Whl M e sa M e m o r ia l SECTYEXEC. hand1cappt:'d . Neat S·gi a' (T r tl •rock) P hoto Lab. Tech. Must Hospital,642.2734.EOE. Rea l E s t ate Develop· Cl ean /\p peara nct?. S1lkyTer r1e r.MaJe.AKC. 1 3 . n w u c Mrs. I . Tuttle 1539 SyM a Lane, Newport leach 'You a re the winner of °Two FREE TICKETS <$13.50 VALUE) have recent custom print menL F'irm. 1 Secty of· Vets .. retired. Age 25 tul 3 Mos . AKC. BestAffer or r vme. e.xper. No trainees. MPS (ice. Bayfront. Min. 3 yrs 70. Supplement ynur in-trade. ~2·8~7. __ NEUT R AL Comfy pr. Photogra phic Services . RM'sj1CU expcr. Accurate. fast. come. Urive a ca h 6 hrs DARLING Oalmalians ti Club chrs. & malch'g. ol· 545·9450. Full, p/t 11·7 typing, s horthand, die-or more a duy. ~pply. in wks old Purebred. $25 lo Loman. $100. 673-W7 Rin9tl1MJ lros. Barnum & loitey C ircus July 31st to Aug 12th Anaheim Convention Center, 800 W. Kat.ella Plumbing. Drain k Sewer men wanted. Will train. Must have own truck & hand tools. 558·7381. PktMber. a.pair Full time. 5 yr min. ex· per:. 536-145:? .• Tic ke ts m ay be' e x - 'hanged for reserved sealS at the Conventio111-_.::.1-------- Centcr ahe ad or time. P/time Ma n or woma n Call 642-5678, ext 333 t w /car to instruct dept. claim your tickets. store personnel 3 hrs a * * * day. 642-4391. ---Help Wante d 7 t 00 Help W ..tect 7100 • •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• MGMT. w ANTED! MANAGEMENT -. Opportunities available in Santa Ana, Newport ,eeach, Southern Orange County area. Must be at least 23 years of age, previous r etail ex pe rien ce h elpful b ut n ot necessary. Pay range for manager "beginning at $750 per month for a 6 day work wee k. for usistant at $650. Full range ol co~~any paid :~ .,benefits, paid formal trammg. CLERKS-»art time opportunities available .. for F riday ·and Sunday work. · Med /Sw'Q t t ' h k 'll person. Yt•llow Cal> C.:o.. • 7 .J weekenJs st2.3~f1 m a c . s ·i s. 186 E. llilh SL . Costa $35.Call 960·l2'12. SMASHING Gar. Sale! W d .............. Mesa. •Siiky Terrien*" Ueds, sofas , box sprgs. & ar __... SEC'Y RECEPT ---AK'' 557-2821 mall's. Ping-pong i:ame, SAN CL EMENTF. • WILL pay a gentle person '"' swing set , clothes, like GENERAL HOSPITAL To $600 to care fo r nirc hou~e ITALIAN Greyhou nd , new; men's,' women's & 496·1122ext214 Hours 12-9PM or P/t 'til Cal. m your home. 111 AKC. male, 9 mos. Gd. children's. Everything 9PM or wknds. 3 yrs exp also buy food. 548-0169 disposit ion, handsome. goes! Tues. Wed, Thurs. *RM's* req'd. Animal hospital, S36·32A!:laft.S 3096 B a li Cir., CM •Intensive Card iac N .B. Write to Classified •WIMDOWTIMTIMG 545-6981 Care. •Medical & Surg. ad no. 441, c/o Daily INSTALLER .~.SILKYTERRJER ------ Floor . •Pediatrics ,, Pilot,POBoxlS60,C05t.a Expe r . pref'd or will 3 mo.old$35. Garage & Yard Sale. Obsletics-Laboc/Del. Mesa. Ca. 92626 tra in. S tart $2.50 hr. 646·19-19afl5::l> C h u r c h g r oup . 0 Soon Ha1seli t o $4.50 within 1 S o m e l h • n It f o r · pening Ser". ice St~. Al~endant, yr. Beg. sa t. accordin& to Germ a n s h e p her d. Eve ryone! fo'n-Sa t. 459 Defin1tiveO!:JServalion p /tl ~e. Expcr d only. exper. Must be ovr 21. purebred , AKC reg. flowl.'r,<.:M Umt Avail eves & wknds. lall&ncnl G44-84S4 Good home a m~<>I.\ Call ------P e.r m a n e.nt , rull & Ne at appear . & ___ · 963-3933~ ESTATE SALE. Thurs, p/time positions. We of· handwriting. Apply 2590 WOMEN ·s t'ilShlon Sales Fri & Sal. Anuque bed • Cer t~p sat, bcnefilS & Newport Blvd. CM a n d / 0 r s a I e s West Highland Terrier pressback. chair, dining working conds. Ap~ly . Stock/Alterations. Exp'd Pups. All mates. ~C. 5 or game set. Opemus Westminster Community Service Sta. Salesman. pref'd Min 4 days lncldi: wk s, C h a 11' p I 1 n e . enla rt;ter $-10 ot bst ofr. Ho.spita.l, 200 Hospital Cr, E~es .• g~ ~ay, benefits. Sat. Good ~enumeration l -734·SOM. Much more. 751-4432. w. es tminst.er . 893·•541. M1ss1on Viejo. ~1795 + employer .-. .. id health 1847 lowa. Mesa Verde. EOE ,,_ Beaut:· CoJlle, sable & --------- ---------Servic e Sta tion Allen· ins. wrute, geo.Ue 5 m<J6. rem . HorHs 1060 dant. exper'd. Day Write ad no408. Dally AKC,.ahots. 5:54-5479. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ROBIMSOM'S Fashion Island eves. Fu II & p/lime. App· Pilot. P .0 . Box 1500 Quarterhorse/ Appaloosa Jy Shell Station, 17th Costa Mesa . Ct 92626 Fne to You 1045 Geldin&. Gd. show poten· l""in" N B ••••••••••••••••••••••• t al 5 vrs old Tack ..L_,., • • "'• • · Young mun to work in . d i 1 · 'bl 1 · " · ,:n~ .. Sitter wanted: My bom ft owing tool rental busi· TLC necde · rresisli e saddle , tack nn avail . Dana Pl., Light hseworlc. ncss. Musi. be neat in a p· kittens, 6 weeks. 673·0835 49'&-6008Shnwn. 9178 8 J8 MeMt1lf~f .... Hus Opening In: FINE J EWIUtY DB'T. 496-3302or S81'* ~ea r . & ve ry ne at *fr* MJ>rgan Fill[;, 4 yrs .• and•ur1't1'n" 6 Uay wk MA"11I011.• 'ro\lnd tcru'1\ 01· .. "' · M"· G ... tca.. Wn beaut. co nr rmation, tr..,ot b(lnnd -l.--.r1 1u111c Student-maleod ern. Prefer m arried man for g ti M st. sell Value w1u. 11..,1.a or w .. iu e111r1rort1 R e ll a • p c r a o n t perm. resp. position. F.x· I 1421 ~ en e u · dr_.., ov•r 11<1ntJ1, 100• .. .,,,,t'rt i ( l 'd ... I H-ta....-._.. . $950. Make ofr. 558-1818. fM C!OUOft cll•ekll. 11•11" s up e r v so I W m por . not rcq . n PP Y -· ...,,._.-... l'rlnt•d ratt.-rn U?R: bascbnll.et~) af\ef'scbool m or ns 1930 Newpor t You are the winner of Hout.a.old Good& 1065 Mia.ea' RllH a. 10. 12, u. a. activily,2boysates4& Blvd,C.M. TWOFIEETICKETS ••••••••••••••••••••••• 11 81•11 <~.c.1of'!lnl6Utt Moo thr u 1''ri. 2.PM·7PM • .._.._ .. _ ... u (Sl3.50 V ALUt.:) Can celled Contrad 2000 ,,~ JdJI. 01nok tobtlc . Hunt. Jtarbo\ll' area. ~-.. d t bel 'll ~SI'° ror e•<ll paumi.' Experience Neces.'lary . Apply PersOMel Office Minimum 20 hours a week available at $2.25 per hour in your own local neighbor hood , wor~ln g bo th evenlnP and mornlnga. I()'OU are mature, at least 20 years Of aae, In need of extr a spendin& money, have a valid driver's license and car, we can put you to work. 840·12M eves ••••••••••••••••••••••• R:::J.... )' S carpe OW OU Md IS~ tor t e(t\ pellf!fft __:;_ ____ . ---.-f .lr..~t 1005 IM SM• ....._,. cotl. install. 541-8729 fer l\nt-<h• 111eJI _, ~P9(i•I .._...,_. -_,. .. u c\111'1: elherwt1e tlllrd· II~~~~~~~~~~ T EL E PHONE SALES. ........................ . c are. Jewelry 1070 riau lkUYtr)' w111 t~IU! thrN Experienced prefe . ......t. SUMMR "7S J"lu 315,toA•""•"""' ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~t ortneN...,..to M•ri•n .,._ b • ·,~ v y • -""' Mer\111, 441, Ult Dally Pilot. 10:30•12:30 Mon-Fri No. 2 Fashion lsland, NB Equal Opportunity £to ploye.r 11(/F UH1ltl .-rn u muc al)'OUua ANTlQUE S H OW ~ Anahein>Conventloo WANTED '-""'11Dttt..m Wutlllll DAtLYlifLOT by talk.in& to peoplo al SALE! t'leaMarlletJul)' Ceoter,800 W.Katella ' ~.,.....Yo.,-, MY. HJOH. ..,.._ST over Soul.hem Ol'an• ""'. 9 am--4 pm. Santa An• Tickets ma" be ex• To.f> CASH DOLLAR Print NAJIUt.ADDtU~:S.' 7.IP, "" "'-·-t .1.. -I » 0 R y 0 u R SIH •IMI S'fYt.K l'UKHR .....-nt)' rom an -con Municipal Stadhun, c h1n1ed for reserved P A ID r ONKl"ltBt:PATTttNofyow IBULT"' d ltione d office. Tw w. Civic Ce,nter Dr. S.A. ieall •t tho CoovenU JEWELRY, WATCH&S, ~1ol!Mld lor.~tt.p•l· SllYICI 1hlfts·l01m to l Pn\ O Adm. Sl.00. Over 100 Ell· Cenler ahead of time. ART OBJECl'S GOU>, Wnl lnet .. lllt:Yt SPRING· MICTOIY $pm to 8pm. Monday lubJLI Portion of pro-Call 64.2·541&. ext 333 'S I LV ER SERVl CE , ~T~r •• ~~~1~1~ ... Quilt Embroitln y: · Bring a Callfom la Drivers License, social s ecurity card, (all vets DD214) and call ,_.1 _.. lhrouah Friday.Apply at ceed~ t o ,\rt1f1 cial clahnyourticket.t. • F I NE l'U RN It AN· t,...,_lWT'ft~·s.&0.'k ~-•-:-"""'c• 250 E. l 'lth St. ·Costa Kidney Found o( Calif * • • 1'1QUES. e.u-m> ~ ..... saw + KNIT......-.... 1111 _.......,.. Mes a . or call Tony DUWllasvtJ*\ttn st n 64Z..1611 .~.122 Scimia at 64Ml00. Rare Chtoeao s mall en ANGORA llAMSTER M•w • Db 1MI tnttant faattion&olc ·•• auo ••·---------·• graved bron10 urn rrom w/l storyca.fe. $54·~ al\tr4 P M. IMtalll$t•ll\t'*1l ... 11.00 To P l ace Your "Fast R esult .. S e r v i ce DJtec:lod 1a ..... bM MW. IMl·srrl. ext. m[ T.a.phoM s.ln Ming Tombs. Also. pr CaUs.45-3339 P (J'lme evca le Sat AM . Engll&h L4Xll picture$ "" Beautiful D\amond Rina. 16 & over. APl>b'. l~ 1870 w /o r lg . a ntlq. P ree· Pupple•, parl S-10 pl. 11UM . ltK p ld J awon. 111dw City. gold*•' frames. Spltcl.al Bauet . 1"12 .. S•nta sctUng. shown by a ppl. Aft.er4pm.SeeDave. prtce to sell. ~l-3380 $aunne, l".Vb'.en•11. ontr . s.a&-5018. i l • ' I • .. . . • • • • • . ; t • • i • • r I \ • ' I I t I I I ' ~ -' Weane~oay, July 18, 1075 loeh, Soil 9060 lo•. Spud Ir TNCka 9160 ·'· •. c=t • • • • • • • • • • • • •• •••• • • ••• Sid 9010 • • • •• • • • • • • • • ••• •• • • •• • • • • · W ;;..!'om 8 riCM01 Ir Orci-s 8090 locrh. Malate..c.;{ Salu...--£' ••••••••••••••••••••••• >..toa. •-~ A.ltot, IM-..&a..1 >..tto1. Imported ...... llWQ 081 •• •••• • • • • • • ••••• • • •• •• SerYlc• 020 IUU9I' -....... ._ ~ • ._ "• .... ••••••••••••••••••• Herreshorr American 18 ft. Mandella Style Ski · ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••· •• :$$CASH $$FOR WU RLITZE R cuni.oll' •••••••••••••••••••••~ Engle, 22 (l. WLW, 26 rt. Boat. 283 Veu.e eni. V .. ,.000'S8FOR0DPJOCUP. AffelOMM 9705 "9tTori 9723 SOGb 9760· ,:&uodw.edrurn•rdn1it1> untq wht lhc•1trcor~a11 BOATCARE overall Bwll by Nowak drive, sgle axle tr. Very it' k m 1ea 00 1 e~ne. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••"•••••••••••••• ·~trs/i.toHi:. Mt. 07tiH 2 5 ,I'':' d Mui. t .s J l' 1\1 A I NT A I N . Cl.. EAN & W11h&ms . 714/546.7172; Clean $1200. 64'·5'798, ra ea, l ru, c Uku ex AH R •'68 330 GTS V·12, new SAAB -.. :-!>-10 34ti5 WATCll. Art S PM & Wknd lS 548·7482 cet1;g:4 ~ tirm. Call G Oft1eO t.op. brakes, tuned, perf. 'll'lU\tcd lll'W or u.st'UTtto·~ .. 5 -T-•631-1712 • 714/675·2644 S36· • erS:OOP.M. DeMO ong.SlS,500.646-5398 DEMO ~eq;l11.s .... t"111uc :&JJ ••" ri ... non ---T -..-Ai-. TRUCK &CAMPER $&LE s•LE '1-ox 11 11,, • It 'c.; .. 11 Keyboard Organ a.s 'l'Cn loah, MariM SCHOCK SABOT. xlnl r••r= . ....--"' Ffat 9725 M · .. L w h _,a d Gd . ••••••••••••••••••••••• ·s1 Chev ~Pickup V-8 • dr 2943 or ~tl(.i ~I~ ,on awrcnce elk:-OW E.,-pment 9010 COrl • racm& record. c s• . . . Priced Crom •••••••••••••••••••••• Price rom !168 3555 tlAM 673 0336afl6PM ... rs I l spd, new valvu. clutch, Oll•ll.ll'!.11. cou........v·s $4190 .. .. · ••••••••••••••••••••••• """". · · l ' 9120 Crontenc:l,shocka.Helwl& $6799 """w'" "'' ~V t·.i~h rur untiquc ur 5-----Mt t41WIST Ir LAJtGEST ~le lbt t'IH..,, Jbu µat10 portin'J Goodl 8074 J HP Evinrude 0 /0 10' Lido ~4 for sale, cover & ••••••••••••••••••••••• overload sprlng1. 8 ' (117502 ) (#5402) ~chrs. 4!.I~ 11~1 ....................... Cluspar dinghy ~ trlr included. Flotation ·n Weekender Camper. ~vc~~~~!~t~:=~. J~ leach lllllMWll l~file~'}t.f leach lmporh ,;;--POOL T /\ HLE. Small, $i 95 213.592.1742' mp. tanks. No. 2612. $1250 or S/C, xlnt conct. Xtrus. '·&ttery ayst•m. $1200. •uo Do~·-r-All Models ··Colors 84ij Dove ~tsl Buy U:-.1.'d t-:ll-dnc ~lurdy, easy to stort", · offer. 675·4621 84Hl250 (4.7 p.m.) u "' -ve °' ~1cunn~ Math1n1.·s. w /cus tom made vin> I 772·0641 aft. 6 <Anaheim> at MacArthur .Dick Miller ·Motors at MacArthur ;,: <.:ul197!17!152 t·o vur . <;11 ro nd SWORDFISHPLAHK ISLANDEd~:KIM.KI~ 8' clb-0ver <Hideaway) '73 Toyot• HILuv &Ja7m5boree.N.B. r:IJDEl'U &Ja7·m52b·o0ree90.0N.B . ..... 50/ ff IM~·· .. or•) ll Wooden zs n• Avon , r a 10, cruise camper , must sell, make .. " 2 OtoO ' a.1....-• I ""'"· o er."'"""'"" ·1 • .. · Ct A 1 w/Cam~er Shell xlnt • .,...ca 5 or wknds Good cood. eqwp. can. slea at reas offer. 846-0720 • • .. ttruments 8083 ----·-REASONABLE. $19.900. OHer, owner, co n,~. xlraal Mu&l 1974 ALFA Romeo . '72 SAAB 99 •)e •• ••••••••••••••••• KNEISSEL Skis, :.!05 Hed Call 60·7744 uft 7 PM. 645·6680 73 VW rop Top camper .sell .. $2450 or beat offer. S pyder, blue, 12,000 120 ~. Wa.rner • ~ ~fa~O;'I. :-.1; Standard Star. S20, Surfboard ------Tent,a1r,e~ec.frlg,dual 675·4595. miles. AM /FM, x lnl dtSo.Ma1~:>7·2132 -4 Doo r . a uto matic"· e~. ~u1t.1r. told m1xJl'l1 Swallo\\lJtl, 6 :! Sl5 Boats, Power 9040 ~lum b1a 34, load~ for batt. awning, s tereo. '70 Chev ~ Ton V8 cond, must sell. S49·S434 Santa Ana transmission, air t'On«U-· w'2 C.il>:.un :.p ptl'.kups 6461729 ••••••••••••••••••••••• c ru1s 1ng, cstm. 1nt., 30,000ml.Perfect.$5,900. 3 d ${SOO B ·1 C • or (213 )598·613l lioning.radio,v1nylrool.., ~ rn?·· · (rple , tv, stereo. P.P. S85·S702/6'73·6971 .s/61· o& at 0 r. 1973 AAT 918·HSF. -Alomtc Skis. 200, nt.'\\ S60 18 ' 9U II p . o utboard 714-898-2970eves. 64 · 1 833-9914. MW 9712 '1 Alll'C I:!, 10 rabtnel. Wilson Tennts racquets. l'rwscr. (1bergJass over MotorcycS.s/ -;-56 GMC i i. ..... 347 v a ••••••••••••••••••••••• 124 Sport Coupe $2799 Musl :-ell. H\:.c.unable. new$20.831 -~ plywood. trlr, x tras, llobtel4.notrailer. Scoot.n 9150 o4 spep~"S4ss. .... OIAHGECOUMTY"S Mint Cond 646-8202 ~0.0l9'J ----s1soo 494 ·2652 or 522-6914 $800 213-59~5750 ••••••••••••••••••••••• . . OLDEST cd l • . MARLlN22 ---, HUSKY 250. 1973. Xlnt 673~lO 70, 850 RACiR. Radials, e.GJ\ tun6 -~v Y.im.ih.1 Trombone l.eHrAct1onnne. lJ' Whaler Type, 20HP Venlure 21, trlr, mot.or, cond,Runsgreat.$8SOor '67 FORD F250 J O' ~ Stereo, Clean & Nifty, 'lud ca.sc. lle:.tt1fCcr. Call _Xl~l. Cond. IH5-64~ Johni.on & tailored boat xlnt cond., many extras • orcer. 673·5825&5574323. Overhead TEARDROP '-' $1325. Call Lee63J·l487or · • ~-4672 TY R d' cover. $050. 8<16-3950 prv prty 830-4794 Camper $3200 347.9524 833-1610. · VOLVO . · -• a 10, -LIDO -4 19 7 5 SUPER GLIDE ' · Sales·Service-Leasing t!'I) ITA R. xlnl cond . HiFi, Stereo 8098 JUST ARRIVED. New Good ~ . HARLEY. Under 6000 Tow Truck W..ted Roy Carver, Inc. '73 FIAT 128 4 dr. sedan. 19b6 Hmbor CM Mb 9303 baMly used,\\, case $50 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Ext1t1n i.: LYMAN Bis-673·579" ~~for~~30 mites. Call s:i7-8683 '70·'73. 64-4-4131 Rolls lloyce BMW (532967) Stuh 9761 C"illll 97!>-0:JJJ 21 COLOR TV. ca yne 2·1' fiberglass, ln· ___ 234 E 17th St $1899 -----Xtntcond.$150. board Lu:-.ur y Sport SABOT ,·ract'ngcond. 7J Yamaha .l75CC & 68 '72MAZDAP.U.39000mi, Cosla Mesa' "~"AA.t4 MARl'.'llUISMOTORS ••••••••••••·~··••••••• Ll'DWI G Drums.natural 8·'67""" Ro l Kawasaki 90CC lo d .,..........., ,.. EXCLUSIVE .. • JUO a Yard & Kite dolly, $365. , ' new ra s., radio. Best 495·1211, 831·2882 .. wooullni:-.h,leakvenccr. UAYSIDE MAR INE 548_7116 839mi_l0e7a83g.e. Gd. Cond. ofr.over$1700.67S-58S2 •t:11tl ti4Hi804i Color J'V $125. Wine keg ~.\Lf.:."> ___________ 1 FOi •- Office. Furniture & ~:~1~t~?r.' 5 64 . 6~921k119 ..... ·ht TV 67:l-9570 Lido 14 No. 61 w /trlr. boat --5-u---1-1-2-0.-$-30-0--'59 Chev Truck, 2 T, dump Hondo 9727 Orange Coun¥ E t 808S """ ..,..., • . cover & x tras. Good bed w/ 2 s p. axle. $775. ••••••••••••••••••···~· <QA $ qwpmen ------14'':! Ref ind. wood. FG , cond. $995. 57~ 6-46·9219 AftS, 581·3981. . $' $T A lllOADWAY '70 Honda. rebuilt. great ~ .. •• ••••••••••••••••••••••• RCA COLOR TY 85hp. Xlnt. l/B w/ lrlr. ---------CYCLE R--••s SANTA AHA on gas. $000 or best offer. f 0\t' svl »t·~rs $1513:5, scy ~OO:_Gdcond 548~H~l S2 19~. or make rcas. of· C O~O N ADO 15 with . .,.....,._ Vmt1 9570 • 960·1516 · ~hr::. SI--4, d!!::.ks. dflg .. O 'I d W· fe r.:>51·3079evcs. trailer, xlnt cood. Days Suzuk190/125.673-346S ••••••••••••••••••••••• 8353171 ... lls uk s, exc uks Cs lm. I e alnul --213 /264 4770 • Eves T'HfUU1fllAftOIWINOMACHIHI JOCJUOr 9730 MOTOI l'it•rce-tSti7 w. l!llh, <.:M. S t e r co C abinet ELCO :!7-good Chrys ler, s:;2.0715 · · 73 Bullaco Alpina 2SOCC '6-4 Corvalr Van. Body & ----------••••••••••••••••••••••• C.+.I t>.l.'l?·Ul w1lh /w1thout compo Super ADF·ba1t pump, · XJntcond.Clean &relia· Jnt.Gd.cond.Converted. JhnRteYft AVTHOllZID ncnts. 26" Ci r. TV. ;.ill Marlin L'QWp. R('C. Sailboat. <!4 rt. Inboard ble. $525. Call 96().2962 Reas.645-9690. 2079-n.in. '70 JAGUAR S*t&S-.lc• H \HGAIN' Oncycdrol<l 3 walnut console. &W·2ro2 :.urvey. Ori~. Owner. eng. $5500.NB mooring. aft.5 •72 Dodge Van . Clean Coda Mna DAVE ROSS .Jr Exec desk~ & <·hairs. . --C S.t 5 00 6 4 2 · o4 7 2 / c v c Call 556·6139 aft 7 PM. 73 H d SLlZ5 w/e t as Whls •-l' You are the..n .. ..-or XKE COUPE •H'le exec.sec d t.>::.k & S le r e o on so t cs G73-J.t68 _ on a . runs x r . • ires .. u ...... thair hie cab 4 dC'sk M a~navox:. GE. MUST -----Kite 1200 ; like new. good. $325. Call 960-2962 gd. $2900/ Bst offer . TWOFIEETICKETS 4Speed,air conditioning, 11vorp.ids.low c.reden~1t. St::L.L ! $250 each 30 ·JEl-'FRIES Unsinkitble! Pleas1,1re, afl.5 586·1623. ($13.SOVALUE> slereoradto.119-DNR. 10311 rack, alt walnut -~~2126 Ftybn dge, Marlrn chair. r acing c hamp. Cost SUZUKI •73 TM 400 A·l ,63 CORVAlR VAN, new liltCJllmglros. POM11.+.C..STUT% 2480 Hcsttor llYcl. Coda Mna 546-8017 oyot~ 9765 I 1rris h . less than ha tr loots & Marine Auto P1~0~. two Twin $1600, sell $850. 67H161 Very few miles soSo o~ paint, chro me wheels, gd lonwtn Ir laWy ~r1ginal tost. 6'14-1559 or ~•pm~nt ~tlP V 8 s, 2 Radi~. loats ~··ips/ best offer. 548·7184 tires & gd body. Runs Cf-..-~·3737 eves •..-~17.StJO. '~ ood .. ~so "'~" 6351 • - $4199 :Owt lemiA -TOYOTA ······················."·,• · ••••••••••••••••••••••• 646·9000 675·4618 Docks 9070 g ·..,.. · ........ July 31st to Aug 12th P. & O 8090 G-... ral 90 I 0 ••••••••••••••••••••••• '70 MAIC0400. Anaheim Convention 1anos nJC1M ......... Excellent condition '74 F 0 R D C hrom e •••. •••• ••••••••••••••• ••• ••• ••••• •••••••••••• For the best Traiterabte SLIPS Newport Beach $525 5464109 Yellow, cusl. Brwn. int. Center, 800 W. KateUa Steinway 5'7'. Grand. 3 BOY SCOUTS need boats, lioal buy tn Town. See Sail or Powe r Mags, cape. many xtras. Tickets may be ex:· )[::..old. Walnut. $500() c<irs&a1rplanes.Taxad· Me;.a Boal Center. 673-5253 645-8506 '72 HondaCB350,likenew Must sell.644·~4 c h anged for reserved t><lti U539 ,,.., seals al the Convention 1966 Horbqr: C M .. 646·9303 l1rm. 67J·033o ... rtuPM. vanta ges. 5464~. · • WANTED hor $650. Sears MiniBike $50. -ons emoor· Must s e ll th is wk. '73 DodgeVanV-8,auto, Center ahead oC time.Lombor9hinl 9736 jg9i up IHG trr l'li\NO $JO() • t).lt) ·1268 * J-.:;lL·Y li:.iby (irand Piano. Xlnl Cond SJ500. l 'all fi..12 4957 anytime *Put TheSparkleB,.•·b· Old 25' Calnn Gruber + ing·, Balboa Is land. Will 675.536Jbet'n8AM-8PM I t d·t· Call "A2 5678 ext 333 to u~ I d h II 1 r k X n con I 1on. .,.. · , ••••••••••••••••••••••• Expert polishmg & de· l~ r.' g ~. • ots o w · · buy boat if nee. 673-Z746 Phone 645-6110 claim your tickets. 75 L ,..MIORGHl ..... I taihng on your fibergl as~ Nd:-. eng S<!:>O. 546--49'l2 1974 Penton 175. Very "' " boal. Let us clean & pa11'1l --.. CL ASS.C" , &o:!J• Speed & 9080 good cond. Many extras. Autos Wntfll 9590 Datsun 9720 •URRACO your cnj:!tncs & bilge. In -• $650. * * 960·2133 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• •COUNTACH the waler or out. l'alt 18' C hri s C r a f t ••••••••••••••••••••••• WEPAYTOPDOLl..AR DOT DATSUN •ESPADA M1';SA HOAT CENTEH. Supcrsport. 1964. Stand. '71Husky.Otimeoneng& FORTOPUSEDCARS 5SpeedsorAutomatics ai.k for Paul. 646-05J<J 3271" V 8 Engme · ONLY '73 Glencoe 18' 455 Olds trans, curnutts, ext sw· FOREIGN, DOMESTIC Lu$ FOR IH STOCK HOW Wurlttwr Spinet Plano & - ------400 Hrs. Comp'ly re-Jet open bow twin fuel. ing arm, et.c. $750. '72 orCLASSICS ""' IMMEDIATE bench. Ex:cellt'nl cond1· Letussellyourboat.any finished. New uphol., ~h a r p $4350. Russ HondaSL350,looti,$550. IC your car isextraclean llmnedicrteDeU••ry DELIVEAY 111111 l\I ;iplc f1rush. $500. :.i.tc, for rast resulL<; toll cusLOm cover by Baxter 644·8385 673-6610 see us fi rst. . OVER 1 0 0 AUTHOR-l'IED 61:!57fi9aft.4PM. Ml::SA BOAT CE:"'TEH. & Cicero. C.:onsislently , , . ~ ---ti46 0539 mainta mc'd & truly in 14 Y.t Outbrd Skt Boat '74 Kawas aki 900, '72 IAUER IUICIC DEALER h•ntlt:r Rhodes ii\. Suit ··~ll NT" cond. thru-Oul. w /big wheel trlr. Many Suzuki 400. Both xlnt 2925 Harbor Blvd. SALES -SERVICE t'J!-.t' c le<·. Asking ~ Boats, Maintenance/ ,\sk ing S·l300. Wkday xlras. 548-0063. cond. 581·2497 aft6pm Costa Mesa 979-2500 lltAHD HEW 1775 LEASING t 'Jll 673·5695. Sen ice f/020 6 1 5 3 s 8 o ~l~-~~~128 1 · o r 25%0FFonallSkiEquip· '74 HARLEY Davidson TOP DOLLAR 280ZS 210 JIM l.·h1t·kenng Roscwuml ••••••••••••••••••••••• t .rand Piano, C1n·J lK!l.j Ho.·a ul. cond .• S30U01b.sl me nt al MESA BOAT 350 SS. Elec. starter. r .a.10 • s MARINO Boats, Rent/ CENTER. 646-0539 $800. 536-1859 ~ charter 9oso IMMEDIATB. y · 61OS•71 OS MoToR cARs ••• • •• ••••• •••••••••••• ~n l ~rop the ball! Ge~ a ~~~~nJ3 ~~ .!;: FOR ALL 1200 W. Coast Hwy •. Ell'Clri cal· Woodworking tH:! 7726. f '111d "'hlll YOU \\JOl tn 0Jily Pilot (;1ll.!>S1r1cds. Plum b1ng· lnstallat1on & Hepa1r. lnbd Eng re Jl'llr. Fire system install & matnl. Scorpio Marine 548-!HW. ELt:GANT 49• Alaskan JObw11.ha low:~tDa11y lhanSOOmi.•-n5.c~c:17Ac FOREIG .... c•as 645-1102 forcharter.lo~orinfo.pls. Pilot Classthed Ad. _____ ... _._~ __ .... ~ " -PICKUPS acreu1r .... Ule8'fkol81yCI•• call : 548·8280 Phone 642·5678. UNISPORT w/'73 Honda CALL OR COME IH ·750 Pwr. unit. This is I.he TO SEE US At u..belieYable Mazda ·9739 Find Your Name Win Tickets Worth s13so_ • P'l'od\lcleCI oy l'\VIH Ft:LD -l(fHNETH F£LD • S1•99d Mid OttKl..S br "ICHA"O .A,.STOW COMING TO ANAHEIM CONVENTION CENTER Thursday, July 31 to Tuesday, August 12 PHONE 635-5000 3 wheeler that banks into LOW-lOW PRICES ••••••••••••••••••••••• a tu rn . Co m p . w/roadste r top & side curtains. $2,950. 645-1746 Triumph 500, s emi· chopped, good cond. NEWPUHT lMPorrrs 842· 7956 3108 w. Cont llwy. ll Motor Homes. 642·9405 Sale/Re11t 9160 -------- ••••••••••••••••••••••• Of9ftCJe COUllty's 22' ISLANDER, xlntcond, Hl-h t $ ._ self contained, $7250. "-' H _,,.. 846-0446 on lwtporis IHI MauyToYota Trailen, TraYel 9170 Call Roger or Bill ••••••••••••••••••••••• '73 Shasta Travel Trailer. H ft. One owner. Elect. brakes. M ake offer 5484667 '72 Layton 22', SIC, Sips 6. Xlnt cond. Many xtras. Terms avl. 842-8114. TERRY TRAVEL T RAILER 15 Y.t n. $750 * 545·31.90 * 847-8SS5 flEE APPRAISAL We buy used cars & trucks. Call GROTH CHEVROLET for a free a pprais al. GROTH CHEVROLET 18211 Beach Blvd. Huntington Beach 847-6087 549-3331 SELLING YOUR CAR? TOP PRICES f'AID SAVE money this vaca· For Imports l ion w I th is s potle ss. Paid for or Not mint cond. "Prowler" D•on L•wi11"90rlt travel trailer. Sips 6. 1966 Harbor, ~.M. New wide track glass 646-9303 tires. 1s t $800 takes. --------- 552·5897. Ford 30 Hot Rod "A" Chopped , fe nderleu, basket cue $650 . ~~~..J .548-4559/ beat ofCe.r. 4 wt.el Driqa 9150 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Topleu '86 Bronco. Hubs, heavy duly rear axle. Xlnt. cond. 645-1-411 TnlCb 9560 ••••••••••••••••••••••• * 5 YEAR 50,000 MILE WARRANTY On All New Cars Sold By Us WITH T HIS AD OFF ROAD SPECIALISTS ALSO NOW AVAILABLE 4 WllEL DRIVE PICKUPS F EATURING 11le Larcpst Selection OF lala Ir c •• to .. Painted PICKUPS IN ORANGE CO. See Us Today! • DOT DATSUN • MIRACLE MAZDA 2 I ~O Harbor 81•d. , Co1to Mua • 645·5700' '71 MGB•OT,$2800. xlntcood • Call -499-3475 loll Royce 975' ••••••••••••••••••••••• •tD£4llR NU.S.A. IOY CAIVIR IOUS·ltOYC[ Anniversmy SALE $1500 DISCOUNT!! · from dealer window price on this near new TOYOTA .... • ..• Sport Coupe ::': Automatic, power steert• ;-. ing. air . cond., AM·ft'M..•; radio, vinyl top. Nb.": 11476. . I ,, Offer Expires 7·22·75 lOp.m. deaAlflDU ~TOYOTA 1966 HorbOf. CM 646 9303 TOYOTA SALE Hew '7 5 Pldalps LARGE SELECTION . . -... Buy or Lease HOW! . . .. ... . .. • l)fGJt lemtt:· f!Jrovon('. 1966 HOfbor. C M 646 9'lpJ • Corolla Sta. Wagon Hin . 30,000 mi. Sl995. Ca,r Gene Felder &U-8584. or art. 4 :30 968·5319. • '70 Toyota Corona Mark'rr xlnt mcch cond, minor" body work, under Bt11e Book. $79S. 494·5139 a fte r 6. '70 Corolla Station Wagon. l owner. Low mi, mech. perfect. 644·6982 '70 MARK II 4 DOOR Autom atic transmission, radio. (3 lo choose from) • 295·CTQ. Prices start at $1299 (f#:v~e~~~\ \966 Harbor, CM 646 930t• • VWsWAMTID * $400 for a n,y VW. '83 & UI), running or not. 673-3465 ... ... •61VW.Good~ .. • $1100. fM2 • ··~ '61 VW 3000 ml on r~ ~., en1. 1.n top shape! SSOOj(,,. beaLpCr.SM·S886 '' TRUCKS· VANS-. W D's Wanted . Clean. late Mdl1. Cashl675-8849 2Ml.t1th$r. COITA MISA 71 vw Street Dune Bula:. ''---"'""' .,,_ ... _. 1300 cc. compte telv" 74 FORD Courier New, Deluxe 534176)6 -45 Chevyi 4 Ton, 13' nallltd, JC nl cond. •. MMOS9/~ ~ . aosao WHOAn overhauled. lOAded "'°' ,. · ____ ......______ 540•~1, t t •I Cl111 ~led Ada aeJl bit 1.Super Beetle, Uke,,.,; .. ; llema. a mall &le.ml or 18.000 mt Bat otrer. _. any Item.~~ lp.in.a.2.u.,o .. .&.&a.. I ~ ~ UM4 ~ Ute4 Alllot, UM4 I ~ntedey, Jufy 18, 1979 * . DAIL V PILOT DI ~ ••r..... u.-. ...... u •••••••••••••••••••••• ·······~··············· ••••••••••••••••••••••• , v-:M:.•••• •••••••••• .. • ••••••••,••••••••••••• ••••• : •• ~ .. ••••••••• ~"!'Y fflO ""'9 ttl7 PfylftOVfh tt•o Toyof• 9765 Toyota 9761 T.,.t. 97•5 w.,_ "' 9770 IWcll tt ..,.__.__. ... • ••• • • ••••••••••• ••• • •••••• • • ••••••••• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • ••• • •• • • • • • • • •• • • • • • • • • • • • •• • • • • • • ••• • • • • • • • • • •• •••• • •••• ••• ••• •• • •• • • ••• • • • • •• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••• t 0 -~c"' tt47 '71 Mere .• Monte1o MX '73 P!nto SquJre W1ag. Xlnt 19'1 VW Baja Bui. ••••0 •••••••••••• ~· .. ••••••••••••••••••.• Brouah am, all white cond. Lo ml'a. Auto, '73 Plymouth fury III. 2 '114110cc •n1irle. Weber * * * 71 MAVERICK Lo m1, with 1old lnt.mor. SpUt a /cond. mag whls. s:mo. Dr. hrdtp. Vinyl &op. A1r. ~.arb. P,ual port heads. llU SW.W haa evtrythln1. Xlnt. vinyl roof. All power. 642·4000 ext 31 daya. Radials. Very cle6t n, Dy~o l1nJUon, cam, 319 I. 18"' Sf cond. See to apprec. AM n ·M. 8 track quad 645·7108 eves/wlcnds Be~l Orter. 581-4131. crtl\a and oil pump 011 C .. 968-8140 stereo Less th· 26M -- - --filter, oil cooler. AM.·FM osta Mesa ml $ls00 5-\8 an MUST SELL '72 PLYMOUTH GRANO Ura ck atereo plus rnor•. You are the wiMer or Mercwy 9950 Spm wkdys, an~oaamn Pinto '72 automaUc. air, c o u p E s E o A N , Muat Seel itSOO/otrer. TWO FRllTICICm ••••••••••••••••••••••• wkndi . new tires & baUery, automatic tr1uwmi11ion, "5-9'69 ($13.50 v ALUE) '65 Mercurt,. Coloey Park 25,000 mi, $1750. 4~ ractorr air cood.iUonJn1t, '11 ·vw Camper, low RllMJU:'lhs. itatio!'~"' aaon. V-8. MustC1tt9 9952 ·-a Ford P into Squire vln y roof. Sharp • ..,........ ~ ower._.orbeltolfer. ••• .. ••••••••••••••••••,,.M' t . Xlnt nd. l6H!*373)Pricedtosell. mllta. Muat see to IP· -1 888·1547 •74 M t any x ras. co . $lS99 Preelate ""-3818 A" Cl--us ang H, 4.sp, ..,.,95-bst ofr.5'i8·2698 6pm •• ,... •net July 31st l~ 12th AM /FM, 18M. :16,000 mi -. MAR9UIS MOTottS Anaheim Coo~ u '71 MERCURY Warr, Xlras. spotless. '73 Cuatom Runa~ut, uir, 495·1211, 831·2882 '82 VW BUS·CAM PER. Center 800 W K:tetJ". $3000. 548·3177 auto, radials, dlsc brk11, PonH 9965 ?ftw eni brks rad Urea Tick t ' • MQNJEGO MX . Xlot cond. Low pnce for ac $850~75-8638 . e • may be ex· 66 MUSTA NG. Ne uicksale'84&9518 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ---------1 thanaed for r eserved AutomaUc transmission, paint, tires. Good cond. q · '75 Trans Am. 4 speed. '87VWBaJaBug Ca~ at i:e ConvenUon power aleerinf, radid, S7SOoroffer . •536-~U03. rtylftOUftl 9960 loaded with extras. CKD S4f 0 962-8679 c!~ ~2-~;:.de:f ~m:; ~~~~i. vinyl roof . Oldamoblle 9955 ....................... ::::4~:S:~e6:'5"2444 duy1 . '68 Yw Buar. Good Condi· chum your Ucketa. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ATLAS tion. RebullL enelne. * * * $1299 Sales and Servke Thuftclerblrd 9970 $800. 49'·2482 OLDSMOllLE Chrvsl•r ~ ••••• ••••• • •••••••••••• • CadiHac 9915 11 l GMC TRUCKS Open ~ailv & Sun. 'Ul 10 '70 VW BUG. economy 88 VW Bug.Auto. ••9#••••••••••••••••••• A'1n: a J special. (Sl7BQA) '85Q.Callafter6pm. tGI\ UllW HONDACARS PM S1S99 • •544 '1Zn CADILLAC · UnlventtyOkk 2921JHarborBlvd., MAR9UISMOTORS •· .. * Over-70 to choose from. TOYOTA. 28SOHarboi'BJvd. 5C4oa6t:IMfes3a4 495·1211,831·2882 '70 VW BUG From $1 995. GMAC Cost~ Mesa 540-v.-Financln& & Leulng. 1966 Horbor, CM. 646-9303 -~-9974 lf!P.IJ~~Pllll!!I .. ~-· 4 Speed radio maes '6 4 C UT L f. SS V 8 Have 11omethlng you want ..... • • .. • ............ . wlde ov~Js. cu;t.omlzed Tr Y a D a I I y Pi Io t 18M PG, xlnt. runner. to sell? Class1fit.'<i ads do '72 Vega GT. Auto. new .197 5 C.OROLLA, 2 DOOR s2· , •. • SoMcl. -... .i.... . 1~~ee21 in~rior. #4612. Classified Ad to buy, sell $375. it we ll -Cull NOW, brakes/shocks. $1250. S II . . ·. $1699 or rent som ething. 493·2029an.s::.> 642·5678. Call ar~er 5. 55~·8537. . e It I Find It, Trade It With a ~ant Ad . . , • -.. · · A.tos, New 9100 •Mew 9100 Allto1, Hew 9800 Autoa, Hew tlOO Auto1 N•w 9100,Autos New· 9800,A.utoa Mew tlOO ... 11 lt•n: •· c ••••••••••.••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• , •••••••••••..... : .........••••.•.•••••. : •••••••••...•••••••••• : ••• ·············~ Ull\. UllMI -GIHl'O 9917 , _ . Volvo.,; ;·~~·~~~~-~,·;;,~·~;~: . : . 1 A/C, vinyl roof. Orig. 1 • : owner. Aak 'g. $450. b.'966 Harbor. C.M. 6•6 ?JPl 675·3323 . -------~-· '73 VW Bug, 14,<m orig. '7' CAMARO, automatic ml Mint cond. $400 & transmission factory air T.O.P. S36-7880atl6 condilionlng,'radio, vinyl '68 Buar, Sunroof, tape dk. roof. <ss:JKED> Good cond. st:m cash. $4199 673·1261art8pm. MAR9UIS MOTORS 495-1211. 831-2882 Sell or trade '59 VW bus, ----------' sUQrl, rblt eng & trans, Chenolet 9920 nu frnt tires, For bua or ••••••• ••••••••••••• ••• bestioller. 54~7988. CONN&L Vol'f"o 9772 CHIVitOUT •••• • •• • • • • •••••••••••• SALES It SERVICE ORANGE cOuMry 2121 H.-. llTcl. VOLVO COSTA MESA EXCLUSIVELYVOLVO ___ l _4_6-_l _ZOO __ _ Largest Volvo Dealer ~ Orange County I BUYorL~E DIRECT OIV\.NC~f Ct)lJNTY per Sharp Cbevelle ~ 70. S,000 ml. on reblt ent g . m ags • .$1415 673-2325. VOLVO I 1966 Chevy Carryall V-8 350 auLo, P /S, positrac'n, 33000 ml, xlnt98().2764 2025 S. Manchester '61 Chevy. Mag wheels. Anaheim 750-2011 ~~~lt~~~l$:D) or beet. AnniYttrsmy '63 CHEV. Convertible, SALE.I 327, engine & body fine. S4SO. 496·6493 ~75 VOLVO '70NOVA, V-8:m,3spd. • 164 E 4 Dr. MT, lo. m i, $loe5. Gd Demo. automatic, ai cond. •141-8788 cond., power &teerin&,1--------- A M • ~ M 8 tr a c k , '14 Caprice, FUJI price. headhgbt rims, floor $299S. Air, PB/PS. mata. #3614. • AM/FM, elec. wnda & Was SI Ito Jocks. Tilt alr. whl. vinyl Sa•i1991 $1004 top. Priced below wb15e. NOW $7186 1- 67 - 3 -· 10 -19---- """"' 9925 ••••••••••••••••••••••• . • • • • '72 Cllr11ler Ne•port . ~,. 11 LA•n: a Fully Jotded. A1kin1 ~~1.,UIU. WIW $2,0U. 191·3* daya; VOLVO 848.aot5 evt1. Brand pew '75 Cordoba, all QQ'u, 1ilver w /black interior. 41t.2290 eve. BRAND NEW _.,., • .., ttlo I 0 ·75 VOLVOS ••••••••••••••••••••••• T '65 CONTINENTAL . . luy or Lease Immaculate._ P rivate VOLVO DIAi ii party.$'79$. Ph.6'So0004 1975 Mark IV. All the H · ·SIMCI 1956 tr11 I Cuat Int. Take over WILLIAMS lae pymnta.Ml).7898. 'IMPORTS '72 MARK JV. Xlnt cond. F ull power. 33,000 l!XCLUSIVE careful ml, '6300 flrm. VOLVO 645-1621.art.4. c...,.... tt32 , ·DEALER ~······················ ion c ommonwealth 63 Cla11lc Rdat.r. Fine Buetia Park ~-7000 cond. WUI corwider t.tade ---------1 $2'50or ofr. 675-688'9. '74 VOLVO 145 '75 Vette, 8000 orig mi, Many, xtras. Mint cond. ~.ES WAGON $18S0.6Jl·08820wn. 4 Speed, air coodlt.ionln1. '69 .Vette, T·T<>f.>, loaded, 8-tuck stereo radio. pn. pty. nu paint. $4000. aa&-KGS. Xlnt cond. 6734002 aft 6 $4999 ~!:!!:" ........... !!.~~ ·c1~· au\ [fADiA' ~ VOLVO ;. ___ _ IU0411Qe 9f J5 1'6+ Harbor (,M. U6 9303 FINEST SELECTION of .... USED .. VOLVOS , in . Orange i;County . ICIMMce .t JOI ''69 Thna 74's All With · .Air CondiUonlna ALL ;::· 'PRICID '62 DART. 4 dr. NEW . tram. Paint. $3!SO/olfer. * 536-7904 * '71 Charier, PIS. P/SB, Air. ndt aome bodr work. >..i1.$MO.~W10 9940 •••••••••••••••••••••• "13 Grand Torino. Lo mi, Xlnt cond. '2309. Call 644-5122 Hit ffW Tom. '68 Ranch~ V.a auto, p/1. p /b, ra.h. Sharp. ,133$. Da11 JU •41'.i 6llM. Evea114/Ml-1Cf! "71 LTD Co~ Squl..,, EJ. cond. ~I 'O'lr bttcb, h.111•1• rack S1IOO Firm. 642-41'1 TO ia Ford Grand Torino " • ILL Squire. t p11a. P /I. P /b, I•' P/w, Am/Frn attreo. _ WILLIAMS Lu". rack. AC, lt,000 IMPODS ml.-$1,500. MN'7.I : • VOLVO 11 J'ord Coun&r7&q. wu. DIA&.m All power + alf. Steel ·8011 Com~Lh belted udlall. 651--7 ..... Park UMOOO 'It LTD Broqham. 1 Owner. 4011 on .. ml, f\al1 ...... UIH pwr lad A/C 6 c.rWM ··~y•••• .... ••••;;oi control. Perf. e~nd. MM;· "*· .,.. .. ························----...._ ____ _ ..,, Hornet Spottabeut .•• , M'-'lHl1 •• OTA. o.; laver t ciyl. U llPO. Loaded l nH41 body • 4 •• radial tires. Xlnt work, $650. coed. 18,000 ml. Still un· 'Ill T-Bird, 4 drw/landau cler warrant.)'. $3295 or top . Loaded! $700 . belt offer. 5841-30'8. 9'19-0232aft5pm. . - A•E ON THE WAYll .. •••••• clild ~ow It'• 1971 model year·e•cl CLOSl•OUT TIMI at HOWARD Chevrolet ' In Newport Beachl ·Monzas! Vegas! Monte Carlos! ....._, __ .. RHIRD $ '61 Awto. tr1n1 . 1lr cond11ionlng, 1395 !OW! l4eerl119. rldlo, hNI•<, 111..__tt..IDf"Dllil. CWPH&l5) . OHLY 'lb 9 I~~~~adlo. h .... r. s1395 OwhtandinQ. (YP0e17) ONLY FIRlllRD '69 Auto. trena .. 1lr condl(lofll119, S 1695 power 1teerln9, vinyl 1oof, t1Mae1 ..... (eoeAVHl OMLT ""_. 1111tut ~=· ........ ,... f 3 ... .... aaJe Trucks! Caprices! Novas! Comoros! I CHEVY 72 :-u~•. 1lr cond1lionl~. s3095 power •-'no. 1ow. 1ow ,,,.,.., c1t10!!ll OHL y FIREllRD . '72 466 ciertonMnc. pK1c9, IUlo. 53195 tnns.. alr COl\dltlonlno. power "-1no. pc>'IWef "1ndoM. lhlti>. laaeESGl · OHL y ' '72CHIVY . . $1995 ~~lo, l!Mter: Donl Mlel m ttat~> OMLY CHEVY &CANMO s3 9 f 2 lo cNIOM •. auto tra111 . tlr 73 condltlonlnt. power atffflng. 5 5 W¥ roof, ClMft, (I leo«IA) · OMLY CHEVY...a $ 9 J • wtlMf *""'· euto irw... tit 73 condlll01'11tt. pow•r •tffftnt. 51 5 Elalletlt T'twouohoul. (lllY103I) OM.Y f HOYA 74 ~~~ 1ren1.. pow•rs309 tie.Ing, Cl•an. (274KFY) OMLY CA MARO '75 e cy1 . •u•o trans. """•'$4395 eteerlno. pow•r l:»rakH, only 8,000 mll ... Hk• n-. (~ ONLY • '75YEGA s3495 WAMM ~·-·radio.,_..,, oNy 2,600 mil••· N••r New . . > OMLY w I "I 833-0555 .. . •• I li...;;·· ·, • l . FROM 1HE FACTORY (()vylletCorpotlfiotl) -.. .,5 ... sbt Cllrplws _,,.,. ,... lilJ Dhceiillh eff __ ..._ llffdwr price. ICOf'dotl. llOt illdlldN). llG SB.fCTIOM. llEADY FOR IMMIDIATl DIU¥UY. IOW IS 1111 DMI ro · SAVEi PlymoLJffi EJAMl'LE: •75 PLYMOUTH ,FURY CUSTOM V-8. automatic. radio. heater. power disc brakes. tinted glass. air cond11ton1ng, whitewall. deluxe wheel covers, power steering (RH23J5G 168045) DISCOUNT PR.ICE $4495 s4195 CASH REBA TE-$300 s2oocA.SH REBATE FROM THE FACTORY 1o-.vs"""""'°'"'""'1 Oii ai '75 Dutws lllld Valiants p6itl lilj Dbc-'s off •mfedwwt stlcllw price. ates SElfCTIOM. HADY FOl IMMEDIA 11 OWVElY. u~M,LE: •75 PLYMOUTH DUSTER Economical 6 cylinder engine. 3 speed. cloth & vinyl interior. (VL29C5G106741) Discount pric~ $2995 s2795 CASH REIA TE-$200 WE WELCOME YOUR WARRANTY SERVICE WORK ••• REGARDLESS OF WHERE . YOU PURCHASED YOUR CHRYSLER OR PLYMOUTH "-Mew Senlce Dtpt . .._......, ..,.. Frhl•y 7:30 •.a . S:JO p.M. w..., 1:00 ..... 5:00 p& c. for • •palatw .. f« .. .,_. Mr"fk• ...._ Fftt F.ir •lld ,......., Altes Srrice. BIG USED CAR SA VIMGS 174 PLYMOUTH SATELLITE CUSTOM SEDAN V-8. automatic. radio, heater. pawer steering. power brakes. whitewall tires. air cond1tioning. vinyl top, extended factory warranty (495KSV) •74 PINTO STATION WACiON ' Economical 4 cylinder. autorretic transm1ss1on. mags. luggage rack. whitewall tires. radio. heater. (987KLE) •74 CHRYSLER NEWPORT CUSTOM V-8. automatic transmission, AM/FM stereo. power brakes. whitewall tires, air conditioning, vinyl top. (439JSA) Great Selection of the Success Ccr of the Year 171 AMC Ambassador Brougham 2 door , V-8, automatic. air conditioning, vinyl top, power steering & brakes, radio, heater~ (425EYA) · 53095 ·52595 -53295 5 1395 173 BUICK I ELECTRA 225 UMllfD 167 CHEVROLET MALIBU v.e. auto. trans .. air. power steering. power brakes. power windows. split power seats. AM/FM stereo radio. 4 oor sedan. V8, automitic. radio. heater, w/s/w. vinyl roof. Po't¥ef ater. power steering, power locks, tilt wheel. cruise con ol. brakes. (VGM541} s3295 .5595 t 169 FORD GALAXIE 500 V-8. automatic, vinyl top, AM/FM stereo radio. power steering & brakes. air conditioni~. {ZXW898) 5795 174 VALIANT- sEDAN V-8, autorr.tic. transmission, power steering & brakes, whitewall lires, air cooditioning, radio. hell•. extended factory warranty. (393KZWJ 53195 , Vacation CLEAN $ BRAND NEW I 975 INTERNATIONAL scour 11 COMPLETE 11HEA VY DUTY11 SERVICE - AVAILABLE_ FOR YOUR R.V. REC. THE BEST SERVICE IN ORANGE CO. FAST FAIR AND FRIENDLY. VO I 0 c t f t • Laguna/South Coast EDITION . .. Today' VOL. 68, NO. 197, 6 SECTIONS. 70 PAGES ORANG~ COUNTY, CALIFORNIA W EDNESDAY, JULY 16, 1975 TEN CENTS. Police, Tea:msters Sue San Clelllente The San Clem ente police of- ficers association and Teamsters Union filed suil against the city of San Clemente in Orange Coun- ty Superior Court Tuesday. Spokesmen for the association and union today blasted Mayor Anthony DiGiovanni as "an irra- tional man" during a news con- ference. "This kind of irrational con- duct on the p~t of a mayor .•• -, points at least in our minds that h e bas a personal vendetta against the union,'' Richard Cas- tle, Teamsters representative' said ln explaining the employes' position. ~ The suit filed demands that the city recognize an agreement between the Public Safety Employes Association and the Teamsters Union for representa- tion in the currently stalled • salary n egotiations between police officel's and the city. The city h as refused to re- cognize any Teamsters Union r epresentation of the employes. The employes maintain they are ~ol members of the union but have merely contracted with it. as an outside agency to represent them in the pay talks. Castle said the union would foot all legal expenses in the. court challenge. "We don't care what it costs. We don't care if it's $5,000 or $250,000. "Our intent is to pursue this ac- tion regardless of the expense. We're not about to permit the city to take this action denying employ es their rights," CasUe said. Castle was extremely harsh in his criticism of Mayor DiGiovanni. He read from a collection of newspaper clippings in which the mayor was quoted as saying the police employes have been ·•snowed" by a "gilded tongue organizer." "A man in such a responsible position as the mayor is really re- miss in bis duties to the citizens ·expressing these types of personal opinions in areas wber~ employ~ have some rights.'" he said. CasUe said the union and the employes association a.ttempt~ to resolve differences with the ca- ty ln every professional way. However, the city bas refused all correspondence with the union and has refused to al- low a union negotiator to be pre· .sent during salary discussions. (See POUCE0 Page A%) os1ves _____ ac e oun Immunity S e t . Bribery Nixed In Tandy Case By GARY GRANVIll.E Ot lll• Oo1lly PllotSUH Superior Court Judge Everett Dickey dismissed bribery charges against Tandy Corp. Vice President James Buxton Tuesday and granted him im- munity from prosecution in mat- ters related to the Orange County Assessor's Office scandal. Along with Assistant Assessor George U pt.on, Buxton was in- dicted last March by the county Bertolino -Dismissal Rejected Orange County Superior Court Judge Walter Smith ordered the trial of accused conspirator James Bertolino to continue Tuesday. The order was made despite pl'Otests from Bertolino's at- torney Donald Thamer, that the prosecution failed to prove that a conspiracy existed in the Orange County assessor's office to help elect Andrew Hinshaw to Congress in 1972. Along with eight other employes in the assessol''s office, Bertolino was charged in a grand jury indictment last December with participating in an alleged conspiracy that used county employes to help elect Hinshaw to Congress. Six of the nine indictees have pleaded guilty to some charges in the 33-count indictment. But Bertolino pleaded innocent to charges of conspiring to sub- mit false documents and grand theft. By mid-day Tuesday, pro- secutor William Evans rested his case against the 52-year-old de- fendant. And Thamer, who delayed his opening statement until Evans completed his case, charged that the deputy dis trict attorney· failed to prove a conspiracy ex- isted. Furthermore, Thaqler added." ff there was a conspiracy Ev~ had not shown that .Bertolino was a participant. But Judge Smith denied his plea to dismiss the case and or- dered the defense attorney to present his side of the case. For openers, Thamer insisted that his client bad not been grant- ed his constitutional rights when be spoke to iltvestigators and testilied before the grandj~. <See TRIAL, Page AZ) FIRSI' COUPlE ·BOUGHT ITEM "I'm very happy with the ad. The tirst couple who came to see the rcfrigeratol', bouaht it." That's the success experienced by the Huntinlton Beach woman who placed this ad in the Daily' Pilot: · FRIGIDAJRE Rdri1 .• whl. 5W t.U, good work cood. $65. Aft. 5, XJCX• uu. If you have a used appliance you would like to convert to cub, call '42·M78. We make it easy to r.t a f •• wonts tb work for you U> th• Dltl~ Pl1Gt. Grand Jury on three bribery counts. But by the time he left Judge Dickey's courtroom, Buxton was free of the bribery charges and ordeted to testify as a prosecu- tion witness in cases related to the assessor's office scandal. Also granted immunity Crom prosecution was Tandy tax manager William Hughes Jr. Monday, another Tandy official Paul Tabor, was granted im- munity. Buxton, Hughes and Tabor were witnessess during the Grand Jury's investigation that led to separate criminal indict- ments against Upton, county As- sessor Jack V allerga and Rep. Andrew Hinshaw (R-Newport .Beach). Hinshaw was Oranee County assessor from 196Stol9"12. It is expected that Buxton, HQgbes and Tabor will appear as prosecution witnesses in Upton and Hinsbaw 's upcoming separate trials. However. nonJ' ot the three are expected to be witnesses at Vallerga's trial in Ventura Coun- ty next week. The. issues at stake in (See DISMISS, Page AZ) San Clemente Kiwanians Set Breakfast The San Clemente Kiwanis Club will host an outdoor com- munity breakfast as part of ,the Fiesta La Cristianita Saturday and Sunday. Hot pancakes, orange juice, sausage and coffee or milk will be served by the Kiwanians from 7 a.m. to 11 a.m. both days at the parking lot of Albertson's Markel, 602 N. El Camino Real .• Tom Axtater is the breakfas t chairman. Tickets are $1.50 for adults and $1 for children and are available at the Bank of America, United California Bank and Security Pacific Bank as well as other businesses displaying the Kiwanis posters. The Fiesta La Cristianita celebrates the first Christian baptism in Cali!omia 206 years ago and runs from Friday to Sun- day with many community events. Sculptor Set For Showing Lap.na Beach sculptor Bijan Bahar will give a free bou.r~long demonstration of how he works in the bard plastic medium ~his sculptures at 2 p.m. Saturday on the Laguna Beach Feltival of Artl grounds, 650 Lquna Ca- Q)'OO Road, Laguna Beach. Babar, a feaUval ~ arta ex· hlbltor slnce 1999, was born in Iran and bas studied many forms ol art as well as pbotocrapby. His works sell for several thouldand doll an. Additional demONttat.lom by otber exblblton ara scheduled tor 1ub&cquent Sab&rda.)"I. The traditional 11Danclng on the breen .. 11 performed by Ballet Padflca COIDtaJaY ~ at s p.m. Slmd•YI· Tbe feltinila run *°°lh AUi. 2'. Apollo Problem 'Fixed' HOUSTON (UPI) -Three American astronauts easily fixed a minor problem in their Apollo today and bore down on Russia's two Soyuz cosmonauts more than 1,000 miles ahead for a union Thursday 136 miles over Germany. The flagships of the two space powers circled the world every hour and a half in the second day of history·~ first international manned spftefligbt. Alexei Leonov a nd Valeri Kubasov opened the day's ac- tivities by gunning their 15,000- pound Soyuz into a near perfect "assembly" orbit 138to140 miles high to wait for Thomas Stafford, Vance Brand and Donald "Deke" Slayton to join them. "Your friend• j ust finished a circ (circularization) burn and <See SPACE, P_,eAZ) Dally PlloeC ,_...,., at<M,._ It-I..- Publication .Budget OK'd By Trustees ' THE OLD TROUPER AT 72 STILL WOWS A CROWD Comic Bob Hope Packed in 15,000 •t County Fair A revised $5.S million publica- tion budget for fiscal 1976 withstood more than two hours of close scrutiny and was un- animously approved by Laguna Beach school trustees Tuesday night. 15,000 Cheer Hope At Co-unty Fair Board members questioned scores of items in the 00-page document, but made no additions or deletions. Final adoption is scheduled for Aug. 5. The proposed school district tax rate for next year is $2.93 cents per $100 assessed valua- tion, eight cents more than this year's rate. Trustee Harry Bithell ques- tioned the increase in the tax rate, but there was no action by the board to change it. ~ Clyde Lovelady, district busi- ness manage r , said the final budget figure was about $70,000 greater than originally estimat- ed due to r ecent word from the County Department of Education on precise income figures for next year. The budget contains $125,000 as a general reserve. This is slighUy more than two percent of the en~ tire budget. About $48,000 is set aside to meet costs of new programs at the district's five schools that are being planned for next year, said (See BUDGET, Page A2) By ARTHUR R. VINSEL Of UM D•llY Pilot Sl.lllf A standing-room-only throng or up to 15,000 flocked to see one of America's most celebrated come- dians, Bob Hope, al the Orange County Fair in Costa Mesa Tues- day night. His appearance on what was designated Senior Citizens' Day was considered the highlight of the1975fair. "We finally had to tum many away, which was unfortunate bul inevitable." s aid Peggy Bayless, publicity director forthefair. Hope cracked jokes and quips for ball the two-hour show which also included orchestra leader Les Brown and bis Band of Renown and singer Rosemary Clooney. He carried the performance with customary pepper and fl air, 1J delighting the crowd includ- ing Edna Belshan who came aJI the way from Oxnard and stood in line seven hours . '.'I've loved him for years," S81d the 52-year-old woman. One gray-wigged woman and longtime Hope fan quipped that she almost tossed her apartment key onstage. "Groupies come in all ages," she remarked. The 72-year-old comedian whose business acumen has made him one of the wealthiest enter· tainers in the world received about $25,000 for the free ad- mission appearance. "I'm olderlban I ever meant to be," declared the humorist whose career has carried him Crom the rough-cut boards of vaudeville stages to the fanciest nightspots in the land, in addition to the jungles, fields and trenches where American Gls fought. three wars. "Fair audiences are the greatest. They 're here for fun ," quipped Hope, who obviously shared the night's good times. "I love it here," he also said. "It's a thrill they took the cattle out before I got her~." Typical Hope humor hurled barbed jests at the CIA, the economy, the alleged horror movie "Jaws" about a monster shark. and sinJ?er Cher's highly publicized musical marriages. Costa Mesa policeh"ad to detail extra patroJmen to crowd controt duties due to the Hope show <See BOB HOPE, Page A!) $121,152 fo.-Nixon? . House May Approve Bill /or Staff Co1"8 WASHING TON (AP) -Tile House is likely to approve a bill which would eive former Presi- dent Nlxon $121,152 for sta!f, of· flee s~plies and other expenses for the new fiscal year -a 40 per- cent cut from the amount recom· mended by President Ford. s torage space and other purposes. Ford asked the House Ap- propriations Committee to ap- prove $203,000 for Nixon's oUice expenses in the fiscal year which COLUMNIST ASKS FOR NIXON TESTIMONY. A4 'By comparl1on, Nixon was eranted $200,000 tor o(fice opera- tions between the date ol bis re-began July 1. That would have fn. 1lenaUon on Aug. 9, 1974 and eluded $96,000 for staff salaries, June 30 Cl t.bia year. And that $8.000 for staff fringe benefits. •mount was a huge slash from $15,000 for travel, $.S0,000 for lbe S850,000 tbeD prq>osed by equipment and Communications, Ford. $10..000 for rep•lrs ~uip- Tbe $121,1$2, up for a vote to-jnai~cee ae4 '1 ,.._ ol· day, doea not tnchlcle Nixon'• ~ , $60,000 annual penalon or a Art r S .. Sampaon', a~· nwnber of tnclired .colt.I relat.ecl mini1lraJ,c?r or '" Qener•l to hcurtty, courter ru1bt.s. Services MrnhibuaUoa, at-. I .. • tempted to bolster Ford's request b,y telling the panel that Nixon bas a backloe of about two million pieces of mail to answer from bis San Clemente bome. The committee, however. set- tled upon the $121,152 ftpre - about eo perceat of the request - by pro-rating Nixo.n's expen- ditures ln the most recent months and then adding s percent for in- OatiOP. His higher outlays in the initial period foUowina his re- llpatJoo were disregarded as unrepi:e&&JUa live of current n~. '?lie Nl•oo ~ ~""' ''?rt.~_blll .~tch p 1}.$?.5 bu...,n ovft'-all for? ~ House. '.l're~l'Y l>e1'.,...t aodoth«·tx~.,.ve ...... " "t • Clemente Police -Arrest 4 By JACK CHAPPELL Of llM O.llJ l"lfot Su.ti San Clemente police raided an apartment Tuesday and later al- leged tbey h ad contiscaled "enough explosives to blow up this apartment complex and half the one next to it." Officers said they had initially been on a narcotics raid when they broke in the door and aJ. legedly found some of the occu- pants " in a euphoric state." Narcotics d e tective David Munro alleged that the ex- plosives were lo be used to "blow up a n arc" -slang for a narcotics officer. Four Marines we re arrested in the apartment. Police identified the suspects as Richard M. Alex-. ander, 22, Jaston Johnson, 21, JelteJ. Jansma. 20 ~nd J umes E. Sharp. 19. All four are stationed at Camp Pendleton. The four suspects were booked on charges of being under the in· fluence of a narcotic. Alexander was also booked on charges of possessing explosives and Jdhnson on charges of at- tempting to destroy evidence. Police said they confiscated one half-pound of military TNT, three-quarters of a pound of plastic explosive, 10 feet of ex- plosive cord, and detonaJ.ion caps. Police allege that the material was stolen from Camp Pendleton. The four suspects are from B Company, 1st Enginer Battalion, Camp Pendleton. Det. Munro s aid six S a n Clemente police officers broke in the door of the apartm'ent at 225 Granada, Apt. No. 3, and found some of the Marines in a dazed euphoric state. He said Johnson was attem pting to inject himeslf with a syringe of narcotic solu- tion which he allegedly attempt- ed to destroy when the officers burst in. A small amount of cocaine was seized, Munro said. Munro said the raid came as a . r esult of a continuing narcotics investigation by the force. He claimed evidence indicated the explosives were to be ~ed in an assault on a narcotics olftcer. 1t'eatller Low clouds through late morning Thursday. otherwise mostly sunny and a bit warmer with beach blgbs near 70 rising to the low.80s inland areu. Lows tonight 60 to 65. I NSIDETOD Y How ar1 our . ~ Comp • PendUton emigronta Jorlno . along tM Orange COOlt? Some have job•, mony. 4re in tchool ~ Eft{llilh -.Olld .all bow thdr own personal com- mtnt• on America. See stories . and photoa Page 89. Index ~ ... 1 11..V I L/~C l , Marines Plan Noiay The Or ange Coast may be bat- tered by sonic booms tonight u El Toro M unne Corps J~~ lake part in a ma~stvt! training ex- ercise simulating rombut with enem y bombers Air Force, Air Nauonal Guard, Navy a nd Mann e Jets will ~crambll' Crom bases between San Diego a nd M creed th.is even- ing in an exercise simulating a West Coast enem y attack. El Toro's F'-4 squadrons will join the mass interceptor mission in the "ea rly everun~ hours'' Fro• Page Al POLICE .•. Castle said the s uit could be ex- panded to include other dif- ferences between the employes and the city. Those diCCerences include lack o r adequate m an- power in the police department, failure of t he city to provide po lice employes with s afety equi pment a nd differences over disability claims, Castle said. The Teamsters r epresentative said there would be no strike by police employes to force any de· mands. He said a strike by employes has never even be.en considered as a means of forcing employe positions. '"The mayor has fobricated a tremendous fear that there could be a strike on the part of public safety employes. .. We arc willing to guarantee in wrillng to the city that lhe police employes will not strike," Castle said. He cnt1cized the mayor's re- fusal to allow union representa- tion saying that posillon only r e- inforces the employes' demands forlheir ''rights." ••If there were many other jurisdictions with the mayor who conducted himself in the manner o( this mayor there would be many police and !ire department employes who would demand that we take the m out oo strike," Castle said. Lower Rates For Utilities Users Coming Some San Diego Gas and Elec- tri c c ustome r s in southern Orange County will receive elec- tricity rate r eductions as a result o( a routine r ate reduction re- quest made by the utility to the state Public Utililie$ Com - mission. Rates for many consumers are expected to Call from $.5 to $11 on a yearly basis. The reques ted r ate reduction was made because of increased population density in Orange County areas served by lhe San Diego-based utility. This in- dudes the south portion of Mis- sion Viejo, San Jua n Capistrano, San Clemente and surrounding areas. A com pany spokesman ex- plained that as areas are de- veloped, it costs less to supply electricity and r ates drop. He said such reductions are re- viewed yearly. He said approval by t he PUC is considered "routine'' and is expected soon. Fro•PageAl TRIAL ... But when Evans presented those statements as part of the prosecution·s case, Judge Smith permitted them to be entered into evidence over Thamer 's heated objections Th e (1 r st def ense witness called wa!> district attorney in- vestigator John Coleman. ORANGE COAST l l!.C DAILY PILOT f•• Cir uo-t .i• 1¥ I• ,f ~th #flu'., f~cert't· r .. , .. rt''" "°' • '' u i ..,, ~.""""' "" ttw-Or.,. .J 1 ' i:.mc»•"" •. P"''"" ,,. Jill .n,. ..,.~ I t I 1 \.' t I t hf f"liUQt f ' ,... fo,llf (~rj\ ·~ "' , "''"" , •• '°'..i t•~~•·-lfv ,.. ~ Fovn " ~,, 'i .. • ""'" ~4111d0 I' ~p \<411., •f'lld • •011 • I,.. " !>'-11" CO•\• ,. •NI•• ,~~· rd1t<1of I~ P.,D41\t"• 0 S tlyrtjty\ ,..Cl \u~AJ'' fru• ,,, IN' ·L• r>-wb••\r'I """ I , ....... , .. , -x.· Wt"' ft•Y ~" t t. •• M• • r • ,~,,, t• •f1r,,)' Rober t N Wero Pr"'°'"' ""° Pwot•"f' Jac k R. Curley Vttf' Pt f\td>f'n t •l'ld C,.l\fl'••• MiilMOf't Thomas Kecvd E,,·IOr Thomci<, fl. Murphine M49n1tQ1nQ r 1Mcw Charl~s H. Looc; R1c hMd P. Nall .. ,."'"'" MA"Af)•f\Q (d Ion Laguna Beach Office 11 .. G••-v•• SH Ht M•lllflll Add,..u " 0 Bo• lok. •n1> Other' OfHces GIKI• ~"" J>O Wfll (My \tr•t1 N•"'"'1 .... II )))l N••tofl lovl•v•rd """""""°' 8'•ch 1191~ &.1<11 flt.,.,,..,. ~ltNltk V•lloy 711011 • P•1 "- at S.n DlfQO f-,....,,,. • ., Teteptlo!t* !71•1 '42-4321 C~ssifled Advertising ~2·S671 LAguna Beach All Departmenh Teleohone 494·9466 f rot'ft ~"" ( ttm nh OS 0•30 (op, o•I l'I\ "'··~ r ·••• '"Mblt)llt•t (•,,Ct~fty 1fGl\•w\\.W•" 1ht.1\tt4h lf'\ _..,..,."-t ..,,.,, .. , or A'l1t•rf1\rm,.,n•\ "" ••" "'•Y b• '""' •lt.1trl'1 ""'tn vt \~ • '-'"'"'\\ion Of ~•fit" t ttA'\ •Olt•O• t,.tO •I (~t• ~1 •• C .. ' , 1 \vt.Wt1pt1Qf'I D?"C4ff ,., ,.,, OO~t"lit "'ft\• •"" IOm.,,1,,lt ,.._,..._,., t.Ml•,,•fiom U 00 ~ H"ft tools~ ••l,S an El Toro spotee~. · Au. Alf'.. r.ee ~man pr. dict.ed that ~ lllnic booma may be hear\! ln'biland as well u coastal area:i. "While supersonl~ night is not an objective of the exttclse, some ol the interceptors may have to maneuver at supersonic speed over the Pacific,'' the El Toro spokesman sJtid. "Should atmospheric condi· lions be unfavorable al the tilJ)e, It is possible that some offshore sonic booms may be beard along the coastline. "The exercise wW not involve the !iring of weapom and baa been coordinated with Federal Aviation Adminlstratloo olfidals to prevent interference with civil a viation traCfic,'' be sald. ·Bank Sees Better Fund Rate The Ba nk of American Na- tional Trust and Savings Associa- tion intends to try to perk up lhe performance of a Laguna Beach High School scholarship trust fund, Laguna Beach school board members learned Tuesday night. The board recently was critical of managem ent of the trust by Bank or America, after review- ing figures showing that a prin· cipal of $147,898 invested in com- mon stocks drew only four per- cent in earnings in 1974. The trust was established in 1968, following t he death o( Laguna Beach area pioneer Jos eph Thurston, to provide financial assistance to deserving high school graduates. Members of the 1975 gr aduating class re· ceived $6,000 in scholar ships from the trust. In a lette r to school trustees , Howard E. Ritt, a bank vice pre- sident and senior trust officer, said it is the bank's intention to move away from total invest· ment in common stocks. The letter states that, during periods o( market strength, the bank will convert common stocks to fixed income investments, such as bonds which pay in ex- cess of eight percent annually. The conversion will continue unW there is a 50·50 mix of com- mon stocks and fixed income in- vestmenta, the letter stated. "We feel that this mix, given today's economy, will provide in- come of approximately six to seven percent as well as ap- preciation potential for the perpetuation of the trust," Ritt said in the letter. Boa.rd members seemed un- convinced about the bank 's claim that better performance is in the offing. ··1 hope in next year's review we review the alleged guarantee of six to se ven percent," s aid Trustee Michael Sagar, an at- torney. .. It says· approximately' there. Mike," re minded Trustee Harry Bithell. Laguna Poet,s To Presem Third Festival, The Laguna Beach Poets will present the Third Annual Poetry F estiva l with four nights of poetry readings from July 26 to Aug. 23 in Laguna Beach. The schedule is as follows :. -Elliot Fried and Holly Prado, 8 p.m. July 26 at Bridge Hall, 340 St. Ann's Drive. -An evening with Laguna poets, 8 p.m. Aug. 3 at 428 Park Ave. -Charles Bukowski, 8 p .m. Aug. 16 at the Laguna-Moulton Playhouse, 606 Laguna Canyon Road. -Sam E isens tein and Steve deFrance, 8 p .m . Aug. 23 at the Unitarian Hall, 429 Cypreas Drive. ' • ' .S OYUZ r..ANOING JOINT MISSION -Artist conception of the Apollo-Soyuz Test Project shows launch, rendezvous, docking, separa tion and . splashdown of two ships. If all goes well, U .. I llllltlrtllH the Ame rica n and Russian vessels will dock in orbit 136 miles above Germany Thursday for 44 hours of experiments. Parking Alternate Plan Set for Study A program to encourage downtown employes to park their cars in outlying areas instead of prime downtown spaces will be considered Wednesday by the Laguna Beach City Council. The proposal, unanimously ap- proved by the city's Parking and Transportation Committee, re- commends the city sell parking permits allowing employes to HOPE ..• alone, which drew more visitors than the entire fair did Monday. Virtually the only misfortune to m ar the event occurred when one woman !ell and sustained a leg injury when briefly tr~pled by the crowd. Hope was the most renowned celebrity ever to appear at the fair, in his first local show since a 1973 benefit performance for St. J oseph Hospital. The 72-ye ar-old performer wowed the crowd with several song-and-dance numbers, show- ing the m he is nowhere near ready for St. Joseph's himself - or any other hospital for that mat- ter. BUDGET ... Supt. Ro~rt San chis. Administr ators also have salt- ed away $32,700 to cover the cost oC any unanticipated enrollment during the upcoming school year, Lovelady said. The revised spending program also reflects a 6.5 percent salary increas e given school employes and related increases in the dis- trict 's support of employe retire- ment and health insurance pro- gr ams. The incr eases wiU cost the schools $244 ,000 next year. . Handicapped Unit Sets Laguna Meet The California Association of the Physically Handicapped will meet from 7:30 p.m. to9p.m. Ju- ly 25 at the community room of Laguna F e deral Savings, 260 Ocean Ave., Laguna Beach. Luciana D. Serantoni, group chairman, will welcome new members t-0 the meeting and out- line goals for the organization. Further information is available tiy calling 494-3351. park outs ide of the downtown core at a reduced rate. The permits would be good for metered parking spaces .on Second, Third and Mermaid Streets and Cli(( Drive between Acacia and Aster Streets. P ermits would sell for $104 per year, half the estimated $200 a Cull-time e mploye must now pay to park in meter ed stalls. The council will consider the request during the 4:30 p.m. por- tion of its agenda. Costly Rings Stolen Wedding and engagement rings valued at $1,000 were re· ported s tolen from Kathleen Dean, 263 Labeiro St., San Clemente. The report riled Tues- day with San Clemente police said the rings were taken Crom the woman's bedroom sometime between mid-June and Sunday. SPACE ••• they are in orbit waiting for you,'' Robert Crippen at Houston control told the three Americans. The astronauts' first chore of the day was to remove a stainless steel docking probe bung up because a wire connector shifted out o( position and blocked a re- moval tool. Crippen radioed in· structions on bow to fix it, and the astronauts reported a few minutes later that the probe had been successfully removed. "Aha, the pro.be is out," Sta!· ford said. The probe was used to clasp docking latches when the Apollo hooked up to its docking module Tuesday. It bad to be removed so the pilots could move into the module and later the Soyuz. After clearing the hatchway, the astronauts moved into the cylindrical docking module to •tart preparing it ro:r the meeting with the Russians. Delinquent Sewer Service Bid Urged DOORS OPEN AT 10 A'.M. Delinquent amounts range from $13 to $1,700, he s aid. Some have been delinquent for more than two yean .• Reese aald poat cards ootilying holder• of the •20 delinquent. ac· ~ta of the public bearings were mailed last week. He aaid the notlficatlon promp(ed about 10 percent of the accouota to be paid. Reese said resentment o1 the sewer and trash char1es and general misunderstanding oC the fees contr1buted to the lar1e number of dellnquencles. The •20 a ccounts represent about 6.5 percent or the 6,500 ac~ COUDtl 1n the city l.lmlt.. Financ e Director Richard Reese will recommend tonight the Laeuna Beach City Council take firm action to collect $37 ,ooo in delinquent sewer service and trash collection accounts. Reese will ask at theopenine of a 7;30 p.m . public bearing at Ctty JfaU that all delinquent suma be added to the property tax bills of affected properties. The public hearing Is acbeduled ao the council can bear both tit. proe and CON ol Reese'• r8quat. 8y eddlnS the amount.a to the w bllla, Reese saJd holden ot ddinquent account.I would bave ~a.Y up. or face a llen aialn.st property. MO EXCHANGES 01 RIFUMDS OM SALi MIRCHAMDISE PLIASI 12.l·o/CJ Raises To200 By RUDI NlEDZIFJJDCI Of'" 0.llf ...... ._,, All 200 Saddleback Community College District employes, from maintenance man to physics in· atructor, will receive pay in- creases ol 12.l percent this year. The increases, retroactive to JuJy 1, were ordered by the Board of Tru.stees in k~ing with a district policy which ties pay raises to the cost of living In· dex for the Los Angel~ area. Board members approved the ~.815 wage package oo a 4 to l vote Monday night with Board Chairman Robert Bartholomew d:isaenting. Although Barthotomew ex- pressed his awareness of the policy he voted in opposition to the increase because of th~ large amount o( money ipvolved. Abandonment of that policy bas been recommended by Roy Barletta , the d i strict ·~ negotiator, but board membe~ deferred a ction on that con- troversial proposal until July 28. The wage package was in~ eluded in a $16.3 million publica- tion budget also adopted by the board of trustees Monday night. Included in that figure are a $15.6 million g e ner al fund, $17,000 in reserves, and $707,087 for bond interest in redemption . The general fund category represents a $3.8 million increase of expenditures over thef current $11.8 million. That m eans that ta>ces will go up s ignificantly (or district resi· dents but not as much as school officia ls bad originally pre· dieted. The new budget will require a tax rate of 92 cents per $100 o( as- sessed va luation to sustain dis· trict operations. The current rate is 70 cents. It had been believed earlier that the tax ra te would be set at 98.8 cents but an unexpected in· crease in the district's assessed valuation allowed a reduction. Fro•PageAJ DISMISS ••• Vallerga's trial center on Orange County's sale o( a computerized appraisal system to Spartanburg County, South Carolina. · Vallerga is alleged to have act- ed illegally when he purportedly accepted expenses and consulting fees from Spartanburg w,hich were r elated to the sale of the . $2,045 computer system. SALE STARTS THURSD~Y, JULY 17th ALL SIZES OM RACKS FOR EASY SELECTION I i Medieal~g How to Select· · Physi~al Exam •• BySYLVlA POtTER Any medical history that !alls to explore your We styles and living habits such as smOkinJ, drinklnc. occupa· tional stress and nutritioo -and thereby identify risk f ac· tors which may pred.irpose you to medical problems -1-worthless:• • .., T h is statement ,,---------- t'omes from Dr. John Mccann. president of the New York-based Lile Extension Institute which has been ln the ''physical examination'• !or6:'.lyears. Money's Worth 'J.'.be LEI 's personal-medica.t history guestionnaire 'asks all clients such questioos as: DO you use· a seat belt in your car? Row much coffee do you dl!ink! How much alcohol do ~ you consume? Did youhaveayacallonlastyear? THE QUESTIONNAIRE - a relatively new system called the "Health Hazard Appraisal" -was pioneered by a le.am of ~hysicians at the Methodist Hospital of Indiana in lndianapoli.s. ~he answers_. wf?icb are processed through a compute~. 10d1cate your nsk in the futW'e of developing a major disease by appraising yoUl' living habits now - rather than by assessing actual s~ptoms which may not appear until the disease has become in~urable. . For instance, treatment for _a possible heart attack should begin with the appearance of high cholesterol. high blood pressure, cigarette smoking plus a genetic predisposi- tion to the disease -not with the appearance of chest pJ,ins. The new Health Hazard Appraisal (which costs onJy $10 for the questionnaire, computer processing and a medical interpretation) is only one earmark of a careful physical ex- am today. To sort out the complete, f4'irly priced medical exam from the incomplete, overpriced physical, here are other guidelines: . -AFTER THE PHY8JCAL, is there a follow-up system to determine whether any proposed treatments are work· ing? Is there a personal, unhurried consultation with the physician, discussion of key problems and "prec;ursors" and counseling on how to deal with the problems? -Are you permitted to l\ave a copy of your medical re~ cord, including not only the results ol your tests and medical observations by the examiners but also any computer prin· tout analyzing the questionnaire you filled out and your ex· am'sfindings? • -Uthe exam is given at a group practice or clinic or a Health Maintenance Organization, is ther e a peer review system under which doctors monitor each other's work? -Is the staff oriented toward prevention vs. acute care? Are they members of such organization~ as: the American Board of Preventive Medicine, which certifies ·physicians to specialize in this field, sets up training criteria and offers periodic exams; the Amehcan College of Preven- tive Medicine; the American College of Physicians; the Society or Internal Medicine? Have the physicians been certified by the American Board or Internal Medicine? -HOW STABLE AND reputable is the group practice or the clinic? Who is behind the operation, who runs it, how long has it been there? Watch out for today's rapidly ex- panding "mass" operations, including health spas and fly- by-night "physical factories." -Are all X-rays and electrocardiograms interpreted by those who have had special training in the fields? Is the laboratory p roperly certified by a state, local (or in some cases federal) agency? Does the lab subscribe lo outside quality control services such as the program of the American College of Clinic~l Pathologists? Are there sub- professionals on the staff -to help physicians expand their services without compromising quality? Some final warnings: inquire about costs or proposed Jab services and be wary of excessive numbers of tests. IC you s uspect lab charges ar e excessive, ask the physi - cian for a detailed report on costs of services. A reasonable total charge for a 12-channel blood chemistry is $10·$151 for a urinalysis, $3-$5; serology, $3·$5; blood count, $3·$5; chest X-ray, $15·$25; EKG, $15·$25. Prices of services should be ~ily obtainable. IF YOU FEEL YOU can't afford the full physical re· c:ommended for you, ask for advice on what corners you can cut. . Factory Takeover Profits 16 Women CUGGIONO, Italy (AP) - Sixteen determined women have made a sm all, down-al· the-heel factory near Milan into ItaJy's most successful experiment in worke r management. The staff of the ·'Work and Freedom" bath mat factory insist that their only aim is to make enough money to live on and that neither politics nor ideology is a r actor. IN ITS DAYS OF peak pro- duction the factory, known then as Velco, had ~workers and turned out about 500 bat.bs mats a day. By last February, the work force was Rotarians To Hear . Wu Lecture down to 32 and the company announced it was going to fire more because of the re- cession. The 32 women oc- cupied the plant. By April, half the women had left , fearing legal. troubles. But the remaining 16 were managing ·to tum out some 150 mats a day using material already in stock. With tbe profits trom their first sales. the 16 ordered new material. They also enlisted the aid or a nearby main· tenance firm to keep their machines running smoothly. "AND NOW. A BANK bas offered us a mulli·milllon·lire loan. We have rejected the of- rer for tbe moment, though, as we can still get by on our own,•• one of the women said. The women each take home 150,000 lire -$240 -a month, what they got be(ore. "We could take more now as sales last month were ex· t.remelY &oodt but we pref er to Cj_.. beina taken to help build ug some reserves which _...., 111 could come !n bandy in solve the current energy sup-aid Ann ply 1horta1e will be ~ussed harder months," s a by Barbara Mintier com-Morgante. munity programs rei>resen· The women are awaiting.a tatlve for the Southern court decis ion on thear Calllomia Gas Co., at a meet.-takeover later this month. i nt or the Laguna Hl111 They say they are willing to ~ Club at noon July 23. band the tactory back to it.a The group will meet at the ownen if ful~loycnent ls Villa Sweden, 237.0 El Toro guaranteed. d Road. El Toro. "We are not af aid," uJ Ms. Mintier will dlscusa MlH Moq1nto. ·'We have eau111• t>! the present natural proved the flrm can be corn· 1u 1borta1e and possible re-petltlve, eapeclally with med in for the problem. modemlutioo or lbe plant.. TbeH eJans include import· and we dct, not rule Odl ht.Pd· ma uforal gu lo liquell.S mall back. . farm from dlltant snports, produeln1 1•• froua coal and plpln1 n~ora l gas h'om Canada. "BUT THE WOR&BaS must not pay (M the ownet"I' mistakes." . -. - . - 18,1975 OAllYPtLOT Wedoe&day's· .. Closing Prices NEW 'YORK STOCK EXCHANGE • HEW VOIU( CUl'I) -~!Owl,,. .,. ,,,1c .. Oft ,.,. i..w Vot~ $Ioele u (lwo11oe •• , .. s.... f.1'1 P.f (MU tloM (hO A-~tl. I ..ate 12t e1'4> ~ AC>Doell.b wt , • tt •U• • '-ACFlf'ICI 1,.0 t •t •S'I• , ... Actne(lv .50 S U t Vt+ ~ AQfl'IC>f .02b • ' ' -h Ac!Eaor •7b • • Ii 1~ "'" ANm•Mllll •• $t .S\11-\o ~ .. 122 •••• Mlvlnv .20b •• SJ th+ \f MtneLt 1.oa 12 a 2111> + ,,.. Allmton 20 1 aDO IOh + \Ir Alleen t11q1 t S> ,._ •• a lrbFrllt.SO 10 M 111o1o ~ Air Pl'd .too It 19' )0\-~ AtrT;Olnc t0 • 11• 21VI I'!. A J lndlistrs 1 1~ ,.,.__ ,,.. 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S I U~ t E ic. :io 11 eo n~ 11.'11 McKN A,. t 74 2'"• "' Ptleroto . • *' t t0 • " me-"' .1' t es • - rnll • I 110 I~-" M<LA~ ,,, ' 9 m-.. Vt ~ ., .,. ''"" ,,.., SINlllM l6 II l•T IS -"' .IO .. s ·~.s llt.'°6 s al 19\lt-11\ NICLttlSf.i s • 1~1 ,.,. t ,, ··~·" MOii 1.au •m -I AO s IU -~ .. ' ="' 1'-.. ' uv.-" a· p 1 ~"' A>r1t I"', •• 1$ "~ " ~ton n ...... ... ... ) .. l )4i5+ .--~ f 11 u-,.+ 1 • u• ....... """°• 1• ' "' '6"'. v. '° .. 10 1> + .,,.. ~-~e1 ·,;.1,nft • 'Ila+ -~· H9Utl't1.1•t a 1~ • , N11t t. .• I ~+"' PGlpffl.50 • HO 104"-t-\<\ .S ,. 016-" ....., .. • .._,Inc' •t "~" 2 •• 1 as,,., ••• Pltntll IA • .. 41 • v. .10 • 1cri u -" ;rum '"'.ll 1' " • - • .. -~:..,_,:OM.:;;.;::;::..;Y:...:"1...:.l=.::O::...;T;....__ ______ w.;...:..;;.;.s~nt;!dey, Juty 18, 1075 .TV DAILY LOG Wednesday Evening JULY 16 l..'90 110 98i>fEED114Yt (VOUJ(OO(t')<9Cll> """ D (I)..._. o-..WMwna .... Aon maw~· fl) Mlria Ttme ~1'1111...i.n fD Dldrtr c..,.., lJ) hdJ' FrielW\ 1:• a '"" 5riltil sa.. ID rut Clfl lltW• S9J EI1)r11CMU'11H C l!I ) DNM's Olelc:c mrmtf na. Q) c.n.,.c 5euolttt OJ littlt 11.uulJ 1:00 e o o Q) oo m CD""" (}) ,,_ ... I) lwfillc i.r Dellala aw Sii• (.el Truth II C••.-•U O Wllat's MJ LIMl OJI lt¥t lucy (E)Tllt flt Ei) le Mujt1 '""™" -Qt TIM lie Valley W Ju1111 Woll With , •• Cl!Cf )INanu 6;}Dn1U 6)Tlll" SU.cu 01Ji (l)dj (QPUMIU£ nit U. -a.ti 8ri111 11.t1th, lolln Mills. Barry Mone an4 lllll Pal111tr atar ill lhk l.Plf' •IAl·MlltS IMMd Oii a '•ul Calilco atory. K..th, Milli and Mont ~IJ 111tmllen of a smalt> ftlllil of I011111t World War II undera«M/114 lielllera who reunite 25 YNl1 aftH Iha wit and 10 bad. lift· dtl&round tG fitlll aaaln -this time apllUI 1 aimlNI plot thal sttlllS to have n•n '"°'' serious lmphatloru.. [Ith 111tmbtr of the a1011p rMtts to llis wartime pseudolly111 -illCll n f'ol, tllt Tiew °' Ille leopard - rtsult1111 Ill their coll«tro fllct.· n1111e. "Th• Zeo Cane." Miss Palmer IPPUr1 IS the Olfller ol • tale on tht frendl Rivlffa wl11ch StrvtS .s tit• lllffl1nr place lor the cane. n.u.._..... . ~ Merit: (Ztlr) "f)t Pictt1 Tlllt l..._ -.~ (com) '62 -Ch111ton Hulon, [Is. Martinelli, Harry Guar· d1no. Q) Tiit t.w Orie$ tn Tiit Cities: Ulldt Sa• C.. Yee {9are A Oi11t! 10:00 II fiZJ I]) U-U "ll•rdblll" (R) Manni.t acts u a tool for 1 c11m1· nil's rmnc• to sawe the life of badly woundfil lt. M.itom when the rwo are taken hosr11e by a crook, esupinf durinr a court hm· ln1. l)OJU)lhn (6) 'eny Mawa 0 (~ 00> Q) CD Biretta ''This Am'! My Bae" (R) Sen! lo a posh community to find a m1Sl1nc wile 7:JO I"-"'-11t'1 t.nt ef tllt W"lid •ho 1s rich and beaul1lul, 81re!11 . 1ta .. That Tuu ltarns that the 11rdens 11e the only Leve AMtrlCU Stylt !hone that ~mell sweet on Ille sub· . U Ctltbnty Snt~tat.n mbs. and yurns for his rtgular ) Qz. _l. Te ltA tllt lrul11 turf-the cil'(s SH l!IY struts. i111e11 $ Mevlt: (C) (Zhr) .._a J Tiie Fii el tht lllWf" (wts) ·~2 -m 'ti S.art Jamu Stewart, Nlhur llenntdy, Julit Adam1. Roc.k lludio". t1* 'r"• Aun QgJ ,, .. Is lticllt ID Mllllaota Ordles1ra at Orchn-QJ Hoc11'1 Herta ba Hall Tiii "•• • TM funeral Game· lO:lO 0 ~ Ted ~f I ld's Make A Dtll llltdMs ""111' m ....., "" Cet:i lllt Cea11t1J 11~ Nfrlcl Hi1dact Celd1ltJ lwtilll al lfodlu Ta,.._ Utae ltncali ... 11 ® CI> r on.• , 11:00 o oo o ei m m 1 ... Din (R) TOllJ Ra':J.11 and Cimo 0 (I) ®l QJ (I) News ruest. I) Int el C!Mdlt 0 Ill W ®) m littlt House ~ Scl lillt Oii .f!lc l'nk'lt "Tht Circus Man" 0 Tiie LllCJ Shtw (RI Red Buttons CUtsls as I Ont GJ · • . lllpeuible min lllV~lnC CHCUS and lait~ heal m ::s:;... '~· whose "m1rKlt mtdic1ne" almcnt @ CV httr 'u• kills Mrs. Oleion. tl§ The Untoudlllll~ I) Mft1t: (C) (%h1) "Tht Stat\ ("'"' ~) f'ldofJ at Su Ute ti W1h11 Mitt(' (com) '4 7 -~.Jn.1J Dinny K.aye, Vir&ln!I Mayo, Ann 11:15 ~ Ci111111 34 Ruthtrlord. (i) WiW W-IW WHt ll:JO 0 ~ (2) ([) CIS late Mtfit: f) (~ Cl)) (}) Q) lWs 111J (t) olfit ~ (dra) ·n - 111111 "Hontlly Day'' (R) Clifton, Charfu DuminL Ronnit Cai. Zohra ahru an4 lracy face hilauous con lam~ sequences when they pledce to tel. ~ a) 00 9 m JtilHJ em. only lbt truth '°' one whole day. 1\1 "91..,._rs I Dlllft's aa.lct 6 MIN: "'""' tit" (dra).'43-....., Tlln f,W,, Randolplt Scott. Grace McDonald. e "9f.-AWN O ("' Cf)> 00 W'ldt Wor1d MJs-Qt lhrit: (C) CZlwl ""OaWs tr ''""Dutta Crui~" (R) (com) '60 -frank Sinatra, Dtan O Mftlt: "ll's A l ie C:-try" Martin. Sam111y Oms J1, (d11) '52 -Gary Coopef, .Jantt I f"*i C... Lt1C11. fthel S.rrymort, Gerie Kelly, au.,i...-., Wmfilt \'an Jollnson • ...,_,, ~ Pncr-. m 111e Thll u,. &JO 1J (~ l CS) Q) Ale ... _ U.• 0 CIMSltM *7 ...._: (C)~ "'T\t Sn S,. tD Mtwic: "TM lie Sbttt" (dra) W' (R) (dra) 74 -ConnM! S!ev· '42 -Henry fotlda, Lucine Ban, em. Sllellty W1nttts, Jtck ~rttr, Sam Levene. W1lha111 Castle, Don Munay, Jamu (E) Gtt Sfttart OISOll, Hehe!Wh Pen ott, Madlyn . Rhue, W1llllm Smith, Milton Stitzer. 12:30 I) Twil1ctat Zont A st1tle1 rC>Chts to !arne .as lht l:OO 8 ~ T 0111.,,.. 11ahon's numbtr one pmup 1111, dis· CI)([)@ (j) News CJO'lerinc th• thrill ot success and the loneliness it brines. 1:45 O Mtfit: "In tht Frewch style" m lltfy Criff• Sllew ' (dral '63 -Jun Seber&. Stanley tn llH lllil4s, Mill ~ Baker. t:00 8 ~ (l1 (I) Ca-• "The Min Who CoUldn't Force!" (R) tannon btcomts 1rwofa witll an attempltd u s.uinatlO.lllfcl the s.11th '°' 1 ,.., comi11al actused of World W11 II conwtlr1lioft CHIP 1lroc:d!l.S. Thursday DAYTIME MOVIES lt:OO 0 "bdlairt...r (rot11) '49 Onrd NMn. T trtsl W11(11t. Far1t C11111cr. Gtt1 Pcnuu. 00 -ea,laia .., Ja6w) '35 -h1ol flynn, Ol1¥11 Cle Hnilland, Brnl Ralhbon<. J.Z:oo OJ ''Cusbtvr (dra) '55 -Arthur Ktnntdy, Wllhu1 Btndlll, lutllef Adler, Gene Evans. 1;00 0 ''Tiit last ~ (•div) '35- Cary Grant. Claude Rains. Gtrlrude Michlcl. 2:00 ID All·lfirhl Shor. "A Yant in tbe R.A.F." "ThfJ Live bJ Hi&hr l :lO 0 MO¥it: (Cl "'TllvlllMr Om Ari- 10111" (wu) '56 -Skip Home1er, Georae MJC1eady. Of (Cl "Tiie ~an• (dra) '65 -Charles Drake, Ceo<ce Sanders, Dennis Price. l:OO (l_gi (C) -W-iqs et f11t" (d11) '67- Su11nne Ples/M!ttc, lill!fs hrenhno, Lloyd Nolan. Ci~ 00 (C) ""-rwt" (adv) '55- Grace ~lly. Slewart G11ncer, Piul • Dourlls, John u ICSOl'I. l:lO rl) (C) 'b4y ill tltt Darr (mus) '44 -G1net1 Roeers. Ray Milland. 0 (C) "'9td "'ichbor Sam" Cond. (com) '64 -Jack Lemmon, Romy Scllntider, Oolothy Provine, Mike Connors. 4:00 O "SIMtblcly Up The1t Ltln Mt" (dr1) '!>6 -Paul lfewman. Pier Aneell, S,I M1nt0. KOCE_ Tele vision (50) &e.ks-t:lrus<MIS .. 7:H Ye9• Wit• M•••llae (Cl (KOC El 7:H Ora111• C••••Y .... , (Cl CKOCEI •:• Mastff~t 'DNtre (Cl IPBS) Upslal~. Oownst•il"S -EpllOde X: '"""91 The Foot mat\ Saw" 9:• ~ la tM Act CCI CP8SI "'R•"" MIKKll'non and JtrtmiMI eurrwm·· :~thelaluana1 .. leawlt lay. ::fortheplamureof tt.-. whose ~ • fmle It-~ Judith Crill. NEW YORIC MA CJ.ZIN! I Conway Boosts Career Carol Burnett Show to Break Hu Spell? LOS ANGELES (AP) By BOB THO~ LOS ANGELES CAP> -Now that he has been announced as a regular member of "The Carol Burnett Show" cast, Tim Conway may have to change bis personalized license plate. It reads "13 WKS" -testimony lo the length of the moon-fa ced runnyman's television series. E x- cept that one of them lasted only one performance • -11 minutes in Conway's native city of Cleveland. More about that later. Conway will join Harvey Korman and Vicki Lawrence in weekly SUPPOrt of the multitalente<l CONWAY Burnett during her mnth season on CBS Saturday night. Conway has been a frequent visitor to the show and a semi-regular last season. He is the first to be added to the permanent cast since the show began. "CAROL IS THE ONLY star 1 would go on as a r egular with," said Conway. "H?Ivey is of- fended by the term 'second banana,' bul with Carol you can't be anything else, she's that great. "So now Harvey and 1 are faced with a whole year of breaking each other up. It's hard for us to look a teach other without bu'stingoutlaughing. . "That has been true ever since we were dis- cussing a personal problem of his in his dressing room one day. "He was dressed in a chicken costume and I was outfitted as the Avon Lady, but we were both very serious about the conversation. Suddenly we realized that he was speaking through the beak or a chicken, and I was wearing a dress. "WE HAVEN'T BEEN able to take each other seriously since. :.Now Carol is beginning to break up, too. ~·s all right. ~ thi.~ the audience likes it, as long as 1t seems genuine. About those series. The first was "Rango," a comedy western. "We discovered the folks in the West don't like comedy westerns ," he said. "Nor do the folks in the East the North and the South, and even those in the · midd.le don't care much for them." Elapsed air time : 13 weeks. Next came ''The Tim Conway Show'' in which MESA ·-British actor Nicol he and the late Joe F1ynn ran a funny airplane. "We Williamson wtll portray round out people don't like funny airplanes, either." ·reseodary detective Length of run: 13 weeks. Sherlock Holmes and Sir Laurence Oliver will NEXT, .. THE TIM Conway Com~y House" -play bis arch nemesis, "it wasn 't." Again, 13weeks. Moriarty, in the film ''But the record came with George Schlatter's version of .. The Seven· offshoot of 'Laugh-In,' called 'Turn-on.' ABC pulled Per·CentSolutioo." it after one performance, and in Clevel~nd they Also appearing in the yanked the plug after ll minutes on the aLr, that's Universal feature will be 1 OJ. c..-OI' how.offended they were. . Alan Arkin as Freud. • ,..-PAMnB LIMOMADI "George s aved money on the premiere party -:-:~·===:--=="""'~,,_.,.~~~~=~!:!!!!!!!~!!ii!!~ for the cast and crew. 'Turn-on' appeared here r three hours after it did in New York, by which time The terrif yi11g motion. ABC had already canceled it. So the premiere party picture from the was also the going-away party." terrifying No.1 ~st Miler. NOWIN IT'S NEWPORT 673-8350 COME EARLY • STROLL NEW UDO VILLAGE TH •SUCCESSFUL •EVENTFUL MONTH MWS 1884 Newr.ort Costa ~ S4 1 ss; HOW TH.RU TUESDAY IARHA STHISAHD JAMES CAAH "FUHHY LADY" IP'G) WOODY DIANE . AIIEN KEATON . -*.-!SI.JI -Ml. 'MD. MIU. ... "''· ....... .... & SUN. , ,.,,. . .:a -rHE FOttTUMI"" -si.FOU WIYIS• 11) "TOMMY" "EARTHQUAK£M ~ JUGGERMAUr" lPGJ _,. YOYA&E OF SMAD"" -wESTWOaLD• INt •aiTVIM OF THI • Z ..... PANTH&• CPGt UilMii!O~AIV~( -IN • ' • -swrc>IT YOUI LOCAL Ste..,,. "'ONCE IS MOT a.O'*t" W "8&H SANCTION" llJ $1.25 'TIL 2:30 P.M. at STARRED(•)CINEMAS WAll84 IEA TTY SADDLEBACK PLAZA 11 IUAOAO"OAIAOCl<llllO ~81-~8110 . 1HE 711aVOYAGE OF SIHIAD .. .... -rHI MlSlBIOUS ISLAMDOF ~A .. MIMO•' "DOCTOR ZHIVAGO" WIMMBOF 6ACADEMY AW AIDS FOUNTAIN VALLEY • FOUNTAIN VALLEY • 811UOKHUll\I Al tl>INl..111 ..... tlJ9 ·1'.>00 One of our DlllGSilUIS lsMlsslng 1:05-J:lO i-.J~7:50 -Plus - "CINDERELLA'' 8AOOIC HUll~t Ar lOINCilR ll.l9 -1~00 All-TIME QOT! 8 1 THE ClASSIC ~ Qj DOCTOR ZHMGO GENERAL CINEMA CORPORATION COME TO THE FAIR WITH CHANNEL 50 See our e.xciting LIVE color T.V special of the Orange County Fair. TONIGHT at 7:30 KCCE-T50 Or ... County T~ llTON JOHN e 'IMI WMO .. 4-lWAOt snuo TOMMY""' MONTHIY pap,,_. "WVE .. ~ and DEATll" B•rg•i" M•Qln2.'30 Senior Citizens 1. 50 at all times SOUTH COAST PLAZA THEATRES SAN DIEGO FW'f. AT BRISTOL .Tommy ....... FREE PARl<I G 6tJJ.9'lt WI'-l:l ... :JS.,..3- "WHAT'S UP. TIGll ULY-1,u .11:u ?.111/S-:r.J.7.S .. llt:M 6 11DEA TH WISH• -.,.., .... , WJ'S-4:4W:45 . .. .. •. I I I ' \ l I \ •• Saddlebaek EDITlbN VO L. 68, NO. 197, 6 SECTIONS. 70 PAGES . ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA . . .. -• T oday'!i Clo N.Y. Stec W E DNESDAY; JULY 16, 1975 TEN CENTS Pros arid Cons of 'Big MAC' Debated ByJANWORnt Of .. 0.lty Pllet ~If T a lk of m oney and politictal clout is likely . jO furnish t~e them~ or a meeClng Thursday/on possibilities for a SaddJeback Valley wide Municipal Advisory Council (MAC). Lead ers of t he El Toro Homeowners Association have invited leaders of other com- munities to attend and give opi- nions on whether they think an area-wide panel is feasible. "I don't think a MAC ls any better than the Saddleback Area Coordinating Council (~CC>," Rick Bohay, president of SACC, said in a brief survey of homeowner leaders. "Since a MAC is only an ad- visory body, it wouldn't have any more power -and it costs a lot more money,'' The MAC is an elected panel · which gathers local opinion on parks and recreation, health and s afety, ·roads and traffic and land planning. Jt passes on recommendations t o th e county board of supervisors, which make final decisions for the unincorporated Saddleback Valley. The only MAC in Orange serves Mission Viejo. Its budget, not counting the cost of last Nov- ember's election, has been about $6,SOO for the first year. The funding comes from the treasury of County Service Area Nine, provided by a 41.6 cent tax per $100 assessed valuation on Mission Viejo residents. "A MAC is a waste of tax- payers' money -because it doesn't really give them con- trol," Bohay said. "The only way to iet control i!'< t.n become a ctty and E l Toro certainly i• not ready for that yet.'· The meeting is setfor7:30p.m. in the multi-purpose room of Los Ali.sos Intermediate School, Mis- sion Viejo. Leaders of an · ad hoc commit- tee formed by the El Tor o Homeowners Association main· lain that as an elected panel, a MAC has more credibility than a volunteer homeowners associa· lion. El Toro spokesmen say even lf no one else joins in their ~C, they will continue the campai~. Besides Bobay, a Laguna Hills r esident. representatives . ol South Laguna Hills, Aegean Hills and Leisure World are expected Thursday. "We haven't had a c hance to <See MAC, Page A2) Judge Denies Berto • oDismissal . '·~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Watching Irvine Flock D~lly Pllclt Staff P11elo ay Wllll~m S<twelber Sheepman Aurelio Ramirez, who says he's from Peru, stands with his dogs watching the "band" of 1,200 sheep owned by Dominic Duhart of El Toro. The sheep are grazing on Irvine Company land south of Lion Country Safari under terms of a lease. Company spokesman Fred Keller said it is the first time in three years sheep have come onto the ranch to feed and eventually they'll work their way into the heart or the ranch. Astro11Llllts Approaching Cosnw11Llllts HOUSTON ' (UPI) -Three American astronauts easily fixed a minor problem in their Apollo today and bore down on Russia's two Soyuz cosmonauts more than l .000 miles a head for a union Thursday 136 miles over Germany. The flagships or the two space powers circled the world every hour and a half in the second day or history 's first international manned spacelligbt. Alexei Leonov and Valeri Kubasov opened the day's ac- tivities by gunning their 15,000· pound Soyuz into a near perfect ·•assembly" orbit 138lo140 miles high to wait for Thomas Stafford, V a nc e Brand and Donald "Deke" Slayton to join them. ·•vour friends just finished a circ (circularization) bum and they are in orbit waiting for you," Robert Crippen at Houston control told the three Americans . The astronauts' first chore of the day was to remove a stainless steel docking probe hung up because a wire connector shifted out or position and blocked a re- moval tool. Crippe n radioed in- structions on how to nx it, and the a stronauts reported a few minutes later that the probe bad been successfully removed. "Aha, the probe is out," Staf- ford said. College Employes Given 12.1 % Hikes By R UDI NI EDZIELSKI Of Ille D•llY Pllet SUtf All 200 Saddleback Community College District employes, .from maintenance man lo physics in- structor , will receive pay in- creases of 12.1 percent this year. The increases, retroactive to July l , were ordered by the Board of Trustees in keeping with a district policy which ties pay raises to the cost of living in- dex for the Los Angeles area. MAC Selects 3 to Serve On Rec· Board Two members and o n e alternate have been selected by the Mission Viejo Municipal Ad - visory Council to serve on a new Saddlebac k Valley recreation commission. Cal Neve, MAC first vice presi- dent and a deputy sheriff and Tony Loechner, chairman of the MAC parks and recreation com- mittee, were chosen. Alternate will be Mission Viejo resident Tom Stout. .... Board members approved the $464,815 wage package on a 4 lo 1 vote Monday night with Board Chairman Robert Bartholomew dissenting. Although Bartholomew ex- pressed bis awareness of the policy he voted in opposition to the increase because of the large amount of money involved. Abandonment of that policy has been recommended by Roy Barletta, the di s tri c t 's negotiator, but board members deferred action on that con- troversial proposal until July 28. Tbe wage pac kage was in- cluded in a $16.3 million publica· lion budget also adopted by the board of trus tees Monday night. Included in that figure are a $15.6 million general fund, $17,000 in reserves, and $707,087 for bond interest in r edemption. The general fund category represents a $3.8 million increase of expenditures over the current • (See PAY JUKE, Page A2) Vessel Seized NEW YORK <UPI) -The Coast Guard Tuesday night seized a J apanese fishing vessel in the Atlantic Ocean off the coast or Maryland for illegally taking lobster s from the U.S. Continental Shelf, a spokesman reported. Defense Opens Its Case Or ange County Superior Court Judge Walter Smith ordered the trial or accused conspirator James Bertolino to continue Tuesday. The order was made despite protests from Bertolino's al· torney Donald Thamer, that the prosecution failed lo prove that a conspiracy existed in the Orange County assessor's ofCi ce to help elec t Andrew Hinshaw lo Congress in 1972. Along with eight oth e r employes in the assessor's office. Bertolino was charged in a grand jury indictment last December with participating in an alleged conspir acy that used county employes to help elect Hinshaw to Congress. Six or the nine indictees have pleaded guilty to some charges in the 33-counl 10dictment. But Bertolino pleaded innocent to charges of conspiring to sub· mil false documents and grand lhert. By mid-day Tuesday, pro- secutor William Evans rested his case against the 52-year-old de- fendant. And Thamer, who delayed his opening statem ent until Evans completed his case, charged that the deputy district attorney failed to prove a conspiracy ex- isted. Furthermore, Thamer added. if there was a conspiracy Evans had not shown that Bertolino was a participant. · But Judge Smith denied h.is plea to dismiss the case and or- dered the defense· attorney to present his side or the case. For openers, Thamer insisted that his client bad not been grant- ed his constitutional rights when he spoke to investigators and testified before the grand jury But when Evans presented those statements as part of the prosecution's case, Judge Smith permitted them to be entered into evidence over Thamer's heated objections. <See TRIAL, Page A2) Boost in J et Noise Coming Tustin and Irvine residents may notice a change in the noise they must tolerate from El Toro Marine Corps Air Station jets. Base officials said Tuesday that El Toro's primary runway will be closed intermittenUy for the next 10 weekdays, due to con- struction. On weekends planes will use the normal duty runway.· All air traffic will continue to operate in the normal traffic area, oCficials said. .... ... The probe was used to clasp docking latches when the Apollo hooked up to its docking module Tuesday. It bad to be removed so (See SPACE, Page AZ) FIRST COVPIE ·IJ()VGHT ITEM The recreation commission was set up by the Saddleback Valley Unified School District to be the watchdog of a new year- around, $132,000 recreation pro- gram. The panel will include two representatives of each Orange County service area participat- ing in the joint school district- county project . Included are Laguna Hills, E l Toro, Aegean Hills, Mission Viejo, and South Laguna Hills. Boom Towns Marines Plan Noisy Games .. I'm very happy with the ad. 'lbe first couple who came to see the refrigerator, bought it." That's the succesa experienced by the Huntington Stach "M>man who placed this ad lo the Dally Pllot: FRIGlDAIRE Refrlg., wbL SW tall. lood work CODd. fM. Aft. S, XlCX· XlCXX. II you have a us,.appllance you would Uk~ to.~ wtrt to cuh, call M2·5678. W'-,ake it ea1y to _pvt a (ew words woTk for you ln the Dally Pllot. ' Three Murdered J ACKSONVILLE BEACH, .F1a. <UPI> -Two young men and a woman we.re found bound, sagged, and apparently stabbed to death in a motel room Tues- day, poUce reported. The victims were not immediately identifled. At leul one of the vlcthns, who ~gi.at.ered in room 117 at the Surfside Quality Inn last f)'iday as "Jle>nald McCatthy" was tbou1bt to be from Vir1lDia Beacb, Va. · The Orange Coast may be bat- tered by sonic booms tonight as El Tortf Marine Corps jets take part in a massive training ex- ercise simulating combat with enemy bombers. Air Force, Air National Guard, Navy and Marine jets will scl"amble from bases between San Diego and Merced this even- ing in an exercise simulating a West Coast enemy attack. · El Toro'a F ·4 squadrons wUI joln the mus ln~rc.ptor ml9Mon in the ''early evem.n. hou.nt" tonight, 1ald an 1 1 Toro apofletman. An Air Force 1pokesuwi pre.. dieted that some tonte booms • may be heard in inland as well as coastal areas. "While supersonic rught is not an objective or the exercise, some ol the interceptors may have to maneuver at supersonic speed over the Pacific," the El Toro spokesman said. ''Should atmospheric condl· tions be unfavorable at the time, it is po1sible that some offshore sonic booms may be beard along the coastline. "Ttte· ex4R"tise wlll not lnvo)ve fttlaa ol weap0ns and has eocildtnated with Federal .atlod A~m lratloo ClfOdala to freVent eren.ce ~ civil avietiOll tr c." be laid. D•llf Pllol Ptlotolty "lcl1•rd K"hlor THE OLD TROUPER AT 72 STILL WOWS A CRQWD Comic Bob Hope Packed In 15,000 at County Fair 15,000 Cheer Hope At County Fair By ARTHUR R. VINSEL Of Ille Dally Piiot ~ A standing·room-only throng of up to 15,000 nocked lo see one of America's most celebrated come- dians, Bob Hope, at the Orange County Fair in Costa Mesa Tues- day night. · His appearance on what was designated Senior Citizens' Day was considered the highlight of the 1975 fair . ''We finally had to tum many away, which was unfortunate but inevitable," said Peggy Bayless, publicity director for the fair. Hope cracked jokes and quips for half the two-hour show which also included orchestra leader Les Brown and bis Band of Renown and singer Rosemary Clooney. He carried the performance with customary pepper and flair, delighting the crowd includ- ing Edna Belshan who came all the way from Oxnard and stood in line seven hours. "I've loved him for years," said the S2·year-old woman. One gray-wigged woman and longtime Hope fan quipped that she almost tossed her apartment key onstage. "Groupies come in all ages,'' she remarked . The 72-year -old comedian whose business acumen has made him one of the wealthiest enter· tainers in the world received about $25,000 for the 'free ad· mission appearance. "I'm older than 1 ever meant lo be," declared the humorist E x -Radio Star Plans Address Former radio star John Milton Kennedy will make a guest ap- pearance before the Saddleback Valley Exchange Club Thursday noon at the Laguna Hills Hilton Inn. Kennedy. now wlth the com· munications department ~ the Southarn CaJlfornia EdilOn Com· pan)', wW talk about. '"Science In A.cUoo.r'' amiliar ra<ilp pel"llCIOality tlie' 40•s, SO'a and early . a> , ennedy was the announcer for the Otd Lux Radio n.ater and for tbe Loretta Youns Show. whose career has carried him from the ro ugh-cut boards <j vaudeville stages to the fanciest·· nightspots in the land, in addjtion to the jungles, fields and trenches w)lere American Gls fought three wars. "Fair a udiences are the greatest. They're her~ for fun," quipped Hope, who obviously shared the night's good times "l love it here," he also said. "It's a thrill they took the cattle out before I got here.·' Typical Hope humor hurled barbed jests at the CIA, the economy. the alleged horror movie "Jaws" about a monster shark. and sinJ?er Cher's highly publicized musical marriages. Costa Mesa police had to'detail extra patrolmen to crowd controt duties due to the Hope s how alone, which drew more visitors than the entire fair chd Monday. Virtually the only misfortune lo mar the event occurred when one woman fell and sustained a (See BOB HOPE, Page A2) Oraage A Coaat ~-~~ Weathe r Low clouds through late morning Thurs day, otherwise mostly sunny and a bit wa rmer with beach highs near 70 rising lo the low 80s inland areas. Lows tonight 60 to 65. I NSIDE T ODA Y How ore our new Com.p .Pendelton re/ugeu faring along the Orange Coast? Some have joN, mon11 ore in school learning Engluh -. and . all have tlwrir own peraoaal com- ment.ton A mtrico. ~e storiea . and pho(oa Page 89. ladex N.Y-Senlc• Al M11u11Mr~ CJ ........ ., --· •• 1 L.M...!:f ,.,. -IP'liMl 1114 Ctl • ... ~'-'-''""" A4 Q.ttalti.I OMO Or• .... Ctvftt~ •• CMlk\ •• ....,.. c;1 J ~ .. ,,,.i. ,..,,., u =::=. A1 5'Wtl aM ,.. S.C:ti Merti .. ~ .... liU I lat ..., 'f ..... tlM •• ~ a+.s ~ ... , .... U.t• WN01tr A4 Miii IC.-Cl WW141Neft M By GARY GRANVILLE Offfl• o.au, PJ•oUuH Superior Court Judie E\'erett · Dickey dismissed bribery charges against Tandy COrp Vice President James Buxto~ Tues.day and granted rum im- muruty from prosecutJon in mat- ters related to the Orange County Assessor's Office scandal. Along with Assistant Assessor George Upton, Buxton waa. in- dicted la.st March by the county New Blood Sought/or Committees John Sipple, chairman of the traffic committee of the Mission Viejo Municipal Advisory Coun- cil, has put out a plea for new committee members. "We need people who are will· ing to work for a minimum for a year a nd won't quit after the pro- blem in their neighborhood is corrected." Sipple said. The committee studies com-· plaints from Mission Viejo resi- dents r egarding speed limits stop s igns, dangerous curves o; intersections and other traffic problems. Recommendations are made to the MAC, which discusses the situation and makes a recom· mendation to Orange County board or supervisors where final decisions are made. More information is available by calling the MAC office 581·7610 or Sipple, 831-1644. ' Lower Rates For Utilities Users Coming ~me San Diego Gas and f;lec· trac cus tome rs in soutnern Orange County will receive elec- tricity r ate reductions as a result of a routine rate reduction re- quest made by the utility to the s tate Public Utilities Com- mission. Rates for many consumers are expected to fall from $S to $11 on a yearly basis. The requested rate reduction was made because of increased population d ensity in Orange o:>unty areas served by the San Diego-based utility. This in· eludes the south portion of Mis· sion Viejo, San Juan Capistrano, San Clemente and surrounding areas. A company spokesman ex- plained that as areas are de- veloped, it costs less to supply electricity and rates drop. He said s uch reductions are re· viewed yearly. He said approval by the PU C is cons idered "routine" a nd is expected soon. TRIAL .. : The firs t d efense witness called was district attorney in· vestigator John Coleman. The investigator merely con- firmed the authenticity of docu- men!-5 used ip .the investigation leading to the indictment of the rune. ' ORANGE COAST DAILY PILOT ' • ''"" (Ootlit D••'• PilOt. '*"''" ...... ," i\ com ~ • 1 trw t.,..,,. .. PttU 1t puOt•'fW'O Oy '""'Of'~ • 1 t .b->\•..n•no C.omp•l"I• S..'OA'af" f"tltton• •r• O.•t "•Cl Ml>ndaY lf\rO\IQn "'tCilY fOt (.o\t.. Nf °"" '" •oo<t &t~ '°'· HUl"lflnt1f0'\ 6PM'ft fOUl"t" ' "•"t•. '''*•n• S•dcH•b•U· V•ll~v •nd \ I 11'1..• 'l#M'h ~Utf\ (0 .. ,f /6 \•l'lq~ tf!9.on.tf M'M 'lo SNl>f•\Md ')•h.trd4'V~Mtef~Y"\ 1"'9 f1' !"II CMI ,._,,l>h'1'Ut'lt pl~t '' At IJO M \l !Uy !,ottl. Co t• Mf'W C•ltf0'"'• •JU&. Robert N. Weed Pu\tdt'l'\t •nd Pt.1bt1""'r Jack R Curley \/1<f Prl!\10.nt •nd Gif'Mr•• INNQlll'f Thomas KPPvil (Odor Thomae, A Murphine ~n•Q•f'IQ ldnor Charlfl<, H Loo~ Richard P. Natt A'''''""' M4n•9•nQ EOit°' .. Saddleback Valley Office 7rn11 ~· Pu Road at \en Otego,,.,..,., Other Offices fo,t• "1M1tt• now'"'' S.vSttt'4 ,...,.,~" f\•<Kn lJ)) "'•wwr1 -.1o•••cl H ., '·"'''~A"•'" 1111s &t.c." eou1•"•'0 ~•Q•na S.acn llM C.-yro!.tr,..1 Ttltphoae C71 4) 642 ... 321 Classif1~ Adv•rt1Slft9 642-5671 tttidlf> .. (~ V•Ue y H,_.. <•t 511 ·'310 ''0"'~''',...""' OS-0630 '"•'''CJf'tl ••I\ C'•"O' r • 1 P"wo11uunt (oMOA• 1 "'' P...,, .lOf, .-•• 1 h ti.,.,, #d•IOtt•I f"I '''~' CJ' •Ov•"•'" •flh '"''d'' mft _. ,., '"""•ct 1ii11111ncy1 '' • O''""""on •• ••le>''''"''-""'' , '"'"d ti•'' •o't~4' fJ••J .-1 (ft,t• M•\• < •••• ,,,.. •• \uO\(r+P••lW1t, '" •\• OOl'f'IOf'ltht1 bf m•tl ,. OO~Of\lhly "'1ht~ff<"'•l•"'ilf~\.) 00 '9\IY '"''" Grand Jury o~ three bribery counts. But by the lime be left Judae Dickey's court.room, Bux~ was free of the bribery charges and o.rder~ to testify as a prosecu- tion w1tness in cases ·related t.o the assessor's office 1eandal. Also granted immunity from prosecution waa Tandy tax manager William Hughes J t . Monday, another Tandy olficial Paul Tabor, wa5' granted im· munity. Buxton, Hughes and Tabor were witnessess during the Grand Jury's investigation that led to separate criminal indict- ments against Upton, county A&· sessor J ack Vallerga and Rep. Andrew Hinshaw (R-Newport Beach).,. Hinshaw was Orange County assessor from 1965to1972. It is expected that Buxton, Hughes and Tabor will appear as prosecution witnesses in Upton and Hinshaw 's upcoming separate trials. ~owever, none or the three are expected to be witnesses at Vallerga's trial in Ventura Coun· t7nextweek. The issues at stake in Vallerga's trial center on Orange County's sale of a computerized appraisal system lo Spartanburg County, South Carolina. Vallerga is alleged to have act- ed illegally when he purportedly accepted expenses and consulting fees from Spartanburg which were related to the sale or the $2,045 computer system. FrOM Page Al MAC ... tap our membership," said Harold Beck, vice-president of the South Lagu na Hills Homeowners Association. "I .person ally feel that this MAC would be a duplication or SACC -but I'll wait for an of- ficial opinion until we have a board meeting. Beck said be understilnds that the El Toro homeowners do not want to fragment the Sadd.Jeback Valley "with a bunch or little MACs. especially if they act like the Mission Viejo MAC, staying off by themselves. "I f~el we are accomplishing essentially the same jobs with SACC -and it's all with volun- teers.'' Beck said. Wallace Filson. a Leisure World representative, said he plans to attend the meeting as well -but only to Jind out what the proposal is all about. "This isn't something that we want to discuss in public until the meeting -until we find out what this is all about,'• he said. The concept of a MAC was in- troduced to the Saddleback V~ley more than two years ago with a SACC study on governing alternatives for non-city com· munities. SACC leaders m et with many homeowners associations pre- St?Oting alternatives for better representation -including an ar~a planning commission a MAC. and cityhood. ' Most homeowners attending the forums said or the three, they preferred a MAC but didn't wa nt anything at the time. Though SACC did not officially advocate a Valley-wide MAC, its leaders favored it over ·~utue JIACs" such as that formed last year in Mission Viejo. Laguna Mall Hosting Arts, Crafts Show Artists and craftsmen from the Saddleback Valley area will dis- play their work a nd demonstrate their skills Thursday through Sunday at the Laguna Hills Mall. Among the artists featured is Frances McFarland of CapJstrano Beach who will de- monstrate glass window making techniques. Also shown will be the work of James Powning of the Capistrano Art Association, a specialist in local scenes. Pown- ing has lived in the valley for 24 years and has been painting in oils for 17 of those years. Painting and palette knife techniques will be demonstrated by artists Barbara Lance, Peter Stampfas and Madeline Richard. The art show runs concurrent· Jy with regular mall shoppng houn. Rain Dries Up SAN FRANCISCO (P) -The Heht rain that dampened Northern California on Tuesday hu mostly dried up and akies are expected to return to normal t.hroUlh Tbursd .. y . except for a few lin&erl.ng cf ouds and ahowers ovtt the Siena, lhe weatherman ..,.. I \ • O.lly ...... ~•'I' Al<Ml'll l(Mtilff HOPEFUL HOPE FANS HAD TO BE TURNED AWAY IN DROVES AT FAIR TUESDAY NIGHT One Lady Came From Oxnard and Stood Seven Houra to Join Thia Throng New Gas Hike Seen Be/ ore La.bor Day WASHINGTON (U PI> - Federal Energy Administrator Frank Zarb predicted today gasoline prices will increase another two to five cents a gallon bv Labor Day. He insisted, however there was no collusion by the oil ~ompanies to raise prices. Zarb told a Seri ate subcommit· tee that curbing of gas r efining by the oil companies was due to "a combination of unforeseen re· fining problems. "We have seen no evidence that there is a conspiracy to pro- mote a shortage in anticipation of higher price levels," Zarb said. Zarb spell ed out the Ad · ministration's outlook for the near future as both the Senate and House focused attention on energy, particularly oil prices. Group Formed For Carpenter Senate Backing State Sen. Dennis Carpenter: CR -Newport Beach) has not of- ficially declared himself a can- didate for U.S. Senate but the· wheels of a Carpenter for Senate campaign are already turning. Carpenter 's election commit· lee, the "Friends of Carpenter," has been formed and has filed with the federal elections com- mission. . George Argyros, of Linda Isle in Newport Beach and head of Amel Development Co. of Santa Ana. has been s elected to head the election committee. Additionally, the political management firm of Spencer and Roberts has been retained to "get the ball rolling." according to Carpenter's aide Waller Clark. But all the action is just pre- liminaries. said Clark. "Al this point it looks favorable, but' we're not at a point where we can · announce (Carpenter's can- didacy),'' he said. Fro•PageAJ SPACE ..• the pilots could move into· the module and later the Soyuz. After clearing the hatchway, the astronauts moved into the cylindrical docking module to start preparing it for the meeting with the Russians. The problem was considered minor from the beginning and flight directors said there was no concern about it affecting this week's rendezvous and linkup plans. Russian officials in • Moscow, howe ver, expressed some concern and were assured by U.S. technical representatives there that the problem could be overcome. "In return, we bugged them about their TV camera pro· blems," said astronaut Robert Overmyer in Moscow. One or the four video cameras in the Soyuz railed during launch Tuesday and detailed step-by. s tep repair procedures were radioed by Moscow t.o Leonov and Kubasov at the same time Houston was sending repair pro- cedures to the ApollQ. Soviet controller Vlktor Blagov said the camera problem was traced to a defect in a cable. "It will not affect the rught. ·• he.said in Moscow. ''The only suf. feTers are the viewers." St.afford, Brand and Slayton awoke more than five hours Idler than the cosmonauts this morn· Ing. A few minutes later. Slayton spilled some strawberries be was eaUne for breakfast. "We have strawberry colored 1rpacecra!t," he radioed Houston. "Spill much?" asked Crippen. • 'lt dotsn 't take much up be're," Slayton replied. ' The Senate Tuesday approved a six-month extension or oil price controls and Speaker Carl Albert said the House would take the same approach. ~ Later today. President Ford is expected to submit to Congress his proposal to more than double the per-barrel cost of oil over the next30inonths. Zarb said barring any oil price increase by the oil-producing na- tions. he estimated gas prices would rise from between two to five cents a gallon, varying in dif· ferent parts of the country. "We don't anticipate short.ages although there could be spot con- ditions. We see adequate crude s tocks on hand and we see no need at the moment for shortages," Zarb said. The Federal Energy Ad· ministration, Zarb said, found there were "abnormal gasoline stock drawdowns, with gasoline stock levels being reduced to 196 million barrels at the end of the first week in July. ··It has been suggested that de- liberate decisions to delay in- c rea si ng refine ry capacity utilization were made to firm up prices, even at the risk of creat- ing a shortage. We have no evidence to demonstrate that this was the case." DOORS OPEN AT 10 A.M. HO EXCHANGES OR REFUNDS OH SALE MIRCHAHDIS~ P.UASE Fro• Page Al HOPE •.• leg injury when briefly trampled by the crowd. Hope was the most renowned celebrity ever to appear at the fair, in his first local show since a 1973 benefit performance for St. Joseph Hospital. The 72 -year-old performer wowed the crowd with several song-and-dance numbers, show- ing them he is nowhere near ready for St. Joseph's himself - or any other hospital for that mat- ter. PAYffiKE • • $11.8 million. That means that taxes will go up significantly for district resi- dents but not as much as school officials had originally pre- dicted. The new budget will require a tax rate of 92 cents per $100 of as- sessed valuation to sustain dis· lrict operations. The current rate is 70 cents. It had been believed earlier that the tax rate would be set at 98.8 cents but an unexpected in· crease in the district's assessed valuation allowed a reduction. Fashion lsknt N1¥11pOft ltcxh I 'Bomb' Devices Seized By JACK CHAPPELL OUM D•il• f'tlo'5utt San Clemente police raided In apartment Tuesday and later al· leged they bad confiscated "enough explosives to blow ,_.P this apartment complex and hplf the one next to it." Officers said they had initially been on a narcotics raid when they broke in the dpor and al · legedll. found some of the occu-pants 'in a euphoric state." Narcotics detective Da~id Munro alleged that the ex- plosives were to be used to "blow up a narc " -slang for a narcotics officer. Four Marines were arrested in the apartment. Police identified the suspects as Richard M. Alex- ander, 22, J aston Johnson, 21, Jelle J. Jansma, 20 andJamesE. Sharp, 19. All four are stationed at Camp Pendleton. The four suspects were booked on charges or being under the in- fluence of a narcotic. Alexander was also booked on charges of possessing explosives and Johnson on charges of aL- tempting to destroy evidence. Police said they confiscated one half-pound of military TNT, three-quarters of a pound of plastic explosive, 10 feet of ex· plosive cord, and detonation caps. Polic~ allege that'tbe material was stole n from Camp Pendleton. The four suspects are from B Company, 1st Enginer Battalion, Camp Pendleton. Det. Munro said six San Clemente police officers broke in the door of the apartment at 225 Granada, Apt. No. 3, and found some oC the Marines in a dazed euphoric slate. He said Johnson was attempting to inject himesl.f with a syringe of narcotic solu- tion which he allegedly attempt· ed to destroy when the officers burst in. A small amount or cocaine was seized, Munro said. Munro said the raid came as a result of a continuing narcotics investigation by the force. He claimed evidence indicated the explosives were to be used in an assault on a narcotics officer. '.T est Problems SACRAMENTO (AP) -The Rancho Seco nuclear power plant, already shut down because of turbine blade damage, burned out most of its control rod motors during routine testing, Tuesday. SALE STARTS THURSDAY, JULY 17th ALL SID5 OH R~CkS FOR !ASY SELECTIOM \ ... PILOT EDITORI. L P :\GE ~ ~C~tt1ral Adjustillent Getting adjusted t9 American culture takes much more than learning Engllsh. For the manv Vietnamese children.about to ent~r American schools, the cultural shift will be startling. ~ In the Saddlebaek Valley Unified School District, where more than 100 refugee children and their parents are settling in with sponsor families, a r ele· vant orientation program is under way to ease the transition. -. Through the work of Tho Anh Bui, a ¥oung Viet- namese woman teaching summer school classes in Mission Viejo, the students are learning many things. which will help them relate to their American • classmates. That m eans learning to jump rope, play four- ·square, and eat ice cream. It means putting together model airplanes and walking on stilts. It also means learning that in American schools, children ,,<'.an sit coed or sprawl on a carpeted classroom floor to read. The orientation class is an excellent. helpful idea. It offers the new students a nugget of security for their adventure into American life. No Laughing Matter Keeping options open was the idea behind the triad of alternative land use plans adopted as Irvine's ·general plan. But a major chink in the city's com- prehensive attitude to· land planning is developing over a new proposed village. The planning commission, on a 3 to 2 vote, has moved to the city council a proposal to step up the timetable for development of the Village of New Culver. New Culver, 1,300 acres between Moulton Parkway and the San Diego Freeway, northwest of. Culver Drive, is designated as permanent agriculture in one of the land use options. Strong arguments have been advanced by the Irvine Company for abandoning the idea of ~erma­ nent agriculture on the site. The peaceful coexistence oC adjacent residences and farmland is hampered by chemical sprays, the scent of manure and oth,cr fac· tors. But rather than shuffling the plans for a plot at a time, the city council should take a new look at the role of agriculture ir\ Irvine's future. A promised study session on that topic hus failed to materialize. The land use option setting New Culver aside for farmland has been called a joke. If so, it should be c:onsciously -recognized as such and rejected, not laughed piecemeal into oblivion. Looking Into the Past. ,, . So far as most newcomers are concerned, the htS· tory of the Saddleback Valley began in the early 60's with the development of planned residential com· munilies. Before that the valley was little more than a col- lection of farms and ranches clustered around the old community of El Toro. Fortunately the valley's rural history has been preserved, and those who didn't know there was any history to speak about got a first-hand look a t it last week at the Laguna Hills Mall. An exhibit by the Saddleback Area Historical Society brought out some of the treasures of the past which included heirlooms of the valley's settling families, old photographs and implem ents which were used to tit I the soil. The first' edition of what is to become an annual historical exhibit did much to instill an appreciation of the past a mong our new inhabitants. •\NOW l'M A SELf-5TA"'TIN6 l~PE." SB · 11 It's Loud .·It Will Sell- Even lf Bad Drawitig the Line 011 Censorship : ( PAUL HARVEY) White House daughter Susan Ford, hosting her high school • . prom at the White House, • had much di!· ficulty finding a group of mod mu s i - cians which · could qualify for th e n ecessary security clearance -. meaning "no drug convictions. .. Is noisy music with raunchy ' lyrics itseU a drug? From noisy music you can run but you can't bide. In the deep south of Mexi~ even the smallest town is likely to have three concert bands which play everything loud, louder, loudest. , THE ZAPOTECS, listening, are likely simultaneously to chew plants with names like ''Tears of the Virgin" while they hallucinate in the central plaza. Italy's state·run radio and TV have been trying to wean listeners away from hard rock music. A recent radio survey showed that Gnl• 7 out of eveey · 100 Italians listen to this mod :. music. Yet the big shows on Italian : , networks !eature the gyrating, twitching, acrobatic howlers. The San Remo Rock Festival de-- livered a TV audience of 20 :..~ million. ' • • . • I • , In the United States some com- munications industry readers h ave sought to ban this "music to • steal hubcaps by," but those leaders have few followers. . In Vegas' posh casinos, which certainly do not cater lo sour- • smelling junkies, most music is e l e ctronically amplified fortissimo. EVEN MORE conventional en- tertainers, Wayne Newton and Debbie Reynolds, come on loud. ,. " Dear Gloomy Gus The mystery is solved. After reading Irvine Cou.n· cilman and higher office aspirant Henry Qoigley's . Jetter praising the swift ex- ecution of King Faisal's as· s assin, we can deduce that bis ''Leaders hip" signs mean he is running for Lord High Executioner. E.K.A. Gloomy Gui comments ••~ s1111m11i.ct by n.cten •nd do not necttwrlly ,.llec:t the ¥i~s ot tlM newsp•per. S.nd your pet tiff¥• to Gloomy G11s. D••IY Pilot So the cacophonous jungle music cannot be identified with any particular age group or with any specific economic stratum. The preference which sustains the din is not race related. But one observation leads in tbed.irection of an intriguing con- clusion: Most rock musicians are male. In the annals of the Met, and through the era of the big bandc;, male and female vocalists were almost equally spotlighted. If anything, pretty girls were out front. In country music and in soul, it's about half-and·haJI. BUT WHEN it comes to rock - with suc h notable exceptions as Janis Joplin, Grace Slick and Maggie Bell -most of these mod music groups are mostly or all male. Personally, I $Ion 't dig noisy music. (I think that's still an ac- ceptable expression.> 1 do not pretend to comprehend its ap- peal. UPI's Bruce Meyer thin.ks it bas to do with mac:hismo, gutsi- ness, a kind of super·sexism. The same thing that moved the wiggly girls to the Cront o( the bandstand is now showcasing tight· britches m asculinity for the titillation of liberated females. At rock concerts attendance is mixed, but the girls do most of the squeali11g, screaming and swooning. The very loudness of the music represents a calculated animali- ty which offers heretofore in- hibited females a free trip. Well, fellows, it is their turn. "And don't forget the mothbali." .. Obscenity Versus Pornography To the Editor: Mr. Provost's letter of July s, which denounces ''pornography'' a nd advocates increased censorship, has raised our blood pressure. We feel that a r ebuttal is in order . Mr. Provos t m akes quite general r e marks, but we are perhaps more qualified than he to comment on censorship -having had first hand experience with it ourselves. As owners of the Fahrenheit 451 Bookstore in Laguna Beach, we have wasted about a year and a half (so Car ) ·dragging ourselves and our two small children in and out of courts, fighting an obscenity ar- rest originally instigated against us by two narcotics agents of the Laguna Beach police force. It seems that these agents found in our store some racy comic books (not much different Crom what is commonly available) which they considered "pornographic." In carrying out their arrest they were given "moral support" by a d eputy district attorney <who is no longer on our case) and a judge (who signed the arrest warrant e ven though -as he later ad· milled he hadn't even seen the supposedly offensive material). How obscene! ( MAILBOX ) Letters from readers are welcome. The nght to condense letters to fit space or eliminate libel i& reserved. Letters of 300 words or Less will be given preference. All letters mwt in- clude signature and mailing address but names may be withheld on re- quest if sufficient reason i! apparent. Poetry will not be publtshed. lio n upon Mi ss Perry 's patriotism, her honesty, nor he r perspicacity lo voluntatily vacate her seal on the present grand jury. On the contrary, such act ion on her part might be elo- quent testimony of her innate suitability for future service. REBA WILLIAMS Measuring Chief Da!'is To the Editor: I find it hard to believe that Ed Davis is chief of police of the second largest city in the coun- try. Whe n he announced that the new marijuana law would lead to more heroin addicts, I could hardly stomach him. He couldn't possibly have at- tended college-or is it just that he has an 1.Q. not much larger WHETHER or not Mr. Provost than his belly measurement? regards a couple of underground MEG EN THOMPSON comics as "dirty" is beside the 0 ...... PririRg point. Nor does it matter much if • ~ he <or somebody else) finds sex, To the Editor: nudity, political satire, o r Your newspape r recently ad- anything else "repulsive." What vocated support for Assembly counts imme nsely is the fact that Bill 193 by Assemblyman Barry we are all essentially different "1Ceene, of Eureka. This so-called people, a nd no two of us are going ( consumer legislation seeks to re- to see things in exactly the s ame duce the cost of prescription way. Why then should any person drugs by permitting pharmacists set himself (or herself> up as a to s ubs titute chemica lly- Jiterary custodian for others? Is equivalent generic drugs for not s uc h a person "porno· brand name products prescribed gr aphic'" in the truestsenseoflhe by physicians. term ? But is this really consumer Mr.Provost speaks soardently legis lation ? More than 25 about the virtues of freedom. respected nationa l health or· Perhaps he does not realize that a ganizalions claim il isn't. Their truly free country entails a truly opposition to drug substitution free press. Our forefathers were legislation is based on the fact wise not to put any holds on the that some drugs with the same First Amendment. If he does not active chemical formula have care lo see some of the material differ ent inactive ingredients. being printed today, let him not This m ay cause the drugs to have look at it. That is his privilege. A diCferent therapeutic responses little tolerance will go a long way in the body. -and it will surely help to unclog . our increas ingly sat urated GENERIC DRUGS are widely courts. assumed to be cheaper .. In some GOROONandEVELYN cases, howe ver, genencs cost WTLSO!'.J: more than certain brand name products. A Prop~ l11ror! To the Editor: It is dis turbing that a girl friend of Supervisor Battin has been appointed to the grand jury. Despite the presence of a seeming conflict of interest, the young woman in qu~tion has staled she is personally satisfied she wilJ be capable of serving as • an honest, impartial grand juror. She has expr~ssed a desire to serve because it would be an in· t e resting and fulfi11ing ex· perience ror her. AU this may be lure. BUT is this enough to satisfy the citizens of Orange County? ,Is it enough to satisfy the needs or the grand jury system ? Faith lo lbe integrity of the arand jury system is crucial to our ability to govern ourselves effectively And 1 stronaly doubt. tb•t anyone's personal rulflll· ment is auHicient rea.'IOO to risk impairment of that f alth 1n no way would lt be a rcllec· There are other reasons why AB193's claimed consumer benefits may be outweighled by its drawbacks. Generic sub· stilutes are available for only 25 per cent of the 200 most common· ly prescribed drugs. Generic pre- scribing by physicians is curtent- ly authorized lo Calilornia; about 10 per cellt of all prescriptions are now written generically and the llgure ls rising. Current law also permits a pharmacist to sub- stitute drugs with the consent of the prescribing physician. If this law ls changed, neither the doc· tor nor tbe patient will know ex- actly what drug the paUcnt i.s re· ceivlng. THOSE in favor ot As - semblyman Keene's bill may be missing the polnl when they claim lt ls a consumer measure. Cost abould not be the only con- sideration. Other aspects of drug product selection -quality, elfect.ive- ness, safety, equivalctnce -ln· dicate that California's current . anti-substitution statute is a necessary consumer protection . law and should be retained. BARBARA S. PUETT We remain convinced a substantial number of prescnption drug·u.sers ·would save substantial.amounts of money under the proposal at no loss of consumer protection. -Editor Delinh19 'Sfrike' TotbeEdilor: I was overcome with sympathy for Tom Robinson <M.D. who cbastized the Daily Pilot for us- ing tbe term "strike" referring to r ecent doctors' actions - Mailbox, July 9). As a teacher I have withheld services, which the newspapers and the general public insist on calling a strike. Where I teach, the community was very fortunate. the doctors· wives, all P.T.A. members, just hopped into the ir little station wagons to man the classrooms. This in spite of the fact that P.T.A. is supposedly a neutral body. As a teacher . I have often bee~ told that we should clean out our profession of a ll undesirable teachers. Malpractice &uggests to me that if the A.M.A. did so, their insurance may not be so high. Every profession has its weak· nesses. Mine is that in order for my wife and me to have a stan- dard of living in keeping with our desir,. · oNe both have to haul our "bods '' out of bed and take full- limc job responsibilities. BEN BO ELMAN, Placentia (Vacationing in the area) Whose Windfall! To the Editor : Your July 6 article "Hike Hard to Swallow." confuses me. You sl a te that the oil companies raised the price of gasoline 3 cents a gallon because of the fourth of July holiday, and that the President's ''import fee ad· justment" was only 1 cent a gallon. The President put a tax of $1 a barrel on foreign oil. As one barrel of oil produces 40 gallons of gasoline, that makes the lax 21h cents a gallon, and 1li cent a gallon raise for the oil com- panies. THE PRESIDENT put the tax on to purposely raise the price lo discourage consumption. yet the companies gel blamed. And the· Senate is now having another ex· pensive investigation to see why the oil companies did it. ll might be better lo investige\)e where all that tax money is golng. We im· port six million barrels of o~l a day. Now that we have a tax of $2 a barrel, that is 12 million dollars a day extra going to Lhe govern· ment. Is this money being used lo reduce our n,Uonal debt, reduce our individual tax burden, help our wellare rolls. or is it just another added tax lo fuel our ex· travagant government? I~ ls con· fusing. GOLDIE JOSEPH '"'''-Htle Da11pr Totbe Ed1tor: I 1rieve for tbe death of 11· year-old Donald Bohnsack (wbo died aa a result of a minl·bike crash into a driveway barricade at Orange Coast College). What a senseless, rrea.k acci- dent-the chain lhat so many people on bicycles and mini· bikes can't see as they pedal in- nocently along-awaiting death in the making. There is jus t such a chain at TeWinkle Park where all four ol my sons play Harbor baseball. I have seen boys hit this chain on their bikes or run into it by acci- dent. In my mind, I could never understand the folks who strung these potential dangers. No warn- ings. no red reflectors, no strings adorn these wires. Only last s ummer, my then lO·year·old son was running across TeWinkle Park in bis · usual boyhood abandon when be caught his neck on a guy wire strung to the park trees. There was no visible warning. Fortunately, be was only stunned and as I ran to his side when the air was knocked out of him, I feared his neck was broken. I was concerned enough to call our locaJ police to the scene and file a reporL The guy wires came down. but they were back lhis year. 1 see them at many parks and school grounds. Th.e chain strings are still there. Why must it cost so much· before hazards for children and adults are r ealized? Common sense and mother-awareness show me these potential acci~ dents in the m aking. MRS. JOHN R . PEUCHOWSKl lnriting Tlai~es To the Editor: • A condition has developed bt our city that is of concern to me. For the past several weeks there have been about two pieces of ad vertising material per day fastened lo the front door of mt home. (Sundays included.) This means that it's virtuall)f impossible for an occupant ol a single family residence in lhi9 city to take a trip for business or pleas ure without advertising ta ever y cruising thiefthattheirproo perty is unoccupied. I believe this form ol ~ ing is unfair to the resident and to the police department wbo9e responsibility it is to protect U. property. I urge tbe city council to seriously consider the adopt.Iola of an ordinance prohibitiba the conspicuous placement ol Wl• solicited advertising matter upoa any property. JACK W.BARCUS ORANGE COAST DAILY PILOT Robert N Weed. Publlatln' Thoma1 Krt-t11I. IMitor Barbera Kreibich. £dltonal Page Editor 'l'hc editorial page or the D.ily Pilot seeks to Inform and ~timul:ue readers by praent.lna on this page diverse comrnnary on topics or interest by synctkat. ed columnists and u rtooni8la, by providing a foNm I« readers' views and by prese.ntJng this newspaper's opinions and Htta:s on curr('nt topics. The editorial opinions or thc Daily Pilot apl)t'ar onl) in the editorial column al the top o( the pai:e. OpinioM ex-. pre!l~ed by th e columnista and cartoonists and letter wnlers are their own and no endorsement ol their \'ttw by the 0aJ1y ftl« ~hould Ile inferred. Wednesday, July 16, 1975' DAILY PILOT 1\§ ~ l 4,SOO•ilere Bia~ - 700 Fire Fighters 1 : HeaTsts Ask ·: : Court Action Citations Cat ' . CHP 'Slowdown' Hit 1.-.tonall him ~' , . t 1 I! , ' ' • Battle in Ranchita . ~CHITA (AP) -About 700 fire ft~hters are battling a 4,SOO._acre brush fire, burning 00 terrain steep enough to test a mountain goat. to keep the blaze from reaching some rare bJg born sheep. . . SAN FRANCISCO <UPI) -The parents of Patricia Hearst have petitloned to be n amed conservators of tbeir daqbter•s estate. Tbe petition was filed Tuesday In Superior Court by Randolph and Catherine Hearst. Hearst is president and editor of the San Francisco Ex- aminer. • SACRAMENTO (AP) -lf anyone gets kllled because of the traffic ticket slowdown, the patrolman on the beat will be respomible, warns a California Highway Patrol official. About 25 percent. fewer Uckets were beina iasued in the San Francisco area, said Walker. Walker added: •·u the public !eels they can speed out UM!re and only get a wan:Uni, there's going to be more speedin1 and U someone gets killed because of that. the officer is going to bave to bear the responsibility.•• Schiavone s aid 2.3 million ticket.I were issued last year,. ' from which about $75 milllon re- venue went to cities and counties. The blaze. with flames 21> feet high, had burned to within u quarter-mile of Anza-Borrego ~tate Park early today. Fire f1~hters hoped to contain the flames today, but they kept a nervous eye on the weather. ••u we get a north wind out ot the desert, we're going to have some problems," a spokesman for the California Divisioii of Forestry said. lncrftUe Baited · SACRAMENTO. (UPI) -The ·Calif omia Hospital Association says it will consider ."all legal and legislative remedies" to block Brown administration ac-. lion halting increased payments to hospitals for M e di-Cal ~ervices. Health and Welfare Secretary Mario Obledo Tuesday an· nounced the increase cutoff, say- in g the action was prompted because lhe federal government has refused to a llow the state to limit the increases to 10 percent. He said hospitals were using slate runds to "absorb" the cost o{ empty hospital beds. ( State J Blat Ripa Office LOS ANGELES CAP) .. There was no warning ••• everything just went blooey n said a stunned Mexican Coos~ General Ferna ndo Fernandez after a bomb blast ripped through his office injuring four peraoos. More than 50 pel'SClllS were in the consulate Tuesd~ when the 12:44 p.m. blast sent doors flying from their hinges and lllass and debris hurtling 100 reet mto Olvera Street Plaza. a busy downtown tourist attractioolined with Mexican shops. Bllflhes WI•• Seat The petition s aid the Hearsts reared .. artful and designing persons" might take advantage of their daughter . who w as kid· naped by the Symbionese Libera tion Army in Berkeley Feb. 4, 1974 and then joined her abductors. Youth Killed In Accident GRANADA HILLS CUPO...r- LOS ANG ELES <AP) RichardHageman, 16, was killed Democrat Teresa Hughes Tuesday by being impaled on a became Southern California's on-fire hydrant. • ly woman legislator today, win· Police said Hageman was ning a special election handily in standing in the rear of a dune the largely black 47th Assembly buggy, holding the roll bar, when District in South Los Angeles. it careened out of control and Miss Hughes, who is black and crossed a lawn. Hageman was a n educational consultant, thrown clear and landed on the gained 7,230 votes or 62.8 percent hydrant. to 4,268 votes or 37 .2 percent for the Rev. Henry Sellers, her white • The driver, Jeffrey Warren 21. Republican opponent. was arrested on suspicion oC drunken driving. Ralph M. Walker, CHP com· mander for nine San Francisco J\ay Area counties, said Tues- day, however, that the slowdown participants "have every right to be unhappy.•• • Patrolmen h a ve cut back about 50 percent on traffic citation writ· ing, on s tatewide average, in their campaign for higher pay. They bad been voted a 17.5 per- cent r aise by the California Legislature which Republican Gov. Ronald Reagan approved. But incoming Gov. Edmund Brown Jr., a Democrat, held it to the 10 percent ceiling he h as placed on all state raises. Tbe minimum base pay for un· if ormed CHP officers was $1,162 per month beginning July. PATROL SPOKESMAN Kent Milton said patrolmen in the Riverside and San Bernardino areas are virtually 100 percent involved in the slowdown, with officers issuing warnings instead of tickets. Milton said "a little less than 80 percent" of the officers statewide are participating in the slowdown. . The campaign, which began at midnight Friday, is called a "Humanistic Enforcem~nt Ef- fort" by the California Associa· tion of Highway Patrolmen, (CAHP ) which says it represents 00 percent of the 5,400 membel' force. THE MANAGER of CAHP. Ralph Schiavone. s aid comman- ders "can make all kinds of com· meets. No officer is going to ln· tentionally allow a situation oo bis beat that is going to cause a person to get hurt. U be sees a drunken, reckless driver. he's He 1ald the strategy is to pre. aaure.clty and couiity olficiala in· to penuadinc state lepalators to override Brown •s veto ot the re- malnlng 7.5 percent. ASKED ABOUT possible ells· ciplinary action, Schiavone said, 64We're wondering what they've done to warrant punitive action of any kind. They haven't walked off the job. They're helping the public." : Sperm Bank Sued For .$5 Million SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -A man who stored a sample of his semen at a sperm bank and then had a vasectomy has filed a $S million lawsuit against the bank for accidentally destroying the specimen. GREGORY MARTON said in his class action suit filed Tues· day in Superior Court be has suf· fered ''emotional and mental anguish" because of an apparent e quipment failure at the Chartered International Cryo- Bank at Cathedral Hill Medican . Center here. · Marton said when he contract- .ed With the b ank in January, its. president. Robert A. Quinland Jr., told him bis sperm deposit was "fully protec~ against destruction" 'bj two~"fail safe" monitoring systems. AFTER UNDERGOING a. vasectomy, Marton said that on June 22 he received a letter from the sperm bank saying his semen bad been destroyed in a possible equipment failure . Marton 's laws uit asks $5 million damages phis $500,000 for any other sperm donor who might have s uffered the same loss. Publisher Guilty Of.Tax Evasions LOS ANGELES (AP) -A m an federal pro- secutors have been trying to nail on pornography charges since 1968 has been convicted on 22 income tax fraud counts. BobHope and other stars in free shows! Sears op Marvin Mill er, 45, a suburban Covina publisher, was found guilty Tuesday on five counts. of tax evasion, six counts of mail fraud, seven counts of filing a perjurous tax return and four counts of m aking a false claim against·the govern· ment. The returns were filed between 1968 and 1972. U.S. DISTRICT Court J udge William P. Gray said be would remand Miller to custOOy immediate- ly pending bis sentencing Aug. 11. But after a de- fense plea. Gray gave Miller until J uly 25 to turn himself in so he could prepare for the care of his J.S.yea.r-old diabetic son. • Miller's trial was halted for two weeks while he recuperated from what doctors described as an in- tentional sleeping pill overdose. He is still under psychiatric care. .,,.- A reputed millionaire. Miller entered the sex book and film business in 1968, immediately draw· ing the attention of vice investigators. His appeal on a 1972 misdemeanor conviction fot' mailing unsolicited pornographic advertise- ments to a Newport Beach man went all the way to the U.S. Supreme Court. ln upholding Miller's con- viction. the high court banded down landmark ob- scenity guidelines that still stand. New Smog ·Target Revealed D f,.ie!O motorcycle r acec; -rodeo • TV shows horse i;how hu ndreds of exhibits! Admission SI.75 Children. 6-12 s1.oo Childrm undeT six-free •Shorts •Tops • Skir11 Barbin;. Suits. SAN FRAN-CISCO (AP> -A new set of • gradu.ated emission con- trols has been adopted by the state Air Resources Board de· signe d to curb the m assive problems of. motorcycle pollution in California. • Scpara/cs The new standards will limit motorcycle exhaust to 10 hydrocarbon grams per kilometer by 1978, five hydrocarbons in 1980 and one hydrocarbon by •1982. The smog bo a rd originally bad proposed adoption of the one hydrocarbon limit by 1978, but motorcycle in- dustf'Y representatives told the board it could not achieve such a stan- dard bytbat time. • S111m11er Samplt:S • Ji.fi.rfr.< a11d}1mior Sizn 29129 PACIFIC COAST HWY. S. WESTERN AT CALLE MAYOR SAN PEDRO TORR~NCE 547-3095 378-2795 9038 ADAMS AVE. HUNTINGTON BEAC (714) 963-222 1 traditional summ~r whites ... from HARRIS; easy C4lt'e dac.ron cott.on st.raight leg wash pant, wornwit.n G~NT~ ccilon knit shirt. with bold st:.rip~s, and white. collar and plack~t. @)~o@@)~@ 44 fa&tion island I MWP0rt cmar 644•50'70 Where Thrift Is Always . In Style Located on the Lower Level This Ad Effective through Saturday,· July 19 CUT. s31 Proportione~·fit Nylon Pants Were $5.99. 299 Was $5.99 Pant Top ' Short-1IHved, shirt style top with placket front and pointed collor. Polyester knit. Solid colors. Ml..,..' .1z ... Were $6.99 ~ants· Zip-front atylt pants w ith wide straight· leg•. waistband. In snappy floral prints. MiuH' 1ize1. 299 399 Buena Park 81 SO Lo Palma Ave. STOH HOUIS, Oran2e ~J/:."','=:'· 2100 N. I._u1t~ Ave. ,,,05:~,. ~So. Coast Plaza ~ 3333 8rl1tol St. Phone 540-3333 Phone 121-4400 Phone 637-21<» ~ 12 ............ ,, ! EDITION VOL. 68, NO. J97. 6 SECTIONS. 70 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA Today' Clo. log .V. Stoeks . -........ WEDNESDAY, -JULY 16, 1975 TEN CENTS 12.1 % Pay ffike for College W Orke~ By RUDI NIEDZIELSKI ot .. o.ur.-tlelSUtt All 200 Saddleback Community College District employes, from maintenance man to physics in- s tructor, will receive pay in· creases or 12.1 percent this year. The increa,.ses, retroactive to J uly 1, were ordered by the Board of Trustees in keeping with a district poJicy which ties pay raises to the cost of living in- dex for the Los Angeles area. Board members approved the $464,815 wage package on a 4 to 1 vote Monday night with Board Chairman Robert .Bartholomew dissenting. Although Bartholomew ex- pressed his awaren~ or the policy be voted in opposition to the increase because ol the large . amount !>f money involved. Abandonment of that policy bas been recommended by Roy Barletta, the district 's negotiator, but board members · def e rred action on that con- troversial proposal unW July 28. Tbe wage package was io. eluded in a $16.3 million publica- tion budget also adopted by the board of trustees Monday night. Included in that figure are a $15.6 million general fund, $17,000 in reserves, and $707,087 for bond interest in redemption. The general fund category represents a $3.8 million increase of expenditures over the current $11.8 million. That means that taxes will go up signilicantly for district resi- dents but not as much as school officials had originally pre- dicted. The new budget will require a tax rate or 92 cents per $100 of as· sessed valuation to sustain dis· trict operations. The current rate ls 70cents. It bad been believed earlier that the tax rate would be set at 98.8 cents but an unexpected in· crease in the district's assessed valuation allowed a reduction. Judge D _enies Bertolino Dismissal Watching Irvine Flock D e f e nse Ope ns Its Case Orange County Superior Court Judge Walter Smith order ed the trial or accused conspirator James Bertolino lo continue Tuesday. . The order was made despite protes ts from Bertoli no's at· lorney Donald Thamer, thal the prosecution failed to prove that a conspiracy existed in the Orange County assessor's office to help elect Andrew Hins haw to Congress in 1972. Along with eight other employes in the assessor's office, Bertolino was charged in a grand jury indictment last December with participating in an alleged conspir acy that used county employes lo help elect Hinshaw to Congress. Sheepman Aurelio Ramirez, who says he's from Peru, s tands with his dogs watching the "band" of 1,200 sheep owned by Dominic Duhart of El Toro. The sheep are grazing on Irvine Co.mpany land south of Lion Country Safari under terms of a lease. Company spokesman Fred Keller said it is the first time in three years sheep have come onto the ranch to feed and eventually they'll work their way into the heart of the ranch. Six of the nine ind.ictees havt pleaded guilty to some charges in the 33-counl indictment. But Bertolino pleaded innocent lo charges of conspiring to sub- mit false docume nts and grand theft. Astronauts Approaching Cosmonauts HOUSTON (UPI) -Three American astronauts easily fixed a minor proble m in their Apollo today and bore down on Russia's two Soyuz cosmonauts m6re than l,000 miles ahead for a union Thursday 13 6 miles over Germany. The flagships of the two space powers circled the world every hour and a half in the second day ol history's firs t international manned spaceflight. Alexei L eonov a nd Valeri Kubasov opened the day's ac- tivities by gunning their 15,000- pound Soyuz into a near perfect "assembly" orbit 138lo140 miles high to wait for Thomas Stafford, Vance Brand and Donald "Deke" Slayton to join them. "Your friends just finis hed a circ (circularization) bum and they are in orbit waiting for you," Robert Crippen at Houston control told the three Americans. The astronauts' first chore of the day was to remove a stainless steel d ocking probe bung up because a wire connector shifted out of position and blocked a re- moval tool. Crippen radioed in- structions on how to fix it, and the astronauts reported a few minutes late r that the probe bad been successfully removed. "Aha, the probe is out," Staf- ford said. The probe was used to clasp docking latches when the ApOllo hooked up to its docking module Tuesday. It had to be removed eo (See SPACE, P al'e AZ> FIRST CO VPLE BOUGHT ITEM "I'm very happy with the ad. 'l:'be first couple who came to see the refrigera tor. bouabt it.'' Tbat'a the 1ucce,1 experienced by the Huntinatoo BeMll womu who placed this ad in the Dally Pilot: FRIGIDAIRE JlefrJ1., wbl. SW ulJ, Sood ..t rood. SSS. Aft. '· :UX• xxxx. II you bave a used appliance you would Uke to coovert to cub, call 842-S678. We make It euy to put a few words to work (or you In the Dally PUoL Buxton Bribery Charge Dismissed By m id·day Tuesday, pro- secutor William Evans rested his case against the 52-year-old de· fend ant. And Thamer, who delayed his opening statement unW Evans completed his case, charged that the deputy di strict attorney failed to prove a conspiracy ex- isted. · Furthermore, Thamer added, if there was a conspiracy Evans had not shown that Bertolino was a participant. By GARY G RANVILLE Oftlle 0.11, ...... SUft SUperior Court Judge Everett Dickey dismissed bribe ry charges against Tandy Corp. Vice President James Buxton Tuesday and granted him im· munity from prosecution in mat- ters related to the Orange County Asses.tor's Office scandal. Along with Assistant Assessor George Upton, Buxton was in- dicted last March by the county Grand Jury on three bribery counts. But by the time he left Judge Dickey's courtroom, Buxton was free of the bribery charges and ordered to testify as a prosecu- tion witness in cases related to the assessor's office scandal. Also granted immunity from prosecution w as T a ndy t ax manager William Hughes Jr.' Monday, another Tandy official Paul Tabor, was granted im· munity. Buxton, Hughes and Tabor were witness ess during the Grand Jury's inve5tigation that led to separate criminal indict- ments against Upton, county As- sessor J act V allerga and Rep. Andrew Hinshaw (R-Newport ~ach). Hinshaw was Orange County assessor from 1965tol972. · It is expected that Buxton, Hughes and Tabor will appear as prosecutJJ.P""Witnesses in Upton and Hliish aw '1 upcoming separate trials. l I Grant Offered For Literature UC Irvine English profasor Jay Martin baa been awarded a one-year Rockefeller Foundatioo lellowahip to be1in work on the' second volume of a projected ftve-voldme series oo American llblrature.. To be UUed "Into the Teeth ol ~~ Ameri~an Uterature 1900-1960," tile boot ls a COO· tinu&Uoa of a previous volume, "Hanesta ol Chaqe," which ex- pb'tlS American literature from l8S& to 1914 . Martha said the five-volumeaet may take 20 years to complete and will chronicle American literature rtom 1'20to117&. However, none or the three are expected to be witnesses at Vallerga's trial in Ventura Coun- ty next week. . The iss u es at stake in Vallerga's trial center on Orange County's sale of a computerized appraisal system lo Spartanburg County, South Carolina. Vallerga is alleged to have act- ed illegally when he purportedly accepted expenses and consulting fees from Spartanburg which were related to the sale of the $2,045 computer system. Little Case Mistrial Out RALEIGH, N .C. (UPI) -At- torneys for J oan Little, a black woman accused of murdering a white jailer s he claims tried to rape her, unsuccessfully sought a mistrial today when prosecutors rejected another black as a pro- spective juror. "I would like the record to show that the state is again using the peremptory challenge to ex- clude blacks," said lawyer Jerry Paul. "And I again move for a mistrial." Judge Hamilton Hobgood, ac· cused by Paul of favoring the prosecution Tuesday, rejected the request. But Judge Smith denied his plea to dismiss the case and or· dered the defense attorney to present his side or the case. For openers, Thamer insisted that his client had not been grant- ed his constitutional rights when he s poke to investigators and testified before the grand Jury. But when Evans presented those statements as part of the prosecution's case, Judge Smith permitted them lo be entered into evidence over Thamer's heated objections. (See TRIAL, P age A2) · &ast in Jet ; Noise Coming Tustin and Irvine residents may notice a c hange in the noise they must tolerate from El Toro Marine Corps Air Station jets. Base officials said Tuesday that El Toro's primary runway will be closed intermittently for the next 10 weekdays, due to con- struction. On weekends planes will use the norm al duty runway. All air traffic will continue to operate in the normal traffic area, ofCicials said. * * * Boom Towns Marines Plan Noisy Games The Oran.ce Coast may be bat-may be heard in inland as well as tered by sonic booms tonight as coastal areas. El Toro Manne Corps jets take "While supersonic flight is not part In a massive training ex-aJ\.Objective of the exercise, some ercise •imulating combat with ol"lbe interceptors may have to enemy bombers. maneuver at supersonic speed Air Force, Air National Guard, over the Pacific," the El Toro Navy and M arlne jets will spokesman said. scramble from bues between "Should a tmospheric ~on~i- San Die,o and Merced this even· tiombeunfavorablealtbeUme,it Ing in an exercise simulating a is pojslble that some offsborc West Coast enemy attack. · sonic booms may be beard aloog El Toro's F-4 aquadrans will thecoastline. join the maH lDtereepcr mlas1on "The exeTcise will not. involve lo the "early eveninJc hours" the firing of weapons and bas tonight , eai d an El Toro been coordlnoted with Federal spoke.m an. Aviation Admlnis&ratlon officials An Air Force spokesman pre-to &Jtevent Interference with civil dieted that aomo acme booms aviMlon ttalrJc," be said. . I ·' • D•ilY Pilol PllolO by IUc~rd ICMllltt tifE Ot D TROUPER AT 72 STILL WOWS A CROWD Comic Bob Hope Pecked ln 15,000 at County Fair 15 ,000 Cheer Hope At County Fair By ARTHUR ll. VINSEL 0111\• O•lly Piiot.Suit A standing-room-only throng of up to 15,000 flocked to see one or America's most celebrated come- dians. Bob Hope, at the Orange County Fair in Costa Mesa Tues- day night. His appearance on what was designated Senior Citizens' Day was considered the highlight of the 1975 fair. "We finally had to turn many away, which was unfortunate bul inevitable," said Peggy Bayless, publicity director for the fair. Hope cracked jokes and quips for half the two-hour show \4hich also included orchestra leader Les Brown and his Band of Renown and singer Rosem ary Clooney. He carried the perlormance with customary pepper and flair, delighting the crowd includ- ing Edna Belshan who came all the way from Oxnard and stood in line seven hours. "I've loved him for years," said the 52-year-old woman. One gray-wigged woman and longtime Hope fan quipped' that she almost tossed her apartment key onstage. "Groupies come in all ages,'' she remarked. · The 72-year-old comedian whose business acumen bas made him one of the wealthiest enter· tainers in the world received about $25,000 for the free ad- mission appearance. "I'm older than J ever meant to be," declared the humor ist T est s Slated F o r Disease A Tay-Sachs di.seue9Cttening clinic is planned at Or-ae Cou.n· ly Medical Center July 33 tnxn 3 to 7 p. m. lb bwldlof 53. Tbe &eaeUc disorder it lat.al to ·wanta bom to parenb wbo carry th~Tay.Sacb.s 1encs. 1be t.esUn.i wlll be cacrted out by p byalclal)• from t be UC Irvine-California Collt1e ot Mediclne. ApPOlntmeot.s (or the blood te$t.s may be mllde at The City shopp~ cuter In Oranae Saturday from 10 A.m. to4 p.m . whose career has carried him from the rough-cut boards or vaudeville stages lo the fanciest•. nightspots in the land, in addition to the jungles, fields and trenches where American Gls fought three wars. "Fair audiences are the greatest. They're here for fun " quipped Hope, who obvioasiy s hared the night's good limes. "I love it here," he also said. "It's a thrill they took the cattle out before I got here." Typical Hope humor burled barbed jests at the CIA, the economy, the alleged horror movie "Jaws" about a monster shark. and singer Cher 's highly publicized musical marriages. Costa Mesa police had to detail extra patrolmen lo crowd control duties due to the Hope show alone, which drew more visitors than the entire fair did Monday. Virtually the only misfortune to mar the event occurred when one woman fell and sustained a. (See BOB HOPE, Page A2) Or:•~="'7 ~•st 1t'eatller Low clouds through late morni n g Thursday, otherwise mostly sunny and a bit wumer with beach highs near 70 rising to the low 80s inland areas. Lows tonight 60 to 65. INSIDE T ODAY How .are our .new camp . Pmdleton r efugees faring· ,along tM Orange Coatt? Some have job1, many are in achool l«Jming EngU.h -and . oJl have their own perronal com- nwnt1 on Ammca. See atones . and photo.1 P.age 89. l•dex ~l , I •'-' IM ... ... Cl-) ••s t<! ..... .. ... , •• .... A.2 DAIL y PILOT Illegal ~ FBl 'Burglaries'Repotted WASlllNG1'0N <UPI) -FBr ap~y · conducted dozens and sometim~Ofe tb&n 100 ll· legal burglaries a year in the early 1980s f6 Cain in- formation in crifl\inal and secwrity cases tbe W ashingtoo Post reported today. · ' Quoting a source who said he approved many GI lhe burglaries, the Post reported that moat ol the break-ins were directed against the Comm~1t par· ty, extremist groups, embassies and other targets in the category of "security cases." · But the unidentified source also told the Post a number of others were conducted in ordinary criminal cases such as hijackings, bank robberies and Jddnapings. The story quoted for mer Attorney General RamseY, Clark as saying he ended the practice in 1966 when be got a request from then FBI Director J. F.dgar Hoover to burglarize a foreign consulate in Washington. "I refused, saying I didn't see how an attorney general sworn to execute the laws could authorize Lheir violation," the Post quoted Clark from New York. $121,152 Sought Nix on Staff Fund C ut by 40 Percent WASHING TON (AP> -The House is likely to approve a bill which wouldlgive former Presi- dent Nixon $121,152 for staff, of - f1ce supplies and other expenses for the new fiscal year-a 40 per- lent cut from the amount recom- mended by President Font. By comparison, Nixon was !{ranted $200,000 for office opera- tions between the date of his re- signation on Aug. 9, 1974 and June 30 or this year. And that amount was a huge slash from the $850,000 then proposed by Ford. The $121,152, up for a vole to- day, does not include Nixon's $60,000 annual pension or a number of indirect costs related lo security, courier flights, Irvine Youth Hurt as Bike, Auto Collide An 11-year-old Irvine boy was in satisfactory condition today after his bike collided with an automobile in Irvine Tuesday af- ternoon. William Witherspoon, of Walnut Village, was taken to Tustin Community Hospital with a broken leg, concussion and lacerations following the 2:30 p.m. accident. AccordJng to police reports, the boy 's bike collided with a car driven by Joe Lucero, 39'll Clare- mont St., Irvine. It was the second bike versus car accident in a month al the corner of Culver Drive and Ferris Street. according to Lt. Eugene Norden. Al that intersection. there is a stop sign al Ferris. Traffic from Ferris must cross the 12-foot bike lane to get onto Culver. Budget A d opted SAN BERNARDINO (UPI) - An austerity budget of $250 million -one that will not in· crease the county tax rate -was unanimously adopted Tuesday by the board or supervisors. The supervisors explained that the line was held by not filling some jobs as they became vacant, by employes taking days off without pay and by use of $2 million in Ceder al r evenue-sharing funds. ORANGE COAST DAILY PILOT , .... O•·•"Qtll' (OJ'' r ,,,1., P••~ w''""""''<"•icom· "'n "• '·· w s:, • u. 1\ oubh\P'Wlod by'"" Or,a.noe f£4t 1 I 11 tin i Ct1mo~nv """"'"" f'i01ho~a1~ r.... ,. 11 M ·'"'"''t H\fC.UQt'I ,,,o., tor Co\\• '"-• .,, ,,.,p.-;,t tw..t<l't Hut'tUnqfon O..c.ft J:~~ t "•I _, l••1n_. \.-OOlf'Mfll V~Hfy •nd l.-•, l;.t A ,., '..tJu'~ ( fl•\I A "t•nQlto ,..,.Q"OMf f'd ,,,, ~ .t ''""~ 5.f•u•O•Y\ '"'° :>1.nd .. ';\ f~ .,_. I otl t f 11· ,.,,.., P'~"' • 11 ~ w.~• B•Y ~''"' '"'''•/ii<• J ·""' rn•• ~~'' Robf>rt N Weed Prt \•t'Yl'\I •nd PuDt•\hl''" Jack R Curley V•<t' P•h•01 flt 4~ f.,irl"tt'AI MltWl)t'f Thomas Keevil Thoma-; A M urph1ne Mitnt11q1nq r di tor Charles H Loo'> R•chc'lrd P. Nall 1 A"i" ••nl M•"•'J'"'9 EtJ•IOf\ Offices (O\t• M••• 1,,o w.,~ O..v\tr .. •·t k•w-1 .. • n 11U H•"'-' Bovltv .. d L•Ouf"l4 0••~PI , ... tiM-~frf'Strot "4""t1~to." 8••·" t "" ~·"' ~.,.., d ~ltl>oO<' Y•I •• )\1011.• P•I JI-., '\A" O•t fl') r , ... ...,., TelephOne (71 4) 642.,.311 Cl•u 1f1ed Advertt$tn9 '42·5671 ••oetht-«-V•Jl•yN•*' rw•fct 511 6l10 f rom \en Ct•" "'" '95-0630 c Pr',,., ,,,, <-••"4-fnA I 'Wftl1,.-11\t tontOA",. N O fir _,, fOP~"' lllV h;tl "\\ f•J f0f1•I ,,,,.,,,, .,, •"•"'"'~,..,,."'' ,.., •• " ,,, • ., Cl,. r•O• 11w •n .,.. ll11111Jut '\(lft ••I ., .. , ''U'"•" tt t0,'1'' ,;,"I ow~• ,,,.,,., l , • po t~ IM'f •I '"'•• M•,•. ( ,411f ,., ,,, wD.C' &1ft1tl\n• M rhu \• vt)m·~t~tr l)y T'l4'·1 I IM)MOMl"l'f '"llt.,,<h •""''•ft,....)\)() ""'l\fhl" ' storage space and other purposes. Ford asked the House Ap- propriatioJis Committee to ap- prove $203,000 for Nixon's office expenses in the fiscal ~ear which began July 1. That would have in· eluded $96,000 for ~taff salaries, $8,000 for staff fringe benefits, $15,000 for travel, $50,000 for equipment and communications, $10,opo for repairs and equip- ment services and $14,000 for of· fice supplies. Arthur S. Sampson, ad- ministrator of the General Service\!! Administration, a t- COLUMNIST ASKS FOR NIXON TESTIMONY, A4 tempted·to bolster Ford's request by telling the panel that Nixon has a backlog of about two million pieces of mail to answer from his San Clemente home. The committee, however, set- tled epon the $121,152 figure - about 60 percent of the request - by pro-rating Nixon's expen- ditures in the most recent months and then adding S percent for in- fiation. Hi6 higher outlays in the initial period following bis re- signation were disregarded as unrepresentative of current needs. The Nixon funds are contained in a bill which provides $7.5 billion over-all for the White House. Treasury Department and other executive agencies. FrotRPageAI TRIAL ••• The first defense witness called was district attorney in- vestigator John Coleman. The investigator merely con- firmed the authenticity of docu- ments used in the investigation leading to the indictment or the nine. Fetus D e ath Conviction CAMDEN N.J . (UPI) -Win- field Anderson , who claimed he was asleep at a friend's house at the time a pregnant woman was shot during a holdup, has been convicted in the murder o( twin fetuses who died hours after pre· mature birth. The conviction Tuesday was unprecedented in New Jersey, where criminal codes had not clearly defined the protection un- der the law accorded to unborn children. However. Camden County Judge Leon Wingate. drawing on common law, ruled that An- derson could be charged with mur.der since the 7'h month-old fetuses were "victims of a wound upon their mother . . . were born alive . . . and subse- quendy died hours later.'' Homes Sought For] apaneae Irvine participants ln a Foreign Stud¥ Leaeue spouored visit by 33 J apanese ltudentl are seek in& boat families IOI' the via· it.on. The stude.ots will arrive In Irvine for a three-week stay July 29. They will spend weetday mominga at:teedtni clUH.S at UC Irvine. Host f amUies are expect.cl to provide room and board for the students. The Forelcn Study Leaiue is • 1ub1idlary ot Reader's D11eat. P\arther inlormaUon may be obtained by c allln1 Otrittl.De Ot- to at 552·0572. t .... J O.lly Pli.c ~ 1i1Y •Ucuf'lll Keelller HOPEFUL HOPE FANS HAD TO BE TURNm AWAY IN DROVES AT FAIR TUESDAY NIGHT One Ledy Ceme Fro m Oxnerd end Stood Seven Hours to Join Thi• Throng F ront Page Al HOPE ... leg injury when briefly trampled by the crowd. Hope was the most renowned celebrity ever to appear at the !air;in his first local show since a 1973 benefit performance for St. Joseph Hospital. The 72-year-old performer wowed the crowd with several song-and-dan~e numbers, show- ing them he is nowhere near ready for St. Joseph's himself - or any other hospital for that mat- ter. Group Formed For Carpenter Senate Backing Stale Sen. Dennis Carpenter. (R-Newport Beach) has not of- ficially declared himself a can- didate for U.S. Senate but the· wheels of a Carpenter for Senate campaign are already turning. Carpenter's election commit- tee, the "Friends of Carpenter," has been formed and has filed with the federal elections com- mission. George Argyros, of.Linda Isle in Newport Beach and head of Amel Development Co. of Santa Ana, has been selected to head the election committee. New Gas Hike Seen Before Labor Day WASHINGTON (UPI ) - Federal Energy Administrator Frank Zarb predicted today gasoline prices will increase another two to five cents a gallon by Labor Day. He insisted, however, there was no collusion by the oil companies to raise prices . Zarb told a Senate subcommil· tee that curtnpg of gas refining by the oil com)r.rnies was due lo "a combination of unforeseen re- fining problems. "We have seen \DO evidence that there is a con~iracy to pro- mote a shortage in anticipation of higher price levels," Zarb said. - Zarb spelled out the Ad- ministration 's outlook for the near future as both the Senate and House focused attention on energy, particularly oil prices. R eport D e nied WASHINGTON (UPI) -Ex- ClA agent E. Howard Hunt says he n ever named former Presidential Aide Alexander But- terfield as a Central Intelligence Agency contact in the White House. Hunt Tuesday denied a report by retired Air Force Col. L . Fletcher Prouty that Hunt had made such a statement to him. · The Senate Tuesday approved a six-month extension or oil price controls and Speaker Carl Albert said the House would take the same approach. Later today, President Ford is expected to submit to Congress his proposal to more than double · the per-barrel cost of oil over the next JO months. Zarb said barring any oil price increase by the oil-producing na- tions, he estimated gas prices would rise from between two to five cents a gallon, varying in dif. ferent parts of the country. "We don't anticipate shortages although there could be spot con· dJtions. We see adequate crude stocks on hand and we see no need at the mome nt for shortages," Zarb said. The Federal Energy Ad· . ministration, Zarb said, found there were "abnormal gasoline stock drawdowns, with gasoline stock levels being reduced to 196 million barrels at the end of the first week in July. "It has been suggested that de- liberate decisions to delay in· creasing refinery capacity utilization were made to firm up prices, even at the risk of creat- ing a shortage. We have no evidence lo demonstrate that this was the case.'' ~BOmb ' Devices Seized By JACK CHAPPELL OfllMO.llyPtleC .. H San Clemente police raided an apartment Tuesday and later al· leged they had confiscated "~nough ex-plosives to blow up th.is apartment complex and halt the one next to it." Officers said they had initially been on a narcotics raid when they broke in the door and al~ legedly found some of the occu-pant.a "in a euphoric slate." · Narcotics detective David Munro alleged that the ex- plosives were to be used to "blow up a narc'' -slang for a narcotics officer. Four Marines were arrested in the apartment. Police identified the suspects as Richard M. Alex- ander, 22, Jaston "Johnson, 21, Jelle J . Jansma, 20 and James E. ·Sharp, 19. All four are stationed at Camp Pendleton. The four suspects were booked on charges of being under the in- fluence of a narcotic. Alexander was also booked on charges of possessing explosives and Johnson on charges of at- tempting to destroy evidence. Police said they confiscated one half-pound of military TNT, three-quarters of a pound of plastic explosive, 10 feet of ex- plosive cord, and detonation caps. Police allege that the material was stolen from Camp Pendleton. The four suspects are from B Company, 1st Enginer Battalion, Camp Pendleton. Del. Munro said six San Clemente police officers broke in the door or the apartment at 225 Granada, Apt. No. 3, and found some or the Marines in a dazed euphoric state. He said Johnson was attempting to inject himeslt with a syringe of narcotic solu- tion which he allegedly attempt- ed to destroy when the officers burst in. A small amount of cocaine was seized, Munro said. Munro said the raid came as a result of a continuing narcotics investijation by the force. He claimed evidence indicated the explosives were lo be used in an assault on a narcotics officer. 1 T est Problems SACRAMENTO (AP) -The Rancho Seco nuclear power plant, already shut down because or turbine blade damage, burned out most of its control rod motors during routine testing, Tuesday. Additionally, the political management firm of Spencer and Roberts has been retained to "get the ball rolling," according to Carpenter's aide Walter Clark. But a ll the action is just pre-· liminaries, said Clark. "Al this point it looks favorable, but we're not at a point where we can announce (Carpenter's can- didacy)," he said. CHILDREN$ SHOE Fro•Page A J SPACE ••• the pilots could move into the module and later the Soyuz. After clearing the hatchway, the astronauts moved into the cylindrical docking module lo start preparing it for the meeting with the Russians. The problem was considered minor from the beginning and flight directors said there was no concern about it affecting this week's rendezvous and linkup plans. Russian officials in Moscow, however, expr essed some concern and were assured by U.S. technical representatives there that the problem could be overcome. "In return,-we bugged them about their TV camera pro- blems," said astronaut Robert Overmyer in Moscow. One o( the four video cameras in the Soyuz failed during launch Tuesday and detailed step-by- step repair procedures were radioed by Moscow to Leonov and Kubasov at the same time Houston was sendJng repair pro- cedures to the Apollo. Soviet controller Viktor Blagov said the camera problem was traced to a defect in a cable. "It will not arrect the flight," he said in Moscow. "The only suf· ferers are the viewers." Stafford, Brand and Slayton awoke more than five hours later than the cosmonauts th.is morn- ing. A few minutes later, Slayton spilled some strawberries be was eating for breakfast. "We have strawberry colored # spacecraft," he radioed Houston. "Spill much?" asked Crippen. "It doesn't take much up here," Slayton replied. "U you think your 1V is look- id~ through rose colored glasses, it 1 only because it's covered with ltrawberries," Stafford said l•ter. At one point, Crippen 'asked Sl•yton how be Celt. "}can't beJieve it," replied the man who has waited 16 years for a cbance to t'ly in space. "Never !tit' better. There may be 10n:1eth1ni better, but it's been 110 lan1 1lnce I've seen it I couldn't tell )'OU.', DOORS OPEN AT 10 A.M. HO EXCHANGES OR REFUNDS OH SALi MEltCHAHDISI PLIASE \, Fash1on Island, Htwpon Beath SALE STARTS THURSDAY, JULY 17th \ I ALL SllES OM RACKS FOR IASY SILIC:TIOM I 7 I 7 ..... \ Dwntington Beaeh Fo11ntain Valley . EDITION VOL. 68, NO. _197,t6 SECTIONS. 70 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALI FORNI A Ex-Hinshaw Orange County Superior Court Judge Walter Smith ordered . the trial of accused conspirator James Bertolino to continue Tuesday. The order was made despite protests Crom Bertolino's al· torney Donald Th a mer, that the proseeution railed lo prove that a conspiracy existed in the Orange · County assessor 's office to help e lect Andr e w Hins h 1.1w t o Congress in 1972. Along with e ig ht oth er employes in the assessor's off1c~, Bertolino was charged in a grand jury indictment last December with participating in an alleged conspiracy that used county employes to help elect Hinshaw to Congress. Six of the nine indict Aide's l>leaded guilty to some charges in he 33-count Indictment. But Bertolino pleaded innocent lo charges or cons piring to sub- mit false documents and grand lheft. By mid-day Tuesd ay, pro- secutor William Evans rested his case agamst the 52-year-old de- f<>nda nl. And Thamer . who delayed his Trial opening sta!ement until Evans completed bis case, charged lhat the deputy district attorney -failed to prove a conspiracy ex- isted. l'Urlhermore, Thamer added, if there was a conspiracy Evans had not shown that Bertolino was a particirant . But Judge Smith denied his plea to dismiss the case and or· • • Today's Clo ·I ng • toe ks WEDNESDAY, JULY 16, 1975 TEN CENTS to Continue- dered the defense attorney lo present his side of the case. For openers, Thamer insisted that his client had not been grant· ed his constitutional rights when . be spoke to investigators and testified before the grandjwj. But when Evans presented . those statements as part of the prosecution's case, Judge Smith permitted them to be entered into evidence over Thamer's heated objections . The first d efe nse witness called was district attorney in- vestigator John C.oleman. The investigator merely con- firmed the authenticity of docu- ments used in the investigation leading lo the indictment. ol the nine. n Pilot Dies • m Crash Httntingt Apollo Problem 'Fixed' HOUSTON (U Pl) ·-Three American astronauts easily fixed a minor problem in their ·Apollo today and bore clown on Russia's two Soyuz cosmonauts more than 1,000 miles ahead for a union Thursday 136 miles over Germany. The flagships of the two space powers circled the world every hour and a half in the second day or history's first international manned spaceflight. Alexei Leonov and Valeri Kubasov opened the day's ac· tivities by gunning their 15,000- pound Soyuz into a near perfect "assembly" orbit 138to140 miles high to wait for Thomas Stafford, Vance Brand and Donald "Deke" Slayton to join them. "Your friends just finished a circ (circularization) bum and • they are in orbit waiting for you," Robert Crippen at Houston control told the three Americans. The astronauts' first chore of the day was to remove a stainless steel docking probe hung up because a wire connector shifted out or position and blocked a re- moval tool. Crippen radioed in· structions on how to fix it, and the astronauts reported a few minµtes later that the probe had been successfully removed. "Aha, the probe is out," Staf- ford said. The probe was used to clasp docking latches when the Apollo hooked up to its ·docking module Tuesday. It bad to be removed so <See SPACE, Page A2) Small Shark Attacks Girl In Florida NEW SMYRNA BEACH, Fla. CUPI) -A 14-year-old girl sus· tained severe lacerations on her left arm when attacked and bit· ten by a four-foot shark while swimming less than 200 feel off this northeast Florida resort city's downtown beach Tuesday. Capt. John Crisp, head of the city lifeguard detachment, iden- tified the victim as Beverly White or New Smyrna Beach. She was released after treatment at Fish Memorial Hospital for three deep gashes in her left forearm and a number of other less severe lacerations. She also suffered a minor laceration in her side, ap- parently from the shark's fin, Crisp said. . The girl was in chest deep water swimming with a compa- nion 'Steve Morris, when the shark attacked, Crisp said. ''She yelled to Morris, 'Get me outo!the water'." Crisp said. FIRST COUPLE BOl/GHT ITEM "J'm very happy with the ad. The flnt couple who came to see the relrtserator, boucht it.•• . That's the sutcess experienced by the HunUneton Beach woman who placed tht1 ad in the Dally Pilot: FRIGIDAIRE Refrlg .• wht. 5W tall, «ood work ~cond. $6$. /Jt, 5, XXX• JUI.XX. If you have a used appliance you would Uke to coavert to caah, call 642-5678. We make it easy lo put a few wordl to work tor you ln the Daily PUot. i .. Suflar 'n Spice OAllY Pilot SIAlf Photo What's a county fair •.vithout cotton cand y"? Why, it would be a flop for sure. But CC1rric Chidester, 6, Huntington Beach, found her share of the s weet cotton during a visit lo tne Orange County Fair in Costa Mesa . Th(' fair continues through July 20, and, presuma bly. the cotton candy supply will hold put that long. Buxton Bribery Charge Dismissed By GARY GRANVILLE Of Ille D•llY Pilot Sllltt Superior Court Judge Everett Dickey dis m is s e d bribe ry charges against Tandy Corp. Vice President J ames Buxton .Tuesday and granted him im- munity from prosecution in mat· ters related to the Orange County Assessor's Office scandaJ. Along with Assistant Assessor George Upton, Buxton was in - dicted last March by the county Grand Jury on three bribery counts. But by the time be left Judg.e Dickey's courtroom, Buxton was free of the bribery charges and ordered to testify as a prosecu tion witness in cases related to the assessor's officescandaJ. Also granted immunity from prosecution was T andy l a x manager William Hughes J r . Monday, another Tandy official Paul Tabor, was granted im· munity. Buxton, Hughes and Tabor were witnessess during the Grand -biry's investigation I.hat led to f"eparate criminal indict- ments against Upton, county As· sessor Jack Vallerga and Rep. Andrew Hinshaw CR-Newport Beach). Hinshaw was Orange County assessor from 1965to1972. It is expected that Buxton. Hughes and Tabor will appear as proseeution witnesses in Upton and Hinshaw 's upcomin g separate trials. . 3 Plead Guilty SAN OlECO (AP> Thre<' penons will be sentenced AuR . 25 tor amuggllna 800 pounds of hashish into the United States. I l11wcvt>r, none or lhe three are l'l\peclcd to be witnesses al V;.allC'rga's trial in Ventura Coun· ty next wc~k . T h e issue s at stake in Vallerg;.i's trial center on Orange Counly"s s ale or a computerized appraisal system to Spartanburg County. South Car olina. VaJlerga is alleged to have act- ed illegally whe n he purportedly accepted expenses and consulting recs from Spartanburg which were related to the s ale of the $2,045computer sys tem. He's Got Experience The public works depart- ment in Huntington Beach has received o~ applica- tion for an engi,lreer's post from a job hunter who may offer more experience than the city wants . Charles Albert Smith of AJtadcna is 86 and looking for work -kind of. In his application to Public Works Director Bill Hartge, Smith noted that he has more than 60 years or engineering work. plus degrees from Bowdoin College (1910 ) and the Massachusetts lnsUtute ol Tech_nology (1913). Smi th admitt e d , how('ver , he may be over- qualified for tbc job, but ln order to collect uoemplOY• ment pnyments be 11 re- qui rcd to make "all re-. asonable efforts" to find employment.. 3 Others Perish In Copter A Huntington Beach helicopter piJot and his three passengers we re killed today when their chopper faltered and fell just after takeoff from a remote rocket test site in a San Diego County can yon. The fi ery crash -its cause un - determined ignited a brush fire battled for two hours in re- mot e Sycamore Canyon northeast of San Diego and near Poway. Killed in the predawn crash near the General Dynamics re- search and test center was pilot James W. Burns, 40, of 19842 Tri· dent Lane, Huntington Beach. General Dynamics officials identified the other dead men as senior e lectronics engineer John R. Ehret, 48. of Ontario. plus manufacturing test engineers James Walls, 36, of La Verne and Donald Hanson, 38, of Etiwanda. Investigators who collected pieces of bodies and debris strewn over a quarter-mile area in the rocky canyon near the Red Missile test site said the victims were killed instantly. The h e licopter piloted by Bums apparently Jost power just moments a fte r t akeoff for Pomona to r eturn the three passengers to their homes near G e n era l Dynamics ' head - quarters. "I heard this big noise right after midnight and saw lhe fire." said rancher Chuck McLaughlin, one of the first to reach lhe scenl' in rugged hill y terrain. Bob Gough, another area resi- dent, joined ne ighbors with shovels and garden hoses in an effort to control the gasoline-fed flames before State Division of i''orestry fl re true ks am ved. Gough s aid h e heard an ominous rumble a nd boom, then followed by an eerie glow in the sky as the fu eled helicopter burst into flam es. Gladys Hawes, Physician's Widow, Dies Gladys Be rtha Hawes, wife of the late pionee r Huntington Beach physician Or. Ralph Hawes, died Sunday at Pacifica Hospital after a brief illness. She was74. F\lneral services have been set for 2 p.m . Thursday at Smith's Chapel in Huntington Beach. Mrs. Hawes is s urvived by her son, Don. Woodland Hills; three daughters. Dorothy Van Beek, Pottery Valley; Mildred Jacobs, Chicago, lll.; and Marjorie Campbell. Lansing, Mich. Also two brothers, Harold Stephens of Seal Beach and Jack Stephens and 14 grandchildren. Ur. Hawes died Jan. 9 a' age 79. The couple lived at 330 Crest Ave. They celebrated their 50th wedding anniversary last sum· mer . . · Dr. Hawes was honored a year ago by the Huntington Beach Ci- ty School District board, which named a new school aft« the retired family doctor. The Rev. M1 cnael Samsvick, pastor of Calvary Church, will of· ficiate at Mrs. Hawes' funeral. Vessel Seized NEW YORK (UPI ) -The Coast Guard Tuesday night selzed o Japanese Ci.shlng vessel in the Atl1ntie Ocean oft the coast of Maryland for Uletally talclng lobsters f ~m the U.S. Collllnen.tal Shelf, a spokesman . reported. ' Dall., Pilot,..,,..., &y R1c ... n1 Koefllef' THE OLD TROUPER AT 72 STILL WOWS A CRGWD Comic Bob Hope Pecked In 15,000 at County Fair 15,000 Cheer Hope At County Fair By ARTHUR R. VINSEL 01 lhe D•oty Pilot Slllll A standing-room·only throng of up to 15,000 flocked to see one or America's most celebrated come· dians, Bob Hope, at the Orange County F air in Costa Mesa Tues· day night. • His appearance on what was designated Senior Citizens' Day was considered the highlight o( the 1975 fair. "We finally had to tum many away. which was unfortunate but inevitable ... said Peggy Bayless, publicity director fortherair. . Hope cracked jokes and qui ps for half the two-hour show whi ch also included orchestra leader Les Brown and his Band of Renown and singer Rosemary Clooney. He carried the performance wi th customary pepper and flair, de lighting the crowd includ· ing Edna Belshan who came all the way from Oxnard and stood in line seven hours. ''I've loved him for years," said the 52-year-old woman. One gray-wigged woman and longtime Hope fan quipped that she almost tossed her apartment key onstage. Fetus Death Conviction CAMDEN N.J . (UPl) -Win· field Anderson, who claimed be was asleep at a friend's house at the time a pregnant woman was shot during a holdup, has been convicted in the murder of twin fetuses who died hours after pre- mature birth. The conviction Tuesday was unprecedented ln New Jersey, where criminal codes bad not clearly defined the protection un- der the law accorded"lo unborn children. However, Camden County Judge Leon Wingate, drawin_g on common law, ruled that An· derson could be cb.arfed with murder since the 7"1t mcinth-old rietuaes were ''victims or a wound upon their mother ••• were born all ve . . . and nblo- quenUy died hours later." ·\ .. "Groupies come in all ages,·• she remarked. The 72-year-old comedian whose business acumen has made him one of the wealthiest enter- tainers in the world received about $25,000' for the free ad- mission appearance. "I'm older than I ever meant to be," declared the humoris t whose· career has carried him from the rough-cut boards or vaudeville stages lo the fanciest nightspots in the land, m additioq lo the jungles, fields and trenches where American Gls fought three wars. "Fair audiences are the greatest. They're here for fun.•• quipped Hope, who obviously shared the night's good time!'. "I love it here," he also said. "It's a thrill they look the cattle out before I got here." Typical Hope humor hurled barbed jests at the CIA. the economy, the alleged horror movie "Jaws'' about a mons let" (See DOPE, Page A2 > Weather Low clouds th11.0ugh late morning Thurs day. otherwise mostly sunny and a bit warmer with beach highs near 70 rising to the low 80s inland areas. Lows tonight 60 to 65. INSIDE TODA V How . ore our . new Camp .. Pendldon re/ugeea fori.ng" ,.along the OrOtlge CO<Ut? ~ : have jobs, many. are bl school . learning Engl~h -. and . tsll ~ IMir 01Dft perfonal com- ; mtnt1 on America. See stories •.and phoCOI Page 89. l•clex At.,_ lef'wk• A.J MlluMffl CJ ....... ... ..... ..., = All ...... Fi.oh •• AS ~---A4 ~ OMt ar.._c:.-., ,.. Cilloilk• .. ::: ...... Ch) o-...-.. ., ............ ., =--.-... .,.., ............ M M..s .... rt temeM ...., ,....,.. ..... .. ...... M-S ,......... M-' .... C..-14 ....... M Mllft1ua1 a ---A4 ' I ,: .Johs Proneised'! Wt!'dnesday, July 1&. tf~ • . - Cory Campaign Gifts Probed S ACRAMENTO CAP > Ft•dt!ral :.iuthorities arc in- ' c!illt;.tlmg whether state ~on. Lruller Kcnn!!th Cory of Garden GrO\"e sohcited campaign con- tnbullOn:i witfi promises of ap- pomtmt•nls as in heritance tax re- ft:'r1.·1.·~. lhc Sacramento Bee said t<>dj~ Thi.' newspa pe r said Asst. U.S. Ally Donald H. Heller refused <'Omment when asked ii evidence o( tlkgal political activit1es \\Ould b~ presented to a federal grand jury. The Bee attributed its stoo lo sources in the U.S. Jus ti ce Departme nt in ~arr::imento. l'or~· dented .any wrongdoing, and !laid he had not been contacl· t.'<i hy authorities, the Bee sa.id. · l think the losers of political plums don 't like losing lheir • cushy jobs and will discredit ~Labor Day Fuel Cost Up 5 Cents? WASHINGTON (UPI ) - Feder al Energy Administrator Frank Zarb predicted today gasoline prices will increase another two to five cents a gallon i>v Labor Day . He insisted. however, there was no collusion by the oil comparu~ to raise prices. Zarb told a Senate subcommit- tee that curbing of gas refining by the oil companies was due to .. a combination of unforeseen re- fining problems. , ''We have seen no eVidence lhat there is a conspiracy to pro· mote a shortage in anticipation of higher price levels," Zarb said. Zarb s pelled out the Ad- tninistration's outlook for the near future as bolh the Senate and House focused attention on energy, particu I arly oil prices. The Senate Tuesday approved a six-month extension of oil price controls and Speaker Carl Albert said the Hou se woul d take the same a pproach. Later today. President Ford is expected to s ubmit to Congress his proposal to more lhan double the per-barrel cost of 011 over t he next 30 moaths. Zarb said barring any 011 price increase by the oil-producing na· tions, he estimated gas prices would rise from between two to five cents a gallon, varying in dif- ferent parts of the country. ··we don't anU cipate shortages although ther e could be spot con- ditions. We see adequate crude stocks on hand and we sec no n eed al th e moment fo r shortages," Zarbsaid. The Federal Energy Ad · ministrallon, Zarb said, found there were "abnormal gasoline stock drawdowns, with gasoline itock levels being reduced to 196 million barrels at lhe en<l of the first week in July. "It has been s uggested that de- liberate decisions to delay in- cre a s ing refine ry capacit y utilization were made lo firm up prices, even at the risk of creat- ing a short age. We have no evidence to demonstrate that th.i s was the case ... The reason for the lower levels of refining, Zarb said, were due in part to ·'an unusual number" or refinery m alfunctions or acci- dents, surplus inventory stocks and underestimating gasoline de- mands in the e_arly part or the summer . ORANGE COAST DAILY PILOT '"°':Cr1•tMr'Co"'' O••'v rdQ1 Wtthwtl•<n,,com· b•~O lhf NII'#\ • t t•H • puhll\hed bV trw> 0fMt9" (n •• I PutJl1 ,,.,"J t rHng,1r., •,,rs>lfuth t<d•tl(ln\ dh.1 ovr , ntd M11u1tAv truouoh '-t•cJ,;ltv fnr Go\l• ""' .. t"• .-.uor 1 t ~Ar~. H1Jl\l111f.l'vn ...,..arnlf ot.ff'I• , .. ,,, v..,111 ; " ..... n,. ~: .. H1dfl"f)d•. V4'0flV •nd 1 •••ir~" ,,, •1" "1u1n Ctt•'' I! \t1f"<)h ,. QIONI ,.,ttu..ri 1\ c.ut)ft\t\••'1 §.atl4rd•l'\ ~ W rdAY\ Hw ""'"' ,,,._, r-.1~•1\n1no '"''"''' ,, At ~ 'Nt-.t twv St11•t to•'•""'~ j t• ''"'' 1'l'/&Jf1 Robnl N. W€>• Cl p,, """' """"' p,,,,.."'", Jae k R Curley y.,. ,,,..,,,"'""' •nd "'"f''•t M.tfti.tO"f Thomae; Ke1>vil l:.d1tor- Thomas I\ Murphine! M.11.,.Q,~q (.OHO" Chtirll", H Looc-, Richard P. Nall A \1 ,Nnt M 1n•g1nt LOttOf"> TPrry CovdlP W.\t Ortt,.1)1' (ountf EtMOf" Huntrnqton Beach Office 1 ,., • f'!••t"' 8ov't¥¥fJ Mo ·••"O ""d" p u Bo• 1'0 .• , ... , Other Offlcu t •'1 1,. .. I' ,.. 11&• r.,t,,.,.,.,,..,,, S•r~I (t'l\11 M•\4 ttoW•U n•y 'tr,,..I ~I• #f•1n fl4t ft J t J] N" •P'lf1 ftoV•l'VA'd •rkti~.,.., to V11I l'W )\)j\I I A PAI .. Oild ti \.,, f ''"00 F'r~,i/IAt f elPphon<' (714 I t.42 4321 Cl.h,tf1ed l\clver t 1~inQ 647 5678 I '" ~l\•t,,/),.•·•')'" r~uf\h•t;itn,,.-,,,. f .S40·1120 r tt1n g n t1 f"I) 01",.nt• C •I .. y f:.11\"iftQ , tn5,.n, N() ,.._., \.O• " 11\.I• ,., 'W'I\ •dilott•l r .etl•f •' fd•~r· H"f'l·•f"lf\ t rttt flt m •'I n• r•oroGv, •1 w tf\owt ,.,~•·•~ ""''"'"\IOf\ 01 11•f't lQ,.IO'#,.,.t \~r .-.,,tl ,. ••t• P•&1•9'P' O••d ft Co,t• M•\•. "" ,, ... ,.,,,.,. "uour•lf•(ill\fttc.,.,...,.l) Of')~'"'" .,.., ,,.,, •• ,, 00 '"°"lNy, m.'4f .. , °"'',..,~""' u 00 """"'"'• • anyone," tl'le newspaper quoted the Democratic controller as having s aid. Cory fired 23 referees appoint- ed by his R epublican pre- d et'essor, Hous ton Flournoy. Cory later appointed 74 new ones. I nvestigations by several newspapers disclosed that a number of the appointees had direct or indirect political ties to Cory. some involving campaign contributions. The Bee said the investigation is centered on whether Cory's mailed dismissal notices to the referees set off a chain or events that constituted violation of the federal mail fraud statute. The newspaper said it is the same charge on whicb former Il- lionois Gov. Otto Kerner was con- victed. Kerner was accused of defrauding the people or Illinois of their right to his honest and faithful service. and of failing his duty to administer the Jaw im- partially. The f ederal investigation focuses on two of Cory 's appoin- t~s. Antoinette McGillvray of Stockton anCl Tibert Nicora of Oakland, the Bee said. A lawsuit filed by a fired re- fere e asserts that Mrs. McGillvray's family contributed $5,500 to Cory 's ..l.ampaign:. Nicora is a 20-year-0ld Stanford student, whose father, Vincent, was said to have contributed $5,000 to Cory. Booms Due From Toro Jets Tonight The Orange Coast may be bat- tered by sonic booms tonight as El Toro Marine Corps jets take part in a massive training ex- ercise simulating combat with enemy bombers. Air Force, Air National Guard, Navy a nd Marine jets will scramble from bases between San Diego and Merced this even- ing in an exercise simulating a West Coast enemy attack. • El Toro's F -4 squadrons will join the mass interceptor mission in the "early· eveninJI? hours" t onight, said a n E l Toro spokesman. An Air Force spokesman pre- dicted that some sonic booms may be heard in inland as well as coastal areas. "While supersonic flight is not an objective or the exercise, some of the interceptors may have to maneuver at supersonic speed over the Pacific," the El Toro spokesman said. "Should atmospheric condi- tions be unfilvorable al the time, it 1s possible that some offshore sonic booms may be heard along the coast line. "The exercise will not involve the firing of weapons and has been coordinated with Federal Aviation Administration orficials lo prevent interference with civil aviation traffic," he said. Student Killed SAN FRANCISCO <UPI) Bruce Du Pertuis, 20, a student at the College or Marin. was ac- cidentally electrocuted Tuesday whil e working al a prop warehouse of the Amer ican Conservato r y Theater. Wit- nesses s aid De Pertuis touched a li ve, high-voltage wire as he worked 30 feet above the ground. • I U Pl lll1Htratlo11 JOINT MISSION -Artist conception of the Apollo-Soyuz "fest Project shows launch, rendezvous , d ocking, separation and spl ashdown of two shi ps. If all goes well, the American and Russian vessels 'will dock in orbit 136 miles above Germany Thursday for 44 hours of experiments. Drainage Plans Set For Sunset Beach Orange Count.¥ supervisors agreed Tuesday to spend $50,000 in county road funds to make curb and alley improvements in Sunset Beach in an effort to con- trol chronic drainage and flood- ing problems. In a report to the board, E n· vironmental Management Agen- cy Director H.G. "George'' Osborne said there have always been drainage woes in the area. "But the problem was ag- gravated by the county's im- provement or Sunset Beach Park facilities and North and South Pacifi c Avenue," Osborne said. Osborne said the residents of homes between North Pacific Avenue a nd Pacific Coast Highway battle storm runoff and high tides every year because their homes are very low in rela- tion to high tide lines. He said the water forms huge Front Page Al HOPE ... shark. and sin~er Cher's highly publicized musical marriages. Costa Mesa police had to detail extra patrolmen to crowd control duties due lo the Hope show alone, which drew more visitors than the ent ire fair did Monday. Virtually the only misfortune to mar the event occurred when one woma n fell and sustained a leg injury when briefly trampled by the crowd. Hope was the most renowned celebrity ever to appear at the fair, in his first local show since a 1973 benefit performance for St. Joseph Hospital. The 72-year-old performer wowed the c rowd with several ~ong-and-dance numbers, show- mg them he is nowhere near ready for St. J oseph's himself - or any other hospital for that mat- ter. pools in streets and alleys that re- main until they evaporate or percolate into the ground. Construction of the county parking lot in the old Pacific Electric right-of-way in 1974 only increased the runoff problems, O~borne said. He noted that sand that used to collect some of the water has been covered with pavement and now there are 'even runoff pro- blems from the automatic sprinkler system in the park landscaping. Supervisor s were told that numerous complaints have been received of water running off the alleys into homes and yard areas. Osborne said the problem can be corrected for the time being by putting in curbing and alley improvements that will 'channel the runoff to drains in Coast Highway. Fro.~ Page Al SPACE ••• the pilots could move into the module and later the Soyuz. After clearing the hatchway, the astronauts moved into the cylindrical docking module to start preparing it for the meeting with the Russians. The problem was considered minor from the beginning and flight directors said there was no concern about it affecting th.is week's rendezvous and linkup , plans. Russian officials in Moscow, however, expressed some concern and were assured by U.S. technical representatives there that the problem could be overcome. ' "In r eturn, we bugged them about their TV camera pro- blems," said astronaut Robert Overmyer in Moscow. One of the four video cameras in the Soyuz fa iled during launch Tuesday and detailed step-by- s\,ep repair procedures were radioed by Moscow to Leonov and Kubasov at the same time Houston was sending repair pro-· cedures to the Apollo. Trustee Garland Foots Bill HimseH Brian Garland. a trustee in the Huntington Beach City (elemen· tary) School District. paid his own way to last Thursday's State Board of Education hearing in Burlingame. ..., But his fell ow trustees, Norm'a. Vander Molen and Steve Holden, had their trips financed by the district. Superintendent S. A. Moffett said the district wouJd have paid Garland's way, but be refused. Garland was the lone trustee opposed to a unificatJoo plan for the district. which was approved at Thursday's meeting. He said he paid h1I ofm way becau.se Trustee Dale Bush •UI· gested at the July 2 board meet- ing perhaps the district shouldn't finance Garland's trip, consider· mg his stand. But Garland said even lbe Supreme Court recognizes a mmority opinion. After discuuin1 the matter, lnalteu voted unanimoualy to pay air fa re ror any truatees wish ing t o 10 -including Garland. . ' But he decided to pay his own $52.50 air Care anyway and sug- gested other trustees do likewise. He said be also suggested trustees donate the cost of the trip to a dis trict project, but neither idea met with any sup· . port. 'Tm glad he did (pay bis own way).'' Bui.h said today. "He didn't have to." Bush aaid he made the motion to pay Garland's way, as well as that of any other trustee, "even though I personally felt that Mr.· Garland wu not being !air to lbe other members of the !School board a nd community.·• But Ga.rland sa.ld be believes the question .. was an attempt to put pressure on ma and P.C?SSlbly embarrass me for my pos1Uon." Bush said lt is routine for board members boldlna a mloorit.,y opi· nioo to back the majority ooce a deei.sion bu been made. But be 11ld Garland 1'felt there wu room for dlasent... . "None of u1 questioned his riibt to dbaenl but rather the wildom !'f lt1" Bu.b explained. ' DOORS OPEN AT-10 A.M. NO EXCHANGES OR REFUNDS OH SALi MllCHAHDISE . PLIASI Sunset D,reaging Approved Emergency dredi!ng to re- move toM or s ilt and sediment Crom the . Sunse t Aquatic Regional Park Marinu was authorized Tuesday by Orang~ County supervisors. The board voted unanimoust1 to spend $45,000 on an interim dredgine project around the mouth of Bolsa Chica Channel. It will be the Courth time since 1970 that maintenance dredging has been done to maintain ade· quate depths for navigation in the west county s m aU boat harbor. according to H .G. "George'' Osborne, director of the Environ. mental Management Agency. In the three prior operations, the county has removed 73,000 cubic yards of muck from the bottom a l a cost of nearly $159,000. Ultim alely. Osborne told supervisors, the county will have to embark on a sedimentation control program that will involve overdredging of the harbor chao- nel to remove an existing sand bar that now traps the sediment in the marina. But he said a project or that magnitude, which would cost <.1L least $340,000, would require an environmental impact report. Supervisors h ave already balked al another alternative that would cost nearly $500,000 and is favor ed by the.city of Hun- tington Beach. It calls for realignment or the Bolsa Chica flood c hannel across a corner of the Seal Beach Naval Weapons Station and into the harbor mouth closer to the ocean. Osborne said the sediments would be subjected to mor e ocean tidal action. But he recomm ended agains t the move beca use of complica- tions involving the Navy, the cos- ts a nd the fact that the new alignment would severely impact one of the last known bird nesting grounds of the endangered least tern. In his report, Osborne said there are other ways of con- trolling sedimentation, including construction of log booms, metal grates and special chain link fencing. Officers Picket RIVERSIDE (UPI) -About 100 off-duty s heriff's deputies, deputy marshals, district at- torney's investigators and their families picketed the county courthouse Tuesday because of low pay. ( SALE -sy ARTS THURSDAY, JULY 17th ALL SIZES OM RACKS FOIUSY SELICTIOH \ \ ,( J I -.. ILY PILO.T EDITORlr\L PAGE The state parks commission seems to have • worked out a reasonable compromise. ln a dispute • wilh the city over beautification plans Jt Huntington Stale Beach. Two state eommlssloners have been as· ' signed to work with city pJanners and state architects to resolve differences.' - City officials had wanted the project -scheduled to start in 1976·77 -dela)'ed a year while a com· promise was sought. But this area has waited long •· .enough to see the state beaches cleaned up and beautified and a year's delay doesn't seem necessary. The city objected to a $1.5 million beautification ]>roject because it didn't give development plans for acreage the state may buy in the future, it didn't add enough new car parking spaces, and city planners don't believe the proposed landscaping will survive in this region: The city objections may be quite valid, but the dispute essentially involves a philosophical question over bow intense the use of the beach should be. City planners feel an urban beach should accommodate urban masses, and we certainly agree. But two months ought to be time enough to solve a philosophical dispute and rework the plans. In the Right Hands The long-debated school unifica.tion question -al least for residents of Fountain Valley and southern Huntington Beach-is finally in the hands of the peo· ple. The state Board of Education last week agreed to give voters in south Huntington Beach a chance to vote on forming their own unified school district. That elec· tion is expected to be Nov. 4, the same day Fountain Valley residents vote on forming a new unified district with.in municipal boundaries. The state board's action last week was prcdicla ble. Board members followed the recommendation given them by thestateeducat.lons taff. The information should be presented unemotional- ly. No facts -particularly on tax rates, finances and student and teacher shuffling -should be hidden. Feo· ple should know just what their vote on Nov. 4 will mean. EIR V aloe Shown The revelation last week that the new Ocean View High School campus will be built on top of a valuable archeoJogical site in Huntington Beach shocked and surprised quite a few people. The sad fact is, that if the Huntington Beach Union High School District had followed the proper state environmental procedures, no one would have been surprised. Under the 1970 California Environmental Qualit~ Act all governmental agencies are required to either write a n environmental impact report, file a negative declaration, or declare the project planned "categorically exempt" from s uch procedures. Because the high school dislnct considers the need Cor the 2,000 s tudent campus an emergency 1 it declared the project categorically exempt. A city survey conducted in 1973 had listed the archeological site, south of Warner Avenu e and between Gothard and Golden West streets, as one worth preserving. But because the district did not follow the full environmental impact report pro- cedures, the campus was designed without considera- tion for prese rvation of the site. It may be too late to prevent construction now, but the district ought to take every measure possible to save what it can ·of the site and right a wrong already done. • • '' NOW 1 'M A SE L f-5TA"T l N6 IYPE." H If It's Loud .:It Will Sell- .· Even If Bad. I Drawi11g the Line on Censorship '.T PAUL HARVEY) •' While House daughter Susan Ford, hosting her high school prom al the While House, .. had much dif- ficulty finding a group of mod mu s i - .' clans which , could qualify for th e n ecessa ry sec urity clearance -• • meaning "no drug convictiollS. .. Is noisy music with raunchy • lyrics it.sell a drug? From noisy music you can run but you can't hide. In the deep south of Mexico. ', even the smallest town iS likely to have three concert bands : which play everything loud, louder, loudest. ~$ THE ZAPOTECS, listening, are likely simultaneously to • chew plants w.ith names like ••Tears of the Virgin" while they hallucinate in the central plaza. Italy's state-run radio and TV have been trying lo wean • listeners away from hard rock music. A recent radio survey s howed that only 7 out or every ;'100 Italians listen to this mod 'I • , music. ... ;-Yet the big shows on Italian • networks feature the gyrating, r twitching. acrobatic howlers. .' The San Remo Rock Festival de· • livered a TV audience of 20 • million. ,. In the United States some com- munications industry leaders have sought to ban this "music to steal hubcaps by," but those leaders have few followers. ' In Vegas' posh casinos, which ' certainly do not cater to sour· • smelling junkies, most music is electronically amplified fortissimo. EVEN MORE conventional en· t ertainers, Wayne Newton and Debbie Reynolds, come on loud. Pun~la , Dear Gloomy .Gus Every day in every way I ask myself why the city of Huntington Beach tackled a new civic center, a new police station and a new library at the same time. That's where the city's real money problems lie: .M.R.K. Gloomy Gld <ommenu ue sllbmltlff by rN4en ...... Cle""' IMCeSHroly ....... ,,. views ot the Mwsp<1pu. Send your pet PffVe to GIOOm., Gus. Di.fly PilOt. So the cacophonous jungle, music cannot be identified wit.Fi any particular age group or with any specific economic stratum. The preference which suslarns the din is not race related. But one observation leads in the direction of an intriguing con- clusion·: Most rock musicians are male. In the annals of the Met. and through the era of the big bands, male and female vocalists were almost equally spotlighted. 1r anything, pretty girls wer.e out front. In country music and in soul, it's about half-and·half. BUT WHEN it comes to rock - with such notable exceptions as Janis Joplin, Grace Slick and Maggie Bell -most of these mod music groups are mostly or all male. Personally. I don't dig noisy music. CI think that's still an ac· ceptable expression.) I do not pretend to comprehend its ap- peal. UPI's Bruce Meyer thinks it has to-do with machismo, gutsi- ness. a kind of super-sexism . The same thing that moved the ~ggly girls to the front of the bandstand is now showcasing tight-britches masculinity for the titillation of liberated females. At rock concerts attendance is mixed, but the girls do most or the squealing, screaming and swooning. The very loudness of the music represents a calculated animali· ty which oHers 'heretofore in~ hibited rem ales a free trip. Well, fe~lows, it is their'lurn. "And don't forget the mothballs.'~ Obscenity VersusPo~llography TotheEditor: Mr. Provost's letter or July 8, which denounces "pornography" and a dvocates increased censorship, has raised our blood pressure. We feel that a rebuttal is in order. Mr. Provost makes quite general remarks, but we are perhaps more qualified than he to comment on censorship-having had first hand experience with it ourselves. As owners of the Fahrenheit 451 Bookstore in Laguna Beach, we have wasted about a year and a half Cso far) dragging ourselves and our two small children in and out or courts, fighting an obscenity ar- rest originally instigated against. us by two narcotics agents of the Laguna Beach police force. It seems that these agents found in our store some racy comic books (not much different from what is commonly available) which they considered "pornographic." In carrying out their arrest they were given "moral support" by a deputy district attorney <who is no longer on our case) and a judge Cwho signed the arrest warrant even though -as he later ad- mitted -he hadn't even seen the supposedly offens ive material). How obscene! WHETHER or not Mr. Provost regards a couple of underground comics as "dirty" is beside the · point. Nor does 1t matter much i1 he (or somebody else} find s sex, nudity, political satir e, or anything else "repulsive." Whal counts immensely is the fact that we are all essentially different people. and no two of us are going lo see things in exactly the same way. Why then s hould any person set himself (or herself) up as a literary custodian for others'! Is not such a person "porno· graphic" in the truest sense o( the term? . Mr. Provbst speaks so ardently about the virtues or freedom. Perhaps he does nol realize that a truly free country entails a trl,ll Y free press. Our forefathers were wise not lo put any holds on the First Amendment. If he does not. care to see some or the material being printed today, let him not look at it. Thal is bis privilege. A littlf! tolera nce will go a long way -and it will surely helptounclog our increasingly saturated courts. GORDON and EVELYN WILSON:' . A Propne luror"! TotheEdilor: It is disturbing that a girl . friend of Supervisor Battin has been appointed to the grand jury. Despite the presence or a seeming conflict of interest, the. young woman in question has stated she is personally satisfied sbe will be capable or serving as an honest, impartial grand juror. She has expressed a desire to serve because it would be an ln- leres t ing and fulfilling ex- perience for her. All this may be lure. BUT ii> this enough to saUsf y the citizens of Orange County? ls il enough to satisfy the needs or the grand jury system? Faith in the intepUy of the arand Jury system is crucial to our ability to govern OW"Selves crrcdlvely. And J s~ly doubt.. that anyone's persoo.aJ rullllt, ment is sufficient reason to risk lrnpaJrmant of that faith. In no way would it be a ttfiec- ( __ M_A_IL_B_o_x __ ) Letters /rom readers are welcome. The right to condense Letters to fit space or eliminate libel is reserved. Letters of 300 words or less will be given preference. All letters must in- clude signature and mailing address but names may be withheld on re- quest if sufficient reason is apparent. Poetry will not be published. tion up on Miss Perry 's patriotism, her honesty, nor her perspicacity to voluntarily vacate her seat on the present grand jury. On the contrary, such action on her part might be elo- quent testimony of her innate suitability for future service. REBA WILLIAMS Mecu11ring Chief ~ams To the Editor: I find it hard to believe that Ed Davis is chief of police of the second largest city in the coun- try. Wh en he announced that the new marijuana law would lead to more heroin addicts, l could hardly stomach him. . He couldn't possibly have at- tended college-or is it just that he has an I.Q. not much larger than his belly measurement? MEGEN THOMPSON Drug Pricing To the Editor: Your newspaper recently ad- vocated support for Assembly Bill 193 by Assemblyman Barry Keene, of Eureka. This so-called consumer legislation seeks to re- duce the cost of prescription drugs by permitting pharmacists to substitute c he mically- equivalent generic drugs for brand name products prescribetl by physicians. But is this really consumer legislation? More tha n 25 respected n ational health or· ganizalions claim it isn't. Their opposition to drug substitution legislation is based on the fact that some drugs with the same active chemical formula have different inactive ingredients. This may cause the drugs to have different therapeutic responses in the body. GENERIC DRUGS are widely assumed to be cheaper. ln some cases, however, generics cost more than certain brand name products. There are other reasons why AB193's c l a im ed consume r benefits may be oulweighted by its drawbacks. Generic sub- stitutes are available for only 25 per cent of the 200 most common· ly prescribed drugs. Generic pre- scribing by physicians is current· ly authorized in California; about 10 per cent of all prescriptions are now written generically and the figure is rising. Current law also permits a pharmacist to sub· stitule drugs wilh the consent of Lhe prescribing physician. U this law is changed, neither the doc- tor nor the patient will know ex- actly what drug the patlent is re· ceiving. THOSE in ravor of As- semblyman Keene's bill may be missing the point when lhey claim il is a consumer measutt. Cost should not be lhe only con- sideraUoo. Other aspects of drug product selection -quality, cfCective- ness, safely, equivalence -ln· dlcate lhal Call(orn.la's current anti-substitution statute is a necessary consumer protection law and should be retained. BARBARA S. PUETT We remain convinced o substan1ial number of prescription drug-users 'would save substantial amounts of . money under the proposal at no loss of consumer protection. -Editor Definbtg 'Strike'' To the Editor: l was overcome with sympathy for Tom Robinson CM.D. who chaslized the Daily Pilot for us- ing the term "strike" referring to recent doctors' actions- Mailbox, July 9). As a teacher I have withheld services, which the newspaper~ and the general public insist on calling a strike. Where I teach, the community was very fortunate, the doctors' wives. all P.T .A. members. just hopped info their little station wagons to man the classrooms. This in spite of the fact that P.T.A. is supposedly a neutral body. As a teacher, t have often been told lhat we should clean out our profession of all undesirable teachers. Malpractice suggests lo me that if the A.14.A. did so, their insurance may not be so high. Every profession has its weak· nesses. Mine is that in order for my wife a nd me to have a stan- dard of living in keeping with our desir~ · Ne bolh have lo haul our "bods''·out of bed and lake full· lime job responsibilities. BEN BOELMAN. Placentiet (Vacationing in the areal Rllose lt'indfall7 To the Editor: Your July 6 article "Hike Hard to Swallow," confuses me. You stat e that the oal companies . raised the price of gasoline 3 cents a gallon because of the fourth of July holiday, and that the President's "iaux>rt fee ad- justment" was only 1 cent a gallon. The President put a tax of $1 a barre l on foreign oil. As one barrel of oil produces-40 gallons of gasoline, that makes lhe tax 2h cents a gallon, and Y:.i cent a gallon r aise for the oil com- panies. THE PRESIDENT put I.he lax on lo purposely raise the price lo discourage consumption, yet the companies get blamed. And the'. Senate is now having another ex· pensive investigation to see why the oil companies did it. lt might be better to investigate where all that tax money is going. We im- port six million barrels oI oil a · day. Now that we have a tax or $2 · a barrel, that is 12 million dollars a day extra going to the govern· ment. ls this money being used lo reduce ollr oattonal debt, reduce our ind1vldual tu burden, h~p our welfare rolls, or is it just another 1dded tax to fuel our ex· travagant government? It is con· fusing. GOLDIE JOSEPH l•.,UH»le Dattflft" To the Editor: I grieve for the death of 11· year-old Donald Bohns1ack (who died as a result or a mlni·bike crash into 1 driveway barricade at Orange Coast College). What a senseleAS, Creak acci· denl-t.be cbaln lhat SQ many people on bicycles and mini· bikes can't see as they pedal in- nocently along-awaiting dea:Lb in the making. There is just such a chain at TeWinkle Park where all four of my•sons play Harbor baseball. t have seen boys hit lhi~ chain on their bikes or run into it by accl· dent. ln my mind, I could never understand the folk s who strung these potential dangers. No warn- ings, no red reflectors. no strings adorn these wires. Only last summer. my then lO·year-old son was running across TeWinkle Park in bis usual boyhood abandon when he . caught his neck on a guy wire strung to the park trees. 'Ibere was no visible warning. Fortunately, he was only stunned and as I ran to his side when the air was knocked out or him, t feared his neck was broken. I was concerned enough lo calf our local police to the scene and file a report. The guy wires came down, but they were back this year. I see them at many parks and school grounds. The chain strings are s till there. Why must it cost so much· before hazards for children and adults are realized? Common sens e and mother·awareness show me these potential acci· dents in the making. MRS. JOHN R. PEUCHOWSKI ln.,iting Tlti~n To the Editor: A condition has developed in our city that is of concern to me. For the past several weeks there have been about two pieces of advertising material per day fastened lo the front door o! my home. <Sundays included.) This means that it's virtually impossible for an occupant of a single family residence in this city to lake a trip for business or pleasure without advertising to every cruising thief that their pro- perty is unoccupied. I believe this form of advert.is· ing is unfair to the resident and to the police department whose responsibility it is to protect the property. l urge the city council to seriously cons ider the adoption of an ordinance prohibiting the conspicuous placement of UD· solicited advertising matter upoll any properly. JACKW. BARCUS ORANGE COAST DAILY PILOT Rohrrt N. Weed. Pub&Mr• Thomas Kenai, !:dltor Horboro Kfe1bicl1. 1-:dttonol Poge Edi1or The editorial page or the DaJty. Piiot Hf>ks to inform and stimulate readers by presenting on this page <li\'erse commentary on topics nr interest by ~yndlcal­ ed columnists ond ct1rtoonists, by providin11 n forum for readers' vie"-; end by presenting Ull1 ne" spapcr·s opinions and Ideas on c·urrent topics. The editorial op1n1ons or the Dllily Pilot appear tmly HI th(' edit on al column ll the top or the P41AC Opinions ex- pressed by th e columnists and cartoonists and letter writers ar their o" n an<) no t ndotsem«it o( the-Ir \·icws by the Daily PUot :!hould be inferred. Wednesday, July 16, \97S 4,SOO•aere Blaze. . Heaists Ask 700 Fire Fighters Battle in Ranchita · Court Action SAN FRANCISCO (UP1) -Tbei parents of Patricia Hearst h4ve petiliooed to be named conservators ~ their daugbter'a estate. 'RANClDTA (AP) -About 700 Ciro llf bten are batUing a 4,500-~ brush fLre, burning on terram steep enough to test a mountain coat, to keep the blaze from reaching some rare blg born sheep. The blaze. with names 20 feet bigb, bad burned to Within a quarter-mile of Anzn-Borrego State Park early today. Fire fighters hoped to contain the flames today, but they kept a nervous eye on the weather. •·lf we get a north wind out or the desert. we're going to have some problems:• a spokesman for the Calif oruia Division of Forestry said. . lrterea.e BaUed SACRAME?n'O. (UPI) -The Calliornia Hospital Association says it will conaider ."all legal and legislative ·remedies" to block Bro·wn administration ac-. lion halting increased payments to hospitals for Medi-Cal services. Health and Welfare Secretary Mario Obledo Tuesday en· nounced the increase cutoff, say- in g the action was prompted because the federal government has refused to allow the state to limit the increases to 10 percent. He said hospitals were using state (unds to !'absorb" lhe cost of empty hospital beds. . ( State J Blast Rips Office LOS ANGELES CAP) "There was no warning ••• everything just went blooey." said a stunned M ex.ican Consul General Fernando Fernandez after a bomb blast ripped through his office injuring fourperSons. Tbe petition was tiled Tuesday in Superior Court by Randolph and · Catherine Hearst. Hearst ls president and editor of the San Francisco Ex· aminer. •. 'The petition said the Hearsls feared "arUul and designing persons" might t ake advantage o! their daughter, who was kid· naped by the Symbionese Liberation Army in Berkeley Feb. 4, 1974 and then joined her ab\iuctors. More than 50 persoos were in------------' the consulate Tuesday when lhe 12:44 p.m. blast sent doors flying from. their h~ges and glass and debns hurthng 100 feet into Youth Kill• ed Olvera Street Plaza, a busy downtown tourist attraction lined with Mexican shops. H119'11ft WI•• Seat LOS ANGELES (AP) -Democrat Teresa Hughes became Southern California's on· ly woman legislator today, win· ning a special election handily in the largely black 47th Assembly District in South Los Angeles. Miss Hughes. who is black and a n edu cational consultant. gained 7 ,230 votes or 62.8 percent to 4 ,268 votes or 37 .2 percent for the Rev: Henry Sellers, her white Republican opponent In Accident GRANADA HILLS (UPI) Richard Hageman, 16, was killed Tuesday by being impaled on a fire hydrant . Police said Hageman was standing in the rear of a dune buggy, holdfog the roll bar, when ~it careened out of control and crossed a lawn. Hageman was thrown clear and landed on the hydrant. The driver, J effrey Warren 21, was arrested on suspicion of drunken driving. DAILY PILOT Al l l ., " t I . CDP 'Slowdown~ Hit i ,, • J ~ SACRAMENTO CAP) -U anyooe 1eta killed because ol the tralClc ticket slowdown. lbe patrolman on the beat wW be respoo.slble, warns a Calllomia Hlahway Patrol oCficlaJ. Ralph M. Walker. CHP com· mander for nine San 'Francisco Bay Area counties, said TUes- day, however, that lho slowdown participants "have every right to be unhappy." · • Patrolmen have cut back about 50 percent on traffic citatioo writ- ing! on statewide average. in thear campaign for blghet pay. They bad been voted a 17.5 per· cent raise by the California Legislature which Republican Gov. Ronald Reagan approved. But incoming Gov. Edmund Brown Jr .. a Democrat, held it to the 10 percent ceiling he bas placed on all state raises. The minimum base pay for UD· i!ormed CHP officers was $1,162 per month beg.inning July. PATBOL SPOK~MAN Kent Milton said patrolmen in the Riverside and San Bernardino areas are virtually 100 percent involved in the slowdown, with officers iss\ling warnings instead of tickets. Milton said "a llWe less than M percent" of the officers statewide are participating in the slowdown. The campaign, which began at midnight Friday. is called a "Humanistic Enforcement Ef. fort" by the California Associa· lion of Highway Patrolmen, (CAHP) which says it represents 90 percent of the S,400 member force. About 25 percent fewer Ucketa we.re belna luued in lbo San Ji'ranclaco area. said Walker. Walker added: .. JI tbe public feels they can speed out there ~only get a warnlQI. Ulen'• s<>mg to be more apeectin1 ad lf someone gets killed becaUM of that. the officer la going to have to bear the respomibilif.j:• THE MANAGE& of CARP, Ralph Schiavone, said comman· ders "can make all kinds~ com· ments. No officer ls going to in· tentionally allow a situatioo on his beat that is going to cause·a person to get hurt. If be sees a drunken, reckless driver, he's . ' folng to nail him... it Schiavone said 2.3 million .{ ticket. were issued last year •. ~ Crom wblcb about $75 milUoo ro-i venue went to cities and counties. ~ He aafd the stl"ateo ii to pre-: ssure city and county oftlclala ln· " to persuading state legialators to override Brown's veto~ tbe re- m1tnlng 7 .S percenL • ASKED "-_BOVT po&Sible dis- ciplinary acfaoo, Scbiavc:me said, "We're wondering what they've done to warrant punitive action ~any kind. They haven't walked oil the Job. They're helping the public." : Sperm Bank Sued For .$5 Million SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -A man who stored a &ample of bis semen at a sperm bank and then had a vasectomy bas filed a $5 million lawsuit against the bank for accidentally destroying the specimen. GREGORY MARTON said in his class action suit flied Tues· day in Superior Court be has suf • fered "emotional and mental anguish" because of an apparent equipment failure at the Chartered International Cryo. Bank at Catheclral Inll Medican . Center here. · Marton said when be contract- ,ed Wiih the bank in January, I~ president, Robert A. Quinland Jr., told him his sperm deposit was "fully protected against destruction'' 'by two "fail safe" mooitcii'ing systems. AFTER UNDERGOING a. vasectomy. Marton said that oo June 22 he received a letter from the sperm bank saying bis semen bad been destroyed in a possible equipment failure. Marlon's lawsuit asks $~ million damages pltis $500,000 for any other sperm donor who might have suffered the same loss. Publi~her Guilty Of .. Tax Evasions LOS ANGELES <AP) - A man federal pro- secutors have been trying to nail on pornography charges since 1968 bas been convicteci on 22 income tax fraud counts. BobHope and other stars in free shows! Sears u Marvin Miller, 45, a suburban Covina ,,Ubli.sher, was found guilty Tuesday on five counts of tax evasion, six counts of mail fraud, seven counts of filing a perjurous tax return and four counts of making a false claim against·the govern· · ment. The returns were rated between 1968 and 1972. U.S. DISTRICT Court Judge William P. Gray said he would remand Miller to custody immediate· ly pending his sentencing Aug. 11. But after a de- fense plea, Gray gave Miller until July 25 to tum himself in·so he could prepare for the care of his 18-year-old diabetic son. • Miller's trial was halted for two weeks while he recuperated from what doctors described as an in· tentional sleeping pill overdose. He is still under psychiatric care. ....- A reputed milliooaire, Miller entered lhe sex book and film business in 1968, immediately draw· ing the attention of vice investigators. His appeal on a 1972 misdemeanor conviction for mailing unsolicited pornographic advertise- ments to a.Newport Beach man went all the way to the U.S. Supreme Court. In upholding Miller's con· viction. the high court handed down landmark ob· &eenity guidelines that still stand. New Smog ·Target Revealed r.-::~-=::-:-=-:--:-::~~"""."""."~ Dfnee'D motorcycle races rodeo • TV shows horse show hundreds of exhibits! Admission Sl.75 Childrm, &-12 S 1.00 Childrm unda six -frtt • Shor/J SAN FRAN.CISCO (AP> -A new set of gradtiated emission con· trols bas been adopted by the state Air Resources Board de- signed to curb the massive problems of. motorcycle pollution in California. •Tops •Skirts Barbin.~ Suits . •Separates The new standards will limit motorcycle exhaust to 10.hydrocarbon grams per kilometer by 1978, tiYe hydrocarbons io 1980 and one hydrocarbon by •1982. • S11mrmr Sampl~s •Misses a11dj1mior Sizu The smog board originally bad proposed adoption of the one hydrocarbon limit by 1978, but motorcycle in- dustry representatives told the board it coul<\ not achieve such a stan- dard by tbat time. 29129 PACIFIC COAST HWY, 9038 ADAMS AVE. S. WESTERN AT CAUE MAYOR SAN PEDRO TORRAN CE 378-2795 HUNTINGTON BEAC (71.d) 963-2221 traditional summer whi~ ..• from HARRIS; easy ca~ dacron cot.ton alraight 'leg wash pant, wornwit.n G~NT~ cotton knit shirt with bold strip~a, and whit.f. collar and placl<f.t. @)~@@)§@ 44 ,...,., llland, newpott centiw 644·5070 - Where Thrift Is Always· .In Style ~ This Ad Effective through Saturday,· July 19 ... ·cuT. ss? Proportione~·fit Nylo~ Pants Were $5.99. 299 Use Sears Revolving Charge • Was $5.99 P~nt Top .. · Short-1IHved, shirt ttyle top with placket front and pointed collar. Polyffter knit. Solid colon. MltMt' .11 ••• Were $6.99 ~ants : Zip-front style panh with wide ttralght · le91, wal1tbond. In snappy floral prints. MltMI' 1lie1. zoo 300 rc::::l So. Coast Plaza ~ 3333 lrittol St. Buena Park 0 ansre 2100 N.~tfti? Ave. PhOM 540.3333 .. -. .. ca. • 1150 Lo Palma Ave. Phon• 12M400 Phene \7·2100 r STOU HOUHt ~ "'"' "Wrf. 10 AM let PM ~ 9tl0 AM .. t"" 12 ..::.'":'I PM J 7 7 I Orange ' Coast ED ITION Today' Closing • Y". Stocks VOL. 68, NO. 197) 7..SECTIONS, 78 PAGES ORANGECOUNTV,CALl~F~O~R~N~l_A;__~~~~~W_E~D_N~e~s~O~A~V~,_J~U_L_Y_1_6~,_19_7_5~N--~~~T_E_N_C_E_N_T_S Newport Council · He8rs New Jet Pitch By J OHN VALTl':RZA Of lll•D•ll,f'lleCIUft Cessna aircraft officials made a p~esentation t o Newport Beach city councilmen this week in an effort to shake the panel's opposi- tion to late-nig ht flights of re- latively small, twin-engine jets. A curlew currently forbids any jets from taking of{ or landing at Orange County Airport between ll p.m . to7 a.m . Spokesmen for Cessna used charts, gr apbs and noise measurements to show that lheir plane produces less noise than m any propeller-driven planes now allowed to fly at any hour. Counc ilm e n seemed im- pressed. Mayor Donald Mc innis. himself u pilot, indicated that, if· the council votes to endorse a variance to the curfew for the Cessna Citation, the action could serve as an incentive to other manufacturers to develop quiet craft. Aircraft con s ultant Fred Austin, appearing tor Cessna, stressed that because of rigid an· li·noise measures, the incentive bas been Jost for aircraft manufacturers. Austin stressed that because the jets have a high takeoff pro- file it would be possible for the planes lo leave the airport and never even fly over the Newport city limiL'i. They could make a right turn at 3,000 teet or so before reaching •the city boundary. he said. The attempt by Cessna to get an endor sement from Newport Beach is aimed at a sales pro- gram at the airport which in- volve.s the use of !he craft by fly- ing services specializing in cor- porate fli ghts. While councilmen mull over the information obtained at Mon· day's s tudy session, lhe city sta!! will meet with airport officials and others involved in the anti· noise rules currently in effect. The council is expected to vole on a possible ~ndorsement later Uus month. Tandy VP's Bribe Rap Dropped Watching Irvine Flock Sheepma n Aurelio Ramirez, who says he's from Peru, stands with his dogs watching the "band" of 1,200 s heep owne d by Dominic Duhart of El Toro. The sheep are grazing on Irvine Company land south of Lion Country Safari under te rms of a lease. Company spokesman Fred Ke ller said it is the first time in three years sheep ha ve com e onto the ranch to feed and eventually they'll work their way into the heart or the ranch. Booms Due From Toro ·Jets Tonig~ The Orange Coast may be bat- tered by sonic booms tonight as El Toro Marine Corps jets take part in a massive training ex- ercise simulating combat with enemy bombers. Air Force, Air National Guard, Navy and Ma rine j ets will scramble from bases between San Diego and Merced this even- ing in an exercise simulating a West Coast enem y attack. · EJ Toro's F-ii squadrons will join the mass interceptor mission in the "early eveninJ! hours". t onig ht, said a n El Toro spokesman. An Air Force spokesman pre- dicted that some soni c booms may be heard in inland as well as coastal areas. "While supersonic flight is not an objective of the exercise, some of the interceptors may have to maneuver at s upersonic speed over the Pacific," the E l Toro spokesman s~id. "Should atmospheric condi- tions be unfavorable at the time, it is possible that some offshore sonic booms may be heard along the coast line. ·Ex-Hinshaw Aide's Trial to Continue Orange County S uperior Court Judge· Wa lter Smith orde red the trial of accused conspirator James Bertolino to continue Tuesday. The order was made ~pile protes ts from Bertolino's at· tomey Donald Thamer, that the prosecution failed to prove that a conspiracy existed in the Orange County assessor's office to help e lect Andrew Hinsha w to Congress in 1972. Along with eight oth er employes in the assessor's office, Bertolino was charged in a grand jury indictment last December DON'T BASK I N THE BUFF Nude sunbathing on public beaches is now illegal in Newport Beach. Following a course already set by the county and other cities on the Orange Coast, city coun- cilmen Monday approved a new ordinance baneing nudity on the sand. . '-.I. with participating in an alleged conspiracy t hat used county employes to help elect Hinshaw to Congress. Six of the nine indictees have pleaded guilty to some cbafges in the 33-count indictment. But Bertolino pleaded innocent to charges of conspiring to sub- mit false documents and grand theft. By mid-day Tuesday, pro- secutor William Evans rested his case against the 52-year-old de- fendant. And Thamer, who delayed his opening statement until Evans completed his case, charged that the deputy district attorney failed to prove a conspiracy ex- isted. Furthermore, Thamer added, if there was a conspiracy Evans had not shown that Bertolino was a participant. But Judge Smith denied hi s plea to dismiss the case and or- dered the defense attorney to present his side of the case. For openers, Thamer insisted that his client had not been grant- (See TRIAL, Page AZ), Immunity Granted By Judge By GARY GRANVILLE Of llle Daily Pilot Staff Superior Court Judge Everett Dickey dismi ssed bribery charges against Tandy Corp. Vice President J ames Buxton Tuesday and granted him im- munity from prosecution in mat- ters related to the Orange County Assessor's Office scandal. Along with Assistant Assessor George Upton, Buxton was in- dicted last March by the county Grand Jury on three bribery counts. But l>y the time he left Judge Dickey's courtroom, Buxton was free of the bribery charges and ordered to testify as a prosecu- tion witness in cases related lo the assessor's office scandal. Also g ranted immunity from prosecution was Tandy tax manager William Hughes Jr. Monday, another Tandy official Paul Tabor, was granted im- munity. Buxton, Hughes and Tabor were w itnessess d uring the Grand Jury'0nvestigation that led to separate criminal indict- ments against Upton, county As- sessor J ack Vallerga and Rep. Andrew Hinshaw CR-Newport Beach). Hinshaw was Orange County assessorfrom1965tol972. It is expected that Buxton, Hughes and Tabor will appear as prosecution witnesses in Upton and Hins h aw 's upcomin g separate trials. However, none of the three arc expected to be witnesses at Vallerga's trial in Ventura Coun· ty next week. The is s u es at stake in Vallerga' s trial center on Orange County's sate of a computerized <See DISMISS, Page A2l PROFIT TAKING CUTS DOW BY9 NEW YORK <U PI> -The stock market, running into strong profit taking pressure. closed sharply lower today in ac- tive trading on the New York Stock Exchange. • The Dow J o nes industria l average, up mor e than two points at the outset, lost 9.70 points to 872.11. Declines led advances by about a two-to-one margi n. Prices were lower in active trading on the American Stock Exchange. "The exercise will not involve the firing of weapons and has been coordina ted with Federal Aviation Administration officials to prevent interlerence wit.Ii civil aviation traffic," he said. Seven Soaring in ~pace r3 Plead Guilty ii SAN DIEGO CAP> -Three persons will be sentenced Aug. 25 for smuggling 800 pounds or hashish into the United States. FIRST COUPLE BOUGHT ITEM "I'm very hapOY with the ad. The first couple wbo came to see lhe refrigerator, bou&bt it." That's the a&Rcas eJQ>erienced by the HunUnJton Be~h woman who placed lhJs ad In the Dally Pilot: fo~RtG IDAIRE Refrlc .• whL 5W Lall. tood wotk rood. 965. Aft. }, XU• xx.xx. lf you havo a uaed appliance you would like to convert to cash, caH 642-5678. We mue il . easy to put a rew words lo work for you IA the Dally PUot. Astronauts, Cosnwnauts Con:vei:se on Radio HOUSTON <UPI) -American astronauts and Russian cos- monauts. on target for their his- toric orbital linkup over Europe, improvised repairs of broken equipment today and beamed simultaneous color telecasts to earth of weighUess llte in space. The two cosmonauts also ex- changed spirited radio greetings with t wo crew m e n aboard Russia's Salyut s pace station, headed toward its second month in orbit. One oc:cupant ol Salyut dubbed the earthlings now in space ''the M agnllicent Seven.'' With three astron~ fiying Apollo, two in Soyuz and two In Salyut seven men in three craft from t~o nations are circling the globe. A$tronauts Thomas Statford Vance Brand and· Donal d ''Deke" Slayton -usLni their bare hands, a few tools and a fix- lt procedure radioed by Houston ) control -easily removed a used but rebui It docking probe jammed in a hatch tunnel on their Apollo. • Once the probe was out, the astronauts trained a camera through the hatch lnto the barrel· shaped white room where their history-making meeting with the Russians Thursday will start with a handshake ol welcome. Aboard the Soyuz, Alexei Leonov and Valeri Kubasov floated weightlessly and crlnned into one of the ca mens th•t wlll let eartbUoge watcb the orbital get-toegether from the v~e point of the. Russian craft. lt was the first telecast from SoY\11. "Everythin1 la nytni ~d ~wimming here aa you"lee," aald Leonov, clad in 1raur covwalla and wearing a wb.lte com!llUDld· Oona headset . "This is how we live ln the artiflclal satellite ol tho earth.. I Right now it's our home, to which we are used . But it's very dlf· ferent." The cosmonauts -in an or- bital repair attempt that sur- prised American flight con- trollers -also cul their way into a control panel on Soyuz t.o re- wire broken cables for another TV camera. They used medical kit bandages to insulate tbc spliced wires. · U.S. officials noted it was very unusual, based on put Oight ex- perience, tor the Russians to try to nx broken spacecraft equip- ment during night. AU the repair work threw both crews slightly behind their planned 1cbedulcs. But every- lbin1t wu reported moving 1m~:.t, apaetbeless, toward the evou1 136 mllcs above O...U1 &Mt •ill create the world'• firat lnternaUooal 51>1ce complex. -..... ec 6 ..,. I t t THE OLD TROUPER AT 72 STILL WOW9A CROWD Comic Bob Hope Packed In 15,000 at Co.my Fair 15,000 Cheer Hope At County Fair By ARTHUR R. VlNSEL 01 tlle Dally Pilot Swll A standing-room-only throng of up to 15,000 flocked to see one of America's most celebrated come- dfans. Bob Hope. at the Orange County Fair in Costa Mesa Tues- day ni ght. His appearance on what was designated Senior Citizens' Day was considered the highlight or the 1975 fair. "We finally had to turn many away, which was unfortunate bul inevitable," said Peggy Bayless, publicity director for the fair. Hope c racked jokes and qui ps for half the two-hour show whkh also included orchestra leader Les Brown and his Band of Renown and singer Rosemary Clooney. He carried the performance with custom<b-y pepper and flair, delighting lhe crowd includ - ing Edna Belshan who came all the way from Oxnard and stood in line seven hours. "I've loved him for years.'' said the 52-year-old woman. One gray-wigged woman and longtime Hope fan quipped that she almost tossed her apartment key onstage. Small Shark Attacks Girl In Florida NEW SMYRNA BEACH, F1 a. (UPI) -A 14-year -old girl sus- tained severe lacerations on her left arm when attacked and bit- ten by a four-foot. shark while swimming less than 200 feet off this northeast Florida resort city's downtown beach Tuesday. Capt. John Crisp, bead of the city lifeguard detachment. iden- tified the victim as Beverly White ot New Smyrna Beach. She was released aft~r treatment a l Fish Me morial Hospital for three deep gashes Qi lier ten forearm and a number of other less severe lacerations. Sbe also suffered a minor lace ration in her side, ap- parenUy from the shark's fin, CrispsaJd. The girl was in chest deep water, swjmmine with a compa- nion, Steve Morris, when the s hark attacked, Crap said. "Grouoies come in aJI ages,·· she remarked. The 72-year-old comedian whose business acumen has m<1dt• him one of the wealthjest l'nlc•r lainers in the world recc1v1·d about $25,()()(} for the fr<.'l' cHl mission appearance. ''I'm older than I ever meant ti• be," d eclared the humora:,,L whose career has carried h1111 from the rouj!h-cut boards of vaudevilJe stages to the fanciest nightspots in the land. in addition to the jungles, fields and trenches wher e American Gls fought three wars. "Fair a u di enc es arc the greatest. They're here for fun.·· quipped H ope, who obviously shared the night's good limes. · "I love it her e.'' he also said "It's a t hrill they took the catlll' out before 1 got here." Typical Hope humor hurled barbed jests at the CIA. the economy, the alleged horror movie "Jaws" about a monster (See HOPE, Page A2 ) Ora11ge ,..J. Coas t ~~--7--= 1t'e ad1er Low clouds through late morning Thursday, otherwise m ostly sunny and a bit warmer with beach highs near 70 rising to the low 80s inland areas. Lows tonight 60 to 65. I NSIDE T ODAY How .are our new Camp , Pendlelon refugees /anng . along t~ Orange Coan?~ have jobt, many are m &ehool learning English -.and .all have their own personal com· mentt on America. See ltorws and photoa Page B9. Index At Y .. r Senrke "' MllLaMen Ct .... , ... a> ........ , .. , L..~· All ~,,.._,, •• C.I • AS Net._, ...... ... 0.Nlfl9' 01-lt OtMt9 °"'"'' •• CMllC• •• ....... CH 0..--•• $rl•W~ as DMttlHetkft ,,., :C: ... 111.-IH Ultw"91.--.e ,.. ... , ._....._... ....., , .. ,,. .. .. .. _ .... s ~ ... , ..... C>t4 ....... •• ...,..,.,. Cl ~--M Al OAJL y PILOT N 8 Claim ·Harassed , By IRS . LOS ANGELES CAP) -AJleg- lng harassment, eight partners of a tormer attorney to ex· President Richard Nix.on have gone to court seeking an injunc· tion againtst the Internal Rev~nue Service. The eight, partners of Herbert Kalmbach of Newport Beach, in two investment companies, in· elude former Nixon tax attorney Frank DeMarco. They contend the IRS is harassing them in a search for possible illegal cam· paign contributions. Bruce I. Hochman, the at· torney who filed the action in US. Dis trict Court, said the re-- l'Ords of TTiangle Investment Company a nd Partners Invest- ment Company were first ex· amined by the IRS last year. Accountant Arthur Blecb re- fused to honor an administrative summons when the IRS reported- ly tried to go over the records again later that year and early this year, Hochman said, on the grounds that it was an unwar- ranted second examination. The IRS then told the eight in- dividuals they had alleged tax de- ficiencies on their 1971 federal in- come tax returns. The suit, filed Friday, seeks a halt to collection of $60.4~ in tax- es from DeMarco; $52,687 from Blech; $139,379 Crom William C. Baker; $72,887 Crom J ames Knapp; more than $64,000 from William Ray ; $46,832 from George Woodford; $4,067 from Harold Beral, and $2,027 from Sherwood Cbillingworth. The IRS made no effort lo examine the personal recor~ of all the partners in Triangle, Hochman said. . .. Failing to issue statutory notices of deficiencies to all of the similarly situated partners was arbitrary and discriminative, serving no purpose other than to harass plaintiffs and pressure them and their accountant into cooperating with an examination of matters totally unrelated to their tax liability for 1971," Hochman said. Patio Dining Plea Planned By R estaurant A request to continue dining and live entertainment in the open patio area adjacent to the Warehouse Restaurant in Lido Village will be heard Thursday by Newport Beach planning com- missioners. The commission will hear the request at its 7 p .m. meeting al city hall. Temporary approval was given by the planning com· 111ission in May. Owners are now requesting that the approval be made permanent. Restaurant Owner Burt Hixson told the commission's staff that bis plans are for s trolling violinists, rather than rock and roll musicians. "Our intention will continue to be catering to an older, more sophisticated crowd ... not to the s winging singles." Hixon wrote to the commission. R epor t Denied WASHINGTON (UPI) -Ex· CIA agent E . Howard Hunt says h e never nam ed former Presidential Aide Alexander But- terfield as a Central Intelligence Agency contact in the White House. Hunt Tuesday denied a report by retired Air Force Col. L. l1etcher Prouty that Hunt had made such a statement to him. ORANGE COAST N DAILY PILOT Rob<'rt N Weed Pr,.\t~nt •f\Cf Publ•\IWt Jae k R Curley V•<t Ptr\1otnt And c,o.,,,,., MiN9tf Thomas Ket'vtl t:n·•~ Thoma<. A Murot,1nl' ~..,•f1,n1.1 lt111r;f Charle!> H Loo<, Richard P. Nall A''''t•nt Mill'11U)'""<l [~tOt\ Other Offices C'l\I• ~u >•Wot 9•• ~, ...... l•-!M.Cll lllloCMftnevroS.•"°' t<.,..1•"'11""' &.•<II 111H a. ... 11 9ov,. •• ,~ ~, • .,..,. V•l .. y 1'101 l• Pu~ , •t ~n o .. .,,o f' ,,., .. ., T elephone (7141 642-4321 Cloiuift~ Advertis1n9 6o42 S671 W~neldey, July tS. 18'15 O.lly PllM l'tlet• •Y IUd\ard ICOfll .. r HOPEFUL HOPE FANS HAD TO BE TURNED AWAY IN DROVES AT FAIR TUESDAY NIGHT One Lady Carne From 0 Jmerd end Stood Seven Hours to Join Thia Throng ·Camera Day Slated At Fair Thurs day Entertainer Billy Armstrong headlines the amusement bill of fare Thursday at the Orange County Fair as it enters its sixth day in Costa Mesa. Thursday also is Camera Day al the fairgrounds, with Orange Coast shutterbugs anticipating a day-long photo contest. Fai.r officials are also saluting the cities of Anaheim and Orange Thursday. Gates open at noon. Besides the traditional daily fair activities involving arts, crafts, product exhibits and livestock displays, here are highlights of the scheduled ac- tivities: -Noon to 6 p.m ., Photo Contest in the Photo Building. -1 p.m ., Blanco Luz dance troupe, on Family Fun Stage, plus Chuck Jones' Aladdin Show on fairgrounds proper. -1:30 p .m ., Mediterranean Cooking dem onstration, Home living Pavilion. 2 p.m ., Reedettes Accor· dionettes, at Bandstand. -3 p.m., Salty Dog Rag, musical comedy at Fa mjly Fun Stage and Dixi Cups performing al Bandstand. p.m ., Myra Garcia Dance Studio show, Family Fun Sta -4 p.m .. Vagabond Drum & . Bugle Corps in concert on fair· g rounds proper. -5 p.m ., Marine Corps Flag Pageant, Family Fun Stage. -5 p.m ., Dixie Cups show, at Bandstand. 6 to 10 p .m .. Montezuma's Revenge rock band in concert at Mountain Dew Stage. -0 p.m .. Red Dawn Indian Dancers, Family FunStage. -7 p.m .. Photo Model Awar~' Little Theater. -8 p.m ., Billy Armstrong musical review, at Grandstand. New Gas Hike Seen Be/ ore Labor Day From Page A I H O PE .•. shark. and sin~er Cher's hi~hly publicized musical marriages. Costa Mesa police had to detail extra patrolmen to crowd control duties due to the Hope show alone, which drew more visitors lhan the entire fair did Monday. Virtually the only misfortune to mar the event occurred when one woman fell and sustained a leg injury when briefly trampled by lhe crowd. Hope was the most renowned celebrity ever to appear at lhe fair, in his firs t local show since a 1973 benefit performance for St. Joseph Hospital. The 72-year-old performer wowed the crowd with several song-and ·dun~e numbers, show· . ing them he is nowhere near ready for St. Joseph's himself - or any other hospital for that mat- ter. Budget Adopted SAN BERNARDINO (UPI) - An austerity budget of $250 million one that will not in- crease the county lax rate -was unanimously adopted Tuesday by the board of s upervisors. The supervisors explained that the line was held by not filling some 1obs as they became vacant, by employes taking days off without pay and by use of $2 million in federal revenue-s haring funds. Cory Campaign· Gifts Probed SAC RAMENTO (AP) - Federal auth orities are in· vestigating whether state Con· troller Kenneth Cory of Garden Grove solicited campaign con- tributions with pronuses of a~ pointments as inheritance tax re- ferees, the Sacramento Bee said today. The newspaper said Asst. U.S. Atty. Donald H. Heller refused comment when asked if evidence of illegal political activities would be presented to a federal grand jury. The Bee attributed its story to sources in the U.S. Ju s ti c e Department in Sacramento. Cory denied any wrongdoing, and said he had not been contact· ed by authorities, the Bee said. "I think the losers of political plums don't like losing their cushy jobs and will discredit anyone," the ne wspaper quoted the Democratic controller as 'Hap' Hatter Dead at 50; Rites Friday Longtime Harbor Area resi- dent and marine hardware salesman Lionel "Hap" Hatter died today at South Coast Com· munity Hospital. Funeral services for Nr. Hat- ter, 50, a 48-year Harbor Area re- sident, will be Friday al 2 p. m. in St. James' Episcopal Church, Newport Beach, directed by Bell Broadway Mortuary. A World War II Army veteran, Mr. Hatter was an active member of the American Legion and for the past 20 years worked first for South Coast Marine Hardware, then Newport Marine Supply. Survivors include his wife Bet- ty, of the home at 498 Magnolia St., Costa Mesa; sons, Jim or Canoga Park and Dick of Mission Viejo; daughters, Marjorie Davis, Susan and Patricia all of Costa Mesa ; his mother, Beatrice Hatter of Laguna Hills, plus a brother, Norman of Portola Valley, and a sister, Marjorie Foster ot Laguna Beach. The family suggests memorial contributions to the American Cancer Society. having said. Cory fired 23 referees appoint- ed by his Republican pre- deceasor, Houston F1ournoy. Cory later appointed 74 new ones. Investigations by several new$papers disclosed that a number of the appointees had direct or indirect political ties to Cory, some involving campaign contr1 but~ns. The Bee said the investigation Is centered on whether Cory's malled dismissal notices to the referees set off a chain of events that constituted violation of the federal mail fraud statute. The newspaper said it is the same charge on which former1l· lionois Gov. Otto Kerner was con- victed. Kerner was accused ot defrauding the people of Illinois of their right to his honest and faithful service, and of failing his duty to administer the Jaw Im~ partially. The federal investigation focuses on two of Cory's appoin- tees, Antoinette McGillvray of Stockton and Tibert Nicora or Oakland, the Bee said. A lawsuit filed by a fired re· feree asserts that Mrs . .·McGiUvray's family contributed $5,'SOO to Cory's ca'mpaign: Nicora is a 20-year-0ld Stanford student. whose father, Vincent, was said to have contributed $5,oop to Cory. Grant Offered For Literature UC Irvine English professor Jay Martin has been awarded a one-year Rockefeller Foundation f ellowsbip to begin work on the second volume of a projected five-volume series on American literature. To be titled "Into the Teeth oC Dragons: American Literature 1000-1950," the book is a con- tinuation of a previous volume, "Harvests ot Change," which ex· plores American literature !(om 1865to1914. Martin said the five-volume set may take 20 years to complete and will chronicle American literature fl'om 1620to1976. WASHINGTON (UPI) - Federal Energy Administrator Frank Zarb predicted today gasolin e prices will increase another two to five cents a gaJlon by Labor Day. He insisted, however, lherewas no collusion by the oil companies to raise prices. "We don't anticipate shortages although there could be spot con- ditions. We see adequate crude stocks on hand and we see no . need at the mome nt for shortages,'' Zarb said. The Feder a 1 Energy Ad · ministration, Zarb said, found · there were "abnormal gasoline stock drawdowns, with gasoline stock levels being reduced to 196 million barrels at the end of the first week in July. CHILDREN$ SHOE Zarb told a Senate subcommit· tee that curbing of gas refining by the oil companies was due to "a combination of unforeseen re- fining problems. .. We have seen no evidence lhat there is a conspiracy to pro- mote a shortage in anticipation of higher price levels, .. Zarb said. · Zarb spelled out the Ad · ministration's outlook for the near future as both lhe Senate and House focused attention on energy, particularly oil prices. The Senate Tuesday approved a six-month extension of oil price controls and Speaker Carl Albert said the House would lake the same approach. Later today, President Ford is expected to submit to Congress his proposal to more than double the per-barrel cost of oil over the next JO months . Zarb said barring any oil price increase by the oil-producing na· lions, he estimated gas prices would rise from between two to fi ve cents a gallon, varying indil· ferent parts of the country. Group {ormed For Carpenter S e nate Race Stale Sen. Dennis Carpenter· CR-Newport Beach) bas not of- ficially declared himself a can· did ate for U.S. Senate but the' wheels of a Carpenter for Senate campaign are a lready turning. Carpenter's election commit·; tee, the "Friends of Carpenter,". bas been formed and bas med. with the federal electiom com· mission. ' George Argyros, of Linda Isle. in Newport Beach and bead ol Amel Development Co. of Santai Ana. bas been selected to head the election committee. Additionally, tbe political management firm of Spencer and Roberts has been retained to "get t.be b:.Jl rolllng," according to Carpenter's aide Walter Clar'k. But all the action is Just pre-· Uminaries, said Clark. "At this point It looks favorable. but we're not al a point where we can announce (Carpenter'• c10- didacy)," be saJd. (1 "It has been suggested that de· liberate decisions to delay in· creasing r efinery capacity utilization were made to firm up prices, even at the risk of creat- ing a shortage. We have no evidence to demonstrate that this was the case." The reason for the lower levels of refining, Zarb saidl were due in part to "an unusual number" of refinery malfunctions or acci· dents, s urplus inventory stocks and underestimating gasoline de- mands in the early part of the summer. F r o 111 PIJflf! Al TRIAL •.• ed his constitutional rights when he spoke to investigators and testified beforethegrandjury. But when Evans presented those statements as part of lhe pr06ecution 's case, Judge Smith permitted them to be entered into evidence over Tbamer's healed objections. The firs t de fe ns e witness called was district attorney in· vestigator John Coleman. The investigator m erely con- firmed the authenticity of docu- ' ments used in the investigation leading to the indictment of the , nine. F ro•Page A J DISMISS ••• appraisal system to Spartanburg County, South Carolina. Valler1a is alleged to have ad· ed illegally when he purportedly accepted expenses and consulting fees from Spartanbure which were related to the sale of the $2;045 computer system. Test P roblems SACRAlf{ENTO (AP) -The Rancho Seco nuclear power pJaot, already shutdown beeauae ol turbine blade damaae. bumed out moet of iu control rod motors dwinl routine testing, Tuesday. J 11 .. ~~ORS .~PEN AT 10 A.M. MO EXCHANGES OR REFUNDS OM SALE • MIRCHAMDISE PLE ASI Fashion Island, Nwl'pOf1 ltac.h SALE STARTS THURSDAY, JULY 17th ALL 51%15 OM RACKS FOR EASY SI LECTION • • PILOT EDITORl1'\L 1•. GE Wi1ling Help Gree~ed Getting citizens interested in local school boards h; a difficult task -even more difficult in the sum-mer. But suddenly, in July, the Newport-Mesa school board is the object of great interest. It's a tum of e vents that can be taken only as a healthy s ign of citizen involvem ent. When a trustee position recently opened due to a resignation, 13 persons from that trustee area applied for the job. That doesn't include the many people who mis- :. takenly applied from other trustee areas and were in· eligible. A' pleased district official reported thnt many of those who didn't qualify agreed to s tay involved " and serve on various citizen committees. Obviously, the troubles that have recently plagued the district -massive budget c\Jtting, noisy appeals from angry parents and teachers and two tax override elections -. forced a greater public aware- ness and probably piqued the interes t of many. We hope that the newfound interest does not wane when the district returns to the less glamorous mat· ter s involved with educating our children. . An Acceptable Jet? For many years, the official position of the city of NeWJ>Ort Beach on jets at Orange County Airport was a comfortable, s ure fire philosophy. Jets, a fter all, are intolerably nois y. Opposition to increased flights is natural. · Suddenly, city col.ancilmen have been convinced that there m-ay be a "good" jet that could even take off in the wee hours of the morning without dis- turbance. It's called a Cessna Citation. The plane is a two- engine executiVi model and the group of manufac- turcr representatives present at a council session showed with graphs and pictures that the fanjet uc· lua1Jy is quieter than many propeller planes lhat can use the airport at any time. They need· a city endorsement to obtain a w<.1ivcr from the current night-jet curlew at the terminal. Councilmen called for a little more time to allow some negotiations with other entities involved in the waiver from the variance. But they gave a strong hint that they could en· dorse the night jet-a monumental development if it ever comes about. Library Prospects Good The Newport Beach City Council began moving this week on the proposed Newport Center library site by giving its preliminary endorsement to the plans and by hiring an appraiser. The site, located at San Joaquin Hills and Jam- boree Roads, appears to be a good choice. It i~ cen- trally located and will be surrounded by complimen- tary facilities, including the proposed new Newport Harbor Art Museum bui,lding . The city council ha5 agreed to foot half the $2 ,000 bill for appraising the land to determine how much the Irvine Company will ask from the city of Newport Beach. T he proposed library building would be a needed and attractive addition to the city. Wl:lile the Newport Cent~r site appears to be the preferable one, Lhe city council should not allow the project to bog downin the event that the land proves too expensive. Whether this site is used or alternate plans be de- veloped, the project must move forward if Newport is to take advantage of its cultural momentum. •\Now · 1 'M A SELF-5TA"Tt N6 l'f PE.'' N ~J/ It's Loud ,r It Will Sell- Drowi1ag. the Line on Censorship ~ : Even If Bad. ·" ~ ( PAUL HARVEY J White House deughter Susan ·Ford, hosting h er high school prom al the ... White House, .... had much dif- ficulty finding a g roup of mod mus i - , ciaos which could qualify for t h e ne cessary security clearance - i" meaning "no drug convictions. .. ls noisy music with raunchy lyrics itself a drug? From noisy music you can run but you can't hide. In the deep south oC MexiCo, even the smallest town is likely to have three concert bands which play ever ything loud, ~ Jouder, loudest. 7 THE ZAPOTECS, listening, are likely sim uJtaneousJy to c hew plants with names like ''Tears of the Virgin" while they hallucinate in the central plaza. Jtaly's state-run radio and 1V have been trying to wean listeners away from hard rock music. A recent radio survey 1 1 s howed tbat only 7 out of every. e "100 Italians listen t.o this mod ., music. ~... ·Yet the big shows on Italian ~ networks feature the gyrating, t~ twitching, acr obatic bowlers. • The San Remo Rock Festival de-!: livered a TV audience of 20 -million. : . • Jn the United States some com· • munications industry ieaders : • h ave sought to ban this ••music to :~ steal haQcaps by," but those leaders have few followers. ~ • ln Vegas' pos h casinos. which ! certainly do not cater to sour- . . s melling junkies, most music is • I t .. I • I . • . • ~ e lectronically amplified fortissimo. ~"' EfllN l\(!R~ conventional en· tertainers, )'~AJMewton and Debbie Reymp, ~me.on loud. Paatch Dear Gloomy Gus Let us dig th;tt big ditch on Newport Blvd,. a little deeper and extend it down the boulevard to Newport Bay. Whal a wonderful ship canal could be made out of it to give Costa Mesa direct access by boat to the Pacific Ocean and world trade. .M.0 .P. Gloomy Gui comments <1re submitted llY re~cle<-s •nd dO not 11ectsu,,ly refle<l 1~ v•t""s or 11\e newsp•per s ... d .,..,, !NI peentoGlltOIYIY Gus. O•lly Pilot. So the cacophonous jungle music cann ot be identified with any particular age group or with any specific economic stratum. The preference which sustains the din is not r ace related. But one observation leads in the direction of an intriguing con- clusion: Most rock musicians are male. In the annals of the Met, and through the era of the big bands, male and female vocalists wer• almost equally spotlighted. If anything, pretty girls were out front. In country' music and in soul , it's about half-and-half. BUT WHEN it comes t.o rock - with such notable exceptions as Janis Joplin. Grace Slick and Maggie Bell -most of these mod music groups are mostly or all male. Personally, I don't dig noisy music. (J think that's still an ac- ceptable expression.) l do not pretend to comprehend its ap- peal. UPl's Bruce Meyer thinks it has to do with machismo. gutsi- ness. a kind of super-sexism. The same thing that moved lhe wiggly gir:ls to the front of the"' bandstand is now s howcasing · . tight-britches masculinity for the . titillation of liberated females. At rock concerts attendance is mixed, but the girls do most of the squealing, screaming and swooning. The very loudness of the music represents a calculated animali· ty which offers heretofore in- hibited fe males a free trip. Well, fellows, it is their tum. "And don't forget the mothbal~" Obscenity Versus Pornography To the Editor: Mr. Provost's letter of July 8, which denounces "pornography" a nd a d vocat es increas e d censorship. has raised our blood pressur e. We feel that a rebuttal is in order. Mr. Provos t makes quite general r emarks, but we are perhaps more qualified than he to comment on censorship -having had first band experience with it ourselves. As owners of the Fahrenhe it 451 Bookstore in Laguna Beach. we have wasted about a year· and a half (so r ar > dragging ourselves and our two small children in and out of courts, fi ghting an obscenity ar- rest originally instigated against us by two narcotics agents of the Laguna Beach police force. It seems that these agents found in our store some racy comic books (not much different from what is commonly available> which they considered "pornographic." In carrying out their arrest they were given "moral support" by a deputy district attorney (who is no longer on our case) and a judge <who signed the a rrest warrant even though -as he later ad- mitted -he hadn't even seen the supposedly offensive matenal). How obscene! WHETHER or not Mr. Provost r egards a couple of underground comics as '"dirty" is beside the point. Nor does it m atter much if he (or somebody else) finds sex, nudity, political s atire. or anything else "repulsive." Whal counts immensely is tbe fact that we are all essentia1ly different people, and no two of us are going to see things in exactly the same way. Why tben should any person set himselt (or herself) up as a literary custodian for 9thers? Is not s uch a person "porno- gr aphic" in the truestsenseofthe term? Mr. Provost s peaks so ardently about the virtues of freedom. Perhaps he does not realize that a truly free country entails a truly free press. Our fo refathers were wise not lo put any holds on the First Amendment. U he does not care to see some of the material -being printed today, let him not look at it. That is his privilege. A little tolerance will go a long way -and it will surely help~o unclog our inc r easingly s aturated courts . GO ROON and EVELYN WILSON: A Propn-.JMror'! To the Editor: It is disturbing that a girl friend of Supervisor Battin has been appointed lo the grand jury. Despite the presence of a seeming connict of Interest, the young woman in question has stated she is persona lly satisfied she will be capable of ser ving as an honest, impartial grand juror. She has expressed a desire to serve because it would be an in· leresting a nd Culfllling ex· perie.nce for her . All this may be ture. BUT Is this enough to satisfy lbe citizens of Orange County? Is It enough to satJs(y lbe needs of lbe grand JUT)' system? Faith in the integrity of the rrand jury system ls crucial to our ability to govern ourselves effedively. And J s tl"Ongl.y doubt lbat a nyone's personal ruarau, mtnt is sulficienl reason t.o risk impairment or that tailh. 1.n no way would It be a re!lec· ( MAILBOX J Lrtt.,s trom rudrrs arr welcomo. The roqht to cond•nse ettcr' to t11 space or rllm.n~lll hbct "rt· Hrved. Litten ot lOO words or leu ""'" M qiven Pl"t'ttrenu All l~lter\ m u'I .nctuci. s1qn~lure ind nw1llnq •ddrtu bul n.imn m•y ~ w1lhl\eld on re· quest ,, 'wttoc•rnr ru,on ,, •PP<11ren1. Poetry Will not ~ publlshtd. lion up o n M i s s Perry's patrioli!WJl. her honesty; nor her perspicacity lo voluntari ly vacate her seal on lhe present grand j ury. On the contrary. such action on her part nughl be elo- quent testimony of her innate suitability for future service: REBA WILLIAMS Measuring Chief Davis To the Editor: I find 1t hard lo believe that Ed Davis is c hief of police of the second largest city in the coun· try. When he announced that the new marijuana law would lead to more heroin addicts, I could hard)y stomach him. He couldn't possibly have at- tended college-or is it just that he has an I.Q. not much larger than his belly measurement? MEG EN THOMPSON Point Them North To the Editor: The time is past due for all re· sidents living south of the Orange County Airport to band together to insist that whenever weather permits, planes must use the north pattern for take-off. Whether we Ii ve in Westcliff or Eastbluff our problem is the same. Upper Newport Bay is a nar- row bod y of water . To expect the best intentioned pilol l-0 be able to adher e lo ils narrow limitations is unrea lis ti c. Even if the planes took off dc:.1d center over the Bay. the noise of their ascent would still cause intolerable noise pollution to the residents on both sides of the Bay. THE SOLUTION to the pro- blem is simple. self-evident, and not costly. It involves no disrup· lion of the residential population. The latest proposal of the county supervisors to acquire the homes in the Santa Ana Heights area, by conde mnation or purchase of airspace. which in fact, is in- direct condemnation, would cost millions of dollars. To have lhe planes use the north or "pre- ferential" takeoff is one of the re- commendations made by Depu-. ty Director or Mass Transporta- tion a nd Aeronautics for the State of California. As he pointed out in his report., the area t.o the north, east a nd west or the airport is zoned for commercial use. The area south o! the airport is, and always has been zoned for r e- sidential purpose-s. In using the "pr efere nti a l " pattern, the planes would takeoff over the commerctol, industrial complex that demand t.heir service. By the time pla nes were over r e- sidences north, east or west of the airport they would have r e· nched an altitude where ground noise ls minimal and within the stand ards set by thestate. So why are the planes still tak· ing off to the south? This strange arnmgemenl is la rgeJy due lo the transigcnl posit ion qf some of our county supervisors. It is time for the citizens of Newport lo act in concert to refute the ridiculous stalem~nt of Supervisor Clark that t.he noise of the planes is' "Newport 's proble m." If the airport were used onl y by the cillzens of Newport, lhen~ would be no need for expansion. Since *t he pressure to ex p::ind the ser vice at the a irport 1s to :.allsfy the needs of the rapidly growing industrial area in Irvine, Tustin. and Santa Ana, those areas must be prepared to s hare lhe noise pollution resulting from that service. HELEN LEVINSON Defining 'Strike' What a sens eless, freak acci· dent-the chain that so many people on bicycles and mini- bikes can't see as they pedal in· nocenlly along awaiting death in the making. . There is just such a chain at TeWinkle Park where all four of my sons play Harbor baseball. [ have seen boys bit this chain on lheir bikes or run into it by acci- dent. In my mind, I could never understand the folks who strung these porential dangers. No warn- ings, no red reflectors, no strings adorn these wires . Totbe Editor: Only last summer, my then I was overcome with sympathy JO-year -old son was runnfog for Tom Robinson (M.D. who across TeWinkle Park in his chastized the Daily Pilot for US · usual boyhood abandon when he ing the term "strike" refer ring caught his neck on a guy wire to r ecent doctors' actions -strung to the park trees. There Mailbox, July 9) · was no visible warning. As a ltacher I have withheld Fortunately. he w as only services, which the news papers stunned and as I ran to his side and lhe gtneral public insist on when the air was knocked out o( calling a sbke. him. J fe ared his neck was Where r teach. the community broken. was very fortunate, lhe doctors' I was concerned enough to call wives, all P .T.A. members, j ust our local police to the scene and hopped into their little station file a report. T he guy wires came wa~o~s to !'"an the classrooms. down, but they were back th.is This m . spite of the ~act th ~t year. I see them at many parks P.T.A. is suppos edly a neutral -~ and school grounds. The chain body. strings are s till there. As a teacher, I have often been Wh y must it cost so much told tha~ we should clean o.ut our before hazards for children and profession of all _undesirable adults are realized ? Co mmon teachers. ~alpractJce sug.gests sense and m other -awareness to r:ne . that 1f the A.M.A. dtd so, show me these potential acci- the1r msurance m ay not be so dents in the making. high. . . MRS. JOHN R. PELICHOWSKI Every profession has its weak· nesses. Mine is that in order for my wife and me to have a stan- dard of living in keeping with our desir,. Ne both have to haul our "bods"· out of bed and take full- timc job responsibilities. BEN BOELMAN, Placenlla (Vacationing m lhe area) Whose Windfall? To the Editor: Your July 6 article "Hike Hard to Swallow,·· confuses me. You st a te thal the oil companies raised the price of gasoline 3 cents a gall on because of the fourth of July holiday, and that the President's "'import fee ad · justment" wa s only I cent a gallon. The President put a tax of $1 a barrel on foreign oil. As one barrel ofoil produces 40 gallons of gasoline, that makes the tax ~· 2 cents a gallon, and t:: cent a gallon raise for the oil com- panies. THE PRESIDENT put lhe tax on to purposely raise the price to discourage ronsumption. yet the companies gel blamed. And lhe· Senate is now having another ex· pensive investigation to see why the oil companies did it. Jl might be better lo investigate where all that tax money is going . .We im- port six million barrels oC oil a day. Now that we have a taxof$2 a barrel, that ls 12 million dollar~ · a day extra going to the govern· ment. Is this money being used to reduce our national dcbl, reduce our i.ndivaduaJ tax burden, help our welfare rolls. or is It Just another added tax to fuel our ex- travagant government? Il is con· fusing. GOLDIE JOSEPH ••mnWe •••flft" Toi.he Editor: I grieve for the doth oC 11· year -old DonaJd Bohnsack (who died as a result of a mlni ·blkc crash into a driveway barricade al Orange Coast ColleRe). ' Inviting Thieves To the Editor A condition bas developed in our city that is of concern to me. For the pas t several weeks there have been about two pieces of adve rtising material per day fastened to the front door of my home. <Sundays included.) This means that it's virtually impossible for an occupant of a single family residence in this city to take a trip for business or pleasure without adv£rtising to every cruising t hieflhat their pro- perty is unoccupied. 1 believe this form of advertis· ing is unfair to the resident and to the police department whose responsibility it is to protect the property. I urge the city council to seriously consider the adoptioo of an ordinance prohibiting the conspicuous placement of un• solicited advertising matter upon any property J ACK W. BARCUS ORANGE COAST DAILY PILOT Rnbert N Weed . P11hl1sher Thomas Ke1?u1l. £ditor Barbera Kri>tbr<'ll. • !:dltonal f'agt Echtor The editorial PllRC' of the Dnily. P ilot i;eek s to inform •nd stimulate reader:.c by present!~ on U.i~ p~gt> divNsc <'ommcntary on topics of mtcrest by syndkat· f'd columnists and cartoonists. by pr\widing a Corum for readers' views and by pr c.>sentlnf{ this ncwspa~r·!I opinions and ldeu on current topics. The edHcrial opJnlons ol tht> O:i1l) PiJot appear onl)' an the ed11on,1I l'Olumn tl the top or th<' pu~c Op1niont1 t'X · press('(! by the columnJsts and l'i'lrtoonasLr; and letter \\rite.., are their own and no endorstm1m1 or their 'lt'\\ll by the Ooily Pllot ' !!houl(I ll(' inforrl'd Wednesday. July 16, 1975' 4tW•a e1 e Bl.ue. 700 Fire Fighters Battle in Ranchita llANClUTA (AP) -About 700 n.-e fiJhters ar~ batlJing a 4,,500-acre brush fire. burning on terra1o 1teep enough to test a mountain goat, to keep the blue from reaching some rare big homsbeep. 'The blaze1 with names 20 reet high, had ourned to vXthin a quarter·mlle of Anza-Borrego ~tate Park early today. Fire fighters hoped to contain the names today. but they kept a nervous eye on the weather. "JI we get a north wind out or the desert. we're going to have some problems:• a spokesman for the California Division of Forestry said. _ fnerecue Baited SACRAMENTO. (UPI) -The .:ali!ornia Hospital Association 6ays it will consider ."all legal and legislative ·remedies" to block Brown administration ac·. tion halting increased payments to hospitals for Medi·Cal services. Health and Welfare Secretary Mario Obledo T uesday en· nounced the increase cutoff, say- ing the action was prompted because the federaJ government has refused to a llow the state to l11nit the increases to 10 percent. He said hospitals were using state (unds to !'absorb" the cost of empty hospital beds. .. [ __ ~S-ta_t~e-~J Blmt Rfp• Olllee LOS ANGELES (AP) ''There was no warning ••• everything just went bJooey," said a stunned Mexican Consul General Fernando Fernandez alter a bomb blast ripped through his office injuring four persons. More than 50 persons were in the consulate Tuesday when the 12:44 p.m. blast sent doors flying from their hinges and glass and debris hurtling 100 reet into Olvera Street Plaz~ a busy downtown tourist attraction lined with Mexican shops. J . LOS ANGELES CAP) Democrat Teresa Hughes became Southern California's on· ly woman legislator today, win· ning a special election handily in the largely black 47tb Assembly District in South Los Angeles. Miss Hughes, who is black and an educational consultant. gained 7 ,230 votes or 62.8 ptWeent to 4,268 votes or 37.2 percent for the Rev. Henry Sellers, her white Republicanopponen~ : HeaTs ts Ask ; Court Action SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) -The parents of Patricia Hearst have petitiooed to be named conservators of their daughter's estate. The petition was filed Tuesday in Superior Court by Randolph and · Catherine Hearst. Hearst ls president and editor of the San Francisco Ex· aminer. •. ·The petition said the }{earsts feared "artful and designing persons" might take advantage of their daughter , who was kid· naped by the Symbionese Liberation Army in Berkeley Feb. 4, 1974 and tbenjoined ber abductors. Youth Killed . In Accident GRANADA mLLS (UPI) Richard Hageman, 16, was killed Tuesday by being impaled on a fire hydrant. Police said Hageman was standing in the rear of a dune buggy, holding the roll bar, when it careened out of control and crossed a lawn. Hageman was thrown clear and landed on the hydrant. The driver, Jeffrey Warren 21, was arrested on suspicion of drunken driving. w.ctn.d11Y,Juty18, 19'1S I Citat ions Cut DAILY PILOT j$ I • \ J . ~ ' CHP 'Slowdown' Hit SACRAMENTO (AP) -If anyone gets killed because of the traffic ticket slowdown. tbe patrolman on the beat will be reaponalble, w ams a Calif om.la Highway Patrol olflclal. Ralph M. Walker, CHP com· mander for nine San Francl.eco Bay Area counties. said Tues- day, however, that the slowdown participants "have every right to beunhaf.py." · · Patro men have cut back about 50 percent on traffic citation writ- ing, on statewide average, in their campaign for higher pay. They had been voted a 17.5 per· cent raise by the Cali~rnia Legislature which Repu lican Gov. Ronald Re~an app ved. But incoming Gov. Edmund Brown Jr .• a Democrat, held it to the 10 percent ceiling be bas placed on all state raises. The minimum base pay for un- iformed CHP officers was $1,162 permontb beginning July. PATROL SPOKESMAN Kent Milton said patrolmen in the Riverside and San Bernardino areas are virtually 100 percent involved in the slowdown. with officers iss1,ling warnings instead of tickets. Milton said ''a little less than 80 percent" of the officers statewide are participating in the slowdown. The campaign, which began at midnight Friday, is called a "Humanistic Enforcement Ef· fort" by the California Associa· tion of Highway Patrolmen, <CAHP) which says it represents 00 percent of the 5,400 member force. About 25 percent f nter Ucketl . were belna ilsued in tbo San Francisco area, said Wal.tu. Walker added: "Uthe public feels they can speed out there and only get aw~. there's going to be more speeding and lf someone gets killed because ot that. the officer is going to have to bear the responsibility." THE MANAGER ot CABP, Ralph Schiavone, said comman· ders "can make all kinds of com· ments. ~o offU;_er is going to in· tentiooally allow a situation on his beat that is going to cause a person to get hurt. If be sees a drunken, reckless driver, he's \... l°'°I ton all h.im... f Schiavone said 2.3 million ~ Uckets were issued last year,. ~ ltom wbicb about $75 million re-> venue went to clties and counties. r He said the strategy Ls to pr-e- au.re clty and county olfictala in· to penuadini at.a.t.e leglslaton to override Brown'a veto ol the re- maining 7 .s percent. . ASKED ABOUT poaible di&- dplinary action, Schiavone said, "We'r& wondering what tbe)"ve · done to warrant punitive action ol any kind. They haven't walked off the job. They're beJpin& tbe public.., : Sperm Bank Sued For .$5 Million SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -A man who stored a sample of his semen at a sperm bank and then had a vasectomy has filed a $S million lawsuit against the bank for accidentally destroying the specimen. GREGORY MARTON said in his class action suit flied Tues· day in Superior Court he bas suf'· fered "emotional and mental anguish" because of an apparent equipment failure at the Chartered International Cryo· Bank at Cathedral Hill Medican . Center here. · Marton said when be contract· .ed Wiih the bank in January, its. president, Robert A. Quinland Jr.. totd him his sperm deposit was "Cully protected against destruction' .. by two "fail safe" monitoring systems. AFT E R UNDE RGOING a. vasectomy, Marton said that on June 22 be received a letter from the sperm bank saying his semeo bad been destroyed in a possible equipment failure. Marton's lawsuit a sks $5 million damages pltis $500,000 for any other sperm donor wbo might have suffered the same loss. Publisher Guilty Of. Tax Evasions LOS ANGELES CAP) -A man 'federal pro- secutors have been trying to nail on pornography charges since 1968 bas been convicted on 22 income tax fraud counts . Sears · OP Mar vin Miller, 45, a suburban Covina publisher, was found guilty Tuesday on five counts of tax evasion, six counts of mail fraud, seven counts of filing a perjurous tax return and four counts of making a false claim against·tbe govern· ment. The returns were filed between 1968 and 1972. U.S. DISTRICT Court Judge William P. Gray said be would remand Miller lo custody immediate- ly pending bis sentencing Aug. 11 . But after a de- fense plea, Gray gave Miller until July 25 to tum himself in so be could prepare for the care of his 18-year-0ld diabetic soo. • Miller's trial was baJt.oo for two weeks while be recuperated from what doctors described as an in· wational sleeping pill overdose. He is still under p1ychiatric care. ,,,, A reputed millionaire, Miller entered the sex book and mm business in 1968, immediately draw· iQi the attention of vice investigators. His appeal on a 1972 misdemeanor conviction for mailing unsolicited pornographic advertise- ments to a Newport Beach man went all the way to the U.S. Supreme Court. In upholding Miller's con· viction, the high court banded down landmark ob- 5Cenity guidelines that still stand. New Smog ·Target Revealed Admission Sl.75 Childrtn, f>..12 ~1.00 Olildttn undtr six -frtt • Shor/J , • ToPJ • Skirrs Bat bing S11itJ. SAN FRAN.CISCO (AP) - A new set of gradu.ated emission con· trols has been adopted by the state Air Resources Board de- signed to c u rb the massive problems of, motorcycle pollution in California. • 'separates 'l'he new standards will limit motorcycle exhaust to 10 hydrocarbon grams per kilometer by 1978, five hydrocarbons in 1~ and one hydrocarbon by • 1982. The smog board originally bad proposed adop tion of the one hydrocarbon limit by 3978, but motorcycle in- dustry representatives told tbe board it coulcl not achieve such a stan- dard by that time. • S1111m1er Sampl~s •Misses a11d)11nior Sizes 29129 PACIFtCCOASTHWY. S. WESTERN AT CAUE MAYOR SAN PEDRO TOR~NCE 547 3095 378-2795 9038 ADAMS AVE. HUNTINGTON BfAC (714) 963-2221 t raditional summu whit.ea ... from HARRIS; u.sy car~ dac.ron cotton elr aight leg wash pant, wornwit.b G~NT~ cctt.on knit sh\rl, with bold stripes, and whit e collar and placket. @)~o@@J~@ Where Thrift Is Always . In Style Located on the Lower. Level This Ad Effecti~e through Saturday,' J uly 19 ·cuT. sa! Proportioned-fit Nylon Pants · Were $5.99. 299 Comforta.ble pull-on styie pants fashioned of° { 100°/o nylon. Easy-care ... machine-wa1hable. s.lightly flared legs. Popular solid colors. Misies' sa:zes. · Use Sears Revolving ChClfge · Short·1leeved, shirt style top w ith, placket front and pointed collar. Polyttter knit. Solld colon . M5ue1' 1izea. Were $6.99 Pants -' Zip-front style ponta with wide at;olght · l•g•, wol1tband. In anoppy floral prints. M l1H1' 11191. . 299 399 ~So. Coast Plaza ~ 3333 Bristol St. Buena Park STOtl HOUHr Oran2e ~J/';:,'::'· 2100 N. Tvttfli Ave. 9180':'~"' .. _.,.ca. Phone 5404$33 81 50 La Palma Ave. Phone 121-4400 PheM 637·2100 ......, ............ ... { I I ·1 \ I l N· DAIL V PILOT BS Medfeal Shopping Wednesday's CloKing Prices NEW' YORK ,STOCK EXCHANGE How to Select· Physical Exam. By SYLVIA fOaTO "Any medJcal b.lstory that (alls to explore your life ~les and Uvtn.i habits such as smold.n1, drinking, occupa· tional stress 8.l)d nuUit.ioo -and thereby ldentify risk fac· tors which may pffdlspoge you to medical problems -is worthless." • • Tb ls stat ement ·,,---------comes from Dr. John Mccann, prj'slde11t of the New York-baaed Life Extension lnstitute which bas been in tho "physical examtnatioo" for82yean. Money's Worth The LEl's pN&ooal·medical history qU-estionn.tre.asks all clients sucb ~est.ions as: Do you use a seat belt in your car? How much coffee do you drink? How much alcohol do youconsume? Didyouhaveavacatioola.styear? THf; QUESTIONNAIRE -a relatively new system called the "He~l~h Hazard Appraisal" -was pioneered by a t~m of J>:bys 1cians at the Methodist llqspital of Indiana in lnd1anapoli_s. ~he answers, w~ch ar~ processed through a computer, indicate your n sk m the future of developing a mll,Jor disease by appraising your living habits now - rather than by assessing actual symptoms which may not appear until the disease has become incurable. . For instance, treatment for a possible heart attack should begin with the appearance of high cholesterol, high blood pressure, cigarette s moking plus a genetic predisposi· tion to the disease -not with the appearance of chest pains. The new Health Hazard Appraisal (which cosls only $10 for the questionnaire, computer processing and a medical interpretation) -is only one earmark of a careful physical ex· am today. To sort out the complete, fairly priced medical exam from the incomplete, overpnced physical, here are other guidelines I -AFTER THE PHYSICAL, is there a follow-up system to determine whether any proposed treatments are work- ing? Is there a personal, unburned coo8ultation with the physician, d1scuss1on of key problems and "precursors" and counseling on how to deal with the problems? -Are you permitted to have a copy of your medical re, cord, mcluding not only the results of your tests and medical observations by the examiners.but also any computer pnn- tout analyzing the questionnaire you filled out and your ex· am's findings? --If the exam is given at a grou~ practice or clinic or a Jlealtb Mamtenance Organization, lS there a peer review system under which doctors morutor each other's work? -Is the staff onented toward prevention vs. acute care? Are they members of such orgaruzallons as the Amencan Board of Preventive Medicine, which cerli.fies "phys1c1ans to s pecialize in this field, sets up training cntena andoCCers periodic exams, the Amencan Coll ege of Preven· tive Med1c10e; the American College of Physicians; the Society of Internal Medicme? Have the physicians been certified by the Amencan Board of Internal Medicine? -HOW STABLE AND reputable is the group practice or the chnic'> Who is behind the operation, who runs it, bow long has it been there? Watch out for today's rapidly ex· pandmg "mass" operations, mclud1ng health spas and fly. by-mg ht "physical f actones." -Are all X-rays and electrocardiograms interpreted by those who have had special training in the fields ? Is the laboratory properly certified by a state, local (or in some cases federal) agency? Does the Jab subscribe to outside quahty control services such as the program of the Amencan College of Clinical Pathologists'> Are there sub· professionals on the staff -to help physicians expand their services without compromising quality? Some fmal warnings: mqwre about c:osts of proposed lab services and be wary of excessive numbers of tests. If you suspect lab charges are excessive, ask the pbysi· cian for a detailed report on costs of services. A reasonable total charge for a 12-channel blood chemistry is $10-$15 ! for a unnalys1s, $3·$5, serology, $3·$5, blood count. $3·$5; chest X-ray, $15·$25; EKG, $15·$25. Pnces or services should be easily oblamable. IF YOU FEEL YOU can't afford the full physical re· commended for you, ask for advice on what corners you can cut. MARKET HtGH.l-IGHTS NYSE Index ASE Index Dow-J ones Ind S& P 500 Stocks INDEXES 50.72 96.27 872.11 94.61 off off off off 0.52 0.59 9 .70 1.00 611i11.;;.,. 011d Lo11Pr" Nt!w York tlJPl l -Tiie 1o11ow1119 'ust wws lht: stocks 1na1 llave 09lned ,,,_. .xi tost the most l>HH CHI perc.nt ot c:Nnge on the Ntw Vor11 Stoc-Ell<hange Nc1 and puct:nieve chancies .,.. the lllHerence between T ht prhlous ctoslnt prlGe •nd 111e G~~~r:~15 <IOSinQ , P'•<t: l Jewelcor In 4h + ~ Up 19 4 2 qRead"!l Co 2~ + .._ Up 18 I 3 Bobble BrkS l'llo.. \11 Up 11 ' 4 EmOpfA 47 SN.+ ~ Up ISO $ Arctic Enlp ' ..,. V. Up 14 3 6 GIWIU 1 92b ll + #I Up 14 3 7 Texfl lndust &Vt• I Up 1• 0 a AOe<o Corp a'll. + 'Ml up 111 9 CNA Uiwln 1\4 + Vt Up II I Nru., l'flrk Ja Most ,, t-tive IS MOST .ACTIVa ST'OO(S NEW YORK (UPI) -The IS ~t active stocks treded on tM New York Sloc:k E•CN!ftOt W•dn•sdey. 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Y_. llllNS M<lnt yr•Ml4t110 <IWI+ \'I PNOMI '9btt SJ S~•" ~ t 16-" &°' '°) M<Kee A,. ) t4 ?th• ~ lllolel'OICI *2 41 1089 --.-1._ ~ II ~11 ' ~Leen n 1 • i1"-• "' "°"'4etOM s" 471 1ll4 I/) I ,, 1 ' -... fAI 'I M<Llh$1..0 ~ .. 11V. I ,._,.T MIQ t 11 la\\•_.,, c...-01 lol014 fSIS ~ ~· Mc ... ,, .80 1 1 I~ I.\ Port( '"' IV ) 1i ,,.,.._ ... SUDerGfl 'ton S! ·~ .. • =· c:. .. _., c 1.20 • ,,. m• . . ....,,oe 1.,. ' 4J it'lll • '1• SuGn ~ ao 's ! g1 ... ~ ~ i..Xi111R"' i k #elldilPf 2 • .0 • • 1 ~ + \/& PGe pm "° . ''° 104~ • ,,.. $UllrlCv ........ 1 I.lo • , ,.= :: 2.,,.. 111c1 .n t• -.ot9 2,to .. 7 ~~ 1•• f'oo411Ch I 40 9 4& .. 1 "-5ut1tV1 ,. • ' ..__.;;;.o.;_;A;...;;1L_Y_P1.;..;L;...;;O....;.T ______ --=-~8!1!!.~8Y· July 1 s. tm t TV .DAILY LOG Wednesday Evening JULY 16 c.•oe a cmmm""" WCM1JCW(t)(9Cl.J) ..... G C'I>.....,.. 8 WIN WIN Wnt ID """ Ams CD M'4 ,._ ft) ..., .. l trtll QITIM '-'tf1 m DectT1c c;..,e., (!)ltd} & F111114s . &:JO~ Mm (irilfil .. CD IMt Cill <l.zWI Sn m r 11 e111 Clt'A• (~ l DNJ.r'i C1Mb m1m.i rh1 CD Callopitc fievr .. t al Unit ltlK1l1 ~oo eoo n oo ma>,.... (11 lr11111ft O lftlinc fw Dtlllfl (tJ Med Sq"" (.Ll T 111tll If Ctatq11C11Cn O n.ra My LIM? Qt I lt!lt Lucy Q) Tiit Fii fi) La Mujlf "9hillW1 Qj Tiit lie Vatlty WiN ... WtlfW"~ ••• <iaf(tl)lauw El)Dmu @TIM" si.ecu a ii~ ma m ,.uuuc flit r .. 51-c '"'" Keith, John Miiis. thrry Mone •nd lllli h lmer 3tar in Otis 6-part mi11J.w11u bawd on a Paul CalllCO 1tory. Keith, Mills i nd Mont portray members 01 1 sm1~ 1roup of former VIOlld War II undei around t1ah1ers who 11unite 25 Jiits 11tt1 tilt war and co back u"' dfrcround to f11ht 1111n -thls time 11a1ru1 1 criminal plot that *ms to lllve tvtn mo<• stnous 1mphcat10ns. b ell member of the aroup renrts to his war11me pseudonvm -5UCll as roi. the T11tr °'the Leopard - resutt1111 111 tllelf collte1rve n1el· lllmt, "The Zoo Gana," MIU Palmtf' •PPHIS IS Ille owner of • ult Oii tllt rrenc!I RIYltft wtuch Slrvts IS tile 111utln1 place for the cane. (i) Tiit u..-...w.s liOi Mftlt: (2'l) "Tiit Piatt• Tlllt fNt: ~ • .., .. (COii!) '62 -Charllon Hulon, USI Martintlh, Harry Guar. " clHIO. 11> n. laW o.s fll) Tiit Citiu: Ulldc St• Cn TM ·~re A Di111e! 9:JO c;JNen fl) .... " de r,.... EI! fuellil 10:00 I) @ (}) Mt111li "Htrdblll" (R) M1nn11 1cts a.s 1 tool for 1 cr1m1- nal's rmnge to Slwt th« Mt of ll1dly woundtd LL Malcom wlten Ille two are t••en llostace by 1 aoot, esapi111dtlfinc1 court •ur- 1111. UCD &JNns 00 '"" MISM IJ (~Cl)) (Il EE> larttta "This Ain't My 8ac" (R) ~nt to a ~ community to find 1 m1n in1 wife 7'.>o I I.MM 1,_1, Ust ti Die Wil4 who is 11eh and buut1hit. Barttta 11.1 .. Tlllt TIM learns !hat the 11rdens are Ille only Lowt A111t11cu Style th1n1 that smtll Sl'ett in the sub U Ctldnty SWtt,,Utes urb), and yurns for his 1qular ~Gi j; Te Ttll tM T111UI turf-the city's su1111 sltetls.. ...... $ Iii-: (CJ (2-r) (! Tbt 111 Id II tk atvwl" (wes) ·~2 -Q) Gets-rt Jamu Stt1or1, Arthur Kennedy, Julie Adams Rau HudSOll ~ firtU km Q9 ,rict Is 'a11•t Et) Mill.wt.a Ordltstn rt Otdlcs· Q) 1Mc11'1 lttr-tra H.11 I ~':!'!.~ ~u':~1 ~1111• llkJO 0 Callltf Tt4 Ara~ ... , Nec.ia T1,&s Q) ""'5 "" CMs tlM c.ntrr ~ NfrM Hitdlncl Ctlcbrity lwlillc EIJ Nedlts T.,W. Ullle baclh a. 8 tftl CD (I) 1"' °'"... , 11:00 u m o mm m "NI 6ft.a (R) lony Randall and Charo 0 ([) rui@CIJ Man cucst. 0 lest ti Cl'Mdlt e @ Cl) l1i m uns. "-4 oo Set. n•• • tlM hairil '1ht Cifws Man" 0 Tiit U<y Sltow (RI Rtd Buttons 1ue$l1 u a one· I '"'™' min traveh111 circui and faith hul· ::'°S:-~ e~. wtiow "miracle mtdieine" •lmosl 1 C:il ,ettt Cu1t• l1ns Mrs. Oleson. ~ The Untolldlab~ D ....,..: (C) (~t) °'The Stct•I { rAI) V-Y'-1t Su 1J1i If Wllttt Mitty" (com) '47 -1£ ~-·1 Danny Kaye, V1ra1n!' M1yo, Ann 11:15 EIJ Cilltm1 34 Ruthtrford. ~ WiW WIN Wut 11:30 I) ()~ (J'J (j) CBS Lilt Movie:· O (Q!j ([,) (1) EE Turi NJ (t) '1\e ctllMdiM" (dra) ·12 - , Mal!Jt "Honesty Dly" (II) Clifton, C~1t1es Ournifts, Ronnie Coi. Zohra • Mama and T11q face llila11ous con Lampert ~ ""'" they pied .. lo ,,., ! 01 Cil ~ m Jellillf C.nti enly the trvlll for one wllolt day. TI.I ltotMyNllltn I o.llf's Qflce 6 Mftit: "Cvi.1 tto• (dra) '.43- .._.., Jn FriNf Ra'ldolpll Scott. Crace Md>onlld. a ,,.f_.,... o c~ OO> m WWt w."' MJS-tlt Mtowit: (C) ~) ~·s 11• tety "Duth Cruise~ (R) (com) '60 -Fran• SIMiia, Oun O Mrrit: .,rs A Ii( '-'!rJ'° Manin. Sammy Oms .If. (dra) 'S2 -Gary Cooclef. Janet I r-., c.. Leic~. Etl>ef ~flYlllOle. Ge11e ktlly, QI•~ •ra8llc Van Johson. i.,,11ese '-IMct mer-ED Tiit Th• [dee l:lO 0 (~ l (}) ED MC ......_ l2:CIO '2 ltltftwrl iiif 111..i.: (C) twl ..,._ Sa ,,... 1119rit: "Tiit lir S'tr..r' (dra) W' (R) (-ra) '74 -Connie Stev· • 2 -Henry Fonda, LUCtlle Ball, ens. Shtllry Wint el$. Jaclt Clr1er. Sam Levene. Wlllia111 ~stlt, Don Munay, hmu Q) (id Sinart Olson, Nehemiah Ptrsott, Madlyn • Rhue, Wilh1m Smtih, Millon Selim. 12:30 0 Twii(llt z- A starlet toe•ets to !•me .as the l:OO 8 crg Te•omw 111t'°".!'s number one pinup c1rl, dis· • CD (f) •••@11tws coverint the thr~I of success and "" Iha lo!Mlinw It brines. GJ Men Criffill Slltw fll) Mu 1"14s. Mai Dntrop 1:45 I) hie: "I• the f'relldl Style'" (dr1) '63 -Jean Seber&. Stanley Baker. t:DO I) (j}) rn c-"The Man Z:OO CD All.fliaht Sllor. "A ''"' lo the Who Couldn't For1rt" (R) Cannon l.A.f." "They Uwe i., Jrte1tr b«omes 1"wo/Yed with 1t1 1ttempted nsnsin1lion 1nd tht search for 1 war cr1m1111I aa:used ol World War II concentration c.mp •trociliU. Thursday DAYTIME MOVIES .-e "bdl11weM" (rorn) '49 - Omd llivtll, THUi Wncttt. h c,,ncer. Giel Pe11uu. @ "taf!U111 lleH" .J.14'tl 'JS - Crrot r1ynn, Ot1Y11 i1c Hivdland, • 81$11 R1thbooc. ltGO GJ ''Cmtteur (dra) 'SS -Arth11r • Ktnncdy, W1ll~m Bendtt,, lather Mttr, Gene bans. : t1IO 0 "T1lt lut Outllllf' (ac!Y) '35- Clry Grant, Cl1udt Rains, Gertrude Michael. l:JO 0 Mtfie: (C) "'Tlnlidtr Owr Ari- 10111" (-.es) '56 -Slip Home11r, Georce flhcru dy. o~ (C) "The Cnchtul. (dra) '65 -Diaries Duke, Ceorce Salldtn, Dennis Price. 3:00 ~ (C) "W"aip tf fire• Cdra) '67- Suzanne Plullelte, u mn hrtnhno, Lloyd Nolin. ,,~ GJ IC> "Cna ,..""' C•dY) ·~s­Crace 1<en1. Stewar1 Cun&er, P111I Oouctu. Jolln [r ICSOll. 3:.30 [31 (C) "lMJ Iii Utt Darr' (mus) ·~· -Gift&fl Roeers. Ray M1Nand. 0 (C) "CM4 NciPll« Saal" Conti. (com) '&C -JK~ Lemmon, Romy Schneider, Dorothy fr<Wine, ~1ke Connors. 4:00 0 "So!MMdy U11 Thtre l.llri Mt" (d11) '56 -P111I /fewm1n, Pi« Ancrli, Sal Mmeo. KOC~ T e levision (50) WEONllSOAV r.M Yete MUii MaOllM (CJ Cf(OCEI t :JI EIKtri< ~y (Cl (CTW) 4'11 ~ Stre.l CCI tt• M11ter 11 ... ra N.+tMiw,... .(() I.:• VllMI Ai.tn IC) I PllSl 6!• ~I 0999r•lfllflY CCI ''!iollr' SMtvv end the E.'\rlh's llu"°._ .. tea . Ht~ ti M1 . CCI "Ard "'k Gf'-s-t:trusc•n'll'' 7:H Yo1a Wltlll Me•ell110 (Cl CKOCEl J :Jt Ora111• C••11tr P'•lr ICl I KOC El I:• IN~ Tllleetre IC) (P8SI Upstairs, Downstairs -Eplt.Ode X: ''Whet Tiit Footmen Sew" t:• ~ 111 lllle A<l (Cl IPBS) "Ru.n Mes;Ktnnon ond Jeremlolh lk.wtlam'' ~thelalu1noses lecnelt lay. ::,_thepl1...-reol thoie whose ........... Jlld1th Crnt, NEW YOlllC MAGl.ZJNE 709 I. a.t.oa ll.•673-4041 O,EN DAILY AT HOON M..,..._H't SHOW ... a UT. Conway Boosts Career Carol Burnett Show to Break His Sp e ll? New Holmes Film Slcaed LOS ANGELES (AP) By BOB THOMAS LOS ANGELES (AP) -Now that be has been announced as a regular member o( "The Carol Burnett Show" cast, Tim Conway may have lo chang.e his personalized license plate. ._ British actor Nicol he and the late Joe Flynn ran a funny airplane. ••we WlWamaon will portray found out people don't Wee funny airplanes, either ... ·1egeodary detective Length of r un: 13 weeks. Sherlock Holmes and Sir lt reads "13 WKS" -testimony to the length of the moon.faced funnyman's television series. Ex- cept that one of them lasted only one performance • -11 minutes in Conway's native city of Cleveland. More about that later. NEXT, "TUE TIM Conway Comedy House" - "it wasn't." Again, 13 weeks. ''But the record came with George Schlatter's offshoot of 'Laugh-In,' called •;rurn-on.' ABC pulled it after one performance, and in Cleveland they yanked the plug after 11 minutes on the air, that's how.oltended they were. Conway will join Harvey Korman and Vicki Lawrence in weekly supp0rt of the m_ultitalented Burnett during .her ninth season on CBS Saturday night. Conway bas been a frequent visitor to the s how and a semi-regular last season. He is the first to be added to the permanent cast. since the show began. ''George saved money on the premiere party for the cast and crew. 'Turn-on' appeared here three hours after it did in New York, by which time ABC h ad already canceled it. So the premiere party was also the going-away party." CONWAY "CAROL JS TH E ONLY star l would go on as a regular with,•• said Conway. ·•Harvey is of- fended by the t e rm 'second banana.' but with Carol you can't be anythfog else, she's that great. ·'So now Harvey and I are faced with a whole year of breaking each other up. It's hard for us to look at e ach other without busting oullaughing. . ''That has been true ever since we were dis· cussing a personal problem of his in his dressing room one day. "He was dressed in a chicken costume and I was outfitted as the Avon Lady. but we were both very serious about the conversation. Sudde nly we realized that he was speaking through the be ak of a chicken, a nd I was wearing a dress. "WE HAVEN'T BEEN able to take each other seriously since. "Now Carol is beginning to break up, too. That's all right. I think the audience likes it , as long as it seems genuine." About those series. The first was "Rango, .. a comedy western. "We discovered the folks in the West don't like comedy westerns," he said. "Nor do the folks ~n the East the No.,rth and the South, and even those in the · middle don't care much for them." Elapsed a ir time : 13 weeks. Next came "The Tim Conway Show" in which MESA 1884 Newoort Co\ta Mno sd.1 ss; NOW IN IT'S NOWTHRU TUESDAY IARIRA STREISAND JAMES C AAH "FUMHY LADY" l,GJ ""THE FOaTU..- -slW'fORD WIVIS" llJ MuRTHQUAKF" ~JUGGERNAUT'" (PG) 97• YOYA6i OF SMAV "'WISTWORLD" IPGI ... nvaMOFl'HI • Z . ... PAMTHH" INI ~-f.0~~1v~c-1 .. • -swP'OllT YOU. LOCAL SHa.,... "'OMCI IS MOT IMOueH'" flJ -..a So\MCTlOM"' llJ Sl.25 'TIL 2:30 P.M. at STARRED(•)CINEMAS WAIUHIEATTY .... JACS MICHOUOM --SADDLEBACK PLAZA 11 :vllOROAOAI ROOlllllO \til·\1180 It -rHE 7tlaYOYACiE OF SIHIAD• "DOCTOR ZHIVAGO" 9T'HE LAST DET Al.• WIMMROF 6ACADEMY AWAIDS FOUNTAIN VALLEY• llllOOM HU~ \I Alll11Nt.IW ..-4 llJll· l~ Gneofwr DlllGSilUl'S lsMlsslng ·~):20 S:ll-1'50 -Plus- "ONDEREUA'' FOUNTAIN VALLEY • BROOKHUR~IAT IDINC.IA Hl9·1~00 All-TIME r.REAT! t8i 1 THECWSIC ~ ~ DOCfOR ZHMGO GENERAL CINEMA CORPORATION COME TO THE FAIR WITH CHANNEL 50 See our exciting LIVE color T V. spec ial of tfie Orange County Fair. TONIGHT at ~7:30 -I KOCB-~so Cir•• County Te..,,.., NEWPORT 673-8350 COME EARLY -STROLL HEW LIDO VILLAGE TH •SUCCESSFUL •EVENTFUL MONTH Laure nce OH ver will play his arch nemesis, Moria rty, in the Cilm version or •'The Seven- Per-Cent Solution.'' Also appearing in the Universal feature will be Al~ Arkin as Freud. - The terrilying motion pirture lron&lhe lerril11ing No. I best 3"11.er. .JAWS WOODY DIANE . ALLEN KEATON "LOVE . , · . and DEATH" B•rg•iii J\1•Q ln 2.,30 Senior Citizens I. 50 at all times SOUTH COAST PLAZA THEATRES SAH OCEGO FW'f, AT 8RISTol :r.·rommy Mi .... FREE PARKIN I ""SMILE .. tNI 7·11<H hllJ WJ1-J:JS-7:1 .. t•• "PRtSONEA Of 2nd AYE." t hllJ S.t/JR 1:4S.t:J ...... •:J-.11 W /-J:JM:J».Jt. --WHATS UP, TIGHLILY" 7:t S.IO:H W/'-J.S.Y:SS.tt:H 1 I I 1 1 I .. ~ .... ' . ' Orange Coast ED ITION s VOL. 68, NO. 197, 7 SECTIONS, 78 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALI FORNI A Ex-·Hinshaw ·Aide's Orange County Superior Court Judge Walte r Smith order ed Lhe trial or accused conspirator James Bertolino to continue Tuesday. The order w~1s made despite protests from Bertollno's at- torney Donald Thamer, that the prosecution failed lo prove that a conspiracy existed in the Orange County assessor's office to help elect Andrew Hins haw to Oongress in 1972. Alon g with e ight oth er employes in the assessor's office, Bertolino was charged in a grand jury indictment last December with participating in an alleged conspiracy that used county employes to help elect Hinshaw to Congress. Six of the nine indiclees have pleaded guilty to some charges in Che 33-count indictment. But Bertolino pleaded innocent tD charges or conspiring to sub- mit false documents and grand theft. By m id -day Tuesday, pro- secutor William Evans rested his ca!e against the S2-year-0ld de- fendant. And Tbamer, who delayed his Trial opelg statement until Evans completed his case, charged that the deputy district attorney failed to prove.a conspiracy ex· isted. Furthermore, Thamer added, if there was a conspiracy Evans bad not shown that Bertolino was a participant. But Judge Smith denied his plea to dismiss the case and or- T~tday 's Cl0Hi11£! N.Y. Sioeks WEDNESDAY, JULY 16, 1975 c TEN CENTS to Continue dered the defense attorney to present his side of the case. For openers, Thamer insisted that his client bait not been grant- ed his constitutional rights when he spoke t.o investigators and testiliedbetorethegrandjury. But when E vans presented those statements as part of the prosecution's case, Judge Smith permitted them to be entered into evidence over Thamer's healed objections. The first d efl!nse witne ss called was district attorney in- vestigator J ohn Coleman. The investigator mereJy con- firmed the authenticity of docu- ments used in th~ mvestigation lead.in~ lo the indictment of the nine. Tandy VP's Bribe_ Rap .Dropped Immunity Granted By Judge By GABY GRANVILLE Of~ Dally PilttSUff Superior Court Judge Everett . Dickey dis mi ssed bribery charges against Tandy Corp. Vice President J a mes Buxton Tuesday and gr anted him im- munity from prosecution in mat- ters related to the Orange County Assessor's Office scandal. Along with Assistant Assessor George Upton, Buxton was in- dicted last Ma rch by the county Grand Jury on three bribery counts. Watching Irvine Flock But by the time be left Judge Dickey's courtroom, Buxton was free of the bribery charges and ordered to testify as a prosecu- tion witness in cases related to the assessor 's office scandal. Sheepman Aurelio Ramirez, who says he's from Peru, stands with his dogs watching the "band" of 1,200 sheep owned by Dominic Duhart of E1 Toro. The sheep are grazing on Irvine Company land south of Lion Country Safari under terms of a lease. Company spokesman Fred Keller said it is the fi rst time in three years sheep have come onto the ranch 'to feed and eventually they'll work their way into the heart of the ranch. · Also gr anted immunity from prosecution was Tandy lax ma:nager William Hughes Jr. Monday, another Tandy official Paul Tabor, was granted im- munity. Buxton, Hughes a nd Tabor were witnessess during the Grand Jury's investigation that led to separate criminal indict- ments against Upton, county As- sessor J ack Vallerga and Rep. Andrew Hinsha w <R-Newport Beach). , Council Nixes 2nd Hearing On Mesa Bank By ALAN DIR.KIN Of Ille Dally P llM 5'aff The Costa Mesa Clly Council denied a request Tuesday for another hearing on its decisiQD to grant s ign code variance to the Citizens Bank of Costa Mesa. The rehearing was sought by Costa Mesa Now, a citize ns group whose leaders indicated they want the variance over- turned. The decision lo deny a rehear- ing was made on a 2·0 vote by Alvin P inkl ey and Norma Hertzog. Councilman Jiick Ham- mell abstain ed from voling, not- ing that he has an interest in the bank. Two other councilmen, Robert Wilson and Dom Raciti, also stockholders in the bank. were abst:>nt. The deci s ion to grant a variance to the bank was made on a 5-0 vote a month ago. The variance allows the bank to put Its sign on the second story (the code restricts signs to the first story > and to use 24-inch high lettering, where only 20 inches would be allowed. The decision to deny the new hearing was based on a finding that no new evidence was sub- mjtted and no procedural e rror had been established, Pinkley said. Councilmen indicated that pro- cedures will be tightened on all (uture requests for tehearings, 3tating that they should be sub- mitted to the city atUOmey's of- <See BANK, Page.U) FIRST COVPlE BOUGHT ITEM ''l'm very happy with the ad. The first couple who came to see tbe refrigerator, boughtit." That's the success experienced by the Huntington Beach woman who placed lhJs ad ln the Daily Pilot: .. 'RJGIDAIRE Refrtg., whl. s~· tan. &oOd work rood. $6S. Af\. S, XU• xx xx. I( you have a used appliance you would like lo convert to cash, call 642-5678. We make It e3sy to put a Cew words to work ror you in the Dally PUoc.. Burglars Loot Home Of Mesa Councilman Hinshaw was Orange County assessor from 1965to1972. · It is expected that Buxton, Hughes and T abor will appear as prosecution witnesses in Upton a nd Hi n s haw 's upcomin g separate trials. Burglars looted Costa Mesa Ci- ty Counci lman Robe rt M . Wilson's home of thousands or dollars in belongings hauled away in his station wagon, il was revea.Ied today. The three-time city mayor and his wife confronted the huge loss Monday night when they re- turned home from attending the U.S. Conference of Mayors' con- vention in Boston during the past week. Pennies, Fireworks Mesa Theft Loot Costa Mesa police today were keeping their eyes -and ears - peeled for a burelar who broke into a west side apartment Tues- day and found just what he wanted. A juvenile may be the culprit who visited the home of Ray J . Amburgey, of 773 W. Wilson St., according to investigators. The only loot t ake n was l ,600 firecrackers and 200 pennies, for a total $15.60 loss. No immediate dollar value was placed on the burglary loos, but police said today it is bound to be considerable based on the number of items stolen. Some loot taken from the home at 3435 Plumeria Place in the northern sector of Costa Mesa has now been recovered in cen- tral Santa Ana where it was dis- carded. Detective Sgt. Keith Carpenter said the items include Coun- cilman Wilson's briefcase, ap- parently tossed out of his stolen car near Harbor Boulevard and 17th Street in Santa Ana. The missing 1974 Ford station wagon was later recovered near Mc Fadden A venue and Main Street, also in Santa Ana. A second item recovered -not from the Wilson household -is a souvenir Navy aviator's fight helmet believed take n in a burglary elsewhere, according lo Sgt. Carpenter. He said it m ay have been stolen in another city or taken in an unreported local theft, adding that lb~ flight helmet's origin (See BURGLARS, Page A2) However, none or the three are expect ed to be witnesses at Vallerga's trial in Ventura Coun- ty next week. T h e issues at s tak e in CSee DISMISS, Page A2) PROFIT TAKING CUTSDOWBY9 NEW YORK (U PI) -The s tock m arke t, running into strong profit taking pressure, closed sharply lower today in ac- tive trading on the New York Stock Exchange. The Dow J ones industrial average, up more than two points at the outset, lost 9. 70 points to 872.11. Declines led advances by about a two-to-one margin. Prices were lower in active trading on the American Stock Exchange. Seven Soaring • m Space Astronau.u, Cosmonauts Converse on Radio HOUSTON (UPI) -American astronauts and Russian cos- monauts, on target for their his- toric ,orbital linkup over Europe, improvised repair s of broken equipment today and beamed simultaneous color telecaatg to earth of weightless lite in space. The two cosmonauta also ex- changed spirited radio greetings wllb two cre wmen aboard Russia's Salyut space station, headed toward ita second mooth in orbit. One occupant ol Salyut dubbed the earthlings now in space ''the M agniOcent Seven." With three astronauts flying Apollo, two in Soyu1 and two in Salyut. seven men ln three craft h'Om two naUons are cl cling the aJobe. \ Alt.ronauts Thomas Stallbrd, Vance Brand and Dona ld ''Deke" Slayton -usin& their bare hands, a rew toolt and a nx- lt procedure radloed by Houstoo control -easily removed a used Right now it 's our home, to which but rebuilt docking probe w~ are used. But it's very dif- jammed in a hatch tunnel on ferent.' · their Apollo. • The cosmonauts -in an or- Once the probe was out, the bital repair a tte mpt that sur- astronauls t rained a camera pris ed American flight con-. through the batch into the barrel-t.roll ers -also cut their way into shaped white room where their a control panel on Soyuz to re· hi.story-making m eeting with the wire broken cables for' another Russians Thursday will atart 1V camera. They used medical · with a handshake or welcome. kit band ares to l~ulate the Aboard the Soyuz, Alexei spliced wlrt?s. Leonov a nd Valeri Kubasov ' U.S. officials noted fl was very floated weightlessly and grinned UD\llual, ba$ed on put rupt ex- blto one of the cameras that will perience, for the 'Russians to try let earthlings watch the orbital to flx4brokcn spacecraft equip· get-l~getber from the vant .. e mentduring rueht. point ot the Ruuian craft. 1l was All the "P•lr work threw both the flrstteJecaslfromSoyuz. crew• sllgbUf b~blnd tbeir "Everythin1 ls flying around, planned achedulu . But every- awimmlng here as you see," said thing wat reported moving Leonov, clad in 1ray coveralls smoothly, nonetbelea, toward and wearing a white commun.lca· tbe rendevous 136 miles above Uom headset. Germany that wUI create the "Thi.a is bow we live ln the. 1t'orld'1 M t lnternat.Jonal space artlOclaJ utellite ol U. ~ 1 eomplex. D•lly Polol Ptlolo &y Ricll•rcl KH lll" THE OLD TROUPER AT 72 STILL WOWS A CROWD Comic Bob Hope Packed in 15,000 at County Fair 15,000 Cheer Hope At County Fair By ARTHUR R . VINSEL Of Ille D•lllo Pilol Slaff A standing-room-only throng of up to 15,000 flocked to see one of Ame rica's most celebrated come- dians, Bob Hope, at the Orange County Fair in Costa Mesa Tues- day night. His appearance on what was designated Senior Citizens' Day was considered the highlight or the 1975 fair . "We finally had to turn many away, which was unfortunate bul inevitable," said Peggy Bayless, publicity di rector for the fair. Hope cracked jokes and quips for half the two-hour show which also included orchestra leader Les Brown a nd his Band or Renown and singer Rooemary Clooney. He carried the performance with customary pepper and flair, de lighti°" the crowd includ- ing Edna Bels han who ca me all the way from Oxnard and stood in line seven hours. "I've loved him for years," said the 52-year-old woman. One gray-wigged woman and longtime Hope fan quipped that she almost tossed her apartment key onstage. "Grouoies come in all ages,·• she remarked. · The 72-y ear -old comedian whose business acumen has made him one of the wealthiest enter· tainers in the world r eceived a~u~ ~ (or the free ad- nuss1on Appearance. U.S. Confirms Grain Dem WASHINGTON· (UPI) -The Soviet Union has bought two million metric tons ol American wheat in what officials think may be only the first step ol a larger grain d eal , the Agriculture Department announced this af- ternoon. The department said it wa.o; "notified by a grain export tlrm that it completed negotiations to- day for the sale ol 13.• mitUon bushels or hard wlnlttwhcat." Agriculture secretary Earl L. Butz predicted that the Russians might buy up to 10 million tons o( American corn and wheat because of a bad year. 'Tm older than I ever meant to be," decla r ed the humorist whose career has carried hi m from \he rou~h-cut boards or vaudeville stages to the fancies t nightspots in the land, m addition to the jungles, fields and trenches where American Gls foug ht three wars. "Fa ir audiences are the greatest. They're here for fun." qui pped Hope. who obviously shared the night's good times. "l love it here," he also said. ''It's a thrill they took the cattle <See HOPE, Page A2) . Parking Ban OK'd The Costa Mesa City Council has authorized a parking ban on Victoria Street between Harbor Boulevard and P lacentia Avenue. P ubli c Servi ces Direct or J ames Eldridge s aid the purpose is to provide one lane in each direction with a two-way turn lane, a change that already bas been made on Wilson Street.· Or::'4, ~asc Weatller Low clouds through late mornin g Thurs day . otherwise mostly s unny and a bit warmer with beach highs near 70 rising to the low 80s inland areas. Lows tonight 60 to 65. INSIDE TODAY How .are our .new <limp Pend.Le.ton r efugees /onwg along the Orange Cocut? Some haw ;obi, mcmy.ore m ad9ool Uoming £ngUth -. and .all have their own personal com,. nwnt1on Amntco. See lCorlq .and photo• P.og~ 89. ' •> •> "" •• OM I .. .. .., ... ... 7 .... CA-14 CJ 1 UA11 .. 'f t'ILOT C Fro• P -.e .4 J BANK ••• ~· ~ca to ~elermlne wh6lhe.r there ts a bu us for a rehearlng. Assiatant City Attorney Robert ~~mpagna .•aid be had been asked to review the question Ci- ty Attorn~y Roy June also has an interest in the bank as a director and by servlng as its attorney. C~mpafna said that he agreed with June's original ruling that although the gorernmeot code re- quires elected officials to abstain where conflicts exist. the law a16o requires such coofilcts to be ''overlooked" when abstention would mean that no action could betaken. The original vole was legal and proper, Campagna said. He also said that a 2-0 vote would be legal because Hammett would make up a quorum even it be did not vote. Louise Napoli, speaking for Costa Mesa Now, and Paul Raver both urged the council to set a new hearing on the grounds that no hardship was established in the granting of the variance and alternatives were not re- viewed. Raver said that he was concerned that a preced ent might have been set. Campagna ruled that the courts were the proper recourse for such complaints. "If there's something wrong then there's a court to !ind out if there was something wrong," be added. Though he did not vote on the issue, Ham melt spoke on the sign ordinance itself and indicated he was having second thoughts on some aspects. "Perhaps there are some ~hanges that might be made in ~e ordinance to make it more re- alistic, so I am going to request that anothe r look be taken," he said. He said that he particularly .tisagreed with the requirement that signs be not affixed to the first story. ''I have accepteq top floor signs because they are iden· tifying rather than advertising," , be said. 'Hap' Hatter Dead at 50; Rites Friday Longtime Harbor Area resi- dent and marine hardware salesman Lionel ''Hap" Hatter di.ed today at South Coast Com- munity Hospital. F\Jneral services for Nr. Hat- ter. 50, a 48-year Harbor Area r~ sident, will be Friday at 2 p.m. in St. James' Episco~al Cburcb, Newport Beach, diretted by Bell Broadway Mortuary. A World War II Army veteran, Mr. Halter was an active member of the American Legion and for the past 20 years worked first for South CoasJ. Marine Hardware, then Ne~rt Marine Supply. Survivors include his wife Bet- ty, of the home at 498 Magnolia St .• Costa Mesa ; sons, Jim of Canoga Park and Dick of Mission Viejo; daughters, Marjorie Davis, Susan and Patricia all of Costa M esa ; his mother, Beatrice Hatter of Laguna Hills. plus a brother, Norman of Portola V1!1Jey, and a sister, Marjorie Foster of Laguna Beach. The family suggests memorial contributions to the American Cancer Society. R e por t D enied WASHING TON <UPI) -Ex· ClA agen,t E . Howard Hunt says be never named form e r Presidential Aide Alexander But- terfield as a Central Intelligence Agency contact in the White House. Hunt Tuesday denied a report by retired Air Force Col . L. F1etcher Prouty that Hunt bad made such a statement to him. ORANGE COAST t DAILY PILOT Ttwi OrM\fJP' t"°CM\t Ci••IY J'1 ICt wlln ~"4th i'li c~ bil'V"d lhfl Nf'"" PH "i.\. l\ oubh-.Nln l)y lhr Or .. nqt (.oa\I Puhl1,h1nq CompAt\'1 Sep,,,.,,. ro111orl,,.,,.,. outJ•• IWd Ma"'1AY tnrout)n fr.day ftw CO\\• A/ttl"w N1"¥tOOrt ~•<-" Hunllnoton &-Mn1f oun· t•tn v .. l\•Y Irvin'° S:•ddttbA<., V•llfY and L~U-8'-ot<h Soulh (OO>I A ""'Ii. r"910rWI f'CS I O'\ I' Qubh• hfll'(t ~turde';'\. 4"Cf ~~ ft\41t "'•t'C.•04• o-1t>l1\.h1n9 e>l•nt '" et JOO lNie'll S.r S•,,.~•. (.Q)1• ~ ..... C•ltfOff'I•"'"'· Rober! N . WefJd l•t .-,1dfnt ttnd Pubfl~ Jae I( R Curle't' V11 ,. p • ., •0--f'lt •I'd (;eMu• ,....,,..., Thomas Keevil ECl<IO< Thomas A. Murphine Motll'l•Ott'\C) l.dHOI' ChMles H Loos Richard P. Na ll A'\1\C•t\t M.et\t,l"t E.dltOI \ Costl M .sa Offke 1lO w.~1110 Sltffl ~'""° Adclreu : l'.O. lu IMO, mM Te lephone (714) 64H:J2t Class1 lied Mtvtrt1$lng 642·S678 ("Ol'f O~I 1t1' Ora., .. C••<i P111tll•1tl"O C~t'•"'Y ,...et 1MWtttorte"t., 1thntto11t.oft\.,"''°"•I m•tt•' "' edv•l'lnemtnh "•r•I" ~•r N ••II• 0011t .,, w111to•tl ,,..,,., Pff 1111\ttO" al eottvr14n1 O•Nf. S.<•"Cl <I••\ ,.. ..... H id •I GHlt ~na, C..lltorn•• \ •'"<•IPl-ll'f<Nrwr U oo...-N,. ., ...... ~·II') rftMll!lll'. '""' .... ' ~· ... ·-· u °' ._..,.,, • t I O.lly Pllet ,..... l y '"' ... "' KMll .. r HOPEFUL HOPE FANS HAD TO BE TURNED AWAY IN DROVES AT FAIR TUESDAY NIGHT One Lady Came From Oxnard and Stood Seven Houra to Join Thia Throng Camera Day Slated At Fair Thursday Entertainer Billy Armstrong headlines the amusement bill of 'fare Thursday at the Orange County Fair as it enters its sixth day in Cos ta Mesa. Thursday also is Camera Day at the fairgrounds, with Orange Coast shutterbugs anticipating a day-long photo contest. Fair officials are also saluting the cities o( Anaheim and Orange Thursday. Gates open at noon. Besides the traditional daily fair activities involving arts, E'ro111 Page Al .BURGLARS could provide a valuable clue in the case. Councilman Wilson could not be reached today for elaboration on the total burglary loss and specific loot taken, but was re- portedly preparing an inventory for police. Detective Phil McCormick is investigating the case. Family spokesmen discovered the burglary Sunday, but no report was compiled until the civic leader and his wife arrived home to !urnisb complete information on the loss. Wilson lost a costly collection of silver firearms and numerous rare coins. Stereo equipment, television sets. appliances, framed wall pictures, and many more items were taken, according to police .. Investigators said other family possessions had been stacked up ready for loading and then left behind during the time it took to loot the premises. ' Fro•Page AJ DISMISS ••• Vallerga's trial center on Orange County's sale of a computerized appr~sal system to Spartanburg Cowffy, South Carolina. Vallerga is alleged to have act- ed illegally when he purportedly accepted expenses and consulting fees from Spartanburg which were related to the sale of the $2,045 computer system. Booms Due From Toro Jets Tonight The Orange Coast may be bat- tered by sonic booms tonight as El Toro Marine Corps jets take part in a massive training ex· ercise 1imulating combat with enemy bombers. Air Force, Air N ationaJ Guard, Navy and Marine jets will scramble from bases between San Diego and Merced this even- ing in a n exercise simulating a West Coast enemy attack. El Toro's F -4 squadrons will join the mass interceptor mission in the "early evenin~ hours". tonight, said an El Toro spokesman. An Air Force spokesman pre· dieted that some sonic booms may be heard in inland as well as coastal areas. . "While supersonic ru~ht is not an objective of the exercise, some or the interceptors may have to maneuver at supersonic speed over the Pacific," the El Toro spokesman said. "Should atmospheric condi- tions be unfavorable at the time, lt ls possible that some offshore sonic booms may be beard alone thecoastllne. "The exercise will not involve the firing o( weapo~ and hu been coordinated with Federal Aviation Admlnl.stration oCflclala to prevent interference with civil aviation traffic," be said. crafts, produc t exhibits and livestock displays, here are highlights of the scheduled ac· tivities : -Noon to 6 p.m ., Photo Conte~t in the Photo Bujlding. -1 p.m., Blanco Luz dance troupe, on Family Fun Stage, plus Chuck Jones' Aladdin Show on fairgrounds proper. I :30 p.m., Mediterranean Cooking demonstration, Home living Pavilion. -2 p.m ., Reedettes Accor- dionettes, at Bandstand. -3 p.m .. Salty Dog Rag, musical comedy at Family Fun Stage and Dixi Cups performing at Bandstand. -4 p.m .. Myra Garcia Dance Studio show, F a mily Fun Sta -4 p.m .. Vagabond Drum & Bugle Corps in concert on fair- grounds proper. -5 p .m ., Marine Corps F1ag Pageant, Family Fun Stage. -5 p .m., Dixie Cups show, at Bandstand. ~ to 10 p .m ., Montezuma's Revenge rock band in concert al Mountain Dew Stage. -6 p.m ., Red DaWJ1 Indian Dancers, Family Fun Stage. -7 p.m ., Photo Model Awards' Little Theater. -8 p .m ., Billy Armstrong musical review, at Grandstand. TONIGHT MUSIC OF AMERICA -South Coast Village, 8 p.m. ORANGE COUNTY FAIR - Fairgrounds through Sun. ''GODSPELL'' -South Coast Repertory Theater, through Sun. 8p.m. UCI LECTURES -"Manage- ment Development for Women," Room 140 Social Sciences Lab. ·'Conservation Gardening," Room 105 Social Sciences Lab. "Family Afoot in the West," Room 178 Humanities Hall. All 7 p.m. THURSDAY, JULY 17 SUMMER TR"CK & FIELD - Costa Mesa High School. All day. LIBRARY PROGRAM - Story time, 10:30 a.m. UCI LECTURES - "American Folk Medicine " Room 159 Social Sciences Lab: 7 p.m . ''Fabric Design with Dyes." Room 503 COM High School. 7 p.m. Group Formed For Carpenter Senate Race State Sen. Dennis Carpenter· (R-Newport Beach) has not of- ficially declared himself a can- didate for U.S. Senate but the' wheels of a Carpenter for Senate campaign are already turning. Carpenter's election commit· tee, the "Friends of Carpenter,": has been formed and has filed' with the federal elections com- ·mission. : George Argyros, of Linda Iale. ln Newport Beach and head ol Amel Development Co. ol Santa Ma, has been selected to bead the election committee. Additionally, t he political management Cirm of Spencer and Roberta has been ret.alned to "let the ball rolling," according to Carpenter's aide Walter Clark. Bot all the action ls' Jusl pr6-· Um1narie1, said Clark. "At this point it look1 favorable, but' we're not at a polnl where we can i announce <Ca rpenter's caii-, ctidacy)," he said. ' I E:rone P age A l .HOPE ... out before I got here." Typical Hope humor hurled barbed jests a l the CIA, the economy, the alleged horror movie "Jaws" about a monster shark. and sini?er Cher's highJy publicized musical marriages. Costa Mesa police had to de~l extra patrolmen to crowd control duties due to the Hope show alone, which drew more visitors than the entire fair did Monday. Virtually the only misfortune to mar the event occurred when one woman fell and sustained a leg injury when briefly trampled by the crowd. Hope was the most renowned celebrity ever to appear at the fair, in his first local show since a 1973 benefit performance for St. Joseph Hospital. The 72-year-old performer wowed the crowd with several song-and-dance numbers, show- ing them he is nowhere near ready for St. Joseph's himself - or any other hospital for that mat· ter. t Rain Dries Up SAN FRANCISCO (P ) -The light rain that dampened Northern California on Tuesday has mostly dried up and skies are expected to return to normal through Thursday, except for a few lingering ~louds and showers over the Sierra, the weatherman says. DOORS OPEN AT 10 A.M. • HO EXCHANGES OR RIFUHDS OH SALE MERCHANDISE PLIASI .. lofts Prorttised? Cory Campaign· v Gifts Probed SAC RAMENTO (AP) - Federal authorlUes are in- vestigating whether state CQn- troller Kenneth Cory ot Garden Grove solicited campaign con- -tributions with promises of ap- pointments as inheritance tax re- ferees, the Sacramento Bee said today. The newspaper said Asst. U.S. Atty. Donald H. Heller refUsed comment when asked it evidence of illegal political activities would be presented to a federal grand jury. The Bee attributed its story to sources in the U.S. Ju stice Department in Sacramento. Cory denied any wrongdoing, and said he had not been contact· ed by authorities, the .Bee said. "I think the' losers of political plums don't like losing their cushy jobs and will discredit anyone," the newspaper quoted the Democratic controller as having s aid. Cory fired 23 referees appoint- ed by hi s Republican pre- decessor, Houston Flournoy. Cory later appointed 74 new ones. Investig a lions by several newspaper s disclosed that a number of the appointees had direct or indirect political ties to Cory, some involving campaign contributions. The Bee said the investigation is centered on whether Cory's mailed dismissal notices to the Nurs e Loses ·Cash at Fair Someone apparently seeking care at the Orange County Fair's First Aid Center Monday night stole the staff duty nurse's wallet for a $250 grand theft loss, Costa Mesa police said to- day. Karen D. Runge, 23, of Phoenix, Ariz.,, told police she was busy patching up as.sorted fairgrounds casualties with Bandaids and mercurochrome during the period when the wallet vanished. Miss Runge told investigators she lost $200 in cash along with the wallet hidden behind a first aid supplies ca bi net, plus as- sorced credit cards, identifica- tion and three hemostat instru-· ment.s for stopping blood now. A pair of bandage scissors was also mi~sing. Fashion lalond, Ntt9'*f ltoch referees sel off a chain of events that constituted violation of the federal mail fraud statute. The newspaper said lt is the same charge on which former 11· lionois Gov. Otto Kerner was con· victed. Kerner was accused of defrauding the people of Illinois of their ri1tht to his honest and faithful service, and of failing his duty to administer the law im- partially. The federal investigation focuses on two of Cory's appoin· tees, Antoinette McGillvray of Stockton and Tibert Nicora of Oakland, the Bee said. L9bor.Day Fuel Cost Up 5 Cents? WASHINGTON (UPI) - Federal Energy Administrator Frank Zarb predicted today . gasoline prices will incr ease another two to five cents a gallon by Labor Day. He insisted, however; there was no collusion by the oil companies toraisepric~ Zarb told a Senate subcommit- tee that curbing of gas refining by the oil companies was due to "a combination of unforeseen re- fining problems. "We have seen no evidence that there is a conspiracy to pro.:. mote a shortage in anticipation of higher price levels," Zarb said. Zarb spelled out t he Ad- ministration's outlook for the near future as both the Senate and House focused attention on energy, particularly oil prices. The Senate Tuesday approved a six-month extension of oil price controls and Speaker Carl Albert said the House would take the same approach. Later today, President Ford is expected to submit to Congress his proposal to more than double the per-barrel cost of oil over the next30months. . Zarb said barring any oil price mcrease by the oil-producing na- tioo.s, be estimated gas prices would rise from between two to five cents a gallon, varying in dif- ferent parts of the country. SALE STARTS THURSDAY, JULY 17th ALL SIDS OM RACKS FOR EASY SILICTIOM I of or r y e n e e n e e e 0 ,., ' ·- .. " .. " t .AS DAIL PILOT EDITORI GE • Wi1Jing Help Greeted • Getting citizens .interested ln local school boards is a difficult task -even more diflicull lo the sum-mer. But suddenly, in July, the Newport·Mesa school board is the object of great interest. It's a turn or events that. can be taken only as a healthy sign of citizen involvement. When a trustee position recenUy opened due to a resignation, 13 persons fnltn that trustee area applied for the job. That doesn't include the many people who mis- t.akenJy applied from other trustee areas and were in- eligible. A pleased district official reported that many of those who didn't quality agreed to stay lnvolved and serve on various citizen committees. Obvious ly. the troubles that have recently plagued the district -massive budget cutting, noisy appeals from angry parents and teachers and two tax override elections -forced a greater public aware- ness and probably piqued the interest of many . We hope that the newfound interest does not wane when the dis trict returns to the less glamorous mat- ters involved with educating our children . Glimmer of Optimis~ A welcome sign that perhap.5 the unemployment picture might be a little less dark made itself evident last week when the city of Costa Mesa revf!aled it was having difficulty filling jobs created by f ederaJ relief funds. The city had received only 70 applicants in the first week after announcing that 24 positions, al salaries around $800 a month. were available as a re- sult of a new allocation of manpower money. This resp0nse compared with the 400 persons who applied for 60 jobs crE!ated by the fi9st disbursement of Com- prehensive Employment and Training Act funds in .January. .. So many applied in January that the council chambers had to.be used ror initial processing, but this was not necessary this last time. Indeed, !i ve or the 24 positions went unfilled for a while because of a· lack of applicants with experience as finance storekeepers, junior programmers. or as equipment mechanics. It may be that less publicity contributed to the limited response, but it may be a hopeful gliml'Jler that fewer people are out of work. Away With Trash! Another special trash pickup is planned in Costa Mesa next week, and, judging from the success of last year's project, it should do a lot to beautify the landscape. Last year. the first year such a special pickup was made. 700 tons of debris were hauled to the. Orange County Dump in 139 truckloads. What was taken was the kind of stuff that the re· gular trash service ref uses to haul orr ~ old ap· pliances, mattresses, and rusty lawn furniture, un- wanted and unosed items that clog up a garage or make a backyard look slovenly. · Such a special pickup can be a boon to old people who cannot get rid of rundown items on their own, or to any family that does not have access to a truck or a van. The pickup, which is being sponsored by the Costa Mesa Beautification Committee and the city's .Department of Public Services, will be made Monday • through Thursday July 21-25, with the trucks going ~o certain areas on specific days. Call the public services department at 556-5343 if you need to know the day for your area. ''NOW 1 'M A SELf-5TA~TI N6 IYPE.'' c ~- ' ' If It's Loud It WlllSell- Evenlf Bad Drawing the Line 011 Censorship ~ .. -· I ' ' , , , I ~ .. y . .. . , ~· I • . . " I • .. ' • ( PAUL HARVEY) While House daughter Susan Ford, hosting her high school prom al the White House, had much dif- ficulty finding a group of mod mu s i- cia ns which could qualiry for the neces sary sec urity clearance -• meaning "no drug convictions. ''ls noisy music with raunchy lyrics itself a drug? From noisy music you can run but you can't hide. Jn the deep south of Mexico, even. the smallest town is likely to have three concert bands whic)l play everything loud, louder, loudest. THE ZAPOTECS, listening, are likely simultaneously lo chew plants with names like "Tears or the Virgin" while they hallucinate in. the central plaza. Italy's state-run radio and TV have been . trying to wean · listeners away from hard rock music. A re<:ent radio sun'ey showed that only 7 out of every 100 Italians listep to this mod music. Yet the big shows QD Italian networks feature the gyrating, twitching~ acrobatic howlers. < The San Remo Rock Festival de- •. · livered a TV audience of 20 • • -:" • million. ·~ . ' • • .-. .... .. .. In the United States some com· munications industry leaders have sought to ban this "music to steal hubcaps by." but those leaders have few followers. In Vegas' posh casinos, which certainly do not cater to sour- . smelling jUJakies, most music is electronically amplified fortissimo. EVEN llORE conventional en- tertainers, Wayne Newton and Debbie Reynolds, comeonloud. t Ptntrla • ' ~ ,. • . . , , ~ • • ' i ' ~ Dear Gloomy Gos Let us di~ th.at big ditch on Newport Blvd. a little deeper and extend it down the boulevard to Newport Bay. Whal a wonderful ship canal could be made o:.il of it to give Costa Mesa direct access by boat to the Pacific Oceao and world trade. M.O.P. Gloomy Gvs c.omments .ire Jffmi!Wd bl' ~·rs •Ml eo llot M<tUUtly .. ii.ct the viewi ot ,,.. 11ew5t1.ipoer. Send YOIW pet l!"Ve 10 Gleomf Gus, D.i\IY Piiot .• So the cacophonous jungle music cannot be identified with. any particular age group or with any specific economic stratum. The preference which sustains the din is not race related. But one observation leads in the direction of an intriguing con- Clusion: Most rock musicians are male. In the annals of the Met, and through the era of the big bands, ,Jllale and female vocalists were almost equally spotlighted. It anything, pretty girls were out front. In country music and in soul, it's about half-and-half. BVT WHEN it comes to rock - with such notable exceptionf as Janis Joplin, Grace Slick and Maggie Bell -most of these mod music groups are mostly or all male. Personally, I don't dig noisy music. (I think that's still an ac- ceptable expression.) I do not pretend to comprehend its ap- peal. UPl's Bruce Meyer thinks it has to do with machismo, gutsi- ness. a kind of super-sexism. The same thing that moved the wiggly girls to the front of the bandstand is now showcasing tight· britches masculinity for the titillation of liberated females. At rock concerts attendance is mixed, but the. girls do most of the squealing, screaming and swooning. The very loudness of the music Tepresents a calculated animali- ty which offers beret.of ore in- hibited females a free trip. Well, fellows, it is their turn. "And don't forget the mothbals." (, Obscenity Versus Pornography To the Editor: Mr. Provost's letter of July 8. which denounces "pornography" and advocates increased censorship. has raised our blood pressure. We feel that ;t rebuttal is in order. Mr. Prpvost makes quite general rt?marks, but we are perhaps more qualified than he to comment on censorship -having had first hand experience with it ourselves. As owners of the Fahrenheit 451 Bookstore in Laguna Beach, we have wasted about a year and a half <so far) dragging ourselves and our two small children in and out of courts, fighting an obscenity ar- rest originally fostigated against us by two narcotics agents of the Laguna Beach police force. It seems that these agents found in our store some racy comic books (not much different from what is commonly available) which they considered "pornographic." In carrying out their arrest they were given "moral support" by a deputy district attorney (who is no longer on our case) and a judge <who signed the arrest warrant even though -as he later ad- mitted -he hadn't even seen the supposedly offensive material). How obscene! WHETHER or not Mr. Provost regards a couple or underground comics as "dirty" is beside the point. Nor does it matter much i1 he (or somebody else) finds sex, nudity, political satire, or anything else "repulsive." What counts immensely is the fact that we are all essentially different people, and no two of us are going to see things in exactly the same. way. Why then should any person set himself (or herself> up as a literary custodian for others? ls not such a person "porno- graphic" in the truestsenseorlhe term? Mr. Provost speaks so ardently about tbe virtues of freedom. Perhaps be does not realize that a truly free country entails a truly tree press. Our forefathers were wise not to put a ny holds og the · First Amendment. If he does ndt. care to see some of the material being printed today, let him not look at it. That is his privilege. A little tolerance will go a long way -and it will surely help to Wlclog our increasingly saturated courts. . GO ROON andEVEL YN WILSO~ A rr.,,n-l•ro.-'l To the Editor: It is disturbing that a girl lrlend of Supervisor Battin has been appointed to the grand jury.· Despite the presence of • seeming conflict of interest, tbe1 young woman in question bas stated she is personally satisfied she will be capable of.serving as an honest. impartialgrandjuror. She bas expressed a desjre to serve because it would be an ln· · teresting and fulfilling ex- perience for her. All this may be lure. ~VT ls lb.ls enough to satisfy the citizens of Orange County? Is lt enough to satisfy the needs of the 1raod jury system? F.aith in the integrity ol the erand jury system is crucial to our ablllty· to govern ourselves elfect.Jvely. And l stronaly doubt that anyone'• personal rutflll, ment ls suUicient ~a.son to rislt impairment of that f aitb. In no way would it .l>e a ndlec· ( MAILBOX J Leltors from ruder' .,, welcome. The rl911t to condense •lie,. to ht •p.ice or ehminate libel " re- lC••td. Ltlltf\ ot lOO words °' IHS Wiii be 91ven prt1ere,.c1. All ltllers must include sl9l\llture a"d rN1hn9 .tddreu but name• may be withheld on rr- qutst ,, •ultlettnl re.uon " ap~rent. Poetry Wiii "GI be pubhsheCI. tion upon Miss Perry 's patriotism, her honesty, nor her perspicacity lo voluntarily vacate her seat on the present grand jury. On the contrary, such ·action on her part might be elo- quent testimony of her innate suitability for future service. REBA WlLLlAMS Meaniring Chief Daris To the Editor: I find it hard to believe that Ed Davis is chief or police of the second largest city in the coun· try. When he announc~ that the ·new marijuana Jaw would lead to more heroin addicts, I could hardly stomach him. He couldn't possibly have at- tended college-or is it just that he has an I.Q. not much larger than his belly measurement? MEG EN THOMPSON Point Tltem ·Nortla To the Editor: The time is past due for all re- sidents living south of the Orange County Airport to band together to insist that whenever weather permits . planes must use the north pattern for take·off. Whether we live in West.cliff or Eastbluff our problem is the same. Upper Newport Ba1 is a nar· row body or water. To expect the best intentioned pilot to be able to adhere to its narrow limitations is unrealistic. Even if the planes took off dead center over the Bay. the noise of their ascent would s till cause intolerable noise pollution to the r esidents on both sides or the Bay. THE SOLUTION to the pro- blem is simple, self-evident, and not costly. It involves no disrup- tion of the residential population. The latest proposal or the county supervisors to acquire the homes in the Santa Ana Heights area, by condemnation or purchase of airspace, which in fact, is in· direct condemnation, would cost millions or dollars. To have the planes use the north or "pre- ferential" takeoff is one of the re- commendations made by Depu- ty Director of Mass :n"JnSporta- tion and Aeronautics fci'the State of California. As he pointe<fout in bis report, the area to the north, east and west of the airport is zoned for commercial use. The area south ol the airport is, and always has been zoned for re· sidenUal purposes. In using the "preferenlla l " pattern, the planes would takeoff over the ~mmerclal, industrial complex that demand their service. By the time planes were over re- sidences north, east or west of the airport they would have re- ached an altitude where ground noise la minimal and within the staoda:rds ael by lhe state. So why are lbe planes still tak- ing off to Ole south! Thi~ st.range arranfement ls lar1ely due to the lramlaeal position of some of oor county supervisors. It ls time for the cilium of Newport lO act In concert to refute the rtdicwou.. statement ol Supervisor Clark that the oolse o' the planes ls "Newport's problem." IC lilt! airport were used only by the citizens or Newport, there would be no need (or expansion. Since the press ure lo expand the service at the airport is to satisfy the needs or the rapidly grow ing industrial area in Irvine. Tustin. and Santa Ana., those areas must be prepared to share the noise pollution resulting from that service. HELEN LEVINSON Definiag 'Strikr' To the Editor: I was overcome with sympathy for Tom Robinson <M.D. who chastized the Daily Pilot for us· ing the term "strike'' referring to recent doctors' actions- Mailbox. July 9). As a ttacher I have withheld services, which the newspapers and the gtneral public insist on calling a Stike. Where I teach. the community was very fortunate. the doctors' wives, all P.T.A. members, just hopped into their litUe statior wagons to man the classroo~. This in spite-of the fact that P.T.A. is supposedly a neutral body. As a teacher, I have often been lold that we should clean out our profession of all undesirable teachers. Malpractice suggests to me that if the A.M.A. did so. their insurance may not be so high. Ev,ery tm>ression has its weak· nesses. Mine is that in order for my wife and me to have a stan· dard of living in keeping with our desir~ · Ne both have lO haul our "bods"· out or bed and ta.Ice full - timc job respons ibilities. BEN BOELMAN, Placentia (Vacationing in the area) Wlaose Windfall? To the Editor: Your July 6 article "Hike Hurd to Swallow,'' confuses me. You stale that lhe oil companies raised the price of gasoline 3 cents a gallon because or the fourth or July holiday, and that the President's "import fee ad· justment" was only 1 cent a gallon. The President put a tax of $1 a barrel on foreign oil. As one barrel of oil produces 40 gallons of gasoline. that makes the tax 21'2 cents a gallon. and 'h cent a gallon raise for the oil com- panies. THE PRESIDENT put the l ax on lO purposely raise the price to discourage consumption, yet the companies get blamed. And the~ Senate ls now having another ex· pensive investigation to see why the oil companies did it. It might be better to investigate where all that tax money is going. We im- port six million barrels of oil a day. Now that we have a tax of $2 a barrel, that is 12 million dollars a day extra going to the govern· ment. Is this money being used to reduce OW' national debt, reduce our individual lax burden, help our welfare rolls, or is it just another added tax to fuel our ex- trava1ant governm(!nt? It ls con- fusing. GOLOlE JOSEPH l•t"9f•le8••ger To the Editor: T grieve for the deatb of 11- year-otd Don.aid Bobnsaclr (wbo died u a result of a minl·blke era.sh lnto a drivewll.)' barricade at Oran~e Cout Colleae). What a senseless. freak acci- dent-the chain that so many people on bicycles and mini· !:>ikes can't see as they pedal in- nocently along-awaiting death in the making. There is just such a chain at TeWinkle Park where all four of my sons play Harbor baseball. I have seen boys hil this chain on their bikes or run into it by acci· dent. In my mind, I could never understand the folks who strung these potential dangers. No warn· ings. no red reflectors, no strings adorn these wires. Only last s ummer. my then 10-year·old son was running across TeWinkle Park in his usual boyhood abandon when he caught his neck on a guy wire strung to the park trees. There was no visible warning. Fortunately, he was onl)• stunned and as I ran to his sid< when the air was knocked out ol him, I fear ed his oeck was broken. I was concerned enough to call our local police to the scene and file a report. The guy wires came down. but they were back this year. I see them al many park ~ and school grounds. The chain strings are still there. Wh y mus t it cost so much before hazards for children and adulls are realized? Common sense and molher-awarenes:: show me these potential acci· dents in the making. MRS. JOHN R. PEUCHOWSK! lneiling Tlti~~ To the Editor: A condition has developed it our city that is of concern to me . For the past several week~ there have been about two piece:; of advertising matenaJ per da) fastened to tbe front door of m) home. <Sundciys included.) This means that it's virtuallj •impossible for an .occup~t or .11 single family residence m thil city to take a trip for business 01 pleasure without advertising ~ every cruising thief that their pro perty is unoccupied. I believe this form of advertis mg is unfair lo the resident and ~ the police departmeot whos• responsibility it is to protect. lbt property. I urge the city council tc seriously consider the adoptio1 of an ordinance prohibiting lhd conspicuous placement. or ""' solicited advertising matter upot any property. JACK W. BARCUS ORAPitGE COAST DAILY PILOT Robert N Weed. Publuhn' Thomas Ke~nl, Jo:d1tor Barbaro Kre1l>ich.. f:dttonol Pogr Editor The editorl:il pogc of the O.U,. Pilot seek s to inform and stimula~ readers by p~ on this page dh erse com1TU1-......., on topics of Interest hy s at· ~'<f rolumnists and <.'8 by providint( a forum for • '''<-'""" and by prese na thll newsptt~r·s opinloni; and Ideas on current topics. The edJtcttai oPinlons of tbc U1ul · Pilot appear only 111 the ed1t<lri<il coharnn lllt"8 top M th,• p.-gc Opll\i.oftl • presst'<l by the columnJata. and cartoonists and letter ~riteti ve their own and no endora.•11. ol thc1r views ~.Y tbo DaUJ Pilot .should he inferred. Wednesday, July US, iltS' -. . 4,508-aere Blaze. 700 Fire Fighten Battle in Ranchita RANCffiTA CAP) -About 700 nre -lifbters ore bulillng a 4.SOO.acre bru.sh fire. bu.ming on terrain steep enough to test a mount.a.1.o coat. to keep the blaie from reaching 1Some rare big born sheep. Tbe blaze, with flames 20 feet high. bad burned to within a quarter-mile of Aru:a-Borrego ~late Park early today. Fire fighters hoped to contain the flames today, but they kept a nervous eye on the weather. .. lf we get a north wind out of the desert, we're going to have some problems,., a spokesman for the California Division o! .Forestry said. _ lntt~e Baited SACRAMENTO. (UPI) -The California Hospital Association says it will consider ."all legal and legislative remedies" to block Brown administration ac-. tion halting increased payments t o hospitals !or Medi-Cal services. Health and Welrare Secretary Mario Obledo Tuesday en· nounced the increase cutoff, say- ing the action was prompted because the federal government has refused to allow lhe state to limit the increases to 10 percent. He said hospitals were using state funds to ~'absorb" the cost ol empty hospital beds. . ( State J Blcut Ripa Olllce LOS A NGELES (Al>) "There was no warn.ina ••• everyUling just went blooey," said a stunned Mexican Consul General Fernando Femandez after a bomb blast ripped througb his office injuring four persons. More than SO persoos were in the consulate Tuesday when the 12:44 p.m. blast sent doors flying from their hinges and glass and debris burtli.Dg 100 feet into Olvera Street Plaza, a busy downtown tourist attraction llnecl with Mexican shops. . LOS ANGELES CAP) Democrat Teresa Hughes . bec·ame Southern California's OD· ly woman legislator today, win· ning a special election handily in the largely black 47th Assembly District in South Los Angeles. Miss Hughes, who is black and an educational consultant, gained 7 ,230 votes or 62.8 percent to 4,268 votes or 37.2 percent for the Rev. Henry Sellers, her white Republican opponent. .. :Heais ~Ask ; Court Action . SAN FRANCISCO CUPn -The parents of Patricia Hearst· have petitioned to be named conservators of tbe1r daughter's est.ate. The petition was filed Tuesday in Superior Court by Randolph and ' Catherine Hearst. Hearst is president and editor of the ~n Francisco Ex· a.miner. .•. 'The petition said the Hearsts feared "artful and designing persons" might take advantage of their daughter, who was kid· naped by the Symbionese Liberation Army in Berkeley Feb. 4, 1974 and then joined her abductors. Youth Killed . In Accident . GRANADA mLLS (UPI) Richard Hageman, 16, was killed Tuesday by being impaled on a fire hydrant. • Police said Hageman was standing in the rear of a dune buggy, holding the roll bar, when it careened out of control and crossed a lawn. Hageman was thrown clear and landed on the hydrant. • Tbe driver, J effrey Warren 21. was arrested on suspicion of drunken driving. DAILY PILOT .ti I Citations Cut CHP 'Slowdown' Hit ~ • ·: .I ' SACRAMENTO (AP) -If anyone get.I killed because of the truffle tlcket slowdown, the patrolman on the beat will be reseonslble, warns a Calltomla )ltghway Patrol official. Ralph M. Walker, CHP com- mander I or nine San Francisco Bay Area counties, said Tues· day, how ever, that the slowdown participants "have every right to be unhappy.'' · • Patrolmen have cut back about 50 percent on traffic citation writ- ing, on statewide average, in their campaign for higher pay. They had been voted a 17.5 per· cent raise by the California Legislature which Republican Gov. Ronald Reagan approved. But incoming Gov. Edmund Brown Jr., a Democrat, held it to the 10 percent ceiling he has placed on all state raises. The minimum base pay (or un- iformed CHP officers was $11162 per month beginning July. PATROL SPOKF.SMAN Kent Milton said patrolmen in the Riverside and San Bernardino areas are virtually 100 percent involved in the slowdown, with omcers issl,tlng warnings instead of tickets. Milton said "a little less than 80 percent" of the ofticers statewide are participating in the slowdown. The campaign, which began at midnight Friday, is called a "Humanistic Enforcement Ef- fort" by the California Associa· tion of Highway Patrolmen, (CAHP) which says it represents ro percent of the 5,400 member force. About 2S percent rewer tickets were being tssued ln the San Francisco area, said Walter. Walker added: .. JI the public feels they can speed out there and only get a wamlng, there's going to be more speeding and lt someone gets killed because of that. the officer is going to have to bear the responsibility." TUE MANAGER of CAHP. Ralph Schiavone, said comman• de.rs "can make all kinds of com· ments. No officer is going to in- tentionally allow a situation on bis beat that is going to cause a person to get burt. If he sees a drunken, reckless driver, he's 801o&tonaUhim ... J Schiavone said 2.3 million ticket.I· were issued last year,. trom which about $75 mlllloo re- venue went to cities 8Pd counU& : Be said the strategy ls to pre. 'J llUre clty and county officials m. f to penuadlng state leitalatan to override Brown's veto of the re- malning 7.5 percent. ASKED ABOUT poesible ~ cipllnary action. Schiavone aaid. "We're wondering what tbe.y•ve done to warrant punitive action of any kind. They haven't walked off the job. They're helping the public." . : Sperm Bank Sued For .$5 Million SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -A man who stored a iample of his semen at a sperm bank and then had a vasectomy has filed a $S million lawsuit against the bank for ~ccidentally destroying tbe specimen. GREGORY MARTON sald in his class action suit flied Tues- day in Superior Court be bas suf· fered "emotional and mental anguish" because of an apparent equipment failure at the Chartered International Cryo- Bank at Cathedral Hill Medican . Center here. · Marton said when he contra~ .ed Wiih the bank in January, its. president, Robert A. Quinland Jr., told bim his sperm deposit was "fu1ly proteded against destruction" 'by two "fail safe" monitOring systems. AFTER UNDERGOING a. vasectomy, Marton said that OI\ June 22 he received a letter from the sperm bank saying bis semen had been destroyed in a possible equipment failure. Marton 's lawsuit asks $5 million damages plUs $500.000 for any other sperm donor who might have suffered the same Joss. Publi~her Guilty Of.Tax Evasions LOS ANGELES CAP) -A man federal pro· &eCUtors have been trying to nail on pornography charges since 1968 has been convicte<i on 22 income tax fraud counts. BobHope and other stars in free shows! •' Sears op Marvin Mille r, 45, a s uburban Covina publisher, was found guilty Tuesday on fiv~ counts of tax evasion, six counts of mail fraud, seven counts of filing a perjurous tax return and four counts of making a (alse claim against the govern-ment. The returns were filed between 1968 and 1972. V.S. DISTRICT Court Judge William P . Gray said be would remand Miller to custody immediate· Jy pending bis sentencing Aug. 11. But after a de- fense plea, Gray gave Miller until July 25 to turn himself in so he could prepare for the care of his l3-7ear--0ld diabetic son. • .Miller's trial was halted for two weeks while be recuperated from what doctors described as an in· tentiooal sleeping-pill overdose. He is still un~er psychiatric care. ./ Dflttt'D motorcycle ract>s rodeo • TV shows horse show hl.mdrtds of txhibiti;! ~tit j A reputed millionaire, Miller entered the sex book and film business in 1968, immediately draw· ing the attention of vice investigators. Admission Sl.7S Children, 6-12 SUXI Cllildrm undu e.ix -f rtt His appeal on a 1972 misdemeanor conviction for mailing unsolicited pornographic advertise- ments to a Newport Beach man went all the way to the U.S. Supre me Court. In upholding Miller's con- viction, the high court handed down landmark ob· 1 ~=========~~ iscenity guidelines that still stand. IP ,.,-:-:,.,--,--=--:~~-,-.....,....,.-..,,.-,-=~-:o""".~~,....,,...,.-=.,.....,....~-:---1 NewSm~g ·Target Revealed SAN FRAN-CISCO CAP> -A n ew set or f gradu.ated emission con- trols has been adopted by the s tate Air Resources Board de- signed to curb the massive problems of. motorcycle pollution in California. The new standards will limit motorcycle exhaust to 10 hydrocarbon grams per kilometer by 1978, fiye hydrocarbons in l~ and one hydrocarbon by 11982. The smog board originally bad proposed adoption of the one hydrocarbon limit by 1978, but motorcycle in· duatry representatives told the board it could not achieve such a stan· dard by that time. •Shorts •Tops •Skirts Bathing Suits. •Separates • S11111111er Samj>f,·s • Misiu a111l} unior Sizes PACIFIC COAST HWY. AT CAllE MAYOR TORRANCE 378·2795 9038 ADAMS AVE. HUNTINGTON BEACH (714) 963·2221 traditional summer whites ..• from HARRlS; easy car~ dacron cot.ton slt"aight 1~ wash pant, wornw\lb G~NT~ ccilon knit shirt. with bold stripe a. and whit.~ colfar and plack~t. @J~a@@J~@ I Where Thrift Is Always·. In Style Located on the Lower Level This Ad Effective through Satl{tdoy,· July 19 ·cuT. s3? Proportioned-fit Nylon Pants · Were $5.99. 299 Comforta.ble pull-on styie pants fashioned of. f 100°/o nylon. Easy-care ... machine-wa1hable. S_lightly flare d legs. Popular solid colors. Misses' sizes. · Use Sears Revolving Charge Were $6.99 Pants: Zip.front atylt pant a with wide 1t.:Ol9ht • le91, wai1tbond, In snappy floral prints. Ml1M1' sizes. . , 299 399 Buena Park non HOU1S1 Oransre ~rtt;.".~· 2100 N. Tu1tfi Ave. tilO~PM 1150 Lo 'alma Ave. Phone 121-4400 "*'• 6'7·2100 ~ 12 ........... ,. . . '• 7