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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1976-08-04 - Orange Coast PilotI ,. . \ Nemport Woman 6laims Fear --. . {'-- .. Judge Biased, ... Claidls. Defense ';; . DiDl~lf,· Man .. · WEDNESDAY AFTERNOON, AUGUST 4, 1976 YO\.. '9, MO. 211, S SECTIONS, JO ~AGES With 'Hit Jtlan' Victim Tells Fear~ Shock By TOM BARLEY OI 1"41 O•llY Pilal S..H A Newport Beach doctor's wife who spent four days on the run with a confessed "hit man" after he told her over the luncheon table that he had been hired to kill her spent a long day explaining her actions Tuesday in Orange County Superior Court. Defense attorney Al Ramsey was Janice Robinson's Inter· rogator and he a s ked her several times via different questions lo explain why she fled with Anthony Scalise from her Big Ca nyon, Newport Beach. home f'eb. 21. Scalis e, 29, first look Mrs . Robinson, 38. to the Huntington Shores motel in Huntington Beach after he showed her a garrote -a corded rope used in strangulation killings ..-which he said he was supposed to use on her. The self-confessed lifetime con m nn. driven by a young man identified In testimony as Gary, then took Mrs. Robinson HE WOKE VP TO .4 SALE "The first caller woke me up al 8:30 on Saturday morning and wanted to buy the bike. He paid the full price." That's lhe advertising success story told by the Costa Mesa man who placed~'" classified ad: Bicycle. moleberane 10 speed. S70. Day or Night u you nave wheels you want to move, call 642·5678. We make it easy for you to put a few words to work. In the Dally Pilot. . ( . Ha•e Fatal ' Sniper's Act 'Suicide' + .. BERKELEY (AP> -A man who fired dozens of riOe shots from a rooftop before dying in a gunfight with police had left a note saying he did not have the courage to commit suicide, or- ncen said today. · No ooe else was injured \n the shooting, which lasted nearly an hour Tuesday nighL Police idenUrled the vict.im as Donald M. Partrick J r., 29, and said the note was found In his apartment. Inspector Daniel M. Wolke said the nole, written in a barely legible scrawl, was ad· dreaed "Dear Father." "Tonight I'm Saini to be lbc>l to death," Wolke quoted from the note. "I don't hue tbetoUrqeto take my own ure. I am stuck with the terrible rH~lbillty of opening fire on \he palke. I'm fir. Ina an Italian Mm.er. I bave over 100 rounds of ammunitloa." Wolke said Par\rid; bad ... t' \ purchased the rifle the day before he climbed to the sec<Ql· story roof of bis apartment build· Inc and started firing. Tbe buikl· in« is in a mlxed commercial ud residential neltbborbood. The gunman held polJce al b~ f«•rabwta~f~~ fire. Then be varusbed from·'-and WU found dead later. • Wolke said be ''llnderstood." that Partrick's parents live "somewhere in Southern California." 1 1 .----·. ... -··. .Disease .. . -. ' ... .. .. Effects Si01ilar • I .. A 2 DAIL v PILOT s Wednetday.Augusl 4. 1919 : Malady. Toll at· .22 1 ' Disease Re~ins Unidentified HAR1USBtJRO, Pa. <AP> - Stai. health officialt said today they don't know yhen they wlll be able to Identify the mystery .. legionnaire's disease·• that bas kUJed 22 people who attended an American Legion convention two weeks ago. But some persons who had the disease have recovered and that may a1d researchers in tracking down the llu·like agent, state Health Secretar y Leonard * * * · Fro• Page Al. MALADY ••• don in late July. Most of those who have died or the strange bug attended the coo- wntion. l. ·~is pilot started feeling ill lnOl'UY before leaving the East en bis return fUght and when he arrived in Orange County, he consulted his physician," Chin aaid. "When all the publicity came out about the deaths and the dis. ease in Pennsylvania. he and his doctor put two and two together and reported to the County Health Department for tests," the stale official added. .. By that time, however, be was in his recovery phase and feeling better." Chin said. ·-Dr.....Gerold. \Vagner, Orange County health services director. said the county man was never hospitalized, despite press re- ports to the contrary. "By the lime he came to us, he was feeling much better than he" had in the early stages." Wagner said . "He was receiving ex· cellent care from his own doc· tor.·· Wagner said the pilot was at home with his family. According to Chin. the family will be kept under observation lo deter minc if there was any spread of the flu-ltke illness. So rar. he noted. "the rest of the family is in good health." "The pilot is not in any particular isolation because the disease is in a late. generally non·conlagious s tage," Chin said. Wagner noted 1t appears the mal a d y lhut e rupted 1n Philade lphia "is a precisely limited thing to those who were ac tuall y at the convention hotels." lie s aid ll is "certainly a serious thing and we are all very concerned. But there are many researchers and laboratories working to find pu t what the db · t'asc is and how to halt it ii nt'Cessary." Chin sairl his a,::cncy is con- ducting in\'eSltRataons around the stale into other airl1nl' employcs who milithl have con- tracted similar ;11lments in re· cent weeks. Though some have been reported, he said none ha\'c been confirmed. Police Decoy Team Retires . ; SALT LAKE CITY CAP> -The l)Qlice decoy pro tllutcs in the nr- rest of Hep. Allan T. Howe <0- 0tah> for solicilinR sex acts soon may be decoying no more. Their tl>ss says their "cover is shot." MarJ:nrel Jf amblin and Kathleen Taylor. private securi· ty offkors who 11cl as police de· coy pros titutes. made four similar arres ts over the weekend. but the arrests may be about the lust in whi<'h they l)nrticlputc. Replacements prolxahly will be hired, said Police Chief Dewey J . Fillis, becuusc the Hamblin· Taylor teum now 1s too wt•ll known ORANGE COAST DAILY PILOT 1tw O•t\~ .. (o•\t n1111ty t-..iot .... or"I ~•<"h " (""" f'H"fd tM Ntw\ l••ft'\,, "f'Ull"410•l't l•y o .. C,,f•""-"' (•4\t P~h\tHn·t (()n""''' \lf ... '••I.,. •trtift\ W• ...,.,,.,.~ .... ~. W~ I •.U.-W' tor tb\t• Nft ...t. Nf•l~•t t t«.f\ H"9' lttl\jt•.n ~A(PllfO~"tett" Ylll .. y, lr••M, S.~t•t.., ti \letlty •t'(f l~Qy.'\ .. f"•H" ~ff'I (_~t A "~I•• tf'Q!Of\;al ll'f'ffttOM t\ PVb41\fl.t(t .... l~U.¥\ ~ '"" d•Y\ lht· a•1ftf,9<al ~lli\t\10J of•"' I\ ~I J"1 Y\~~I (Ww 'lu·, I, CO\I• ~ .. lAhtN'N" '1•?• Roberl N. Weed f I' \Ut-i f'lif •M ruf't1\N f Jack R. Cur11v Vtc;e ..,,.\•Of'" •nd CrtinefN Miif'lil4'1' Thomas KeevH (d1tf!t Thomas A. Murphine -ft•Q•"9 (di ... Charles H. Loos Richard P. Nall Offices C•> .. N• '41 lJO W.•I fl•Y Slrrtt h Q""• O••<•. 11 .. Ct•,....,.~ \l't"t tiv• t•~ton &1.·#C-f\ ttll\ f\•Mh 6oM"-'4•f'0 ,_ .. '"'" """"' 111~1 l• ""' 11-.81 S.n D "w t 't' .... ., Te1..-tton. 17'4) 642-4121 ClauilllCI Advertising M2,,j671 )ff<lk'-fO Y•lf•, N<••OthU Sll-6310 r rom \•r. (•'"""'"'• 4'5·0UO F..-~ll()f., .... C ... N.~tlft 540-1220 C...,,,qt>I, '"' Or-Coe•I 11'\411"'400 C-o.M~. Ht "-""' \tOtMI\. •ltv~tf.,.119""9 r<tttOlt~t "•Utr Ot ffVUtl\tll't I ftt\ f'l.f tl'lf't IW\tl. 0. nproov1" w101ewt ,,.., ••• ,,._fml\\tOft •I C01Art0M ~·. ........ <l•U "'t•et P•td at 09\1• #1\.0, t.-t1fltir~• WO\Crt,hOft by (iV"f ... .,., '1 ,.. .. ..... """"I " 11 ............ mtkt..-,Cht•Nl-U »lnOnt"lt D1cbm:.n told a news con- ference. Doctors also do not know how to treat -the 123 f>'rsons stilt hospitalized with symptoms or high rever, congested lunp and e.beetpaina, Bacbmansaid. "Some are l•Wnl antibiotics and some aren't and that hasn't had an errect one way Ol' the other," he aaid. There are nc> si1ns that the out· break was abating. o.ity ,.1._ ''-" ,..,... TELLS HER STORY Mrs. Janice RotMnson A 72-year-old Phlladelphla woman died Tucaday,rught and a ft\laburgb man died early today, brtn1ing the death loll to22 . "The disease has not le\lelcd off," said Bachman. "Apparent· ly botb the number of deaths and tb4 number of new cases have in- creased •nd are increaslnii." More than 1,000 federal and state medical researchers have been mobilized to identify the diseue. Al lhe rederal Center for Dis· ease Control i n Atlanta, re· searchers planned today lo ex- amine the first cultures grown from tissue samples taken from victims or the illness. The cultul'•• could provide a clue. "We are ruling out nothing," said Dr. Walter Dowdle. director ot virology at the center. "Tbls could be anything from an infee· lious disease to a toxin." All the known victims of the disease -including two hospitalized in New Jersey and one in New York -attended or were in some way coMectcd with a alate American Legion conve(l- tion in Philadelphia that ended ll days ago. • It was earlier reported a Con· necticut man also had the dis- ease. but Connecticut health of· ficlals later said he does not have It. There has been no confirmed evidence of secondary spread of ine disease, Bacfiman said, out added that it was still too early to dJscount the possibility that the disease may be spread to others. In an interview early today, however. a slate health depart- ment spokesman said there were six unconfirmed reports of the disease amon g peop l e in Philadelphia who did not attend the convention. "Thal has not been verified," sa id the spo kesman, Bob Costello. "It looks like it might be so." All the victims have ex- perienced the same flu·like symptoms: headache, high fever, congested lungs and chest pains. Bachman said those symptoms are consistent with the swine- typc nu that appeared in New Jersey this year, prompting plans for a nationwide im· munization program. They are also consistent with viral pneumonia, he said. Fro• Page A J DOCTOR'S WIFE. • • ncr. Mrs . Robinson, obviously tired after a long day on the witness stand, appeared to re- sent Ramsey's probing into the value of the couple's communi- ty property. She refused to confirm if the property jointly owned by herself and her husband was t·orrectly \'Ulued at the figure listed by her divorce lawyer in November, 1975 -S2,114,183 in net worth. It was the only question or that type that Judge Rutter seemed prepared to accept and he practically told Ramsey that 111 u hearing held outside the prt'sence of the jury. "I don't want lo hear the domesti c relations Issue or Hobinson ve rsus Robinson argued In this courtroom." he told Rams£>y ... J'm not happy about this kind of questioning beeause I think you mJghl open ::i Pandora's box that is not con nel'lcd wilh this criminal triul." The bulk of the valuation fi gure on the Robinsons· com· munlty property ts repof'ted -to h<' in a chain of pi2ia parlors JOlnlly operuted by the cou1>lc before their se ~>aratlon last July. Other elements o( the valua· lion figure Inc lu de Or . Robinson's practice in Irvine ••nd Mrs. 'Robinson's $300,000 home on Augusta Lane in Big Canyon. Ramsey appeared to press Mrs. Robinson hard late in the day on the Issue ot the sleeping arrangements in the motels visit· ed while the pair. sought refuge in Huntington Beach and Los Angeles and Ventura counties. Questioning the attractive blonde witness on her-state ment that aJI she took with her frorn her home was a single change of clothing, SS In cash and no credll cards, he asked her If she ever made the statement to an in· vesllgator : "And thenwewentto bed." "No," Mrs. Robinson replied. "I didn't and we didn't." "Well, did you ever make the statement to an Orange County In- vestigator that 'we got up and then called tee (a family friend?" Ramsey asked. "I don't remember that. I was probably speaking in vague terms," Mrs. Robinson replied. Mrs. Roblnsoa told Ramsey that there were several reasons ror the flight from Newport Beach for herself and ScaJi1e: among them her rear of her husband, Sc~lisc 's fear of Robinson and the police and the need to allow her fam11y and friends to list her as a missing person. It was not until an Orange County l awyer came to Ventura and spent a day convincing Scalise that he would not be jailed If he came back to Santa Ana a nd told his story that she and Scalise were able to return, she told Ramsey. She told Ramsey that she never undressed in the presence of Scalise ... I only had three or four hours sleep during the whole trip and most or that was In the car." she testified. Mrs. Robinson r eadily iden· tified the garrote held up in the courtroom by Ramsey as the de- ath instrument that ScaJ1sc said he was supposed to use on her. And she identified as forceps the surgical instrument which Senlise said he was given by her husband. The hit man told the jury that the forceps were lo be used to extract Mrs. Robinson's birth control device from her body as proof lo Robinson thut. she was dead. Robinson was arrested Feb 25 at u Santa Ana service staUon after he allegedly paid Scalise a fu rthe r $1 ,000 in a t rap engineered by district attorney's investigators. Officers said a loaded gu n Cell from the doctor's waist.band as they overpowered hlm near the gas pumps. Bo th Scal ise and Mrs. Robinson teslirled that the hit man took SI0,400 o( Robinson's money with him when they tenon their four-ctay lour or three coun· tics. Solon's Mate Under Study SACRAM ENTO CAP> -A Jegls lalive subcommmee is call- ing ror the termination of' a Los Angeles·ttrea prepaid health plan whose marketing executive is William Burke, tiusband of Yvonne Brathwaite Burke <D· Los Angeles>. The Special Assembly Subcom- mittee on Health Care tnvesllga· tions Is also requesting a "housecleaning" among state Health Department emptoyes who hondle prepaid health plans. The recommendations are In a repart released Tuead•Y. The re· port had been given to Gov. Ed· mund Brown Jr. late Mond~. · o.u, ""' sun ,...._ CLEMENTE BURGER STAND HAD UNSCHEDULED APPOINTMENT WITH WRECKING CREW 65-Ton Crane Trucking Rig Brings About a Premature Redevelopment Fro• Page A J DEMOLISH truck come by four hours after it did, four or fi ve employes might have been buried in the rubble of his sland. Wi ll he r ebuild? "I don't know," he said. "That's a good question right now." tually, he--added, he's think· lng of relocatin'-. Carter HQ To Cooperate WASHINGTON (AP) -After lashing out against President Ford. Jimmy Carter assured top Democrats today that his pre- sidenti a I campaign will be coordinated with slate and local races. Carter said he and his running male, Sen. Walter F. Mondale. will keep in close touch with Democratic National Committee headquarters in Washington, even though they will run their campaign from Atlanta. Carter sought to quell doubts expressed by some Dcmocratie leaders about possible problems arising Crom the separation or the presidential campaign from the national campaign effort to elect Democrats to lower office. Reseue Futile Heart Attack Kills Channel Swimmer Efforts by two beach visitors and Newport.--Be-ach ~medics proved futile Tue&day afternoon when a Balboa Island resident s uffered a fa tal heart attack whUe swimming in the channel north ol the I.al and. The cause of the death of Glen J . Weir, M, of 209 Coral Ave. hips been attributed to a heart attack by the Orance Count.,y coroner's otnce. According to police, Weir was swimming oft the Apolena Avenue beach when be apparent- ly lullered a massive attack. Robert Shaughnessy of Brea who w aa aunbalhlnc on the beach said he saw Weir 1top1wlmmlng. so he dove into the water lo rud him. Shaughnessy pulled the un- conscious swimmer to the beach and with the aid o( an uniden- tified passer by, administered cardio-pulmonary resuscitation until paramedics arrived on the scene. Medics continued resuscitation attempts while laking Weir to Hoag Memorial Hospital. where he was declared dead on arrival. ffi_n_n_tin FURNITURE , Weir's wife told polict' that her hu_s.t>_and had a Nst.ory of heart problems. Beer Loot In Killing KINGSBURG CAP> -A clerk at a convenience ll)arket here was shot lo death during a robbery In which two casea of beer were stolen, police aald. Marshall WrhrhL 31. or Klnsbura, was shot In the chest at point blank range Tuesd•y night by a bandit armed with a 12·gauge s hotgun , Sgt. Dennis Parker repor ted. Witnesses who heard the blast notified police over citizens' band radio, and two officers arrived in time to sec a vehicle speed away rtom the Cirele K Market In t his southern Fresno County communi- ty. Four suspects were ar- rested later. Principality P,CV!<l(ri M"!di1..,oneon ~ in!pfo iM new coiechon of b<.-<lroom lur1'>hllt lrom Thomos.ile . Hor'!. 1olon1ed d1niqner\ ho•• blended the che-•1:.hed 17th (!ln•..y d«oror,... rno11fs of tt4fled u1Jlt .mon from 1ho Lord<!< Oeo\ of l1dy. Fronce and Spoon In leep•"J •·•h the c.cwwv ~\ of tiie col1Nt1<1n. P"<'Y p«un ._,.col< ~ OIY.J wood ptodurn Ott coef.Aly Mtl«led and blendtld 1oqe11>.,. 10 pn~ o 90n tealure OfP':>QlotJl'I 10 1ht~ \•y">. F-v Ol\I) delolinq With lo·"' l \h('"'J•h. ce<t0on decootMJ po•' and < ""«I rllo><t\ ryn \1mulo1ed WOO'I Hod ~ ond othor \f'e<•ril ''""'"ICJ t«lnqoo\ tteole o new l••.h Ill' 1'1<11-ICIP/\LL Y w.th ....r.ucl ch-ity and 11 ltYn I I r .. v .. d lh" tf.~o< l•.IOIJly Of fhe w .. J ., ion v.1 •t~'f 1..i..:•..,.J I'll 11 .. , mo11• I ,.,Jr,,.,." .,, rJU"' .1 room Pl1110/\LITY offu \ you 11 ~ rJ,,..1·""1 ""'""f M....-t.t•.,t1Mtlf• belll!y ond 11 .. , 11100;, ,,,11., 'IV 1l11y II• II yv1 ho,..,.. dui.etv<•~ 1. .. i' I I• ··~· : ,.: II 5749 1865 HARBOR BLVD. DOWNTOWN COSTA MESA PHONE 548-5131 Al .. 0..0- Rt• .. • .... cwte , \ 'Nednesday.Au9ust 4 1976 DAILY Pll.OT A3 County Endorses New ~~-Low-denslly AP Wor~pMle RESCUE SQUAD REMOVES BODY OF FLOOD VICTIM One of Nearly 100 People Who Perished in Colorado Flooded Canyon Begins "Healing' l.O \'EI.,\ NI). Colo t i\ P Thl' f1001l r'il\ a l!l'<I Big Thompson Can~ on .. looks I tkl' a ca1>nt·ious l!Od tl;11W<'<I amolo. tn tlw plat·t.• <:o\ Hil·hanl l.am111 suul alll'I !!IC'ellll! lhl' an•a \\hen• m'url~ 100 persons dtt•d "Thl'l't' is ffiCl\l'ml'lll Tht• Jll'CI pie are 1·om1nj! hal·k The h(·:1lm14 process has bt•1.nm . ··he all<ll'<I Lamm fie" b~ hl'11coptt•r oH·r the ont'l' m :11csttcalh heuut1ru1 'ar ullon an•a Tut•sda~ anti said . "htlt• llw lit•\ asl.•lton "a:. ~n·al. the scl.'nt• ".1s more (•nto11ra~ini.: than 1l h;ul lH•t·n tht• morntnl! arter thl' r ;11n SJlJ\\ IW<I fllKHhllJt A 12 foul'' <ill ol "Jlt't h.1rrl'lt'<I its\\ a~ throuAh till' l\\ l'>ltni:: nvl'r can' on Sa tu rthl\. lloalml! hou!'es ,rn ~~. s rnashin'i:: mot.nil' homl's He's Really Wheeling i\Nl>EflSON. Ind <APt ln1han;1 St all' Trooper F.arl Fra11r1s om·t• had to arrest a llrunkrn airplane pilot, but ht• hacl never l><'t'n c allecJ on hefon:• to stop a wheekha1r on an tn· tC'r!>latc ht~hwa~. Franr1s ~to1>pecl tht• !iouthbound 'l'h1cle on IW. It was cru1s1ni: aJoni.: th<' C'mergC'ncy berm .11 S1' tenths or n mill' an hour Il l' said thl' "ct1 l\l'r. who had both lcgii; in <aca~t . tClld him he was hl'U<hni.: ror Tl'nll<'S!IC'C. The man. 1.1tr•r 1rlt'nt1£it1I ••S J!'nnm'> l'h11lips, 27. of An<i<'r~on. ''as ehari:cd with ptihlir in tox1c·at1on. against the towerinl? rock walls and burying the dead under silt and sit me. While some who survived the noo<l returned to their washed· out homes. others waited for ''ord on the fatt' or loved ones. An usused hospital was set up as a morgue where identification \\US :ittemplcd for the battered and torn bodies recovered from where the rushing riverdepasited them. Seventh corpses were in the makeshift morgue her e and Larimer County Sheriff Rooert Watson said more bodies were wailing to be remo\'ed from col- lec·tion centers at each end of the canyon. Nat ional Guards men. volun- teers and search and rescue teams were in a fourth day or searching today among log jams of twisted metal and splintered '' ood for more dead. Watson. who earlier predicted an eventual death toll or 200, scaled down the figure to 100-150. But he admitted to reporters. "You r guess is as good as mine." With an airborne evacuation of ~U r\'i\'OrS completed, the list Of tnJurcd stood at nearly :xx>, the missing totaled 250. T he fe deral government e!lt1mated property damage at u~1 to $100 million. Robert Rosenheim , r egional a d · m1nistrator or the fl'deral Oepartml•nt o f Hous ing and l 'r ban Dc,·e lopmcnt. said that much monc,· had already been st•t aside for r eli,cf and re- construct1on, with more availa· ble ir neeessary. Watson estimated it would take a vear JUSl to clear oot the tons of debris. Reronstruction, he said. \\on·t comc as quickly. Approach Eyed By G.AllY GRANVIi.LE O! IMt 0111• Pitel"'°" A low-density, Mgh-0pen space land use plan for the Irvine Com· pany's prized 10.150-acre un· developed coastal area was t'n· doned Tuesday by the Orange County ,Planning Commission. The commission's unanimous endorsement Is, in effect, a re· comme ndation lo the county Board of Supervisors that au amendment to the councy's land use plan be adopted that en· \'ISIOns : -An ultimate population of 38,868 residents in what now is Fired Cop Fights Rap In Laguna Ousted Laguna Beach Police Detective Carroll Bush has ap· pealed his firin~ by Chief of Police Jon Sparks to the city personnel board. Bush was fired Thursday for aJ. leged gross misconduct. misuse or a city police car . and for con· ductin~ personal business during on-duty time. A police offi cer for 12 years with the city of Laguna Reach, Bush will recei,,e a hear· ing from the personnel board within 27 days. Under city law. the board will make a r ecommendation on the appeal to City Man ager Al Theal. The recommendation could range from r einstatement to confirma· lion or the chie f's dedsion. Theal may acce pt or reject the board's recommendation. No further ap- peal ls provided for. The personnel board. composed or three citizens. must make its recommendation within 10 days of the hearing. Bush was terminated following n week·long inte rnal police de· partme nt in vestigation into events July 22 in San Clemente. Bush was accused of using his badge and forcing his way into a private home in San Clemente to retrieve pe r sona l prope rty belonging to his 17-year -old daughter. O<!leclive Alex Jimenez. a 20 year veteran or the force accom- panied Oetecti ve Bush in an un· marked city police unit during the afternoon incident. He was sus· pended for three days without pay for his part. County supervisors are set to conside r the recommended coastal la nd use amendment Aug.18. Supervisors can reject, accept or alter the la nd use and traffic circulation plans endorsed by the commission. The commission's decision, which came In a series of quick 5-0 votes. came at the close of a public hearing centered mainly on the policy guidelines later ac- cepted by the commission. In recent months, five public hearings were he ld as the rate or the largest single piece or privately owned ocean shoreline in Calirornia was debated. Priest Defrocked VATICAN CITY <AP> -The Re v. Giovanni Franzoni. a dissi· dent priest who announced he was giving his support and vote to the Communist party in the Italian elections, has been defrocked, the Vatican reports. the undeveloped 3.7 mile·long strip between NewP<>rl Beach and Laguna Beach. -Roughly 75 perce nt of the coastal land devoted to ope n space-recreat ion use. -Major ocean front tourtsl· cqmmercial development limit· ed chiefly to on,e s ite. -Construction of 14,413 re· sidential units mainly northwest or Los Trancos Canyon on Pelican and Wishbone Hills and along the San Joaquin Hills ridgeline. ' -Limited e ncroachment into the Laguna Greenbelt. a policy partially dependent on public ac- quisition or gr eenbelt land. -Acquisition "for public use the beaches and bluffs des ignat· ed open space" in the land use amendment. Planning com missioners al· tached to their endorsement of the proposed land use amend· ment 29 "pa ges of approved policies covering development of the coastal area. They also tagged on 10 mitiga- tion measures suggested by stair of the county's E nvironmental Management Agency (EMA >. . .-. ~Ut f'lleUUtl PMta And, for good measure. com· missioners also ordered a resolu· tion-ttlling for "solicitation from all possible sources" funds for the acquisit ion or open space within the coastal area. FUN, COMPANIONSHIP NAME OF GAME FOR TRAILERISTS John Roberts, Lota Ptank Enjoy County Sunahln• They also attached to their en· dorsement of the proposed land use amendme nt 29 pages of policy guidelines and 19 mitiga· lion measures. F1•n Draws 'Em Commissioners went on to or· der a resolution prepared that will call for solicitation of funds from all possible sources for the acquisition of open space within the coastal area. 1,500 Trailerists GatMr . The resolution. if. adopted by the commission next week. will echo similar resolutions recenl.ly adopted by the Irvine and Laguna Beach City Councils as well as a pollcy position taken by the Newport Beach City Council. Fulfillme nt of what com· missioners foresee for the Irvine coastal area is. to a great degree. dependent on the fate of a $280 mHlion state bond issue expected to be on t.be November general election ballot. Proceeds from sale of the bonds would be directed to the public purchase of coastal land. The land use a mendment en· dorsed by the commission Tues· day was. for the most part, the handiwork of the county Environ- mental Management Agency's <EMA> staff. It was, in effect,~ compromlse between lower de nsity proposals and a plan s ubmitted by the Irvine Company. The company's proposal came at the end or a three.year study known as the Irvine Coastal Community Multi-Agency Plan- ning Pro~ram (TtCMAP>. The TiCMAP proposal sug- gested an ultimate population in the ·cQastal area of about 48,000 residents and construction or roughly 16,000 dwelling units. Under the TlCMAP plan, 65 pm-cent or the area's land would be devoted to open spac~ And ther e would be three m ajor tourist-commercial de velop· ments along the coastline. GEM PRICES RISE You'll never buy for less. By STEVE MITCllEU~ 04 I"• Dally Pol .. St.1111 T h e y c a I I t h e m s e I ,. c s trailerists and 1.500 or them are gathering al the OranJ{e County Fairgrounds this week ·ror one purpose, compa nionship. The motor home set beAan ar riving at the fairgrounds Tues day. and by midday hundred~ ~f tr ailers. motor homes. mm1 homes. van COO\'ersions and cam· pers had lined two areas set aside Jorthegroup. They are all m ember'5 of the International Travel and Trailer Clubs of America OTTCAI gathering in Costa Mesa for their 1976 international rally. "Most of these people are re- tired.·• expl ained George Calhoun. a 71 -year-old public re· lations man from San Diei:to. "They follow these rallies around the country just to renew ac· qualntances and see the United States," he said. The ITTCA was formed in 1954 by a eroup of r etirees who grew weary of touring the country alone. Many of them have cut their home r oots, relying on friends they m eet along the way for companionship. "When they hear about a rally, they gather from all parts or the country," Calhoun said. "Some of the people here drove out from the East Coast just for this six· day event.'' And it's a busy six-days for those who want to participate in all the events set up by the host California division. "All lhose wbo would like to sign up for the Knott's Berry Farm trip, please meet by the re· g1s trat1on d esk." drones an amplihcd \'Oil'e over the mini- city Ten m mutes I at er. the same \OiC'c, sound int: like nadar on the MASll t<•lcvis ion sel'ies. drawls, "All those who don't think the ladies can park their rigs as well as the men. come to the main en· tranre and see how it's done." The trailer clu bs display col· orful banners with names such as the CB Rldgetyl\ners. San Diego Yellowjackets, Boondockers and the Uga Shontons. There is even a handicapped trailer club. named just Olat. comprised of wheel·chair bound trailerists. who manage to took out for themselves. The lrailcr1sts. about 75 per· cent of them retired, put on their own parade. perform skits and visit area tourist spots like Dis· neyland, Catalina and Knoll's Berry Farm. They don't mind company. so if you're in the area. drop by and see the m. That's what they're there for. 81S W@llil lf ®®lfWO©@ The column appears today on Page BS Gem prices a re !llill lncreaslng and are expected to continue an upwaro spiral reflecting the pressures of general inflation a nd ~ growing scarcity combined with mcreasing demand. /!l1$mfflld/f/J¥ We buy gem s and jewelry six months to a year ahead, and when these purchases io Into our s tock their prices are based on costs al the lime of ordering. So we can look al what we paid for gems six months ago and compare eo1ts with what we are buying today for six months rrom now. Prices are going no way but up. Brilliant 14k Gold pendants and earrings. each with its o'Nn diamond. Oftlp#tff .,. OOl11ccl OI "'"*'""'· 1823 NEWPORT BLVD., COSTA MESA Seaside Seascape Krnl ~t athlcu 1 right> und hi brother ~tare· udmin• th •tr h:mch\\ork al the retaining wall near l t.'P~ Llollow ralk ·~ Laguna Ht>arh Tlw hrnthC'r!'. alon~ ''1th Bryn Bernard. all or Laguna, painted the mural to "make the place more beautiful." It has previously been co\'ercd with graffiti. To offset rising gem prices, which do not fluctuate like gold, you should consider some of our estate pieces. These are usually lower in price than comparable new Items. Another way to offset rising co!lls Is to avoid pro- crastination; If you plan to buy, do lt now. And give serious consideration to the overhead savings inherent on the operation of an Independent, owner -managed store. CONVENIENT TERMS BankAmerlcard-4.1n ler Oiaroe 30 YEARS IN THE SAME LOCATION PHONE 5'8-3401 ' ,I t 44 DAtLYPILOT Wednesd!y.AupU9t4, 1111 CIA Artt.,tt1 Mfud.;.benalhg · Drugs Tested WASHINGTON <AP>-TheCIAuaed ftdtralnwcoUcs::~olld· mtelster txperiaaeatal dnaCs to WlWlWnc infosmQll qd IUS• P9tU 1D a pro1ram aimed at riadiq chemicals that coaJd alter human bebarior, accordlqtonewlydeel ... mect1ovenunentdoc111Dent1. The documtntl released today &i v• previously undisclOMd delalla of a pn»tram inlti6Uy ouUlned by both tbe RocbfellerCommluion deltroyedAmost tue1 on the·pc>O- and tb"e Senate lntelllaence com· er am In 1973. mittee. Both lnveatlaaUona ol the CIA ~E NEW DOCUMENTS were prorram, which beau in 1955and obtatneclundertbe P'rttdomofln· wu known as MKULTRA and formation Act by the Center ror MKDELTA, suffered from a lack National Security StucU•, a of lnlormatlon because the CIA liberal research ~ Jobbyiq 1roup concerned wath foreicn * * * policy and national aec:wity. • ~IA Eyed f)rug Vse . ForPOWs . ; WASHINGTON <AP>-ctA in· lerro1ation experu wanted to U.e truth dru11 on American i>riaonus of war returnlna from the Korean conntct, but the plan )lraa vetoed by government tsealth official1. ; The plan waa outlined rw1hJy rn CIA document. released today i&nder the Freedom of Informs· lion Act. • ACCO&DrNG TO THE pre· ~IOIQly secret documenli, mem· t>ers of a CIA project on lmprov· ing interrogation met.hods hoped to use their techniques on POWs returnina from Korea in 1953. Memo1 on their meetings show they dl1cu11ed druas. ah~lc tre atments . h ypnosis, u l - trasonics and other mind control methods without stating whether all these were considered for use pnlhePOWs. Over a series of meetings, mem bers o f o n e grou p discussed offering their services in the interrogation or returning POWs. They bemoaned that public and congressional pre· saure to get the POWs home as quickly as possibl e "had in· terfered with a well worked-out proaram in connection with the ?QWa." ,.,...,,..... .. ..... ~ Trl .. Jlll• U.S. Rep. Donald W. Rei~h) Jr., Flint, a liberal who left the Republican party three years ago, won Michigan's Democr atic nomination for t h e Sen a t e. Ile races ~ Republican r.1 arvin Esch in • November. According to the newly re· leased documents, the technical services division oC the CIA con· tr acted with officials of what wu th~ known as the U.S. Bureau of Narcoti cs to h ave m ind· influencin1 dru11 tested on unwit· Unc1ubject1. In on~document. a CIA lnapec· tor ceneral noted that the CIA felt the dnl&• needed lo be tested ln "normal life settinp ." THAT WOULD AU.OW a com· plete study of the drugs' full capabilities "to produce d1H bl· ina or discrediting effetb or to in· crease the etrectlv~ ol inter· rotation of hostile aubjecU. •• The inspector 1eneraJ's report said that under ihe deal witb the narcotict bureau, the CIA financed the o=on ud established "safe " where U..--nar~ics-..a&ent& could.. dll· penae the druga and record reac· tions by those who took them. {'<Jo CIA men were present wbeo the drugs were administered, the re· port said. Some subjects were· 'informers or memben of 1u1pect criminal element• f rom whom the <narcotics) bureau has obtained results or o per ational value through the tesll." according to the report by the inspector general. an internal agency watchdoa. "ON THE OTHER hand, the el· fecllveness or the substances on individuals at all social Jevels, hi&h and low, native American a nd fo r e ien . is ot erea t sisnificance and testin& has been performed on a variety ol In· di v tdual s within th e s e categories," it said. The CIA was troubled by a pro- ble m in aathedna resulta, because after narcotics acenta dispensed the drup there waa no cuarantee that an ageol would aet a first-hand look at the subject UD· der the influence, tbereport said. But, it said. the teats did ette the aaency valua ble experience In perfecUng tecbnkaues foe covert· ly deliverinc.drup and in idenU· fyina effect. ol diffei-entdr\lis . Another problem wa the e(fect the e x p e rimental dru11 tometJma had on thole wbo re· ceived them. "IN A NUMBER OF in.stances . . . . the teat 1u bJect hu become ill for hours or days, incluclln& bospitaUulion in at leut one case," the report aa.id. ll said the agent Involved in tUt cue had trw ble floding out the ttf ect ol lhe dru1 and bad to make "fUarded inquiry after the test aub~t'sre· turn lo normal lire." In ill deal with tbe n•cotics bureau, the CIA set up safehouses on the West Coast in 195S and establbhed a slmllaroperallon on the East Coaat in 1961, the docu- ments said. Despite worriet about riahta of cilliena, lhe 1963rePOrt, l.n recom· mendinl dlscontinuln1 the pro· gram of testing drugs on un· suspecting human subjects, ap- peared m oat. concerned about proCecling the CIA image and Its top administrators. .,.w,,.....,... SHARON (STANOING) AND JERRY LITTON They and Th.W Children Ole In Election Night Craah Rep. Jerry Litton Victor Kilkd • In Plane Crash CHILLICOTHE, Mo, CAP) -Rep. ~err,y Litton, his wife and two children and two other people were killed when their small plane cru hed as they headedloward a celebration of hi• victory in Mlssouri's Democr alie-suatodal prlrrulry. A few hours after the tragedy, Litton was declared winner of the f lee· tlon fOf' a Democratic nominee to replace Sen. Stuart Symington, and bUslne11m an whOwu bOrn in wholsretlrtne. a three.room house near Lock Livingston County Sheriff Sprln11, )Jo., recenUy told an in· Kelsey Reeter said the plane had tervlewer b e had orialnally had apparently Just taken off from threeaoalslnlife: Chillicothe airport Tuesday ni~ bound for Kansas City and s "I WANTED TO HAVE the banklnc for a tur n when finest puru·bred catUe operation nosedived about 75 (~north or' in the world; I wanted to make a U.S. 38. The wheels of the plane milliondollars ; a ndlwanledtobe caught on a bar bed wire fence and elected to the United States House the aircraft burst Into names on of Representatives by the Ume I impact. was3Sor10." On the House floor , Rtp. U'ITON, JI, WM killed out· right, as wu his wife. Sfiaron, 38: their two cbiJdren, son Scott. 12, daugbterLinda, 13; and pilot Paul Rupp Jr. and his son, Paul Rupp m. . Late into the night, residents were sitting on the hoods or their cars around tbe courthouse in Chillicothe, many crying. Reeter said he would or· der an autopsy on Rupp. U lton, a millionaire far-mer Wil liam L . Hungate CO.Mo.>. euloaiied Litton. "It's sad but iron.le that he died on the ni1ht of the greatest victory In hialife," he said. Hooae Speaker Carl Albert told reporters. ·'This is one ollhe most tragic things that hu happened since l came to COftlrest." He said Litton was an outatandine member of Con&resa, "very re· sourceful. very friendly wlth a tremendous followlnc." Red Cross Halted in New Rescues BEIRUT, Lebanon <AP> -Ef· forts to evacuate more wounded from the Tal Zaatar camp an -an armbtice lo end the 16-mootb-old Lebanese civil war boa&ed down today. An International Red Cross convoy to the besieged Palesti· nian refugee camp in Christian eut Beirut was delayed le.aving the Mosle m sector. Security sources said Red Crou delqate Jean Hoemur and Arab Leaaue mediator .ilft11an Sabri Kholi were having trouble getting the Chris tians to renew the tern· -porary-cea1te·fire which ~atbled them to Temove 91 casualties from Tai Zaatar Tuesday. Hoefliger said be plaMed a convoy of 15 to 20 vehicles today and hoped to evacuate at least ISO wounded. A Swedish doctor in Tai Zaatar reported there were 4,000 wounded in the camp and said 1,400 had been killed since the siege began six weeks ago. The convoy of nine trucks and two ambulances Tuesday was the first the Red <.:ross had been able to get the-Christians-to let pass. Car Safetff Prowd WASHI NGTON CAP I Trans por tation Secretary Wi lliam T. Coleman Jr. today begins deciding whether the gov· ernment can teach American motorists to protect themselves in auto cr ashes or whe\her It must protect them with space age technology. G H II . 0 h A hearing Tuedsday was called real a t ers to help him decide whether so· ' called passive restraint systems such as the controversial air D bags are needed in order to re· amaged l·n Quake duce the highway death toll or whether the job couJd be done cheaper and better by increasing TOKYO (AP I -Some oC Peking's noted structures, including the the use of seat belts. Great Hall of the People, were damaged in the earthquake that hit lJ.S E11 Bl Th northe•t China last week, the Japanese newspaper Asahi Shiml>un re· • e• fl rer portedtodayfromtheChinesecapital. WASHINGTON <APJ -Gov· Aaaht's Peking correspondent ------------ernment regulators are going to said lt had been cOl\firmed that Kyodo, reported sighting refugee scrutinize the auto industry's the quake caused d•age to the tents at the foot or the Great Wall economic structure in what may auto giants, General Motors. Ford and Chrysler. The Federal Trade Com. mission said Tuesday it is RrO· ceed ing with a full·acale fo. vestigation that its stafC called for last November . The agency said it has cleared the action with the Justice Department. The Investigation Is expected to be time-consuming, and if 'he government finally decides \o me antitrust charges. a court battle is certain to stretch on for years. Bl E.recNted KHARTOU M, Sudan CAPJ The Sudanese government ex· ecuted 81 men early today for the abortive attempt to overthrow President Jaafar el·Numairi last month, the official Omdurman Radio announced. The broadcast said 16 other persons were sentenced to prison l~rms ranaing from 10 years to hfe. upper part of the historic White north of Peking. The waJI held off be the first skirmish In an an· Pa1oda In Pelhal, North Park; to invaders in ancient times. Utrust battle against lh~. U.S. more than 30 reel of the mud brick ·;=========::::;============~iiiiiip;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;=:;:;;::;;;::;;;::;;;:;;;:;:;;::; waH of the old palace: and two parts of the w al I of the Great Hall of the People facing Ti~ An Men Square. The Great Hall 0( the People ha been the scene oC numerous banquets for foreign cliplitarles, inc:ludina President Ford and for1Q11 Prealdent Rk hatd M. Nixon. WESTERN DIPLOMATS in Pekln1 reported that Chinese autbortties were coatinuinc the earthquake alert In the ~eking area although there hu been no I indication for two day1 of a new majorqualce. ' The Asahi correspondent quot-! ed Chinese s ources as s•ylng ll will be possible lo ease the earth· quake warnine around Aug. 8. The sources were also quoted as aayina they expect the af. ter1bock1 which period.icalJy jolt the area near Tapgshan to-sub- sldeby tbaulme. Peking residents have been campin& outside their homes for days in e"pectallon of another .major quake. THE PEKING correspondent of the J apanese new• agency, l Mild Skies Warm U.S. • >. Moat of Great Plaim Under Cloud Cover s • .., ...... ..., ..... t. ~•ocNr ti ~ C10 flOI "-your -1W & JO o"' Colll Mlore 1 OM. --C09Y •oll be _ ... ed. Salllr*t .,., lllllldl'f ",... do "°' -rOUf C011J ., f All\. Utf b91o1e tO e 111, ... ,eoo. CIOew-" M _.....,, .. \ IS 50 II .0 ~ SI .olO II St .. u .. ff h SI .. .. At mldnlOlll, Pl'lllllP•burg, Pa., ,,. •tttd II ftO•Ht, """II• Ill Ht• Yoo , Elmira tllcl C.len F•ll• botf\ ••t h ttrtcl so. At '"• Hme ume. .....,.,.,. hH IM 11t llon'1 hl9h It"" lleftlwrt •t •. Callfertlla ll't mtrt t i lht ""'• "° num ""''""' w""" ••• l11tr ro:r Soutl\tm Calllor111e, Ill• l'l•llOftel WtetMr S..\'lc•vn. s.mt •-(levels wlll 109 POn'-of tllt eottl 111 tl'le mor11lfl9'o -.,,..... 1119\, llolltl ...... ht 11'11 MW'lllY-t 11111 ... ,..,., '"'-" fllurl4Ny. HiO"l Ill dtwftto-l" Alotptles , .. lie""' 16 ,.,.,.,.,, •rtll IM meteury cll"ll>ol!fte_IO.,.flNrtMv a tH wlltrt, cee U•I artu •fld Y•l~yt wtll M¥t Mtht lrom 1' .. IS, .... "'""' ,.,. _w,,, 111 .. '°" -lr9ml6le tOSl11IM WWft- ~ ...... tt'eadwr WE ARE THE ORIGINAi. SMALl BUSINESS Behind every big bualn••• there la a amall bualn••• -or, a lot of amall bualn••ff•. The Prealdent h•• declared U.I• week to be Small Bu1fne11 Week -• national Hlute to • vltal part of the nation'• conP merce. We think ft to be an appropriate time to recognize more than 900 very 1peclal 1mall bu1lneaa people -the boy• and glrla whoa• bu1lne111t 11 to bring you the Dally Piiot • Our bu1lne11 11 to keep you Informed. Our carrier• help make It po11lbl• Tor us to do tt\llt. And, whll• going about th•lr bu1lne11, our carriers learn a lot about what It la to b• In bu1lne11. We think that'• Important bu1lne1a. DAILY PILOT I ' - Wednesday. August '· 1976 DAILY PILOT AG r' Case Rested In Pugil Death &u•..,....8•• Actor Clint Eastwood and seven other in· vestors ih a Fiji plan· ta.lion are suing a ninth (or neglecting the Island property. The y want th e partnership dissolved and the cattle, banana and {>ineap- ple plantations sold, plus damages from .«hocolate magnate Paul De Oonenico. I PA&AO&NA (AP> -A balkJ robot arm on the Vlldq 1 &Meter b• Jmn..,..S for t» •ecend time, tbwartiDC acMa&llU' effada to make an orspic ...a11'9ofth• M.Wf_~v.Vartian MU tbat etlll( determlae ii ll _. • ., .. A decilloa • bow to aet the vm 1Doving •1aJn wu expected today. Vlldn& otf leJ'11 reported Tuetd1y nJght that the met'hanleal arm uaedto callett soil for experlmen&I In the Jander'a aophl.aticated •utomated labontory bad ftOt completed Its prosramed mis1>ion a ner dlJ· Cini lntothe MarUansurface. ONE OF THE laboratory instruments, a au chrom•ta1raph mus spectrometer. "did GOl re- ceive a aoil sample today," sald Vikin1 spoketmlll Larry King. The extension arm reached out 95 In· ches, dug up some solJ and retracted about tht In· ches before It stopped, he said. Viking officials met durin1 the niaht to de· termlne what might have caused the arm to jam. It had also jammed during preliminary testing, but scientists then found a way to dislod1e a pin that blocked the arm from moving. I FRANK BRISTOW, Viking news chief. ~aid 1cieoti1ta believed the problem might be in a rail· Nie mechanism or the lander designed to halt the arm In cue or some related problem. The arm had previously delivered soil to two other experiments using separate mechanical sequences. Bristow said that Viking scientists have theorized that In order for life to exist on Mars the rust-colored soil must contain organic molecules. The organic uperirnent that was tempon1rlly stymied by the stuck arm would help to determine whether sue h compounds are present. MEANWHILE, VIKING scientists said they now bt'lieve an unexpected abandance of oxyaen produced from the Martian soil Jn ao<Xher of Vik· log's test cells probably "'as not the result or life forms . Tht-researchers said Tuesday the unl.'xplalned generation of ~as from a soil sample had almost ceased. "We are gravitating closer toward a non· p ua.•1 II D d biological explanation" of the gas production, said '"" • ~r .-a Or. Harold P. Klein. head or the Viking biology Lord Thomson of team. "But we are not 100 percent sure It's not Fleet, own er or an biological." international chain THE STRANGE G~ emlsaion from the soil or newspapers in· sample probably resulted rrom a chemical process eluding a number in in which surrace oxygen. released by sunlight, de· CaliCornia, died in a composed a liquid food added to the soH In the test London Hospital to· cell, scientists said. . day . At first there had been speculation that the ---------emission was caused by some life form breaking down the nutrient. But Dr. Fred Brown. a biologist for TRW Systems. manufacturer of the life.seeking laboratory package, said the experimentaJ data "have almost zero chance of being a message about life ... He added that many or the scientists OD the of· ficial Viking biology team agree with him. TV Medics Face Real Emergency PALOS VERDES SAN DIEGO <AP) The go\.crnment hos re l· ed its ca e an the hearing to determine ar M arlnt' Ca.pt. Cecil V. Taylor will be tried on charges stem-ming from the death or a recruit. Maj. Joho Grant, defense counsel ro1· 1':i)'lor . was eJCpected to complete the defense prcscntutlon todar MAJ. ERNST U.A. Schultes. who hl!S been COD• ductin1 the hearing. will then recommend whether Taylor will face a general court-martial on eharaes or dereliction o( duty In tailinl( to instruct and supen·isc peri;oonel under bls command. Taylor iii former head or the Sperrnl 1'rolning Branch, a unit for problem recruits, at the Marine Corps Recruit Deoot. IT WA.Ii IN Taylor's unit where Pvt. Lynn E. MeClure. 20, of Luf'kin, Tex .. was ln.Jurcd Dec. 6 while bema forced to undergo special pug1l :1hck bouls. McClure remained In a coma until his March 13 death In a Houston hospital. Let·~ Oo ~ailing . •. IM llAunPUl~AMA l'OIMT HAHOI RIMT A SAILIOAT VICTORY 21 OMIEGA 14 CORONADO 2l A THllU. YOU'\.L HIYU FORGET I •Motor ........... . •loftoMC'-'IMJ ..... s-.. tat DR. NORMAN HOROWITZ, head or the a chemical release experiment, which is looking for signs of photosynthesis by Martian organisms - among other things -said preliminary data have indicated only that Martian soil is quite dry. <APJ -The television EMBARCADERO crew for the Emergen· cy series raced a real MARINA Execs Transfusion Wrong ,LOS-ANGELES IAP I -The .de.atlL. of Tafl Schreiber, u director or MCA. Inc .. who died after transrusioos or the wrong type blood. was caused by clerical error. a UCLA Hospital of· ficial reports. Cops Nab Chino Slayllig Suspect emergency while film-a...c.Mro P1oc~ ing at Marineland Pier D-, .. HorMr. CA. in PaJoe Verdes. ~~,._.;;·~11~1;41~4~•;•·~•;11~1~~~~!!~~~;~~ A scuba diver on the crew was apparently s ulf e ri n-g Crom e bends, more technically known as an air em· bolism. County rire de- partment crews rushed to the scene. and a U.S. Coast Guard helieopter flew Nikki Amorosino, 25, to Santa Catalina Island ror examination. CLEARANCE SALE Dr. George S. Smith, director or clinical laboratories at the h<>1pital . said a technician in a blood bank. who was typing two blood samples at the same tim e, wrote the wrong type on SChreibcr's chart. The 68-year-old Schrejber was ad· mitted to the hospital OD June 3 for ucologic s urgery . lie died June 14. .. The technical work was ac· curate." Smith said in an interview. "A human error fouled up the system." Cf11pl Sit~ of Sla11l•9 COMPTON CAP> A 76-year-old South San Gabriel woman who visited the crypts or her late husband, daughter and son·in-law ha.s been btudg~ed and strangled to death. 'police say. The eouncil -on a 10·4 vote - asked t he atate Department of Transportation lo end the projeet r~tricting rush hour use or one lane to car pools and buses. Councilm an Marvin Braude said the Diamond Lanes waste time and energy and increase accidents. ~'o-laMll Die• Agabt SACRAMENTO <AP> -The last no-fault automobile insurance bill or the year is dead. Opposed by insurance companies and trial lawyers. the bill would have required insurance companies to is- sue policies requiring. payment or drivers' costs In an accident. regard· less of who ca used it. The troublesome question proved to be the rj&ht to sue ror additional losses. LOS ANGELES (APJ -Chino police arrested a man early today in con- nection with the murder last May of two Catholic church members who were gunned down as they patrolled the church to prevent vandalism. Los Angeles Police In· vest igator Jack Jung said Chino poliee accom· panied by LAPD officers arrested Gi lb ert Corde ro. 23. al the Greyhound Bus terminal in Los Angeles. CORDERO WAS taken to Chino and booked for investigation of murder. mother of three. died on the eve of her 30lh birth· day and on her first night of patrol. She and Padilla, a 43· year·old maintenance man with s ix children, were talking with her husband when the shots rang out. Amorosino was found to be out or danger by doctors. SENIOR CITIZENS loCW Off All m JU Parcl••••• • 111.V ON All PURCHASES I 8l OM NG A ilM\[R Of OUR SENIOR rnlzcNf SA~INGS PLAN AT NO COST TO YOU. All Prt·P.W IX Pro9ra•1 H1Hrell RE::ti: " U.ltetl Offer SIGN UP NOW : · College Pharmacy . . ~ ,\ ' . ' ' . " • I . . • . : . . Style change and discontinued models by Adido•. l imited sizes and quonitites. mm IOITE CAIL0 .1 ... $24.9S UHITAIE ........ uus --------. SP01n ........... u•.9s IOIY ............ uus NOW $1 ·9ts ROD LAVER •EG. s151s $19.95 AMERICANA lEG. s1515 $23.95 Martha Eddlngton's body was found In the mortuary after a n anonymous telephone lip, a Compton police spokesman said. ~" ......... s ...... , Manuella Cortez and Ignacio Padilla were killed in a fusillade of ri- fle fire May 17 as they stood in the yard at Our Lady of Guadalupe Catholic Church. .~~~==============::;:::_::=;:::========:::;;:==;;...._-----....__ __ ---------------------- She had gone to an alcove in the two· stor)• Indoor mausoleum on Sunday. ·Dla•o•d' End A•ked LOS ANGELES CAP> -Diamonds are rorever. but the City Council is hoping the sam e 11 not true of the com· muter Diamond Lane project on the Santa Monica Freeway. LOS ANGELES CAPJ -A city council committee voted to seek re· commendations aimed al controlllhg sidewalk newsracks after 500 persons attended a hearing on the matter. Most com plained that the curbside racks were "1\SighUy, dangerous and sold publlution11 which contributed to juvenUe crime . . The committee asked ror recom· mendations In two weeks. Mansion's Sale Stalled in Vote SACRAMENTO (AP> -An attempt to put the vacant Sl.3·mlllion governor's mansion up tor sale hu stalled in an ANembly committee. but its author says h~ will iry for pasnJ?e agajn next week. The bill by Sen. AJrred Alquist, D·San Jo:,e, was blocked on a 4.3 vote ol the Assembly Governmental Organization Committee, one vote short of passage. THE MANSION. a project or former Gov. Ronald Reaun, alt.I unoccupled on a bluer above \he American River about 14 miles east or downtown Sacramento. It hos been a problem for the state ever since Gov. Edmund Brown Jr. caJled it a "Taj Mahal" and reruaed to live in it. BE•'ORE TUE vote on the Senate-passed bill, AJqui1l amended It so the mansion and Ila ll·acre site could be sold or exchanged. lie said Sacramen· to County miaht be Interested In such a deal. MRS . CORTEZ, 2 Appointed SACRAMENTO (AP> -Thomaa K. Beard or · Stockton and M lchael Glazer of Los Angeles have been appointed by Gov. Edmund Brown Jr. lO the California Waler Commission. One or the "no" votes came from committee cholrm•n Bob Wilson, D·IA Mesa, who uld he did not think the stat, could recover anywhere near Its • expenses for the mansion. W.pey1M alb. CMh fora.riuncena & other,c1Mn,houl1hold~ 'Ra ~uarlar mac TNINEWEST IUT MOT JUST AMOTHB STEAKHOUSE vou pertc>nallv pick '/OAJf own steak from our gourmet thOwe... enoote the cut & thic:kneA voo de51re from our Cholee Ea1tern Com-fed Beef. Salad and Potato llWIVI Included. GRAND OPEMIMCi SPECIAL! WMA,.n ....... .,You UHi TMI UACT Sfll IAM~ o•• ' Ol.I Of YOUI snAI L..M~.-l 1·2:JO ""!! ......... , Mii11r Dair 6 II ml •. c.ast .., .. w..t .... 141-1177 wnlcl'l l~tuoe1 alumllwm toil. pit !)Int lrozen IOO<l an<I dinner trava. d~. p11ddmg ano 111&11 eOl'llalnert C.nain 0111er etnn, all· atum1n11m Jttmo can bo '~ C.t1 y0ur Center tor Otfllls lrtno It to Reynold• Alumlnum oranee Rearcllno 'tent. 210 E. MHtt Avenue ] Meats Ave. • Katella Ave. Tuesdals:ru Saturday -9:00 a.m. • 4: Phone 4271 for Information on M schedules In your area. ' ,; . , I • ,,. DAIL PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE t Vote Should Qe ·Open T he lluntington Beach City Council has completed a shakeup of the Plannln~ Commission and Recreation and Parks Commission-and sened notice that me m· bership on other city agencies und boards is coming up for sim ilar review. Undou utcc.lly. the shuffling Is well moUvated. The rouncil ~ppan•nlly wants an up·lo·dale list of com· misl'ion mtmbers with maximum qu-.Jlfications. But it does posetwoquestioms ls it proper to keep secret how lhc council votes on the com m ission members? Is there some danger that future councils m ay end up appointing new commissioners every two years us possible poll tac al 1cwards? On the fi rs t point. the selection process. each coun- <'11 member now natcs candidates on a personal scale . Points are added secretly and Utose highest on the list arc simply announced. -It is the nC::tme of the game these days to stard up •und be counted . particularly so in Huntington Beach M'hose mayor has proclaimed an era of open govern· )ncnt. If this is the case. it seem s to us to be in order for 'the public to know how each council mem ber voted on ~he var ious candidate!>. • Al the very least, the results <:ould be re\'ealt!d at the end of I he \'Ot ing process. • As it stands now. the city administrator a nd city al· torncy add up the \"Otes of each candidate a nd the :mayor merely lists the names of the appointees. :· On the second point. if the reappointment of com- m issions is carried out. there is a possibility that com- .missioners could be junked every two years a nd their 1our-yearterms would be meaningless. council member~. lf the city council doesn 'tllkc the ud \'ice it is giv~n. it canalwaysbru h lt aside. The present council <locs. however. have an urgu· ment in fa\'or of reconstituting commissions. Then.> are three new mem bers and they feel they should have a voice ln the it· m akeup. However, it Is dlfflcuJt, indeed, to muster an arau· ment in favor of rontlnwng the secret voting tcchni ques. • • Face the Facts The people of Huntington Bench for the first time have a realistic picture of what 1t really costs to put on the Fourth of J uly parade. An exte nsive analysts released this week put the true costs at $50 ,000 with some bills still outstanding. City ofCicials last year budgeted $15.000 for the an- nual event with an agreement to pick up overtime costs of poli ce a nd public works personnel. The idea that the city could put on the parade for SIS,000 is a joke and has been r egarded as such by ad· ministration officials. Now that a ll cards have been put on t he t able. it is up to the people to decide if the event in its pr esent form should be continued. T he par ade for July4, 1977, has not been budgeted and it is clear that if there is one. officials will call for drastic changes which might include s ponsorship by private corpor ations. A thorough accounting or aJl costs has long been needed . : This could ha\'e serious effects on continuitv of the 'commissions and could cause the loss of valuable ex· J>crtise. · Commiss ion members also s hould offer a ~alanced \'iew of all segments of the community a nd a ot necessarily r eflect the 'iews and ptliJosophies ol Apparently it came about this ye<1r for the first time because of the change in adminis tration and in council leadership. The re ar e indications that the days of glossing O\'er unpleasant facts areat anend. lt's high time. H/F '\\'ell, I dvn 't ('ltre wlwr you think you ~ee ... OIJJ' u ir force 1ust rclensecl :1 rPµort discount int( unident ifit•d 11yin{! object:;!' A Naf11rol Tra11q1dli:er ifigures Reveal Dear Gloomy Gus Let's Keep the Green Fields Threat (SYDNEY HARRIS ) Most people ha"e no notion of what Sauv~ h os called "the tl•rn bl e power of I hl' exponentwl. .. lf lhey recall the l'Xponenlial at all, it ii; only as a vague term from hiAh-school math . II ere is a ~ 1 m pit• illustrot ion of '4'hal is forgotten. 1f l'\ er kr\own Suppose you quy one ticket lp a lotte ry 1of h e r e one mi I Ii on J ick ets :Hl' ~old : Ob\'l()U~ J ." ~o ur <'hanC'l' or\\ Ill nins: 1~ one in u m1lllon. '.S u ppo s e there are two lotlPrics. (':JC'h ~ell· thg n million t1 <'k<'ls. and you bu~ one ticket 111 1::1t·h. What 1s your chance of winninl! both" Nol one ln two million, or one 1n 10 million. or onl' in 100 milllon. or oven one in a billion. It 1s ont• m a tnlllon -a million mUliontoonc. THIS IS lhe terrible power of the exponential. It was known lo antiquity: rerall the mathemat•· han of le1:end . "ho requested a 1mltan to r epay him for a i:rt>:il favor by '"mt•rely" ~"·mg him u rhessboard of corn gram. The sultan was to put one ~rain of corn on the fir~l squarl• or th£• hO<tnl, t"o on the srcond. four c•n the third. iJn<l ~o forth. douhhn~ rad1 s qu are l o tht· (14th. Of ~·mll'sc. Uw su ltan qu1<'kly k11rm•d that lht•rt• was not enough corn cm llie "hole earth lo ~at1sfr th•~ tic• nrnnrl. \Vhnt dors all 1111~ rrwan m J)rac·tkal terms? ll meun11 that most of us h :\\'l' I 1tth• ich•a 1)( the iitrcn~th of a l!l'Ometric pro gress1on. Thus, an annual rbe of lhrl'e pcrcenl in n population Modern Or iental pro\·er b: PoUtician who proclaims "open gO\'er nment"' may find mouth is r ight size opening for foot. N.H. o_, o ... -•"'• .,. , __ ., ,.._, -.. ...i tM<t U•rllT rtflt<t ... ..... , Of tM ........... ,. s--.... _,... .. 0-T Gvt, D•llT P'tlel seems a small figure -yet the population will ne arly double in a generation a t this rate. The same. oL course, is t.rue of infla· lion figur es ,\TABLE showing the increas· mg population of the world gives a most dram at ic example. At the time of Christ. there were about 290 million p<'ople living on the earth. It took one thousand years to raise that fi gure to 350 million people. Then it took only 8>0 years to add another 200 million by 1650 or so Then it took only 100 years to add 200 million more people. Next. in the century between 1750 and 1850. some 450 million were added. And in the century from 1850 to 1950, the world's popula· lion more than doubled, from 1.175 million to 2,510 million. F I N A I. L Y , i n t h e quarter-century between 1950 a nd 1975. about 1.500 milllon people were added. hrln ging the total to 4,000 million. or four billion in· habitants. t:ven with our r educed h1rth rates today. this will double a~am i;oon arter the turn of the 1·entury I rlicl not s tart out towril<' about 1)(lt)t1lation. but at)()Ut the decep. 11\l' quality of a "rate of J,!rnwth ... Figun•s th:ll seem. at f1rsl hlush, s mall and unlmpor ll1n1 cnn bear lh1• m<>st ominous 1mpl 1rnlion~ for the near future. Thi.' tern bh• power of the <''<. pOnenlial muy threaten us more thun the ll·homh. To the Editor Our feeling about far mland anll fields in Southern OranAe Count~ is backed u1> b~ J?rowing up on an orange ranch and being hfclonj! residents of this ('Ount~. Whill· not opposed to expansion or orderly ~rowth or houses ll<'inj:! huilt. W(• enJOY seeing lht! gn'<.'n fil!lds or vegetables or herries in the 1-·oun- tain Valley :ind 1 luntington Beach area where we Ii ,.e. But how Ion~ can the hold-outs on these farms keep from l)(!mJt gobbled up by builders? How Ion~ can they resist the big dollars paid by land compa ni'es? TUE GREEN fiel~ spanning the area next to our free"'ays Jiivcs t he fe<'ling of open space as well as lovely green view of fields soon to be harvested. This locally grown pr oduc<' and frwt helps lo keep our cost of grocen e ·do" nus well as rc' cnue to lhl' lex al far m sta nds nearby the r csidcnl1<1 l area. Wher<' do we continue to get lhese s upplies if all the land is sold for bu1ldinJ!. other llwn 'alleys in central California and lmpl•nal County? Jn a busy and hectic schedule, 1l is a welcome s ight to come upon a lush field with people picking crops as we return from a busy work day. It a cts like a tran- quilizer without the harmful side effects a nd makes us feel us if \H' have the best or two worlrl agriculture and the wsincss cum· munity. CAN'T WE do something as a i;roup of ronr.:-rncd c·1t1Lens lo keep the s mall rroduct• at-rc•s of farmland in the Southl'rn Orang\• Count y art'll <•nd hel1J our ccologltal C'Ond1t lon. our hl'allh and continue to t'nJoy th(• ahun dance of t r'l•sh pr0<IUCl' in 11tir markets? ls then· ~in,·ont•e!s(•out there who aJ!n·e~ an;I ll·C'ls as" t• clo about our few n.:rn;_1111rng f ielcls anclsm:.sll fnrms'' HOIH:H1' I' BAl<TOI. RAIW~\11 I\ ll/\HTOI. The Bureaucrats Coine First W /\S iil Nr.TON The /\m<·rn·nn lo>. payers rontri boll' ~enerou:.ly t.o o \'Ori ely of \\ orth~ c nuses Rut lhe d<'prl vcd anrl th • deprc~sed. lhr Oiled un1l th\• n11ini;t. usually wind up mt.>rt'I~· with a nr ill ury bcnefi1s. Tht• rt>:tl benefieiarie:<, m,·ar1 ;1hly. orr 'the borcnuerats "ho munagt> lhl'.' pro~roms Tht•y p a y t h e m s e I \' r s R <' n er o u s ~:ll or i e s. t> r o ,, i ii c t.h c m s e I ,. t' s fency off1rl's inti surround O\em ·el\·es ¢'Ith SC<'· (etorie s :t nfi !'Uh · qr d 1 n :1 t es . ; Thc b u sy t:>t1 rc•a ur r n t s Lhen form rom m1ttees. hold lileetings. conduct studies. "rite ~ports a~d issue statements. • After all this ha s been paid for. qJlly a t iny fr i•Ct Ion of the monl'Y if left for the purpose thut wa~ In ~nded. We hll\'C taken up the w pewr itt'r, for exampll', lo 6hamplon t ht• m igr3nl rarm 1£rorkers who loll under miscra· . {JAC K ANDERSON) l)le ronditions to m ake America lhe best fed na tion in history. We ~ent our rcpartcr. Hal Bcrnton. to hve and work with lh"ftl . lie fou nd them h \'ln1t in squalor, ex· ploitcd by the planters, nci.itected hy the government, ignored by society TllE Bl'R EAUCRATS would ncn•r let an opportunity like this ,::o by. J\t the Labor De pt .• .., burcnucrats wangled SOO million from the taxpayer s lhis year to help the migr ant laborers out of the stream and to place them in • rarcer jobs. T he bureaucrul~ sut tit their desks and. with a .:real 'hufning or papers and clacking of typewriter s , drafted pr ogr ams to rescue the lowly s loop laborers. Y l'l these bureaucrat.c; hod ne\er evtn m et n migrant worker. The results are now in for the nr. l half of fi11cal 1976. A stagtter· ing S30 million. of course. went ror the cor e ond comfort of the bureaucr ats. Our colum ns ul>oul reporter Ber n ton · s l' x pC'rlem·ei; um on~ th e mif{rn nl workt-r s. meanwhile. brou~hl down 111\ avalanche of letters upon the Labor Dept. The mail wus :-.o heavy, secr etaries hncl lo u.se a form letter to respond to uJI the Inquiries. THIS HAS procJuced soml' ravor abl e resu ll.s . Labor Secret ary William ,J. Usery ml·I with Agriculturt'l Secretary Earl Rutz to discuss what th<' Ad· ministration could do to help mi· 1ttant workers . Our sources stty Usery sincerely wants to press for collective bargaininf,? rights for farm wor kers. I le also met with reprl'sentatin•s ol_J!le Na· llonal Assn. of Far mwor ker Organizations. u ~roo11 thnt has been rebufred by the Labor Dept. in the past. As a direct r<>sult of our col· umns. the Oc<'upational Safety and Health Adm1njstrMion h<lS also airttd to In pe<>t five times more migr ant housinit next year. More com prehensive standarcls will 31so be issued. ( MAILBOX 11 udt-r1m11 {'rif it• To the Editor ) Mr. J ack 1\nckr~nn ., n1lum11 ul .July 20 ~<'f'ks to rfM•r1·!hl the· "I.us Amt>nt'as"' hou~111i.: pro jel'l. apparently oblh wus ln lhe fuct that this was Onl' Of the I'(' markable achicn•mt'nh of lht• Nicaragun ~o' c rnmcnt in the im medial\' post-earthqu:ikl' pcr1o<I The SJ m1lllon doll:irs warm heartedly i;:h'l'O h~ the li.S Ai;enc~ ror l n tt·rnalional 0cH?lopment amt thl• i\mt>nrun µt.>ople helped m~ J!"' t•rnmt•nt build no less than I I ,WO clwl'll· mgs in lht• record ti mt• of' !I() clays to house (i(),000 hnml'lt.•s.s . This l" S. Agenc~ knows of ttw c·orrec•t ln\'estment 11f l111s sum as 1t h<1s certified tha t these funds haH· been properly used. Thb 1s 't'f) t•asy lo verify WITll Tlf E emerJl<!Ocy action period over. President Somoza. ugain with the gcm•rous as- sistanre of the $. J\.1.0 .. has already commenced u full-sralt• program to upg ra'1e and turn ttlese rlwelllngs into 1wrmanC'nl .liilitmcs with all ronvcnlenct·~. cons1:.1tcnt with the ongmal plan- ning. Mr A nrlerson would a lso know. if ht.• cared lo look inlo ll, 1h11t my gon•rnmrnt has pro· vided honws to Hi0,000 1nhahi· rnr1ts or nt•urly 50 percent of tht' f)re·carthqn:ikl' pop11lat1on of lht• l'apllal <'llY of M anai;:ua An addi· ti11nul 20 .000 hous1n~ units arr run;J!ntly un<lt•r ('onstrul'lion a~ part Of 1hC' ~O\'('rllml'nt'.s C'Om· I' r e hen i; i '"c> p I a 11 t 11 11 rt>,. id c • further house~ for t tw llm t::-1 • income ll<'Clors ol tht• popult1l'C Cilfll.l.EHMO SP.Vl l.LA SACA."i/\ "rn hassador or N1cU rtlj1Ull Pc-f lt1r .. 11fm .. nt To the Editor· Regar'11n~ the Af1?h on t$lory. "Lassie Come lloml· " , A~ain1 Wt' sec un onim11I lra.-iicnlly lost. conru1wd. nmonit stran~er11. who~<' llfo would have heen over . Literally thousands ot loi.t animals pHs throuJth Ora nge County /\nlmal Shelter yearly. In most cai;cs. hud the unirnal been weitring a h ccnist• and 1<1entifica· lion tdl(. the owner and animal would l>e happily re\tnltC'd. Too many pct owners feel their pct will never r un away. A visit to the shelter <lt.>n1es that. P lease. do~ and cut owMr s. spend a small amount of money for an l.D. lag a\l·ailable through veterinaria ns, pct s hop. and by mllll. It will ~ave you ond your pet a lot of heartache l. ROt;Sll l.inlalr Char9e To the Editor: I deplore the spml of Mr. Pull· lng·s letter in the July 25 Mailbox If<' seem<1 lO Indicate lh<•t an adult is not re.,rxinsible for his act ions. lie further l'a~l:o. aspersions on :i mim's charac1t•1 becaus e he hns been in thl' Sl'rvice I rt>sent this WE SF.!'\O a man out tn clo a Job und .st•rvc his counlr~ and do our dirty work. then we 1111hrall• he has a b('nt for murder 1 am an ex·Ma nne and m the :u H'ars that I ha\'C been out I ha\'t! i1cn•r had worse than a traffic ticket The Bible commend:. se r\'iCl'.' tu one's country. \·Ve alsosc.>nd the Police lo du 1)ur dirty \\Ol'k for 11s • ~hould "e also t•ondemn them as being inclined lo be killcr s'! Environment does not sha1>e 11 man. A r eal m an shapes his en· \lronmenl. i\I any of our grctit leaders were ex-ser"icemen. All of us have access to guns. bul M' are adults an<! re:-.1>onsible for our own actions. Olhl'l'S miitht twlp us by bein g l!oOO nrighhors. bu~ the~ a rc not responsible for our Ul'linns before Cod or tht' law .I Al\l ES 801.DI NC; Pflodfe Pal• To the f.clitor This ll-tter is reAarding the art• de about Pookie the Poodle. which appcarerl in your pap1:r July 15, written by Anne Cooper The response to PQOk1e"s dilem - ma (a lost pooch who had obvious- ly recently givE'n birU1 to a litlcrof pups by a Caesarean section 1 wui< overwhelming! ~t y ne1~hbor. Sue Middlebrough. and I recc1\'ed ap proximately 50 l'honc t•alls with offers of food . n ew homes for t>ookie, as well ai-monetary don a· lions to help pay for her needed surgery. WE WISll to Inform )OU nnd your readers th:.sl, with their help, we wer e a bl,. Io ha \'C the necessary su r i,t<' r y pl'rfor mt.'cl 'er~ successfully. Shr 1s re · cupcral1ng nicely \\t! also h url enouj:(h money left <h N ' art er thl' surgery to lw ve l'onkic spnycd We had infornw1l llw A111m;il Assist ant•c• I ,l':ig11t' that 1l un~ money was left '-lflt•r tlw l'~ ~t \~a~ rcmovcd th;:it 11 \\ uuld he donat<·cl to their or~eniint1on Tlwy tolll 11s instc11d to u~c llw m1mt!y to ht1'l' her!lpayed. whir h hus tx.'(•1Hlc11w. Than k::! to c vcryon(' who helped rcsol\ e Pookie's muny prohlt•111s. It turn('cl out she had four owners in four Wl't•ks l~for'<' turn Ill!! 011 ul m y home Pooki(• now has 11 permonenl homl' twrl' with my family. ~he won'L lack for lnve and all cnt ion in ~pile of tlw fn<·t w • ha v.-thr<•1• very s mull t•htldrcn :ind t wooth<•rclogs. l>O t.OflJ.~S SH/\ Y Falrt•leac Frh•nd• To the Y.<litor tn the July 2:1 . issue ol' lhi' Daily Pilot. Mr On n 7.. Miller . or lht• DC'pt of l lcullh. was quot<'d a11 soymJ!, · .. nlC'rC' has b l•cn c nns idrrablc con· troversy around Fuirvi('w, In · \"olving two d1rfC'rent ~roups of l)arenL~.·· As president M Fairview Fa'm ilics a n d F r icndx, the 1.700 membc.•r orirnnli••tion of par ents a nd rriends of the Fain•1 •w clients. w • urc l'<'rl nln· ly not oworc or ony ot her hospila l·wldc "grour> or par<'nts"' al Fairview, and w(' feel thut Mr. Miller's statement. therefore. could lead to misconccptit>n~. tn addition. "c ••r(' <'C'rtainly n o t ow:tre thut Fair v iew J l-'am1lll'S und Fn(•nrl~ was a part of u ny · 1•nn t 1•0, t•1·i.~ oround t'a1rview." unl{'1'S our slnt'c•rt• und n •p1•:ilt•rl 'Oll'l'<J i.u111>0rl of our mcda·al ll11·l•1·tor \\:IS con· ~tru<'ll to ht· ('On trn\'1•ri;l:tl f r unkb , "•' al't· :mi.:t·rcit uml rathel' bt'" i ldt• n•d h~ llw ncpm•t mentoflll·:illh's Jt·tion AS t• AR ENTS "Im ha"' ha ti lht• pll-a~u1·1-· ol \H1rk111~ "1th 01 'foto sinec tht• int'l'PI 11in or our or ganiiat11111 some 12 ~ t'.trs u~o. \\ l" have found him to Ix.• most sup port1\'e or our efforts und ('>. treml'ly f<tir . I! egarding his management. we ('Onsitkr lhl' positive feedback Wl' have hud over the years from the ov\•r "helmmg m:ijon1y 01 our mcm bers to be significant The changes for 1 he gooct lhut have O('{'urred at Fu1niew dur 1ng Dr. Toto's knun• r annot lw denied. and in our op1nion, lhl' state has foohs hl\' pt·rmiltl'<I th1· loss of ;,in cl\tr<•mt•ly <·apahh• mNli ca I d 1 rel'! or a 11<1 h us shnw11 little n •gard for lht• l'airvic\\ dients by this action WAR HEN A. SNOW Loae·c•f111f f '•md To the Editor. With food s hortagl':O. becoming more seriou s e\'ery whcn.·. rouldn't you do someU1ing to pro- mote the manufatture and sale of i;rapefruil marmalade. makinit use of the millions of tons <if Arapefruit hulls which art! now be· iMth rown out to ror> They make 1l m Argentina. they make it in ls rucl. but I am sure no On<' makC"s 1t in this coun· try . HE RE IS u pot(•11t1al rcsourct.> availabk f1'1•1• throughout the Southwest unit in 1·1orlda. I prC' fer tht• Argentine i.:rapcfru11 marmnladc lo thC' oranJ,le pro- duct -it tws mort• of thl' t uni: of the Sf'villc orun1 .. w 1>roduct. pn" frrred by cplc·un•i; It may lake a l1ttl1-• prumotwn to gel 11 l\I artc>cl . hut con'S11kr how attractl\'C lhl' n •t :111 pr1 l't! should Ix-. with l h • low cost of the 111 grcdlentH ! Jr wf' would look urouncl our country with 011 11H1111ring cyr. I wa~er \\l' would find mun~· Vt!gctablc 11rnclurt!I. now bin· i1idercd wortblcss. wlll<'h could lie con \•crl c!I into low·co11t . nourl~hlni:t 1 oo<.I FllANK KWCK OAANOE COAST DAILY PILOT Uol1NI N Wl'td. /'ul>/1~/ll'r T1111ma1 K11r111I. ~:d11or /larl>crlJ Krl'1/)IC'll ~:d11or1ol l'ayr Ed1111r Thl' eo11oru1I 11ni:c• of the Drtll> Pilot :CL'ck:J to lnfnrm nnd sllmulotC' re11<11·r" hy 1m•scnllnf1 on lhi:c v111ot1• d1wrsl' commrntury on topl<·~ of lntl'rt'lll by i1yn(llC11l• \'fl columnilll!> and co r1oonl ·u. by provl<llni: a forum for re1tdrr11" \'1cv. !I :ind by pr esentlna this nev.11poflrr'11 oplnion:c nnd i<lcu~ on currt•nt to1>lcs. 'l'ht' «lltor'lol opinions of the Dully P1lut appt>R~ onl in the• l'dlto1 lal column at th~ l01> of t hl' pu~c Opinion~ rx· prcs111"1 b~ th<> columnists and r1111ooni~l~ and l1•t,1•r writrrs urc their own :ind no en11or emcnt of their vlC'14S by the 0.:11ly Pilot :chnuld be inft:rred. Wednesd1ty. August 4, 197G ' Wednesday. August 4, 1976 DAILY PILOT A 1 THE FAMILY CIRCUS• By Bil Keane :Qoon Walker Now 'Wgh' on Religion By JOANNE REYNOLDS • Gt.,. Dally ""lel r.w11 • ·som people belle\·c the Bible was written specifically Cor earth· lings and they believe tbat m a n was never ~ant to go to the moon. "Others who have ione there fe•l othttwise," says Jamee Irwin. who would seem lo be a man or contradic· tions. I didn't belle,·e tlt one SURMOUNTING the Um-.., that God could have physical limitations or just as eas ily used C\'olu-space travel Is goin3 to uontoHlspurposes. be man's g reates t "But now J see a trend achievement. Irwin toward the process or believes. lhln1s breaking up.'' He noted that even a Irwin says he also manned Journey to Mars believes there Is In· Is 1oing t o have telligent life outside of enormous physical pro· the earth's solar system. blema to overcome In Based on the Clndings ierma ol time s pent in ol the Viking project he space and the hazard.~ ot says it's obvious thrre I radiation. no lite on Mars, the mosl To him, travel to other journey Uke that would tak e thouaa nds of years." h~ uld. "The physical reatralnt.s are insurmountable." the power would come from the m ind. "There is a tremen· dous power m the mind and spirit of man." THOUGHT AND mat· 'iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii--iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii{j ter transmlulon will probably be th' hithWIY to the stars Cor'manldnd, lrwlnuld. ll would be a pr«elS not unlike radio or television t rnnsmlnions, he explains, except that He piloted Apollo 15 t.o the moon in 1971. Toda~. he spends all of his time and talents spreadin• the word o f Chr ist through his High Flight Foumlut1on. likely place to find It in solar systems will not be ---------- the solar system. depertdent on any vehic le 8·"- Call 142-5111. Put a tew word• lo work to,. ou. ~ ·-.. ,.. __ _ --lie describes hi rnself :simply as a Christian who is technically in- clined. ~ ASTRO-CHRISTlAN James lrwtn He acknowledges that since the fastest It could hJs theory of life el&e· go would be slightly where in space brings more than the speed or with il a suggestion light. "So even then, u or extraterrestrial visits _:~:.__:::._:.:.:~::::_.:_ __________ ~~~~~~~~~~ "" It okay if t don't sit down? There's too much SAND in the tub~ Lltl. Boyd Harsh Sound Natural Too Maybe you '\le read that some doctors ar c using laser beams to check glaucoma hl'mor- rhages, to burn out cancC'rs. and to <>xccule other precise surge ries an ailing human bodies. But did ~·ou know such laser be<ims now also are being ust.'C! to get rid or unwanted tattoos? Already pointed out the curiosity of those word.s.."ca\•eJ" and •·unra,·c l" which mean the same. How many other sjmilar S) non~ ms can you come up w1lh? Start with "nammable" and "inOammablC'." Add "regardless" and "irregardless." What, you say "irregardless" is not a word? It's in the dictionary. QUERIES FROM O .IENTS Q. "Will it make my dog fat to ha\le him fixed?" I A. ~ot unless you fix him with too much food . The canine experts now refute that an· cient notion that all dogs need to be bred at least once to be healthy, content and un- frustrated. Q. "'Ask your language man who first described jealousy as 'the green-eyed monster'." A. lie finds no earlier reference than the one in Mr . S hake s peare 's "Othello". · If sand is ~ilicon diox- ide. <is lhe science boys aver. then there's \'ery lit· Ue sand. if any, in New Mex\co's White Sands de- sert. Whal 's there is granulnted gypsum. llARSll SOUNDS THE RE'[IRED astronaut came l o Newport Beach Monday to open ttre five-day visit of the Mobile Space Museum, a traveling dis- play based on his mis· sion to the moon. The exhibit. housed in a trailer localed on the s outh s ide of the Broadway Department store in Fashion lsJand. features several pieces of equipment used on the trip, including Irwin's space suit. It is open to the public, free. from 10 a.m . to 6 p.m. through Saturday. Even gi\ling a special t e-u r l h-r o u ~ h t.h e museum. pointing out the s hovel he used to dig IT WOULD BE dif· ficult to fit his religious beliefs into a niche since his views reflect the technical expertise of the space age coupled with a strong faith in God. He says, for instance, he does not believe in e\'olution. "There are gaps in Darwin's theory. I don't believe that man c\lolved from an ape. I don't believe that man evolved from any lower form oflife." But that belief is not based on flat acceptance of the Bible's explana· tion of the Creation. Rather, Irwin says, be believes the universe 1s movi n g toward a homogeneous s tate, rather than a e-ontinuaJly upward evolution or life. to earth -UFOs. BUT HE SAYS he doesn't bellve In UFOs. "That 's probably beeause 1 haven't ever seen any and I've been looking for years and years," he explains. Irwin ques tions whether other beings have r eally visited Earth. "If a nother civilization reached Earth, they would want to record their landing. Every moon mission took a plaque which was a record of the visit. ··communication between peoples is the most important thing we have. Why would some advanced civilization that had mastered flight through space come only at night and land in the boondocks without leav· ing any record of their visit or trying to contact a trench on the moon or "THAT'S NOT TO one or the r ocks he say," he cautions, "that brought back, the 46· -:::::=================~ year-old Irwin displayed us?" no ej!olism about his ac· complishment.s. IN HIS BOOK published a few years ago. Irwin declared that his space flight renewed his faith in God and Jesus Christ. In 1972 he founded the High flight Foundation to further the cause of C hr is tianit y in a technically advanced world. The foundation put the museum together as a Bicentennial pro- jed. Man's advance into space, he exp I a ins, is simply part or God's divine plan. JOHN D. ROSEN, M.D. GENERAL MEDICAL PRACTICE ANNOUNCES RELOCATION OF NEW OFFICES AUGUST 2, 1976 140 1 AVOCADO. SUITE 407 FASHION ISLAND-NEWPORT CENTER NEWPORT BEACH BY APPOINTMENT OA Y ANO NIGHT CALL (714)640-0760 Now thru August 10, 1976 Any pizza Any pitcl.ler ..... 54.9 TAX Client contends that all harsh sounds are man-made. that no nolse in nature is ominous or blatanL Can't quite buy that one. sir. Groan M a tornado is ominous. The roar of an avalanche is downright terrifying. And not much else Is so blatant as the s ilver cat. That's the scream or a tree trunk, sometimes heard across the woods or a winter night, when freez- ing moisture expands to crack open the trunk. Incidentally. oftentimes a tree that's ripped apart like that in the night will mend It.self in the morning so you can't even see the wound. Remarkable. Irwin is a soft-spoken ~~~:~=~~~ .. b·'r· .... ~~·~ ... ~~-E@l·~~~E@l ... ,....E@l ....... E@l' ......... E@l' ... ~2@1--....................................... ~ ... ,.... ...................... .... The national and even international nature or M lssourl Is noteworthy. I think. Therein you'll find towns called California. Florida. Louisiana. Missouri City. Neva.da and Washington, plus CUba, Lebanon, Mexico and Holland. •Addrt11 mail lo L.M. 8ofld, P.O. Bor 1560, Coata Mesa 92626. Chain Sued~ By Woman~ A Buena Park woman l v1ho claims in her , lawsuit that she became ~ the target of retaliation after the city tried to halt the screening of obscene movies at a local theater has sued the Pussycat ~ ;:;::;;,~Qaa:=:;;:a::.&lf!!!;;:;;;:r.;;::;;~:-.0~·£"'".'Z::o:;;i::;:;;:m::;;r...~Theaters c hain and operator Vincent Miran· da for more than $2 Deaths Elaewhere ..a million. ENID, Okla. <AP) - Retir ed circus pttf or mer Nlca "UttJe Nick" DeBercay, 91, who 1t.ood an inch shy orthrff feet tall, died In a holpltal Monday. BURBANK CAP> Travel agency rounder ltobett W. (Bert ) Hem· plllll, 79, one or the had ·estimated that he Donna Bagley claims had flown , c ruised, in her Orange County walked, bicycled, and Superior Court action ridden camels over al that she was sued In least five million miles,. federal court action made 38 trips around the beeause o~ her demaJ?<Ss world, spent five years that the city ta~e action at sea, and logged more to hall the showing of~­ than 1,800 airplane legedly pornograp_h1,c nights movies at the chain s · Beach Boulevard Dftltlt Notltt11 world's moat traveled ,000 men. died Tuesday. He v11101N1• s . Fooo. , •• ,..,, of CO\t. Mtw, c.1rror111a.. D••• o1 ., .. ,,. ----------.Jiiiy 2t. ""· S<lrvl .. G ll'f,,... ,,.,.._ MLTZ ... Rot"ON ............ NI .. O•e<•~ 1'09QolC-~·AL HOMI ~:·J~,':!~· ~~::::· .. ~==: orona del Mar 673-9450 ,..,, Frio•r. Auquu "" •• 1 11 ~M. Costa Mesa 646•2424 Bell lr0;00w•1 Cl••~I wltll o-1vete Ill· ttr,,,..,t. ,,.., .. w,.. wl!" mo ·- RU BROADWAY MORTUA"Y 110 Broadway Costa Mesa 642·9150 MoCORMICIC MORTUARY Laguna Beach 494·9415 San Juan Capistrano 495·1776 PACWIC VllW MUIDRIAL PAJtK Cemetery Mortuary Chapel lr-t It f~ 0,,,,... COVlllY 0111<• f)f 111( ..... IO AnollyMOv' e.u .. .-., lillOll-yclirKIOt~. HIOLIY HIELl!N L. HIOLIY, r•lklelll of i...-Nl9uet, C•llfor11la. O.t• of Clo- •I" July lO, t'1•. Svrvl••d llY htr -· Je<k ............. ''""" """" C.._..,. 0. Wo•I f-••I _.. .... w...•rt:JO PM, o·c-~ Hiii' ~ll••rv. UJOI Allele p __ ,, La91111• Hlttt, Ca . An, RO!lerl L. ..,,,..II o111<1at1119. lnt•r-111. El Toro C•-t•ry. 0 °Con11or Le9una Hlth -t-ydfrKIO" LOWI McKENOllU! A. LOWI!, rttldoM of Set>le Ana, Call..,..111•. Otte GI Otalfl A~I 3, '"'· Svr•l¥ed llY -_., .,_ M. L-; '-1111111••, Mn. -"-TN ...... ll, tovr 91e,.,.llllkt11. Llncla & Jl"""y TN._1111 _.,, lrle11 ' "-<• LO .... !o•rvlut and lftt•rtNnl 111 CotorHO. O'COftllO• '-•tuna Hltll Mllr1110'Ydlr.cten .. PUBLIC NOTICE 3500 Pacific View Otive • Newport, California 644·2700 AllenUM lalldHt H Mlll\t•-t c.,,,.r•CIO''-1,,.,11e11o11 to 111<1 111-1 "''" ,.,..,_111 of na "°""" &lo --It· SI 06, 0.edll,.. AllOUll 1'. Sufi Hol-1-owoeo AUOClelloll, ft 0 . 9ul.Jt. SeftJ,..,. Capl•l••..Om1S. NDFAMtLY COLOHIAL f'\INE"AL HOllE 7801 Bolsa Ave. Weatmlnster 893-3525 .lmntS' MORTUARY ' 627 Main St. -·-O.•nv-Coast 0..IY' PllOl """"'' $, •. s. "'' , .... ,. theatre. Mrs. Bag ley states that her r ol e as or- ganl ur o f FORCE Cf'riends of Respectable, Clean Entertainment) left her open to reprisals by the defendants. Mrs . Bagley st ales that she was forced to meet subst antial legal costs and mak e a number or federal court appearances before Pussycat l awyer s agreed to drop the ac· lion. She condemns the federal suit as "harus- ment." THB PUIMllH• HIATIM• AllCOMD. "'--..... -, ~'""_ ..... ....-Call Ml8~Y1EJO Htn c.""no C..00tlf-~ ,.• '"·" ,.,. •• ,Jiiii.,, 4tM401 COSfAMESA IU."'--'81...S 642-171) KITCHIM &: IA TH llMOOatMG Fiii UTIMATIS ... °"'~··" ANAHllM•MAIN Of',ICE i.>l w l•ncom -- Proudly Presents .The IN PERSON= & AN ALL ST AR SHOW August 7th Saturday Eve. 8:30 p.m . OrClllCJ• County Fairground 77 Fair Drive Costa Mesa '7 Donation Admits The Whole Family tMOM, DAD & KIDSt Ticket Information Call 17141 847-7206 Hun=:-•ch A~f0th1 •1 to~ 772-1470 ·~~\l ~ ............ Mllllll ................................ ~ .......... ~ ................................................................... ~ .... ~ .... ' I ' ' For the Record 81ra .. ..... "" ....... , """"''., J1tly ,., "" Ml •ncl Mr> C•ry Furut•. to1n Run nl~ Sprn>Qs A••, HunllnQton Buen, l»Y NII •"" M" IUC"<lrd BIR•. 1101 M<C0<m1<-U.., Coste tMMI, boy Mr, and Mrt L4trY Hted\ • .,,. HllK•• W•y, Newport 8H<ll.111rt Jt11r 11, ,.,. NII ancl Mrl. ArnolO lltmphlJr, 810 Go~rnot, Co\t• M•sa. 91t t J 1tty 11, ,.,. Mr '""Mr• JOM 8ruemtr, IOW v .. • 1-. 0t ., Cost• MeMI, boy Mir tncl Mrs. Char .. , Nol>lt, 10$f1 ~lln,u, Ml'nlon VitJo, boy Mr. and Mt• Peul Hutchin•. 9':U Ke"' dfll Circlt, Foullta111 vano. OoV Mr.""° A4/f LA•rMct M oller, J02t Donnyt>rooi., Coll• M<P••. 11<>r Mr. ano Mr.. Douv••• Fr lrom.n, Ulll l(le< Or., Irvine, boy Mr •n<I Mr\ JoM AoehllnQ, 11052 1.oi,,.,i1 Cir<•~. HunlinglOft lkt<ll, "'>• Ntr.-Mf\ 0awld All.,,, 1 .. 2C- 0. • Soln•• An•, girl Mr.-M••· lhom•• Gr•llio, 111 E B•y Ave., ~•WPOrt 8t>M "· 91r1 Mr, •l>ll· Mr\ Wollodm Mullin, 1Slo7 Vl•Verct., E'IToro,bciy - .tuly U, H76 Mr Ancl Mf\ lhomA\ Jt<OO\. l .. l l'cwt Oun~n. Npwport 8~a<I\, boy "" """Mr> Stt~n Wt•n•teon, JIU Oultt Cove. Co•'<>ll•l<l&I Mar, 00¥ Mr •no """ C:t>•"H Jennonos, <UI ~yl.,k SI , lr••M. girl Mr •nd 1111•\. P•ul C•\\ll 14.IO S.... t4lnefl• Tt'f·r«•. Coron. Gel ~'. oov Mr •nd M r t Jottn H•1rn 11911 ~-Ln,, .. ..nllnQton Bvach, oort '1At. 4nd Mn~ 8•rry Bo\tw;(-., 1S11, 0,~, (Mt• Me\6, 91tl Mr •nd Mr'\ Mlcnae1 Miii"'. 11an 11<1.iol Or .• WtJ1m•nU•1 llOr Jiiiy u , "" Mr and Mr'\ Ivy Ono. »11 Sfo•.ne., Ave.,Goron.del ~r,41r1 Mr. •nd Mr\ J •trrey 813< i.mo11, SH p,..,,.,,,,., A•• • Aol. P105, Cost.> MH•,glrl Mr •nd Mrs w.11,to Otaou.o tw.n Mt Allyson Cir • Fovnfdlft V•U~y bO'W Mt. •ncl Mr~ oC•n""lh A\hlC;, •l'I •Congress SI • Co"• M.:<d, 0"1 Mr bnd Mr> JOM Coodl?Wn, 1165 Mtu Or , S~nla Ana HtlGhh llOy Mr llnd M" (Ow••O Tutton 11).ll PtntlrH Ln Huf'tif\9\0n 8,.&c:n, bOy ~ .,., Mr'\ 0d¥'d Sot •f"MJ UtO't -Q!Mmctnne Cu FouM•1n "•"•r Q1rl Mr. Ar.cl Mr\ P~t~r Pendl•IO<> ~141 V•tcf\H Or . Hu"UnQIOtt 8f"Kh. Qtrl Mr •nd Mr\ LOttCJ fr•hauv•n 101 Srwhm41 Co1I• ~ ....... 91rf Ml af"ld Mr\ lvn"i" J(1ftdr~ 11 L.tnO F•ll Co.;rt, N•woorl 9Htll, Qltl JYIY U, 1'1• Ml, •nd MF\ Creoo C•AlldOn, 11S Co\t• .r.wu $1 • Co"• Mot oov Mr -M,. J.,,... S."CIWPI )1)33 Cohl NINt Or l •9un1 N19ue1. bOY Mr ano Mr\ Jon Mohler 11n Ea•I OctM\ Front, Nrftoor1Btt~<h.91rl Mr •nd Mr\ J•ll•~v1r1,,, '"'n Ortn. CM Rd San Juen C•o..,rano. bOr Mr •"'Ct Mri ~,,., At~1•nct(>t 1.).a07 Pf.ppef'd•nt. Wt \1mln\trr. OOy Mr ar'ld Mr'° 9, t41n Norktt1h\, 1A01 Port T 1ttan, Ntwoort At'ac h, C)Jfl July ''· ,.,. Mr and M rs Oletman I(•••• 12• Sntrwooo Pl • (Mta M4!1t11 01rl Ntil ttnd Mt\ J•rn<\ Harr1"Qt011 U01 W -•rtnur 81•d . S..nl• """·bO• J111r 11, tt1• Mr •n<I Mr, ArnAIOO ConMlet. nu C•tllorn1• 51 • ADI •. Honli"QI"" 8•"'<~. llOy Mr er.cl Mr•. ~OfQt! 8ul.<h, n10Wnl -•. S.nl• An•, bOr M< and Mrs Chi! uooher C-r. 261 ()qlt SI., Aol 0 Co\1• Mn•, QJ•I Mr, •"" Mn . l orry Pel•'"'"· '°°'' So-..l"'fW\t Soruc •. S•nt• An", Q"t Mr .. nc1 Mrt. Rl<~•rd H•ll•r. ,.,, v •• ,. ••• ,, •• Ml\UOlt Viejo, qlrl J ••• 11, ,.,. ,,,., And Mr\. Pre-•ton Or•"'-'· .to.W"!'\I 8•11, i;.nte Me. 9lrt Mr •ncl Mt\ Oevld Oa•••, l'l"I• O.i•or. Co•I• MtH. 9lrl Mr •no Mr\ AOIM!rl Hurl ... '°' Otl•wArt S1 • Apt A, Hunt1notoo 8Utll,bOY ""' encl Mf\ Cl••tnce Puc\tll ,,,. [ldllnSI., Aol. C, Co•I• Mel~. any Mr •nd M r' CeorQ* Smil~, "" ltnd\t,.-om Avf , trv1ne-,01rl Mr •fld Mrt C&rf Ma"°<' ttll Ea\I CwrorH<>~I , S.nteA,,.,bo., July It, t•lt Mr . ~nd M rt 0.,y M tlN, 111&1 Walnut, Founto•nValltY, l>O'( M< and Mrl. AoMld Adoml, 31' A04 l UnlverMlY Or • Co<t• Moa tlrl Mr . •nd M " G•ry Cole, 40. HMnllton. Co.ta Me,., orrl oov Mr at\d M r\ lttrl 1-hlltr, 111' l"•cler••. Co\la Mtu, boy Mr encl M,., Timothy Su110, 2116 $1arl>lra Or .. Colla IM•• olrt IN tlld Mro Wllll•"' Ward, '°'7 Boll "''Cir . HIMlllnQton 8r..cf\, 01rl Jvly lt, '"' Mr. 1nd Mr\ Allen Lewi\, llS• l'l•YOO<I W•Y. NtWOOrl 8•<1<n.Q1rl Mr. •ltd Mrt G•oro• Jonn. 200 Mfter P1 , ADI 0 , Co~t• .Mtw lloy Mr. •!IO Mr•. Tl'lom~• H.tt_.,. 11'11 Hlllllu"I Or~ UQ""" NIQUO'I, Qiltf JYI\' ti, tt1• Mr, •nd ,,..,, Aoy W•Altll>rby, 1191 .. U .... ,,,lnQbtrd Or.. Co•••""'"" boy Mir. •"" M" Ml("<l•I Chlerel> nt6 O.Oo H.,bor Or • HUf\111\Qlon ~Mii, Qlrl Mr. tnd Mrt RoNrt H1olon, n1 Promontory Or. Wul, N•wPOrt 0.•cl'l, lloy Mr. •nd Mt\ t..trry Hein, ,.. E•'' ,,,,,SI . '°''• Mtt\I, DOY Mr •nd Mrt Cllatfe• Llftd, ll11t A<.toul~o Or , O•ne Point. Qorl Jvly U, 106 Mr. eno "'" JMnU l.~k•. •411 tlr .. kw•t.,. Cir • HunlTnQlM lk'acl\, bo\' Ml elld Mn O .. id T•n"••. 1tV7 8'141.-\.n., Slln J°"n C~•lrM'CI, ~rl Mr. •nd Mrs Roy l(vllkov, 1'11 Er-. CIHI• MeH, boy Ml'. -Mrs. M ic-I H.tr"'10, llJQt S."fme Clrt It, lrv!M, boy NB Veep Appointed Rick Prerrer or Newport Beach has been named vice president of California Partners of the Americas, a non- profit foreign aid pro- gram between the U.S. and Latin America. Pfeffer, 31, will place an emphasis on rund raising. Those inter ested in donating their services to the program should call 673· 7309. CllAIAICI 21 -·'-'• lOW HICIS 01 All WATCHIS IMu U°"lel llCl(lil&j SAVl*S Off Oii .. r 11na sroca ""'' , .. 1 f. IV l>ilf,n t\ld11rt\1 '"°'-""'~· lllUt'J· 17 ''v.('f I £~"" 4 tlW"I . •lulfl !>ljll;'J llG. 1.09 TO 1.l9 Pl. ASSORTED STYLE & SIZE TIP TOP HAIR ROLLERS Choose lrom snapons foam cushlO!l, br1.1gi or magnellc ro~e•. '" SS'><lf'ed s•Les Ready ge• set save11 PACK OF l TOTAL OF 3 HOUIS! 39c 60 MINUTE TAPE CASSETTES 1o.ick60 rii.nvro tapo•, a 1o:al ol •80 mnurcs ot ptavong t• r.e NJ• ona ~ oovcri scd. a SIOfl()n·ltee, low no•o NALLEY RAVIOLI IHFOR CHICKEN pair MEI'S & LADIES' POUllZED MIRROR SUIGLASSIS No gtare wolh tash<on lla•t Metal. pbsiic. me!Bl·PlaSlic comti.nations and Ille gre11 MW 11mleu loolt WIUSU WYIOIY. OGo R It Ir I OPRUC 'OUSH DILL "CKLD ........ , ,.,. ',. .... ,,. .. """ .. ' .... """" . .. . ,_._. __ .... __ , ... . O.•'i.~;::' r .. :.;;.:;:::'! c. tU~'..'":g'~~~. ? ... ·-· • ,, ... ' ... STOCISWTI MAil • SPAii '-'-pr. All LEATHER & IATUlll SUEDE WALKllG SHOE A. gteat casual wolkong shoe w•lh negative ~et com· fon & genuine lelthet wen.ng on Nllut al suede lOP I '---ch~l_(.en ~ ··r:!'. ~ ~'~M CAnlVAL GATORADE 43 c PllTZELS DlllK :?. 33! li42c llSRA 'ICED RA Mii Mii RICE Mii 139 i21 .. ~ s:s.,J9 SlOIUU COLD CREAM SOAP . Costa Mesa .2300 twW of Welton fll~\\\\~\. ~\ll WHITE KING COMPLEXION SOAP e·AR IOSIMILI Siii CAii · CllAM STAYFlll AISOllEIT IUll-PllS ~ ~ ALIA-SILTUI AIALGISIC AITACll s ''" , • .. i u~ ~ Gllunl CllST FOAMY flUOllDI SllAVE CRUM TOOTIPASn 1~ al2' ... ACll Santa Ana 3325 lfb tol af ........... Santa Ana 1406 W. ~ & lnstol \ Fountain Valley 161 4i Hcnar .. ~ Westminster WohftiMtw .. Goldttl Wut Huntinc)ton Beach 9161 ........ at lrooldw,f HuntiftQton Beach 9 S .......-, ... Cltlttr l. Huntinaton Beach 211l1 1toci·1twd. .. A"Gllto Huntinaton Beach sufwcner ... .. Wednesday. August 4, 1976 . Athietes Persec~ted, Says Soviet llOSCOW CAP) -T'be bead or lo pull out of water polo when it controversies and setbacks of the East Germany came second. who tried to poJson the Olympic: tM Soviet Olympic teem tn Mon-appeared il wouldn't win. The Carnes while being treated to followed by the United Slates. atmosphere.•• • DAILY PILOT 81 Defectol! 1 Not Tied trul said Tuesday In a Rusaian IOC also lossed pentathlon com· lavish newspaper and lelevision and other Eastern bloc nations When Borzov dropped out ot newspaper his athletes were petitor Boris Onishchenko out or coverage. finished high in the standings. sight after placing third in the .. peraecuted" right from the the Games when he was caught Most of the problems have not Pavlov said that was no surprise lOO·meter das h, rumors sprang •tart of the Games. But the Sov· cheating, using an iUetcally wared been mentioned at aJI In the Sov· to ttim. up that he had defected. He later let people haven't heard much foil in fencing. 1et press . 0 nishchenko was "This was predetermined by anchored lbe 400-meter relay. aboultheirteam'1 mishaps. The Russia ns we.re also the publicly eens ured here after he the social policy ol these coun· Before his r e appt:aranc<', .. It ls not easy for sportsmen target of anli·SO'!iel literature was caught cheating. But there _triet 1n the field qf p!\ysical train· Pavlov said. "somo unknown ~~N~l~A~J -A j I wealthy CinC'innatl business m1m has denied reports that his daughter was Involved In the do· fectlon of 17-year·old Russlun diver Sergei Nemtsanov a nd the diver's lawyer has confirmt.'<l lhe denial. rrorri the USSR to s*-form on the and of demonstrations .by Ukra1· has been no word in the local pre· i.ng and sport," he said. "I think person called up Borwv. He was American continent.'' Sergei nhans seeking separatism from ss about Nemtsanov, who sought the managers of the U.S. team threatened with ph ysical Pavlov told Sovletsky Sport. the Soviet Union .. There were and received permission to re· did not expect such strong com-reprisals and warned that when •'Our athletes were persecuted rumors that sprinter Valery muin in Canada. petition from tfie Olympians of be appeared on the track there from the very first day by forces Borzov had defected. And lheSov· The Soviet press has focused the Soviet Union, East Germany wou Id be a sniper in the ror whom Olympic ideals are ieL•f problems wer.eeapped whe~ a l most exclusively on the and other countries." s tadium." foreign ." 17 ·year-o ld diver Sergei athletic events. in which the But he said these The piles of anti-Soviet The Soviet team was censured Nemtsanovdiddefect. Russians won 125 medals. includ· performances , among the literature "had to be moved into by the Inte rnational Olympic However. the public here has ing 47 gold. Both those figures Russians, were made difficult by the Oly mpic Village almost Committee UOC> when It soucht been told very little about the were tops in the Olympics. "terrorists and provocateurs every day," Pavlov said. Buckner Sparkles Hooton Erases Neg~t~ve Ideas LOS ANGELES (AP) -Burl Hooton h as had the kind of fortune that would make a g_uy talk to himselC. So he did and, what's more, he listened to what he had to say. "I talked to m yself the whole game, telLing myself to keep at it. not lo give in. to keep concentrat· ing." he said. ----The-l'eault.-w.as a two.hit, 2.0, shutout over Houston, Los Angeles' fourth win in a row and eighth straight over the A.ttros. Hartze ll Titriving On Finesse ARLINGTON, Tex. <APJ - The image or the California Angels is that of a team built around strong.arm strikeout artists like Nolan Ryan and Frank Tanana. but that image is being tarnished by rookie Paul Hartzell. "I had been thinking all kinds Dodgen Slate "''' Gam .. M llA8C 11ttl A...;i. • H~IOftat l o-Anoelft AU9-S(l...:11..,.tlt al LCKA~ltt •"II· •C•...:•nMh al LO~A"9&1H 7 7hm. 7 Upm 1 7Spm. of negative things and I wasn't going to let it happen this time.'' said Hooton who had dropped six of bis previous seven decisions. Bill Buckner singled home Dave Lopes twice, the Dodgers' only runs off loser Dan Larson. 1-3, but, as Hooton saidlater, thal was all he needed. The Astros got two hits in the first inning, by Greg Gross and Cesar Cedeno, and not another the rest of the way. BILL BUCKNER Drives In Both Runs in a four-game series ·over the weekend In Dodger Stadium, will try to add to their win streak tonight, sending Doug Rau, 10·7, against the Astros ' James Rodney Richard. The Dodgers got their runs in the fourth and seventh innjngs. Rlcliard Lindner, president or Thriftwa y, Inc .• a loca l supermarket chain, issued a statement Tuesday night follow· • ing speculation that romantic in· volvement with an American female dlver had influenced Nemtsanov's (lecision to defect. Lindner's daughter, Carol, 21, was a diver at Indiana Universi- ty and finished seventh in the U.S. Olympic Trials in Lon~ Beach in June. She was in Mon· lreal for the Olympic Games. Carol's uncle, Carl Lindner, is 1 publisher or the CinciMali En-I quirer. The statement said: "There have been numerous rumors that my daughter was in some way connected with the defection of Russian dive r Sergei Nemtsanov. She met him at an international diving meet at Fort Lauderdale in June, and was hostess alon~ with my wife and me al a party which he attended with divers from several other ~ntries. "She and another diver spoke with him and his cousin briefly in Montreal. She knew him no bet· ter than any other member or our diving te am. and it was only casually. I asked her specifically if they had talked about the de· fection and she said no. Jn fact. when she read of it back home in Cincinnati a week later, she was s hocked." · The family declined further comment. However. in Montreal Tuf'S· day. Nemtsanov's lawyer. Alex Paterson of M onlreuJ, said his client had dated Lindner during the Olympics, but he saict the woman had nothing lo do with the defection. At Indian a University, Lindner's diving coach. Hobie Billingsley, said the rumor was ,..,...,,..,..,. RICARDO 'S WINNING KICK-Benny Ricardo, former · Costa Mesa lligh and Orange Coast College football star. kicked the winning rield goal of 33 yards to give the Detroit Lions a 20·17 victory over Buffalo Saturday. The kick came with Jess than two minutes to play in the pre-season N FL game. Quarterback Joe Reed holds the ball. II artzell tossed a four-hitter against Texas Tuesday night, nearly matching a three·hit Yet Houston threatened in lhe final two innings when Hooton is· sued four of his five walks. He walked the first two batters in the eighth and got out or it. He walked two more in the ninth, but struck out. Cedeno, got Bob Watson on a deep drive to right and struck out pinchhitter Clirf Johnson to end it. In the fourth Lopes r eached first salelv on an error by Enos Cabell, stOle second and scored when Buckner singled. In the seventh Lopes walked, s tole second -his 33rd successful steal in 40 attempts -and again Buckner singled him home. ''a lot of talk. J "A lot of our kids talked lo him." Billingsley said. ''lie was a very friendly youngster. I think he was just exposed to a new way of living in Florida and dccidtd to get out. He saw somethjng he liked better." S ports in Brie f Death Threat Led To Ref's Decision LOS ANGELE~ Ci\1'1 -The World Boxing Council says 1t plans a n official review of a co ntr ove r s 111l s up <'r · bantamwci ~ht fight between South Kor<'an challenger Yun!! Domkyun and R1t:oberto Rini.co • after the referee for the bout said he chunJ!cd his dcci:.1on fnvorin J? H 1asco bccuust' he reared for his li ft'. Fight rcfcr<'e Lurry Rosad1llu said Tuesday lw had <"hangc<I his ruling naming R11tob<-rto thc winner becau:.c his l1 fo was threatened by · ·~uni.istt•r lYl>C:>. ·· Roi ad1llo r1 rst rl\ll>ed t he hand o f defcndinJ.t d1um1> lliasco us I h<' v 1rtor In thl' 15· round fight in Pusun in a 15-H43 decision Rut an hour ufkr th<' fii.!hl h<' soid. ··1 11111dt' a m1stnkc in put· ting down my scort's. It wus ralnlnJ! und the judg"·s papers were all Wl'I und I pluccd the 11cor<'S in lht• wrong pluC'c:-. The Korean is the winner." Buck homt'. Hor.ad illa smd he made the r hangc b<'<'ause ht' Seared for his und Hiasco·s safely. "G anASt('r t y1><'S were associated with the promotion.·· he said. "l was physically and bodily dragged and pushed into the ring a~ainst m y wtll." the r<'· feree said.' J azz Expect in g To Sign Goodrich NEW ORLEANS -Gall Goodrich, free agent or the Los Angeles Lakers. is expected to be signed by the New Orleans Jan Thursday. team officials said. The acquisition of Goodrich would give the Jar.z, with Pete Maravlch. two of the most powerful guards in the NBA. Goodrich's dispute with the Lakers centered on a reported re· quest for a three-year, $300,000 no-cut contract. Hut J au vice pre· stdeat Barry Mendelson said the Jau haven't broktn lhe1r r1ale against no-cut In tatkll with Goodrich. "l got a few bruises. l was lu<'ky. I was worried about J:l'l · tmg stabbed, shot or stomped to death." 1\•h e Duntped NORTH CONWAY. N.H. - Art-hur As he continued his downhill slide Tuesday, falling lo Yugoslavia's Zeljko Franulovlc. 6..it. 6·4. in the second round of the Sl00.000 international tennis tourney here . Jimmy Connors. meanwhile. breezed past llans Kary of Austria. 6·1. 6-3: Manuel Orontes of Spain ousted Spaniard Juan Gi!lbert. 6·3. 6·3: and Australian Ken Rosewall beat Alvaro Relan· cur or Colombia, 6-4, G·l Ha•• Cad 11 . The Los Angeles Rams have put 11 players on waivers to cut their squad to the National Fool· ball League limit. The reductions Tuesday left the Rams with the allowed 60 players plus three who were on the college All Star team but the club released the names of only four of the players tri mmcd. Ir no one claims the other seven they could return to the roster. Waived were two second.year men. kicker Geor ge Jakowenko and defensive tackle Bill Line and rookie free agents Ron Davis, a linebacker from Boise State. a nd Marv Crenshaw. an orrensivetackle from Nebraska. Gor111an S harp COLUMBUS -Tom GOTman continued his impressive play in the $87,500 Buckeye tennis cham- pionships Tuesday with a 6·1, 6·4 victory over South African John Yuill injust42 minutes. Two upsets occurred - Patricio Cornejo of Chile sur· prised Sherwood Stewart, 6·2, 6-2, and Alvaro Fillol or ChlJe beat Mike Cahill, 6·4, 6-4. Other results: Peter F1eming defeated Rick Fisher. 6-3, 7·5: Keith Richardson stopped Jean Haillet of France. 6·1. 6-3: South Africa's David Schneider ousted Japan's Ken Hirai, 7·6. 6·1: Tom Gullikson dealt Bill Brown a 6-4, See Brief , Page BZ A 1tflf!b Sla t.- •110.1" ..... 1tMl'ct1101 AUQ-. 4 C.lifOf ,..,. •I T•••' Avq \ C•lifotn•• •• r ~,..,, A"'! •C:.11t0tn14 •I Oa•t"nd whitewashing in his previous start against the Rangers, as the Angels won, 4-0. "I'm not trying for strikeouts out there. I 'm just not that kind ol a pitcher ," Hartzell said, "and I never will be.'' The lanky rookie, 14 months out of Lehigh University, relied on an assortment or sinkers, sliders and changeups to induce the Rangers into 18 groundouts. He struck out only two. Mana ge r Norm S h e rry. hopeful of being retured for 1977 since the Angels have gone 7.3 after he re1>laccd Dick Williams. said. "This team is not worried about mistak<'s now. They're re· laxed a nd having fun. They're professionals, but you still have lo enJOY the ga m<' to play it.'' "llartr.cll has done well every lime he's started although he hasn't had shutouts like he has ag:unst Tex a:.." Sherry added. ··when you have a good location on your pile hes I ike he had, you w11l l:>e tough ugamsl anybody ... Tommy Davis singled home a run in the s ixth mrung and hit a sacrifi ce fly in the eighth. Rusty Torres hit his fourth homer in the :.eve nth a net J crry Remy singled in another run in the ninth. CA~IFOllNIA TEX/.S .. ., , " .,. •b , "t>• M r,y.·,,ftrn 1t> I I J 11 rtin.•'\tf • 0 0 0 ~,.m, n • '1 1 Httttdh \\ J 0 0 0 Ctv1J• '' 7 0 I 0 l•t'IOU(J1Jrl • 0 I 0 n@ncJ\r• I 0 0 0 H"'rqrnv11 tt> I 0 I 0 f 0 •111\df\ I 0 I I Ouroon''' t 0 I 0 ~""""' 'C) u 0 HoWffl lb J 0 u 0 O•IQ.Qi lb "0 Q 0 q ,lrM;ll ... /I) l 0 0 0 l ~tAnt ·n It 11) '0 Afn•qutu ( t 1 0 ' 0 flot'~,,. It t fl no W<\lll>t•QC J 0 0 0 RQ l.tf•\1" \n f I I U Um"'1r<19r 1> 0 0 0 0 R ft),,,.,,, • ' i 1 y,.,~Or> 0 0 0 0 £ t(t\"Mrt,.tt( • 0 f) 0 H<W""'' p 0 0 0 0 Hfl!rtltttp 0 0 0 0 TM••• JI • II • lo1ttt JO 0 f 0 (-Allf ~m•" 000 001 n t • ,.... 000 000 000-0 ( M "OfO• OP (<1t1•o•no8 I, h«h 1 l 0 8 (otlll ,.,.,,. • l•••• \ 78 A Ton._, CNI-HA - II T0tn• " ~ • (h~I .. '· A Torr~. !>I' -T. 0.YI\ Hartr•ll W J 11 UfTtO,,.,.~, &...1 •1 Trroaio HOf"rn11tr T ) 11 A -I~ JOI IP H II £111 II SO 0 0 7 7 J 1 2 7 • 0 0 0 0 0 7 1 I 0 I . "I was high with my pitches the whole game." said Hooton, 7·11, "but I wasn't going to give up my stuff and throw a nuthin · pitch just to get it in the strike zone." Los Angeles has defeated Houston 21 times in the last 24 meetings over three seasons. Yet. they failed to gain on Cincin· nati with their latest victory and still trail the Reds by rune games in the National League West. The Dodgers, whoplaythe Reds HOUSTON Gro~srl ~11)0 C.-<f WI!_ to J Ctu11f • Ht:rm.JIW'I (. oave.-pr Ju:r1ec c Jonn ...... ofl .,,.,,,,..,to "M4>1<9e• .. Ut\Of\O &o"w<WI• on "'"" p Total\ '-"°" ... , ft Ill • 0 '0 JOOO • 0 '0 '0 0 0 JOOO l 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0000 t 0 0 I) 2 0 0 0 l 0 0 0 100~ • 0 0 u 0 0 0 ·) )8 0 l 0 LOS ANGIL£$ ~11> &v<a-.ne-r J1 IA<y ,, c. .. , .. y lb Cay JO Ru~W'fl~s S.'-r' '' E Aodr~te HoolOO'IO ~.,, .. bi J 7 0 0 • 0 7 l • 0 I 0 • 0 2 0 J 0 I 0 7 0 '0 • 0 I 0 • 0 0 0 3 0 0 0 Lo\ Anl)"IH 000 100 10< ·l E ·C•llell OP ·lo• Angtlf\ I LOO -tlou\IOO't 0. lo• °'1l9"le\) SB •LOP<'\ 1 S -<--Y IP H A Ell 811 SO l atM>n l, I )I 6 1 I J ~ Po0nl1 2 0 0 0 0 Hool0'1 1W,lll• q 1 0 0 S o PB M•rrm"""· T .) 11. A ·ll,~1 Added the coach: "I don't think any of our kids had anything to do with his defec· lion." Paterson said, in an interview, that Nemtsanov and Lindner had been corresponding ever since they met at a Florida di vmg com· petition a year ago. As ked whom the diver hact been s tay ing with since last week, Paterson replied, "I le has very, very nice friends who arc looking after him ." Al' Wlr•P"°I• BRUCE JENNER (RIGHT) SIGNS AN AUTOGRAPH AS WIFE CHRYSTIE (LEFT) LOOKS ON. .Jenner lJndeeided i\bout Fut1•re l CANTON. Conn. CAPJ -Bruce Jenner. the record breaking Olympic decathlon gold medalist, says he's had enough of track and field and may want out. "I really don't know about track. We've talked about pro· ressional track, bu t J think I've had enough running. I may want to get out, I just don't know," Jen· nersaidMonday. Wearing blue Jeans. a form fitted white s hirt and open·toed sandals, Jenner arrived herewith his wife Chrystie and his pa.rents, .. William and ••lher, after a 300-mlledri ve from Montreal. Jenner and his family were IJ'eetcd by hundreds ~ chUdr"1 and a handful of reportall and photographers who waiWI for tbeir ar-rival at his parent.• apart- ment complex. "After 12 year..s el traiDtflg, you eantet one or thbe, guJll." tllid Jennet, holding hil golcl medal up lor youths gathered at his parents' home to tee. As the world's ,...ateat athlete signed autoeraphs he talked wttb interviewers. J "I've sl1.ed with three agen· Jenner was in New York des and I've Jul\ sold a book on Tuesday for a TV show. the Olympie• written. with Phil l'lntb, 1'hatk Ci.Pd everythibg bMled=U ritfrt. 11 wouldn't .. haft eh of a book If l had . lmt. '\le rsatd ~ Jenner , a 26·year'°8d Newtown, Conn., native who set a state pole vault record ln Ull wWle a,enior ._tN•townllil'h School, stWeda record Dumber of polnt.a in the two-da~ decathf6n 11$t week. He won 1tve-0f the ten events in the contest of 'speed, slr~gth and stamina. He told reporters he and his wife plan a Hawaiian vacation before returning lo their home in San Jose. After that Jenner wasn't sure what he would do. "I'm sort of looking for a job. We've talked to a few people in the past few days, but we're going lo take our time and sit back and lake a look at what areas I'd be comfortable in. Rightnow it'sjusl ·tooearlytotell," JeMersaid. ' ,\ - 82 . ~AIL_V_P_l_L_O_T _______ W_ed_n_ffd_,..ar,_. _A_ug._u_s_t ... • • ._1_97_6 Confer: He Gives It 110 Percent By ED 8 UltGART Oll ... D•ilJf'i .. $4.a" Those cynics who question thl· validity of student atttlCll'l> pro· bably haven't come across Gar) Confer yet. Confer. r ecently gl'acJuotcd from Estancia lllgh in Coi.ta Mesu, is headed for Hnrv•ml Vmversi\y this fall, planning on pursuing a degree in veterinary medicine . The l 75-pounder aJso wants to play football as a wide re<>eiv1:r . a position at which he will h<- employcd Saturday night when the South All·s tars meet the North in the Orange County All· s tar football g#me at Orange Coast College. Confer. a 3.8 student. UJ)pears more interested in his education than football. but al least until Saturday. football 1s taking the primary role. 'Tm really looting forward to this game," the l8·Yt!ar-0ld says. "I was kind ot surprised to make the team since 1 d1dn·t do as well as l had hoped during my senior , ... ar." Tra11s-11ational Golf Def ending Champ Eli1ninated at MV Defending champion Heverly Davis or Jacksonville. Fla. wa~ upset by national collegiate champion Nancy Lopci o f Roswell, NM. 6·and·5, in opening round action or the 46lh annual Women's 'frans-national Golf As· sociation championsrups at ~Its· sion Viejo Country Club Tuesday. The only player participating in the international tournament from the Orange Coa!>L area, Janet Engesser of Huntin,::t.on Beac·h. won her first match over Jean Stacy of Georgia. 2·1. Medalis t Donna Horton. also of Jacksonville, fired an even par round or 72 to Win O\·er Sheran BRIEFS ••. Gerber of Johannesburg, South Africa. Barbara Barrow• a member or the U.S. Curtis Cup team aJong with Lopez and the 1974 Trans· national champion, ousted Janice Campbell of Santa Barbara, 5·and·4. Horton h ad her second straight round of 72 after taking medalist honors in qualifying on Monday. Lori Garbacz or South Bend, Jnd. was the junior medalist with 75 and two players l ied ror s enior medalist honors. l\trs. Charles Abrahams of Orange and Mrs. David Hibbs of Long Beach each had 85. Prior to has senior iseason. Confer s uffered a separakd shoulder during summtt S('bool. He bad two pins Inserted in hes shoulder and was unable to re· turn to action until his team's third game. Nonethe less, he went on lo catch three touchdown passes. earn All-Century Le~uc honors and eventually ~nln a stnrtmi: spot on the South·s pass..onented team. The younft<'St of three brothers. Conler is especlaJly dangerous • • after he cntches the btl.11. "He has good hunds and good fttt and does n't know the mel\n· lng of lhe word lonr." sa)'s South coach Bruce Pickrord. · 'Sincl· he·s been working out with us, he hasn't run a patlcrn that hasn·c. been 110 percent." Confer's high school c<tJch. Ken Kiefer. likes to use su<'h superlatives ~ 1>ersistenct>, ex ctllence and doggrd detcrmina ti on. •·If<' nc\ <>r quits." sa~ s Ki efor "He is an eXC'\'llent ~llu1h.•n l becuuse he works, \\Orks, work!>. You 'll ~et-him in the aludent center with a book on the tabll' and people talkin.:. He'll muke a few remarks, and then he'll hav~ bis eyes back in the book. .. And by beini:: a good thinkf'r. hl' plans things well on the field. l le runs t>Xtellcnt rouh·s and lw~ good speed under duress." Also a starting ftuurd on Estan C'ia·s varsity basketball team in \976. Contcr wall only pursue foot ball in <'Ol lef!('. "Rut my main .:oat is 10 .:ct tn· 1ovet med1C'1ne." hesays Continuea From Page Bl 6-J loss; and Jim Delaney defeat· ed John Whitlinger. 7-6, J .6, 7·5. -Marianne Stan g-e l and, daughter of former Cal Stale lLong Beach) football coach Jim Stangeland, and Debbie Stewart. members of Virginia Country Club in Long Beach. captured the Howell trophy with rounds or 79-77. This is for two players from the sam e club with the lowest combined score. SOUTH STARS STEVE BRUNO (70), BOB TIEZZI (83) ANO TONY LUNDY. AmonJ? the first-round winners Monday were Brian Teacher with a 6·1. 6·4 win over Mexico·s ,\(arcelo Lara; Colin Dibley of Australia over !:'ranee's llervl;! Gau vain. 6·2. 6-4: and Hank Pfist ;.itop \\"est Germany·s Frank ~;ebert, 6·0, 6-3. Solchao. Win• DAVENPORT. I owa - Carme n Sal vino won the 15th title or his Professional Bowlers As· soc1ation I PBA 1 career Tuesday night when he captured the S60,000 Quad Cities Open. Salvino defeated Larry Laub, 210·192 in the title game to collect lhc $6,000 first prize. Jn the opening game. Tommy Hudson downed Mike Berlin. 246-202, before losing to Laub in the next gari1e, 254·237. Laublhen :-topped Da vc Fr a me, 215·212. ·Lo11da lla11g• 011 MANNllEIM. West Germany World champion driver Niki Lauda. critically injured in a naming crash in the t;erman Grand Prix on Sunday. has sur- \11ve<t the expected third-day crisis and spent a peaceful night. doctors said today. lt'TT Hetmlt 11 IM .. n• 1'. l.O< ·-~ u Wornt•1 -C •l"•'' l A# l>tf<11 Vut' ff tlll ~ '. C,u--r , .tnt 1(1yomur ' 1 I• t)f al C•\1\1-. t4il•d"u Jont·'·,.. • AN•n Stonf\ C • • .,,_,., i "'''· •·~ Luu .-._,,,utiH 1l.A O"d(~( MA~'" I • l ,,,.,. J f.lufr1 I "11omvt ~ tJ ty ''PA ottlll UftfO .n tnnt-1 \ •' UIMVti•IAl[)li "' tn(11,t111HK.ili Pho•nt • >o. Golden C..t•' 1• M ttf\ -Ao(hf' P11u.,,.,\ f P) bf'At O kk"'r• -...,M1fl "'~ ~ J P.trthO•' tP f ~dt O\.'-•'· l uc.•\• ~I wn""'n -tv••I i Pl bU1 Sto,,.., JS. Ew-rt Sn.ow .1>1 t)l·ttt Sito¥t Ourt.fi 1 M1tf'O M\.M1tl.1n Ou.1,. C(,,(,.) t.>.tl W~lh ~w. ..-•• p~,,t cwaf'\htOrttetl.t '· 1..0.. A l.Olt.fl P110""" Action continues with a double round Thursday with semHinals :Friday and a 36·hole final on Saturday. "''""-0 Horton Otl C.trtH>r 6 ' St..nl<rv clef. Mor9<1n. t•tf\ PV\lf' Col•\ Ofif H,.,rOwy IUD. G4ftat.trutft dirl ll••rt•1 • S C0<nell <!el G•,ton. • l. 11.trrowo.I C ""'""'II. S '· l uno9a <hf llonnoll. l I, H~rtloy °'' f "''00". 1 uP. Smit,,~' Pa11&11~, 14hh no1~. MA1;ror Qt! Sto<AO•I•. S •. '-'<Ill. O.•I\, .. ~. NV ,.. O.I 8rtllOll. 10!11 llOI•. O."'°" clef. a.in. ; t ~'*••rt <> t M1Kh"f-. • 4. Howt Off M ~·· w.1rt 1·t EnQt\,..., °"' si .. tv t·•. Sl•nv••no °"' Hv.r .. no1ctl )·"· St1mrnaM0wtt. ~rqu .... 1'>\I\ >ioi,. Mu,.c>nir dt·f Raoo. J 1. Mtlf Ott Sta~r. 1 oo ~.'°<HI (IK"''• J· I: H.Wllan «I. R-. J S. -n.Otl !>tanley, l 1. Mthll\9' • Ooen: Hot to"· n , J uniors G•rt>att, Ji; SM'\1ur, 11t • Abr•~•m,., ... ,t>iO\, IS. 1 ~m uopnv S••nv••nO, $1-..-1 (Vlr9'n1a CC. l~ e~a<hl, 19 11 156. P\1lt1nQ. A_...olf\$., 24; 8-WiC':i.ns.tulbOUJ"r\. H: c lloQL<•.11. Fish Report MOltllO IAY llloll's SPOrthVli"'ll -4ar>gl<t<\: 'ltroo coo. Oj£W,.OllT !Art's UM1 ... I 11 onQll!<t· 111 tM '~ tl0"1fn \ h•hOUt. -'1 IOC\ <.Od f0 .. W'ef I l.otller) ,~ .. n )lfl't\ ao .. rr.c:ucw, 1~boml:J .. 110 t.Hl\ ~hot k COtJ 1 l'hlht>Vt \EAL llEAC:H liq •nQI«•~ • bMr.-c..s.t. 31 QuntfO. 1•.J \•nd ~._"1., )'9 <~UCO Oo\.\, .a holh t>ul J.4) tDt~<00.11onqcoO B•r.. 141-ltt' 6SbO'li!O, 1lwr.otht\ • Hh•l•OUI U•H OIEGO iMun•<•P•I P1trl -I~ llr>gltr>. ., )81.elh.>C.o•I', )tt>luPt1M hU'M ~·H l'[OltO JI anq1 .... I !UN,. bor'llC:l•CM, 4 C)OtUIO. )J.t <•lt<O ~ ..... tS.. nxll <Od. J ,...hbV1. tUftt S• LIN•"f' SI ano1,.,, }t»rr,.<UOll.1U C ... htlJ n"'''• I t"t•ttt>ut,c \ltMdb..h~,flObOfhlO, \O},.-oc9' •u(J OitH•llO -111 <>"11"'" lO'talkob.ob, 3'SblU<> b.t I l)HO(t·tQd ltltf\Q(Od LONG IE•CH llltl-nt f'lffl -Jt-1..,,. I ....-.11•1• 'tt•J l).,H\, 14 bdrr~( U<ld. 1 fhlllbul; IQ '\-Ond M~'. 8t.•Hco b•U' 10 t>ot"tu. 40roc_ti.coo tO\iffft'~ w "'rft -SO •nqle,.\ \ b~rr~uOA, .. bOft•to. ?• c wrorwu.•tro<,<oct.1~"°bll'\ OCEAHSIOE 71f•nql .... < 110b0n•lo.115i...u. IWtiftt\11'4 b8\\, \ h .. llt>ut. '1 J bhJfllJnhi""" IUIOOHOO ·~1 •not•,.· , l>llJ<'UI\ ,.....,, '" bofuto J"• <••lee. b..t~\. > wn•ft" ~• bit\\. _. rwr t<Kud!\. a• otut" DA'\\ ••• ,., -t\.1 ~ter,, •S1 bon1t'>. 'bdrr•cud.11.1Sme1re..~,fl'•, •roc.,<od Royals Stay Alive, 7-4, In.Tourney Fountain Valley·s Royals re- turn to Thoroughbred League baseball action in the South. Regionals tonight with two more victories necessary to stay alive in the doubl e elimin a tion tourney. The Royals w~re to clash at Kimberly Park 10 Fullerton al 5: 30 agains t. Escondido after Tuesday's 7-4 victory over Los Alamitos at Amerige Park. Larry Brown was the heavy stick in the Royals attack Tues- day, unloading a arand slam home run in the fifth inning to cap a six-run outburst. Run-scoring s ingles by Dave Bienek and Dan J ackson ~ot the inning s tarted and Brown finished il. Ray Craft (9·1> anrl Gary Robertson (5-0> shared mound duties for the winners. Bienek ulso got the other marker across in the lturd inning with a safety . Fo11~1alft vauo, ll•Y•h II) •I> r II ,., •11 r I\ rti 0 81...,.k. cl A I 1 1 G&•l1•ld II J 1 0 0 J-' "-• "· Jb 4 f f I l-'dwurd\, 1.. J O 0 I) GI R~ll "°"· l\ • 0 0 0 Co<> -''"'°"· lb 0 0 0 0 V•lot••. rt J I I 0 (•tit, D 0 0 0 0 Bt-n. d'I \ I I 4 C.• AOC)'°"· p 0 0 0 0 P•i-r 111 J 0 0 0 Tol•I• 18 I ~ T OouQ'ln ~.II> I I 0 0 LM Al-'mHi3'\ Fount••" V•lh y Aa'tal\ r A e ll0001'11 ••1 001 0..0 c 1 \ I MAZDA Major League Standings AlHERICAN 1.EAGUE NATIONAi. Lt:AGUE 19 7 5 F.ast Oivlslon East Dlvi11lon w I. Pct. GB w •. I'd . c;n New York fl:l :Jg .618 Philadelphia 70 3'1 .673 Bnlllmore 52 .'ii ·.rio5 11111 Pitt'lburgh 57 47 54K 1:1 Cleveland 51 .51 .500 12 New York S.1 SS .491 rn CLOSE OUT llctrolt 48 51 .471 15 'Chicaito 46 GO .434 25 • Boston 41'\ 55 .466 J 51"' St. Lou1i; 44 SR .11:11 25 Milwaukee 45 55 .450 17 Montreal 36 62 .367 31 WAS ••••...• $5127 DISCOUNTED s350 CASH IACIC • • S4GO West Olvlsion WeAt Di vision Kansas City 62 40 .608 Cincinn:itl 69 38 .6'15 Minnesota M !H .51(1 91,\ Dodgers 59 46 .5fl2 ~ Onkland 54 52 .509 JO Houston 55 5'1 .505 15 T('xas '19 ~ .480 13 San D1eJ!O 51 SR .468 19 C..'l11cngo 46 57 .447 16~ Atlanta '17 !)!l .443 21 ""~ An~els 46 60 .434 JR San t-"ranciiico 46 62 .42fl 2:J•," ,.,..,.,., o...... t .......... o ...... rl•vt•••nd I. 80\lnnO 110lMt"'°\I (llOroo;>• ~ Phll...,•1~'1•• 0 I NttwYo,111 • o~trO•t, P1thour9h) ,,St LOUI' ... M1lwAvkrf'"• Oaltimor• 1 AtlM\t• I 4lan 0•"'00 l I( ll't\f\\{•tY '· M 1'\ntt\OtA I New YOf'' •. Montr••l 'I (),o '.wlidl C~uc.t-QOl (lf\C.it\n•tl•.~n Fr•nt1"fOO t..lll<><n•f t. Tt •no l o• A11Q.••t'1, HovttM O Tocl•r'1 OtMt\ ~OdO'I 01'"" 11~111"'1!•11 ll'ollm.-IA ti Al O ow1,1nd •Alflot Montr .. 1 IC••riln.,1 \ .i JI! N•w Ynrll 1 }• \t<oovnan1111 llo<lon J•11•1n< 10 t •I O.irool'R~••• '' P11tl.tc1•!Pfll• CtM1 l•n\0<1 10 \I •1 (;J\1ug<1 ""'"' Yor~ IH0111mA11 I I ....i Ht""'• 11101 •I "'-o• 61 Mllw•u•., ~••Ion U 8 •ncl I r~Vf'" t, at) Clnc•M.tll IGull•tl I JI •t S..11 Fr•ncl\(n (/WI .. M U\f'l•\ol• 1~1nQt'r 11' •' 9'.-n,n (•l'f LM>n•rft \ffu4r.(o to•' 1t 01 ~ O•~QO f\lrc>l'l'I • t1l OI All...,I• IAUllM'" Cttt•hnd M·f(f\f'f I\ o4f(t\l,,\Qn fhttl/11\l 11'> C.olhlufno• If (•ft. 'II .. Ir••• a ..... , , , SI !Av•• 1r O"t"' ~· .. Pl!t\oburOll IC•n<I< ..... 10•1 "lOll\IO'I IRoth.trd ,, ,., ~I lo\ Ano '"' '"·•II ·~It Annapolis-bound North Standout .Alters Li/ estyle By LAUR ENE KEVS 01 tho O•llY P1IOC Sl•ll You won't hear him sayin g ·"yes sir'' or "no sir" in the hud· die. but offensive tackle Ron Langer is getting pretty fammar with those words. There will be little time for politeness on the field when Langer and his Yankees team· mates meet the Rebels in the aayes Faces More Charges. On Recruiting EAST LANSING, Mich. -- Cash. promised Hose Bowl trips and a coach·s car for a weekend were indul'cmcnts used by the Ohio Stale coaching s taff to recruit players. says a copyright· ed story in tod<1y's Michigan Sta le University s tude nt ne\\spaper. The State News said onesourn>. who 1s now <1 player at another ll1j! T~·n school, said he received t•ash from \\'oody lla)es. the Ohio State head coach. during a rccruitin~ v1s1t lo Columbus in Januarv Hl74. .. Coach Rudy llulibard set up a dinner \\1th Woolly for me.·· thl' source told tht· State News. "I k told me that I should come· to Ohio Stak bccaUl>C I "ould l1l· able to RO to the ltO!'le Bo\\ I anll that my family nn<I fricn1l:-; woulcl also he able to go for• frl'l' .. Woody the n lt)()k<'d u1> :1l me and s tr<'lch<'d hark 1n hi -, (·h:ur, rcached 1n his trouser:-. and l!tl\i• me a SSO hilt ~1011 ~aid, ·11avc• ,1 J::(l()tl time, son· ... the Statt• N1•\\~ report t•d . Th<' news paper suirl 1 l:ty<''> was not iwailahl<' for comtnl'lll Tue~ day n1Rh l on lhc tharl!t'S, whid1 if ll'Ul' would l><• nil.-v1nl;it icms ,,r the NCAA anti th<' Big T<:n. Oh111 St at c at h I<' I 1 t• d 1 rec I or Ed Wc1wcr. in French 1.it'k. ln1I.. to allt•ncl a 1111: 'l\•n mct•trn~. toltl lh<' Ill'\\ s pap1:r lw harl · no cor11 mc·nt .. on th(' t·hurgt'S. 'l'hc source ~rn 1<1 nuckcyt•!> fullback Pete .Johnson was as signed to be h 1s ~u1de for Utt• "cckend in Columbus. nml thut he met with John:-.on and Hub- bard after the dinner with Hayes Orange County North·South All · star football classic at Orange Coast College Saturday night. The three-year varsity let· terman from Los Alamitos High has altered his Hrestyle quite a bit this summer . Instead of body surfin~. he's be-en sailing on 44-foot yawls, and his hair is a good deal shorter than the collar-length style he has been used lo. But that's all part of lire at the U.S. Naval Academy. Langer. a 6·3, 225-pounder , 1s back from Annapolis on a !>pecial 13·day leave to play for the all· star~ and the touJth physical aC'· lion may come as a welcome change. ''They put us under a lot or mental strain at the Acade my in the first three weeks." says Lan~er ... I guess it's to sec if you can take it or if .rou·11 break un· der the pressure. 1t takes some getting used to. .. Rut this is a run game. no real pre::.sure." he says. 'Tve played a1tnmsl some of thc•se guys. now it·11 be nice playing wrth them." And North c oach Dick Campbel l is also happy the Sun~cl All·lt>agucr was able to g el spec 1 a l permission to participate. ··The Academy's athletic pro- J!ram 1s on the upswing," says Langer. '' AnJ within two year s. J think the football team will be very competitive. They seemed to fCl1l this gHmc was impor- tant." De!>µitt' the mental pressure and the very structured and d1s- c1phnt>d way of life, Langer feels he will not have too much trouble adjusting. .. , think playing football has helpt•tl:· he s ays ... Peopll• yl'lling at ~ou anti cloinl! somcthin~ in 11 ('ertain way ut a certuin time has made 1t e;isi<'ron me." Nor does Lani:er s<.-em to m1n1I that upon graduation he will owe the Navy five years of scrvir('. "I'll hav<' a J.?ood education ;end I'll be guaranteed a JOb," he Stlyll. Spike Results All Co"'u' OIUMct It"" '"SH (1-tnl• ( 1.-...... ,., t ltr.~rl 0 Wt''" lMftry1oncn tl 4t o. ; Oon11l'1 PM•~, 1\und1hiwnt '"· <ton (IM'Y\I t'11d 11 it 1l, J t l•d""'" IC41fl\ f/)r• '" •'l.J. I '' tt I\, .. P ·t• ~.,., 'undOwn' r f4 J\ O ' 8·flv ~'''" 'M• '•uo llJ• .. 101 t \ o,. o. • Ol•t (\lmOhni.,4 f\un Onw"' t'~ 1\ .ut 0 Hulbert Returns To Area Cbet'kin« tbe college scene: Jerry Hulbert, the former UC Irvine ass istant basketbal coach. is back in the area. Hulbert . also the UCI gol coach for six years. resigned : year ago to take a basketball jot at a Grant's Pass. Ore. higl school. lt didn't work out and Hulber is back-but not coaching. Now living in Irvine. Hulber suys he'll enter the real estat< bt.isiness with bis brother. Mike Mayne can thank Chane· College athletic director Barne 'Newleel~r Upp1ng him-off ~beu the OCC baseball position. Newlee called MaynetoteUbin he could have the Chaffey Job I Chaffey coac h Howard Lowde I -CRAIG SHEFF was pkked as the OCCcoach. Mayne, a ~ucccssruJ prep coacl at Eisenhower Hll(h ln Rialto ro I four year s, thanked Newlee ro the offer. but quickly added bt would also check outtheOCCjob. The rest ls history with M ayn outclassing a talented list of a,: plicants. Ml. San Antonio College ha about the best home schedule < any or lhe state·s JC footbai teams . The Mounties play sevc of thei• 10 games al Walnut, ir eluding the fi rst six. OCC and Bakersfield arc hom • six or 10 times while LA Har bo probably has the worst homo schedule, playing only three o nine opponents al Wilmington. Golden West. Cypress and Lo' Angeles CC have six of their l• srnmes on the road. Saddlcback i. home five of nine ti mes. Quarterback Jim Conley, whc compiled 1,028 yards-in total or lense last year a t Cerrito~ Collel(e, will r>lay f01"1tbaJI at OCC this coming season. Costa Mcsa's Dennis Delany i~ batting .256 and Capis tranc Beach"s Joe Janton has a 3.4 pitching record (or Gary Adams' Valley Green Giants this sum· mer. A new Alaskan baseball team. the GianL~ ar c based out ol the Matnnuska·Susilna Valley. Delany is a catcher for Adams at UCLA "hale Janton pitched last season at UC Sunta Barbara. Tom llcrm~tad wasn't the only Golden Wt•st College coach at the Olympic Gamf.'s. Track coach Tom Noon and soccer mentor Grel(ory Ghica Wt'rr in Monlreat as spc>ct ators. flt•rmstad WH an oHIC'ial at somP or the• water J)()lo itamt•s. 1"11rm<·r Edison lll~h nnd OCC hn<'hackcr Biii l"ord a1tain riJ.?urcs high in Ore{(on State's plarls this foll. Thi• 6·2. 21S·r>ound ~wnic>r wa!'I th(' Ucavcrs' kl'Cond lt'ading ta«klcr last Sl'81\0n. lie made 58 solo lackh.•s anil was in on 59 others. And he 111tcrccpted one Jill SS Anotht•r u ·E<llson and OCC standout quarterback Davo While 111 ulso with the Beavers. Oregon Statt• OP<'llS the ~cuson S:1111rday. ScpL 4. hosting lh<' Unr vcrsrty of Kunst111 . NOW $4377 l~t V'1 "" Avt t '' '~' A'1J. CM \f.llllJ Purcell Memorial Games Set tr!• I th I •t ~l'l l'f1t IMMEDIATE CREDIT OM lHATf FOR DO~M rUMIHT 01 CASH BACK! AJl·sta~ b'nsketbaJI will be pre sented al lfuntinitt.on Acach's Edison High School Thursday njghl. Aug. 12 in a memorial doubleheader for Lionel Purcell , the Edison High cage coach who died recently following a heart attack. Funds derived rrom the two contests are l ickctcd towurd a scholarship fund in Mr. Purcell's name and pitted will be a band of Orange County All -stars against a Los Angeles group, in addition to professional al umni stnrs from USC :ind Cal State CLong Beach I. ' Among the Orange County amateur stars will be Rich Bran· nin)? of Hu ntington Beach's Marina Hll'h, Jrm McCloskey or Costa Mesa's Estancia High, Bob Vogelsang fro m Edison. Jim Elenz and Sal Gaton oC Santa Ana's Mater Dei. Fountain Valley's Ge:>rite Barrios and Bret Wilkinson. Long Beach Poly's John Nash and Michael Wiley and possibly Alex Black and Jack Tuz of Corona del Mar. The games are scheduled at 6: 30 an<l 8 with the pros playing rn the nightcap. Tickets are S2 for adults and $1 ror children undet• l2. Tickets will be available at tho door, in addition to five other out- lets. They are: Pal French al th<.' Edison Hig h administration or. fice; Family Book Store al Hunt- ington Beach Center <Beach and Edinger); Huntington Valley Spor ting Goods a t 19026. Brookhurst a nd 6901 Warner In· Huntington Beach; and Giovan· nl's. ltalian Delicatessen at 1380 No. Coast Hlghw~ ln Lagunll Stach. ,, OAILYPILOT r----:::~A;....._r.-~·· .. -AJ--~~-,-,_-'1--~---...·Rustler " Po t '1~ '" 87-79 Victory Wednesday AuguSl 4 1976 Del Mar Racing ~ntries - .,.,, ___ _,,,.,,,. ...,,.-UTTL& 8ACl(SPIN IMPAATeP TO~ UME OF -.....-...-~.,f~16HT ~ HST DOWN OH THI IALl TO MAKE SHOTS RISE O~ basic concept of 1olf is this: Shots become etr•n• by hlttin1 downward on the ball. This applies to all full aJ\ots except drives and fairway wood a. By strlkina the ball just before your clubhead reaches the bottom of its art ••• a point still in the downward swln1 ••• you put maximum backspin on the ball. It Is this backspin (illustr1t1on n ), coupled with the club'a loft, that causes the ball to rise and float on a cushion of air currents. Too many 1olfers mistokenly try to scoop under the ball with the clubhtad 1n an effort to get the shot Into the air. Usually tt11s causes the leading edge of the clubhead (illustration • J ) to hit into the side of th• ball as 1t is starting it~ upward path. The result is a minimum am~nt of backspin and a shot that either flies very low or riosed1ves • 8 ... n. ........... - IRON OUT THOSE IRON SHOTS! Arnold P.1lmu '1 bool>let "H11t1n1 UI• Irons" tNH ch•n19lon.lhlp tops to help sh•rP•n )'O\lr ltCHIM\o( 19'0,n1<111•. Send 20• •nd • atamped, return anvtlopt to Arnold Palmtr, in are of 11111 newtp•Pft· ~ J Los A lamit o s ~ Race Results F.,.T,..Sd•' l'l•ST ltACI -HO rards. l yeor OlllS Cl~lmlng Puf\eSl'IOO. I 01d1lm.,w11 tBrooksl 811Mner IT re.sure I c-tCld CB..,ksl Time -110. 11.40 S _, l 10 • 00 110 l 00 Aho A•n -Shlrochl. Jllled, J~,.... I C""roer, LllCkJ MIO , l.aoU Lol>.e 11, .,..., Too NoS<••Kno. '1 lluct• -.. , 0 1.i1mywe' a .. 9'~NY, .. ldSSl.fO. SllCONO ltACE -HO r1td1. 3 Yt•r Oldl. FOi' Follie .. AllOWUl(.4'. -.. S.)100. U P•• B•r IAd.lirl I._ Over Jord•n .8'00l<t .. ICll Mo,,,.I(•• Llptl•ml ,,,.,. -llOJ 110 1 X 1 ... Aho R•" M1h 8•nduc.tt, S..rtw.ty 8.01. ''""' '""'9<1' No,<r•tche~ 'THlltO ltACI -•00 1•rd1. 1 yu 1 olds. Mlolden1. Purl• Sl'IOO. £.11619 A•d .Cerdor• I 11 Ml S XI • OC Vlnt-Yt•r!W•rdl I .0 I Ill. T11,,_J11n<I-UC•,,glll l ) l>O Tome ·10 l• Also A•n -Me1ted B•ndli•. ~.C Tr.Oiiton, M•n f ruty c;1nt, E•'v S.Crel•ri•l, Bet\ LOI>• Luo:'-. Su twmP • .llOo•eP.tr How:r•ltties. l'OUllTH llACli -nouro .. Jy""r old" C••1mlng Purso l'IOO l ru4r Pol>.ey IH•rll ""° '.10 J10 Glory.C,.r•tUOre.m S<r.olc,...d -BIACk Brotller OH -Trople Gc•d""et for pl..:t, SIXTH •ACI! -JIO V••ds. 3 vt•r old'> & uP Cl•1m lno. For 1111;.,, & martt PurM\1100 OH·Ml• •o•t•tor 1 Ort r•r I 3 •O 360 UO OH·MiH Fiv• Plr IO•r<SW!I l 90 l.60 3 00 LtoV•norGlrl IC•rdor•I ] 40 Time -110. Also R•n • MIU O•d'S Wi n. Lotta A\tro. Cll•rge 10 (llfn<•. Oul<'< CHI· 1ra1, Lllllt 811w Wiiiow. Glory T• Nourat<ht~ u E ••<l• l·MI• A9ll•tor & .. OH· MiHl'1vt Ply,11•ldUJ 00. U E••<Ut .. MIU l!i•t Ply & l·OH· Mia At ll•l•r, P•ld SH 00. SEVENTH llACI! •DO Vl<dS. 2 .,..,01os A.flow•""• Pur,•Sl'!IOCt M )'if1,,y A'ocil•U•1H•rtt s "° L<>ls•luOy IWdrdl W"-&IW"'-Yf f lrf"•,ur•J T11•-. -70 ll J 11> H o •10 lOO • to Al~ qan -C•'Y SCMrklfl, Ltktf'N, T ••• Wlnovoo. T 1mr tor C•u..,, Cu"' 'fl0i01, Ji'b',Jft No!.<ralc""' EIGHTH llACE J'ClvJrd> 1 ''"'r :ilctJ C111m1n9 Pur eUIOO GoldCouritry Ao1191\I 1' •O Jet Rocktl ,..,,., Cl•to•W!f FrM(nrow AOd1r) Time • 11 /6 100 •20 JOO '80 J 00 Al\O RM -L•l•OO lo•aoo. En10Y Mil, Tlnv Cuo1d, Som~ K '""" S.11or. """'.' Rnrfl. Twh t ot L•m• S<r~l<~Pd Oori't ~'1001 Lolw Aoogara. F"eC•11M. Too Trouo•t°*<~ S111,..rll,. IBroo~tl "" 41oot IC•rdOt•I T•-·110. • '° ~ ~ u EH<I• .. Gold Co11ntry & 1~t llochl Ntw1, P"d '167 .00. AIM> R•n -S.rq.•Jnl N"'I Som-rl"I NINTH ltACE -JSO Yf•d• J yf'l• Fit\f\ton Arm\ Co. M 1Ch•I• s 3tctt\uo ct•1m1nq Pur-.•Sttc.x> Run•w•y V•nCI• sJ•I ~ B•n•>I Noscr.ic""'· l'INH II.ACE -170 v•rdt. 3 ,,., <lid•' up C"1m1ng. Pu••• Utoo llO 610 • ., Yoglt lie .. , .. ICltrtt .. I 4 60 \ Xl 0>M9•11!1 Cnarllt IWMd I & 60 Tt--187' Mr. 616Ck Deck tCltrlUtl HO 1 XI 0+4·11tdlltdWlllO IAou9111 l.10 OH Judy'"""" OtLomtul' 10 OH C.r.od .. Trttcel l 29 "'"" R•n 81Q l!aw. AtQu•"I Lllllt l 70 B•r. Je l Ouli Rtd, 8t r ArtoN. 1 •O Co.ollr•ln 710 SctelCh!'CI -Tull Son Tu"T"W u~.JO • 220, U EU<I• •·O_llH_ & 1 'f'tqot ..... a.N IO UlSO "'I'° llan -Nlghl SM~d. l(n•;"4 ot Alltnd•n<e -I OOJ Alamitos Entries l'erTo"lt M l'lnt l'n ll • Cl9<1t l'lltST llACI -JSO vtrd,. 3 ,. .. , olO\ O •lmor19 Puru l l'llO Cl•lrNr>Q proc•usoo ~ ~•lutt tOt LOmll.l I, .... fl'l•Qhl ll•nUI, GoCaful\ Tr .. tu•el. _.4'1 T dn•tt I cr .. vero: M r. B•r Ctf<tl IH•rll; Rul\nll\il hi> I R011QM: 8•V.lrt Robin ICtrdotel: M•ll't COl>Y tAdollrl; Tull Ro IOrool>.lltldl. SICONOltACI -lSOyarCK 1YNr old ,...10~"' Cl•lmlnQ P11rM \1'00. c1..im1rwi ortct uooo Sntt t Oone 111ouo111 Or•y PollPOI\ Ulen•sl; f!••••to• • BrHN 1~1; Run Killy IT•NW,.•: 9unn1'\ !Ur lt111 ~n.on11 : Arni• llol>O ICIOfl\\tl Allee Wini IC••do1••. Tnp Moon AO(l .. I IM<l<IWlll; Ht \ A llU'W'r • •W•tdt, ~"'''"'ct 01.mond tAcMlt>. THlllO •ACE -810 nrdt J ,.., 01~ ' UfJ Cla1mln9. Pur .. tl 100, C'hlmlnq orlu UOOO 61n Street S..m 1Tre1tu1•I; \lot~ Basket ball l'or Pall~ CW•Hll. E•q•~ Land•llQ t8foo~''· v.,9•' T·~' MyJf'1o1, ~oul P•IM B•n-•I, ~n·on1 Flot• R-• FOUllTH II.ACE •00 ordl 7' .. r old """'°'"~ Ct•l,,,1n11~ Pvt1'# , l\ilUO C11lmlno or1ce "IOO Wner\•t Otvon tfrff<•f HYny Kan• tBroo-.,1, NO<h•"''il Moon Mylt\1, Trac" P•hmn e fu:d<wt l, QulC~•n O•I• • Ha<ll Tom T~o Siar ~·01>&ml, Orph•n s Oo tll<>u(llt1 Oul al My War CC•rUOltl. Im Nol"~" P•"9 B•n-.1, Nall•• O~I• ,(1•r.,~1. Fl"H llACE no r~rd l .,.., olds & uo (lolmong. p~~· uiqo Cl•tmtnQ Ortc.e l •JSO H•ddtn T•••"' Tno 8r:w>~ ' J"stl .. e P• H•rlt, 0• 4ttl lrf\O 'LI0""-1m1 O•' O 11t 11n Qt-.. .,. •• ,. Of"d)" lfo Birt lCl.-,1~1•'· Al.nue tC..rdotll, SIXTli •AC:( •00 vMd\ l vr·Ar ofdl ' YP Cl•un1n1;1 f'urw 11-...0, Cltttrn1r.o ont.r '1ti011 M.<nr1-lla 11•nl<1hl I Rov•• TOil [lar CL•Pl"IM1'11. A~o•• 8•f'H1 Tr, ... ~• f&:~~~: ~.o::~~d ,.:,.~:t ,:::." Ot>odol t Rouqhl 0111 c •~'" c"'do11 • r<no ,.,,, lHti>0•'1~ (t:trlt ,·~o.1nr.fy tMfttPWtU. S • SEVENTH llACI • lSO y~rdt. l ummar1es Y••tOld'\,AllOw•n<t Pur-..t ~ $old \rorl tL1p1>.11ml, hll>.v ,."'°"'~ tHMll (l\••O!I• A•Y tOrry•r• 'ft\I C: .. laMUt 0tt11Ltt\tW IM• IT<t••uro1, Jtl Ocin l~le•• ... l, At 111~:_1:.~::!',''""°' "'"' Juov 1~••00111. ~Ollfll MtC'°"'"' Pl•tl ""'flt'' W•l<~•r Cl<""qoyon Rovn !.coll toltls •• It ,. "' 11 2 ' ,. • ' ' 14 • 0 t • (> 0 I 11 ~ ' ' " t • 3 10 ' 1 3 t • A l• 16 I) .. K•wu n ltlll It II ,. llt AIPt!• , 0 J • I ,11tm:H\ P 7 • ,. ~,.,."I II 0 1• C..••1•1'1 J • 10 (f-11) 1 • 21 \I'"°" & 4 3 16 Tot,•!\ 36 11 '' tl toirttmr Tul'\t •,,_., JS. C•ll ... O.rs dtlU le<I Ct nlwy 11 11, forlefl. Tonight's Sclledvle 1 IS ·8ulleltvs WoOCly's 8 JO -C••ltnO•r s u 811lld •nd Grow ~,·1S<he<111le 7 1S-C•ll•ftdtrs1rsT11rik't • ~ ..... -c;,. .. .,SlletlO·• LHt•St41"41111t1 Wo t Ol•hl•" • E IGHTH ltACI -tOO y41rlb. h•ffr olta \. up. Cl•trt11no. Pvr~ atOO. Cl•lml"9 Cl'ICt UtoO ICl• .. m•ll • Kr!IQlltl . To,.IO'• Do Jlft91• "''"~'· Mt• tre• •8<tnll,1, A•ffl A.>w"•' I Adair I· MOll•lt 011sler IW•t\Onl ~lllit RIO Tt .... t8r~fteld); OIOf l. lound \8rOOI"'' P•1>• ll\dl• IHltll, NINTH ••C£ -llO v~rd' 3 .,,.., 0111s. C1••mlr19 l"uru ••«>o O••""no prouUSOO Bold M ft' P•PCO aoa1r I "' ""''°'""'''o IC<1rdo1111 O•q Al {>.lt 1Mi1cl>tlll Trl'f Too l.o••• 1CnoQ111 1 S<o11 ... I B•t Encl .... ,, S••P. (1)1 , •• Cuo I Bff\11 ', o. H rl c.,.m \A°OUQhli Tt mr f l') C l"l•f,_I' 1Tr'"'"''"'· ~01'1· r (;o f0r<i;ittrt ; Mf!•t ~loOV 1tlori\~I. Men's Golf efo CANYON cc T'wo Low Btlh 111 Fow•-. I Mr -Mrs Al.-. a1.c.i1d91, Mr. '""' Mn P..,1 ScAICWtMr, 11•. t. /W •l'O Mrs O•<k (llMonqMm, Mr, -MTS ~, ... , ..... IJJ P•ro.tr s e.11tr 8•11-1. ~ ~,., Oufld&Gr- Ctll-r's C:.ntuty 11 W L. Ar9Yf'Oi, Oob Mor<1•n SI 1 JKI< 7 ~ Gonqdon, Oto•ld °'O»ll•ll. '4. l. 11•1 6 • ~M\let Smllh, lllthotrd -•; f•rl T""'°'t s-·~ ICtw•~I LAlwllfta liUIOivlsl.,. s • '''""· M.oo Albertson; Douo '"'· 3 • 0111 "°""•'· .0 IO 1 . ) s • I IO llANCNO IAH JOAOUtfl 0C Wttll -· '"'"' 700 ••r•.ldr .. _ 'IP. ll>t tMn S Choll MO imum OI 110 I• -ly t1llt<I ti Ae"'ho 5.ln ,,_..,n Gell Co<1rH . • I \ WHITTIER -The Hlo Hondo College summer basketbaJI leal'ue C:lrne to on end londay rugbt; and the Golden Wen Coll ea:e Rus tlt.>rs ~cored an 87-79 decision over Cypress. ,,., Tl••, ... , f'int PHI H'M Of '4'11tt1twr IValtttcl W•tlClt Pwlllo M<~tr!l""I ll#ppy M•l\\ll• lllu"I 11• t 11 ... 1111r,e t6000. Clelmlnt llfl~ A1..000 • l.'O 000 0-..0'0lory IPIMc.t ) Am•tn.• 011Yt!t•\I ()cw, 'MU\1( Tor•t T~lf.,.,,... (M<Htr-1 IU k lOHTH •t.CI -11116 motf\ <•\ t ,.. tU't lfll0fl• A m•t•\ l y.,_., 04d ~ ~. l:lrlan Rogers pot:ed Colden We l by st·orulg a> potnlb. R11ttlett •t JI •• II pf Ip fi ...,... ' • .~ J ait•"°"' I ~,. <I ' • ,, luO• " •• • FlllST llACa -0,.. ""I• l I 4 .,.. .. ,.,.,........,..011t'OO"·Q"Ot9' 1 '" C,.J,t (l•1m•"9 Pvt.,. UD O••r. "'QP<o<•\0000 \11 ll9w_., ll·OWM!ll, ,_,,,t>erl ~~' ........... ,011\1~•·1• (1 .. ,. ... , N C1""dv , ..... C...'Yle~lttl MtHtt9..,.1 it..t .. tl"l'f c. '''""'"' wn11n ... t P.111.u OtiYttr•,~ """'~'''"'' .... , .. C ~t•r-..nic G.tfnt \Marllnl) ~·lt¥\t ~c.,.~uil4tt.I; C.ro><oMuc""'"" "•nuyJt I 41 .. (11•···· ~~-.,., .......... , 116 X114 ""' 111 flt 1u ,,. )I II I II• I•• XIII "'111•:. ... ,.. •••oon• 1w,, O•rw,01•1 H•A1r~,lllf1'11 IP111{f~ Jr.) \ 1rp.,,. 'Hew•rdt l<I ~l()t , .. "' 11' °"<O<•lor O.nctr IOllY.," 11 A/IOtl \ Fll(llll M<H•t9"~1 c;.or....,~ IP•n<•yJr 1 ""-J(o IV• ... 11 l,.tllyV1k1"'""' •C•"'P41•1 ftf,,1..,.. .,, ,,,. ,v.,~,. 1 t • H, ,,.,.1\1 0Jn(fr fTOtO' W"u a1 Y ?UY\• 0 fl¥•fft) ~·-r~-.J tVer9oo••I I 0. !lo.0. .. II ltoMl\OrllOyl IW ~lte\•nt1 Atrt o 1C.0•11•lt1I w. A At~ I Ht>W•tdl Wlnl•r W1nnt• IP1<>r,•I 0.-.... e.10 l\lloeft\•htl Culntt\ O..r t 1MltN1 I 'THl llO lit.Cr 11116 m1~ ) l • ''' Ohl rn•l<lon\ Cl•1m1no lilurw MOilOl.Cl>1m1"41p110UO,OOO t l6000. rv.,.,,mm.1n .. 01nu;ia1.a X111 hur(.P'I ,,._, 0,1y H• .. I lt& I"'"°"' \. •mp..t•1 tU c. ... ,.. .t;. ft .... ., 116 lu•r-.>n..,coq M<H•reu• > 1i. .... "'''''' 11-..0>llM 0•1• 1Vfr9'1r•JI lt\.OU Ohtw.tt ~ 1 • 1.~. IO•*'•t.Ot•• Ii• ... '-tlul• 1T0<ol 117 111 117 I It 4110• .. RO\ llUf\4' 'U,OUQ. 111 Undt'(IO •41 •P•ncftJr I 117 $1XTN It AC a -6 fltf~ 3 ,.,.~ 1'11111 ... M<H•rtvtl Dr.UitHI .. Oov• tOhv•'" • OM .. l PfNtV'f tVefQ .. ,.., I lh II I I t. I II 11J 111 111 Oleb. A'-An<tt PvrM Jll.000. II~ T. r•\' r ~-k•r> 11\ "'"To-tR•Mlltll 11 j Gl>t9"'U • Gr.,. ~ 1 c. ..... .,.~ I 11\ [lwCltl( 1>14lQ llO'OI 11\ C/11( ltulet tM,HefQ<t9) 111 C:t~Nl\ClllOtn l~••IHI Ill 111 P•IO ,-.,r•ll How•1.i1 tot C.•-<tl"' e •. ...,..,, ro'•' II) Mf"'n K•lhlHn 1 P••ru I 111 '" llJ 11 • $I VI N'TH ltACI -t lurlOtlQ\. J .\ NINTH llACI -Or~ mll• I"''" tldflllfU, AllOWtn, ... Pu .... 14000 T•M. Ulitn<. <V•t~4'•' 11 t l' •lw,,..,..r..,..•nl•I • ~llcWm•l>.vr > I It ~rntn• tMlH•tOu•• ''' \/ftlt SiDOllbl• I M<Jft• t '" 11) 1<111 11) • ~' Old m11<rs. Allow•"'•'-Pll<w I' 11• lv~\I• M..,.,, .. 10hY.tff\t 1 U '~ ""°''OHOC fPincav Jr I l.H·· "'"" " ' 1' o.-l•nl• • II I • H~ft&ff SICONO llA~l \lw•ltou'l..1~ • Okh Ci-4"'•"9 Pt1f"'• ~ (J,.,f111f"'l l"o<tt ... 000 "(IN T~111 .. n\1111' Al•'l;tn) X1~ w .. llOcln V•l<Hll IU flll"TH llACa.--o..tw'-'-t VtUI' Oldhll ... Alio-•11te' Pu•Wl IWJ'f 0.W•n l~htr I Oeltt en.me-• 10llv•r1 •I C ... v.l.e<l<•IQ 'M ""'ll•YJ uv.,..ao, \V••• qUit1• 11' "'' \ 0rl'•m (iltl IC#<>M•l•1I II• llO ~'"-• l•l)clft IP•n•OJr.11 111 Ill) Pi• W f l"louCI ~!Or U I '" 110 ""'1\1111" 81..i Oonl(Olal ., 0 " tot•• '40 •• II F-UfO f-r ... nC'"hco tNWl\lf ft• l'OUllTH llACt • luflO'"l' t H•ltttMt• Ru tt .. , ,, •• ll 11191n1o,111 '""""' XIO. ~ .. M utn m••O•tt t•IUf"'\~ Ct•tmtnQ SPECIAL VALUES FOR TODAY THRU SUNDAY 4 PLY NYLON 27MONTH\ LIMITED WARRA~ JUMBO 70 SERIES CORNELL 900 STEEL BELTE D RADI ALS WHITE TUBELESS , SIU WHITE TU9El£SS ER70.14' -FR70-U- -GR70-1" COSTA MESA PRICE ~FED UC TAX $39.29 _$2.74 $40.69 $2.93 $43.49 $3.08 s.o . 89 $3.13 F ..... y W111 .. IPl"<ftr Jr I f>\>My ""9010 l!>-•1>.tr I c..o!IW~•n•l INl<ln.al FULLERTON 1530 S. HAJltllOR BL VO. PHONt: 170-0700 , .. 111 Ill Up To Jv41•1 lforol 110 Al .. lll•IM• 110 RtttlntTo .... !Pln<•tJI n l.'O PT<o<Cln<Nl IVttoer•I 11\1 M·""'•'-1• ITorol 111 GoA<OUnJMttry l\/tlcMtl SANTAANA WESTMINSTER 120 E. FIRST ST. AT CYPRESS P'HON£: 547·7477 15221 BEACH BLVD. PHONE.: 193·8544 AIU Y l.LUSTIATID •WY TO IUD ftlfllUON AITl lEPAll ~~~·BOOKS Jopo.-••• 1 .. ,..,, •• "c"·"P• o•cf Vo~• k••< •r ,•·---· • P'!ASflC ,...,.. • l'OUllNO $!'OUT ~ cu n u • 0t1 mTu Wat NCI' m 1 s• Of 3 SYNTHETIC ''WA1& SPRITI" CHAMOIS $ GR70.IS HR70-1S S4 S.29 53.35 JR70.1 S $47.29 $3.54' LRl0.15 $0.49 S3.63 YOUR CHOla 59!a. 4 0 MONTH LIMITED WARRANTY • FREE TIRE MOUNTING FOREIGN CAR SPECIALS TIUS VW' TOYOT AS, MGS, OPEL S, fOI $ DATSUNS AND M ANY ~OTHER FOREIGN CARS s.o 0 x lS rt~ SI JI $1529 TUBEUSS 4 Pl y BlACKWALLS NYLO N 21 MONTH LIMITED WA RRANTY ' [~ 2?" ~? s1511I L~·?? ~ ! 7 •16aa l rv;n-:-15 s17s9j 5.60 x 14 s17s9 j l-·;;--;~ '' _ r l' \I 1 -----'· [~·9?~1 !~ •18'9 1 Hl·l'lUOI MANCl A78-15 s2o~s .__w_,1 ... 0_.l_l._l_A_C.._K ___ " T r I • 243~1 HEA vr ourr ... , ..... IUCKWAUS ·~" ,,,. 1 00 • U 1 · 70 • 1 ~ I ?:.7.~: ~ ... ~1· ,.,... ,.,., ,.,,.""' --I0.16S I 12'1t~ I ~~~! ~~~ ' I ,, \ HIGH PRESSURE TIRE PUMP 1 Y2 INCH x 20 INOt CHROME PLATED •ltre,. ••• •••••I lteh ......... .._.,,, ..... , ..... ................. , .. ... ~ ...... '"' .... 5"•7" IUD a•• • en. "" 00-n·fOUUtlf MD IAYI 3'' I ~ 2'' ~4'' ICllP 1'' ONE .. YOUI CM SPRAY-ON ENGINE ENAMEL ASSORTED COl.OIS ~~ii:o~l.I :~;:h' •. 0:~~.',,.!:o't:..";:~\::~~· 9111• ..... I.le ....,_. ' ~ ' t B·I O~IL y PILOT Wednetdey,Augu1U. 1978 Amy Takes Tuna Stand PUBUC NOTICE PVBUC N011CJ: PUBLIC NOTICE PIC1'1TIOUS •USIMlrU ~IC'llflOUS IUSIMl.SS MAMaSTATaMeNT •AM&HATlllllUfT Tllo .......... --It ......... 1"41 ....... ~ --llclltl•lll8'-_.,_ -tJI •II.A. Clf .. TEllS & ASSOCIATB, PINNIY '-'VINO T.V,. lllQS CO. Carter Daughter Out of Fishy Bminess ~St .~l•MeM.CA ~ .,,,_t.inVet10 .CA.t11'8 Willt-E. C""letl. UIOClellWft. O.vlCIA. ... 11",to.~s.n. $8111•4ne.CA.t111M leAn•,CA.f21CM n.K lllutllllfttl!J ~lttl .,, .,. l11t TMl IMIJlneu It <·OllOU<llld ""en 111o .-rtt1M1, CllYlclu.il. •· rom ,\I' Dlspatc:htS Amy Cute r JO•rn.-d 8 y~r-old U&a Diprima'• c urnp.11~n lo'-•' e-v. 1ld arumaJs rrom trappers. L1z.i ~1rnl Am}. th•u~hler of Democratic Pf"&- !i1dt-11twl nonrnwe Jimmy Cart«'r, sent her a letter .icccpt &nl( honorary 11wrnbership In her Animal SavanJ! A i.i.OCIJllOll, a •:roup or elementary school i.tud\•nt ... or.ia111.ccd under parenUal allllpkes in M ad11>11n, \ 1.,c I .tr~•"' rolt• to Am~ lw.t week suggesting she not. ~cit tunu fl ">h i.undw1~hl~ ut her lemon¥de stand at. tht: Curtt>r h o1ne m l'lami;, c:a. Com1>l.i1n1n1-: llwt tuna fi!;hcrmcn drowned porpo1~t.>s in cutching t un••. Lita orrered a n honornry 111t•tnbcr:.hJfJ to Amy und included a cam· pa1gn button rt'ad1111:; ··uon't kill ammoaJs ror fun or lur ·• * Vin· l'rc111d1.:n t Nt'lson Kockereller returned to hu; lnrthpluet· at Mount C>est.•rt. island to host a !\lame Hl·puhhcan party rcceplton. About KS pl'ri.oru. rmld SlSO each to drink t·ockt<1il:o. v. Ith lhc vice-µresident in his modern ~1·m1C'1rrul<tr ~um mer hc>me at the tip of the island. Huger~ . 0 . Morton. chairman or President. Ford's campn1gn com- ( mittee, and John LJwll, l >L~()l'LE ) ~1aine ·s s t ate GOP 1:. ch:urman, were among ----------'-the guests. One man said he also k.oc\\ <l couple of Ocmocruls were there. • Opera -;tar Benrly Sills. suffering from a cold JllO l;1n 11~111!>, c:anccled her scheduled appearance .1t1hc HJ\ln1;i f''esli\'al in Chicago. Tht• soµrano wus rcrlaccd by Donald Gramm, leading hU!>Stl or the Metropolitan 0 era. who 11c•1·rormefl a llrogr nm of Italian, Frcn<'h ;11hl Hussian ::irias under 1lw bJton of Sarah Caldwell, ronchu·tnr uf the Opcr:s <.:om· pan) ol Un..;t on Miss Sills' lust performance \\:JS at l1h il;11ll'lphia's Hobin llvod Dell J Uiy W. • Faith, love. discipline and resp1:rt for t he husband 's JUthorily m<ike ror h lifmOniOUS SILLS fam1l> life. suys Princess Grace of Monaco. "ll "oultl huve been extremely dirricult without the strong basic bond of our relii;ion -and that we were in agreement on principles we hope lo in s till in our c hildr e n ." the forme r llollywood actress said or her 20 -year marriage to Prince ltainier. • PRINCE\\GR.t.CE The former Crace Kelly, now 46 and the mother of three, mad e h e r co mme nts i n Philadelphia at the 4lst lntema· t1onal Eucharistic Congress. a .:athenng of Roman Cat.holies fro m throughout the world. * F1n:HH'1t•r ('. Arnholt Smith, trying to prevent thC' ll<;(' or ~t·nt•cl records 10 his approaching bank thl'fl I rial, s:l) s the sl'arrh warrant was too vague. It t11lo" l'tf, irnv his lawyers, "almost in- clist•r11nln11tc \ :icuuming or the 25th floor" offices which Sm 1th otn1v1e<I. ··ws J "'orking tool or law enforcement.." n•sJ)(mdv1l Oepuly 01~1. Ally. Thomas McArdle, ----~ --~----------- Pl'Hl.lf NOTJC'E l'IC JI TIOU) 8U~t NEU NAMtHATEMENT ,,. •.• ,lfO#fl t) ~·r•,•n\ .tH•OOintttlU 4 ... _. ~ .. t ""' t Uf•Qt .,.r•, (0 .. ,, V• • I 11 .. " 1111,. • ' ... •11 I(,, Ot .. t\.O'flllf ti l , 10• , ... ~ M.r.•1n.n1 No. l, ~· oonoo 0.M-1\. CA. ..,111 C",...cw ... L. W'ov,, '· ?i\n r--.mlno, M 1 +uflV••l\1 rA. .. hi~ lf'H bu ltlf'\"' •1' (·•ndU<tcitt by tt '"'tit '•lfMfH1••t n1p .-. ., t>• ··•o~ .,, ( "'''"' -..uv.1<.< 1'•"\ I 1lrn\• l\I ""'1 lilMI Wllh ,,._ P UBLIC N011CE l'ICTITIOUS a USINllSS N.t.MIE STATIEMENT 1~1041-lr>v otrj0115 •re clOlno busl· f"'f"\~4'\. SCH ILLING PRECISION •• wt? R•...-••<h Dr. C. HunlinQIGft 81«11. CA. ~u·~ Clwrles T...-.nce S<l>l11"'8, m9' tSCtt~ .. So l 8H ctt. CA,'°, • R-..ci !M:Mabsl, '711 Mlddl«llll Of'., HunU"910<\ Ou<lt. C.A, ~ Th" bu•ln@n I• condu<ted by • 9t"'4'•' """""' j l\lp, Gll•rl .. T. S<hHllnq Thi• \llte,,....nt was ltll'd ..C"' uw County Cl•f\ ol 0r•"9t COunl1 Oii July .•. ,.,. lllMtlJ Pucio\~ Of'lt"O< CH\I 0..•IJ PllOI J'S'OOj Ju1y ?t, 19. -Au9uSI •. 11, ,,,. t'uN! ". t Or l•l(t rt.~\· 0-HIV f"tlu\ ~n ,. f Vf'l'I '-' "' I Or llt'1 ;1t ( 1vttfy Ot\ JiM\ I'. Hrl't. J JlJ • 1nt1 Au • t It 1-., nib 1101 ,. rUHLIC' ~OTICE P UBLIC NOTICE ,.CTITIOU$ 8USINHS N.t.MI STATEME NT l'ICTI TIOU\ llUSINEU TM fl)llO•onq per'°"' are dOll'Q taN· HI .. • SfA f EMENT ,. -l~101111 ... 1n1~·••t1•M"°"'ll<I"""' c 0 SAFEr'I" co. tt!oll -· .,...,, .-f tt\f(I , El Toro,CA.•l•JO P!:Ttlr JI> Ml .. S C.t.1 IFORNIA O..voa A Or11w11, H SAI WooOcrti.I UNIV CR .. (, ~I? C°••Of1 14tr• Or,, rr,, [I Toro, CA•7'JO I 0111 •IO<I, CA ~U~. Wll\Oll H, O•kt,, 1'17 FIOIMllllO Mt'' ( HUotnt' \Jfh'V .. IV' lftC • It Of•• COlt• ~,.,CA '7616 f "41tiornut uttOOtAtton SU C..teitf\Atrt P•tt•< 9' A. O•"'P'•Y, S>& W. Ot•..,,. f"U ti lft.CA•1.,,\ ""'°'"•'\.iitntAAM,C•ttJO> '"'. ""'''""" •• C.OflW\led bJ1 • eur '"" !Iv••"•" I• condu<led l>'t • f<Sl'JUlon ~r.tlSMtlMtlohlP. r ''" •,mlth Wol-o" H, Oyk ... ~ ,, •· ch,,. ttH\ \;t•tttt'Ttt'nt •~S flttd -'"' ,._ 'Jnl• ,,,,,, m1 111 '"·" "'"' wlllll llf' ('°""tY (ltrk of Ornn1111 covnl) Oii JUiy CWn\V th,. "' U• .,,.94 (41only ""Juty Jl, "'~· '"• WI• ""llt ~"141 ('vbllo.d 0.ltftOll Coast OMI, Piiot. f'unto<llM °'"""" ('o.1111 °""• "'~· lut•,. • ..., Auovll ~ 11, II,,,,. JIM-1' wlthoul any need to be .. eJaborat.tly speclnc." The r«0rds were aehed Sept.. 30 from the o(. fices wltich Smlt.h t.beo oc:~pied In the UnJted States National Bank buildina lo downtown Sao Dlego. ' • Cuban A(l'lcultur-e ~ter It••• Castro ar. rh•ed ln Halifax Nova Scotia '°" wbal be described as non·polltlcal stay at the in· vitatioa of Nova Seot.la·born in· dustriallat Cyru Ea&Ga. Castro. brother ol CUban Premlu FkleJ Ca.VO. sa.ld he is in Canada only to study agriculture. Eaton told Castro, "You tell your bc'other that there will be a new 1overnment in the United , States and that government will u ToN eo all out to diaplay friendahip and understandlngloward <.\Iba. t•m willln1 to bet all the lea in China that. will bapp_en." * Secretary of State Hewy A. Klsabager will st0p in France next week '°" a 36·bour holiday at a coastal resort in Normandy with his wife, Naacy, and son, David. Robert L. Fauet~. a State Department s~esman, described the stop in ~auville as private and declined to identify the Klssingers• bosL He said no talb were planned with French of- ficials while Kissinger was m the count.ry. * Eliubetla Cole••• says she doesn't see anything unusual about being the first female press secretary in memory for a Calitornia governor, "It seems to me most. of my professional life~ I've been one of the flnt women dolng one thing or other." The former magazine and television newswoman is work· ing for Gov. £.tma.t Br..-.''·• taking a job that gave previous Brown press spokesmen ulcers before they quit. * Soviet chess grandmaster Vlktor Korcbol, who applied for political a sylum in The Netherlands last week, has been couMAN granted a six-months permit to stay in the count.ry, the Justice Min is try announced. The world's No. 2 player from Leningr ad has been in hiding since beaslted '°"asylum. Korcbnol, 4:5, stayed on in Holland alter taking part in an annual chess competition or· ganiied by the Dutch al£Uiate or I n terna tional Business Machines. He shared first place with young British player An· &19on.y Miles. * Watergate s pecial pro- secutor Archibald Cox received Ko•'""°' the first WUJlam 0. DcMlglu Award 10 ceremonies at Century City. The award was presented by Public Counsel the public-interest law orflce of the Beverly Hill~ Bar Association Law Foundatfon, at a dinner honor· Ing retired U.S. Supreme Court Justice Douglas. Cox was the main speaker at the affair, wbicb Douglas was not able to attend. PUBLIC NO'nCE PUBLIC N011CE llltCTITIOUSaUSINhS "AMalTATIMINT ,.,,. .......... ,.,_, . .,. ~.,..,. -"'· II & E PAINTING. 110SI ,....,_ SI., Hunllf\9lOll a.tt< I\, CA • ..,._ RonO•ll Geno Etsee, 110SI P•'"""''e St., Hu11t1119t0<\ ... II, CA. ., .... Rory 51Au•on Rtch•rdi, lM1t ()njoru SI., HUl\tin91011 8"«11, CA. w... T111, lkl.,M n 11 c.Ofl4¥<Mcl W • ....,....1""r1nenl\lp. ROlld•ll 0, El ... n.ls "•••-"' w•s fli.d wllll V.. GoulllY 04tll ef Or ..... C--,onJuly n ... , .. f'lft1' Pvllll-Ot•"Ve Goelt o.11'1' P0'4, Jut,"· ...0 ..... 911•1 •• "· ... "'" J"5-76 PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE wtlH-t!.C.Mt,_ O.vl•A. Pel\.r T'Ml ••-• w•• ,._ wl9I t11e nil• Sla .. rNnt wn fli.ct """' "" c-, Oen. Oil o.-.. c_, _UY Qwfta, Qerll ot OtMl9t ,_,on Jul' ''· .. ,., 12.. "' .. ,.. ,.,.... "'*'"""Or-C'.N•I o.111' Pllol, PvllllsN<f Ot•"~ CCNU o.llJ llllol, JulYIA.21.&-""9.•,ttl• tt01·1• Jutyt4,?t,21.•llllA110 •.1'1t ~I• PUBLIC NO'nCE S·Zint SUHltlOttCOUaTOfl THI STAT'IWCA\.1N••tA,.. TMICOVNTYOf'O•MIOtl ......... , NOTICI 01' "aAtt1NG O~ l'ITlllO,. '0• l"•OaAta Of' 1111111..L ANO 111011 LIETTl1t$ TUTAMI N· ,.,. ... lhl•I• ol MAUIUCI! M. AOAl\U. Oo<ffW<l NOTICE IS HEAeov GIVEN '""' PtUL-IP t.. ADAMS tt•' ltltcJ ,_..., •• n 4 Ot1•t~ ft' PtObJt• ot W•ll onJ fOit ·~ ~~of L1ttvn ft\t•ffl""'.,Y t.) lM OtUt~r '•'•'•net' lo wt\1c.h" r'ttrrao~ lo-lu.rlhor IM!rt•(ul•f>, AnQ tl\01 0 .. II"" •net pl.-c• of "'""I"~ 11111 ••n"' "•' -u 1 "" .t.vou11 11). 1t1•. t i 10.00 •.m.. In I"" tCHlrlr-n ot 0.0ol•tmtnt No. J ol S•IO <Ov•I ••• IC>J C:Mt 0.111 ... Ort .. W.\1, In 1M Col' OI S...le ""41, C•Utornla 0.lfllJufY21. "1•. WILUAMLSIJO"N Counly C••'' .... VY,ICOUOIN,AWOOOS,APC P.o.aoiu~m SANTAANA,U .'21l1 A,..,_.., ... , ... 111 ...... Pvbtl.,...d Or•"~ Co~tl Otlly Pllol, Julytt, tt.•AdAuQ<i•U, ltl• l1'2·1• PUBLIC NO'nCE '-JlUZ StlPl••o• c:ou•TOll'TMI ITATll Of' tAUlllO•NIA ll'Oa TMICOUNTYOf'O•ANGI .... A ... 10 NOTlCI Of' "IEAltlNG 0~ PfTITION ~O• 01101• Ollt l CTING C:ONVIY ANC E 0 111 alAl l"ttOI'« U V Ell•le of J OSEP H AOBERf KAO\l. •tCA JOE KROLl. De<teted. NOTICE IS H£REl!Y GIVEN lllat PEGGY A, l EONE ,,., 111..S ""'°eln • pelltlon 1 ... OrO~r Ol1e<llnt Coll· wyMCe of Real Pr-•IY to uw ~II· tloner rt4-nc• to whl<ll " ,....ot '"' tun,... PMtk ul.,s. en<! tl\ol '"" llmc -pl.a ol llffrlno 111« .. mt,,., bffft Mt lor ""911SI tt. ,.,,, •I •.oo • m~ In Ille <ourlrM<n ol De1><1r1,....111 No. 3 ot w ld ~. et 100 Civic C..ntw o,;,.. Wul, ... lM "'" ef Sa111• ... M . GtlllOfl\I•, Oetecl Jul.,,.,"" Wll..UAM I . SI IOHN. C-tyCJe_r- -TMOM & ltOS.NSWalG ,.WIUMl•l •1..vo. IUtTaJM a ava•l..YNtU.S,CA.ttUt .. ......., ......... 1- PvbtlUMd OU119' co .. 1 0•11Y Pllol, JU1yH,tt.-Au911sU, 1'16 31'°'1• PUBLIC SOTICE PICTITIOUS aust•IH NAMI STATaMINT Tlw totlo•lnt ,,_rson• .,. clolnt ll11>lllH~~: SUNSET PllOOUCTS, UJJ E. 0rltft91tl•orpt An .• Full•rlon, CA'l'ltlt Stlt<llle ol Calllornl•. Inc,. a c..lll0tlli• <OlllO' ellO<\, llU MOlor A .. ., t..o.A119tlts,CA_,. 1.,,1(,E. (.orporallon, ~Jn Molor A ... , t.ol ""'9el•'• CA~ Tl\tl llll>IMn ts COndu<led by ii 9'fttr•l ... r1Mrshlp • S.l«tll•ol t •lllornt•, 111<. Gen«r•IP•rtner Rolletl-y Tiiis ~=: wH llled with t"' C-lf Clerk of Or•llll'I Go•111c, on rn.1t16. "'"" P111111s11ee1 Or0119t co.st 0...11, PllGI, AU9USl•, 11, lt.2J.1'16 ~I· PUBLIC NO'nCE PICTITIOUS aUSINlU NAMIE STATIEMENT Tiie to1-inQ Pff loOllS •rt clOlng _.. -.. : HIGH SOCIETY DESIGNS. 3611 w. ~cA1'1hu•, SUlle )0), s.tll• AM. Celllornle 'I'? 704 ROJSlvn G. 8.0.n, 2'"1S JIK.,Mllla, S...I• An.a, C.llto•ftl• t7101 0..Y a . Fe .. 19', 1101 &owltt, c;.,-Of'ow,C.lltor..Cat1MO Tiiis ~llHS I• ~t.o DY e 1'1111 .. .. pM1Mnt>IP. R..iYftG. BMeft lllls tl•t-M WH fli.d Wllfl Ille °"""'' a...11 •Or ... c:.11114y Qft JvM 14,t"~ ,.,,,.. rut!llW\ed °'~ Co.151 Delly Plioc. PUBLIC NOTICE NOTICI INVITING atos NOTl(C! IS HEREBY GIVEN 1 ... 1 t,,. eo.ro ot e ... 011°" o1 tlle ~· Mt .. U"lllH School 0 1\lrklOI Or- Counl,, C•lllo<11••. wlll , ... , .. -blOs 11p lo 11:00 •.m. on th• 10ltt cloy OI N9'1lot, 1'76, •t llW Oltlct Of .. id ScflOOI Oltlr let, loc•l•d at ltH Pl.c.1111• ~•tnue. Co\I• Mose, c a11lornlo. e\ which .,,,.. ••Id bids •111 be 1>11btl<IJ ~.,.dre•dfOf: SltlPlOADER All bid\ •re lo ~ lft ICCOl'Cl.>ll<t wllll C-11°"', ln>l<U<llorl•, -Sp&octt~• II°"' wttlch ••e ,_ Oii fllt II\ lne olft« of lllt Purc11u1n9 Olreclor ol Wk! ScMol Ol>lric l, 11$1 PloKt"U•Awnut, <Ml•-... c.i1w..i.. tu.21. •No blooer ""'• wltlld•.,., Ills blclror• period ot lorly·ll .. IO I dtfi .... , , ... dtltMt'°'IM-1"9 lher"°'. Tl\• Bo•rd of EducellO<\ of Ille ~--u Ul>lfied Sc-Dhilrlc1 retllf,rff Ille r'9111 lO rt,K I -OI' •II blcll, ...., Mt nee•~• ly ec<"9t tN _,, .,... -.......... , ..,..,.,.., .. ly or lrr19Ul.,lly lfl ..,., l>tO r«.el .. d. o.t.TEO: J11ly U, 1976. MEWPORT·MESA UNIFIED 504001..0ISTRICT OI Oreft9a C:O-ly. CelllOfllia eor.tlly .. .,.,., l'ISllW -clltil"9 Director s~,neo NllllWCI Of' ..... CoHl Dlll'I' Ptlol, ......,..u . 11. m• lll>-7' Jul,1',Jl,21,Md .... 4, 191' 2'n•1' 1---------------~ P UBLIC N011CE "''°"'' 4, 11 •• 71. l•I& lJ'/ 1' -----------------! PUBLIC NOTICE P Ill.IC NOTICfo: PUBLIC N011CE PUBLIC NO'nCE l't'UUC NOTlCF: PUBLIC NOTICE p BLIC NO'l1CE ), f'ICTtTIOUSeUSINIU NAMlllTATIEMaNT Tlle fot-1119 ,.,_, ••• dotntMJ. ..UH : ou~e·s MA A" er, 1oeo "°· eo..1 Hwy, L._a 8HCll, C•tltornl•fl•)1 Wtlll•m Du" Copper\, IO•t ,,..,._,Pl., UtUflotl llHCll, C:.t OIOrnle mf1 EllH~lll Allll COPIHtrs, IO•• M.WI-Pt~ U<aun• e ... "' Cllllwftl• ..,.,, TllS, IMlr,.u It <Ofldueled.., M ~ dlvl-. Wllll•m 0.An c;_,. '"''' t1•1trMfll .... 11 i.d """" tlle '°""'' ti.rll OI °'"" .. '°"""'M .M't JJ. .., .. f'IC1'1TIOUS aUllNIUS MAMaSTATaMI NT "",.._,.. ~Mlftj O<t """'"""" ... ,.,: SU NIH S I! S VSTEMS INTIRNATIONAI. Clr<lftSP0fl8110ft e..-.n1. ~ Gueltil Gt-BIVd., ~Otove,CA,.,._.J Low11 °'•' LA11t11,, no•~ .... .,.._ I MM, CA. ffl41 Petrlcll 1-t ~ry, UN ..... ........... 111...-. CA. '1"1 Tlllt IMotlMH h <ellOIKled lty lt ..,.., .. ~llllp. LwltD.t...tRll't Tiiis t1•1-1 ... , fll<ld -'"' "'° PUBLIC NO'nCE PUBLIC NOTICF. PUBLIC NOTICE PVBLIC NO'nCE Qowl!J Cltrll ef Otet199 C.-CyOll .1111' 1-------------°"'"'"---------------------------------------------- t0, 1t1'. ,... ACTUAL USE nalt ~ltflff Or.MOO (OeU Deity flllot. "'*"'*'°''""coos! Delly....... ,,_.,tt, .. _......_._ 11. rm JIW7.,. REPORT J\;t' tt, • ..., AYQU\1', ti, 11. -1191•,. PUBLIC NOTICE PlJBUC NO'l1CE PUBUC NcmcE . PVBUC NO'l!CB b;r.,.,,,.,.-,-t , ... 0011•-··~ FOVNTAIN VALLCV C ITY ...,..::;.;.:...;:;.;.;.:;,:;~;.;;;;;--11---.:;.:...;;.;.:.:..;,;..;.;..:....~~--0 ... ru.A""'6milL.f -,. ---.,_ ~•'7 1, 19111 ""u """• :IO, lt/i .;....'-----+"-------+..;:;...-----~ .,, ~T "°' OS 2 0 30 so l FOUNT AIN vnLLEY ClTV DIRECTOR O~ F I NAHCC 102 00 S L.A TER l'IVE FOUNTAIN VALLCV CALIF ./ 101 fftUC f f\INO fllPOAT , .... , to "'""'~l'O" 01 ..• -.... ,,..,..~ ... ,, . ··--1<19 ,_. -.. _ ...,., '·,~,.--JO. 1170 • ~--"-.. c:-'""" '· •• ,. ...... .._ )0, ··~·· • . •· .,_ -'"""Oollv•-Clf' ANY) • .. ._ .. -.. •.~· • 0. , ...... --... OfUI Cllll ANY) • 1.1 .... '-·~·-Ill• • .. ,_A_C._ ·-.. -·~.C9'-n 8 ---C:· • \ 176 10<?00 0 272 ,571' 0 0 ?.72 •. SU 222 .~2 272 577 Plaota Work Ba~k h1 l "o("WI DEAR PAT: I hud a fon11ly portrait taken at OUF home. by Hyan's ot Hollywood in J anuary l97S. Th~ photo was not salJsfoctory, even though my or der cost S!i7.50 "lus C.O D . l'hargcs. f a:.kt-c..1 Hyan'11 for u refund but was told that was not poss•· ble. I was asked to return the picture and told they would either touch at up or retake it. I never hear<! anything from them and cooltJn 't get an :iO!>wer when I called. When I dad rt>ach the studio a month ago, J was told thul the manager would return my call. lie hasn 't contacted me yet. P.L., Costa Mes a Ryan's spokesman said thf' m anager, llark Gordon, had been disabled by Ulness las t year and "everything came to a stop ror awhUe." R yu 's Is ••oot a ble" to issue rerunds. but it will take anothf'r portrait and give you three R-by.JO photos as a replat'ement. Make an appointment by phoning th«" studio at t!IJ) 937·192'. 1llolt1rt"y~le Rule• SI rkl DEAR PAT; I am l6 ~c-,1n; old and have a driver's inslruct1 on J>()rm1t. I hopl.' to gl't m) license soon. Is at okay to use m~ µ1;•rm1t for radio~ a motorcycle. and \\hat do I have lo do to make s ure I'm licensed lo drt ve it as well as a t:ar '! t; N .. Co~ta Mesa It's more compli<'atl'd than you think. \'our per mit may not b l' used for operation of a motorcy-· de until you have completed ~our automobile drh•er education and driver training in~truction. H you have done that, ~·ou may not drive on any rrttw ay and may not drin• artc>r d ~rk with an in· strucllon permit. No rider m ay accompany you while drl\•in1t "Ith a permit f'xcept a per ·on licensed or !>o rn eont> credt>ntiall'd to ht> an instru<'· tor. California law aJso requirei. that }Our dri\•e r's li<'ense be e ndorsed to permit you to operate a two- wheel motorc' cle. A Oass 4 endorsement meets ---Lh==i.,-=-requircn\cnt. Since ~·ou are a minor. your ' f CMUllOI< "'"°" e IOllllMOUtlO IOtU e NO •UlU MIDWAY 1001 AllPOIT '7S !"I '"'. ., ""' 11o•OlH '"wun GATOR 1001 MOONIUNNIH CN1 -· IJ >0 e .... M iii OAIU uu ..._" • 1111 11100,,tuOH Soilot Who fall from Groce Wlth the SH !•I CAINAl KNOWUOGI 11· 0.tlllf t2 )0 • M t.,.nll D&IU -------,-.... "°" "'"°" • lt•lllllOll'tO •M.t• _,,..... .. 531-9580 ..... ~t ........ !131-9580 .......... •' ,, .... " 52S·3526 \AU••n ••:t.• .. 821 4070 .... , . ••.•••• , tf ...... ,.," 962 2'81 IOllY MO •AJtU MIDWAY 1001 At•POIT 7S 1001 O .. H I J .)0 ..... mou DAtn IMJOOH pt(l e UI 11-.t -"· ......... . THI OMIN 1•1 , .... , It .,.,. ...... " _ .. ,, ,. . """"'"" ·~· MIU e I • I s.ller WM ftll f.-Onct Wiiii Ste 1•1 c.ttHAl INOWUDCH c•> .•. , ....... , ........ , ..• OPtN 11 M I -..-n N IU Wll&t ~ TIWUll Of MARC\IMll 1•1 '''". A .. U _l'U ... OANO "'I Ol'I" 11 )t e Mii6ft ... U DAM.f OIUM 111 TUCKOOWN fl t ("'U ltOH MUf()4iil • \IM\\iU O\fND #llllOWAY 1001 ..0 ••UU e ""' SMAil TOMI lfll TIUJ 111 .. t\.U K>U• CAI l_A(t MKMAll t.AtUllN GUllllAll UlllT t"1 l•tu •1 .. 1• • lllCMiAH. ... U ltN , ';~ .. :._ OUMUll lAlll'f fN t 171-18e2 __________ Hill ON WHlllS , .. 1w.1 1u -e1· ••won GATO. 1001 ,. ... ,(Ill* MOOH•UNNllS 1,..1 ..--IO~<-" --,_. "° ,,. •• , LOGAN'S IUN l"I CMOSIN SUIVTYOll tNI --------•• 1 ... t ....... ~ _,, "° , • ..,. StUNT MCWtl !NI MMISS & DllTWAnl FOX ~~ -------... _, ,.., •• lll tlliltrl -H. NO •Allll MUI IMC/I tii Wlli -.llOH NU MYllRIOUS MOM5TRS 191 OUTllS'ACf CClelflCnON ,., • l , <;01 a probl1'm' Then writi> to Pat l>unn Pot u 1/1 r11t rt'd tape . gt•tt mq lllt' w1su'(•rs ruld act wn 11ou nt'<'d tt> snh'1• ltlt'Qllllll'.' Ill {JUl:i!TTl11U.11l and bU!\I m·~~ .. Mllll 11uur q1H·~l11111!\ tu /Jat 1Ju11n AL Y111.1r .Wrv1C'e. Orange Coa~t Daily Pilot .PU. Hor 156<1, Costa Mt.'so. C1\ 9262/i /11dudt• your lt'lt'p11orw 11umber The column appears c.tc11/y t•.rct•pt ::>aturdays. parenl1> or ituardlan aho mui.t s1){n ~our application ror a lkcn11t< or motorc·ydl' cndor t'mcnt. i\i. p11rt ur your driver's C~am, ~OU lllUl>t rut out a qU1•i.tlOll· naln lt lll'ng about )'our pb) >ical condition, tak .. an " e t'xam. a nd take a n·~ular wTittrn tot or rule., or tht< road. \' ou mui.t al1>0 tal..t-an addition al tt>i.l or motorcycle driviol-\ rult>., and a road t.-.. Hh•mon1>trat· lngyour :ihilit)' to <·ontrol a motor<') rh>. llelv Trac·k ·E•npl !I Boxe11• DEAR PAT: I ordt•rt'<l a JUnll)~u1l April I 111101 Dressmaker fa:.1110111> or Nl'plunc 1'0\\n:.h11>. N J I ~cnt S2 with the order anti wrote u Sl6 92 dlt'rk on May 3. when the :-.uJl w.ts dch\l'rcd. I was not !>atished with 1t <Ind 1m1m"1l1atcly 1>cnt 11 back I stall haven't heard fro m th1., c·omp.my n'i;ardang my t l' fund requl'st. I c:111'l 111111 the postal 1n!>urnnce n· cc1pt, but the post olflrl• rnu:-.l ha\l' a rl'cord of 1t. F.lf .. lluntmgton Ueach A\'~ i.ugitt•sts that lht' tw .. t "a} not to lose track or a poi.ta I in"iurance rt't'l'IPt b to ket>p it in .} our "allet until ) ou !..now ~our put:kagt' has been r t .. reived. The rect'ipl wUI be required by Ore!>!> maker Fashions before a refund will bt• issuc>d. Phyllis Ar· rington. customer St'n •ire n·prcsentative. sa) s ~our packagt' was nol r('cei \•ed. She a ·i..s you to ob· lain a duplicate of the receipt and llCnd it to her at Dressmaker t'ashion .... Shi:' then "ill issue an im· m l"diate refund to you . i\rrin!{lon .,aid ht>r firm h as t•xperienced an inrreai.ing number or "empty box" returned itrms in recent month-.. Shc blames postal theft. Thi:. ha-. ncresllitatl'd the pol1r~ of requiring proor or m ailing bcfort> refund!> an• issued. ~lake sure you tilt> a daim with the po~t oHice for the in· sured jumps uit. Filni Evokes U.S.' Immigrant Past By JAY SllARHUT'T LOS A~G E LES <AP> I hall• lu ~l't O\ crlv en· thusjast1c. but drop l'H'r) lhtnl! l'\l'l'Pl the b;ihy toni~ht and "atrh "Tu \men<'<i . un CBS. Oc.,p1tt: the title. 1l 's an) thrni.: but Jnothl'r h1l'enlC'nn1al hur ___________ r ah 1Clwnnl•l2.~µ.m.l 1 t 's ~1 bt•aut1full~ T \' REVI E\V filmed. \\ ('ll·1.:d1ted und thorou,:hl) 1ntcrc:,tan~ _________ _,stud ) or two younit families 11 ::. a<•tually "ho !<'ft their fo:ast 1'..uropeun homelands last ~ear to c m1 J_'rale to tht• l 'n1tcd Statl•s THE\"ltt: Tiii-: "ST.\RS" OF tbc show. their storif's told" 1th a mixture of actual footage or f1lml·d re·enact mcnts of thc1rt•fforts to t:OrtH' here and some of the good and bud things they experienced 1n Ameril'a. The s hO\\ ·s onl) flaw 1s its us(• of brief f1<'l101rnl sequen('l's on Ellis bland. M'eOl'S \\lll'rc actor Alan Arkin pl ays a 70 year·old m an rl'll\ mg memories of his a rn' al from I lalv60 \car"' earl11.·r The ck' kc ts s uppose<1 to pro' 1dc p!!rs pecti vt• on 1mm1gr:1t1on thcn and now. But 11 only infrudl'S 1>11 the en,gro!isllli! true Mom•s ol thl· famtlies of Jean )\'an Donn uf Rulg;m.1 and /\ndrt<:J Bozek of Poland DORIN ANO lllS WU:F:; VIOl.F.TfE. arc• l'ntcr t ainer" lip's an ::irtor ancl clirc<'lor 111 films. s he's a singer . They ha'<' l\H1C'h1lun·n. Rozel-1., a fiH·torv ''nrkcr. tr." t•ltn:.! "1th ha" \Oun~ son. All'C. \\t• lutt·r lt•arn Ill' h,111to 11•;1\C' his wife :incl <laulo(hler Ill f'nl.1ml lx•t ;111'-l' lhC' .iuthnnt11•s onl) would ll'I h:ilf h1~ I a 1nll) 0111 M1ll. hl' hupl'S lhl'\ can rcJ0111hnn111 Amee ll'U ~onwda~ We "on't s<iY how tht•ir st11rtl'°' tinall) t•nd 1n tlw pro~ram. Uut tune 111 CB.~ for th1• i-tart of tht· "'CH' telling to1111tht. \\'e bt.'l ~nu \Hill t lt•aH• unt II ,1 ftt•r the dosing credits roll on thl•:-;l-rl"l'll "MURDER IY DEATH" C,GI "BLACK BIRD" "SILENT MOVIE" lftGI "HARRY & WALTER GO TO NEW YORK" "R.tum of tt. Pink ,_....._. .. "LOGAN'S RUN'' lftGJ "FANTASTIC PUHET" "ODE TO llUY JOE" CPGI "HARD TIMES" "GATOR" ''TRACK DOWN'' IPGI .. TUNNEL VISION'' IRI "EVERYTHING AIOUT SU" "GUS" IGI "IAMll" * "°0-af M). CO.Uf fV.IA Wll04T'\' -·~··" )&f ·SllM 1 .... »'-1 ...... SHOWM AT CfMIUAU .. COMT. DAILY • hJO.J:OO 4:)0.6:00.t:OO ..... 71Jo.e,•~1t·ll I \ Grand 01"' Rolt11 Joel's Back As George M. l\y HOO TllO'UAS LOS ANC El. ES (i\ P 1 "lt's a i.:r:11\d olll flJJ:, it's :1h1gh·fl~1n~ flag . " . . The (;eor~t· M Ce>huo anthem to J>atnott'lm, much heard 111 1h1:-. red. Y.h1te und hlul• humnwr, "11111(• :wng a~.11n t1101jfht when <.:BS presents u n· lll'at ot the mu:.H'al 1>ll(.'t:1al. "Gt'Ort:e M' •· !>lurnm: OAIL 'f PILOl BS HOFFMAN REDFORD ' I "ALL Tll PRESllNTS MRf Joi.'! \ir1'y. Thtli "111 be a d1ffrrent v4:'rs1011 from thl• portrayal b y Janws C'U1!11CY 1n the l!HZ film, t---------------------t \':ml..ee Doodlt'. D:Ulcly." t<:hanncl2.8p rn 1 The Mpst Devastating (PG) l\A6~ Story Of This l:enbll "I SAW '\'i\NKEE t><lODLE D:tnily' on lh<' 11.:LaiUK Fourth or Julv." said Gn•y. "It's :i ~r<.'ut pirturt'. Al but it's an 1nn11l·cnt. ~u~ur rii.!iiiii:. . ~ ...... ~1~ coated W Jr n er Brothl•r s 11~- musical. There 1s nu md11:at1on about the price o man pays to become a star. Jud.:1111.: from till' movit>, you'd ne\Cr know th:it Cohan hod children, that he w:is. d1\orccd. . "The Cagney film was such a classic that I naturally hes1tal· cd to portray Cohan. f did 1l CAONEv bt>cause I thought I l'OUld adcl another dimension. to show what h:ippcns to a man --------------------- when ambition takcso\'er his hfc.'' G1 ey left his own classic role. the mac a lire <'mccc in "C~1burcl." in 1()68 to star at the Palace Theater in "Geor ge M.'' The show lus•.t•d a year ln New York. and Grey played 1t for six month:. on thl· road, mclud1ng Los Angeles and San l"ranc1sco. "IT WAS A HIT," llE SAID, "surpras1ni:1ly so, bec.iuse it came at a time when patriotism wa:. 111 disrepute. In fact , when then President Nixon camt• to \he show and p raised it. we aJmost dosed.·· The teJev1s1on version firs t appeared on NBC 1n September, 1970, in a 90-mrnute form. The CRS spec a al will air :it one hour, and Grey belie' cs it" 111 play bette r that way. Astde-from the ~ct that i:flt'y h1:1-ve-b~en s uperior entertainers who S!>l'nt thl"1r lives belon• aud1enl'es . there as hltle :.1m1lanty between Cn•) and Cohan. Joel has b(Jt•n married to tlw same '~1le for 28 years. und al though he 1:. a decltcatl'd performer, h<.' docs not M'l'm oh~<.':-;~rd by 111~ caree r. "OTllER PRIORlTIE~ ARF: MOR E prom1 m•nt 1n my hit', paruculurl) 1.11n1ly ancl lrw11d~." he obsC'n l'.'d. ll1s sense of proportion may h<.' due lo the fact that suc('ess raml' lat(' Son of the Ytddi.sh enl<'r · tainl•r· m usu: 1 ~1 n ;\llckey l\at t . Joel sturll'd pcrformmi.: al a~<' 10. lie appear\•d in the film "About Fat:l'" at 19 and w~1s ol· rcreu :.i Warner Hrolhl'rS t'Ofl· trJct. ll1s aj!ent advised against "Eastwood creates a magnl flcent western feeling.·· ·Roger Ebert. Chicago S11n Times CO·HIT AT j MOST CINEM,, S ''CHINO "' It lie pla~t·d "Jark ond the ~--Deanst.tlk" 1n a 195ti TV spt•c1al, _,_, __ _ ~<'nl•d 111 dolC'llS ul T\' seriC's t< .. •••ll• .. .., ... ., ·-·"•-""'• J from · :\l:iH•nck" to "Tiu.• Ann __ ....... _ .... ·111""'" :-•'-·"1 .. •1 Glln Sothcrn ~ho" .. a :-tJn) t hmg from ~::::::::::::::::=======:-::=-- tccn-a.:e k1lll•r to <'Olll.',i.:e pla' hoy Not much hap -------.. penl'd "m y youthlul ;,ippt•ararwe m11Cle pcopl1· ~~,tf~~!Sl,I D, .~~O~"N. 'nW~l'b'fi,~~ th;nk thol Wn> •II th'"" w" lo m• .. fom< <omo •A . .;1~·af.!@~~u ,.,., ~ ~~: J ~ "An American ',\, , .:Romeo and Juliet' " Enjoy the ~ ~, bigg est, '-~ Ode To : ... ~Joe \ A foue story thats joyous.funny and so touching you will neuer forget 1t . ... ' ......... , ~ .. ,,,,, A ,• grandest, 1 action I'dled pirate rnovie evert ---- ~ fOV;AROS \'1 ~1111'tlA wEn 1 tt ·-· ..... fll.,PINtoft I w.. ............. ~flt..w t1 fAot• • '-' "u __J~,_._,. ~ •HIA4'1 -~ IAOO~HURSI f <\I,. tit .. o ... ~ ... ., "·~' T THEATRES PRESENT D·EEPTllROAT® Alao on the Same Program ·1·he Devil in Miss Jones /~dull• Only No On• Unchr 18 Admltt•d HllLU"Ollll NSSYCAT 114 1111 usa HoltrittM ..., • 0,.. 0°'" II 17 11-o,.. Al NltM fUSSrCAT, flJ~OU 719( ......... °'" 0""'11111- .. M1do1 M •• :. :I '!I .. ;[ , ,. .. ,. ,. ~ f' ,. ,. ~ "' ~ r ~· , . . ; :; !· .· . • 88 DAILY PILOT Wednesday. August • 1976 Ht LD OYH IY '°'VI.Alt DIM.AHO! "IN FASHION" New Look for Day TV A dehgh1fully frolhy lun-lllled musical about marital misadventure among 1urn-ol-the·century Parisian Society Somp1uou5 Costuroos & Semng HOW THaU AUGU5T • .. BEST SCIENCE FICTION MOVIE SINCE STANLEY KUBRICK MADE 2001. By LE E MARGUUE' LOS ANGELES <AP> -NBC·TV is taking anothe r whack at J:IVing d ayUme audiences something besides game shows, soap operas and re- runs of sltuaUon comedies. The network tried and failed to attract big rat- ings with "Take My Advit'e," a program styled after the "Dear Abby" newspaper column, but now .LS back wl lh "T he Gong Show" and "The Fun Fac- lol')I. ·• Producers ot l>Oth new weekday series hope their &hows are the "~omet.hlng 1.hfferent" that many viewers are s:.ild lo be looking for.' "Daytime neec.lcd something new and 1 think Jolmnie Ray Big Hit in England LO NDON CA P > - Singer Johnnie Ray re· turned to the Palladium after 18 year s. and u nostalgic packed hoo!.c gave him a 15·minute standing ovation. Veterans of London's • leading variety theatt!r said they could not re- member such a r~'<'CP· t 1o n f o r an o t he r performer. Singin g "Cr y " a nd other fa\'Or1tes from his repertoire. Ray began a two-week enga gement ,l\1onday nig ht with an ;\J I-Ame rican btll that in- cludes s inger Billy D'aniels. the Ink Spots a n d p ianis t ·s i n ger U 'I'll CORS1' . ' . . , -MIOHflY60 Frances Faye. "Memorable. lt r e· minded e\'eryone or their youth sn the postwar music hall." wrote Geof. frcy Wanscll in the Times of London. ··A I thoug h t hese singers are much altered since they last stepped on this stage they retain their perennial charm, .. said E n c Shor ter in the Daily Telegr aph. ";\lid- d I e -a g ed m en and wome n flocked lo the fooUights at the end of Ray's perfor m ance for a clutch or his hand ... and the Ink Spots •Lare hotter than I rem ember them from the 1940s." Buttons Cast ~4'*AllUMO.t.YOMLY ·IO LOS ANGELES (AP! ~llATRE 1-----. -Red Buttons j oins MICHAii. SAlllAZIN "TiiE GUMBALL RALLY" (~OLOR lPGt Helen-Reddy-and Micke. Roon e y 1n Dis ney·s musical fantasy, "Pete's Dragon." THE;\TRE 11---t~=-... ~~~.:.a:~ IDfalllffllAN 111111 ~.!11' r,:..._ 'f:.,.lt" I '~:•!ft ,,. COLOR U•Gt ""' '"HMO'OM OF THI ,ARADISE'' C-•·•-••t·MIOO•"' "GATOR" "CHINO".,GJ ''THI IAD HEWS HARS" "THI FOlTUMF' lf'GI "SURYIYI" Ill "IORN TO KILL" THE CIT Y SHOPPING CENTRE ORAHGf U4-l'1 I ~ cm CEHTltE CINEMAS SA FRWV IMANCHU TER EX.I 0 0 . FAWV ICITY OR. EX.I MSURYIYl"IRJ MCHIMO" "A SMALL TOWH INTUAS" "tMHYO" IPGI /}I. "IAD HEWS 11.AlS" lf'GI ~ .. THI FOUUNf" CEL EBRA TES 200 YEA RS OF CI RCUS IN AMERICA I AUGUST A.M. P.M. P.M. TOMORROW., •••• KEZY/CHOC NIGHT •••••• 8:00 $2.00 Off On All Tickets 6 FRIDAY ••••••••••••••••• .3:001 ••••• s:oo • 7 SATURDAY •••••• 11 :oo• ..... 3:00 ...... 8:00 8 SUNDAY ••••••••••••••••.• 1 :30 •••••. 6:00 9 MONDAY •• , ••••••••••• NO PERFORMANCES 10 TUESDAY .••••••••••••••• ..3:00• , •••• 8:00• 1 t WEDNESDAY ............... :1 ·oo• .••.. 8:(¥)' 12 THURSDAY •••••••• , ••••••. l.;00• ••••• 8:00' 13 FRIDAY •••••••••....•••• .3:00• ••••• 8:00• 14 SATURDAY ..... ,1 1:00· .... .3:00 ...... 8:00 16 SUNDAY .................. 1:30 ...... 6:00 16 MONDAY ••••••••••••••••• .3:00• •••• .S:oo• 17 TUESDAY •••••••••••••••• .3:00• .••• .8:00• • Ct11ldren under 12, S2.00 Im thin ICMt pticn All Seats Reserved · Tax lnduded $3.75 -$4.75 -$5.75 -$6.75 TPCKETS NOW ON SAL E AT AU TICKETRON ounETS ind,,. dtng ~ WMdf • 11-l fOMJwrf • ALL MUTIJA.L AGENCIES lncW flf l'tlcific SlMO (631 S. Hill. L AJ •WM.LICH! MIJSIC CITY STORES a ALL LIBERTY AGENCIES . CONVENnoN CENTER BOX OFFICE e U• YOUT ~ °' ~ 0..,,, by mw1 tK11t llox Office e FOR TICKET /NFORMA TION CAL.I. ff14J 635 • 5000 e FOR GROO, SALES INFORMATION CALL (2t3J '65 • 4126 ALSO AT LON G BEA C H ARENA WED. AUG. 18 THRU SUN. AUG. 22 'The Gong Show' ls It." prod aims Jlroducer Gene Banks. Ed F ishma n, one of \he e~ecutive producers ~~.fouth Coa st Reperfor.i · Cl YOl" G'LMOU~ . · " · of 'LTh• Fun F actor)'," said hl.5 series fi lls tbe need 1121 Hewport •v4. ... ....._1 c., ........ in daytime for •·something lhal didn't have a struc---=~~=~~===~~==~;:;;:~::=;•:•~~;':U~ld~ ture that says here 's where "'e're going, either \I.Ith -A ·--· a bonus round or a storylme." ON "THE GONG HOW," amateur performers ar-e given a chance to display t.helr lalents to the TV uud1ence uod a panel ot three celebri11es. and if one of the three stars Ulmks the act stinks. he or sht! THEATRES-ORANGE COUNTY sounds the gong and ends 1l. Otherwise the performers continue and are aw3rded points. with SENIORS CITll MS SI.SO AT ALL TIMES \he big winner e ach d ay walking off with SSlG 32. MANN'S """L' oition One ret'e nt show featured four tap c.lanf 1ng sis· SQ, co 1 A 111 S 11 f 1 1 p 1 tAZA "TRCASU~~~~~mcuMB£" ters, a clown who juggled, a mime who did mag le. a t'. woman doin•• a Shirley Temple Imitation and a mat\ ,,.,,. •11" "APPLE DUMPLING GAHC" (&) .. i'l llll llt.\1 0··~· trying to sln~. The latter two got the gong. "The emphas is is on sheer fun .,nd entertain- ment." seys Banks "It's not a school for talent. The celebrities do It with lh\' idea of having tun, and the acts know beforehand they could g~t gonged." 0 8 VIOl1SLV, FUN IS Al.SO the goal of "ThC' Fun Factory ." It is a game show in the sense that prites a re g1\'en ror answering questions, but tlttlt aspect shares the spotlight with comedy sketches. singing and dancing There is no structured for mat and the pace is frenziro "It's like doing a different variety show e\·cry day ," s:iy s f'1shman. "If s completely different ea<'h day l'X <'l'Pt for the opcnin~ and closing songs, wh1ch takes up a total of about a minute. We thought 1l was time 10 see 1( the daytime audience would hnd a change rt'freshmg." nrortunateb•. a sample viewing of the two pro· ~rams m erely reaffi rms that different is nol necessarily better. Neither was a ny more engaging that its more traditional competitors. "T HE GONG SHOW" llAD a few good mo· menls. thanks to those performers who either were 'ery good -or ,·ery had. But the forrnat of the .show. with its reliance on w1tllcisms from the cele brity guests a nd obnoxious c•ommcnts from host Chuck Barris, precluded the chance for much de- velopment along these lines. And "The t'un Factory" turned out to be a com-- bination of the worst element~ of comedy -deadly dull matct1a1 -wiU1 the worst ele me nts of game shows giving expen.-.ive prizes for answering in- su~linl{ly ~ mplc..quesuons. The two shows may mature in time. In any ta»e. it's nice to see NBC making an effort to fi nd something at least slightly different. MAHN'S SO. COAST PLAZA Co l•ll•" l•'f 1!11•01 )'o ! II MANN'S SD. com PLAZA U! ''""'°" so llll MANN'S CIH£MUAND 1'1' St W.. bl ..,.,. 5l) ,.., MANN'S CINEMALANO 1111 ~· ....... h1•1.• m1Ht MANN'S CINEMALAND 1111 St ~., .. , A•1llitt• m1541 llllfUCIN• "M~SJERIOUS MONStCRS" 1u.1 0 .. 11 tt "OUJfR SPACE CONHCCTION" 2 " ' t0-4 10 tttt ..... , f .. "00\a) •••OlJn •• , .... \tott •\ ,_•Ut • •• , ..... llOIY "ALICE IN WOMOEIUNO" ,.,u X WllU\JIM 0.·1 .. 1\ h f,.., tH)I ........ J IM II r•ll lllllU\ rt. ··rHE BINGO LONG'S TUVCUNC All STARS'' 1·\ •1-t JI "SURVIVE" • 0\ ', .... lS "' 11 •U.SOC IT OUT MA ... OIGOS l•t.UIDl ... GO! "DRUM" I lO l JQ.i .l .. J IOUO ... ,,.., ... 11<1 •otlt '1u o11n ,.,,,.., '10.• IHllt•U t A l•T"'1 '10IY "ALIC£ IN WONDERLAND" X I If.I If.• lt>4 If.I lf.t OI ON Nt & U.f & '0 )0 •.M JNOW AOO. WEEKDAYS 7:15-9:30 (PG) StartlnG MICHAEL YORK FARRAH FAWCETT MAJORS PETER USTINOV C IN~rAA CENTER HARBOR AT ADAMs;.cosT A MESA . MESA VERDE CENTER 979-4141 .·CINEMA CENTER HARBOR AT ADAMS. COSTA MESA MON-FRI 7:05·9:05 11 :00 MESA VERDECEMTER 979-4141 7:00-8:50-1 : SAT 2:00-3:50-S:40·7:30-9:2C).11 :10 SUN 2:00-3:50-5:40·7:30-9:20 ·~NE~WP~ORT~CIN~EM~AS~ HUNTINGTON CINEMA MUR COAST HWY. & MACARTHUR IEACH ATElLIS, H.1. a11wPOa10omu 644-0760 847-9608 847-6017 ,, "ORUM'~WARREI OATES· ISELA VEGA · KEI BTON PAM GRIER · YAPHET KOTTO ·JOHN COLICOS co Uring FIONA LEWIS • PAULA KELLY • BRENDA SYKES .. c.wHO& . ~by RALPH B. SERPE · Directed by STEVE CARVER· ~by NORMAN WEXLER fiiiiiii'fti"_ °' Based Oil Ile ncMI by KYl.f ~mrr. Music Composed by CHARLIE SMALLS .......... I l Tonight's TV Highlights CBS 9 8:00 -"George M." Joel Grey recreates his Broadway role as the legendary Broadway showman in this hour-long s pecial with Red Buttons, Jack Ca.ssldy, Blythe Danner and Nanette Fabray. <Related story, BSJ KHJ IJ 8:00 -"Who's Minding the Mint?" A comedy gem from 1967 with Jim Hutton, Dorothy Provine. Milton Berle, Vjctor Buono and Bob Denver, among others. KCET .@ 10 :30 -The First Churchills. John Neville and Susan Hampshire star in this 12-part series about the Duke and Duchess of Marl boroul(h. TV DAILY LOG (w•DN•SDAyt I EV•NINQ I 8:00 11ecr-t 1DC11tws D <UJ !UW ~ • "-a CU r •llf Alfalt ·--•tst m hrtri4tt ra11111J 0)~111·12 ~TlltlllwMef\ mz...i (1211 (I)) Star Trt• Ot DlllM! CD lcUle 1w1h -6:30-a Dilll~ Guests 111Cludt Joel G10 Nd Benedict. Prrsc1Ua l OOfl. Mi ll Mcfadden aod G'1y Mult Our 16 ~Gntfrtll (!OJ Mtrw lifrlflfl Sllew CD f Mily Alfllr llJ ...... 222 IH.: (1.J StM, Ille $00 Ell) Eltctrrc Collt,.ny m ,., tMs "" C.Untry 7:00 ae o m-.ws u ...... "' 0..11 16)bwlllde tfl Tt Ttl Hit Truth O CCllltt11lubon m 1 lott l«y m Tiit f1I 117 ~ J f:it "'",,,..' CD Me" Gritfln Show II> The Vir'*" m lle!ttn Hisltnul DI•• G Tht Srltflt Yu11 11 "Pnantom of IM Optr•" (1925)-lon Cllinty. -9:30- D ~lJ ()) ®' fD Chico & th .._ · lhe Return ol Aunt Conn"" (R) Cluco Ind Ed clfviSt 1 scheme 10 get 11d ol a fortune huntfl lgut~t Ctsare 0JDCVd) •ho his plans tu• 1Mtstrne Almt Coflnit s money m ,,,,~ dt '"'"'"'' 10:00 D l> f J) QQi ID H••l "The Man l'lhO O•ned Everyone" (Ill A CQlrupt COll!lructl0!1 tycoon (iue51 lo.au! BHll!St Will! 'ltff pO'we-lul t11ends 1n lhe eoveml!lfnt •nd the POl<e d•~rrmenl rs lbt t4fitl ol '" inv~)f1g111on b; Del. Ha11l um 11ews tl1 Mod S4ud 8 ( 19 ti ) CJt SbnAJ & Hitch · Oulh 1!1de" (R) OM1nt from San fianc1$Co •1lh tht dluenttr ol a tr1111e t1ar hn Jfrted to tell Jll rn tou11 S1a1s~y and Hullh ar~ pv!lued by a11Jm out to slop Ille g1tl from com1>1e11n1 l!tr jOOlney m Tht llldMtts ti llultll Guts! is Stuart MMylandu. eieculrv~ v1<e· Pit .idenl of Cedars s,.,., t.ltdK'I Center 1.1t1 S,.CMI ti lllt Wtfl "I he let Palue · -10:30-m fl) CDlkws • • fD Kerttn Dr1m1 flJ lt1cltttNM Productr Paul M.:s l1ns•t alld "'°' Will Geer d1sc:uu lhtir movrt Bluebrrd " 8 Mel1 MMllttl Re,.,i (211 • ) lollt1111 m °'""tic S.1ltS m Mdtt11s h1111tr -7:30- D m "'"" Tll1t lu11e U Die• V111 O,h • L1rs .._h A Dul ,. tf-Wlb CJ The ..-er's Wild 1101 "''" hlltn •'"''~" Q11 l61 U$1ol1111 Wii. m Cllt-1 21 Tolllrllt ln~l'!hfl l1vt 1t p1111< on "lobb~KIS 1n I A." and "Ch•uf1MJ1~ •• 1boul ~ur counly othc••I$ and lh~u lha.itleur drrven lu11ous1nH Utl $25,000 r,1111114 8:00 0 17 (j Ct ~Gtottt MA mus1ul lr1bult lo Cto1&t M Col!Jfl. lh• bf uh and bf1ll1•n1 sh~• busrous l•reod who flJYe his "lirds lo &<••du~ ind his music lo !ht tnhrt n4hOn IOtl Grty mrultS lht ltllt r11lr he oug1n4lrd on Bro•dway !ht l~.1 1ncludts R'd BuHon. Ju~ c.i~ \ldt 81,lh• O•n••r N•ntllt f ib"r Anita G1llellt. le111s J ~ladl~n. Jene Wllllt D 2Sl f l 10i D lilllt Hose on lht l'rt11ie 1 ht Runaway C~boost Charlts lnealls and Mr. I rtnch m1~e ~ dtspt•lle rno11 10 <•It~ up wllh • r11l104y caboose Iha! h" bern relu~d aCC1dtnl1llv . .,1th Mary '"° lillfa lllPPfd 1ns1dr e """: ~ (l!lr) ''Cellnn1's II•· w111e" (sc;1 hi -lap4new ust 1 • Mowre: ~ (2h1) "Tiit llu• si.i. ti hlwort~" (•dv) ~ lony C111hs. J~nrt I e1~h 8 ( .Jt l f ) lt I ionic WtfllH ' A~Rtl n4 Mtr(I !RI l11me. dis tu•· td I \ I lf\(Uf tum nur1t flits 1nlo • c1v1I war lur!) Soul~ Ame11un COijnffy .. 1th i 1\61 shtil lltllC~Pltl pilot to 1e1<ur an Americ•n ambas "1dOI •"d h1i wilt D Mowle: C (1111) .. W11o's M111•· NII 1111 M1nt1•• (!Om) 61 hm lh1I tun. Dorothy r10~1nf. Millon 8rrlt CD Tht Cllest & Mrs. Mun ti),..,,, ...... t» Kolm Vtrltly .... , l'l' ~1t: re (hr) "lsl1114 of loff" I om) &3 Robt11 Pmlon, lnny Randall, Geor11a Moll m110 .. C> CN~, Wmthnt m i.11111tse un1u•1• '"'""'' -8:30-m Crm-W1ts 9-..un !Ins 9100 fJ (DI (1) ) TtA.ttlu A him pot11111 of two a< uat l1m1l1tS v.hO 11mbled evel')th1nt lo flu the" IK!1111lands and set~ 1 MW hte In AmtrKI. fht him thron1tlu lhe lr•um1hc o~ls ol a yur 1n lho llYU ol J 8ul1a11 n COUDll 1nd lhtll hlo children. and 1 Pohsh IKtor1 wor~er 1nd hrs young SOii A1111 Aikin po1l11Yt the ooly ltehonJI th11dtltr rn the film. a <Ill '1J Cfl cunt ot s. ... 101• •114 S.. "l1mont IS Olhtllo" (R> latn0nl norl1 a•ns hrs l11h,, 1 rul hHr1 a11K\ •htn the old man S'ts him thok1n& a 111h11t wom~n 8 (1Jt ) O lmtta "!ht ~Y C1me .. (R) fony 11 lwntd IOI tilt murder ol 1 suspected eun dealer tnd toiced to bttolllt a fu11tr\1 lo ~It•• Ills n1me Htrris Yut1n'llnd 81U M<K1nney auest m Tllt frnl Clturchllls A rtpnt cl the 11 part shits 1b'lul t~~ Ou~t and Ow.ht)! ol Marlbo•ou&h str 1n 17th and ISlh ctnrurr £ntl•lld John Ne villt illlO Su).ln Hampsll11e 1to11 11:00 Dem#ews D ,.J • 12)1 't l r10 11 News D Lowe Alatrru11 S!Jlt l J 1 lbrWI Dllloll Iii Mo.it: ') "Tiit T1i1I" (tlra) ')~-Glenn lord. AtlhU< /\tnntOy CD llllJ l!Jrt11111, IRry H1rtm111 a> Ctl Smart 11 LJ l llft11plly ~ lts1 .. CfOlltllt (l)t ••!) Tllllll or ~"'"'ts m Cieellll l4 -11:30- D r11 3 _t tt CIS lt h MIN: ...c_ "Tiit Dirty Oon~" lonct (dtl) 61-ltt Marvin. Charlt\ Rron soo letlv SaY1ln Robert Ryfn o 2l e 10 m 11MnJ C.191 6 Tht rn Club D ( 11 e ) lt W1dt World Mot.e: All tilt l\rpJ 51td~(N CD Ntws m McHalt's 110, 12:00 D ltst ol 1if01Kllo m Mom: ••Mall of lht AHn1er" 1•3•) ~I J~~" Otrr l a> Morie: "The Sttrtl Seven .. IAdV) '6(, lo~v Ru~l•I. Htl1a [,,It -12:30-e All ll11M Sh•· "Contempt. .. "fllt Ctr-y," "Cty frt111 I~• Slreets" 1:00 D U , 110 Tomorrow llJ Wanled Oud or AllH CJ The rn Club 2:00 a M"11: "herylh1RfS Du(~, .. 1.rm) ol M1cl tv Mnont1 -2:30-m All ll11M Show. ··s.1"a fitne," "I Cower tht W1tertront" -3:4S-D Mo.it: IC "Capet-1111111" (dr~) '6/ J•rnt< Brol111 ~YJIM( lfOVIU AUCU$l S Ifie.. ltr )'WI t--.Cf, lrt 111t .. ,.,,...... t:lO g "lo" in h••" (com) '52-~rb11• l\t41f -~of Tre-· (dra)-lohn Btflll•v. Ai\111 Wnt I l:tO 1J "Tiit 9ft 0,.rator" (dra) 59-M10rv Roon•v 12:00 m ·111, rrltM rNcu" 1c111> '43-Roddy McOowall, R111 lolln son. Prnton foster I :tO O lt uMJSttrJ of Hit Wu M•-" (nt'f\) ·13-liontl Al· 11111, f4y Wray la "St Wtll lle111{111Mrtd" (dr;) '0 -Joltn M<llS. M.lrlha Scott. Tr~YOf Ho1111d 2:JO D ''Tluee rut Gun1" (•n ) '60-i.mtt Cta•& Paul R<lmds 3:00 !I "A Otar" •I lhrder .. (mys) '69-An1t1 P1ttenbt1f:. l:JO . ~) """ T• l1td•" \Id•) '60-Rod hylor, Al1n Youna. Yvette M1m1eu1. KOCE Television (50) J·• YOOAWITNMltOILll•I -YOttl.i.tou•tot. l Jt MISTI• •ooa•S NIEIGfteOltltOOO 4:00 SISAMISTllllT 1M>m1nl • S:OO I LIECTIUC COM .. ANY :.: ~~.is~:~:~::ors aUSINHS •• ,,.,. ..... of B11~111n" -a.. ....... ::':':..~ 8UILOS, MltN OUTllO'l'S "A .. le<•U>llve" 7:tt YOOAWITM MADlllMIE Y~ltl«W•W 7·Jt SHOWCAll "Tr,. .. ....,,.,. P•l.oce" • 00 MUTlllP'llCI TMIATllt '"S'*"-to $hOVl~r. AM11' u-lty \'°"""' .... OlllAT P'.1111'011-MCHS ... CIAI. It 00 AltTIS. , It• P'LAY llllOGl lllllTHTMI IX,.lllTS 11:tt TMI 1tOal 1tT IWY<Nlll.llll'OllT 1l0n11111 -11111-~---- Mae West Had It Her Way Q: How much dJd M~e We.st get paid for return. ing to film making with "Myra Brecklnridite" a rev. years ago? And did shf' hue an)' unu ual clau e11 In her contract ?-M loon IA'R •. AUanta. A: Yes. In addition to ~ettin~ star btlhnJ: on·r younger sex symbol Raqul"I Wf'lrh. 1t saill therE' In black and while that Miss West I would have thl' ext'lus1\·e right to wear blark or white gm\nS and accessories -most Oalknn~. About her fee to film that Oop. u 10-day chore. 1\1 ae re<'etH-d ~omt> 5350,000. Which she needs like Howard J ohnson needs more Howard J ohnsons. Q ; Any songs. mo,·ies or books planned on the daring rescue of that hljackedplant'load wu1 Of Israeli hostages?-WaJter Ja<·obs. Pt'bble Beach, Cal. A: Yes. Pan ArU; producer George Ro) llill wi ll dramatize the already dramatic rescue 10 a ftlm lo be released by Universal. It will be titled "Rrscut> .it 'Glad You Asked That' by Marilyn and Hy Gardner Entcbbe." And while the raid was still fodder for thl' front pages, Bantam Booki. v.cnt lo prui.s on t"No edr· tions of the same .. instant book," in English and Hebrew. Tilled .. 36 '.\linutes at Entebt>e:· 1t was writ ten by Isr aeli m1litan correspondent L'n Dan w1lh veteran Canadian author William Stevenson . Q : We don't knov. if this "ill be ofinterest to> ou and your readers -bul while we were in Tokyo M't' J(>arned that the I ate Nat King Cole's daughter won a grand award ther<'. Can ~·oo check and Lell ui. more about it?-lU r. and Mrs. Priest, Cincinnati. A: What N>ttalie Cole woo was the Grand Prix ~warcl al the 5th Tokyo Festival. for hC'r son~ "Mr. Melody.·' writll'n b~· her produc:-ers. i:'huC"~ J aek!!on and Mar \'in Yancy. The song star won a trophy and Sl0.000. The contest was staged by the Tokyo Mus11· Festh·al Foundation and rece1n·d 266entries trom 25 different countries. Send your ques11011s 10 1111 Gardnl'T, .. mad You Asked That." can? of tl11s 111.-uspaper. l'.0 IJ<JI JI i -18. Clu~·agv. Ill tl>611 .\lan/yn arid fly (;ordner will ansu't'r a:c many qia•s t1011s as they ca11 rn their column. but Ifie voluml! oJ moil make$persorral repllt's 1mposs11>le h!Olf -rAI 7 00. ~().10.•0 SAT 200.3!!0-140 1 JO·• 20-11 10 $UH 1 OO·J 50-S 41).1 JO.I XI NEWPORT CINEM AS Mt•lCOA\f"""' &w4C&ll .. UI wcwroat O n wna '44·0~ HUNTINGTON CINEMA~ UA,HAt b.U\.H l 147-h Ot •0 ·6vl) f NCREOIBLE - SHOCKING TRUE CO·HIT AT LIDO "TUNNEL VISION" CO·HITAT CINEMA WEST "BUG" ............... __ PLUS "THE OUTER SPACE CONNECTION" WE TBROOK Wf Sf,...,\TU •t tolOOllMUt \l GAIOlNGIOY( U0.4401 edwards MESA CINE A HIWP()e1 tl•D Af lfTI• U COSTA MIU 46·5025 weo ·T>iURS ·MON TUES _, 10·9 u FRI 1 10 ~I~ 11 1S SAT -r 00 J 00-S 00 • tO 9 1) t1 I) W M I OO·J 00 ~ 00 7 ro t IS MON· THURS 7 30·9 4S FRI · 6:3H·•S-11 ·00 SAT/SUN 2 00-4 IS 6 30·1.•>11·00 r-~~t8,.~!_TY!t~ .. = !.:;~~% •O .JlU CINEMA CENTER H ... 1ouuo'""'' colfo•n" MISA YllotCa.ru ,, ••• r 4 I CINEMAW£ST I Wl\T .. IH\l'at.T40'°'' .. ''" ~SfWllC Cltcltl IO·Utl Ct<ARL TON HE51011 HEMA\' FONOA 01 fNN f OAO •JAMES COBURN H•l HOlOAOOI( • A08fllr MllCt<Ulol ft08ll\T WAONlA • CLIFr R011£AT50N MON.Fri 7:15-9:40 SAT/SUN 2:10-4.40 7: t S.9:4~ w"°'""'' ... c•lff41111 S40·1444 Pl110 OllOWlflNO l>OOL al WE T OOK wuT .. IHStM •U•OO'IHllUt G.UDIM GAOYI IJ0.4401 CIN£MAWEST WUtwlHSTY AT40UU<WIST WUfMIN.CIMTft "J-44tJ Wedne!lday Auqust 4 i976 DAIL V PILOT 8'1 A F1/lST ARTISTS PROOIJCT/0111 · 111£ Gu~IBAtt RAU i' , ---. A.' C>tA( L ~ARR~ IV "ORll~ 81JRION•GAJU 811$£r • ./OHV OURFIEN •SUSAN FIMNERY STEVEN AlATS ·T•W /JclNllRE •JOAN~{ HAit • J f'Af OMALLEV Nl(;k()USPRrCJR•· RAIJLJ(l(IA f'llf'CO .... .,_..,,,.._.,.,CHVCKllM'. ,,_,.., i. UON CAPt "Al.OS• ,.., ,. C>tlJC" SA.l ,,...t((}I< CAPUANO$ ........... _ .. '·FISI AAT srs PROOVCTtONS• ...... DOMINIC fRON11fRC "6 ..... ~-... if(-...""1t\Atw.f ... ,,,.. ...... ""--• ..::r.::..-c.... __ .......... ,.. _.. w 11ill \I\\ IN•m l>l141.\ U~tl 11l1Jc I UJ. MW ,\1\1 ~ • "'" 11 \IJJJ.lt> · \\Al~JI ''Ifill \Ill IA l\\J ... \ ll.\I IA"' Hl.\Tl ) ~\"4' ""'J.J.11 · 1sn1u "'L'""~"' PLUS "THE BLACKBIRD .. with Goorge Segal HARBOR TWIN MAUOl 4T Wll~Of<.COUA MUA 64 .. 0S 1 l 646-JlO -~;~Ode To S-dlyJoe "An American 'Romeo and Juliet' " PLUS .. llNQO LONO TAAVElltNG ALL·STAAS l MOTOR KINOS" CINEMA CENTER I ... dlOtAf AIA .. CO\UMtU MIU YllDlc.tHTU trt.4141 ' I WARREN OATES KEN NORTON MON -l'RI 1 O\·t OS " 00 !>AT I 00 3 00 ~ 00 T 00.9 00· II 00 SUN 1 00 J 00·~ 00·7 00-9 00 CINEMA CENTER H,tll0 t.t.r&04M\ CO\f.awl\A ~MU~Y~Dt~· !r,!·4141 Loaon is 29. WELCOME TO TH[ 23•D CENTURY. (PO) MIC:H .. l l YOAK • JCNNY AOUll(ll Pl tCR i.~lllfOY • IUC:HAllD JOllOAN WEUOAYS 1 IH 30 SAT SUN I 1$·l7'$l,,_1_5s CIN£MA CENTER H41lOI 4l ..o .. ,} CO\T 4 00!" .. .. fUYUOlCD4fU •l •·4141 .\ 88 DAILY PILOT "' •• Nader as Boss: 'Human' or 'Grim'? • BY 1.() ISE ('()OK .l"'"•l•ll ""'" ...... (Last in a Sent1s' The hours ure long, the PJY '" low and lhe boss Is likely tu cull m the middle or the rught. Working for Ralph Nuder r ., full time occupution: 1t lcuve'( 111 Ue room for :1 1>crsonal life or vut · side aclr vi lies. 80~1 F. NAD E RITES, uod the ones who are strJI \\<OrkmJ: for a nd with the t>On'lumc·r ad· v()('ate. s uy they wouldn't hu\t' rt ;in> other "ay. Others. Lht' ones who ha ve leH, contend lhat the strain of keepin~ up with Nudt>r 's per~nul de-d1cut100 harms nol onl) the indi,·rdual employe • bul the quality or the work produced. "f<alph drin! h1sst~ffnol by a "hip. but by h111 example." sard M.irk G rec>n, director of the Corpo r ~te Ae-counlub1llty Re::.earch Gr oup who hnis lukcn a h:uvc to work on Ham «Y Clurk's US Senate co.mpa1Kn. Al'Wu-.-1• LONG HOURS, LOW PAY FOR ECCENTRIC BOSS Latham Wayne a t Center for Study of Responsive Law "He won't )ell :it you to work on a weekeltd, but you know ht-':. working over the ,weekend •• · · ONE EXAM PU: Of' Nader"i. tnfluen ce hi on the smokmg hab1t.:i or his rmploy("!>. Nad('r 1~ a vehement en tic of smokin#: :tnd was one of the first to rluim that the habit m ay b•• harmful not on· ly to the s mokl'r him:ielf, but to those around him. Vis1t1ng the Center for Study or Resp0ns1ve Luw to inten •iew Nader you noUce that no ont• smokes. T here nr,• no w,htruy rn s11tht. Jt would l>t' 1mpc>l1te to ask. Two days later, Nader is awuy from the center and a butt-filled ushlray sits on the r<.'Ccplionist 's desk ... I j ust haven't been a ble to g1\'e it up," explains the em ploye, ''but J don't do rt whrlc Ralph's around. lie nc\er or dered us not to s moke, hut •• But Ar thur Best. a lawyer who worked fo r Nader 's Center for Stud~· of Responsh·e Law. s111d that Nader "is one of the most humane employers I know.·· WORKING FOR NADER ''1s terrific if you a re a person who has a high energy level and con· sider your worl< to be its own re· ward." sa id Bes t. who is leaving the center after two ~ears to become a law school teacher something he says he alwa~s wanted to do. On thl' negative Mdc. James Turner. who worked for t he center from 1968 lo 1971 and was lhe ~ulboc _o[ "The CbenucaJ Feast." a report on food ad diti..es. s aid be ing a Nad{•r employe was •·pretty 1?nm." lie :.aid he did not mind the Ion~ hours or t he low salary. but oh· JCCled to ··1 h~ dfort to use th~ same k rnd of controls ~ ou 'd frnd rn a corpor ation .. Nllder, and se\ era! or his employes. said the 55-hour wec•k rs necessar y. "This is a max· rmum public m ter<'Sl com mit· ment ... sard Nader, adding Lhal hard work is the only way to ba lance out the larger monetary and personnel resources of cor poratron lobbyists oppos101? thP Nader campaigns Tomatoes Match Moods .. Both Rotten as Canneries Resume Work FR F.SNO <A I'' Hill k n frm t . and :1our dr:.po-.11 au11" arc.· trup :11mA up on (.'alrlorn1 .1 p<'al'h amt ·tomato farms a:. ~rowl•rs lK·,i:in :to fc<'I the full torn • ol lhc ('Jn nerv strrkl' \\·ork has n •-.u nw<I al the 11; c annertl'' "hrrh "l'l'C l'lo'l'll do" n tor 11 <la~:. "h1h· unron .incl mmtU)!l'flH•nt lll'l!lll1.1t11r:. hai.: ,~It'd '" l'I' wa~t· rnt·n·~.-.ci.. tor t>:J.001) \\ orker' t"ann('f'll'S bt•,i:a11 ~··an n~ up •1mmC'<l1:.1tdv In n· ... umt• \\ork. hul lor som1• 1i·ustr01ll'll IJrmt•r ' ti was Ilk<' th1• mm 100 l1llll' and too lutr Tht• ::.la1t• Uepurl m<'nl ol Al.:rit•rrltun.• t•.,lr matt•d ~luncl;:J\ l ht• toll Ol lht• \\alkoul ,1t SJO m011l 11111 111 lost n.1nn1ng pcat'heo;, tomatcws and u11n l'oh Tlwrt' was 1111 c-.trm alt' of \\hat lmpac·t thnt lo:.s n11ght ha\l' 1111 consume!' 11rkl'i.. •Jatr1'/ ,.,_.,., .~hnmH Si\:'11 OI EC:O li\1'1 Tht• mo lion pu•turt• I 1rc11 that 111;1111• .hi\,, .. ha" 1.1kcn ·' l11i.i hitc• <•I S1':r Worlll. hu,\ 1n~ l!I0,000 .. 11:1n·' ol common stol·I.. t•qrral 111 R 1w1 l't'lll ol llw IOWI ;\ spokP.;;matt ),IJHI the· pr11•1· paul ln ~I('.\ ( 'Ol'p \\'"' ~If> 7:1 a shurc or $2 ll I rn rlhon Tlwn· ";, ... tlCH'lllllllH'nl al Sl•a \\'cwl<I Bank OlllC"lally Opvmc J os1.•ph .J 1'1not.1.11n•,r<ll•llt and C'hlcr opl•rathlt: 111'1'11.•t•r of l 'nitt'!I TAKIN(; TOCK ('alifornru Bank 1UCH1. will at lt•ntl c·en.'monre:. at 9 a m l''ritla~ ot ltC'1all~ rcoµt•n1n )! a li<tnk offtrt· 1n Nt!wµorl lkach whlt'h \His <k:.trm cd lw frrl' 18 months ai:o. Tilt' nt'w 1'oratron i:1 utlJacent to thl' property tl estroy<'d by lht• 1'1n• a nd for merly was th(' sill' or an 011 comµan) service station. Bnnk Seib StfH'"k F i r s t Wo m en 's Ban k bf ('al rforn1a, W l'Sl Lo~ Angelc!-o. ha., recel\'ed authorr1.ation lrom tlw ~t;.ite Rankin~ Department to i..cll sto<'k to the publr<' The bank IS orrenn~ 150,000 lo :.!(I0.000 shares :rt SJO a shan• I' 1 r s t \\' o m c n ' s R et n k o f l'.al ilor111 :r wrll :"1Jl'C'1al1l<' rn "'"n II'<''> for women tht• first rn lht> Los l\n~el C's ~1rca uffor<lrni.t lht•m <'QUiii C'n •d1t opµortunit1('., \'f>tt• f 'f rttt f~orntM Nt•\\por t Pharrnnct!ulrf'als Jn. 1t•r1rnt1 o nal . Inc. NC'wporl Hral'l1 . a n'd :\I nrton·Nor wi l'h l'n><IUl'lS. In<·. han' announced tht• form:1111111 of Ne" 1JOtt 1':1tt11n l.:tboralo rtt•s. u new JOtntly O\\ rwtl f':1lrfornla comp11nv. ~l·w11or1 ·Ea ton l.aborutorw<.. "rll lK• res ponsible tor llw dt• t clopmcnt nnrl futun• rnnrkcltni.: Introducing the $JO dollar-a-month bookkeeper. EconoCl1cck 1s a business control system that works ~ as easily as wntrng J check. On a monthly bns1s tt provides you with n conipu~i....._;nzed general ledger. stJtement f f of earnings. bnlance sheet. I empl0yee earnings and a lot of other facts that help you help your business. Call one of our representatives so you can see for yourself how the svstem wnrks to save you time and money. Call (714) 832·6334 (Call collect from the 213 area) M lnos1plcx. u Ol'\\ drug , anrl other p()SSrblt.> products in the L"nitt'd State~. t\ srm1lar JOuil , c ntu r t• c o m pa ny •~ h c ini.: formed rn Cunada. Condo P1tr("hO#M Fullerton Air Pttrl$ at Oran~c Count~ Airport has pun ·hased a 4.f!OO·squan .•.fool industrial curl domrnium un it in Koll lrvrn<.' C<.'nler for a d1slnbut1on center. uccord1ni: lo John /\Jstrom. Kill lr"ine s ales man a~er. Thoma~ J . Fearn and l\l. Ward <~arland pur cha:.ed the umt at 3184 Airway A\C .. Costu Mesa, for $109.000 t hr ough l\lcDonald· :\lcOowell's Costa Mesa offlc·c. 1\·.-w B1ui11f!'t1• Paul Ra rtletl has oix•ncd a new IJusrness. S c a ll\ 1d1ton. Costu Mesa. The firm rccords color ,·rdeotapes w ith mice descrip· li o n s or hom e own e r s ' pos:.ess1ons. The recordings art• M!t\lcd and witnessed before bl' rnit i;torcd for C\ idcnce rn l'a:.c ol ltrc. theft or other los:. M'ebb Grou,•11 The slrongest firsl·hal( eurn· mgs rn the 48·:.('ar history tif the Del E . \\'ebb Corp. of Phoeni x. owner of the Newporter I nn. Newport Beac h. were repork d for the fist s rx months of 1976. This was SJ .510,000, or 43 <'Cnts per sharl'. com11are<I with 220,000 or 27 C'l'nls Pl'r ~hare for llw lake pcn od of 1975. Message Servjce Aids Firms . UP P ER S ADDLE IH VEH . NJ. <AP > Western Union has an- nounc ed p l ans to m - troduce a n<.'w mus~ messa~c sen ace di.'· signed for the s mall busi· ness murk<.'t. Th e n e w !')Stem , <'a iled "stort'd mail· ~ram.'' will enable busr· nesses to store standard letters and add res~es In a Western Union com· puter which wrll ron:>s produce mailgr ams and send them to t he multi pie addresses ECON~ Jointly operuted b~ Western Union :1nd the U.S. Postal Sl•n IC\'. the Mailgram net"ork clcc· tron i c a ll y r o ut es messages to local !)()St offi ces for ma rl d eh,cr" SYSTEMS NC Call: (714) 832·6334 ............................................................................ Ulc nextbuslnc~s <la) · t ' NADER LIVES lN A SOO·a month apa rtment. Th landludy is rumored to be afraid to rnlsl' the rent. He guards h11> pr1v:1ll' life; socialh.es seldom. John ESJ,><>Silo. "ho wor k\•d wtlh Nader from 100110 1971. wo:,. one or sever al pco1>le whose mur. riaces broke up whlll' workm).! for Nader . He uld thl•re was "nu doubt~' his tntere~t in work wms u fac tor in the breakup , bu t tressed th~\t lllcrl' were Olhl'r factors ns well. Jn contrnsl, /\lun Morrison, he:id or the L1tigtit100 Group. said. "I find him CNoden l:Oll· sider ate of m t' und my family. And I'm married and have twu children." NADER DOES NOT PAY hiJ!h salaries. But the rumors abouL vacations are usually \'1s1ts to ht. family. Does Nader tnd(.>{.'(I take vaca· lions:> "NEVER." he said. "J'rn nJways backed up I'll sometime:. ~o away if I huvc somt> writing to do ·· \\'hot about his c mploye!<'' They cun take v:w ations "1f they reel rcully ti n.'<!," ~re suid. But he slrt-sgcd that em.plo~es are not e xpectNI lo tnkti lJme of( m the middle of u fiJ.tht. "It's likl' climbing a mountain. It d<>t•:.n't matter if you ).let 98 percent of th\• way to U1e lop. One person d ad take a vacation and we lost U1t! Lockheed loan bill as a result.'' ll E LATE R. ACKNOW· LEDGED tha t a s ingle vacu· lion m ight no t. have b een •ff lte ac~rett't ~f"lltrlc and dllllftllt- he pro•ablf/ ecoMld•'t laaee s~r~'ff ~ltere •~ It• succeeded • • .. • ,._ glad rher~• a Ralph Nader In rhb to•••rir·· slar\'at1on wages are not tru~. Lawyer Best was pnid Sl 3,000 a year. Morrison s tarted at SlS.000 an 1972. He declined to give his curr,ent salary. but said it w as less than the $23,500 he was earn- ing when he left the U.S. At· torney's office in the Southe rn Dis trict or New York to join Nader. Nader's ear nrngs from speak- ing fees. book royaJti~s. etc. arc. he insists. strictly pri vate. !\lost estimates a re \n the ar<>a of 5250.000 a year . Nader plows back much of the money -he won't say how much --into h1:,; organizahons. ANOTHER l\IYTll ABOUT tht> Nader organization is U1at no one ever takes a vac·a tion. Dr. Srdney Wolfe. head of the lleallh Research Group, said. "Everyone takes vacations - even Ralph." Wolfe s aid Nader ·s re ponsible for the 1971 passag<.> of a bill pledging the i::ovcrnmcnt to guarantee up to S250 million in loans for the Loc kheed Aircraft. C.Orp. But he sa id a little extra ef· fort might have made the dif· ference. Sharland Trotter, who worked for Nader from 1971 to 1973, said s he had "con flicting feelings·' about t he experie nce. The work, s he said, was "very exciting, very challeng ing. The s iz.e of one's office a nd the accoutre- ments.are utterly unimportant · • At the same time. Mrs. Trotter s:ud, lhe re was "~1 lot of pressure to follow Nade r's personal style ••• I rett guilty if I didn't work s ix or seven days a week. But that was SO per cent me.'' TUE PRESSURES OF bclnA a Nader employc contribute Lo a high turnover . ··Only a fe w fX'O· pie can be a Ralph Nader for Jong." said Mrs . Trotter. Over l,h«> Cow1lt-"r HASOU~NJ~ NEW . f L l 'S/,'t Nader IHUd the I umovcr ts M t lll<ccssarily l>ud. "It kecv.<t fr1.•),h ideas. il sprc udi> 1>ro1>le till O\ c1 the country.•• Another gourcc. wh<> nskcd not to ~· quoted b1 11um<'. 8uid tlw turno\'er wos u probtem und cun tributed to n lack of quality 111 sonw of the f\'J>Orts prl'part>tl by ne w and ln<'xp cr1cnccl.I ,, .. s eurchcrs. l\l()ST PEOl'I.•: "Nl-:V.:R St'i.' what we art> u1> uJ.tninst Jn tt>rm:. or c orpo r u t t' p o wer nn cl responsibillt~," Nuder said. 111.· said no one would write a stor" about the Gret>n &y Pncl.1.•n• without writing uboul lhc kind or opposition the team faced. Nath• .. wants the same type of balanct Ellen S'u li bergc r Strau:., founder of Call l-'or Action , Im • whic h worked with the Nader or ganiiation on 3 r ecent study of c ons umer complaints, su1d Nade r , no m atter what hi' quirks. h~ made a contribut1on tu American life. ' "ls he eccentric·! Proba bly If he weren't eccentric and dtl • ficult, he probably wouldn't ha' l. suc~eeded where he was sut· cceded. . • . 1 can huvc com plaints about s pecific thin~. but l'm glad ther e's a Ralpt\ Nadl·r m th is counll·~·. • DOESN'T NADER CET tirt>tl · "Get tired?" he asked. as though he couldn't understand the idl.':.i. ··u·s like you'r e a doctor und i,:o to the hospital every clay. You don't come b ack clisillus iont•ll because • ou find people who need your help.·' lie cannot \'isualiw s witching> job and he turned down suggci..· t1ons that he enter politics. Buth<· did give some thought lo a nother career while he was growing u1> ··1 wanted to be a satirist," tw said. "I thrnk •.• in humor then · is truth. The fin:il deflnltion t1r happiness 1s laughter ." llp• and Downs UPS notm.. LA t lM""°' rn.111nn f-"b :.:~':'niix.f3'~ "~· :::1 J Myl~n L .. ,b I ~;~:.,c,/,~ .. ol"tt 1 0 •• ,, FOOd I f-l4Hlt#YR'1IOV un I H)1tHO ()p11r "t 1 lt It•" nlL••A ' • 8t1'WW'I ,..., .... ' \Ip ... , ,. uo •O I \lo II I •. Uo h ~ • ,,,~ > Up 7.,,. Uv /ti t Uo }()I~ '•• t lft in II U1> )t~ I 1n .. 11t1•h• •• .. -"·'' ,, [due tlton ~ .,, s. • I) L fVCp 18#1 1 • • , 14 Ult St•ilrK•· ' • 1$ MPStno Cl> I • 16 Pdl""I Mqmt • • 11 Wil.O.><" Corp 1 II Coe<18t1QMA I) • I •• AmMtr•nti t,,d I ~ 1 '• 10 C..-.bo1JP E.au•I " • 71 ,:,t1rUdCommry > • • • n PoUutrtC.onl ln<f 1 • • 1l Sun ... 4-'I •n 1 • 1• l'ldiJnaGro ?t 1 7!t O•t•~vc1a.,. 4•. \ II I It I " ' '• II I II I I f I ' ' ' ' II I \ I • U I N4,,... DOWNS l,.j~I (l'lfl Pf' 1 t.onQn•u L 'I Ad<fM~hC..,r 1 1,,1 H'tOl'On•l., I 1 Oii h I A\,o,'O LnQ 1"'• ,...... 1 ,._ ~ 6 ' $ b 1 M•<, o" co,-p ~ "~ C.r nr•rl.dD ~tJ r 1111 CompulTro_ln s~. 'I r~tbr• f ek fnc i..i I ()ti 7 i) • OH II I I tft Ott ,, ' Off 111 ~. OU t t ~ • • OH I• • OU U ' t11 OH '1 t ' ()ff f..; ~ -'• ()tr 111 ~ 10'.-10·· J? .. ]It • n 11 • >3'.. 1~ ~ ~·" ,. • ~ f •Q6 \-. ,, 71•• • • 8 . ' 10 -. ., 4 '• 11 ..... 11 • • 14 I 1 t) lb II 18 I\\ ·~ 11>1 iO , 8\1 ,. >.11& n 'oil 1J Ki '' 551 110 /\ MUTUAL FUNDS l I ------,~ F()fw A'd Ind t :::~:::".~ ,\ .. Sdrninon (or p Mt-d<Om fn<. t • ':;';:~~:~:-~ ' t : '""l'M • fl>ft ( I I ~ Atlif oPra I J#t I O\•lf..'fl< , •• AIO;J ( rrim" l ith'\ I' • ~;~t.' ~~·.:, tP~Of' l ,• •. Nu'fo M 1 .. t-\ • G•H f'o•u 1. 1,, OU '1 t • • 011 ll' '" Ot t,' • Off I.' .• 8" ,, , II 111 , Ott 1•1•> • QH t111l ..,., ,,,,. t~t • ' t-(.,w{lu (or1\ • ·• -l•fH1C..n1r1 lti,,1frlr• I' 11 C)tt If I • Oii "' v .• ,.o., .. 14,..,,,,, \ "' 011 "I Qlt !J, 1 ) Wednesday 'tt Afternoon Price& • • NYSE COMPOSITE TRJtNSACTIONS 0..0•••'-1"<-lll•dlt .... ,,.. ...... v .. ~. Ml4-•I ... 6(1fl(, ............. o.miot -C111<'-tl tlo<ll t \< ....... \-,_,Hll>Y UW N•l.WIAt-1.11-~ S«..-11 .. a o .. i.n -lft'of•"OI ' i. Lockheed Loses BURBA NK CAPJ -Massive writeoffs from Lockheed Tristar debts put the aerospace giant's net quarterly and semi-annuaJ earnings behind last year's by m1Jllons of dollars. company spokesmen said T1&etd•Y· Second-quarte r eamlnge or Sll.3 million, or 94 cents a share, were re. corded June 27, said board chairman Richard Huck, while the totals were $14.9 million, or $1 25 a share, for the quarter ln 1975. Haack said the semJ·annuaJ earn· inp were S22 2 milllon, or $1.86 a share, compared with $24.7 million and SZ.12 lul year. s DAILY PU.OT •• lfydra-laeoded Is Teledyne Lonely at Top? By ~Ill.TON IMO. 'KOWITZ If you'rf' u <'Ooglonil·rate-wntchl'r, a~ I JJ m, the one lo watch nghl now is thl' L<l5 Angel~ ba~cd Tclcd.vnt Inc You may never ha ve heilrd of TelN:t yne. It doC'sn't h .1n • too much consuml'r busmess, und lt'!I u youni: uutf1t But 1t Is a hydra headed corporation w1lh a vor nclous 11pp<"ht(' fur other <'ompanles. It's already bigger UH.11\ such l'om1Hm1c:- as Reynolds Metals . Campbell Soup. G1llettc• and 11.J . He1n:t. And 11 appears still to t>.: hun. gry. Prior to l960, Uwrt> was no Teledynl'. 1l "'•1s founded In th.it yeur b.' Money Tree Henry E. Stngleto11. who C'ame from the i:randcfad<h' or ('On glomerates, L1t«111 lnduslrtcs Singleton 1s still ch:urmun t.o-day. LITTON PROVEOWllATSf:E!'tS to be ob,·1ous. th:ll ti you want to become big quickly. buy u posst'I or compa111c1' Whtie Singleton was there. L1tton acquired 20 companws After he left, Litton bought 80 more. Running his own show, Singft'lon t1emonstraled lhol he had • learned this lesson well Hetwe<•n 1960 and 1968, Teledyne bou~ht 125 companies. By HHl7 he w;1s tioastini.: that "lltook Litton 10years todo what wed1tl in six " At ri rst Teledyne concentrated its purchases 1n defense- or1ented, high-technology fir ms. Then 11 branched out lnte>- metnls, steel. insurance Among the rompanies tt bagged: were Sprague Engineering, Brown Engineering, Vasco, G1JI Electric, Wah Chang, Electronics Microwave, Geotrorucs. Firth Sterlrng . Philbrick Nexus, Ry an Aeronautical.. Parkard Bell, Rodney Metals. Unatecl lnsurunce Compal\1' of Amenca, Argonaut Insurance antl F1res1de 'fhnft. • MEANWHILE, SINGLETON WAS nol lhe only one wttic> benef1tted from the Litton learninA e ll.pcr1 enrc. In 1964, as Teledyne was abuilding. another Litton executive. Fred R. Sullivan, left to Join Walt.er Kidde & Co. in the E_ast , And Kidde subsequently scooped up tK> companies, among them Globe Security. L1i:hting Corp. of America and United States Lines. . With all thes e con~Jomerutes hunting dunn~ the 19GOs. it's a wonder there were any small companies Jeft m the country. The 1970s have been a different story. Conglomerates round it was n't so easy to run so many companies under~ roof and they have been shedding units. One company, Los· Angeles-based Whittaker Corp., has d ivested Itself of 119 companies since 1970 L1tton, Ki<lde, Republic and U.S. fn- dus t.ries have all lightened up on the companies they hold. RUT HENRY SINGLETON was s marter . lie hotl th~ foresight to buy insurance comvanfos. which hove funds lo invest m companies. and so the latest turn In the c.:on• glomerate screw is that Teledyne has become lhe largest single stockholder in Litton Industries. owning 12 percenLof theoutstandmg shares. Nor 1s that all. Teledyne had also acqu1 red IQ percent otr the outstanding shares of WaJter Kidde. In the end we may not ha\'e to watch so many conglomerates. There m ay lit" just one : Teledyne. Big Break/ as ts Bulge Budgets By'l'be Associated Pres!i Bad news for consumers who hke to start the day with a hearty breakfast: An Associated Press market trn sket survey shows prices for such staples as butter . eggs and coffee increased during July. The increases at the r etail store generally r enected trends at the wholesale level which, in Lum, mirrored I.he over·a ll supply situation. TIIE AP DREW UP A random list or 15 comrncm1y purchased food and nonfood items. checked the pricl' Ott one supermarket. 10 each or 13 cities on March J, 1973, <ind has rechttked on or about the start of each sucl'cedmg month. Los Angeles is a checkhslcity. The la tes t sur vey showed the markelbas kel bill increased last m onth at the checklist store in e ight cities. rising an average or 1.7 percent. The bill decreased at the checkJ1st store in four cities. down an average 2 percent. ;ind was unchanged in the 13th city. 0 ver ·all, the marketbasket bill al the checklist store increased a Jillie less than half oft per cent during July. The situation represented an improve ment over Jut1e. when the marketbasket blll went up at the checklist store 1n runecittes and the over·all total was up 1.:i percent THE GOVERNMENT HAS predicted that reuul prices for food alone will increase2-Spercent this year, althoug,ll lbe exact s12e of any increase depends lo some degree oo tbe crops still being harvested. The recent strike by California cannery workers coold provide an unexpected boost In th~ cost of canned fruits and vegetables. July's major increases occurred In breakfast Items.~ price of a pound of butwr went up nt lhe checklis t store in l l ca ties , rising an average or al most 10 perecnt. The price or a pound or coffee incr1'ased at the chec'kl hst. store In seven of the citiei1 sun·cycd. CoHee now uvcroites about S2 a pound, an Increase of mnr1• th an :-;() percent ov(•r lh~ ,,asl year. The price of a dozen e ggs went up at lhc chtckh~L store in 12oftheciliessurveyed : On the bril(ht side, lhe price or frankfurter!\ decre4111ed IJ : the checklist store in eight cities, as dlll the price of a pound IJI : chopped chuck. Jncrea<1ed supplies , combined with scoltcrcd·: 11ummer sales, were res ponsible for the drop in prices. StadiUDl in Black f\ net income lo retained earnlnli(s of $1 ,31•,265 hus been~ re1>0rled for the combined Anaheim Sl .. dium, Anaheim,: Convention Center and the city's two public golf co;.irSC!s, ~ according to department dlr~or Tom Liegler. · Pcrhap~ one or the most significont improvements in ~ the financial report was for the 45,000 seat stud1um. which.; h u reported being In the red since it opened an 1006. Liegler said It had an Income of 1894,249, with operattftc : expenses and bonded indebtedness of $854,0N. Jea.in~" $40,15.1 In retained earnings. "The fi gures for all four operations a.re preliminary;•: Liegler said, "but they retlcct lot.he bei1lof our knowled&c •. very successful fAnd profitable year." : Division Renamed . Irvine's Environmental Technolo~y Dlvbion or DressC!r: • Industries , I nc .• has been r ena med lhe Advace4: , Technology Center . : The center was responsible for the development Git.he: Dretser9lqr fuel ioductor, a device deslp'9 ti~ .automobileexhaustemissions. . ~ 1~ ' : .. • ' ' ' • • r : Vice President' ~ts ~ August F. Wtrner a nnounced his resignation u nca president, general mana'er or Datall'on's SM.lly Met KTL: subsidiaries. Werner said he Is leaving Datatron tw.~ Jl'vlne, to a.aaume enotW posiUon. · I ' I 8J0DAILYPILOT I-Judge NEW YORK <AP>-A federal j udge who does not think much or the late Ern\'st llf'mingv.ay hus ordered the Doubleday & Co. publisbmg firm lo pay Sl~.000 to a biographer and eonC1dant of Heminl{way's who da1med he was ltbeled by a book ubout llern ingway. U .s. Dlstrl ct Court Jud ire J .. J ) 22 OZ. \Vednesday.August 4, 1918 Favors Charles Brieant approved last Apr11·s jury award to A.E. llotchner of Westport, Conn., who charged/in a Sl.S·mllllon lawsult th t h e h ad been maliciously maligned by the book "Hemingway in Spain." The book. by Jose Luis casllllo- Puche of Madrid. was published in 1974 by-Doubleday. YOUR CHOICE 4 ROLL PAKS • Suit 'Papa' .:4uthor in I N llPltOLDING n rE award. Brieant called Hemingv. ay a "rich libertine and a destroyer ot wildlife" and said he wus puuled by the continuing public Jnterest in Hemingway 10 years after his death. Hotchner. who testlfied he was Hemlngway's friend Cor many year•, i• th& author of "P~pa BATH SIZE Hemingway." lie has atlupled many of llem1ngwuy's books for mOYu~s and tt>le\ 1s1on und It•<" tured,.extens1 vely on the author i. life. ' BRIEANT SAil) Dou bl\•tl:t) publis hed "11 1.'mingwu> 10 Spain" with "r e(•kless db n•Jfar1I for truth or falsity" and tx·htUl·d llotchner's status as an aulhorit on llemlnjlwa' llot <'hnt-r cla 1mcd th~1t the book t) pl'd lum us a "1>ublln1' hound and i.1>00.:er" und "not .l true Cricml or I h•rn lnjt\\ ay " Snlel> ot the hook. which ~old for SlO 95, lut<Jlt-d 3,453 l'opw::., court r <'cor<ls .show1:ct. \\ hlle "l'apu ll~m1 11 ~way" hui< !>Old 630.000 COil.iC~. • REGULAR • CRAY •UNSCENTED AUGUST SUPER VALUES SQUIBB THERAGRAI or THERAGRAN-M VACATION TIME! oa·t¥;e0m1 CUPPED WI G SIILL SOlJGHT S N L>IEGO <Al'I A nm· J'IOU01l µ<irtion M J wm~ Ong "htch fell from :m llirhner m·.:r SJn Dw.:o is ~till bein~ sou~ht 'rht• ll•l'l'C mc11sur1ng four fe<'l b) 10 ml'hes was lost 1-'riduy 1111o1ht as llw W(•s tl'rti Alrlinl':l Bottin.: 720H from Honolulu ":ls 0\l'r tlO\\ntC)\\11 Hulboa rark. JOHNSON'S Diaper Liners 30FREE 4 99 OPEN 1 DAYS A WHK ovER-SlNK Cutting Board wit~ purchase ot lOO's at • u. VITAMIN C SA V-ON llAMD 9·:30 AM TO 9:30 PM MON.-SAT. 10:00 AM TO 7:00 PM SUN. fld1u<t\ to tit • 1nh from J l" tc , J ' JOHNSON'S 500M6.2 49 250's • Baby Oil VITAMIN E -I BONNE BELL- MOiStUre Lotion ... : ... Jacquard LUGGAGE 6" Small Salad Bowl [ xc ettrnt for l1urin1' & ,1tler 1 19 tn~ Sun, luo' 10 oz. • 11 _______ _ ---...-<• SAV-ON llMD ~-f 4001.u:s2 79 :-=·I 100 C111s • ._.. ·! . " ~ ~~ SINUJ AB Relieves 1~ ''~-1 sinus headache & , l \ · •.. ~ ;congestion!. 1 39 m .:-:-~., 31 TMltts • r/ 'lnoistLre lotion a eomom Special Summer Sale! 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MAKING WAVES IN GALLEY Shirley Jodces Snootie Ullman B/Jj_e Wa ter Pro vision ing • Stores Smooth the Sail Chuck and Snoorie L'llman h;.ive been married for 38 years. "Stagger ing, isn·t it." quips the petite. suntanned first mate of the E\•1an. ~trs. Ullman has been sailing for all of them, e\cr s ince "a somewhat dismal" honey moon c;ruise, when she was forced to cook -something they hadn't bothered to teach her · at the University or Wisconsin or UCLA -aboard a 3-0·foot sloop with no sink. ··My wedding present was a galley pump." she ('huckled. Having been reared on a standard midwestern rare of meat and potatoes by a father who. s he remembers, sent back to the kitchen nearly every dish that was set before hi m. Mrs. Ull man admiL'i her cmthus1asm for cooking sprang largely out of her husband"s enthusiasm fo r eating. "I haven't found a dish he doesn't like," she said. "fl e's a delight to cook for." Ot:TER:\11'.'ll NG FACTORS There are many fartors detcrminin~ a boat's stowa~e. among the m. the sh1p·s due course. the type of voyage lrac· ing or rruisin1t 1, JlrOJected duration of passage, size of crew and so forth. But the most basic considcraltons, s ays Mrs. Ullman. are space. and the limitations of the cook. "How 1 pack the boat when I'm doing the cooking is very different from how I would pack for a race; when Chuck does the ~ooking and the skippering. ··1 don·t usuall y race with him because I can't hold my own as part of the racing machinery," she explained. So when Ullman gets galley duty. she stows provisions In order of their use. with directions for easy as:.em blage and utensils close ata hand. "sohedoesn'treally have to think." This method for stowing is actually good pract ice anytime, s he says. Random stowing ultimately means chaos and confusion for the chef and the crew as well. Some provisioners prefer Lo keep an inventory list label· ing items, qwintity and location a board boat, with a marker handy to check off what's been used. "This works for real organized people:· says Mrs. Ull· man. "I, m~ selr. a m not that oq~anized. My biggest problem in fact. lS that I'm lazy about labeling, so I never kn ow just what I'm going to get when I reach for a can s towed under the settee." CUSTOM GALLEY The 43·fool E vian, an imperiously-masted, teak-trimmed cutter designed for the Ullmans by naval architect 8111 l.apworth, contains a galley custom·crafted for easy maneuvering and minimal sloshinJ,?. Teakwood dowels and partitions hold cups a nd plates LO place ("but I use paper goods and baskets whenever l can" 1: u metal fiddle secures pans ntop the stove and the ovl'n sits thwartship to prevent baking pans from nying out in rough seas. There is a refrigerator that she keeps ti~htly stocked with fresh foods with ground meats and 1>oultry firsl 1n hne for usage: but lhere 1s no lreeung unit, so eventuaJly, on lon~er hauls, the menu is reduced to canned foods. "That•s when 1 reach for the spices and the wine to take out that canned taste." Sh(' saict. ··Without r efrigeration -that requires a whole different manner of thinking. And youdon't scll much beer. "If we had a freezer, I'd pack more meat, frozen coffee <'ake and lots and lots of ice cream. There 's nothing bell.er on a hot day at sea ,'' Mrs. Ullman added. How one shops for provisions al sea is deter mined largely by the type of climat.e·controlledspaceavailable . Mrs. Ullman says she packs fruits and vegetables in a well-ventiJlated carton, covers it with moistened burlap to keep them cool, and stows it ''aft ofthecockpit" in the yacht's lazarette. SEAFARING VEGETABLES She says the hardiest seafarinj? vei?etables are arorn·l) pe squash, carrots. cabbage, potatoes a nd hard· s kinned a vocados. some with stems and some without, to ensure ripening at staggered intervals. "Local marke ts are generally very cooperative and will even provide you with tomatoes that range from very hard green to ripe.·· she said. "The important thing to remember 1s to pack the fruit and vegetables in order of their fragtlity, with the softer-skinned, riper ones nearest to the top." . tandard pronsions aboard the E\·ian cons 1st or cheese~. dry and condensed milk, biscuit and muffi n mixes ("these take the place of breads which spoil lust " J, canned tuna, sardines and anchovies andtlnsofsoda crackers . "l simply can't imagine li(e without peanut butter and soda cr ackers.I' Mrs. Ullman said. As for utensils, she adds, ''my most precious thing is an oversized fry pan. I also use a smaJler, 1-rench·type Tenon pan. a garhc press. strainer. lime squeezer and hand· operated can opener. And l don't think I could go to sea without my rubber •loves. ·.i Earlier this summer, Shirley and Norman Jackes set out aboard their 32·foot cult.er, the Moonshine, for a two-month honeymoon cruise that took them lo southern Baja and back around through the Channel Islands. At the lime they set sail, Mrs . Jackes didn't think herself much of a seaworthy mate, though she had made mos t of the comforting improvements on J ackes · 36-year·old fi nd. Like many ambitious new old·boal owners, the Jackes found strips of burnished wood under the cabin's salty layers of paint and cork veneer . Its por t and starboard berths are now rheerily dr essed in paisely slipcovers and the cockpit sports a wind·durabledodger . both products of Mrs. Jackes' handiwork; and s he's currenUy designing macr ame covers for the portholes. Mrs. J ackes now works the sails with a confident hand; she can pull in thejibwhileguiding the tiller with her loe- just one of the muscle-strengthening acrobatics conf ined deck hands like herselflearn to love. Mrs. Jackes is also a ri rst·rate gaJley chef, according lo her skipper, having learned to make the most of minimal cooking facilities. t•nlike most seaworthy vessels. the Moonshine has no refrig(,'ration, which presented an interesting challenge. The first rule in preparing a sailing ship's fare 1s make it easy! That way, you won't spend n eed l ess tim e i n th e claustrophobic confines or the ~alley. risk sca·sickness, and miss out on all the action on deck. The follow1n~ recipes take ad· vantage of cnnncd provisions and whatever meats you have on hand, and they can all be made in a sinjt)e skillel. • STARBOARD SWISSST E AK 214 cu pnour 1-'l teaspoon salt . Generous dash pepper l lh pounds round steak (about ;\4-inch thJck) 2 lablespoons shortening l can mushroom soup 1'2 soup can waler or beer 1 cup sliced onion l Lablespoon Worcestershi re sauce Combine fl our and seasonings: pound Into steak with meat ham· mer . In large skillet. brown steak in s hortening; pourofffat.Addrc· maining ingr edients. Cover ; cook over low heat l hour 15 minutes or until lender . Stir oc· casiooally. Makes 4 to 5scrvings. .. CHICKEN GULFPORT 2 oounds chicken oarts 2 tables poons oil or butter 1 can tomato gumbo 1 ~soup cans water 2 m edium cloves garlic. minced 1 teaspoon oregano leaves. crushed l teaspoon !la!\ 1 cup raw regµlar r1rc 1 lar ge green pepper, cut in strips 1h cup chopped pimiento rn skillet, brown chicken in but· ter or oil, pour ore fat. Stir In soup, water, garlic, and season· ings. Cover; cook over low heat 15 minutes. Stir in r emaining ingredients. Cover; cook over low heat 30 minutes or until all liquid is a bsorbed. Stir occa sionally. "' BAYSIDE llAM AND PEAS t •ii cups diced cooked ham 14 cup ('hoµped onion 2 tablespoons butter or margarine J can rream or celery or mushroo m soup 1,-.i cup milk 1 can (about 8 ounccsJ peas, dl'ame<t Cooked noodles Toasted slivered almonds Jn saucepan. brown ham and cook onion In butler until lender. Bland in soup and milk; add peas. Heal ; stir occasionally. Ser ve ove r noodles. Garnis h with almonds. Makes about 3cups. • BE ANS llAWADAN Vi cup chopped onion 2 tablespoons butter or margarine 11 , \ 8)' KAKRARAGIUS o.ii;,.; ... ,.... ..... lmaatlae try lng to ~xtt9te a lt ·eia M*ffte la • llltllt• th•l •••J'U O and fro. ln .. gl9e l*fU.1.,.. U.. •w.9._a& Its 1nometH of sublime detMat ailid walc1Ua1 It, ea ewa.- come 111•11•« to the noor-or worRyet, oato JOU. Soufnt ·lng, n ambe·lnt or even deep·fai '!?=Iii mu n catastropht-oa the bitcb aeu. Pertaape "*' 1 w ~ pie like Snoozie VIima.a aad ShJrter J~k•• Ric' to a.net safe. ooe·akUlet fart wlw• pulllna aalley cl•tY ..._.. &heir boats. E ven so. they sUll ha\e toeoettf'ltclwidlroWa1 ...__. olten, &lmballed stoves that roll too. •ot &o mn&lilli Ille ga&tl'oaomlc demands ol a sea·Jot&led crew. • A aaUln« ship's galley 18 usually so anaall. tbt,. ii HUit room for ••decision or careless cookery. There la al• lll&le room for storage, so organlaatloa Is vital, from ,.... ,._. Ding to the stowing or provisions. Oae sally seafarer suggHts Uaa& "galley wa&dt" .. dte t.ou&best job oa board. Mllce ll requittt Ute wlleffW.....a le pack and eqllip a lauMll witll all Dettaary felDCJ ucl -.llJM items, and to erve up regular repasu tbat ~Id j9a u ..... ly regenerate stamina abd morale aa eed aap i• Ute .ea.~ pelled by queuy "ictimsof mal de mf't. <The same salty seal arer also 81lllttlsthat, In tbe •veml o1 such an attack, raU·Jtangers shouJ41 seek the lee sideef..._ boat, making sure that the matter relieved ii dlatbarlff .- the wind.) In planning and provlsioning ror a craise, ll ii W'lse lebe prepared for a minimum or the "~veU.ces ., ....... " Even U tbe seafaring vessel ii equipped with s&ovt, 9"11 ..a refri&erator, all circuited tbroa~ll lhe sbJp'a &ellft'a&w; •IS a wise galley mate who s tows adequately for tile U.e wllllili celd foods diminish, and plans meals easy e1toa8h to ,re. pare :;-"come bell or high water" - atop a Off•......, Coleman. BEA ANDERSON, Editor Wednesday. August 4. 1976 Cl "You h:ive to turn ~our mind :iround and do with what you hav~." she said. "But you'rt be surprised at how well you caneatJUSt the same. All it t:ike:-0 1:. a htUl• 1mai.:1nation ... Tortillas, she said, proved to ht' esper1all:v good traveling fare. withstanding lhe humid t't1 v1rons of the bou t and prov id · mg easy.to·eat-out-of·thc·hand pockets for filling with cheese. tuna, canned veJ.!etafJles and lcfto\'ers In provisioning the ~1oonsh1nc for their voyai:c. the J ackes stuck to such 1nip<.'rml'ahlc Aood~ as canned soups. and fish, beer 1erkey, dnl'd fruit, nuts and grains "We went through 12 pou nds of peanut butter 10 two months.·· admitted Mrs. Jackc~. Some foods she would normally delcJ.:ate to the refri gerator at home. rhcsa1d, kept well in cooler, dry niches when treated to postponedeterloration. · VINEGA R AID For example, ~he wrapped cheeses. esvec1ally the harder, slicing varieties. in cheesecloth that had been soaked in vinegar ... The \'inegar doesn't affert the taste and pre· vents mold Crom growing on the cheese. It l'an also be used to preserve breads by painting 1t on the <'rust with a pastry brush," she said . Whoever heard of doing this or coating eggs with petroleum jelly? "Eggs keev for weeks like this since the coating keeps the shells from bccom ing soft,·' she said. Mrs. Jackes also recommends varnishing cans to pre- ventoxidiiation, leakage and possible food poisoning. "The only things we really missed were fresh greens and fresh fruit, but we made up for that when we hit San Quentin and feasted on the mangoes there," she said. Voyagers ran usually find interesting foods indigenous to the port on trips ashor,e . .In Mexico, as in many places around the world. the local fi shermen's catch can be bartered for with tokens of Americana. The Jackcs say Playboy magazines and plastic fnsbees are worth their weight and mor e i~ lon~ustina. bonita and abalone. '.\lrs. Jackes cuts UI' the frl'sh fi sh into cubes then. marinates them for an hour or so in lemon JU>t"I! and soy sauce for a surprisingly tasty. no·n>Ok appetizer ,,n board. "A boat 1s a great plucc to learn short.cuts ;.ind to learn howtoapprcciatesimple, natural foods." she said. ''There's really no better way to get in touch with naturt' than by being out m the open sea, .. she continued. ··You find you can really be sel!-sumc1ent in all that\ a~tnt•s!>. "You learn to de~nd on nature and the wind for move· ment, on the ocean for foocl. and on the smallnl•:.s of your boat for perspertivc. It all adds UJl to a bellcr knowledge or yourself in relationship to the universe.·· J can 121 ounrcs1 pork & beans in tomato sauce 1 cup drained pineapple chunks • 2 t easp oons p re p ared mustard In saucepan. cook onion in but ter until tender. Stir in be{ins, pineapple, and mustnrcl. I teat : stir occasionally. Makes about 3'12cups. • MON 'OON SKIU.ET 4 slices bacon 2 pounds cnickcn par Lc; 1 can cream or chicken soup 16 cup water 1 ~ cup chor)ncd onion 1 can (a bout 8 ounces I cul green beans. drained In skillet , cook bacon unlll crisp ; re move and crumble. Pour off all but 2 tablespoons drippings. · Brown chicken in drippin~s: pour ore fat. Add soup, water . and onion. Cover ; cook over low heat 45 minutes or until chicken is tender . Stir occasionally. Add beans; heat, Garnish with bacon. Makes 4 se rvings. • MUSHROOM MACARONI v. cup chopped onion 1 t a bl e spoo n butter or margarine 1 can c ream of mu~hroom soup 'h cup sherry ot beer 3 cups cooke d e lbo w macaroni I ll!z cups :.hrcdded Cheddar cheese fn sauc<'pan. cook onion in but· ter unltl tender. HI end in 11oup and s h erry or beer ; a dd macaroni and rhccsC'. llcat unti l cheese melts; stir occas ionally. Makes about 4 cups. Note: You con sul1e1titulc 1 teaspoon onion powde r for chopped onion: omit butler • • SCAL LOPF.O T UNA SKILLET 4 slices bacon 1 can condensed cream of onion soup 2 cups water t package (about 5 ounces) scalloped potato mix t c:in (8 ounces> i reen peas. drnined 114 leaspoon thyme, crumbled •14 teaspoon basil, crumbled l teaspoon Worcestershire Sauce Dash pepper 2 cans <about 7 ounces each> tuna, drained and naked In skillet . cook bacon until crisp.; remove and crumble. Pour off all but 2 tablespoons drippings. Stir remaining ingredients ex· cept tuna and bacon into drip· pings. Cover : cook over low heat. 15 minutes or until potatoes are · tender . Stir occasionally. Add tuna: neat. G arnlsh with bacon. Makes about S cups, 4 servings. f ' ' £2 DAIL Y_P_l_LO.;._T __ ...,,;:... ___ ._,;..;W.;.od.;;.n.;.;es;.;;.;;.d~ay.._A.;;.uq;::.;1.1;;.;1;.;.t_4.....;l..;;.9~16 • . Happiness: A State of Mind ( Pilot Logbook J NEW YORK CAP> A s urvey of S2,000 Americans 1ndlcatL'S lhat "happiness is u1 the heal.I. not the wallet," two p:.) cholog1sts n port. "ln '3ct, happlni.'l>S ha.'I less to c.JO With whal you have than with what you want. It comes less often from absolute acluevc- ments than relative ones. "Happiness is a maucr oraottlna peraon1l standard•. n ot c haaing nfte r oth~r people'•.'· the p1ycholal11ts re part In ttia Augu~t l11uc of Psycholo~y Tod ay magazine . The P8.Ycholoalsts, Phlllp Sh#ver or New York University and Jonathan Freedman or Y aJe, asked sever al hundred <iueallons of re- aders or the magazine. Replies came from moce lhan52,000, UJ.ll'<i 1Sto9S One conclus ion Is that happiness does not come "fro m therapy, religion, drugs, mysticis m or a long hst of sexual conquests. rt has a lot to do w Ith accepting and t l\JOyi ng what one I• and wha t one has, m aintaining a balance between expectations a nd achieve· ments " LACK CONFIDENCE Seventy percent or respondents say that they have been happy over the last six months But they aren't confident about the ir feelings, which change from d ay to day Sllghlly more than half say their level or happiness shifts rairly often and almost eight in 10 think about happiness weekly or daily 'Airman' Honored S l ' n r o ,. 1\ 1 1· m a n ~larno J llansl><'rr\' I~ tht· onl~ \\ oman among 1::! arrm<.'n th0Sl't1 lh1s ~ l'lJI" <t!'\ th<.' most uutl'l ~rnding in the ,\ 1 r F orl't'. Shl· 1 talking with thl' pi lot of one of t he jet fightl'rs on wh ich she \\Or ks. '"Happiness is Jrke or~ai.m: Ir )'OU have to think ofteo about '4 hcther you have 1l , you don't." The psycholososts said the i?roup is not typical or the American pubhc since the re· aders tend on the a"eratte to be "younger. more nfnuenl, better educated and more liberal than the average middle American.'• Attitudes essential to happiness, said Shaver and Freed mun. ¥te: -Life has meaning al'\d direction. INOONTKOI. -The Individual e:in control the g<>OO thio1e that happen and is not a puwn of ev~nts. -The person disagrees with the cynical view u preued by Barnum's belter "there 's u sucker born every m inute.'' -The person disagrees with lhe stale· ment that · 'good things can't last." "Our happiest respondents are those who reel In control of their It ves and who com pare their progress a gainst their own s tandards, not those of others, the psychologists said. Among other rlndings are: -Employed wives are happier than those who are not. ..\lthough the unemployed say they are as happy as the e mployed wives. housewives a re more likely to be anxious, worried. lonely and feeJ worthless. They also are more likely to say they love their husbands m ore than they are loved in return. -Unhappy children often grow into happy a dults. -5exual H liSflCllOn IS U molter O( quail· ty, not quantity. ATllEl TS llAPP\' -Extramarital sex doe~n ·t Jffcct a person's over ·all happiness. People who have had sexual relations outside of mar- nage -about 40 percent or the married respondents, '4S percent. men and JS per· <'ent, women -are just as huppy, on the average, as people who have not. -Homosexu a l s a r e as ha ppy us heterosexuals. -Atheists arc as happy as Chnslinns or Jews. -P~ple livini:t in the city ureas happy as those in the country. tn fact. people in the country gave their area lower m arks than Cl· ty residents. providing the gr ass isn't always greene r out there. MANY PROBLEMS Shaver and Freedman also noted that despite their feelings of happiness, respon- d ents "r e p o rt a high fre quency or psychological pr oblems, charact eristic or stress and alienation. "One·.thir~ say they felt 'constant worry and anxiety over the past year: ~3 tire easl· ly; •,~ have trouble concentrating, a nd almost as many say theyorten feel guilty. "Most striking or all , 40 percent often feel lonely, and this is by no means limited to single people ." Advice: Who Is listening? ByJOOLSON OI t~ o.llr ,.. ... Mfll . Oay after day, advice columnl1ta sit In their offices throughout the U.S. telling people whattodo. But is anyone listen.Ing to what they Uy? · A Poll or Orange Coast residents indicated that most people in this area read advice columns on a regular basis but strictly for en- tertilinment. Not one person questioned said he or she would ever write to a columnist such as Ann Landers because they prerer to solve their own problem s. "If Ann Landers were a trained psychologist it would be dirterent," o ne woman said. A woman visiting from F1orida disagreed. saying Af iss La nders should be qua lified bttause "she's done it Jong enough." A young man, who said he reads the col· umn "every once in a whHe," said he wouldn't trust Miss Landers because· 'she's crazy.'' Advice columns go over better in "a typical working.class area," one woman said. "Here, people with problems go to their own ~sychiatrlst." Most people polled generally liked Miss Landers' a nswers. The opinions ranged from "as a rule" to "she's got it on the ball" to "it depends on the ciueslion." One res pondent said the answers are "too flippant " however and another said they ar~ "kind or stupid." ' ' "Most of the time her advice is pretty good," a middle.aged woman s aid. "She checks her sources." Another woman said she dislikes the column because it has the same subject m atter over and over. "It's like beating a dea d horse to death," s he added. Miss Landers also was criticized for letting the r eaders write the column m any rtays oftheweek. "Sometimes she ne ,-er ~ives any advise. She just prints letters and says " 'thanks ror writing. " A young man said he considered the subject matter irrelevant. "TJ:lere's nothin~ 1 could apply lo my own self " Peering Around Luz::c fta ~ Jfa ir '))esi9n ANNOUNCING Tt;RRA "'" WonphOIO A WA RD WINNING HA IR DESI GNER SELECTED to study a t the Center of Foreign Study in Dijon, France is I Ha,,cuts Include Merrilee Dunn, dauji(hter • sc1emd1c 11,11r ,,,,,,/ys11 of the Lonnie Dunns of • proper co11d1t1011er Newport Beach. She is <1 • preci~1on haucut student at the University , • blow dry Resolutions for Happiness or California, Davis. ~ ~~ NEWPORTER INN ELECTED into the ~ NEWPORT BEAC H L a u_ re l C ir c l e ror N fOR APPOll'ITMCNT CALL •71411140-4740 services at the Doheny .,,~AY_,., .. ~~,_~,, campus of Mount St. DEAR 1\'/':N .L.l\;";OERS I am a lo,·mg toward his wife, ne\t-r c ritical of her housekeeping, cooking or appearance. I rind it intt-restinj( thal 90 percent of lbt' letters I receive pe rtaining to in·law problems are compl aints a gainst the mother-in-law -not the lather-in-law. A nd 8() p e r c e nt of lh e mother-in·law beefs an against the hus band's mother-nol thc wile's. DEAR ADVISOR: TelJ these kids it's a cop-out to use their parents ' weaknesses as an excuse to take the low road. Mary's College was Arlene Br uner. daughter of the Robert L . Bruners of f'ountuin Valley. "ido" a n<1 soon to I><' a mothl'r ·In I a" I holl<' I <·an folio" tht'Sl' ruks HS a sz1f1 tom~ son. I I will tr~ to mana,.:C' rn) modt's l income 11ruclC'ntly so as nol to he a fmancinl burdrn 2. I will r<'Spt'rt tht• privarv or l11s hOmC'. I will not v1:.1t unless 11wil· C'ti I will rt•allu• mv son anrl his w1ft.> ncC'cl ·time logl•ther alont• :1 I will not hint tC1 go alm1g o n \fl<'al 1ons or \H't·kt'ntl trips . .t I "ill 11ol prt•sl•nt 111\· 'on "1111 t'hon•s to <lo 011 h1-.1la\ oft ~ l \\Ill tw I.ind un•I 6 Ir there are chilrlren, l "111 show no partiality, nor will I interfere with their discipline. 7. In s ummary, I will do my best, oo matter how lonely. lo avoid be· ing a selfish. domineer· mg or clinging mother because m y husband had 001.' or those and l know what 1t did to my lire. - BF.F.N THROUGH THE MILi. OF.AR BEEN TllROllGll: Your letter Is strong tt-stlmony that ('~perience is tbe best of all tu cher11. Brides Aging NEW 'Olli< IAI'> TotlJ) ·!-brirlt'' ,1r1• ~hi.:hl Iv uhkr thun thl•1r n1u11 tt•rp..irls fl\ t' ) <'ars :11:0. arnirrl mJ! 111 a s11 r\I'\ ,,f 11..; rc:ult•r-. II\ lln ch··, l\l ,1~a1.irw · l inJ:S of fin<' <'hinn. S11\•('r anti r ryf>t a l ns opposed to only <'•Ahl SC'ttin.:s of c.c,ual tabflowan.' pre· '1011sh . llrlih•s also s1wn1 a lh1 r d more nn outf1lt1n~ D EA R AN.fl LA NDERS: A question frequently asked bv stu· dents (the m ajority :lre ~Iris> is this· "My mom get s bo rn bed evNv night, doublc-1.iombcd on weekends. fills tht• house with s moke. then raises hell when I s moke und gets crazy 1f I IHl\C a drink. Does s he hll\'C' a right lo keep me from do· inA things she says arc bad for me when -.he does n't pr:lct1t·e \\hat she preaches.,·· Can you g ive me, a counst'lor. som l' adnc·e on what I s houlcl say to these kids? 1\N AD· V I SOR 'lt\/11 0 I S SEEKIN<; YOt:n A[) VICE A d runk en . nicotine-addicted mother lor lather) has been known to turn some children OFF booie and cigarettes as well as on. The decision is strictly up to the individual. D E A R A N N LANDERS : Why is it that when a husband runs around, has back- street afrairs and finally a s ks his wHe ror a divorce, she is always the one at fa ult? Ile tells everyone she was stupid, sloppy. cold, uncar ing, a nagger , a poor housekeeper . or a lousy bed-partner. Some or these 3CCUSallons may be tru e whe n youn~ couples break up, but when couples have been married 30 or 40 years it does n't f igure. Why would a m an slay with a woman so Ion~ if she had Ann~ Landers those undesirable trail'\? Jf there was some way to take the t ramps out of circulation. the Ion{!· s t a ndin g m a rri ages would slick. Whe n a man cheats on his wife he has to give a r~ason and it's NEVER hi s fa ul t Fascinating. isn't it? - SHAFTED IN FLINT DEAR SH A fo~T ED : There are as m any re· asons for marriage break-ups as there are marriages. The man Cor woman> who runs down an ex tells more about himself than he tells aboul the ex. Nobody can s lln1t mud "'ithout getting a little on himself. J ESSI C A Alles of S r i Lank a (formerly Ceylon> is the recipient of the AAU W interna- tional fellowship award. She was honored at a te a last S unday in Leisure World. RECIPIENTS or the Orang<' County Chapter of the Cali fornia Associa· lion of Physically llan· dicapped ar e two stu- dent s who ha\'c O\'Cr· come d1 s abi l it1es to pursue their education. W inners a r e Bernadette T ravis. a Santa Ana Colle~c slu· den t s tu dyin g to be counsel or or ha n · dicaooecl students and Jonathan Oakey , who will be a freshman al UC.: Jrv1ne in the fall. Bernad<-ttc is a vict im or cerebral palsy and Oakey, profound deaf ness. It i.how-; wonwn .ire• now marry 1ni.: nt nn aH•ragc ngt• nf 21 r, v1•ar:-. compurl.'d w 11 h 2<l ti in 1971 llw1r f1r!'lt homr Sot.ROA :ln•ra~t· C'ornpurcrl with ~~===1:z:::;:ji~~~~~~~=I:==1r-----S.1.400. All <'»IWl"I lo ha\l• stert'n 1·qu1 pmfnl untl M P<'r<'<'nl t'XIJ<'Ct 1<1 have i:olor ll•ll'\'1:1 1on Thl'Y appt•ar to ht• mon· traditional. with Ill 1~·r rt•nt say1ni: lhl') lllll'l l <'n· J!rU\'NI wcddrng announ· ccml.'n ts anll f.1 l'CITl'nl usin~ the scrv1n•!< or ·' \\('1lth nR .:m rri.:1 -;tr~. Thl' general t.lt>s1rc w.:1-; for 12 fl\'l' JliC't'(' pl;I('(''\(.'\ ()f thl)S(' r(•Sp00Chllg 10 I llw sun l'Y. !1~ )ll'rl"l'11l ' plnn to "ork for four or I I\ 1• vr:1r s a rtt•r mar · rrJ~t·: F1\ r } enrs n~o th(' rl.'spondcnts cxpccteci tQ <'tmllnuc workinJ! for only three years 4th ANNIVERSARY • ENTIRE STOCK REDUCED 2 QO/o-40°/o ANO MORE! SIZES 6 THAU 20 JACK WIMT'ER PANTS & JACKETS INCLUDED Fashion Boutiaue lll E. 17tlt ST .. COSTA MEIA Behind the l nkrnutlon.11 rnnc.1kl' ltOV'-<' FREE DURING AUGUST ON HUNDltlDS OF LA·Z-IOYS IN STOCK ANNIVERSARY SPICIAL ; STYLE 19' s 19900 OfCOAATOll MA,...Uli A \W I-OR YOUR'> ... f'ri.-1210 ,,.. ....... 1110176 -c:m LA-Z-BOY = .------WHITl'S SHOWCASE-----. 28892 Marguerite 369 E. 17th Street· Pkwy 1•••111••1 '~~.,., Mission Vieio Costa Mesa (•ff ,,.....,. -) l••r"•• ''""" & t "" 11 I ·~r rwwy ·---.~-..! 495-5902 642-8657 '"°" '""" ... , -·'-' •• , S4t.lf.INl-t U T l•H•-1 . ~ • :TUN1g_~~Jf,~'£tL 3'91 E. C()llSr HIGHW-'Y CORONA DEL H~I/. < 31et DOfJ~ W£tT OF PIJINSlr TIA) h7G-JP'JO I ' I ~f,l1~Z!J~~P,~;.,~tu~?}0 For people you love, .an 8xl0 natural color portrait 99c 4 Day Offer (\\l:wa11t you to1ryu~) :\o :ippt11111111c11t 11cc<l1·ll. One ofkc per pc~1111-1"" lli·r f.111111) SI IKJ t h,rr~c fur r,1c It .od<lrd pn~l)n in i:roup(. ·1 h1~ ph1111~r.1ph offer m.1y 1101 IK' w111l11111•cl \\1lh ·"'>" uthcr JJvcrt iwt.l ulkr. OFFER E~DS SAT., AUGUST 7 Photographer's Hours Dally 10·6; Sat. 9:30·6, Sun. IM ALHAMBRA -BUENA PARK SOUTH COAST PLAZA -TORRANCE ' I . -·~-. ---~ .,, .. ,.~_-- ,.. Wed,,esday Augus1 .s ·9;5 DAIL v PILOT C:J Clowning Around A s patient ::, ;.1t hildren·s H ospital of Orange Count) won't be able to ~o lo U1e circus. the circu:, went to the m in the form or a clow n. LaJoyc •, who enll'I'· tained in the recrea- tion room and then. on a beet lour. J ayscn Loertscher Cl cft I. :J, cspeciall~ enjoys jug- gling, while other pa- tients and staff µf l" 'icw a ba lanl'ing ucl. The Hin g l in g Brothe r s . Barnum and Bail cv Cirl'us ope n s T t1 u r s d a y . Aug. 5, in Anaheim Convenlion Center, with a portion of pro- ceeds des ignated for the hospital. Safety 'Legislated' Delly Piiot Photos by Richard Koehler SACRAMENTO <CNSJ -Safety regulations for baby cribs to become effective ufter Aui::. 9. -are the'1'esu~l of an.to-depth invesliJtation into U1c causes of infant accidents. Some 6.900 babies were injured 1n crib related ways in 1975. some of them fatally. In a study or 140 of the:,e cases. the U .S Consumer Product Safetv Comm1sl>lon found an ov€'rwhe lming m ajority 'were r elated to foully crib design. Of the 140 injured babies, 102 fell from their cribs. 16 becam e entrapped between crib slats. 16 were injured when tht:y rell upon a portion of the crib, and six were hurt in miscellaneous wav~ such as being trapped between a mattrc~s and the platform. being struck by a falling crib side. and one mattress rire. The most serious injuril's occurred when babies got their heads stuck between crib i.lat1'. the commission said. Eight of the 16 ''ho becamt• entrapped, died. The new rej!ulallons, which apply to new cribs only. set spacing limits for crib slat!.. m<it tress sizes. crib-side heiJ:ht. and put restr1ct1ons on crib loclo-i ng mechanisms. in an attempt to rt• duce hazards to the infants Gemini Lie Low THURSDAY.AUGUSTS By SYDNEY OMARR ARI ES (March 21 · April 19>: Make mean- ings clear. Interpret for yourself. Others could be less than truthful. Get lo heart of matters. Utili:w your own style . TAURUS (April 20 . May 20>: Mystery, Ill trigue -these are featured. You gel fina ncial orosoectus. Confer with expert. Take nothing for i.:ra nted. Intuit ion is highlighted. GEMINI (l't1 ay Zl ·June 20>: Lie low -play waiting game. Be versatile. willing lo divers ify. Expand horizons -but watch your di~t. You'll 11ove. get m essages and your sense of humor will come into vigorous play. CANCER (June 21 · July 22>: Low key ap :>roach is key be moder ate. receptive and ton't fall Into trap of believang someone Is gomi: :o give you something for nothing. Be direct without being arrogant. LEO (July 23 -Aug. 22>: Illusion. creativity. romance these are featured. Young person is 1dcalls tic but could lack solid information. Know it and res p<>nd accordingly. VIRGO (Aug. 23 ·Sept. 22>: Home, personal l'nvironment. security form part of montage. :;eek greater harmony withan domestic area. Dialogue could bridge genera lion ga1>. LIBRA (Sept. 23 ·Oct. 22>: You may be peer 1ng through r ose-colored glasses. Know it and orotect yourself in e motional clinches. Check rlirectlons, instructions. SCORPIO COct. 23 ·Nov. 211: (;pt n nnr1tu>-. in order -be awar e of prices. costs, production \'alues. Key now 1s to be responsible, willing to acrept oddcd a uthority. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22 · Dec. 21>: Lunar ('\'Cle is s uch tha t you perceive beauty, potential, opportunities for greater security. You com plete importa nt tra nsaction. CAPRICORN <Dec. 22 ·Jan. 19): Be n exi· ble: give full play to Intellectual curiosity. You make friends now by askln1 questions. Show an interest In the artistry of others . AQ\JARIUS (Jan. 20 · Feb. 18): Accent on friends. unus ua l proc:edures. adventure and fulfillment of romanUc desires. Check travel. night schedules. I PISCES (}o"eb. 19 • March 20): Divers i y. Socialiite. Make contacts-communicate. One in position or authority puUs strings for you. Take advanl3ge or opportunities b)' being versatile. U A•pst 5Ua is y•r ltlrUMtay you have pro- ven a m ajor point -you gain more recognition. You are charming, stubborn. articulate. ex· travagant, sensuous and you love luxury. Expert Styling for Men & Women. :'/J/i?K111'1 ,;fi11/ ~~~1ltcrs 1107 .JMlt>ot• Rd.. ~ BHch 64().4740 Tht• r egulut1on:-will upplv to portable and other non-rull-s11e cnhs. to supplement regula tions in effect s ince HJ74 on rull -sizt• crib:. Thl' comm1ss1on noteothat an t1ssessmen( or th<' \'alul' of th<' rc1mlat1oni. on the rut1 -size crib:. <'<innot bl• matlt• becausl' c·nbs are often handed down in fam1ll<'s. berauM' of the short Pt'riod in \\h1ch thl• n 'J!U lat111n has been an effet•t. and bccausl' th1• lowt•red birth rate hus had an effect on th€' number nr crib.-. uurchased The reJ:uhll1ons were especially imi>ortanl. thf' commission noted. sin€'e a prcp0nderance of the mJtlrll's to babies 1moh'ed the infants' heads. In 1975. i:I percent of the injuries affected the heacl . 9 pPrcent the trunk. and 15 percent arms, hands, legs and feet. Nearly 50 percent of• ln· juries consisted of abrasions and contusions, 30 1>ercent larl'r at ions and 10 p('rcent fractures . Th<' majority or the c·ases involvinJ: falls rrom cribs were the result or the ('hild climbing. lcan10~. jumping, bouncing, or simpl) fallini: over the side. The cases lnvohfos: a child striking against a portion or the rri b resultt'd mainly when the child bumped. bounc·cd. or foll onto a c·rib part from in side Weddings ~ and Engagements 111 ;n1111I d1.,,1ppo111tment. prosp<'cti,•e hrnk:-an• n •mmdl•d tu have their \H•dding :-tont·~ "1th hlack ;ind \\hit<' glo..,s~ photugraph., tu thL· Ot1il~ Ptlnl Pl•opll• I >c11a rt ml'lll onl' \H'l'k bdorl' thl· "eddmg. l'tl'lun· ... n•t'l'l\·t'd altt>r that time '"II 11111 hi.· l1'l'tl 1-'01 t•11gngL•m(•nt announcements it is 1mpi.•ratl\·e that the story. also acco~· pan1l'<l ll\ a black and \\hill' glossy p1c· lUl'L'. hl· ... ubm1ttc•d "'x \\Cck:. or mon• l>elnn• thi.' \\Cddmj.( datt•: oth€'rniSl' il will nut b1.· pubh..,hed. • To hclµ fill requireme nts on b11th wed 1l111g and l'nga~cment stories. form.; arc ;n·a1lable 1n all Daily Pilot office~. Fur LhN questions will be :insw<.•rcd by Pcopl<· Oeparlm<'nl stllff members al 642-4321. HEMING PIOBl.EM? I SHCIAllll IM ... YI DIAfMISS CASIS MAJOI MAMUfACTUHIS llPUSIHTID TIM YIAISIH COIOMA DB. MAI HAI. AEllSOtER HEARING AIDS 1•" .. c .... Hw,. I c-.. Mw-675·llll . FINE STATIONERY era 'I' t:ODl"IC 1:-IVJTATIONS 'le _,AX~OL'NCEME:-ITS ORDER NOW! CHRISTMAS CARDS 20% OFF Per1()n()lrted • H.qhc .• Quol1ty lllJ i UASI ... n tU·•lt 1.-Ml 8A.I • lll'llMll Pa•111 ''"''""'" ,.,,,,,,,, SHOE SALE FINAL 3 DAYS Selected Styles • Broken Sizes ONE GROUP WOMEN~S • ..... $35. n 0 F F • FLORSHEIM • AM.ALFI • JOYCE and Others OMIGIOUP CASUALS & SANDALS ME•'S FLO RS HEIM Values to 45.95 E.T. WRIGHT v•es to $70. HE#lllll'S m Ea • 'l! r o ~ t•ltird ""'"IXWI Boott, 7141 b44A~ • •27 Eotl Moil! Slretl, Alhonlbro (213)282.3678 All SALES FINAL .'tpiral .... fi('t•d Wlaolf' or llnlf HAMS Sailing This Weekend? Take Along -Ready to Serve A Delicious, Tasty HONEY BAKED HAM It s the easiest way to satisfy e hungry crew! 3700 E. Coast Highway, COf'ono del Mor -673-9000 1222 S. lroolt.._,., .e W ld., A.... US·24' I t I SSO HHJl!w.., ,, 111 • r-. ~ !lit 1-llo Miit.i 714·14'·31'4 UJalfak. say: "We 've come a long way from the Muu Muu!" See our fabulous Collection of Re sort Clothes for your leisure hours. FINE RESORT WEAR 26 Fashion Island Newport Beach ; • I C4 OAIL '(PILOT , - For good eating and simplicity. nothing beaL~ lbe aroma and flavors of a steak grilled outdoors. Outdoor Dining: Couples who hke to cook O\'er tbc cam1l fire often choose one :;teak lar&e enou~h ror two S uitable fuv o rite . flavorful cuts un• beef top round, chuck and sirloin or round tip steak Allow one Pound or steuk <or a little more tor un· usuall y h earty aµ pcUlesJ Cor two pcoph.:. Shown here is a lean top, Prick with Cork to al cross rib stuk cooked on Io w p e n f' t r a lion a trench ~riddle over the · Marinate 30 minutes or fir . You mlaht prefer lo ws long as convenient. use a heavy Iron skillet Heat 1 litblespoon oil in or simply grill on a rack ~killet. Add onion nnd ovtrcharcoul. partially cook ov r TERIVAKI CAMr medium hot coals. Pw>h 'TEAK FOR TWO to :side. Lift beef from l pound beef croos m3rinade with fork. rtb steo1'. cul ubout ··~· Place in skillet and Movable Feast inch thick fry. turning once, about 6 Salt tm'1 Pt"Pllt'r minutes on each side or l lemon ,,, until done as des 11 l'tl. 1 tablespoon ooltk'tl Add oil lo pan after turn· teriyaki marinade In~ If skillet is dry. A Cut Above Ordinary The picnic. that won- derful excursion into out- door dining, can mean ;anything from hot dogs cooked O\ er an open fire to sophisticated basket- h am pc rs filled with pates and quiches. -One of the joys of pie·. nics is that they can be s pur of the moment run. They can liter ally be pulled out of the pantry, if vou have the basics oo ha.nd. Keep it stocked with things like breads, cheeses. convenient canned lnl!at spreads;- relishes. fresh fruits, thirst quenchers. flow about making one sandwich for six hungry picnickers by using a crusty loaf of French bread7 Just cut the loaf 1n half lengthwise and .. butter.. it with roast beef spread. Ch eddar cheese. c hopped gr~n chilies Wrap it in foil for travelin~. then slice and sern: when \ ou reach \'Our destination. · Another instant recipe 1s for Easy Picnic Pack- t:ps. frankfurt rolls rtlled with de\ill'd ham . Or. if '"u l·an conk on location. kN•p l'veryonc from ··p1t•king at the picnic'· by .!-<'rnni! TanJ!r Picnic Spn•ad on crac-kers unlJI \Our meal 1s ready. llO.\ST BEEi<' I N ,\ LOAt• 2 <'ans 14=1 ~ ounce!l <'~l<'h 1 roast beef spread 1 1 cup f!ratcd ('hed· d:1r cheese I ·l ·ouncl' can 1·hoppecl ~recn chilies. drained · 1 1 <'llP chili sauce or <'UlSUP 2 lah l cspoons minced (lOion · French bread loaf 115 anche1>1 In a bowl. mix toJ!ethl•r roast beef spr 1·~11l, chel'sc. chilies. chili 1 saurl' ond onion. Cul bread cliaRonally C\'t•ry :! ln1·hcs to within 1 , inch of bottom. Fill wilh roast !)(>cf mixture. Wrap in fotl \\'hen r<'ady lo sen·e. s h t•t• bread bet ween fill - 1 n ~ into 1nrt1 v 1rlual sJnc1wichcs. The lonf can ~1lso br hc•nl e1I until c hrrs e ml'lts O\'Cr a r amps lo \'C Makes 6 :-<'n ln~s. EASV PICNIC i PACK U PS I 2 cans <41 2 ounceit I ''ach 1 deviled ham 3 tablcs poon s had~·cuC' l'DUCC ! 1.1 ('Ill) pircnlilli or s wt'l'l pickle relis h 1 R slices C hl'ddar ·i dll'('!ll' ! 6 frankfurter buns l In a bowl. mix toJtether dt-viled hom, bnrb<'cue f ~aucc nnd plcculilll. I Plart rhcese slices in ; huns und lop with dl'· ' '1led ham mixture. Heat ! 1n foll or sc.>rve cold. Mukl's R !landwichl's. T ,\ N G \. P I C N I C ., SPREAD : ~ rans C4~1 ounces ~ cnch 1 rhicken s pread •• \'1 cup dlced sreen t pepper ~ 3 tablei;poons chili i S3UC(' p 3 tnble!l poo n s ~ barbecue sauce l I tcnspoon minced onion 1: teaspoon hot red pel>per sauce J n a bow l. mix 1 tn#te lh er c hicken s prend. green pepper, barbecue sauce, chili sauce. onion , and pepper s auce . Ser ve with c rackers. M akes 1 ~ cups spread. It's Fragile When you buy liver. try to use it the same day.· When lt 's sliced, H shouldn·t be kept for Counlr,Fesh Large AA Dozen • 75 E11gs Macaroni • Chffse Kraft Dinners 1•.01. 25 pkg .• Beel Chuck Boneless Swiss Steak :~.99 Beef8onetn Round Steak The less tender cut..., ca n bl' carried to campsite while marinat· ing in a plastic bag. By the t ime the fire its ready. the steak is well O:J\'orcd and tenderiu.>d. Slraintd F1u11s or Vegetables Cooking 011 Pour marinade O\'Cr. 1 onion. sliced Heat brief!)" Truns r('r Place stl'uk in shallow steak to boal'd or scrv1nJ: container. Sprinkle with t>late. Cul anto thin salt and pepper. Squct"zc . crosswise strips. Sur· lemon juice over ull. round with onion rings Pour ter1yak1 sauce on Makes 2 servings. • • Tunil Meat. Tuna & Kidne,or Macketel Gerber Petuna Baby Food .... 14 cat Food 602. 9c can Treesweet·Pmk Quart Jar Grapefruit Bestfoods Juice 460L .43 Mayonnaisi:89 can Super Ftesh Pack $ lb. Pkg. Ground Beef ~~.5& 8e.t Loln·8onele11 Top Sirloin Steak BHI Lom· Tail Remowed T-Bone Steak ~1.78 ~~1.sa Thompson· The Nalur•I Snacli. Food Seedless Grapes ~ .. 39 Hunl'S·Regull)I Tomato Sauce eoz. 13 can • US G1ade A Soulh~rn Whole Fryers per 43 lb • Bf'cl Blade Cul per 59 lb .• Chuck Steak ,, .. , ... ,., .... Pantry Fiiiers Fresh Produce Beel Cllvcll Clod SAie ~1.28 ,,..., FtO.tlft Delfosted-Wi119 Of pet .49 Rolled Beef oast Turkey DnmstickS lb. Whole or Point Cut ~1.28 kNH Sh•nlt POftlon ,,., .99 Beef Brisket Fully Cooked Ham lb. 81teSl:t1 ':~ 1.39 Boneless Stew Beef w.,erThln12oL Pllg. Ralphs Bacon e •• 1.29 SuPef Frith PKll·3 lb, l'tlg. 1.29 Reg. Of Thick 1 lb. Pkhacon 1.48 Ground Chuck per Fanner John lb. e a. Su~r FrHh Pac:k·3 lb. Pllg. 1.39 Wilson ~~1.39 Pef Smoked Sausage Ground Round lb. Sul)ef FrHh Pac:k-3 lb. Pllg. .57 Pork Loift.llib Cut _,.,1 79 Ground Beef ,,., Center Cut Pork Chops•b. • lb. Slunfn1 Pfl .69 USDA Choice Rib or ~:~ 2.89 Slited Beef Liver lb. Lamb Loin Chops US Grade A·R1fphs .69 Hot Of Mild 1 lb. Pkg. 98 ,,., Farmer John Sa..age eL • Fresh Hen Tl.Rey lb. Dell Foods Plunwose-hnporttrd 1.89 1fb. Canned Picnic CM R.11pllt -Sfvimp Coddail •ot. 43 j1r • P1ll1bury loz. 45 Crescent Rolls pkg .• Du~ Cafiited Ham ~:· 9.99 w1,,.. a Spirits CompMe I $11.e 3.79 full Sandra Vodka qi. C h,1bll1. Burgundy Of AON 11, Old Monterey Wines "'" 1.19 Old Oltttw<>od·6 Ye• Old full 4.89 Straight Bcubon qi. ;\~Gdda:· Spl. 99 ctn. • ·c-'!IN '"'-.,~a.-, c......,. Al~.._.._ 8uddig's·8etf, Turkey. Htm Chipped Meats JoL 39 pllf. • Minute Mo1ld Pure Orange Juice '•gal. .93 cln. l•• to Lelle .l•cll Of tOL 1.02 Longhorn Cheeee pllg. Wetclt't Chilled Grape Juice Drink '•1111. .99 bll, .. .,., White 0t Wheat 160L 29 All Star Bread foal • Aalpfl.t·fmb11Hy Da11111t Coffee Cakes 120l. 89 pkg .• Whilf Of Whe1t·Sandwlctl Of Aeg. Ralphs Bread 7401. 49 loal I Relpflt Dthciout 80l. 79 Bear Claws pkg .• Newfangi.d·Pol1to Chips 9or. 79 Rtd per .39 Pringle's pkg .• Cardinal Grapes lb. ~ Royal-lnslant 3'•0L 23 Swffl. Juicy per .12 Pudding Mixes pl\q, • Casaba Melons lb. Def Mont• 14oz. 39 Swfff. Jule/ & lb h 89 Tomato Catsup bit .• Valencia Oranges cello b"g •K. D-1 Monie 3201. 62 Plump, Ripe 12 Ol 39 Prune Juice Cherry. Tomatoes b11ket each • bll. • Def Monie t6or. 37 Fresh, Crisp .10 Stewed Tomatoes Cucumbers c•n 1 each Del M011l1t 3001. 57 Frtsh. Solid Grf'en per .10 Fruit Cocktail Cabbage lb. can • Countr, Time 13oz. 97 Health & Beauty Aids Lemonade Mix can • Back To Nalure·7 Grain 16ol. 69 New Improved f1 O!. 77 Granola Cereal Rapid Shave pkg. I can • F0<Panc1kH..aW•f!'" 24oL 119 Vermont Maid Syrup b11. • Aerosol Can ·Secret Deodorant 4oz. 89 can • Duncan Hinet-Aut'd. Ltyef 181101. 5·9 Conce11lrale 1.35 Cake Mixes Prell Shampoo Sor. pl!g. I tube Pu'e Veget1ble Jib. 1.39 Pl1ytt1-Rttgufar Of SuPt"r 11 1.49 Crisco Shortening Deodorant T ampons!1 go can Kool Ald·Millf SWftt Herbal Essence 2.19 Drink xes 2 qt. 39 Clairol Shampoo 16oz. pkg. • bit. Motl'•·Aegular 350L 65 For Altfgy Rehet 24cl. 99 Apple Sauce t•r • Allerest hll •• Dole 1701 .• 39 Frozen Foam Fruit Cocktail can • Astorltrd Flnors 46oL 43 Rafphs·Old f11h1oned Hi C Drinks can • Ice Cream h1n911. 89 ctn. • 010flelli1 46oi. 57 Oriental Of ltaljan Strl~ Tomato Juice 1601 39 c11n 1 Ralphs Vegetables pkg .• 1000 Sheet Aoff roll ,26 Cerll-Frt1h·8readtd Scott Toilet Tassue 801. 59 Fish Sticks pllg. • Pllft••HtlYJ Duty 4201. 83 Celest• 101. 79 Detergent pkg. • Cheese Pizzas pkg .• An orttd·Oeratin o .. Mrta SOL 37 Or41 td11 21h. 59 Jell-0 p kg •• Potato Cubes pko. • t r---·~·----. r····({m·----. I 11 .. t Ol wtlhC...,_ 1111 I I lb~ JO• ,O,_COUfl<J<' 1110 I Spt'ci11I 10 011 P&ck AegulM Of Un$Cenltd : -<;.~·.99 : : ~ ·~··.69 : I lJfl'll 0• .. "'•"111"'o""c°"""'""eoNom11< I I 1 ..... 0 ••. 1~.n .... 10....c_...,,.,c~~ I Ci.."'°'' (111<11•" AuflU'I ~ ... u A ...... II t.••oOOt> l .. -<'"'' A•••I ~ lllfM A111 ..... 11 L RIGHT PRICE COUPON ' I L RIGHT PRICE COUPON .I ----------~ ---------- where you p whcit you want 1he s.., awtet ••• at the Rilhf Priaf more than two days lnthe W,PHS STOMS ARt lOCATtD AT:' 380 £. 17th ST •• COSTA MESA HA.RIOR & WILSON 9901 ADAMS BLVD., HUNTINGTON BEACH 15471 S. BROOKHURST, wtSTMINSTltt l726l 17th ST., TUSTIN COSTA MHA COl N. lOARA. ANAHEIM 69'2 WARNO, HUNTINGTOff 8EACM STOttE HOURS: 9.10 Deify. 9-9 Sunday refrigerator. 24167 PASfO DE VAlfNOA. lAGUNA NW ' l l 1 Planning tA Picnic? , r Almoet any summer day is a good one for a picnic. Need an ex· cuse! How about. A M••I~ J'ete. With the talents or friends and homemade inst.ru· ments lwaahboard. e mpty bot· ties, com , e c. >. remtn1scc wrth a medley or favorite old·time tunes. You'll have entertain· ment while you eat! Kite Ceper. Stage a kite· making contest. Give prizes tor the highest. longest <or only fly· ing) kite. Re member that aJ" petites will be hearty alter a day oCracing with the bree7.es. Sports' Spec&acular (or mini· Oly mpics>. Everyone brings equipment tor a favonte sport. Divide into teams and keep track or wins .. .losers serve and clean up. Picnic Coun&down Prepare picnic rood and pack noo,·lood items the day before. On picni c day arrange goods in insulated containers and then be ready for fun. The night before ... Cook 's Off Duty Prepare frozen , battered & lutly·cooked fried chicken ac· cording to package directions. Wrap in moisture·prool cover· ing; refrigerate. Keep cool until ready to serve. Pr e pare beverage: Make lemonade or tea <which, by the way. tastes better Lhe second day 1. Or, place s mall juice cans in freezer until ready to pack - they're great for keeping other foods cold, and when thawed. they'll be refreshina quenchers. Make It Easy ' t l • Clean vegetables or salad i:reens. Refrigerate in air-tight, non·breakable containers. Prepare saJad dressing. Pack m contalnerand toss w1th salad before servi.ng. Prepare other fobds : Include cookies. cakes, breads. etc. Store in airtight, on non· breakable con· tainer Check List Picnic blanket Sun lotion First aid kit Paper towels or cloths for cleanup Insect spray f1ashllght Litter bag On the picnic day pack all food items in insulated container. L'se plenty of ice to keep foods cold below 40 degrees F. tThe melted ice comes in handy to dampen cloths at clean-up time). Pour beverage into chilled . non-breakabl':' vu cuum bottle. Kerp hot foods hot -nbovc 140 deg r res f'. 1 n a n :.1 i r · t i ~ ht ther m us. The whole country is 1tettmg back to nature . But if you're the one who's expected to get the meals out on your camping trip you could find the whole ex· per1ence exhausting. Campers' Potato and Meatloaf skillet is an all·in·one pan com· bination of meatloaf, potatoes au · gratin , a nd vegetables. A minimum of .utens.ils is basic lo any good camping recipe a nd convenience foods are easy to stow and easy to make. Packaged potatoes au gratln. canned vegetables and e\'aporat · ed milk combine with ground beef to produce this hearty maJn dish. Tuna Patties also require little fuss and cleanup. An cm elope of mashed potato granule!> com· bines with the can or tuna for a jifry t•amps tovc meal. Round out your menu with vegetable sticks. cookies, fruit and milk. CAMPER'S POTATO AND l'IEATWAFSKJLLET 1 pa c ka ~e dehyd rated potatoes au gratin l l ·pound Cdn peas and car· rots :il cup undiluted "'' aporatl•d milk l pound i:round bt.'(.'f I l'l!I! r---------. L SAVE IOe I ~ 18 I ~ I ~ on any package or ~SUGAR FROSTED FLAKES 'EREAL (0, ... llfftll"4 lo ••• ('""""" ll<', p .. , .... ,, .... ~ ... .,J J J l 14 cup water 1 1 cup fine dry bread crumbs t teaspoon s alt Combine potato slices and seasoning mix from package in large skillet. Drain liquid from vegetables mto measuring cup; add water to make 2 cups. Add t o skille t with drained vegetabl es and evapor ated milk. Stir tog~ther beef, egg, ~ cup water , ore ad crumbs, aOO-salt; spaon around edge of skillet. Cov· er tightly ; simmer 30-40 minutes until potatoes are Lender and me al is <'OOked. Serves S. TUNA PA1TIES 1 envelope mashed potato granules : 1 cup m ayonnaise 1 tablespoon minced onion l can tuna, drained and flaked 2 tablespoons butter or oil 3 slices American cheese, cul in hair Pr epare potatoes following directions on package, decreas· ing water to 1 cup: cool slightly. Stir in mayonnaise. onion. and tuna. Shape ts palt1es. Heat shortening in I arge skillet. Add tuna patties and cook, turning to brown both s ides. Top each with halr slice or cheese. 6 servings. Wednesday AUQUSI 4 1978 DAIL V PILOT C§ \ Public Taste Changing Water Sales Climb Sales of botOcd water h&t\'e Jn our dally livan.: hnb1ts. "e more than doubled tn the Unitl'd now n :qulre between 50 and 00 St ates .ln the pas\ Si~ )·ears. from ~allons of water per da~ per in· an estimated SSO million in 19f,S dlvldual. This or course includ"s ~ million 1J1-i974, and $.112-water uu<Lu'W)ntbmg c.ooldn~i mJlhon \n 1975. and cleaning us wt'll as foe drink· ll 's believed that ~e of cvcrv Ing purpo es. 2000 Americans dnnks bottle<"\ To further acqu::unt th\' public -water-in~pite oflhe.facuhat ~e with the. advant.u~cs at botUl•<I are a nation blessed with what drinkmJ? wat<'r. hl•re are i.ome appears to be an ever-reody SUP· answers to some of tlw most com · vi>· of safe, clean water al the monly asked questions ronn·rn· turn or a tap-ut litlle or no CX· Ing bottled Wtlll'r . pense to ourselves. Accor din R to Lhc American ls All Bottled Watl.'r thcSam~·! Bottled Water Association No. Bottled wat<'r ma~· <'ome <ABWA >. buriconing sales Is from a number or d1ffrrcnt directly attributable to .. taste". sources and as a result un· In other words, Lhe public 1s dergoes a variety or processes becoming more coneernl'd with under governmental regulations. the palatability or its drinking Thert' art.> basically four dif· water, and why not? ferent types or bottled water, in· PRIMARY RESOURCE eluding: Arter all. water 1s m an's -Drinking water: may come primary resource. And is u from a spring or we.II or may be a necessary pack-along for many sc•entiflcnlly prepared water hikers or boaters whose adven· with certain minerals added to lures take them far away from improve its taste. slgnsof"civilizatlon." -Distilled drinking water: produc •d by chunging water to a va.,or itnd al low in•t It to condense into liquid form. h~uvlni: It f'ree ol any sohds. minerals, or trace elc· men ts. -TIUonaateawtller~ ls-bottled drinkinl( water t o which nuorlde, 411 controlled amounts has been nddcd .. Gen e r :11ly used b y f;:unilies wTOt children to ald--in tooth <tN·ny rl'turdntion. Purified w1tter : water from which mint'rals ba,·c been re· moved to lest' thun 10 Jlarls per m1lhon by J1st1llut1on or de· lonbation. Why Spe nd lHoney for Something That Is VlrtualJy Free olCo~t! · Again. when you ft>t.•I you are getting a superior product than what may be available locally. it's worth spending a s mall amount of money. As a cost S8\'· iogs: discover a porticular brand of bottled water with a pleasing taste and s ubs titute ll tor a beverage. AddUp Your Savings 1oeorr Regular or Mint 1oeOff ' . \ DAILY PILOT Wednesday,Aupu5t 4. t978 • ! l NEW YORK CAP> -sophisticated cooking on Dian Tbomas was ~ittlJ)g camping trlps without U06S·legged on the plush speotting a great deal of carpet of her 19th floor moneyonequlpmcnt. room in an elegant hotel NEEDS CUT cooking surtace. Aocordin a: to Miss Thomas, and "RoughJng It Easy," tbe \'lrialions are nearly lnrio1te. University in Sall Lake City, s he accepted a home econom1cis teaching posiUon there. From the m~nuaf ~ame the book, which was published by the Brigham Youna University Pres • Camp Cookery: here, frylng bacon on the The Ingenious camper top of a tin can. doesn't even need to buy "Whal I really tned to a frying pan. Witness the do," she said, flipping hotel room bacon: -. A tbe spattering bacon, tuna f11t' can. ftlled with "wu •how people the coiled cardboard and m e t bods of ca mplnit covered with melted wax without spending a lot oC was the source of beaL mone)' on equipment.'' Put a match to ll and it She offers advice on how to bake, broil. roast, fry and boil food out· doors, and recipe ror such exotic outdoor meals as st..rawberry up- s I d e down cnku , sourdough bread and bacon and eggs C'ookf'd together in a brown paper bag. • OUTDOOR COOKING "l thought , 'Now where should I begtn'!' and I decided I shou.ld teach first what l knew best, so I sta,r\ed with an outdoor cooking unit "nd the students loved It," shesald. The book includes ad· vice on digging latrines, selecting campsites, varieties or fires and Uieir usH, packing, plan. nln&. first aid and olbef comping basics. ' Bag~ and Cans Mias Thomas was de· bums J\lst like canned monatraUng one or the heat. eooking techniques from -A one.gallon can Mr Jiiook, '"'Rougbln rt wasthestove.Onelid.bad Easy : A U o I q u e been removed, and a ldeabook for Campmg side was raised so that and Cooking." the burning. tUD}l ~an The daughter of n forest. ranger. Miss Thomas grew up in tah, spending much of her lime outdoors. Arter graduation from Brigham Young When she lert the teachlna job br~Oy to take a master's degree in home economics. un· lverstty official$ asked her to write a manual so that other teachers could offer outdoor cooking while Miss Thom as was gone. About 80 percent oC the book is based on com• mon camping parac• tice , Ml$s..Tbom ' ~. and the other 20 percent ls the product or her own imagination -like try. Ing bacon wrapped around a stick. Tty fruit leather made , with fresh nectarines or : pears for .a packable. : chewy. sati'sfyiogly· : sweet Lreat resembling , jerky in texture. . ' 11 NECTARINE LEATHER ~ 2 pounds fresh ~ C alifornia nectarines \'!!cup sugar Nectarines may be • peeled or not, as desired. , · Ir skins are removed, leather will be smoother and ligber in color. To re- ;;_ .move skins. drop frul in ' boiling water. Let stand 20 lo 30 seconds; then drain. Skins s lip orr • easily. Slice nectar ines to measure about 1 quart. Mash nectarines and combine with sugar in . saucepan. Heat slowly until j uice forms. Sim· mer 15 to 2'> minutes, stirring frequently, until slighUy thickened. Cool and pl ace in blender. Blend smooth. Cover a large baking s heet 114 x 17 inches1 with a sheet or heavy plastic <a large heavy plastic bag. cut open works nicely 1. Spread • 1, nectarine pu!p in a thin even layer over the sheet. It should be no more than'~ inch thick. Place in full sun, cover with c:heese·cloth to k~p off any insects and let stand until evening. Br· mg into the house over· night. Repeal sun ex· posure the following day. ll will requi re 2 to 3 days in full sun to make leather dry lo touch and no longer sticky. Peel the leather off the plastic. cut fruit Into strips and roll up tightly. Makes about 7 ounces. Note: To dry fruit without sun. a gas oven ,, with a pilot llght supplies sufficient heat. About Ji; hours in an u nheated Oven la Sufficient to dry I f e nectarine mixture to ather. For pear leather. in· • crease fruit to 212 pounds, add one teas· poon lemon juice and 1:i cup · sugar. Follow in· slructions for nectarine leather, but increase ~ cooking time t o 20·25 ' minutes. Fruits may also ~ be mixed ror an exciting .:. new flavor . . . Ji ~ Cheese, : ~ Please Better than 'burjiter ii' cheetteburger. CHEESY BURGERS ' 2 pounds ground bed ~ 23 cup evaporated • milk ~ 1 :r cup fine dry brend crumbs .l l l a b I e Fo p o o n ' chopped onion i 2 teaspoons salt }I 1'l teaspoon pepper • ~ sandwich buns. f split. buttered. toasted • 1 h cups grated : cheese : I • Combine ground beef. t-.vaporated milk, bread crumbs, onion. cheese. sail and pepper. Shape to fonn 8 patties. Pan.fry « crill hamburgers 7 minutes on one side: turn· and cook S minutes cin other side or lo de- s1ttd degree or doncness. l. Serve on buttered buns. With a little ingenuity -::ould be shpped inside. ll is poss ible to do The other lid was the rou A1WAY5 SAVEi WITH 5TATIR BROS. 10W•10W PRICl5 llATUllllOS.••VAll •klQO 79' LUNCH MEAT ~-gl......... CA. OKMIAAYOI 79' cono SALAMI ~c: . . ... u . IEEF FUNIS ~g~. .. .... ea. 79' ......... tA. 98' u $1°• ..... $119 , ... s 11• CA. $119 LA $1 39 lA ll 4• UCK •1;r• ·'-~'f, 1111 5 T ............... ,......... ..._ ... 55~. 79~ 51°! -ST.AK SALi -••• snaK KCMAll<KfNO ...................... LI.• 12 • 18:.S'.'ll&ll_, l'·SM•u u•o ·::.=.·=-............... l•.: ! I 4 9 T·•••• k(F"•lO.llUll ............................... .! .... UI • 1 •• PORRRHOUSl 1UMOIMSILAIC .. .. ..l •• , " I TOP SIRLOIN IUHOIN • llONfltSS ............ u • 1 •• ••LIT •••••• ICU·U~N ............... " •2•• USOAOllAOlA•ll& .. C>tO•MCNOllfOlll 59c ectir•CHUClt•IONlLUS •12• eclf•llOUND•I011llf$S •1s• ,.,.mlOl(M TUllKIYS.... ... ll SHOULDI• ....... LL Tl• snAK .......... l l . • 98' llfAl McCOY •P~ • 1 •• I UF•llOUNO•IONCUIS $159 llCU'•CHUC••IOHtUU • 12• . TUllOT flllO ... · ....... l• •ASDAMI ll Tl• •OAST. ... .. lL SMOULDUI enAJC " 'llCIHrllOUli 49 ( AIAUllZl•l'Ollll•fll0ZlN•OCl'A0$Tt0$ I 39 ff(F•llOUNO•_(..., • 1•7 kL,•llOIOll£SS •• tt to • 107 !~~~ ... lL ............. l l •••• ••••T ... ,. • .... SftAK ::.O~. I fllln Of sou $119 WllSON • SUCCO • 12• r111t ... • UfllU[Ali $1 09 lfl' •1 •• r1111ttr110ZD~ ,. •AC .. !!-g1 • • .. u ·--••••••• lt cu•• STIAK ...... ll ll1'S 0' SHllMP ll s 12 9 CClfTOI cur • 1 •• IClF. IOMlUS • • 11 • ere•. CHUCK 89 c -----------llAM SLICIS. ll snw MIAT .. ll , .... •OAST .. ,. " * LOW -LOWPRICE 6 PLUS BLUEC~~IPSTAMPS * LOW·L O W P RIC ESPLUSBLUE C HIPSTAMPS * LOW-L O WPRICESPLUSBLUE C H IP S TAMPS * LOW ·L O WPRIC llDJ ISLAND E~.~.1 ................ 1-0z 47c PAM w0t1Ml1coou•o-.. .le-ol a&c CATALINA ~~~"0' I 1..oz 93c CORNED BEEF ~ .. ,,oJJ~, 97cTARTAR SAUCE ~I,.~, 37c : WEFltSllllYt fHEFllOHT TO llMll OA AEFUst SAl ESTO COMM£AC1Al OEAlEllS 011 WHOl ESAlEAS PRICES EFFECTIVE AUG. 5·11 SIAIER BROS. OLD TRADER BREAD PEPSI ••• AEO. Ptl'll • 1111-0Z. tt• • A UANAllts .... 24-0Z. c ti • . -......... --.. ~ ~ ·--. .,_.. . -. ---- Roving Kernels P0p Corn Pops Up Everywhere Pop Corn makes a tasty and economical travel compa· nion. For packing popped pop corn. any number of mat.rials and containers can be used. Best for all-purpose popped pop corn pacltlnc is a large metal canister. A recycled coffee can~Wdo. U plu~ bags are used, remember to cool tbe freshly popped pop orn thoroughly before filling. Either ay remember to fill whatever container you 'hooH ,Hg Uy. Over packing will result in less-than· temptlD1, unched munchables. Wbeo pping pop corn over an outdoor barbecue or opm fl.re. ou '11 need a long handled skillet or poppin& Makel. Be ure to keep the basket moving steadily over the fire. Uae a ut ~cup o(pop c<rn per batch. If the pped kernels show excess signs of browning, re- move the and continue popping the un]>Opped kernels. CHW CORNFETTI _ __ _Mell \ cu£ butter in saucepan near coala. Add 1 teu- poon chill ow er. \ cup n 47oz. plCf.l sllreddectMilctChed· dar cbees , 3 sliced green onions. stems included; atir OC· culonally o prevent burning or sticking. . .. Heat ll cheese is melted. Place ~ cup pop corn in lont·hand basket. Move constantly over bot coals tlll all kernela ar popped. In large bowl, pan or contain• toa pop corn and c Iii-cheese-onion mixture. The ck packer will enjoy this energy packed pop tGril combina n. ~ JOU.VWANDERERMIX Tot quarts of popped pop corn, add 1 WP eaeh ol tllle followin peanuts. raisins, shredded fresh coconut, IUD- nower se s. Mix well. Cool thoroughly. Pac oosely in foil-lined paper bags, clean milk cartam or conve ted coffee ca'\S with plastic covers, or iD pl..ue bap. Also/ great for camp site munchies are traditional caramel ~orn com blnationa that c·an be prepared a.bad and packed fbr travel. BEAOI TOTE POP CORN V~cup butter 3 tablespoons Sloppy Joe or Bar-b-quepowcllredalix 3quarts popped Jolly Time Pop Com Sall to taste Meil butter in sauce pan, add powdered mix. O,.. low heat, Obok 5 minutes. Pour over freshly popped pop cana. Salt tolaate. I _ L llERBEDPOPCORN l5pt1nkle any oC the foilowing over 3 qall'tl fNIM1 popped Jolly Time pop cu-n before addln1 butter: 1 &-. poon larragQD, baall, oregano, garlic or onion powchr. BAKEDOIUENTAL PARTY POP 8 quarts popped Jolly Time Pop Corn 1 pkg. (2 01. >slivered and blanched almonds 1 cup butter · 2 cups firmly packed brown sugar ~ cup light corn syrup 1 teaspoon vanilla Maraachinocherry halves Divide pop corn and almonds in half, placln1 elldt ball ln a well buttered 3-quart roasting or baltln& pan. Keep warm in 150 detree oven. Melt butter In saucepan. Stir in brown su1ar, earn IJl'UP and salt. Bring to boil stirring constantly; boil wit.bout IUr· ring 5 minutes. Remove from heat. sUr in soda and vanilla. Gradual17 pour over popped corn. mixln1 well with butlered fork. Bake In 250 degree oven 1 hour, stirring every 15 minutes. Remove from oven; add cherries. Cool complete- ly. Break apart and serve or store in ti1hUy covered con- tainer. TRAVELERSTARRAGONPOPCORN 3 quarts popped yellow or white pop corn 2teaapoons Instant buttery pop corn navorln1 1 teaspoon dried tarragon leaves (or 2 teupooM fresh tarra1onleaves, minced> To freshly popped pop corn, add buttery navortna and tarraion, Adjust seasonings to taste. Pack In recycled coffee canllteror foiled lined baa for traveling. G ARUC·CltEESE POP CORN 3 quarts popped yellow or white pop corn ~cup butter . l clove garlic. minced V.. cup grated mozzarella or provolone cheese 1 teaspoon mustard powder Keep freshly popped pop t'orn In warming oven (220 degrees>. In saucepan. mell butter; add 1arlic, cheese and mustard powder. Over low h'eat, stir until l'heese is melted. Pour over popped corn. Return to oven andhealWl cbeue l1told1nand t.ltotou1hly mixed with popcorn. Pack lightly in recycled coffee canister. Betton ODt-daJ trips. GINGER FRVITPOPCOllN 3 quarts popped yellow or white pop corn l/~ cup butter V.. leupoon 1round ginger ~cupmineeddriedapricot.s KffP rreahty popped corntnwarmingovtn (220dqr ... >. lnaaucepan. melt butter; add 1inger and apricots. Toes but· lei' mbt•re and popped corn. mixing thorou1hty. Addaaltu desired. Pack In recycled coffee canister. POPCOllNTRAVELBARS 3quarta popped popcorn 1cupsu1ar ¥.. ct1p white cam s)'Np \\cup water '4 cup butter or margarine ~teaspoon aalt ~teaspoon vanilla tcupdates,diced K~ pop _corn in warming oven (220 dtlJ'ffl). ln saucepan combine sugar and next four ln1redleat1. SUninl ~y.eookov•lowhealunW1usardlnolve1. . Coatlmae cook Ina without 1tlrrtn1 wat1l mixture naeMI • detnet or unW It forrna a brttUe ball ln eold ...... a.mow from beat, add vanilla and stir only to mix. Add dates to pop corn and pour syrup over pop corn In larp.butlered bowl. usln1 buttered fork to mix untU pop C'Gl'll latboroushlY coated. WethandsaUghtly; transfer mbturtto caltepan.Smoothoutevenly.Chlll. Transfertocutti.qboard Mdwtlntobarswilhwetlmlle. Beauty Hidden Tbe Chinese 1ooaeberry ,.._.._of tu aatlw home>_. kiwi fruit. .. ••t ., -know tt. ii Ml rlla&M to er. 100Mber· riel. ltlall"...aA..,,....aa.tt.he ....... f/l ......... and ....... ,,.. · l&ift 11111. No one ..W..., eall a ..... .io ..... • • • .., ,.... ~ it'• • dowmiaht ualy. But the , ..... la aaly lkiD deep and when a kiwi 11 mop.a cranwile1)'W ,....," ftllb -aUradlve llrl&bt ereen. ....... to enam1 ealGrl ta UM eeMel' whlcb camtallll ......... aoftaeeda that are edible. Klwt navor bu beelldetcrtMd • atmllar to that ol everythlna from real 1001tberrle1 to watermelon ••• but conaea1u1 fta\'WS a navor eomblutlon ol 1trawberrle1, rhubarb aad p6M8"1e 1uava <a ICll't ol all·io- oaefrillt aalad? •· Beaktea navor, kiwi hM other ..-UU.. wbicb m.ay recommend it to consumers .•• more vitamin C than citrus, very good llor.,e •tabWty and an enzyme which Mt.au a meat teDderiM' mucb Uke papaya's eoayme which Ilda ln the digestion or statthel. Kiwi fruit grows on vines .•• the culture is aimilU' to that ol papevlnel. Rank arow· in1. woody cuea requlreprunin1 at leut once in wlnts, wblle dor· mant. Neglect the pruning and you get a ta~ed, twlated mua ol growth wtt:la amall lnftriclr tndt. Jctwi need • irowm. Ille tbat la narmall1 free from late 1prin1 and early fall frosts .• .in an area that ls also free from atnmc winds, or pnteeted tnm u.em. ~J.latl C91Dt lntoMI ~ ln ·May and wbUe fruit de- ttl_on_ ra~idlJ .•. it don not ripen u.nW the last week cil"NOY· etnber or early Deeembll'. Polllutloa .. eftected by ID- leda .•.. from tbe -· no.en. wlalcla prod.ace poll• bat no fruit, to the female Bowen which bear tbe fruit. Kiwi have exceDeat keeplq quality. Losses dwilll atorace are mainly due to ovw·maturity and fermentatiOQ,bruitdown. The fruit cu be held ap to • weeks In lood eoaditkm iD com. mon ltora,. ••. la a coal, draft· tne place .•• and f« mare thao 4 montba in cool storage at 31-32 degree temperature and to'k re· lative humidity. t , ....... ,.·~·· .-. New Pet-Riti &ozen 9-inch Graham ShellS are less expensive 1 than graham shells off the grocery shelt. ' Save 10¢ to 20¢ per shell with new Pet-Ritz 9" graham shells~ Compare our price vs. the l. Vanilla 2. Peach S. Blackberry 4. Apricot 6. Apple 8. Blueberry 7. Cherry 8. Pineapple 9. Lemon 10. Banana 11. Oranae 12. Boysenberry I& Raspberry 14.Lime i& Strawberry .. Plain , fa : ,. .. ' 't .. .. ) '• .I •' :1 .. Miracle· 39c WHIP Kraft's famOt.111 aaJ4d dreuiq! Quart Ketchup ••••••• ~ 79c · Heini -the alow one! 32 ~ Relishes.mil ......... 39c Homburxer or HoL Dog ••• 12 oz Pringle' S1111tHC1 ••• 79c New lanitled potato chips! 9 oz PEPSI 98 COLA ~~<1 c Hc11. -Diet -Lliiht! l6 oz. btlts. (plm ...... Salad Dressing. 39c HPrn lf'in Low-cal ••• Italian, Ttiilion:cheese, Vinaigrette:B oz - Macaroni ct•... . . 45c Salad, Elbow, Sheils! 1 Jt1. pkg: Viva Napkins • • • 49c , .Jumbo -<;olors, Decorated! 140 ct. Hawaiian Punch 49c < ·hoice of flavors --16 oz can TERI 4· 9 TOWELS c Al\.-.<ntcd or Decor,tt<'d (7e tff) # ' I • -• • ~ ·- .......... ......,_ .... _.....: ... -......, ............... _ ,.. .............. ~_..,_. ..... ,.,._.,u ... --...__. .. -. llllf1 -.... • 11111 tf,. .... GROUND s 1 ·09 BEEF .:::• •. Your choice of bulk or patties ' Ground Beef :urs12t Choose bulk or chopped steaks (3 ,.. a.) • Beef Rib Bones 69~ Meaty! U.S.D.A. Choice! Bake, B-B-Q! SLICED BACOll l..Hn and ~elicioual..y smoked! Bullt· . Game Hens-•• s14~ Checkerboard Farms ••• 24 oz. bit . SausagenlJlllmu • s111 We make ir m the old world 11lyle . . .. Beef Kabobs ~ ............. s 12! Loin cut of U.S.D.A. Choice beef, skewered! ju~r oc!d fain'11!. 8 <*.net l3mb Kabobs ............. s1 2? (;ubes ot lean U.S.D.A. Choice lamb. from tender tcs:s -for feastin1:! 8 oz ol't Pork Kabobs ............... s1 2? Skewers loaded with cu.bes of Jean fre8b Eastern pork? Pork 1~ only! 8 o~ net ------. Split Broilers .............. 59~ Plump large Grade "A" frying cbicken11., split in halves. nady to barbe('U{'. ill llfand~cL ....... 1lll The epitome or tendernt>s.s! Tenclerl111n ol li<'<'I -U.S.0.A. ChoiC'\' beer. sited fc•r Olm•r 111111 trndern~! (fUT -• •. l.lt .. , ' \ • l ~!~~m~n~ M h• M h. , s12• a 1 a 1..... • The teal thing, from Hawaii! • Halibut Steak •• s211 .• I Center cut. Crom Nort.Mm fiab Fillet of Sole . :::.-:i-~2~! ~~e!r~~p s211 !~h~ !?.'~~~121 _.. ::.C~s! S 169 Snapper • Great t aste broile•, frjed or barbt'<'ut'd r ...... ,.., ........ Colony Chablis ~W( =·-... s2ss • ' I ; I ., .. I Bread,....~ lJ • • • 39c Dlluck Si1ak ~~ .............. ~--11! ~~~~sf! .• ,.,...... s41s White, Wheat, Sandwich -Springfield Prove it to yourt!ell'! You con have EJ Rancho quality beef. and 11till be bud11et.minded! renter cut i;teok, too! ......... . Coffee Mate ••• s1 11 ~on·datry n 1ffee t·reomer! 16 Ox Foil lO~oun ••••••• 59c Sprini:lield aluminum -18 in. roll Apple Sauce • • • 23c Sm<101 h HlllJtY Springfield! No 300 7 Botie Roast. • 89~ _ Chuck cut .U.S.D.A. Choice beer. BEEF ~c:'·s 119 ROAST . • Rolled shoulder clod -churk mt . 0 .·Bone Roast.~ 99~ buck cut, U.S.0.A. Choice beef GENUINE MILK FED VEAL featured at El Ranrho! '"' Super. fr esh produce Cubed Pork=. s211 For Chop Suey, Sweet 'n' s0ul' CURE 81s219 HAM •· Hormt>l'11 rull.v rookrd! WholP, half • Frozen Food ··1 ORANGE 39c JUICE Sunkillt, for prtferred Oavor! 12 oz Jeno's Pizza ••• sgc Charcoal $1 09 Briquets Sprin1<l1cld 10 lb. (2t • .•• U1) Cat 'Food ••••••• 19c Callia/11111 ... /5!· Cheei:c, Pepperoni, Sausa11e -13 oi Stuffed Shells • 5119 Stouffer's -Chicken, Beef, Cbeeee Grape Juice.... 59c Fri~lo.tl·K -nil \111ril'li~! 6': 01. Vine.rirened! Thick mealed! Mellow flavor! Enjoy it ony time of day! Welch's, for remembered taste! 12 oz Joyro11us •••• · •••• 69C • For 11 nart' rcOerlion! 22 oi. (lie tff) Griddle Mate. • • 59c Italian· Squash ••• ~29i Garden fre!lh! All green and lender! GATORADE CITllUS Oii OUllCl • 3 9 ( FUVOllS ••• 32 OZ Bell 39c Peppers • Larxe 11ize.firm-thirk meBted! Cherry 39c Tomatoes Wt IU!d ripe! Ta11ty l11tle RCmli! Delicatessen ;/ Franks KINGslZE .......... 89( I for h ·:. ••• qunllty nncl I l11vor that makes them 11urh a welcome borbl'<'U\.' I rent! lb. pki:. Lemonade. • • • • • 59c l\lmutt' Maid -chilled -64 oz. Dressing11•1n ••• 59c "C'11'1ll'lrnia" 11tyle &alad l'ixin'! 8 or. SLICED 79c HAM I )11111 ... h -two con,·enitnt 1izH! 4 oz. Velveeta •••••• .-ggc Chee• tf"3d trom l\rnll! l lh, cln, SaladsCBA• •••••• 49c .Bettermade-many fine Oavo~! If> 117.. ~:;n 69( KraO's deluxe pt1ck -A ounc('ft Brown Onions •• 2.,: 29c U.S. No. l quality • , • all purpose RED 39 · GRAPES ~ Cl\Jilornia's finest! fljpe, juicy Egg Rolls • .-••• sgc S hrimp, Chickeh, Meat & Shrimp! 6 oz Buitoni Entrees · 79c Las&KJ'C, Manicotti1 ~Plant, RavioP· ~~EAM ::::.?1°9 H.oynl Kost premium quality! nU tlnvorA Summer Coolers R SAVE· $1.00 ON $]99 Um ll RANCHO'S............... · Our own label ••• Puerto Ricnn Rurn -Jiiht or ~ark -Save J.00 o~ dw quart Canadian ...... s399 El llnncho'a label-reduC41d 70e! Jlftb Ancie'1t Age •••• 55~9 'Save 7Qe quart! Straight whlak11y· RELSKA $898 VODKA Mixu so well! Half-gallon DP<·n doil,\• 9 to 9 Sunday 10 to 1 J & B Scotch. s1345 Now! Savo 1.50 on the haJf.gallon! • Chianti Classico s37• Melini -Italian dinner wine! Quart Blend~d s499 Whiskey . El Rancho's • , • tl6 prooC! Quart No /fl0 fr11 to drofrl'# ARCADIA PAS/\Df NA 1:,0UTH P/\SAOENA HUNTINGTON BEACH NEWPORT BEACH EASTRLUH IAVINf '., , '' ' ' '' I' ,I I ffl I~· • • ····~V1•I t 1, 1 I '' '' • ' 1 ' '0 -. ' ~~t''ll t,~,111 '" ''» 't"'f"l•l"l'J' I " ' • "'•' f '• • 1 • .... •' CREST TOOTH Nm ....... $1.19 Ch111l"C Mint or Rtfl\llar! 7 ounce tube SECIET .wt ........... nc In t ht four ounct ..,,_,, un FW SOf IW ............. 49c Tht new "Bouno"-p~. of 10 (k tff) sall.lJIG'S Val.A ••••••.••• 59c , m.t• CllES •••••••••••••• IOc The na\Clf wnn'I baltt out! 2 01 btle • StHro Bfff. Chiclrn, Vf(t't1ble! pkJ ol a PREll S....-00 ............ $1.49 {U11cfntratc frK more lalhfr! S 01 tube llTl.ftlSPIMT .............. 91c Sttnt -the one you can rely upoo! r~ f•l IARIECUE SAUcE ••••••••••••.• 79c <"hr11 & P11 t"11 llot. ~ .• H1rkol')! L1 01 WVE Ol ................... $1J9 Ill HCllY ••••.•••.•••••••• $1.41 llt!rtolli'• -imr111r1~ from holy! l'tnt Aunl Sue's. for natur"11toodntta! 2 lb j11r l - . • l I I ~agers' Favorites St.lip's ·Menu · Fares at Home· . Crntlnc theme 91111111 for a tiiraee of 1team1bl&W Jli'HM'• a pa...a ol problem1, 1lnce ex-eeu~ve cbera l'arely come lD diNet contact with orb otber, _-. kite~ crew.a cu c.ba.Dge Ylth almolt every voyage, Wblsk lD wine and stock; sur frequenUy until sauce thickens and bubbles. Return mushrooms to pan and simmer 10 to 15 minutes until slightly reduced. Add chicken and aeuon to taste with salt, pepper and a dash ol freshly grated nutmeg. Spoon over toast points and aprinkle with minced parsley. Serve al on- ce. Serves t. Picnic Sweets · Paclllc Far Eaat Une, however, hu come up with eome winning menu•. which w1D be used one day on each scheduled voyage throu1hout tbe balance of 1976, and wll\ feature all-American dishes f~ breakfast, lunch and dinner and at the p oolside Patriots• Plcnlc ad an.ernooo :SO.ton Tea Party, ldeu were drawn from a llst of more than Ii ve hundred dishes au11ested by food "11torian and ~ultant. S.J. Reae, who hued her recommendaUoal on entries from personal diaries, jou.rna.ls and recipe boob tba1 span the nation'• hlltor,y. From quantity recipes, small- scale versions of the passengers' favorites are reproduced here !or uaeathome. BUNKER BILL EGGS 6 cups riced potatoes 9 eggs plua 1 e11 yolk 7 tablesPo<>ns melted butter 1 Y.z teaspoona aoft butt.er Salt and pepper to taste 8 strips bacon. cut lD half and partially cooked Preheat oven to 400. Butter four Individual ramekins and set aside. Beat 1 whole egg with the egg yolk, and whip into potatoes with 5 tablespoons of the melted butter. Season. Whip until Duffy. Pile-into Tamekins, 1tnd make- two ''bunkers" in each by press- ing down into the potatoes with tbe back of a large spoon. Break each remaing egg into a bowl and slip it into a .. bunker." Of you damage the yolk. save the egg ror another use: you must have perfect yolks for this.> Arrange bacon strips around eggs, drizzle on remaining mel~­ ed butter, and bake al 325 until eggs are set. about 15 minutes. CAPITOLADE OFOUCKEN ~ 3 tablespoons minced Niallots ~ 3 tablespoons of butter 1 cup sliced mushrooms 1 tablespoon flour • , tt.t cup white wine 1 cup s tock or leftover chicken gravy 2 cups cooked chicken. cut in fine dice Salt and pepper to taste t Freshly grated nutmeg Chopped par~ley Hot buttered toast points Melt 2 lablespoons ol the butter in a hea vy pan and aaute mushrooms briskly. Remove mushrooms and set ulde. Cook shallots in remain Loe butler u~tll lispp. Do not brown. Add rem am· ing 1 tablespoon ol butter. and flour and stir until·~ SISTER ABIGAIL'SaDVE FLOWER OMELET C Fr•• &lie Sllaker O.mlDlllllty > 4eH• 4 lablespoons milk 1 tablespoon, each. minced parsley and chives 12 small chive blossoms Salt and pepper to taste 2 tablespoons bullet' Beat eggs and milk until well blended. Add remaining ingre-- dients and season. Heat butter until it bubbles in a heavy pan and ppur in egg mixture. Shake pan until eggs begin to set, then pull in Crom edges Of pan with a fork. When eggs are just set, roll onto a heat.ed plaller, and serve etlonce. Serves2. CALIFORNIA EGGPLANT . SALAD • 2 eggplants, peeled and cut in l " cubes Butler Salt, pepper and paprik.a . 3 tablespoons mayonn~ l tablespoon vinegar -J lh teaspo6n Woccestershire sauce 1 teaspoon chili sauce 3 bard-cooked eggs · "Buffer fetcuce Season eggplant with salt and set aside for 15 minutes. Squeeze all moisture out of eggplant... sprinkle lightly with pepper and paprika. and place on oiled bak· ingsheeL Dot each cube with a small piece of butter. and bake 8 minutes at 325 degrees. Turn and dot with more butt.er; cook an ad· ditional 8 minutes. Cool. Combine remaining lngr e. dients and toss with eggplant... Refrigerat.e overnight. Serve cold, garnished with lettuce. Tempt your ramily's sweeL tooth with this cake, easy to make and easy to pack ror outings. Cut into two·inch squares or just leave it, covered in bakine pan. LAZY DAISY CAKE 1 Y• cups boiling water 1 cup Quaker Oats rquick or old fashioned, uncooked I Y.t cup butter 1 cup granulated sugar t cup firmly packed brownaugar 2 eggs. beaten 1 tea.spoon vanilla 1 ~ cups lifted all· purpose nour 1 teaspoon cinnamon 1 teaspoon aoda ~teaspoon salt 11.i teaspoon nutmeg BroUed FrosUag:· Y& cup butter or margarine. melted Y.t cup firmly packed brown sugar Best Idea Since Shopping Carts }~~w you can do a week's shopping \Ji ~ ~ without forgetting a single item! Use pre-printed shopping lists prepared for you by PILOT PRINTING. 1.0 ..,. ... pttftted ... ,,. •• ................. you cantll ... ,..,.... ,. ....... 21 v .......... 14 Frutta ... '*' ....... ......... 11 ..... Md ........... 1 t .,..,, ....,,. 20 -.C1tl•necM11 2 tablespoons half and half or light cream ~ cup chopped nuts •11 c up tlaked or shredded coconut FOC' cake, pour boilin~ water over oats. Cover; let stand 20 minutes. Beat butter and sugars together until light and fluffy. Blend in eggs and vanilla. Add out mix- ture; mix well. Sift together flour, cin· namon, soda, salt and nutmee. Add to butter mixture; mix well. Pour into weJl.greast.>d and floured 9 -in ch square baking pan. Bake in pre-heated moderate oven f350' F.J 50 to SS minutes. Do not remove from pan. For frosting, combine all ingredients. Spread evenly over cake. Broil until frosting becomes bubbly . Serve cake warrd or cold. Makes one 9·inchsquare cake. Wednesday. August •. 1978 DAIL V PILOT Cf sh§PuTd;t Make Combo ' A ta.sty, rm inc supper salad can be quickly as. sembled rrom foods rrom your freeaer . Curried Shrimp Potato Salad uses pre-cooked frozen Potato nugget s and frozen shrimp. Sim ply lh aw the shrimp by holdln& under a stream or warm water for one minute; drainnnd let stand at l'OOln t<'m· perature until ready to toss wlth other ingre- dients. CURRIED SHRIMP POTATO SALAD 1 16-ounce rrozen potato nuggets 4 cups s hredded iceberg lettuce t cup thinly sliced celery 1 \~ cups thawed 1 frozen shrimp Curry Dressing Prepare potatoes as package directs by bak· Ing in oven. Prepare Curry Dressing. Mix together lettuce, celery, and ~ cup dress- ing. Spoon lnlo a salad bowl. Arrange potatoes and shrimp over lettuce. Serve al once with r~ maining dressin,. Makes 4servings. CURRY DRESSING 'h cup d a iry sour cream 2 tabl e s poon :\ mayonnaise 2 t ab l espoons chopped onion 1 tablespoon milk 1 •:: teaspoons lemon juice 1 \easpoon chopped parsley 1.:: teaspoon curry powder 1~ teespoon salt Mix together sour cr eam , mayo nnaise. onions. milk and lemon juice. Add parsley, curry powder, and salt lo sour cream mixture and mix: well. Makes~ cup dress- ing. New! More aroma. More flavor. =-Either wa)#, save 404 Ncscof ~ • Instant Coffee now• hos more coffee orom o. More coffee flavor. Oecouse we found a way to get more coffee flavor out of the bean. Enjoy the world's largest-sell· ing brand of instant coffees either woy-Regular or green lobel Decoffelnoted. (tCMl91•) lumlalted lftCOft• .. nt =~ ll••· ... ~ Send Today To Become A Super Shopper ----------•"'"' ........... . ~wtllttt.21'9: ..... ~=-"lo~Lllt :Coate ...... Calf, 12121 J :NAiii--~--.J I . I 11TMET-------------~ lart----------.J--' DAILY PILOT .. _____________ .. _______________ ... Cut ole1n9 doned lne ro )()ve on r~ ~scofe. ONLY ONE COUPON ~OE USED • 12'214 I [ ' L \-.I y IJ"tL. 1 1"11..v 1 Wdorfe~day. Auqu9 4'. I,,." • Too Much Fat for Skinnies • • loaf Mix Doesn't Meet Requireflleats "Meat loaf mix" i• water off lnto a cup. The mix <•round beef, \'t!aJ seeds Break the meat wP bdo drained liquid, skim it oil ceding recipe, omitting ~ beef, veal and llq1Ud ia then fat· and pork) 1 teaspoon MSG Cop-larae ctn&nkl and ~ withabulb-typebasteror th• ralslns. Substitute Pork la equal propor· skimmed berore It re-i cupwater lionaJJ \lnue to cook until all UM spoon. Return tbe rat· red wine ror the vinegar. tlon1, widely aold ln turu tothukUleL 1 oalon. chopped salt and pepper chuakl an well wowned skimmed bfotb to the &abstl\Qte fennel aeeds .upennarkeuacrcmUae After tryini our 16-oUJKecan stewed Spra.yalar&e noelltick udrenderedolfat.Add skillet. ud c•tln~ to forthecumin. (Add ooe UDited States. If you 're "Skillet Havana .. try the tomatoes lkillet or electric Cry pan t.M one cup water, reheat simmer, uncovered, until t e a s P o o n i r at e d wet1ht·wary, the one aame recipe with an one a nd one.half with cookina spray for toboWDc,thendralnthe most of the llquld Parmeaan cheese per t.h1nj you should NOT do Italian touch, as in our tablespoons vinegar no-fat frylna. Put the liquid off Into a cup. Set evaporate• and celery aervlne. if desired.) wtth "meat loaf mb:" i. "Sk\llet Sorrento" or 1 c l ove 1 ar ll c, meat In a cold skillet. pan with mea\ aside, Stlr and· oniou are tender. Aboul200calorieauch. maktitintomeaUo.t. seuoned tbeGreRw-.y, minced toptJonal) Heat s l owly over i n remalnln& lnfr•· SUr frequently. Serve GREEK SKILLET Why not? Because the SldlletAthenla. 4 tablespoons &olden moderate n ame without dlents.coverandshamer wltb Taba1co. Sen-.1 ATHENIA -follow firll readY·1round mixture 8 LI• KILLE T ra~· Ins disturbln1,untilthemeat overlowheat. four, about W calories recipe, omitting r-1alna coe&alm another lnare-HAVANA one · half teaspoon is browned on the un· SKIM FAT each. and c um In s eed 1. dleat you don't want -no·f1tcookln1spr1y dri oregano dersid• in it• own melted After the fat bas riaen SLIM SKlLLET SOR· SutMtitute parsley llakea fat. In meat the rat re-one und meat loaf 1 teas oon cumin fat. 0 he 1urface or the RENTO -f ow the •· for the ore ano <or I maln.I trapped into t.he,____:::.=..L.=:.=..:.;.;::....:.:::=;;;..:.:;;;:;;.. ____ .:.....::.::.=,;:.1:,.=...;:..;;......;~~_,;..=..;. ______________ _.il.X._~:.......:.=-===-.::.-;:;.:.....:.;.;.;;.....::::.=-=...;;-. ...... ~.-.-~~~ mixture a.ad eventually wind s up on y our waistline. • Okay then what 00 you do with "meatloaf mb?" You could broll "com· bo-burgers" ... bulonly If you're wllUn1 t o serve thetn very well done. The presence of pork In the mlxtyre mean• that your comtlinatlon bur1en w'i.11 have'to H cooked all the · waytbrough. A more lntere1Una idea Is our 1avor y. spicy skillet main course, Cuban-inspired "Skillet Havana ." A mellow melange o f meat, tomatoes, celer y and onion, it is spiced with vinegar . raisins, oregano and cumin seeds. Cumin, like oregano, is sold on s upermarket s pice shelv6. The navor ofthis dish is zesty but not hot. 1 A few generous shakes of Tabasco can add a torrid touch, if you like.J COOKING TECHNIQUE SU-BTRACT i''A'l> Note our special cooking technique that subtracts I fat 1 and calories J instead of adding it. We brown the meat in its own melted fat. then we add water. and drain the fat and T-Bone Ground Boneless • Steak 111 BEfF LOIN ................... ••. . LB. Blade Cut Chuck Roast BONDED BEEF ................. LB. !L~!.ORMORE ........ LB. 57e Whole Ham s-7-LBs.1'' FULL V COOKED. WA.TERA.ODED LB. Large End Rlbloast Round Steak Extra Lean Ground Beet 7-Bone Roast Hidden Value 30NOEO BEEF ................. . LB 11a BONELESS BONDED BcEF ..... LB. BONDED BEEF ..................... LB. 1oa BONDED BEEF CHUCK , .. LB. !!l.~~~~ll~o!'k Tap Raulll Stelk -U•llOMXOKI! Partert10111 Stllk 90itDt 0 elt t ti,Olh Frnb hit lrlaklt ·~ p• Boneless Tip "oast l:-~;IWl•~'CI 131 18 End Cut Slab Baca• Fresh s,arerills ,.,..,, ""''· Cleaning food storaae areas may be pretty low on your "favorite activi· ty" list. But it must be done. And the time is now ... whether home processed or com· mercially processed foods are in your ruture. Boneless Tip Stuk -ll>I 0 It t • "<>UNO .. 1" ·~ 111 l.111 .• 111 Pork Link Sausage OSC.~'1 til4'1l,_ l at .... ....... -,• I Canned foods that have spent the storage time emigrating to the back of the c upboard need to see the light of d a y a n d b e used ... ahead of new supplies. Examine the containers carefully. IC they are bulging throw them away! Dents and rust do not necessarily mean the canned food Is SPolled. Make su r e the rust hasn't penetrated the can, causing leaka1e. For dented cans, check to see if the dent toes through the side seam or the rim seam at the top or bottom. A dent on any or the seams can break the seam and cau se leakage. Throw leakers away. You h ave a home freezer? Give it clean-up attention. There may be really great foods evad· ing your appetites at the back or bottom of the freezer. Some even may be anony mous ... no label. no date or other identification. Be brave and ruthless. Open the package <or packages 1 with a firm resolution of using the contents Immediately. Or p ut un open ed packages up front where they will be handy (or use In the nearest future. Many frozen Items re- tain their lntegrlt.y for only a few m onths. IDEAS WITH PANTRY FINDS -Canned Jullenne Beets: Heat <do not boll1 beets with a little honey, lemon juice, celery aeed and stir In plain yogurt. -Culled Cream Style Corn: •Jake corn pud· dina . chowder or 11Ct.U....S"'9. • -· C••••• l•tll P•\a.l'I 1: l)raln "'''*: brllft wlth melted htter mht._. w l • .. • l l t..t l • Worce1aer1hlre 1UH. S•' uader brolltl' lo ~.turning to ~ •--11.t. . ~ .. -.,-1aree or ·I'·~ c ........ .,, ..... : T• la a IOllp. f'• .. ~combine stewed tOID•~: uued dry .,..... eaa whole kernel ecn wlll bfff • chicken brotb .•• cud I..,_ meat ii' Pfllltry lf YW choose). lfeat, ttucm and serve. Larae End Rib Steak -0 111'.U W •<l l..O OWi •llN •• t .. • ·-Le 98° j' • l l . , : Alaskan Snow Crab Loner pisiceson par enlflse ~ list. I ,\ l t,\ I Produce Vllincla o,.....4 ~049c Dellclou1 Grapes ~=~~f:S .. Lady Lee Fruit Cockt~I!,..~ 3 5c Del Monte Pineapple ... • 41 c ••• ll ~ ll Ol U>.N Harvest Day Pears 5 3c "Ol CAtrf Harvest Oay-Applesa~~e ... ., 45c Aealemon Lemon Juice fl"' 55c •• 0 .,\ Stokely Gatorade Drink fl"' 44• ; Ill•" Hawaiian Punch Base fl"' 13' f't "t ,.,__. J v•Artt"' • 11 41 CMt PICK LE ll·Olllf• S · ORE SJINC Helnz'Olll Hamburger Sllcea 45• ~ ••01 J•ll Heinz Sweet Rellsh 45c ' 'II #II Kraft Salad Dressing fl"'93c • ••ot •n Laura Scudder MayonnalN 81 c ll Ol ••• Safflower Mayonnaise fl"' 89' "'~',"'Xl "OI JM Pitted Olives 52' .. I'\( CNt Helnz"'9chup .. ~"'.49' -~.w1 31• ~°"C:: 53c PASTA RICE l"NHFR$ Harveit Day . Lady Lee Ladg Lee ~~.: ..... ~LLOAF 29c !~··•:OZ ~. 25c .1~ .. ~~OCTN ~ I h C1rrota · 90 "• 'OI' ...... ._ ...... -... ta. 11111e11 ~-----~ 19° Crl1p Cucumb9ra 15• to. o 0•1111 --··-IACM ~arge .Avoca~-~-~ -·· . .-4 9• Harvest 01y Tom1toet ~ 39• "°'C.... Stokely Cut Green Beans 28• 0"'4 I.Cl U'I Stokely Whole Kerntl Corn33• ~Jr•Ol GA~ Ranch Style Beans fl"' 27, tt Ol "'" Sacramento Tomato Juice 49c 0"'4 .. 01 ...... Harvest Day Peas 29 "OICAN C Lady Lee Spinach 36c 1'01 UN Vegetable Juice Cocktall 53, u, •ii "'-Ol U H COOKIES C RACKERS Sunshin e Cookies ~ 79c t J I UH) ~•It • hCl1 1:• 01 ~ Sunshine Hl .. Ho Crackers 4gc ~·· Ol '°' Nabisco Ritz Crackers ~ 82• •• Ol lt01 FROZEN FOODS Man Pleaaer Dinner• ~ 97• ••~~·lfllv•.i.u ~ o~z ,.n Ore Ida Potato CubM ~ 59• lf.(11 ..... ~~~,Appte J~~· •tOI' 531 ~!,:!J:!m ·-·· .°'.(1n Momlng Star Scrambler• 63~ __ ... tM>lt'!CI. Enchllactu ~ 101 h 'll>l .. WllUfOllC>!lUt ... OL ... O Treesweet Orange Jui '8~53, coootot""ll oto Z CM CJA IRY PRODU1.-T. , 'OFFEE.TEA·COCOA '!~~!_leaf Tea Bags .. c;::. 75• Hervest Da y Coffee 2,. ... , ... , • • 10.()l.JM!I .NHtle's Hot Cocoa M~~01 '°' 103 O~altlne Chocolate ... n• ot :;. 221 MEAT FISH.SOUP ~.~~~LeeChlll -··"oz CAN 49• ~ormel Vienna Sau~a~ CAH 36, Corned Beef Hash 5Lc '"'tttl.H \.f., Ol Ct.M I~ Carnation Chunk Tuna fl"' 51 e iJ .Ot '"Mf Campbell's Soup 19• ~l~l<OOOU tO'· Ol C•N SNACKS· C ANOY.N UTS Crunchola Bars fl" 83 l\1Alvl1 t 'lll •·• Oi 90.1 C Mr. GoodbarCandy 71 , ,.fA:f.to4f" • •·N 9M • Campfire Marshmallows • 59• ..... 1•01 PltO Harvt1t 01y Potato Chlos 69' IWtlol~•~ NIO~Oll,_ Poi ~0 Mixed Nuts fl'4 103 ~Atlll ... .,_, llOA•T ,_. , ... - LlfS~fRrs CCREAL "'' r Viti Cruno9' Granola • ~ 67• a¥~•• . ...oc- ~.nerll Miffs C,hMrl~., '°' g5c Jell·o Qel1tln · 2 1 .. ,.,,_ . ... . . .. . ...a.ot... 1 Oarnattoii llender · • l_.,,...~ ... _ ...... ~3· JA M ,., '"ll' nurrF~ !» ,..,,. DE&.1 Lady L" Oeteraent ~ sgc t'<lll'l#•-Ott•f--1 Ol ti\ Lady Lee Glasa Clean r ~ 49c " l •11. Cascade Detergent f(4 140 (;+'~AlttJM "(I Z lilOI Ajax Liquid Cleaner fl"' 12, 40 aTL Sanl Flush Bo~ Cle~!"S?c ?...?.~ ~~en CIHntr" . •Mii if,,,. 1 ,9 DISCOUNT SU ~,,= ............. -._... --.....-----_.,... __ .... BAKING SUPPLIES• MIJCES Betty Crocker Cake Mixes 591. I \'AR1l nts ..... • ... 11ti Ol 80JC Gold Medal Flour ...... ._, ... M> 77c ~.!~~~~ted ~ug .. ar_.u=-SS• • r.!~. ~~-~!Mix .. _ .. ·--"« _ 4gc Bisquick Bis~u.1~. ~I~·"°"°"'°• 93c Pam Spray.Coa~ln~ ....... oi.cC 94• Cris~o Shorte~I~~ ·-· M-QLCM 1 n . Pancake Mix 65 ~t ltl. •IA --»-.OZ.9011 C Pillsbury H~!. R~ll Ml,~,.oz.-S2' .. Dixie Fry •01 ea• 35c ; ''£T ,.onos Friskles Cat Food fl" 20 4VA ... l Ot l • e • ..ot CAN C Purr All Tuna Cat Food fl" 16, -t OLCAN Gravy Train Dog Food fl"' 1 ac 148- Purlna Meow Mix fl" 52, 11.0l IOk Ht ALT~ a IH!AIJTY AIDS r er Lickin' Noµrishment Yflldnesday.August4.1976 DAIL y PtlOT Cl ' ,Beef: High ·Protein Snack Saving System Cuts Food Bill l Savings or 10-20 per· purch•u.ed In dlrlerenU Gz1~r .. 1 1,! 0 T 1 H }'!r spareribs, they have tbe cbopped IHH onim llld beef-about t.be amount lean sround t>eer with cent on weekly rood bills forms. tiuch as c~ ..,. ..,. .... or Nme1atlal)'ill#Oaworaa ,..a&edcbeesearetbeap-ht a breakfut 1teak or your otber hvorhe are possible .,.,hen a corn nnd rrozen corn. ou1 fln1er foods. tbe tender rib roasts )lrOl!riate ~ ,..._. t...rser -pro-... ta.an ia1redients. system of index cards re-Wrll" I.he date, brand dwicbe1, 1nackl. they're cut. from. Allow videsaboutballtbedaily Shape t.be mixture into• ' cordinc food-price flue· amount and price. Wheo d 'oeuvre. and other Cine pound or three ribs C 0 N S U II E 1l reeoaun•ded allowance reetanlle OQ a ahallow tHtions is used in plan· pertinent, record t.bet bl .. are appetite perpersoo. SPECIAUSTS AT 'l1:IE '11 Pl'OtelJI for adult.a aa bak1nc pan. Mark into niogshoppina llat.s. coetperservln1. 1f1in1. aouri1hin1 CALlf'ORNIA BEJF weO u Mi'pplylat impor· l ·incJuQuarH, centering Arranae In the cards euy to make with S T E A K A N D COUNClL recommead taalamowlU of minerals each with a cocktail ~ ~~~~·'!':~~~~"!-· To or1anize the saving alphabetleally ha a Ille , eooked beef, either CHE~E TEAM UP In a cbooal•• 1a.ok food1 aad t.be 8 vitamlu. onion. 1tulfed oll ve or system, after a shopping box. Update them .tter or cold. Conaumer aaU.fyin1 s upper idtfa. that. fOGtl'lbute valuable QUICK APPETIZER almond. Bake al 400 trip, record each food eacla 1hopplq trip. In eclaliat.a for t.he lndMdual E~akfaat or nutrients to tl•e dally BEEF BALLS ARE degrees for 15 minutes. purchase on n separate thl• way, you'll keep' fomla Beef Council sandwich tea~• are diet. Tbree and OQe b.at SQUARE ln1t.ead of CUt. Into squares and l nd ex ca rd. Make abreut of trend• ha food · • mind us that cuual perfectly al to flt. on _ou_nc_ea_o1_1_e_a_a_c_ooki...;....ed~-round....:...;......;;....;..M;_lx;.;...a--:PoU __ nd_~_ ... __ ve_w_ar_m_on_;;,p_ic_k_s_. -------~~;;.._;;.__s_epar.:...._a_t_e_c_•r_ds_f_o_r_fo_'4l_Gl__.~cee.;..;.;.~----:----. at.iDI is an Important. 1llces or frencb lll'e.t .- ~ tbe dally diet. U Tbe California Beer uea 1ood HDM to in· Council consumer in· 1'llllJllCll8 bip protein beef formation 1pecialista re-on. u pouible 1rl mind ua that cut from the ....i.. and IDaekl. eye ot round or rounli tip, tbele convenient bone- . MANY FAVORITE leu thrifty steaks are • EEF DISHES adapt. very lean and suitable to port.able feut.s. A for quick pan frying. To own ba11er'1 beef make a a u pp er , for instance, In· saadwkb, serve on toast· flCllUd4tS diced cold cooked ed bread topped wit.b f wrapped up with sliced Jack cheese, fresh iced raw carrots. tomato slices and green Mllel~ and canned baby pepper rings. toes. A cold varia· on of 1troganoff is TASTY BEEF mply chilled roast. beef SPREAD covers any OC· cea r olled up with sour casion. To make your am, sliced onJons and beef spread, .s immer 1· hrooma. Add a small inch cubes of beef stew ttle of wine for a about l hour or until met.lunch. tender. Shred the beef and combine with sour HOT BEEF TIDBITS c r eam, dijoo styl e . eat rrom picks are mustard and desired : 1:1lavorites at any party or seasonings. Thia is • • "ft!ative 1athering. The perfect on melba toast, , ~«ni• Beel Council <rlsp crackers, celet'y umer specialists re· stalks or c ucumber mmend this easy re· slices. pe. Broil or grill juicy . alrbites to medium POCK ET-BR EA , ' . Serve with dips of WITH HOT BEEF · bili sauce, cu rried FILLING is hearty oulof a y o n n a i s e o r hand eating. To make arnaise sauce. Lean the filling, brown diced ·er steak such as top top round or lean ground nd Ol' round tip are beef. Season with chili I ~ I, /!. I eal. Powder and taco sauce. For meal sized portions, BIG MEATY BEEF heap into half rounds of IBS should be eaten pocket bread. For ap· 'th fin1ers for utmost petizers, cut pocket • oyment. Also called br e ad Into quarters. becue ribs and beef S hre d d e d 1 e tt u c e, getables Fresh Food I , Fares Well .. I .. I ~' Many camping veterans say their bifgest mplainl about travel fare is the lack or resh s. l\f any vegetables can keep well in cool orage for up to two weeks. Among the hardiest easiest to tote are squash, plentiful now in arioua 11hapes and sizes for pan.frying, steam· over the grill or stewing in a skillet with other anned ve1etables. Most vegetables can be cooked in roll. Sum· er type squash varieties are excellent for this. • VEGETABLES IN FOIL 4 ceJeey staJks I 1 '·. 4 ounces green onions or caMed small , ions. I 4 small zucchini squas'h / 4 ounces cooked baby carrots .. I . 1h green pepper • · 1 tomato 1~-Salt and pepper I .. 4 Dehydrated parsley, thyme ~· Cabbage will also stay crisp in a cooler and I fan be mixed with canned meats or fish for out· ·the-ordinary skillet menus. Reserved cabbage re can be chopped up into a tangy coleslaw us· g a vinegar and oll dressing, celery salt and anned. crushed pineapple. CAMPERS' STUFFED CABBAGE 3cups water 1 ·packet chicken broth mix or 1 chicken lion cube 12 large cabbage leaves 12 ounces dralned canned Luna fish, flaked 1 leaspoon curry powder ·~ teaspoon paprika • :i cup yellow mustard 1 cup tomato juice Combine water and chicken broth mix; br· g to a boll. Blanch cabbage leavei1 <2 or 3 al a me> in bolling water ror 2 minutes or until er but still crisp. Drain. • Combine tuna fish. curry powder, paprika d mustard; mix well . Spoon 2 level tables~ s or tuna mix ture onto the center of cabbage aves. Roll. Place In saucepan. Slowly J>OUr tomato juice · ver rolled leaves in dish. Cook over low fire (Qr O minutes or until heated throughout. Makes 2 rving1. .. FRoM Fash ion Island N ewP.o rt Beach ./ J Five easy st~ps for saving UP$ and getting cash. • 4 • .. tLook for this UP$MARK~on ~ hundreds of .... fm-niliar products. It means • an CJP$--sym1x>J -1s-on or in the package-r-!!!! . .._. .... ~ . -Im - r:--;~\~~;:-:-::--------------m·------·-: I ' ' I I,. I l I 1 : 1~ a I ·1i111 i I 12345 '67890 2 HOll 1 ~. -. 't .... " ~ W'. t L~----------------------------·-------~ 2. Cul out the UP$ symbol . carefully. ... ~ , .. ' • """!"'. .. •· • '\ a --3. SaveuP$ symbols until you have 50 or more. 0 5.Cash Ina few days your UP$ check will be on . Its way. 4. Mail UP$ symbols in this postpaid cash back envelope. I You get it FREE at the L'eggs Boutique where you shop.~~J ~11 ~ "-'°symbols ~ ..... '"' ~pllon.. JO< -••at •nd twoodfln!l dlorOll ..... be deduQlld '"'"' ~chcd<. Be a smart shopper. ~ Save CIP$ and get cash. The UP$, UP$MARK and ft\ATCH-OP$ words and symbols and the words UNIVERSAL PRODUCT DOLLARS are setvi<:e merks used by Unlve1S41 Produd Dollars, Inc. In the operation of Its cash-refund progr•m. oOnlvcrsal Product Dollars, Inc. 1976. STEREO SOUNDS OF THE HARBOR -. -· __ J ~1 l t FROZEN FOOD BUYS CORN or PEAS -t. '<li:li»• SColdt Trut s .. q ... _ ~~.-~ 10-ol. s1 • • 1·~·;·1-t Pkgs. ORANGE JUICE Scoldt Trot Concentr1te . •s1 s~~ eBel-air Cauliflower ~: 69' Peas And Carrots a.1-• ~31 c . ~Sliced Carrots aei-an 2~'f· 39c e French Fries Btl·alr 2 ~0 59c e Bel-air Lima B eans ~: 59c e Bel-air Cream Pies 1~~ 49c Liquor an d J¥i ne Buys.1 Prices Elfecllve 1n L~nseo Safewaya ~!!! c':. J:!~~ .... ~299 ~!~:.r~!!.~~~~~411 0 p ' w· Mon.IS!tfy $149 • rem1um me Vineyard F•fUI Liebfraumilch..!:!.m t.uo~ s339 La Mesa Vermouth f•flh ggc e ORANGE BAR '~":ot1-1an 59c a BEL-AIR DINNERS (AnExcept 211-oz.$100 H1111) Plcg. . Fresh Bakery Buys! Fresh Bread Large Size Full of Flavor! Ser~1ng Sugo~shon Ideal To Serve Atl Mode! for • lb 19¢ .•. ...... nch 15¢ CAKE MIX WHITE RICE Mn. WrlgM's Lay• lcotch Treat Long Grain '2"!1 !.99c Pkg. Regular, flavorful And Juicy. Topa , ......... C. x=d ·A" Cllllornlan Bl'lnd 8-8-lb. Avg. C U.S.D.A. $ Choice &Fldld ..f Loin. Ideal for Any54e ,..... . lb. ' FRESH PORK ~ IUTTSTEAKS Great for Rotisserie. lb. CATFISH SKINLESS STEAKS FRANKS Brolllng. lb. CORN DOGS FNlll WM $] 19 Stertlng 59" ' Y~ . Flavorful 12-oz. Y ,,.............. And JUICJ Pkg. , ...... ·$1a• ,.PwlllbMldlrll. .... uttte1oy11ue ggc Heat And Serve. lb. ~ lllft BUIRITOS I" ......... , ..... ,..._ 39c {,_.~'::7SC) r THAK•YTO CIR•AT aA TING ••• us"'oA?BEEF ,CHOICE) AllUR•IYOU ••• TENDERNESS AND FLAVOR - W• OUARANT•• ITI Ot n't 11 Confuse• l y Fi ney ....._SI Wiien You Wllll S'lfew1y'1 fl1t11t Ou1llly leef ... l uy USDA CMicl leef i nd It AsswlCI of htislactlon • Variety Depart ment fresh Brisket $119 ............. ,.,Clll ................... 111. flank Steaks $209 m&Cllllll ..................................... .111. Premium Ground Beef $119 •• , .... ,, ............................................. 111. Sliced Beef Liver &go froz• Alld llefnlstld ................................ 111. ?s: .. ~!.!!!!~ .................. 111. 79c Chuck Short Ribs 99c USDA Clloice lllf ..................................... Ill. Pork Country Ribs $139 Ff1tll '°" l otll ......................................... Ill. Pork Sirloin Chops S 139 Frttll ron Loin. ........................................ 111. Pre-Cooked Fishstick~gc c.,111n·s Choice ............................. t ·oz. r11;:-I Sliced Bologna s 109 Satew1y.Metl or leef ............................ 1-111. rkg. ~!~~~~~~~.~~.~~,~~.~ .. s 119 U.S.D.A. Choice Grldeleel Blade Cut for Outdoor Barbecuing. lb. c I ~,!~!!. .. ~~~20.'!a. 79c tOranges ·=-~--= I Pineapple ~:"~= "~~ 39C large Size Julcl And Swee. Ideal For TV Snacks or Fruit Sat• COlllllinations. ,,.. , OSTON FERNS ~,'!!-~•rs o ...... LftltrMlll"""' , ........ ,... 99. , 1 $349 SUPERSOIL e Vitamins =~:r $138 Slftway Multiple ••• Bottle of 250 e Vitamin E ~~ti ~1~ s199 ~Motor Oil S::f 0ia1 38c /11 Our Dairy Case! · ~!!!~,~.!~! .. 1--.ca 77° ~.:!:!1~ .. 3 ~·100 . . . . '= .. . ,..:.. 81:11~1 FREE 5"x7" SIZE . COLOR ENLARGEMENT WMll bell loll Of Color Print Fla You "'" Processed 1t S1tow1y Yoa'll 11.-0 l Certlficabl Good hr Ole S"•r Colar Ent ....... SSpaJ111etti Towa-. 2 :. &!JC tApncots ~-== ,~sgc tFruit Cocktail= 4 ·~.:·tJ Peanut Butter =. ~$1sa I Ripe Olives t!:'.:!=a t.:-39~ IHt ._,.w. Dr~.....,.,. IMdl • •J6 Me. C..t ......,, MifiM IHdl • 211L1711 Sl. C.... MtM e Raisin Bran s.C!::'. ~89' eSalad Dressing :de m, 77c esuced Pears = ·t~39' Mayonnaise Nu·M~dr, T."' 79c M .-...... 1ns.,_.,11,1m. . WE WELCOME U.S.D.A. FOOD STAMP SHOPPERS AT SAFEWAY! ·•1 •c:..i..•• s-e ..... ,.._ .. .,......__ tW';4• 1e«11 ·1u11 e..rll ... w .... '"'-•J4 ........ .., ,..., ,... a..,-. s.t. .... ,,._., .. a..,, .. ~, .. •J161 S..Mtw,s.tt ~ • I Orange. Green? Wbtn tl comes hme to pack the car. camper or boat !or • familY ad\•en- tu re. fresh, h ardy- akinn ed fruit:. like oranges are easy, tro uble-fr ee pack- alongs. Some or anges a re aran&e when they 're ripe -but it ain't nccessanly so. Informed s hoppers can let you in on the fncl that orange:. may be tinged with gr.een. or even more green than t h at. and s till be lusciously ripe and de· veloped In flavor. According to the Unit· ed Fresh Fruit and Veget able Association, "greenin~" is a lit· tle tric k that nuture plays in citrus orchards. The fruit grows and de velops on the tree in a perfectly normal "'ay, and mjlY require a lllUe more time to r each full maturity and 0 avor. That's when the runny things may begin to hap- pen, particularly with Valencia t ype oranges. the kind that. are around in spring a nd summer. VaJenc\a oranges begjn to turn golden in the. winter mo nths. long before thf'y :ir e ripe. They may look ripe but uctualJy 1t takes months oC tree ripe ning bl!fore these oranees are ready t.o pick. As the warm ~ummer days begin. the orani;:t-· co l ore d oranges sometimes begin to turn E?Teen again. dt>ceh in~ ~usto01ers Into thinking the fruit uoript>. But these oranges are fully· ripe, ready to pick and bring to market Why does re-greeninJ? happen? There are se\eral reasons. Basical· ly. the re-greening is the r es urg en('e of chlorophyll in the fruit peel. This may be due to wa r m w eat her , particular ly warm nights. to hi gh r ainfall. to high nutrient le\ els. 1>r to any other condition tending toward 'igorous growth which can cause chlorophyll to persist or reappear. Be a knowing s hopper. <Don't be gr een about greening. 1 Green· unaed oranges are r ipe and ready to eul. Exterior col or has nothing lo do with ripe· ness. so e\•er\ though they look ripe. 1t u1kes months of tree ripening before these oranges d evl'IOp the proper su1ur content to be ready to pick. As the fruit hangs on the tree during warm weathe r . a botanical dilemma occurs. The orange-colored oranges bE'gin t o turn green again. Experts. who call the phe n omeno n "regreening," blame 1t on warm ground tem· pcraltif eS return1n~ (•hlorophytl I the green pigment found in plant cells 1 to the skins . Look inside a nd ) otl'll discover that you can't judge an or ange by Its orange. Some people may \\onder. If il 's possible to camouflage rE'greened oranges by adding extra color. California and Arizona laws prohibit ad dition of color dyes to the skins of citrus fruits. f Apple Bread Hot The year 'r o und availabilit y of apples m a kes this bread an easy addition to family -meals. Try toast ing thin slices under the broiler. and sen •e them buttered with honey or rresencs on the side. APPLEBREAO 1,. cup shortening ~cup sugar 2 eggs, well beaten 2 cups sifted flour 1 teaspoon baking powder l teaspoon b;.iking soda t teaspoon salt 2 cups coarsely grat· cd raw a ppl es 1 tablespoon grated lemon peel 2~ c up c h opped walnuts Cream shortcn inl{ and sugar until light and nur. fy: beat in eggs. Mix and s ift fl o u r. bu k i n ~ powder. bakmg soda and salt; a dd :.lltcrnatcly .. with the grated apple to Apple Bread 1s an easy add1t1on egg mixture. to any meal because of th~ Stir in lt>mon prl'I and , . . . walnuts <batter will tx-year round ava1/ab1/1ty stifrl . Bakl.' In grc~ecl of apples. It's and nour~d 9·bY·S·mch . gta.~s-ceram1c loaf pan especially good when at 350 degrees F rl?r 50·60 toasted and served Ford Favorites: Elk and Trout By TOM HOGti AP New\te•twt•• Wrltt# Wh en President Ford m•1kes his nnnu:al pil- Artm age to Vall. Colo .. be not only spends a lot of time on the ski slopes but also goes in for :.omc pre· tty fancy gourm<'t ml'als in this region oeslled 111 the Rocky Mountains. VaU ts 1>ne of the mzy.;;t cosmopol'ltan towns 111 the American West. boasting more than 70 diffe r ent restaurants and nightclubs and the President has apparent- ly (aken a broad sampl· lng of the local cuisine V:ul restaurants go in heavily for game dishes. :.uch as roast elk, fllet of antelope and venison stroganorr. One of the President's favorites. we are told. is elk; especially elk steaks more than an inch thick that h ave been well marinated in a mixture of red wine, soy saucc and olive oil, then grilled over hot coals after be· ing sprinkled with salt, pepper and garlic. Last winter. the 1'~ords decided t o h ave something d1fforcnt and the chef at one of hi s favorite inns sl'r ved a slab of frC'sh \'t>al liv<'r that had been simmel'ed tn butter But the Chi ef Ex- ecutive's chief delight 1s fresh fish ; pa rticularly R(){'ky Mountain trout llere 1s the r ecipe for fresh trout umandine, which is one or l"ord's vacation fa\lorllcs. 2 10-ounce whole fresh t rout. cleaned and dressed ,, cupOour 4 tablespoons butter l c up s li ced. blanched almonds 1 le mon sliced 2 sprigs parsley Dust trout in flour and pan Cry in 2 tablespoons of butter till golden brown. about S minutes for each side. In separate pan. melt remainder of butter and add a l monds. Pou r almonds and melted but· ter over trout. G amish with lemon s lices and parsley. Ser ves 2. ~·~~f.s. Do not slice un· with honey or preserves _:..:.:.:::~.:.___..,:___:_~~~~~~~~~- Pretzels Satisfy Th<>sc• fi her fortlficcl pretlel tn•<its keep well for day~ in in11ulall'd con· tu1nl·ri-Great llll·lhe· 1oad . path n r sea munchies. espl'cioll~ good ''1t h a d1el'M'Y spre:id. SAL.TY BRAN TWISTS 1 !'UP "he.it IJnlll CCI ('OI 11 cup "nler l packai.:e :.ictl\I.' dry )C'ast t 1eas1>0on sugar I h'aspoon sail •, 1·1111 n111ri;tarhu· or hutt<'r. ml'lll'd 2\. lo i:' I <'lljl!> Ull'llfl l'<I all purpnst• llnur 1 l'fU.!. slif?hlly hcuh·n J tublespoont' l'ourst• sail In laqw b(lwl l'nmhin1• whNtt bran rt'renl om1 • • <·111l wntcr : let stanil I or 2 minutcs. until rmist ,1r w at c r is u b s orb t• <I. Spr ink le y<'a s t oVl.'r warm water and stir un· til dissolved. Add to bran ~ stir In ~u~ar, salt nnd margarine. Gr adually bl•ut in 2 cups nour : work m re maining flour. us\n~ hands if necessary. to make a stiff dou,:h Cov· ,.,. and refrigerate 2 to 24 hours. Break Into 16 pieces. roll each piece bel"ccn hands le a rope 16 inches long and n o more than 1 l Inch thick. Shape into pretzels b~· looping ends over center of rope. Plare on llghlly greased baking sheet. Brush with beaten egg; sprinkle with coarse s alt. Let rise in warm pince 30 lo 45 minutes. just unlit almost doubled In bulk. Bake in 400 degree f'. oven 15 m inutes, or until golde n brown. Ser ve warm or al room tem· perature. Makes 16 tJ.els. SEAFOOD SPECIALS ·u RtESH RED SNAPPER FILLET URGE EASTERN SCALLOPS HOIJRS. MONDAY THAU FRI. 11:30-1:00 CLOSED SAT. & SUN. The FISH MARKET Jim _, S..ty c-.- 145 E. BROADWAY, COSTA MESA 64S.522J MA'*'INGIHf $1'' ............ .., FLANK U.S.O.A. ST!AK \O•fl tHt.°' TOP SIRLOIN ,.AUil rtlCI Hiit•~ LUM 59L~. GROUND .... ., .. ·-BEEF C:.Ollp-,., ............... .-.,,... USDA C I SIDE OF BEEF Plus Exira Roast & Steak Sec Ave Wt 350• to C50• MAMHIMG lllP u.~.o.A. FILET MIGNON STEAKS or ROASTS TRI TIP IOAST M9LOWt ......... , ~UA .. ST 6ROUHD IOUMD SJ~ 77.:. ..._....... ,~ .. s1,.. Fl[ET MIGNON 11 ~~=-A--:: 9ANKAMERICAR0 • MASTER CHARGE RANDY'S BUTCHER SHOP 270 E. 17th St. Cotta Me .. Wednesday August 4 1976 DAILY PILOl CI :J Smoked Thuringer Welcome Change Th· family h3 be~n h1kln~. bikini{ or boating all day and 1s slarvl'd - n~hl now! You can tni~ up this qu i c k , w hol <'som<' Natural Cns1ng Smoked Thurinj!er und stuffing m • I und dush 1t <into the in l ess than IS m1m•tes . Thl' scr\'10.:s are t;C"nC'n us: the taste n welcome •hangc from th~ USUttl C mpint( fare, CAMPER'S STYLE S~10Kt::OTllURINGER 2 6-ouncl' packages chicken flavor stulftni:t mix t jar frl'C7c-dricd mushroom sl1ccs •,. .. cup butter or margarine 2 apples. peeled. sliced ' t pound natural cas· 1ng smoked 1hurinRC'r, shced Waler Mix ve~ctablt•/sea.'\On· in g packet and mushroom s l1 ccs. Adel water and butter al·cord ing to package direc-- tions . Heal to boiling in skillet ove r fire or campstove. R educe heat. Cover and simmer 6 mlnutes. Sir in s\uffing crumbs. apples and smoked lhur· 1nger. Rem on• from heat. cover. and let st anti 5 {Tli nutes. Stir befon· servln~. Makes 4 to 6 servin~s. Note: An y natural cas· in ~ cooked smokcd suusag~ t hat requ1n·~ minimul l'l'l'rigcratwn may be substituted for lhe sm oked thuringt>r . Any saususc should bt• kept in lhc cooler unUI ready to use •EW CROP IAUUJT Ill &RAPES ~29~ MAIKHIASICH ..... ~··SUGAR , ~97* lllUCllSf "' GREEN BEANS ~>G18* , ... PEARS ~.18* MaKlf USlllf ORANIE JUICE ,.., ... _ .... ,. ~19~ .. -••YUt , .......... . l ·1 · 1 'I ~ f:J.f D41LYPILOT BOOMER JUMILEWEEDS TANK McNAMARA I \Yedne9d1y.August4. 1976 ••• WHEN ONCe N:tA/N 'ltJU'LL 9E 61VENiHE OPF'Oltrt.INl1V10 t()NOR VOURS 1JWL.'(: 1HA1SOL.IC11005 r--....._-FAl'HeR FIGURe1 IN W>OSE HU\1!'U: «PtDIANCE 'ft>LJ AW.. MSK! by Tom K. Ryan by Jeff Millar & Bill Hinds BUT IT~ ~7 RIGJff ro %LL ro rnr; 1-H&~E~T Bl~R I AN~ ~6~~ NOTHING IN Tit& e.\%atlLl RUl..E? .•. ... THAT ~Y$ IT l;jA? TO 6EANOM~ ~5E6'U..L. "TEAM ... t NANCY by &nie Bushmiler NA CY··· WHERE 15 MY l='OUNTAIN -PEN? WELL, BOTH o:: YOU LOOK UNTIL VOU !='IND IT ... SEARCH EVERY NOOK AND CRANNY UNTIL 'r'OU DO TODAY'S CIDSSIDID PUZZLE PEANUTS UNITED Feature Syndicate tue1<11v 1Puu1e so1veo ACROSS 40 Low resoll N C 4 t Femele deer 1 a I 42 Hau1eo !>Etonino in 43Sehotd Roma 44 Carry away 9 3rd century Slarig (ng sainl 4 S Family 14 As straight member l I l I II ~ D lrC -liTDI••·-r C N ( 1 1·~ A I t lUlllll ~ M E'1~ • 46 C1ar111et1st 1 ~ vunoeh•t • l M 1 IAI l Al-... H l l 11 I ( I! I l Ill 11 II I 11 M £ I 1 ~ LET'S SPLIT UP--- YOU TAKE THE NOOKS AND I'LL TAKE TME CRANNIES CAN'T "(OU GET IT nlR006H ~HEAD nlAT MARCIE 00£5N'T !AWIT ANl(THIN610 00 WITH c«>u? • •• Act>orts Fountain t6 E ~cite to 45 Sprt11klod dllger 52 New JUDGE PARKER OJ HJ ~ f I •• r II l 0 y'( 11 I l A \ ~A 1 t HI£ 1 7 ot lhe Br11nsw1ci.. WOOdS city 'i'(l"'J1 8 I l I t ~~~~ ][j ~ ~ l l I ! L!:~l.!l! 18 V~ttcJn City 58 Eur.t site 57 Forward 8 Herr1110 34 1120 ot a 19 Letters movomrnl 9 Soo•ts pound 2 .i'O Grow Old 58 Valiey w11ters wOfdS 11 Alberta city 59 Attempt m1heu' JS Smile 2 WOid' bO Coiruot•nQ 10 Is dcp11vcd Jo Ghstene<I 1J Rtgarow1lh condition of J8 G3U!IY d1sdarn 61 Devotion II Carly Ca" 42Clea•od .'5 Gr.i1e on the t,:i Nuisance ll•l'r ,• 44 Gu~~'' nl'fVO AJ Hoooed UP WOid~ vehicle 16 Ottaw.1 s t>ever agn t 2 Cru1•tr10 I 5 Pelts with prO\I 84 Enrly Utah tJ Plac. °' rocks .' 1 Garmentt inh1b1t1111ts Sheller 4 7 TOOi tnlormdl 65 Son ol Hera 2 I Aromahc 48 AclOI • 19 Ce111mon1.lt rant COCllran vow} DOWN ~~ c:!:~re 49 •••• BMlff' WOlu!> I Coldd11h Zod J2 Rt'l)iltr ()l :> PrOY\lrl> 21 Grade 111c tlgn · wttar 3 Fmds 28 Bark. t g 50 Etloee J5 Clnnio teoth pleaunl 30 Innocence !> 1 Obl1ga1tons togclher 4 Ploce aymbOI !>2 l:lolch .l6 Rotnrd 1i1ckcr 9 31 Wu 53 Govern 17 C:oddl'S8 of d<lv1c\' indebtC'd 54 Ice house discord ~Most pi)1ntut J'1 R~,volvt•on· 55 Man 16 Otrd 6 Wear ew11y 3 es 59 Resort I\) L11111<1 w11h 1 Orooelll'S 33 No Amef elloit Indian center MISS PEACH i fr ~J. ~ ... ~ DOOLEY'S WORLD MOON MULLINS ANIMAL CRACKERS ,v~f§i, ., by Rodger Bradfield! ,...,....-:r--~:::::! I C't\40N, ~I!! ! t'n9 T~I! ~U. ! ~1'~1 C'MOM ~ by Rodger Bolen ~-e~u. w~ LOW ~~D OOTSIQe! ·: PLOP! '--------"------~ikl 9·4 by Chcrtes M. Set.ft ---------.,~ WHAP HIM WITH A WAFFLE,SIRM.HE'5 8€1N6 SA~CASTIC A6AIN ! by Herold Le Doux by Mell TWrr GOOY FEMALE 7 IN A COHSPIAACY INYOt.YING A MUFlOER? NEVER! \, "What I love about ~hcrry is whenever you think \Omethinc you want is beyond your budact it always convinces you ii isn'1." DENNIS THE MENACE I r WedneSdoy August 4 1976 DAILYPILOr Cf :i l11 com bmed: thorou.~h.ly By CECILY BROWN TONE At~••••• l'ffO '-H4 «tlW thetable " Teacake Recipe About 20 ye11rs ago I mt't L1 bb) Sm ilh. a >O un g w o man from Marblehead. Mass .. who ~a\'e cooking classes and had written a book. Marblehead. hod a re· putaUon as a fine cook. When l asked her name, I disco\'ered that Libby Smith "as now Libby Alsberg and that she and h er husbaod George publish a tood-letter that includes recipes und notes on wino. \\'hen I tried l.1bh\ ·:-. recipe for Zucchini 'Teacake (made with low-r bolesterol peanut oil 1 from "The E\er')·day Gourmet." l found it JUSt as wonderfull t1oocl in its way as ht'r long a~o fish row cho\\der. l kn":-. m~ adaptation of the re- c1pl' Just As Good A friend of hers gavl' ;.1 pJrt~ for her in Ne\\ York and l ''as in\ited Our paths nc' er crossed ui:iain. but l sometimes lhought of her becaw;e she had cooked the main <llsh served a t the party ll 's called ··The E\'er')·· du~ Gourmet .. and It jtOes t o subscriber s every two wc~k s the year a round except dur · ing Juty. The AlsbeTgs describe their publica· t1 on as "he1ng devoted to eating JO~ ou s t ) and econom1cally uncl \Jl the saml' timt.> pr est'h·ini: our herita~l' or tlnl' toc..11ts and their prl'parat mn tor ZUCCHINI TEACAKt: !Jl 2 cups flour, stir to aerate berorc measuring ·'• tea poon balung powder Race Day Fare Duty Means Organization Feeding a crew on a 1>a1linl! race 1s the ul· timate challenge for a j:alle~ chef. I le must avoid excess weil!hl. but meet the neetb of the hungr~ crew. as well. Storage Space; Re1wrdless of boat size. there is very little room allottl'd lo lht• galley. The key here is to keep supplies lo a minimum. CookinJ? utensils should include a larsce fryinJt pan. saucepan. teaketUc and mixini: 'sen ·in1: bowl KHcl'len tools are compnst•d of a spatula. forlc. two knives and l\\O mixing serving '>poons . One-pol stt•ws m nkc e;JS) main cli1>hes to sen c bunj:lr)' crews. n errisceration: Plan lo haH' two 11.'l' t·hes ts. One 1>acked with dry kc and pre frolcn foods, marked and packed in rcvl'rsc 01 dcr of use. This "ay the chest needs to be opened onJy once in the morning for each day's pro\ isions. The th a\\ ing packs can then be tr:msll•rn •d to a second chesl holding canned beH~rnges. This t•hest may then be opened throughout the clay. Before pnckin~ the foods. do as much prC'· par alion as possible. Ht•memht•r tha t there's limited work space. Slice \'Cgetahlcs for sauteing and p ack ''1th butter in foil and rt'friS(erate. You're then ready to cook the entire package al once. Fish or mC':•l chunks can be pre-cut and refri!leratl'd. too. Dry Goods: Assume that l''·crythinJ.! in the galley mily get wet With lhis in mind pack all dry ~oods in plasuc. like the rolls for Meatball .Roals. You can lht'n IX' assured that there will he• dry rolls to hollow out and form the meatballs. M EATBALt ROATS 4 long hard rolls 1 can Tomato Soup 1 pou ncl ground be(•f l <'gg. slighUy tx>atcn . I .. 2 teaspoons instant minced onion 1 -i teaspoon s alt 1 cup water t tablespoon vi negar 1 ~ teaspoon hot pepper saucl' Gr ated c tieddarchecsc Cut thin 111icc from tops or rolls. 110110,, out leaving 12-inch thick shell. reiwn ing bread Crumble reserved bread Into sort bread crumbs to equal about 11, rups. In bowl. mix thoroughly 1 1 cur) soup. beef. CitJl. reser"ed bread l'rumbs. onion and sall Shape into 24 rirm meatball!;. In skillc•t. brown 1r1L•utlmlls. pour off fat. Ad<I re maining soup. waler. 'ineg:ll" t• nil hot µepper sauce. Cover; cook O\cr low lw:it 20 minutes or until done. Stir occ· .. s1onnlly. Spoon mixture into rollc;. Cornish with t'heese. l\I akes 4 sandwich<'s. about l cup suucc Tuna Budget Keepers' Pick Bored wit h the tired cheese ·n crackers hors d 'oeu vrc•s. (or your gut>sl.S? Canned tunu 111 vegetable oil Is a good food buy thnl won't lakt• 11 big bite o ut or your budget. High in protein. :md low in cnlorics, Tuna t oas t ba sed on the Chinese shrimp toast ap- pcllzf'r. will please tht' pa la t e o r d iscernin~ guests. Or. try Tuna Cheese Spread. which can be pre· ' pared in ad,·a nce. Simply : com bine tuna with · n e ufc h a tel and pot cheeses. o n io n . Worcesters hire. paprika and chopped par sley. and chill. Set out the s pread with a tray of r aw ''egetables or th in crackers. TUNA TOAST 2 cans tuna In vegeta· bleoil 2eggwbites h teaspoon ginger V.. teaspoon salt 2 teaspoons sherry or vermouth 1 tabl espoon cor- nstarch I tabl<'spoon lemon Jllicc 12 slircs very thin whit<.' bread Ripe oli\'c5 1011· tlonal 1 Put tuna. <'IU! whiles. ginger . salt, s he.rry, cor· nstarch a nd lem on juice in container of electrit.' blender. Cover and pro- cess at low i;peed until s mooth. Trim crus ts from bread. Spread tuna mix· lure on bread: cut bread in half diagonally. Cover each with about 1 tables- poon of Pu CCy Topping. Place on baking sheet and broil for 2 to s minutes or until topping puffs and becomes golden. Se r\'e warm, garnished with s liced olives. if desired. Makes 24hors d'oeunes. PUFFY TOPPING Jn small bowl mix ti!z cup mayonnaise. 12 leas- pocm onion salt. and "2 te·aspoon paprika. Beat 2 CJI whiles until stiCC: fold m mayonnaise mixture. \ a fabulously good r1sh cho" der. the best I had l'' er tasterl. Recentb a nci.:hbor of mine told m(.' that her \Isler in law" ho Ii' C'd in BOYS LOVE GIRLS EFFECTIVE THI.IRS .• AUG. 51h tlv-u WEO .. AUG. 11th. 1976 SOftltY. NO SALES TO DEALERS FlfSH CRISP l 1 l tcn~oons baking !'Oclll l ' ~teaspoons salt I teaspoon dnnumon 2 t•ups su~ar 1 cup peanut 011 HOUSE PLANTS POPIJLAl VAAEES . ~,, 99c POT IA. . ~· •1" ---------PRIZE DOG FOOD 260L 4~$1 CAN I l.AUU S<UOOU ' . POTATO CHIPS ~~ 79c B OZ. CAlllAOOll SUI ltO"\ l'Ulf COFFEEMAn OLIVE OI. ~~~ ~ . ~A0~~v s) 29. GAL. s~99 ~ r.====~I , ., j 0 1m 1: 1= oscu MAnt suao JOHNSONS 89c u~o~~zr MUT OI '"' BRICK QIU 118 BOLOGNA Rmt-SPUDS -37 c SLICED BEEF 1 ., oL 99c HASH aaowNs 12oz s oz. 7 5c PtCG. FlSHOMAWS WHARF 69c P'l:G SALAD OltSSING · .•. ' · -----1 OWUOUl tOUl um . .. Ol' VllGlNIA HAM aAUSSOt -.. •• . 99' BEEF FRANKS KOSHO PKKUS 37 oz 3-ll s619 CARNATION. ;-;'". ,, 65( 1101 79c c»i con AGE O&SE .,,, FKc. 1 ll1m Qllt1I WESSON OI. INYCATfOOD ~3 :s1 GAL' s41• (()HT, ( t ... . i , • m H!H NOW: ~VENllAiCnJl'EDISll COFFEE CAKE .................... t "" CLA N MacGREGOR SCOTCH ..... - Tl()ll!(Al 16 OZ ITl sviu;49c PURINA CAT FOOD ~~~ 1 tesspoon 'nnilla 4 IJrge es.:i:s 2 c u p s ~ r a t l' d 1mrd1um·fine1 w cd11n1, not pared or packed do\\n I c u p c h o p p t• d c medium -fin(' 1 w:1lnuts ' 1 cup dried currunt:.. rinsed nnd druined Grea!lt.> six < eat'll 5 l~ by 41 • h) 21 , lncht" I ot t\\O ll'UC'h 8l, by 41;,i by 21: lncht.>s 1 lour puns. or ust.• 3 of thl' small pun.'! and l of the I ar .:" one On wa!\ purer i;tir together the Cl our. bttk · 1ng powder. buk1ng sodu. salt and rinnnmon In a lu.ri;;c ml"tnA bowl b\•nt to~eUler the sugar. Pt'Unut oil and 'anilla un- bt•at in tht· e~.:i. ont> ut .1 t1ml· Stir In the flour ml\ ture in st>vcrul ulldllion .. alternately with thl· rnr ctun1. Stir in the wulnlll>- u .. d currants. Turn Into the• prepared pan" ttw~ will be about 1 ~full H;.1kt• in u 1lrt'lll':tlt•1I 350·dei:rte O\ l'll until ,, cukt• tester tn1>t•rtl'<l 111 t he renter ('(Hiil's 11111 clean •IS mmuk.'i for smull IOB\ e11. 55 to a 1 mmull's for lurt:..-lua\''" ( Loa\'OS will l'rtH'k \Ill tOJ) I Loo. t'll t•d ltt'S and turn out on win· rud.s. turn right s1dt• up. l'Ool c·omplelely. MEAT 'D~ SElf .BASTING GlADE 'A' YOUNG TURKEY fROZfN •OASl 04t • .-.. 8-Q Mt-I. WT SY, 1.6 s3'.,.• sucro BHF LIVER 59~ MEPOllC CLUB LINKS COOK~ $1 ~~ FIOZDI JeV ZIAlAND lAM8 ' SOGillWlll 49 SUGAR ~~\-C EPLACEMEHT ------------1 (lll(WI Of IHE ~ TUNA ~~~y le . 1· I Cl• OAILYPILOT I l ( ~ t I. { I t ' ! I t , . . • . ' I . i . . . . . I- I • -Pretty as a picture is a plum compote, featurin g fresh, cooked plums and cream. Fresh Treats Plums Ripe, Ready ta-Eat Take adv ant.age or sweet, colorful plums, now available in the markets by the bushel lugfull. Plums lake well to easy desserts and salads. crunchy cookie bars and popovers. Whc-n buyi ng fresh California plums choose them firm and well colored. f)'esh plums that yield to gentle palm pressure and have a tip end that is slightly soft are ripe. Unripened plums will mature if left at room tem- perature for a few days, but watch carefully. Plums turn over·ripe very fast ; refrigerate ripe plums immediately to keep fresh for about 3 to 5 days. lf fresh California plums accidenlly become over·ripe, you can rescue them. They make delicious purees for milkshakes. ice cream, blender drinks, toppings and sauces. Simply puree over·ripe plums in the blender until smooth; add sugar to taste. Vary the flavor with accents of a favorite spice. or grated citrus peel. Refrigerate until serving time or freeze for longer storage. Stir into softened vanilla ice cream; serve with hot cakes, waffles, or popovers j or spoon over Instant puddings, or pound. chiffon or angel food cake. For all your plum recipes, figure 6 medium plums to a pound, 21 ~ cups sliced plums or 2 <.'ups of dJced or pureed plums. Try fresh California plums in this simple dessert: For each 2 cups of plum slices, sprinkle with 11• to th cup sugar Camount depends on tartness of plum) and add 2 tables- poons kirsch or orange.fl avored liqueur, a whiff of cin· namon. allspice or mace. Chill well. Serve in bowls with heavy cream to pour over. Or, spoon the fruit jlld juice over pound cake, shortcake or ice <.'ream. -Slice fresh Calirornia plums over a spice-flavored cake baller ; sprinkle with cinnamon-sugar and bake as directed. Arter baking, let the cake cool sUghlly; cut into squares and serve warm with whipped cream. -Toss fresh California plum slices with coconut and a little finely chopped preserved ginger. Serve with custard or pudding or over scO()pS or vanilla ice cream. -Poach fresh Caifomia plum slices in orange juice for several minutes until just son and tender; chill. At serving time. layer s<.'oops or sherbet or ice cream with the poached plums. Or. spoon the poached plums into pretty dessert goblets and serve with sour cream or whipped cream cheese. PLUMS IN GOLDEN CREAM 1 cup sugar 1 cup water 2 pounds fresh California plums 2cups milk ~cup sugar 4 egg yolks, lightly beaten 1 teaspoon vanilla extract Combine sugar and water in a large saucepan: cook over medium he,at. stirring constantly, until suaar ls dis· solv~d plums: poach until just tender, abou ~minutes. Chill plums in syrup. In saucepan, heat milk with sugar. Pour b Uk over yolks in a s low stream, beating briskly. Re urn t o saucepan; continue cooking over low heat, s tirring con· s tanUy, unUI custard thickens and coals a metal spoon, about 7 to 10 minutes. Stir in vanilla; chill. To serve, drain plums; spoon into serving dishes. Serve with custard sauce. Makes 8 servings. <Reserved poaching liquid can be used as a syrup over pancakes, wames. French toast or mixed fresh fruit.) YORKSHlllE PLUM BAllS 2 <.'ups blscuJl mix 2 tablespoons sugar •<. cup milk · \f.t cup m elted butter Spicy Plum Filling (recipe follows) Combine all ingredients with Cork. Knead gently 8to10 times on noured board. Pal into greaaed 9-ln<.'b square cake pan, building up edges s.Ughtly. Spread Spicy Plum Filling over dough and bake In preheated 400-degrce over 2S to 30 minutes. Cool. Cut lnto bars and serve plain, or_ with whipped cream oT vanilla ice cream. SPICY PLUM FILUNG 3 c ups sliced fresh California plums (a6out 1~ pounds) tcupsugar V• teaspoon salt ~teaspoon cinna1n0n 2 tablespoons cornstarch V.. cup orange juice 2 tablespoons butter or margarine In saucepan, combine plums, sugar, sail and cinnamt>n. Let stand 10 minutes until juices flow. Add cornstarch to oran1ejulce; blendintoplum mixture . Cook over medium beat, stirring occuionall)', until thickened and clear. Add butter and food coloring. Cool aligbUy before spreading over dough. Makes 18 bars • PLUM CONSERVE 5 lbs. of Blue Anchor plums, quartered and pitted lcupofwater Slbs.of sugar ~lb. of raisins Grated rind andjuiceof2 largc oranges · To the quartered plums add the water and simmer 10 minutes, then add the sugar and raisins, and boil gently ZS minutes. Grate the orange rind and set asJde; squefte the Jule(! and add to the plums, simmer 10 minutes, then remove from the fire and stir in the grated orange rind. Put Into hot. sterlizer jars and seal while bot. ' Store Hours: 9 to 9 Daily -Sunday 9 to 8 . ""'"..._... ... Thurs., Au9. 5 fhru W~. Au9. I I ...... ~ .. SMc• -.. We ~ Acc.,. Food st.,., We Reser .. Tf. ....... To Ullllt Qtlelfttltles ._. RefllM S• To~ AMI Whoh.-..1. FRESHER PRODUCE -LOWER PRICES YOUR CHOICE FRESH IT AUAN YEUOW OR SUMMER SQUASH 29~ •. US HO. I FltESH LOCALLY GRWOM TOMATOES 25f •. -~ ..,. ;_.,.,-----SWEET VINE antaloUP8s ~INTO BEANS 29~ 19~. ' .. CRSIP GREEN CUCUMBERS IARM LARGE LOIN IARM CEHTERCUT Ill PORK CHOPS PORK CHOPS IARM EASTERN WHOLE PORK LOINS CUT FOi RllUI BARM BONED ROLLED HAM POU 01 IHF · IAAM CHORIZO I WEINERS PEPSI 100 LI. I.AG 11.75 1.59~ 1.29~. 2.29~ 1oc EA. BAR M FRESM FARMER STYLE PORK SPARERIBS 1.29~. 89~. HORMa 120%. BACON iiiiiliG"0 S•LA69c AWLE SAUCE I 6 0%. IOTILE 303 CAH sPR1HGF1ELD11G.orHOT 150%.39c KRAFT SAUCE 29 C CH Ill CON c•" TARTER CARNE 60LJil ----------------------------------~-----1to----------------------------...... ~~ ..... ~----1 SPRINGFIELD COFFEE 79c SPRINGFIELD. 39c CREAMER LIGHTER FLUID I t 6 OL JAR 9UART CAH SPRINGFIELD LAUNDRY DRERGEANI 49 0%. IOX DUMCAM HIMls-MEW SHACK CAKE MIX ( 13.S OL IOX ----=-.........---- OCC Sets Air Clinic Orange Coast College will be host to a flighl in· s truc tor c linic Aug . 24·26. sponsored by the Aircnfl Owne r s und Pilots A ssoci ation tAOPAJ. The clinic will run rrom 8 a .m . to 5 Jl.m. dal· ly In the OCC Forum. Ad· mission to the thrl>e-<.IOAy seminar is $35 and ro· gistratlon will be held at the door at 7 a.m. Aug. 24. The clinic is designed for flight instructors. night instructor apph · cants, gold seal a ppli· cants, g round instruc· tors. and hxcd base operators. PUBLIC Nc:n'ICE S•Ul'tt NOTtC:• TOCllllOITOllS SU!'llllOll COUllTOl<Ttte $TAT a O!' CAl.lll'OllHIA l<Oll T"ICOUNTYO!'OllANGll ....... ,, Est•le of DEWEY I!. llARNETT. .tl\O ~now" ., DEWEY ERNE!>T 8AllNETT,0UMWCI NOTICE IS HERESY C.IVEN lo frtrd1l0t\ twvu,,_t <t•ttn\ ..._Ml I"" wKI diK•diit"t to fil'l' u10 Cl .. n'flt tn t"" .,,,,,. °" u .. coe•i. 01 o .. .i ... w..o couri O' IOP'f'~t llWM IO IM ~~·I '"' olttce ot Pl.UIOl(ETT"' PLUIOl<l!T T, •ltor.,•vs "' ....... , °'"'' !'lie! "'"' """-STRUNG OUT ~ Just more strings to pull was the evaluation of Baird Bardarson's new lnternalional-14 dinghy as he and his crew prepared to la unch the craft at Alamitos Bay Yacht Club prior to the West Coast championship for the highly complicated develop· ment dingh y. Bardarson and crew a pparently didn't pull the rig ht strings as they placed third in the r egatta. ~~.:,~~ :.~~: .. :~;~""~~ l11ter11at io11al-I 4 Race wtlo<ll ••lier olfoo I\ ti.. 0111ee OI biroo ~\ OI IM l>ndt<t.o-d In all ""'"•" oorta1n4nq to ~~d ... t•to. Soc.t\ (l(\tm\ "'"" Uw ni£l<.•-twry ~OU<twr\ f"'N\t t>t-lil«S or Pf'ht'l\l¥d •\ 6f0te$.atO WtO\lrt to.Jr monti.s •fltr '"" '"u D<SOll<dtoc>n ol l ... \llOll<e Bay City Boats Score °"'''" , ..... 1 .. "" OR.ACE P.ARl(Ell ea .... , ... 011.,.w,11 o1 San Francisco sailors appeared to l'\.U-~";~':'~';;:::;c~,.. avt .brQllbt thei r own wea er with Lanan won two races. but a fifth in the third ~ !lnd a foortb in !he final long-distance race was his undoing. •u0t1wu..... them as they surviv~ the breezy con· ::!.:=:.:'h.11.C:.lllN ... •9™1 ditions orr Lo_ng Beach Ha~bor to .a-vterhecw1r1a place one-two an the lnternallonal-14 Third place went to a brother team of Doug and Al Harvey of the Royal Canadian Yacht Club, Toronto. Fourth was Dick Rose and Burke Thomas. and fifth was Baird Bardarson and Frank Wyler, both en· trants from Corinthian Yacht Club, Seattle. """''~o ~·"~ C0H • o..1v P11<11, West Coast cha mpionship r egatta '"'•11·•""...,' • 11• 11 m• m1-1• concluded Tuesday. PUBLIC NOTICE l'ICTITIOUS lllSINEU NAMISTATUHNT Tiie followl"Q per Ml'l• •re d0t119 l>u'l:I· neH.S! JR. M ISS CALIFORNIA UNIVeltSI", Sil Gr .... Acre Or. FU1 .. r1°"• CA 91•U .WU C.ltlor"'• u .. 1 ... rw. Inc .• • C•tltornl• Ckpot6hon, s11 c;.~ N.r• Or , FUllfflOfl, CA 9163S TMs tiu.IMU I\ COflOlo!Clto l>Y .t CO< -··-"•v•S"'"" Prf"\'°'91'1' Thi\ M•l•-nt we• fltH -...1h ,,_ Coc>nlY Cl•<-OC Of•n~ Co .. nty an July 1-. ,,,. FStlU Pu!>llS.,.d Or•n~ Conl Olllly Pltol. """'"""· 11, 11, H. ltl4 ~,. PUBLIC Nc:n'ICE l'ICTI TIOUS IUSINU S NAME \TAT!MENT 1 !te IOHOWI "Q l)e< >On 0\ dOtnQ -.... u, OAISV IV ASSOC IA TES l.TO 4110 8orch Sttl'('I, S"ot~ ICM, Nr.w9Dr1 1t.oc1>, C.l11or11.,., tfMO .JeNI KM.., .. ,, 1.., S.y-• T~r ••<•. eo.-oe• ,._,,,.,,.,..,...,,~~s 1111' ... \tMU I• C-IKl.0 by• hm.I f<l IMf'l"tt~lllO OA,SV IV ASSOCIATES, I.. TO. .io.,,.1<onwtw• c;.....,,., "•''"'" The event and the upcoming na. tional championship regatta for the class were hosted by Alamitos Bay Yacht Club. The winner of the championship with a consistent fi ve straight second place finishes was Steve Toschi of St. l''rancis Yacht Club with his cr ew Dave Klipfel. Runner.up was ;mother St. FYC team, Al an Laflin and Russ Taylor. The national -c hampionship regatta starts Thursday out of ABYC with a fi ve race series winding up Saturday. The North American title will be a"•arded to the best scorer In the com· bined West Coast and national cham· pionships. America's Cup Yachts Due in Congressional The 1977 Congressional Cup match racing series out of Long Beach may give West Coa.st yachting rans a first glimpse or two Ame ric a 's Cup challengers for 1977. General chairman terson of Sweden lo pro-bid for France Jn France ,·ide entries. ll, built for the 1974 B o th Fra n ce a nd trials. fh1• \ttJftrn .. nt w .. n ftl.cf Mff'I trw coo1n•vC•••1<01o••no-Covl'!tvonJ..iy Pete r Ke nt has an· Sweden wiU be compet· Selection of the Cal-40 ing in the America's Q.&p as the boat to be aaUed by trial s to selec t a the 10 Invited skippers challenger later in the was made on the baaia of year. Petters on is build· avaUabiJity of the class ing a new 12-meter yacht. coupled with the fact that for Sweden's challenge LBYCowns matehedsets and is using lhe old of jibs and spinnakers for Columbia. formerly the yacht.. There have owned by Pat Dougan of been only two years that 1Newport Beach, as a trial the Cal-40 was not used in hors e and training theCongressionaJCup. "· 1"• ,.,,uo nounced that the 13th an· Pub••v ... o oun~ °"''' o .. 1v P1101. nual Congressional C\.lp J1Mu.11.11.•no•"o""•.111• wlll be salted March ?m-tt. 13·20 in the venerable Cal-40 sloops. Kent said he also has ----------•received commitments l'ICTITIO~r.us111rss rrom Ba ro n Bich of PUBLIC NOTICE """"'•STATEMENT France and Pelle Pet· r11e 1.i1owl1111 IN''°"'••• <IOo"!l-1 neu•s f> I £ST A M-0 T E I. A l'f 0 vessel. · Latest reports are that Bich will make ~is third APAIU MENTS, O• South Coe\I HtQltway, l.•Oun<I &utl\, ~(lorn•• ~l• OAVIO ROSE 1!1 Al., 203q ~­ C"'''"' Avt • Lot Angtle\, C.Oltlornod Mark III Yachts -OE'~EG INC. A C.thlornl• tor· ooral1on, 010 Metro'o Av• .. I.OS ,.,,.,._'-Ct II I or,,,."°'' Tllh 1>11'"''"' Is cono1><l~ l>Y • Ot"f<.i N•t~Hhlp OAVtDllOS£ Tft•t \t•••rrwnt ••U t•HiO .,.,,, ttw c-IJ Gl•rk .. o ....... c ...... y ..... ,_ 1•. IU• l<S1tft l'llbl"Ncl 0<11 ..... Go;t\I OMIY Pllo1, J..ty11,H ,•"dAuQ •. 11, 1•1• ' JOIS If To Clash Friday Sailing yachts r ated under the International Of· rshore Ruic Mark lll will start corn petition Friday for the International Offshore Rule Yacht Racing Association championship. The regatta will be host· ed by Los Angeles-\'achl Oub. ----------1 The IORVRA is anorfshootofthe Ocean Racing PUBLIC NOTICE Fleet of Souther.11 California du ran g the controversy -----------•over Lhe rating rules earlier this year. The·associa· -~c::.'~~~!:::_1:::s lion was formed by owners and skippers of yachts ,.,. 10110 .. 1.,u P~''°'" •r• "°'"<> designed to the IOR who we re opposed to the pro-M'':';~~e coMPANV', m 1 E' P<>!'ed amendments to the rule by the ORF which °'.,.'"°'.,."•• .ri .. 11 .. 1on.CA'7Llt created the IOR /ORF which would give a rating ad· S.t.-<ut• ol C•1110'"'"'· '"' • .. vanta"e to older boats in orfshor e r acinn. c.t11or.,,acoroorelloft, U1JMotor A¥t> " tt '-M~:.'·2:,::::"•"· nu M>tor The IORYRA championship will be composed """ ,1m,.,,.. .. ,,c.t00~ or yachts which competed under the IOR Mark Ill "'" .,.,,Ith, '' <•"•1K•ec1 o, • rule in such season-long series as the Ahmanson, -··:~~~;~~'c,1110,~,.,1"' Whitney, 66. Pacific Ocean Racing Conrerence, c;..,.,.,,,..,.,,,.., Moc Cameron J ones. Rumsey, Catalina Island. :,-:::.;.~~ Onrton, Santa Barbara, Marina del Hey to San Th" .1 .. •n1•111 w•' rnt'd wi111 ,.,. Diego and olher orrshore races. C-IY CJt <lt. Of et~ Gou1111 on J-4• ,1, ltl .. ,.,., .. Plll>lltNCI Or-C"'' Q.&lty Pilot, Cal,.29 Cup Captured By Serena Serena. skippered by Phil Doane. Newport Harbor Yacht Club, was the winner of the Cal-29 national championship held last weekend off Sa nta Barbara Yacht Club. Runncr·up wa s Draron Lady. sailed by Jim Cushman, Santa Barbara Sailing Club, and third was Red Ball. co-skippered by Keith Dinsmoor and George Metcalf, Balboa Yacht Club. Take-home trophies were also awarded to Retreat, Bob Smith. Pacific Mariners Yacht Club. and Frenesi II, Al Carlan, Cabrlllo Beach Yacht Club. _,.,,,,,..--..~~...,..,,,.~~,.,,.....,,::~~··:~·011=c~EUI_• ... Marina Hobies Vie 150 Slated PICTITIOUS IUSINftS lfAMIUT•T•MIHT ~ D rt c T .. ,.,, .... ,,,. .... '°"u··-no-· r or ese rown In R · :1!:v~~1:~~<;;;:_~~. Hobie-Cat Fleet 57 of Marina del Rey.Santa egatt&. S..O:.~rF.::!:':.~v::'.~~~.;~.. Monka has moved into the Oeet finals of lhe Silver More than 150 sailing 1um• ,...,,, ... ,, m•• S<l9lo••o.t, Lakes Challeoge Series with a l23·ll8 semi-final yachts are poised to set _ ~::'~~:i'r:!~i c~ ~:11uect 1iv • victory over Fleet 3 of Long Beach. saU Frlday tn the fourth 991\t•••wt""'"'" The Marina del Rey sailo.-s. who finished in aMual Santa Barbara to 11,1• ,~~7;~~)::. flll!CI ,..,,, ,,.. first place·arter six months or round·robin compeli· Kina Harbor (Redondo> cou,.1• cttr• 1>t ~.,. COVIii• onJ1111 lion, will now meet the winner of next month's San race jolnUy sponsored by n. m._ ,_.1 Diego-Oxnard regatta for the Ocet championship. Santa Barbara and Kini Pu1>1t\h.oo••"llltC"11o.11,Pl1c>1, Ron Wagniere ol Santa Moruca led Fleet 57 HarborYachtclubs. Ju1.u.n,n.•twt•w~•.•m 2'0•·,. sweeportheHobie·14compelitionlnchalkingupbls The 11-mlle race PUBLIC N<n1CE l'ICTITIOUS IUSlltU.S NAM• sn.TEMllNT 1M loll0wi~ --· •<e CIOt"O.,.,,.. "'''6\ OA .... JIV tHVESTMl!NT'S. l.TO. ttn °""'°"' 0r1 .... ''"'"'·CA. n111 eec £nltf'Cl'llot\, ti'< ••• C.ltlor"'• COfllOr .. UOtl. J t.SiOuP<lnl OrtW, lrriM, CA n7U "fllo' O..Jll\eU Is condu<tt!d tJy •limit• MPt<IMrllllt>, -1tt<.e .... ,.,,_ 1..c. "''•" w %1u , Pru-nv, ,,.,.-.us meo ""'" thk ~, C~-of OfM O-CtvftCY 8'I J\jly U. ••" ..... MOWHll,GllllTlfllll a 1110- Ult~Dn.,., ... , tel ~ ....... ., ......w. ..... c.-. ..... . ""*I-Or .... c .. ,, Dotti• ,....,. . ""'''~"·~·-""' ':'"'' ,, ... ,. third Individual victory of the challenae aeries. begins at Santa Barbara. . . rounds Anacapa Island John Hauser of Long Beach was the winner m and finishes a t the the Hobie-16 division. followed bv Paul Garnett of Redondo Beach harbor Sanla Monica and Robert Off, Long_ Beach._ entrance.' It ls open to . Claaaet measured under The batUe for the Silver.Lakes Challence Cup tbe lnlerna\ional Of· resumes Sept. 5 when Sar;' Diego meets Oxnard ~n fshore Rule < IOR >. the waters o( the resorts North Lake near Vic· Performance Harictlcap torville. Racing Fleet (PHRFJ. Mid.el Ocean Racing Flfft <MORF> as well as auch split ti I• as ketches, y awh and schooners. All racers will be invit· lllll•I ed to attend a poat·race cruiM \0 Calallna laltnd. ~ ""' Wednesday. August 4, 1976 DAIL v PILOT DI Tests Check Progress I School Scheme MonitoreStudent's Learning By HILARY KAVE 0t .. o.u,~ ... - When school l'eopens next month, teachers at he Jr\·ine elementary sehools wW use a new educational approach that tests yougsters as they go to make certaln they're really learnin1. ln\'Olved in CSE. stall ha\en't "'·orked out how to handlt' , low learners. unx1ou:-lo han· a contlnuou~ 1<·12 CUE progra m. lude•llS at the six vilot schools will stall recei\•e report card to tuk<-home to their po.rents. But the continuous to ·tlnJ; during th" school years wtll tittempt to In· sure that students ure meeUn~ sta.ndnrd:l set up for th~i Irvine distract, Mrs . Boyd sal<I. lt'a called "competency based education" <CBEI and is a system worked out by Irvine ad· miniltralors and teachers the past six months. Pupils will be continuously tested during the school year as an alternative to year-end testing and grades. While the kinks are be•ni.: ironed out or the K·6 program this year. administrators a nd teachers are also workml( on in iUating the sume program 1n grades seven through l2 ncxl yur. Rayl said the district 111 MA .. LVN BOYD, district or- flcial who coordinated the method. sai(t the first elemen- tary schools which will use the new method are Greentree. El Toro. University Park, Los Naran,ios and Basics Plus. Also, ·sradea four through six a' Turtle Rock Elementary School will be involved. Mrs. Boyd said each oC the dis· trict's schools would like to begio using the approach, but thal she feels comfortable starting the CBE method only at schools wtiere starr members were in· volved in the planning process. According to Mrs. Boyd, CBE is a method of isolating in· dividual skills Jn the areas or mailhematics and language arts. which include reading, spelling, writing and grammar. MOltE-THAN -skills-have been isolated in the two areas. Studeots will probably take about SO tests each grade level. to make certain that they've mastered those skills. Each of the tests are short, Mrs. Boyd said. For example, one test would have the student write numerals from one to20. to make sure he knows those before going on to higher numbers. Earth Mama Mrs. Donna Hufnagel works in the Pennsyl \'aniu Soil Conser vation Department's office. but her re al love is for working the big earthmoving dozer she's silting in here. Jerry Rayl, another district of· ficial involved in CBE, ex· plained. "CBE is a method wher e the student, not the teacher, sets the pace." Saddlehack Board "IF DIE KID doesn't 'get it.' we'll come up with alternatives to make sure he does catch on before he goes on to more c.om· plicat~ things," explained Rayl, althou.Ch he admitted that those OKs Pact Agent A potential appeal by Saddlcback College instructors to st ate labor relations officials has been defusc.-'d by Saddleback College trustees. The board una nimously agreed to recognize th(> collegt> !-'acuity As· sociation (an affilial<' of the California Teachers Assoc1at1on1 as sole bargaining agent for the school's teachers this year. ROV BARLETTA, district business manager, said the board's a ctio n "has cleared things up so we can now s1t...down at the negotiating table and work things out. rationally." non -teac hing emrloycs:thc California School Employes /\s soc1ation <CSEAJ. THE LOCAL CSEA chapter has filed an appeal for review of dlstrit·t actions with the state Educational E m ployment Bela· lions Board <EE RB1. claiming trustees failed to comply with all aspects of the new bargaining law. Paul Brennan, Faculty As· sociallon president, agreed with the assessment by Barletta. say· ing there a re "no more ob· stacles'' to r ea sonable negotia· lions. Brennan last week said boa.rd refusal lo recognize his un· it could have r esulted in an ap· peal to the a gency t.hat ad· ministers a new state collective bargaining law tor teachers. In a separ ate but closely rel at ed "'action , trustees t ook a step aimed at resol ving a sim· mering dispute with the organiza· lion that represents the dislricts Trustees g ranted recognition to the CSEA to act as bargaining agent for the non ·te achiag personnel. But the board stipulated that 16 employes in m anagement, con- fidential and supervii;ory posi· tions must not be included under the CSEA's um brella or COV· e~agc. Chalking Up Winnings Brown' Now an Independent Force in Party By THOM~ D. ELIAS As California's governor traveled the nation through the springtime in his futile quest for the Democratic presidential nomination. a vital but un· answered quutlon was what he could hope to ::ic· complish. With the effort ended, his campaign manager has toted up Brown's goals and It appears he achieved almost a ll of them. "FIRST. HE WANTED TO become th" nominee," said Michael Kantor. who has r eturned to his partnership In the Los Angeles law firm nf state Democratic chairman Charles M anutt. "In March, lhal 11cemed possible. No one knew at thal lime that Hubert Humphrey ond Henry Jackson would gel out of the picture a early as they did." __ SO_VT_H_E_R_N__ But even us Brown CALIFORNIA [ailed to reach that No. I Focu S aim, he did accomplish No. 2 and several others. Brown has become an in· dependent force in the no· tlonal Democratic Party, one that no other major Democr at, even a president, can ignore. The only other comparable Democratic personalllics today are presidential nominee Jim· my Carter and Edward M. Kennedy. THIS FACT WEIGHS HEAVILY In the answer to aaotber question that a.rose as Brown. seeming a bit quixotic, hu.ng on to lhe bitter end in opposing Carter. That question: If elected, will Jimmy Carter bear a 1rud1e against California because it voted so heavily against him In June. a grudge that might be •felt in federal contracts going to other states? While lt's lmpoulble to say whether Carter will bold CalJfomia's primary vote aga1nst the state if he is eventually elected, it II safe to say the state's interesll are aecure. For one lMng, Democratic sources say Carte: is acutely alf are that two of the last three presi· dents, and all of the la9t three if Ronald Reagan wrtsta the Republican nomination away from Presldellt Ford, have been forced from ocrice. IN SHOIT. BROWN'S ESTABLI lllNC himself u a elfplfic,-na&lonal force should com· pel Carter to Aive extra consideration lo Callforniu Interests to uvotd 11 Brown effort ugulnst hint similar to flea~an 's unt1 Fnrd d ri ve. Carter d1~playcd :in :1warencss or this at lhl· Democratic ('onv<.'nl1on in New York, treating Brown with Areater respect than other erstwhile candidates Ilk Morns dull and J ack:,on. Californla':i tnltrests -ill also be proteelcd by lh<· 1'10Sltion· in,:i (j( several key conArcss1on1tl fl~urcs. St'n. Alan Cran11ton will like· Jy b l•ronH! th <• Scnute'11 Dcmocrutic whip next .lunuary and Democrats Phillh' Burton or .. owN San f"rancisco and John Md'all or Manteca arc f1ghllni.t 1t out for the JJcmocratic whi1>'s job in lhc llouw . So Brown·~ candaclacy hus ht'lp d hun, while it oppears unlikely to l\arm chances for federot spending In the s tnl1'. BESIDES Tl .. : NOMINATION, WlllCll Brown became aware he could not wi n soon after entering the race, he also wunlf'll to curry his "Lc11s is bet· ter " m(-/ssagc ucro11s the country. Kantor feels he suc·cectlcd in this. "Even the Carter people hav" hcgun lo use J erry Brown rhclorir ." U1c ex-campaign chicr said. "Y.ou could see It clearly in the 1>lurform debates a t the convention." As for those analysts who s uggested th al Brown would hurt himself al home by runninf( for prtsa· dent so persas tcntly, al seems likely lhal they were wrong. llad Brown lost any or the primaries he en· tered . h is popula rity among both voters and legislators would have suffered. BUT HE WON ALL THREE he got Into, includ· ing a 59 percent performance in California. Jt ls dif· ricull lo call a campaiJtner frivolous when he winit every elect ion he cnlC'rs. Brown thus emcrH s rrom his campaliin as strong as ever in his home state, but a g reat deal beller·known and more pow~rful outside. Although the eventual ~Q.)OH for thiit m•y be some years off, it's still not a bad return for a 31 2· 1 month effort. ............. -- f • I : @2., DAILY PILOT * Wednesd.1y August 4. 1978 ?:~.!::.~~ ....... ,~.~~ ..... ~ . ..._..,_We 1 .......... ~ ........ We l ....... ,..w. ••• ,.. 1001 ••• ,.. 1002 ~.~.~ ....... !~.~~ ....... ~:.~~ ........ ••••••••••••••••••••••"!•••••••••••••••••••~· ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• •a•r.a IOOZ ....... IOOZ ottoM•t• 1024 e ... ret 1002 G~ I 2 ri••r.a IOOZ •••rill . 1002 ....................... ••••••••n•••• .. ••u n• ...................... . ••..•.••.....••.•...... ................... ... ········•········•··•·· ..................... ... BAY & BEACH REAL TY HAPPINESS IS. . • . . . A SPAC IO US h o me with l>RJVACY for the entare tamJJy. The !leclusion of this two·thirds acre «JLLTOP estate provides :.i healthy family atmosphere th:tt would be hard to duplicate anywhcre Jn the harbor f.lrca. The home consists of Rpprox. 4.000 sQ. ft. of living space with 5 bdrms. & 7 baths. Also, beamed-ceiling living area with pi cture windows that suggest complete relaxation. The sparkling pool with VIEW deck, com· pletes the picture for gracious enter· taining. Fortunately. this is the KIND Of' HAPPINESS MONF:Y CAN BUY for only S255,000. Please calJ for app't . Hw Euoluofiw . -... olitlgatiM •e•r• 1ooll....,..a 1002 '••····················~······················· WATEIFROHT FOR $125,0001 Duplex zoned lot with pier & float + small 2 bdrm .. 1 bath home. Xlnt location. ~ly 2 blks. to ocean beaches. Owner will. carry loan. . 673-4400 * Riel R-alt, * CAMEO HIGHLANDS OCEAN VIEW.ft£ LAND Ns ...... a ..,.,:::! J ..._a .. ,...,_. h• .... c••~Oc...•leowtr..._ ....... ~.. u.... ..... .. & kffce.... ,,.. ... beech ec~... SI n .ooo • L..cl ... dedl a.tr .._ .............. ..... C4 for • •p••'tt tRt. Y•'I be .... Y• cld. c-. ........ s,.cNlltt CALL173-7040 1001· ....... 1001 •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• Custom 6500 sq. ft. waterfront home on the point. 134 Ft. frontage with magnificent view of 6oats & ha rbor. Slip for la rge boats. Remodeling has been slarted·finish it to your own taste. New -under construction. Contemp. Cape Cod. Oak firs. 5 BR, 4Yl Ba., 3 frpks. Lndscpd. Boat slip. s.ns.ooo. BILL GRUNDY. REALTOR i 1 I I\ I y " 1. : ) ' . • • f\ t·: ) f I I'> I G1Mr.a 1001 •a .. r.a 1002 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• BACK IN VA 0 M1W OQ.USIYI llG CANYON C.C. Y11W1 A IAll ~ -stlt,100 Unusually beautiful golf course view from this g reatly improved Dover model of Deane Homes. 2 Lge. bdrms., fam. rm .. formal dinJng & 2 lovely bas. Expensive wallpapers. custom drapenes & cptng. Big Canyon's finest toe. -j ust 2 minutes walk to clubhouse. ZltfS•J11,t1 ........ MIWPOIT C..,._ M.1. 644-4910 1002 .... , .. 1001 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• THI COLONIAL MANSlotil The white one with tall columns, stole· Jy trees and the porch with t urnposl railings. Everyone in Mesa Verde has envied it for years. It is a Unique Home, with 4 bedrooms, a den, co!Ol}tal kitchen. formal dining, sparkllni $ool and colorrut gardens . Call Unique Homes of Mesa "Verde i! you re~l it is worth Sl24 ,900. U~l{)UI: t1()MH REAL TORS". 546·5990 Splish Splash Poollstote ,\ r.:ul "~how 11l,1Cl'" ~hirblt• entry to 11u1m llt: C\'1lln11s. hUI(\" pool t.abll• 1l1ed fn m1ly room . (lrevlan• & v.•111111 or .:ttai;:s O\'('r1>1tt!d ll(l()I ,\ jlrclill hOmP lor tnh•rtalll 11111. 8KR .• cull~~0·17~. TMBIU. "*I In C.uf'o"'"•" Ei\STSl l> f. Cu5tom 4 llr :l Ba . cpts. drp~. dbl f11ruge . L11~ 11at1 0, $67.l*SO . Owucr/Agt 631·2711 J Rr 2 ll1.1. new point, cvt~. lntb<"p<l. I Ur gu~,, UJ>I o ff gar. $57 ,500 Owne~1\gt. ti:ll·2~ 1525 Mesa Verde Drive, Costa Meu• BR f Eastside Cando 4 + am Lar.:e 3 bedroom. 2 bath EASTSIDE 1400 sq.ft. Adjacent path •e•r.. 1002 Ge•rill 1002 Pri me cul·dtM111c lot'.• off dinin1i & LR. Jn ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• hon with larize llvlni,; slnc~ li47 dl\lidual laundry. Adult! i---------i ..... IW ,... room & sunny brcnkfo!>I JUST R-uc-o\er u;. Walk to stor'1s . P $39,000 " " k .. 1 ''··11 .,.. .,.. THi ILUF .. S noo .... any ell ras . ...., Sii '950 barg11in Ill S5-4.SOO. As r hs11ng office. Beautiful 1 story pool SC)(' dues now S36.SO. d This popular "X" plan is Red c...,.t RHlty house in t'rancascan By 400£.17'"*, FOi.!'! 4 8e rOOmS a brand new offering to 64S-3474 The Sea. Pool & decking. CM ·--_... the markd placu. 3 lrg ------ gas BBQ. auto garage · A•. . -~ bdrms. 3 ba. formal din· d 0 0 r. ice m a k e r , • 1 in& rm. aourmel kitchen LOOIC! LOOK! LOOK! ca thed r al <'ei l ing. & blt·ln BBQ. Similar MESA Vl-:R01': fireplace . No main· model Just sold for ASSUMABl.t-: VA tenance. Serve through ---------1 Sll0.000. This beauty lb SPi\RKLING POOi. kitchen. See to 11p-._...itlHuuuten-only$92,500!646·771t. 4 Ur. new plush ''l't'ni; prcciate $,.culeton ~.500 Hurry! SPACIOUS 4 II Income property, 4 unit! Gillespie Kealturs $50,950 Costa Mesa. 2 & Belh.963·8911or83S02lt. SpacioUll 4 br home on Bedroom. Oulst1tndin X038Y quiet tree lined--s~. Shag value at only-'8'1.500:-A 1 ~~~~~~~~~ OWNHOliSF. 2br, 2 car carpets, new paint. new sumabte FHA loan-1.. IA.CK IAY VIEW g11r. si1.a,ooo Ownr/Agt tilt> kitchen noor, lge din· Hw-ry. call us •lS40-llSl. Plitt Hklllt LicJllts S46·7?39. 546·7744 Ing. cathedral cellma. SHOllCLIFFS Fronl row Trina model, --- Lots of storage. Neal I 10 D-. View 3 bdrms. 2~ baths; nace· FOR SALE BY OWNt-;lt garage for handy man. Spectacular G Jkd. home ly decorated In gold Charming 2 Br Eost1<oi•lt•. Owner anxious. ln prestigious area. F11n· tones thruout. with sun· Has separutc pantry , THELIVIHG \as ti c Masler Suite shineyellowkllchen. lndry aN!a. det11ch1.>d 2 IS EASY w/pvt balcony, wet bar & <'Ur gar. w/worksho11 YOUR BOAT GeMt'ol 100 6-erol 1002 . on CA~tPER. lhru Assumable •••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••your ov.n bOulfJ:•1•le .. etn· OR NO or LO OOWN on a ONLY S43,900. Tastefully OCIANFROMT view. A rure orf11ri11g C.f. COIBSWOrthl Fruit trees. rustic patt•1. decorated 3 bedroom. l ~a with bedrooms to sujt lhe Rlt"'ITORS 640-00 0 comr ·1y fncJ Oil ove1 bath •own house. 24 ton Deluxe triplex; 3 bdrm. I a r ~ c ram i I y + a --~--------size< corner lot. lla\'1: • bath owner's unit , plu h I I bl ts f .... central A/C, terraced separate mot er · n· aw 544 fOO ueprm or super .. u · i---------1)oy thl' bcaull u pa 10 Vl\ 1 b. 1 ' PE .... l .... SUL"' PT. v.11h bu1llm bral·k BBQ new oan. on t IS m· brick patio. oversized 2 two 2·bdrm .• 2 bath ren suite. Flexible seller will • d11ion. SS4,500. ti 15:-125<1 car enclosed garage. En· lals. Xlnt cond. 1289•000~ tailor the financing to 3 huge bds, 2 baths on lrg --- ..., ..., A 1 macul:tte 3 t>E-droom, 2 :?-Stun . J bdrm . 2 bnth s urruun dl'<I by s p at bath home w1lh brick joy clubhouse adult pool lolM>• lay Prop. meet qualified buyer's ~~~.77B1e1uer s ee today. A STEAL + toddler's pool + play· ll•alton needs. Call and discuss .....,. hoffil': V.Cl bior IO largt• l"e d3 r felll'IOJ: This r1replace. double 11arage ran11l\' room Sundeck Cosl• Mesa 3·bedroom 2 and fresh paint m and -:. O\'l'r :ir.ir .lo!arajte bJth home as ideal ~or out g r oun d . M unicured • 675-7060 • the\'a riouswoysyou can $49 900 grounds. Ever)'thing for ~~~~~~~~~ buy this home. 5259,000 , , . • . . ' Pm:cd :it 12~.00U oullloor ll\'1111? Joli c·on\e· ,\ ~T l-.:'\TI ()". .C '!''' ot li73 :lliliJ l)i:l.Sl»lii eves ment to :.rhool:. and 'hop· 1 Jl!l9Gual~ ihe good life: : indudell land. Corner Lot H~rt H•wldns HEWPOllT SHORES -:\~"l~O~l 1~ 1-. XI \ :'-pin!! Only SJll.0011. BYiJP· iilPlaic• 0 I\:'• \\c arc111tt·r,•!>t poantme ot only. l\ltkl' ~'--R " Roomy 4 bdrm .• 2\12 bu.. WATERFRONT ea ors blt·ins ·. 2 c"r "Drage. HOMES •---------a t•1t an lhn·I' add111onul Wi bon .-. ~ ~--snit·'( n·pr,.,,•nt ·111\ ,.,., 751•'920 11055 M II St " .. .XJnt rental houses for OCJ"O a Slrt:et lo street . larAe lot. AEAL ESTATE sale. 3 & 3 OR. nit priced 963-831 I J1nr1l ,,1 rl1 la l c! Near 631-1400 R I I N iwo fol l't''i1h•111 ; .. I :-.:;11'~ "°° QUAil S1. NIW l ICACH • in S40's. ca 5 111rp. cw U<'t•an. $78,!>00 I G d & om• lor u rll'W <'om. -J£ 'Quail ~ ~~ m •rl·1ul "" 1,11111 l'll'J:.t.: • P1ac9 LIDO ISLE SELL INCOME ('Jll lu1 .1µV(11111m,·11l WESTCLIFF ARlA Prap•rl... Fre~h as a da1>y. re· Jc.in Coll' t'll'l&O I BL>. 2 Iii\ hOml,' IO 712-tnO modeled 3 bedroom. 2 PROPERTY JUST LISTED 675-5511 populor Eu:HMdl' Clm.1: •400ou.\IU'l.Nl-l M ACM bath. oversized lol. one BluHs"E"Pl1tnCondo. C"'YWOOD RE"'LTY i--------•1 pa n t. oo ar eas. "' "' C ...... Pn PILOT REAL ESTATt::. * 541· I 290 * CUSTOM $40·~ Not really but ... so com· Carlsbad·Good location tu Wc,l r l1fl :.h11p 1:. story home. Large patio. If you're alr~dy suc· Horth laclc Bay ~l·huob. & J h1kt• 11d1: 10 BA y & OCEAN Across from Lennis, park cessful al selling houses. I h " · I or er~ a sal-man. busi· 2200 sq. rt. :; u~rlrm,, t 1.1rm1n1? 1 e hea l·,. ~111111lt•1 on VIEW-·PLEX a nd close to-pri vate ~ """ ..... t'f t•""""' ~ h I I " d t t n~sman or Alub.....,.man .,.,au 1 u · '"""•"""· lamll> uin ~. lu rm.1 i.hady Mh· uuc 11 rl'C 1...-11ches. $149.500. "'" ... _,, COAST PROPERTIES d in 1-. 1:1111rm1• l k 11 S66.llOO. ~-IS !J-l!lt IWaut.. co an pl re mod ""PET.E BARRETT new to real estale. learn °''""~'·'"' gu1.· ... 1 ''"'rrni -llonw w/,,.ep. income unal 10 sell high S investment ____ 6_73_-S4_l_o ____ 1 & I I: l' ma" l'f :n11 t I' 1111 huge R·2 cor. lot over -REALTY-properties with the pros. Lii SURE LIVING ~ .. ·~d s pJint P<1J1t•r • . .1 lookangbay &ocean. 615.4060 WewilltrainiC you're a lastSldeC.M. 1us.o3113 , , .. : JACOISREALTY 642·5290 winner . O u r sales $ OOO FOREST OLSON INC ' ' _ 6 75-66 70 .,.-i:;_..,,_._ .. _..,,__.,._..,,_._ .. _..,,_._ ... ~..,,_~.._ quad r up I e d from 66, ... ~ .. HERITAGE Ci...,... 100.~ ~~ •••••••••• ~~~~ •............. , ..... . ~COATS & WALLACE '::rP REAL ESTATE , INC. A LOCAUY OWNED COMPANY SERVING THE SOUT C AST ARE.A SINCE. 1%3 BARGAIN FIXERS This 2000 sq . ft. home is located in best nt'ighborhood. It has 3 baths and <t very fl exible floor plan. Needs some paint and imagination but a baq(:11n at $59.500. Call now, 962·4451. MINI OCEAN/ISLE VIEW From lur~c ctc<'k off master suite. This B11r{·ola bwlt home is only 4 vears old und has 4 bedrooms & 3 baths. l.:.ir~t· family room with ftrnJll:l('l'-l>~lcgantly decorated & In mov('-il\ t•onditlon. ltlJH HY $79.000. ('all 002·4454 . SUPER BEACH HOME Truly outs tundin#! home completely remodeled hy ownt'r/contractor. Unobstructed 360 cte~ree view from privutc sundcck. One block to ocean nr boy. Too many upl-{radcs lo men· ti on. Mu s t sec lo appredute, (''40·6161. IRVIME BEAUTY Almot1t new 2 bedroom + den & family room In Greentree. Many builde r upgrodes include mirrored WMdrob<' doors. carpets. & shake roof. Profo!slonally landscaped, pm.:atc rear yard. $6,500. 640-6161. $48,990 -$48,990 That's t l~ht ! ! That's the full price or this 4 bedroom home s ituated on a large lot with a 35' Sunset pool. Carpets. drapes, covered patio. Best of oil arc the terms. Assumable VA. CaU 546-4141. BUSINESS OPPORTUNITY COSTA MISA Brake and ""ront End Shop. IS Years or out.standing service of a ll running gear. S2SO,OOO. Year Income. 2 Older houses rented. 3 Bays, 4 .hoists. 4 wheel alignment racks. Exclusive ctastomer list. Owner will stny 6 months then retire. t30xl30 lot incld in price or s1so.ooo. Fle~ible financ· ing. Call 546-4141. Otft< "'lo~ otrd .,. C~to Mt>\O ~ .. qtetf' 1.-o<h N,.wp<Vi J,o< '- ----------- I IALIOA ISLAND ssmi11ion the first year to Adult Condo or Tradl· ASSUMAILI . • REALTORS Two on a lot! i''ront Is a S20million last year. ss·~ llonal quality & dC$1gn Newer Duplex <3&2 $42,000. COTTAGE WANTED 5 Park 1 in g 3 u o 10 100~ commission w 2 Br. &2 Ba. frplc.fine Bdrms). Bllns. frplcn. dollhouse. Bade is 1 so split. Prestigious om ces cnblnetry. bllns. cpts. · glass & wood. Principals c Bedroom home in 1 h R I near Or ani:e County drps.lggnrdenpalio.dbl MAGNlflC!t'T 1 0 I A 1 Rar e find , coiy ~ Jlun1·g. Ut!ach. Ftn Vly. :~i~ 0 dd ~~ e\s . e~c:~ ~ AirPort. Call or write automa11c garage. Part WATERFRONT C7:.f15.:: wner g" bedroom cottage with Wes tmnster o r Cer· sepa r ated by tw in Don Berman. Q UAIL or the secluded CAP£ $175,000 shake roof. surrounded ntos ... To $75.000. for San patlos.Certainly best buy PLACE PROPERTIES ASSOC. w.'pool cabana, s Br hme. Massive living 45 FT. IA YFROHT by tall trees. Honc)- Jose ra mlly . S25.000. on the Island al only INC. for an npPointment. Cully equipped clbhse. in· room surrounded by Lovely 4Blt bay front mooner's delight or 111· Cash down. Possession $1.30,000.S4S-9491 (714) 752·1920. 1400 Quatl eluding frplcs. kit, put· waler. Nestled among home w/3BR apt. Pier vestors dream. Assum:.i · Oct. l. Broker. O(ferlngs Street. Newport Bench. ting green & abundant trees & beaut. lndscpd float, sandy be ach. ble loan, e xcelle n t welcome. Ca.92G60. gardens. 2046 Tustin garden W/covered brick Owne r will r1n11nce. financing. Hurry, pleU8t' HAL PIHCHIN Ave. Ut Gloucesteri patio & deck leading to $250,000. call for details Rt;ALTORS •LIDOISLE• Owner moving & anx· your own pvt dock.Real· COASTPROPERTIES . Ph·540•3688 2727 E. coast Hwy. Large ramily home on 45 ious. Stop by or call Jy special one of a kind. • 673·5410 • • ~ 675-4392 SALESPERSONS want· ~~~· ~sl~~~·ui~e b:~~~j JON. G . THOMPSON Pi"~Rte ~ac~ & t~n~s C:......del Mar 1022 .l:J "~ n 7 la ---------ed. Beautiful. long &denup.St95,000 lllALTOR ~er.~1.:477 ores Y ....................... ~~ f>14tl# .--------.. established offi ce. Nat'I LAWSON REALTY 642-7860 HARBOR VIEW HILLS --• ••-•••""_. adve~sing. lots of l~ads' * * '7S-4S6Z * • 5 1 •• $4,,SOO.• LEASE c u a l o m h o an e . We're here to help! Jndiv1dual tra1n11111 . " Panoramic view.ocean/·1-'--------- me mber or 3 listing ASSUMISZ74MO. bay. 3br , 21,..ba. ByBYOWNER ononeorl'.: services, National 6'/JO/o LH•VACAHT OPTION own er . Sl64 ,000. CM. loveliest s treets. 3 Gallery of Home Reloca· Ranch Style Home Fi bed ( 714) 6 4 4 . 4 0 4 8 0 Br 2 Ba. ha rd wood S \ k f It's lrue! ve room (714)642·5140. noors, heavu shnke roof. ~101 n ecrv1cle . ' sOONo~ 2400 Sq.ft. Real barn on quiet cul·de·sac lot Anxious owner with va· uus l see Jlo apprec. "ace row ey. , w/lon . large workshop. Extra large yard + th l cti e Ow 2 BR l B 1'' GALLERY OF HOMES. solar heated pool. 126' children's playhouse. N can ouse wans a on. Y ner, . n, ~6-4780or54080'l0 27812 F b s Rd This 3 bedroom, 2 bath Spotless. See to apprec. -------o r e ·• fronlO~e.beauUJull.rees. new loan costs on as hom e overlooking S87.S00.508Josmlne. YOUROWH Laguna Niguel. 83HMI!_ lawn & garden area. sumptlon or 6 1'2'70 V N H I d &40 840 ~~~~~~~~~~ I • •"78 'h loan! $274/mo. p~vs all'. ewPort. ar>or , nee 5 ·l FOREST ' Want ad rcsu ls 642·.,., Muny many o. er ex· .. , · d b M--------1 tras 'S21s 000 Beat of Callfast-7~2·1700. some paint an s~ru · F"' ..... "'STIC Quiet cou ntry 3 1· 1002 ~············································· macnab / lrvtna raalty IM~SH COTTAM Custom built home w /charming beamed ceiling in living room. 3 Bedrooms, dlninff room , family room & gourmet kitchen. Luxurious master bath w /tiled Roman t ub and private atrium . Oversized garage w/alley access. SIN.500. Roger K. Laule 642·8235 (W74) 642-1215 ........ 901 Dover Orlw .._..,. Yfew c.e"'9>r I rvllW et C..,.. Valley Center 7Jl.14t• • • ' • ONN 111 9 • 11 s •llf• •o lll MC1 • blne. but the owner 111 re· A"' A mosphere. i''rcsh as 11 termR~ McCord.. I > I ady to deal. CALL quick· OCEAN YllW daisy 4 Br & f'um. Han, • _ _......_'! 111 O Newport 9 1,J\illM'lfilJ ly, SSG·26GO ser. 4Ba. Biiiiard Rm, across street rr~m lovely "~ Q[\ i :l CSELECT Pnva1eBch. park. Beil 1-.astsldt• CostaMesaS41·772' lb~~~~~~~ T"PROPERTIES Open Sunday 1·4. nrea.$71.500. C...,.. • -.E p "'I.IC S21S.OOO f('e, Owner/Ast G<t2·6368 /\Rent ~~ • 448 OeSola Terrace D p I t I 026 CUL-OE-SAC Lr" FR w/blt·an BBQ ""p•--• •-...__ t--673·8778 ..a oft ~ 1 "" ... "'~~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• wet bor ;. 32 onvAeuTzhel Buy this 11-. acre In nice· TUR ... KIY i\ SS U M to; v A . 'I' w " bdrms, "' · tu dcvilloped /\pple " i I Sharp 4 bedrm, extra h I kl l>ol , ~ bc<lroom. l :v, bnlh 11 n1111 tnrae yard. Jloom for ome tru Y &par cs Vnllt!Y area and build PIRFICT family ho11H~ close to pool , boot access . lnandout.Rmfor~t later. Only 55800. and Only&l<'Pll lOCarnnllon 11c:hoohl &.1 .. nnlll. Low Enclosed patio. Near trlr. Beat buy In •. l\1 . owner will financl'. If you Park. An immarul1tc re· down paymcnl. $.~V.000. Mlle Square Pork . N~wly l1'tod ut S6:>,000. "have SSOO. lo i:ct you on ccntly remodeled 2100 Priced at $69,900. ~a-9491 your way, call uRs no1"" s". n . 3 OR +den, 3 ba, ] Superb Homes ea ty hotM. With format din· AMCHOIA .. lsaMUPEERSB S49·HSS we'll arrange ln •. rom·rm.wet·bar,lat IHYISTMIMTS Lhere:sl. Muter 11ullc & un· 1714149'97111 l~~~~~~~~~I beJJcvable 1tora1e. l~===-==------ t166W. aa.t,e.M. •---.,l'"'~~u,---i Hchnl•tlfs.._. 1034 ,..., ~~:--' hne a servl~ tn offer or IRVIHI TUil. 64 ... 7111 goods to sell, place an ad Highly uparaded home. In the Daily Pilot l•m te pool 1lie lot. 3 Have something to sell? Classarted Section • • . Bedrooms, large family Classified ads do It well. Phone 642·5&78. room with w,t bnr. tplc. I ,\ I I r '• /.Jn '~li,I' $19,950 Rm. for pooltnblc. 411R. 2Ytba. 2600 11q. n .• built for entcr1 11ining. Lofl hidcawoy In gor , xln\ schools 11n<l 11rea . G11111rill I 002 .... ,.. I 002 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• SHADU C» •MUDA Alry garden home a m ld lus h gardens; wood deck & sunny brick patio. 2 Bdrms. & den ..L French doors. Shutters, lattice & a s hort walk to beach. $78,900. A COUM1LL IAMllR CO. 644-1766 An ext'H ng nt•• prlce ... 1109.500. 644-7270 ;tfun.. S ... od. ,,_ __ IULTOIS 1 ·2LOTCM Poaslble 3 unllt ellowed by 1ood plannfog. Good area fur new units. Plus 3 bedrm home, dble gar. Call Anytime 641-1928, eves:556.....,4 11' '1l 1l I '> ...., Ken Relftr 1-. .... As.cret To share with Just you. I have a dell&hHul 3br home on the ca"yon ln C4M1 w/privale beach aett11. lo sell for 197 ,000. <91GO per yr leaMhold .) 002·7751 DICUTIVI HOMI Thls big Cretnbrook Space.Makel' II hos <!Vet· ythfn1 you could went In a hotne Including SBll, 4BA. fem rm. separot.r formal dlnlna rm. huge bonus rm &t comm. pool. All this for the low, low prl~oU89,~. lloulihan Realty, 848-8686/ t:ves, 847-9805 lnle.rcei>ted? --------- 67J· I I I I ............... 1040 ---------..······················· BY OWN ER EAST C.M. Sale or Lease Option Cornerlot,4Br,ZBa, 3 BR. 2 Ba. completely l---------, 1$4.SOO Al-<MOO redone II ke a model home. Ne wport Wtat Doo'\ .Ive up t.he ship IW1" nt1. S Br, 2 Ba. trecl , all hardwood .. Us\' it In claaslrled form dine. cptt. bllns. Ooora. $12.900. or besl o(. Ship to •bore results! tplc. aaaume VA or? rer. By owner. Scott IM2· s.t-3139 1 ft(oa\ty, ~-7m I .I I • •• • I . ..... ' ... ' . ·-~.~-~ ....... ' ....... ,.w. ., ...... ,.,.Wt ...... ,.,.~_ Olliefo .... ..... . JOIMt' IHI lstete I Wednesday, August 4, 1976 DAILY PILOT 83 ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• HmtilMJt• leac:Jt I 04 ;;.;•••••••••••••;;4~;;;:;.:;;;::;-·~;;;.;:;:.;;a;;:;.-·706t ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ...... ...... u......... ....... u .......... II.cw,,.,.., JOOlllllcw....,.1 ty 2000 •••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ~. Fuf"RhlMd • Co1to Me10 3224 lrvilte lJ44 •••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• J•tle•odtled J>;\ ·11 lh1nc bul strul'lllf 1i. brand n\•w, (;real Ueaul. NF.W l'nlv l'ar lu111nhome. : br. :! h11, S72.9'JO. &l2 S!t~7 l'\(' n e 1 ai h b or ho o rt. ~ IY OWNH B'•droom'\ & o bunu> 1·unll'nx•k PoruJar Pllrn room S.,IJ~·r Is In. huri ~ 1 3 Br . 2 Ba , f anl Hm. & to lrove Stall.'. SutunJt atnum Prine. only 1117112 ~ourttrm!'t. ~a~anaw Or Sij~.9UO ROIERTS REAL TY IW·Ol5t 848· 1611 GREAT VllW! =;:E;;;;;;;;::::~~ Turtlcr04•k llroadmoor • 3t>r, l!h a. rum rm . illlUll), b)' OWnl'r. t;3.ig 4 BATHS S1t>rr1.1 Jo:ltnu $!1\,500. Wrll roni.rdl·r ofCer. Open 11111h '4 la rut• bt'dl'(l()1n1. s ..,.. 12 s ..... "c.c."' l'LUS u lruly FOHM/\l. Ill .,..r1, . ......, • ...,.,.,. di111111 room, l'J.US ui---------•1 Apuclou11 fam rl rm COlUGIPARK w1wet IJ11r ttnft unlqu1• 5 llt. DEM DOY8 SHOUS ., .. ...,Dr. lyO-- Save $20,000. on a home that ls one of a kind . Unique for l i vin e & entcrtulnment. Contemporary design by Joc?I architect. lledwood & alass exter10~. ~U gh be am ceilin gs. panoramic v ie w Of back bay. 4 BR, 4 Ba .. 2 fam.rm's, secluded master bdrm sultc includes rrplc. luxurious '!last.er ba~h. dressing u rea, custom tile Jacuiza & saun a. Price $249 500. Savings good until 8/3ln6 on 9ii ns house will be listed. By appt only. 646·6900 or 644·4684. • f1repllH'l' m od\:rn mnn run 2 m1l1:~ lo lhl Soper s harp 5 bdrm • den ._._ -.. h I 0691""'-__.a. II I 0'"9 or G bdrm hom"' loe11ted ._w,...... • etc ._w,..... • K • t>t-:.ch fur JU'\l W .9.SO lll'llr pool 1111d dubhouse. •••••••••• ••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• 962-7771 An exCt<plrun1tl homt de-------------------111scned tor compltte liv· Ing \\ ilh a lurgt' fa rnrl)' room. 2•2 buths und . !!!!!!I!!!~ for mal drnln.i;. Ownllrs anxious ! Hurry, only $79,SOO! -red hill ~ 552-7500 Oceanfront -Newpert Bea Beautifully decorated 4 Bdrm, 3 bath, family rm, 3-Yr old home on the oceanfront. Fantastic, ever-changing whitewater view ............ UI0,000 UMm NICI DOWN 4 11 J0.000 U'-ffO 7 SZJi.OM US.MO I SU0.000 Sl7,IOO t Sta.GOO $41,000 IJ SJtO.:z: S71,000 14 MM, SH,000 20 $411,000 sao.ooo OMCU SJS0-000 $60,000 C OMPLETELY FINISHED "TURN-KEY" PROJECTS will be sold or exchanged. Trade up and get 2 00 % aJ\prcci alion and l o maintenance. BY APPOINTMENT JN OUR OFFICE ONLY <No drive.buyt;, please.) ............ •••••••••••••••••••••• 4 8R. 2' H11 . RRA~ We llll\C 2. 3 & 4 bdrnt t::W S1':sc1uuli ,;pill homo <St tuwnhom"i. NEW 38R. 21 ib:l. u"~ lc\'el. nr So Co.un l'lna. 1vn1I tor Jeni.c. l'tulll dupl6 on t.iulr lslond dbl gar. l Yr h•11:.t'. $400. S325. No fl'eS. Winter or )'CMIY 2 ca mo. A.it. Sam crane. llANCH ltE L.TY parkfl. LORA VANC &a~-U700l'~&IHJU(JIJ 5Sl·l!OOO Rl.Tk.673·4002 ---------IEASTSIOt-;: P urk·hk( I nr21, Ua. ll'nnli1. tMXlb, CtlurmiOII 4 br wa\crfron ~roulld8, 3Rll, 21\A 5375. g at< ll fi Q & it rd 111· home. Furn. Sllpt: IS Inc•. furdcn('r & watt>•'. Ml·&i7flor~S2·0290 ' _J_w_~_15._!'00mo.6MH Chi It rt'n. 11 ml p t \ - ..... P'ea .. 1.,a0 310 0Ktl42·S270 2 lir, 21s Ha Twnh""· put o, fpl<'. condo prlv'.i, •••••••••••••••••••••• t.:AST, IOI'> r ark·llk ~ Call6U~ll ' Winter Rcnl•l on tilt cround11. 3Uli 2llA $37$, - Beach. 31Wdrms. 2 ba Ines. IHU'l.lcm•r & water GREENTRt.:1'; 3 Br ~ k,1 Oce.al'\.fronl co\tRJ:C. •'UI Chlldr<•n, s ml ~ls OK, hse. Fl-pk., no pets, ~:is. ly t'\.rrn. 1450/mo. 673·4637 6-12 5210 mo. lsc. 645-8781. Cotto M••• 312 ;1EsA VEROE !IOedroui Cali( Hms. lgc a Br, nt·w •••••••••••••••••••••• 2 h1tth. family roum plush cpls. 11t w tile, new I Ur, 11(nale older man bulltlns . <tlshwosh<• p111nt. n\'w '(latlo, nl'w $17$. m•. $395. i\l:it. 5511 266<1 lndsel)d, ~1W mo. Incl 1142·5440 ll rd n r g 3 3 · 2 \3 3 u r •.._·-----.. -oc-h EASTSIDE SS2·S222 dys: 832·3~7 ••• ::::-.:••••••••••••• Vacnnl 4 blks to schls. _e_·v_s_. ------- Beaut. Llndn b le 4 HR 3br, 2·Cllr .iur, big yrd R11nchu Sun Jou.quln. Newport a.ecll I 06• hlco.e Property 2000 prestige home. Sltf' ro must twc. S36S. ~·3561. Sparkling new San Joa- •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• lge. boat. Surnmer or yr $235 2 b G . · · <ll~n modl'I, uppt'r l~vl.'I. I , . . · r a,rugll view, 2bd & d e11 • 1e1• lllf la CAT ALIMA ISLAMD y lse. Agt. tl7S·Gl6l k1ds/~ls/1m~ls. F ec <.:otherdral ceilings & u11· WESTCLIFF 7 u.lh. $175,000. WINTt::R Rk:NT~LS .2!111" Rentals.5~0-~o s r 11ded. $595. mu. Ocean{ron l ·Severa $210. 2 br dup. Garage, 67S-2700or979·3887 SpaclOU5 LR. 4 BR, 38:1, lftcOIM ,lt,200 yrty. large rully Curn1she K1ds•srni:lesok. 1-'ee Rtn.tT"'LS DR. Lg Family Room .673·J620 homes avail Crom $600 t Mam Rental . s-ao-~o lln"'I ,.. Ch a rm lo e ga rden. 516·1202 $800per mo. Agt. 673-541 Single f'amily Home., 582.000. i---------•f ·---"---..;;;...----1$!00. 2 br, garage, Cncd ro 3 Bil. 2 Ba ...•..•. , .• $4:?5 Call Marge Wolfe 10 Mo. rental, Boyshores kids. Fee 3 Br. den, 2 bu ...... S..2."i MA11o..1y ALLPOITS I .E. TWO 4-P LEXES : (1) Newly furn. 3 hr house Main ltenlals.540.$370 3 Rrt,2 Ha ........... 1bs " &lS-8024 3UR o ) or both H BR 646-82S8or (213\.790·2620 3 UR, 2 &1. ..... , •••• ~75 N B' 1 s 6S 000' Renl or lease 8 mo. old 4 "R .,,_ 8 ;rs THURS. & FR,. 1·4 P.M. 2602 WEST OCIAMFIOHT ~ un. 2 ba. lrg lot. run adcl :.t units. 1 ~ ~Ii lo bell S75,000. Ai;l.:._846·31fi6. EXTRAS · · pr me . 1 • · 38rTownhouse. Wlnter o 2200 ft 3 ° •'"Tl< a ....... •· SAMO & SIA RIAL.TY 671-1100 By owner. BtCl 3br, 2ba. each $40 000 down 1 blk C h sq. .. car gar. 4BR,3 8u ........... 25 In this formal lirentwood ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Pool. Open Sat/Sun. 12·S. Ownri At:t 5-io osss · yr Y· 1 rom beac · br, 2\'i ba. sunken family Townhomcs • :.todel . 3 BORl.I . 2 BA . 1s l 8 Sy Iv i a. N . B . · · 645-2937 or 12131281·7420 d~ln~~wx~~l b:~ea~o~ 2 nn. 2 ea ......•... SJ85 lrnliagnh~~d· "'ucoprgartaodr etoduc"'h~~sh. Newport leach I 06'.._.w_ a..ch I 06' ,_&&5-_2"_64_. ------1 IMVIESTMIHT $280. Big 2 Br dplx, w /s un mo. !&-GllOO or 5S2·97~ 2 Bil. 2 Ba .•.•.....•• ~ J ' ,_ ,...... PAIEXCILLIHCI deck. Beachcomber. 3RR.28:.l ........... i4.W Exlcnl'l\'e pallo ~ urk · •••••••••• • ••• ••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• Harbor Vu Hms·Carmel If pride-0r-0wnen;hlp is t'ec. 631·2011 3 8rt, 2 Bn ... • .•...•. ~ lots or privacy. ~ comer&greeubelt;Fee what you'l'e after. we Sparkling 4Br. 2 ba, fnc 3 llR. :?• 2 Ba ..... , .. M7S Jo~ r. 1851 Port TiWn; Owner have it. This pr1>per\y in· u~--UnL-lah-...a yd, trpl. dshwsher, patio 3 HR. 2 Bu .. , .•... , .. $40.'i • 645·2117; $103,000; Open I d l ~ Twnt '"' dbl gar, s nj{ls ok. 5 3 UR 21 Ha S650 '"' e Sat/Sun l·S; Prin only c u es our separ.ite 3 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Marquette Cir. S39S, Rn' 2" 11 ......••. eu ut. °' bedroom, 2 bath houses. General 320 4 · 'fll u ... · ..... ...,.,.,. each with flrepla1.>e and ••••••••••••••••••••••• 83l-0873. eves. llarbor View Homes Prime location. 43 Ft. bayfront: 4 bdrms. aid 's; 4 baths. Spectacular view! $495,000 . LIDO REALTY Cle•llh I 076 oouble garage, all on a 3 BR G d G 3 Br. l ba, new crpl, paint 3 BR. 2 Da. SSSO ..... :.:::: ........... ~~ p~i~~J0~1a~':a. ·,:a.:09ave. ~ ~'"r~~~·i3fncd yd: 4 BR~2°~i:. ~!~~. S47s ?.Story, cheerful 4BR, JlusLs~1o Dau>~eclat.e. ._.__. ~206 Summer Renla~ fplc. poor. S75.400. Xl nt locatioo . Only •-~ COilege Park 3 br-;-TI~ba, 4 BR.~Ba~PeNfWk 3377 _Vlo Udo, M.I. 67J.7l00 Taylor -Made Realty Sl9S,OOO.AskforJosh. ••••••••••••••••••••••• 2 rrplcs. S435. m o ~ "S'"C•Mt11•,7\.. .• Jeu'""E 49S-4"86 or 499·291!6. 506 642·527'b NEWSpanishstyle w / Fr' w/gardener.5.'i7·t351 OPEN OAIL Y Zba, yrly $000 mo. LOR $180. Utll pd, co2y 1 D ~s ., 1.~ ,. "' Ma: """' Teresa. ~ & open beam cell. 4BR SF.ACl.IF,.. 3 Br& t-'llmtlr !IA.:'ll.1'011 P.M. • ---leoch I 041 ._. _ ___... h 1069 hHARM11NG 2d8rh l Ba VANCE RL1'R,673·4062 n.e11r all. Beachcomber. o_· rm. Corner lol. Sove1 •--------~--r-._._,....., K me, x nt con . t ruoul. Capistrano leoclt 3211 Fce.631·20ll ·~~/..'Ji' ~l~~n~ ,";'.an; :;tr~~ a ~~ 1 Just Listed ~·e:~:~~:;:::::·:i:;~· •••;;.;~;;;~·;::~··· ~~:i.0o':::~ ~~~~~'· ••••••• •••••••••••••••• D..a PoW lJ2 au 860()"1ml,_.# chi n 1 J\gt 536·Gtltl-4 & Populor Willows surr, 3bd, 212ba. new 3br. 2h ba, Cp, 2 car gar 2 houses. R·2 lot, llO'xm· $230, sui>er 2 Ur, kids pc ••••••••••••••••••••••• u;J;1" tJ.t2 i731 lit! the rirsl to l!ec ! Love hme by ownr. SUS,000. S98,000 0wnr545·764S MlltA COSTA Easlside CM. Sl~.000. ok. dplx. Beachcomber. lllGlt DEMAND AREA 5 13drm $62.500. Oi>t·n daily. Owner !ti:!· 7~111 lnlne 1044 ············•·········· ly decor, 3 bedrooms 499·.f290or6~UIOO-I Luxury 38r. 2 Story 548·9673 Eves. ownr/11gt Fee. 631·2011 Beautiful, lar)te, 3Blt. .iM. . 11 . LIDO 1$LE Townhouse. Plan 3. See . rn bolh, 2·Story with .. ~" c.utPUSDa·ll'htE i.pacious . ving roo LCICJUftCI Hills I 050 model across St. 496·7139 WANTED: Units. Corona del Mer 3222 ram rm, Crplc, com pl. OPEN DAiLY with bnck rircplacl', din ••••••••••••••••••••••• VILLA eves. J ack Scott. Broker ••••••••••••••••••••••• draped, formal din rm. RA M TO 8 p M mg room arcn, drenm ., 9 R 5c• I l rt r<11----------1 • 5361533 • F I 2bd d I · · · · kitchen. Only 557 .OOO ROWING PAINS .•. 1 Move ms· " o ·cou ya · • or se. + en +enc $410/mo +security de be h BKR I uplou4ijdrm :! •lnalh & fountain , Comp . R-.-aiLt-'-80.,2 S F 'h 1 sun roumin lrvlneTcr· """ll. ·ttcr urry. .. ca ·• • · Curnlshed Sl89.SOO ._ID &R" ." q. t. S 0 PP, ng race. S5SO. mo. Bkr .... KILLGORI-~ REALTY 2Br, 2ba. Single story ~tll-1720. :r~a:;:~[{':· ~~~J,;~i:c: ~ ~ ·.,•4-;bU;·;;::,;.~•n•n•u Center wn·ll l\Ikt., S.E. 673·1181. <l!Jl-5031 Twnhse on Grcenbth. PRESIDENT \'rew. S98.!l00. r O rn ~ r B rl s l o I & Univ. Park. Frptc. elec For S• l I 00 Paulanno, ~osla Mesa. Irvine Terrace 3 Br 2 Ba Super Sharp 4 Br, 2 Ba. )lar dr opener. Nr sMPll. HOME HORIHS REALTY 675·7900 ...................... New.ly bur!t. Term s fplc. dbl gar. block t r am rm , pat 1 o . pools. lt:nnrs. s:ns mo. * 494-805 7 * ~~3. 2 BR, 2 Ba, Adlt 5· ava I I. p rinc only · bay. rncd yd. 61S·3354 EVERYTHING. 493-0761 M2 !H78 1n tht: hills l•f lntnt• WALICTOllACH star park. San Juan 1400.000. Eves & wknds. --.-or9622l!l4 --------- Slll'l'l a c 11 I u,. v lt•w L-oa.och I 052 3 lovt:>ly Newp0rt Shores Capa. Enclosed pet yard. S48-4041or Days642·ll2l So.of llwy. 3 br, 3 ba, den. New'rernl<'e Ca r1lift:t Hr. font1111tH· lantlsra111n r.t .;~;••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••••••H ume s. A ll h ave $24,590. 496 ·8S85 or New Consl Cusl-;;;:; dmrm:bl'ur:nclng,frpk,2 BR luxury oceanfron frpl, wrtbur. lll'ltr vuot. trn1>1rnl .i.:artlt>n:. i.ur· . , FAMILY ESTATE r1repluces, dishwashers, 496-0SSOan .Gpm 0 1 N · 'h SSSO.Lse.673·3477 condo. Lease $400 or sho1~.$375.&i4 ·40t(j round u11110 Jll•I hi.thte1I Bl.Ul'.: LAGOON V1 ~l.AS D r hlf I' 2 S t:'lc S66 SOO to S92 SOO up ex. wpt ~ or es RE leuse/opl. Poss ible fountain. for the ulllmall• Out-1ta111hng \ ww JBK ... ~·rn1A1'~ .. 2ub». ·. ·,~ t,ontr>r' :,n" ~n h~ es Sat & ·Su~ By Owner: 8'x45', 2 bdrm, Sl30.000. Prrnc. o nly. NTA~: Do yourself a lrctde. Hllr. 645·24 ll Turtlcrock 4 br, fum flJI, 3lii\ b lh I I x "" ~ .. " ' l-~ ,. llf . dd rurn 'd . Cabana oi r Bkr.840·1441 C~\'Or. f'mcsl Corona.de!---. -din rm, 2 ba, new rrpt. rn i:ra1·1111"h\rn,i:anill·n · 0 l!\t' 3 e dltlon home' This one "·"• Ora resses. cooler adullpark across !\1ar 3r ea -Jasm1ne f.owltoenVolley 1214 View ur U.C.J i\vuil. • l(•rturnlllt.! tltt)tl' rnai.l<'r 11'™1\-d & J?lai.i.ed·rn. ~cv. has rt all! Lot.~ or dl't'ks & r~ HCMtSe al reel Crom beach in lsl user-House & 4 units. Creek (remember J live ••••••••••••••••••••••• s <' 11 l I s l . L c 0 "c . 'u1le a11cl H'paratl \\ w l''1>ll!. m·w paint VJlro area around 042·3850 New""" Beach. S2.SOO. C.M. Bluffs. f'rplcs. gar. there luo); New lwo2 Story, 4 nn, 2 BA . fum Gurdl•nrr. walrr. a11!111. :.ccludt'll ''Ul'l>l "Ull l' w;illpaper&\\tnclow cov rfl\"•te .... , ... ,, IM"'I \\'Ith ,.v•• Mors Agt 6420758 bedroom •. d h d I " .,, " ' J t 1 t J u "v''" ..,., H--1..--.,,_ H 968·9923 art. 6pm · · · · . . "' en omes rm, mun y ex l r a s. ues fK .,y owner . .,..r.o. t'<•nnul \ltnln~. fnmil) crings. u:. i:. c .. acuzzi. l\I a n lcu reu ~b .. d .. w CN9edl H•1tti.--1e-h with pnvllege or use o ~/mo. 963·4567 Bkr, n mo. 1\gt.S.1J ·SO:J2 roorn unit \\ulk·lll wet ~1 29.soo . Owner ir andscapln~wilhmatur wanlcu Y octor red · ••t .. yLoh/ ...,.._. -pool, Jacuzzi & tennis fee. · hur. Other 11nw11itil•s t1w1 escrow un larger home & trt..'Cs. Would you believe ly from owner. !">81·8411 CryptS 1500 TllPLIX courts 3 Br 2 lln, Fam Rm, hml• numr rnu:; to rm•ntlon. mu.st sell. :rcrm!I. $89.700 •••••••••••••••••••••• 2 Dedrm. l both each. COLE OF NEWPORT Super Cle3n. Nice area. mint cnnd. In Colony $450 l';\Ll. loday for nn ex· Bl~U~LAGO!'~ Baycrest excc3 BR. aciric Ocean View Separate yards. Excell REALTORS la r ge Brs, 2ba . mo. lnclds cable TV, & l'IU.'lll'~hO\\'in~ REAL::.~~;t;INC. m··.. 11~brr& W!l~o~~~.~·7~~ Cemelary. NB. 2 lots rentals. Good neighbor· 675 5511 cpls/drp!I , frplc. Soft swl mm,in~. avai l 817. ----------. TW"l-....... nn 1Nasonic Section > for hood. 6 Blocks to beach • water, encl patio, fncd 54!1·9831 dys, 499·361i:I LITilE "OOUGH" • • ~o 17 OCIEAMNOHT Salo to qualified buyer. S95,SOO. Call Red Carpel Rentals that you would yd. Walk school, n c_'v_cs_. ______ _ LOTS O'HOUSI 3Br. 28a. Super 2 story ReasonableSSl-6042 RealtorsS36'3836 love to live m ·all localed shops. S4JO. Ph960·lJOI TUHTl.EHOCK 3 Ur . Tllr\T'S THE T Hf.:.tE WATCH home !>n lhc oce~o~ronl 01Wrciel Well ke pt triplex on i n at l r a cl i "e WALK Pam Rm, with 1>001 & f''OR TllJS 4 BDR M THESAILIOATS in minl cond1lron . Propetiy 1600 EastsldeCostaMesa.All neighborhoods. to Mlle S uarc Park. Jucut7.l.M50 mo.644·4 '7 l.1\GUNA home I I hdrm New 3BR h11m1•, hi uh on Graceful living al its ••••••••••••••••••••••• 2 br. $85.000. Drive by Spyglass Hill $975 to Redecorat~ 3Br 2 ba LUXUt'Y 1'WNl1Sto ... •-I t b f to 1 l " best. Slll9,500. 1779 Westminster then SISOO ' · ' ~ i:.. " ..,. ias ccn cu iv. ten l.hc bill. S87,SQO. Pro__... Haus. BAYFRO..._.T call SS7-6075 Cameo Shores Sl500 rrplc. new cpts, drapes & 2 Ra . patlu. all rec fa.II. Det:lllt-d all wood ex· J ay W. Yi.'1Jls neully E2'. '3'1so " Laguna Ni.stuel S4SO dishwasher 5410 mu. s:l611mo. lse.644 5998 ll'nor has larJ,!e s undeck 31711 Coast llwy ... o m ce building, s pec· SIX UNITS Also some summer ren· 963~569. Agnl, no rec. Rancho San Joaquin l'.nclos'"•J w ~i;t & rail~ So Laguna 499.2237 tacular view. luxurious Largcsl3 OH w1lh \lcw 1 11 AT O I-FF. It S A ---executive offices 1\11 TWO BEDROOMS· talsforlhe month_oC Aug. Beaut 3 br home, choice L •-h )'11..11• ·~1.1•d1u1· ,\ \!.11 . ;!\ , . ~ 1 ~ r 1 • 1 , , H"" 1 I •·l l '•'°>' )(1 t1.rlyt1n ,1 I .i It lull r>r' ·I Hlrl• 1 Terroce Towftholfte t'n1\ l'k. 2 Br :? Ba Ca1d1£1. 1'1 l ••nlr ~, nr pool, J.H'1111.1 II) ov.1wr l'flnt• onl~ 01'<.•11 ltouw S ;1 I & S 11 n I :! !'l I' :\t ~jl·4!11t .~.51)(1 UGHT & AIRY T. Rock lroadMoor 3 Hr. ::? Hn, fllm rm, <•lrrum. nu cf'l"· dr 1r. 111.ul\ u,.i;r:edt•!I, le \rt'" lc•l. ft'<' I.ind, SH!l.~IHl 83.1 ll~l CUSTOM DECORATED h o fl\ t• 1 n I r \ 1 n 1• ' 1o twll ullrul ('uh1·1<1alr LlC\'l.'lopnH'nl I luritc hdrm111, lwmu'\ room 15lh IM1rm l. Ill<' fanHIY rm, llv\111: 1•111 & formnl (ltn 11111 rm. rltl('k ~ ul'fl madr lor oulclour Hvrn~. Only 'lll'!>l' lo flr\V llli' 11ark W/COU r t for l \'nn1 ~. 1,..:1ke1hall & \Ollt'Y b:.11 1o a bu11c awlmm1na pool. A rn11s\ lo 1!11.!c to ony. -Rt.:.\L1'Y 5Sl·2000 ---- S''"'.'•''IC ''IL',\\'OF'TllE l,._,na ... l: ,. ,.... ed •-g 6J'"""'lt ( d Call fordclarls F'VI ·~001 Cll OCJUftO-ac ,_ "r,,, " r L.CJ!SU t""llg~ Rcuuc: to $625,000 ... r e x'"'" o .tone BAY & BEA Ci I . oc. ~ per mo. a •••• ••• • ••••••••• •••••• Ot:i':AN. Sprawlrnic 11001 Harbor H•"Pwlands II~ GRUMDY R. 4 ) Near .19th . & REALTY 675·3000 Ke1lh 962·<1471 Agt. 2 Rr house. stove & rcfrf). plun has w w C'UtJ>t'lin~ the choice community Realtor 675 6161 Pomon a . Like new __ 370 l\tll"nulia Av 1, lhruoul. lsl und l y pt ••• LOWt::ST PFUCE Sparkling poo with Cully __ • car~ls & drapcd·S/N 2 Br. $350. bllns, (pie, gar, HwltiftC)ton leoch 3240 rrnw S38S M< 497.369~" kitchen has Hll.T·IN HOM t-: in MONARCH carpctedastro-lurCdeck.prime Commercial GRasr ~ven & Run.KeS · patio, adlls , no pets.•£••••••••••••••••••••••--· 1' • • H ANCE & ovi-:N. BAY 1'1-~RR,\CE. 3BR. Spacious 3 bedroom. Leased Property. San e r rge r a t o r s in c. 640-7546 xccullve 4 br. 3 ba.2 Rr h ouse l'~ bd VIS If WS II fl • <; t\ tUj rum II~· room. surer J>O'lf family room ond dining Clemente. Income 18700. ~ U T 0 M A T I C spacious 21100 sq fl. l blk garage, frplc .' cpls, drl'll'. DISP. & t-:X'l'l·~NSI VE & 1leekin1: Sunken bari room. Custom featurt'S Price soo.ooo. 498·34L3 SPRI NKLERS· 0 f' F 3 BR., 2 ba.; palro. gar., bch. S47S. lsc. 640-5048 rcfni:. Ocean \'iew. j; 1 t: S c 0 1'' I> fo: £ P fom rm Some ocean lhruoul. Priced for qwck STREET PARKING. On· So. or Hwy. Avail. 8/23. La Brea. $<115. mo. lrfl STAl:-.IF,D M \110<;,\NV \'1ew. SIU .500. sale al $95,000. Call Ll~UIDATING ly 9.S X Potentral In· SSOO Mo. Agt.675·2373 Beachwalk condo, lease. util l2IJl92S·H.lll.'i ( 0 \B I Nl-:TS . 011en Ln~un1tN1guelReull~ 54().llSl com e . PRI CED T . Superrle:inllmodt!lw/----------.-'luin·a~e h•ud"' 10 2nd 130.5050 496·404 2 r IM E commercial SELt. AT Sl39.SOQ. Maintenance rrce. 3br. 2'"2 upgraded crpts, drps Chm> Abel Dci.iltn ultcu I\' \I' I w /~ U U IDt s .. lots for sale or lease In El 541·1404 ha duplex, l ,llOCI sq. rt.. wallpaper. Avail imrncd. modem. floor lo celling flXl'll & 1.AR<..:1-: LIV. Toro.830·3'773or586-8SOO. bt0.~25.5S2·03'11. S425. '114)R92·7486. 11l11ss facln,:: spet•tacur,r Jl)I. APl'UOX, 23 FT. --- - -·rollc Rllrs. ~· LA BORDE 5275. 2 br. nr. beach: 4 BR . family rm. formal ocean vle~s rrorn ~~ with dlJI. J'lltll o~ Alu~s Newport leech I 06 Ch91e1 / • • Sin~les ok. Fe<.'. dining rm 2 hlks bch ti d rm s . k 1 l c h c" ~ wullil thnt op1•n lo sun·•••••••••••••••••••••• 8'1ckbay.3br .2\\ba,Cml w•:. llOO · Mam Renlal!l,540,5370 547S.mo.oo2.4471 malls1vc living roo,io dtf·k Hu1ll l11~h uµ in NEWPORT lfACH dJ1I pool Shown by a ppt 1 -w1f1rcplacc. Plus den ft Arch flN•<'h llb un l''J Cali642·0130. '••••••••••••••••••••••• forsole 2200 C .. onllttlehse SRrhomcfor s rnallram1• overi.11:c )tarai:e. t. .. ,. lots w 2 n 1r ~:.ira)(<'. Thi• TOWNHOMI $ 14,400. Per Uttit 2Br, l ''l ba. full g:ir. new ly. No pets. IJ.!c rencl'd dee ks and enc loud h•lll~e m'•'«" n liltlc (lrtlnt UMDEI SS0,000. Pl£X£S crpt. g ,., blks lo brh. No yard, btwn Ooug las p;1t10. ~1ui;t Sec! SGOO Oll & v;m1 >'ork We lllrnk Th11t's rlaht ~ neat 2 EJkl 4,.9 p ets. S ll O inc ld 'g Aircraft & the bt'ar h ll•:1s':.:f:!'.<:_scal14!l7·335l,;_ 11 ·, l.OTS O 'll<)US ~' lllt. 2 O:t wicommunity ns s 0 c gardener.&14·2tl9. 89S32s.e.,0~10. fl42·0565 or t:rncra lcl 1'(•rruc ll . FOii pool. under ~O ranf18 0 "'.>n" S61.500Fu11Prlce Callu1·644·7211 2Sl-:AWINDCONI>OS • ra • only . Eves /wk nd s CottaM••a 3224 --Hcilwoml. i;tln11s .. OCf'IUl TllJ\T'SNO'I' l::11chWIOt2Bedrooms. Foor lndivi uallh two-M8·40.Uordays /IW2·11i!I •••••••••••••••••••••••Adult Tv.nhm 2 BR, 1•~ ~ut.hw'.?f'i;y1. ~Br1.,.c111nr~1), Ml'l..:11 "LIRt::AD" &ths. Patio. One Wllh &lory buildings w l <4H -, ba. 2 l'ar .iur, all of lhl' uu • -rp c" 1 u c ll111'• Mlsslo .... lti"'LTY bedroom a partme nts ofCCMlftfy 3 ~~· 2 ba condo, frplc. luxuril'!I irwl i1er. )(:ih'. $1SOd~r 1!J7-ll73 " "" Oen. sr.2.SOO. Each. and (4)·2 bedroom apart rroperty 2510 patio & pool. dbl gar . Avail 1mm\•d W11lk to ------. El.KINS CO., Re1lton ment.s In each. All apart· •••••••••••••••••••••• Adull11. $37S. 642 1155_ ocean'. S37S ooiRll70 l~<.'a~~· North l.n.i. tlO !JM.'> S CMt . Lnf!untt PhoM 494·0731 "1n ~1llill 881 Oover Dr. 63M800 menu have bullllns. IO ActtS, acce!ls to Bc!n ----clci:rt·«' view tllr. ~l>J. I~~~~~~~~~~ c:ir11ets and drapes C ...... k Vi M, 1 Sh t VERY CLEAN. J BR. 2 Bil 2 Ra crpt11 <h !>ll 11ir ff.()(l.<t()1·t1 27 or4!H 23:!1"• I· f '"''" . ew 1 • • as a BA + ram rm No pets d• , · • · · - CHARMING Owner will hel~ rnan~e. tr La sen.633·09S9 $450/mo. C1111' 546·414i ~on.• I ::t•u. ~aa:; mo 52:1.~. lltrl trc•r, 111<·0 I Ir BY OWNER ll11rhor View Lowdown+ Income. loo Mk f Ch •k Jo' • ·ll Shield Rc.1lly,6:}6.5070 w/oor llenrhc•omb•t sale iicpurnlely or o or "' .vcrc · --- - - -•· · • PhU!!e tll. 4 nr. •·uni ELEGANCE park~gc . Jusl lis ted. 260 Agent. lknutlfullt llllllrnch;d 2H ll ,..(;e, 63I 2011 --~\~ :~~.r 0JPt'~I t•St~ ~~~~ 2 Story home on Santiago Please call for, details. 3 er 2 ea. Corm:tl din rm, ~ al'fc. ~.x(.!cutlvc Vi lln LOCJUf'a Hlgwl 3212 l • l I'M . 2 3 18 p o r t Orivc. w1lh city view. 4 " Elko County Nev. 40 cpc.s bltn!I rpl rnc<l 144( F aclf c (;undo. Free boat •••••••••••••••••••••.:• ~~·lc·k. IUO.t;-129 Spacious hdrms. It den. 80 acres. Orazin~ land. & lncl grdnr ~r ? ~!1·3l39 or R.V · storojle, 2 car 1.t-:i\S t;, 3 lid rm 2 •u ----t formul dlnrng rm .. mar· seasonal creek. $17S. dn. ~aragc, tennl!I, j ;icuul. hc1ui.t• ulll rm 2 rnr a"• EST"l.l"f'. r uol , blefrnlc.lnexlralge.ll v-T O P • .,..,._,, MESAVf:llDP. sauna&pool11.Jmlhi lo · '. • -.. "' " . ,. . . . ....,.,,...,., B ""'Can .,., ... '"'2 :'11114 Plltlfl $3!1() 4U~ 687fl • Jacuu1. 3 DR,:? Ba, lng rm.5Assortedbathl. 3 r .2lia.Cplli,f11lc, _..,,._._...,,,., '"' ·· -- beaut. <lt!cor. sec. Fmestcarpcts&drapu; •tote immac.$4SO.S4S.5760 OOOSimnii1h Vlllri 26Q()Ml1tlOftVfefo lZf7 system. Many xtraa. beautifully decorated. , Wefthd 290 · · · •••••••••••••••••••••'• 0 t I d •. ......__ .. _retohelp! 4 ..... ROOM StJ.fl.4br,3ba,stutly, •t .... T••s : Room to expand fo'ee. wner rans crre • ""' ... ,.. ,._ "' o o I' 3 " " ""~ 0 "' I bl rl _., h r 2''" b• lh f 11 .-·"·· '~ .. • cur ill', 1: rtnei.l work11l1tn~hlp, de· Sll9.000. wncr. 5.$8.!)438 anx ous: & p c• ron.uc· ...__, tt 2000 •Y pay cas or your •a a • am Y room, $1!15. !)68.2445 MISSION VJpjJ() • IR,. ,'Or und ac~ssorle!I have , :--lion toS2t5,000 -rope•~ house In :M hours. back fireplace. Welk lo pool, -Slnglcfpmlly from 1,12~ been blended for com· t.:WPORT SHORES b)' CALI. A •••·2414••••••••••••••••••••••• paymnl$0K. Ca ll Jack tennls,s11un11.J11cunl.cl· Brt.,.B1t,patiodbl gar. NOJ.'E~-AGT 639·119'11' Iii\ I l f ~ '• l'N:il}( 11\11 S TH~ WAVES BREAK! _beach. G45-M23 ~d& Trade to laraer unllt $4.25. per month. 000·1830 VACAMT ;,. (C)rlllble living. SEE 011111cr. 4 Br ~ blk 1 K.~ TIMITOTIADI Scoll,Brtr.536-7533 c.etc. all Included for bllns.S350mo.53G·l827or -• I.EA R Tl'E O•'L~«N i••\.TY -..1. u or•a::-"la'lon, ave uptoS160,000 c:Hh& KEY REALTORS ---4 n.• O It til! "'SSUM "'ILE "'"'"' NEW •'" ,..,.. "' " ''"'" ~ l b t It I •u-.••77 Br 2 "all1 Co11do, nr ,...,rm can om. c,.. .,. ' ,.. ,.. " . RO\R' R•'"UCEO TO "'"' ,.. •• ,.,, ~ .. , OUiu more tax s lter Call mus uy DP un s n .,...,., <> I o 1 •· .. loan & the O\\ner will ' . •v i U . O.C. w/ln 30 days. i\lao Hunt. Ha rbour. $250 mo. m?cu utc. ,n Y .... ~ •• "'6· helpfrnancc.Hoploltto SELl.T00i\V.S23S.SOO 3 Br,3 1\a,18fom rm.2 oowCorln orma °" hav e 2 a pl bld g Jbr +den, 2ba, rrplc. Noklds 847.78S l Rtntorl.colic. , sec this almost new, •Joyttt.O.oodLlt. frpka. Jacuttl, 11ul'ldeck, lk...I.. ._11 LIOMSISTATIS w/$300,000 totalequltyto bltns.nrHalccrestClub. · -· 55(J·7777askCor Suc.: mcUculously kCf'l, well 493-251 l ruu 'ln&uh1ted. oil )(ll'as. ~~HHIJ ~ I $38.-8832 trade up. K lnve11lmenl!s, $385, gardener, wtr Incl. Vllla Pncllic Condo. 3 an .... --.. h 326,. localed 3 bdrm •• 2 ba. & 32325S. Coa11t llwy Short walk to be11ch. llocll te 1e-1.l .,0 R ··pie"'-. n-st buu In 640-8300 979-4886 or 9'111·7836. 3 811. Newly decotaled. -,.... • ac den al Still,9SO OPIH THUlt J 6 -•n "' .. .. ... """' 1 Pools & tennis crts. Nr •••••••••••••••••••••--: S T•SU • Two3bedroomj2b.athun• Jl.8 . 184.500. Steve. nlverslty Park 111 or3Br, 28a, cpts/drps, very Bch & Schls. $390. mo. 3Br. 2\'l bn condo w/lli' A M 1-6 lt.s. Lower flllly'fumished 536-7542, S36·980l Terrace 38r. Agnl for c I e a n · D b I g a r 962-8445 al\. 6 pm. boat sllp, dbl gar, • SS2·7000 !UOl ll•.,.A••· wiUI fireplace. And all ownuse.827·9624 s prinklers. 1375 mo mo. summer, S6SO )'...,_ <sllual~d t blk So. the convenlenc:ea. ldu l Three office . bulldlna•. S4S·8S76 an. 5, all da) $265. Near water, 2 br , lse S.5·76'5 THE · :. · · Superior· Balboa c rou· for owner occuput. ~nae Co. "'Z:,"o:e:O LIDO ISLE wknds. ltids/pet.s/sngls. Fee -·-------...- VI LL "·CE. · lng of PCll & Wci;l on Hurryonthl1at ._!e000ran,1_9 h .:,ul__. Wanted ·8 ayfronthome MalnRenlals,540-5310 2Br Condo W/den,~ n: -Rfvt'r.) $11 f 950 -· · -s _ r-,. '""· •n h p p · 2llr. kids ok. No pets. area, 2\laba, stove, t REALTORS N~ R1-R3. Will buy or ' S90,000 to Sli5,000. Ted " CH · vt ty only. $265/mo. Avail Aug 15th. Br townhouse, nll. comp. Rece ntly co DRAMATIC trade. an••~ Broderick. 714-549-1480 ~,;.~~r~J.1~ Opm, (714) 837-6050. eitl St gara"c. Pool facll. $325. i,tr\l!Cled. tennis eourO. JoM'Tlle W.....,.1! A haven of peace heal '46•0866 64l;m1 COSTA MESA •·PLEX. wltdays,or645-348Seves. mo.S57-l"\ ~· nr beaeh. $550 mtl. Woodbndie BroadMoor. describes thl• 11«>cluded 3 $25,000. dn. No points, no or 3br home In Id area. lu11Cied ad• sell bl EAN 3 Dr 2 Ba. bllns, e75-<>123. 3.,drm. 2ba, el~gant bdrm. horne a.a l'l. llYlng Classlfie<I ads sell b ANlTUAE qatifytnr. no ttflna11c~ Con&ldtt fixer.upper. items. s mall items 0 cpts, drps, fncd yd, '37S. N-pt.--Sho-r_u __ B_R __ ~..,... ~.u10 home w iatnum. rm.ceiling. \'u.ll08.900 ·ltems1.sm11l tlemsor 1n> 1111. 2 12br> 2 Obr). ~.11Wollect. (714 ) a ny Item. Jua l cal )'Jr Westminster Mall. den. Wa lk t}bc.~ .. f · Nr lake S'JS,995. 646-2881 1tem.J ustcall642·S67J. SlOl.000. Aat. $57·NS9 -v... &u-5671. M&-5230, ....... 08 MlO/Yrly. A£;_~., .. ~Ian Rt.'\l EST<'\TE 'JI 1 , " ',t !J! ' I' t ............................................ Mi•,_. leace. lHf le Mete 37 ............................................. I i Br: 2 ba condo. UJ: SJ7 .10 WIM a UP craoed. Adult cpl. •SludM> • l BR Aptt l .... $350. 549 11251 •TY• Maid S.rv Avail ~tcliff avelJ, a Br 2 Ba •Phooc Serv, Jltd pOo& I (pie. patio, aar. ~rdn •Q1Udr.n5eet.JOA hac . 1450. 644-77ZT •Low aaooUUy ratea. 59-1232 237' NewPQrt Blvd, CM 541·1'7~ or '41-*7 .Sutblufla .C8r, 3b111----------, Twohle. 81tn1 & pool ... ..,. ... 2 Ir HIS mo. 844·5St2 Bltna, wfw. drpa, pool 673-'799 S2U. Adlu, no pets ..;_-~------iCMl-3971 On the Bay, 48r+Den1---------. Be t location. SlSOO mo Br, poot S'lU. mo. N yrly lease. Watertron peta. 2285 Canyon Dr Hocne11 G3H400 Apt F.13J-."33 ' • ,._ ••• ...... to SMre 43 .-::. --=----~ ~ ' ---1 •••••-••• .... --••••••••••••••••••••••• ...... 41 1Aet & ,_. IJO • "'WI"" ._. Jl6t al \o Mare IOveq l br ........... ••••••••••• ...................... •••••• ............ _. •Pl I• pa: Newport. .... c t 11.... .. .............. . -..-..-.....e.-1,_-..-.,. ... --~~~r-;,AUMIWPOaT llHorl lhl•1 wlt ·1 81•• .!: a!t_ Le • Sml bla~~ • ·~ Sc•nta a • •• --.... Ch•'*""· \taalt etc. tk3'1 oe,. •---~ le le•ale ut Sau1 • ....,_.._ 7001 -"'.-B:l' _. 1~ Call ~ iu'..tcHO. After -. "'°· or ·-u llarsutrite • SieA Joa ............... ••••• •••• LOllT OML Y -Mctm.oa fMM91A11oc:capAMCy Private patio. llreplaee, beam9d cellin••· full kalcbens. Pool • recreatioo room. tyear '-"· HAYLIFT APMllDJS JllA•--..C.~ '4W141 friU& 11 .. 7 1«2 ...._. lpmcaJllM-'7115. 4MMlle 41110 llUla Rd. CdM·i---.-.~---TownhouHI W..e.4 46 llewarcl. IM-'1'105 II A From $321.S! eflned lady to •an ... •~PoolM DT!!_'!,_ luxe apt u . PHlaloa ..... _11,. left ..... REWARD · Womao'a aold nayn l~rur Acr;;· fro: M io Centttw/aaMe.MN4t1 ..._;; ,; w~rl.al. = ~ 1:!:."'~;t: IM Ml.ft latand at Jamboree ~ to ........ Aue. lch. aru. SIOO. °' '-' O..t Plua UZ.aTJ Su Joacauin Hilla aoact. t1aru s.t. m. Wftk. 0'81 tM-~:!!lm~----:--:-1;;~~~8i"k;-;;J;J C7141644-lt00 w walk\obeadLllU'k,... --a... ncl ~FOUND : Blk'Tma~~ ----------.eve.~ . ..._... Afaban name ' ara, I Ir Apt tOO eq k . f'r1>k. twtn funa reatat la N. w/ta1. vie Adaru H.B. P•llo. PhH (11• EwopM" lad)' •Hll aNa Appt'Olt ~~oov ,th NO-aG -.. ..._ ...,.. beaut boiat l blll f'eb. Appror .. mo .. ,_;_ ______ ~ • ......._. holll Victoria Bcb, Prel.,.Cdll.191·10D. D: Blk male curly DeUIWuJ 8ack Bay~br IAaana. View. aao mo...._..._•"t/ do&. Lquna Nl1uel nr bl\na..cl· aar. Adulta )'l'ly. _,.J022 Pk.,.-PCH. 131~. Mornlna·Aft trooon t:v .. 1a1 CLASSES START MONTHLY PACIPtC TIA.Va SCHOOL 110 ElTth St, S. An» sns. ._ OHM....... 440 ••••••••• .. ••••••H••• POUND: Small 6•ndy BllYfront plush bacbelo •••••••• .. •••• .. ••••••• ....._ <'Olar mala Terrier type. l.•~ ..... d. Boat priv•a. 123.s ,,_,. .. ......,., IOO Pink leaab/choke collar F•nt111tlc 4 Bdrm Duplex tau~-6 ,. -• -T h St ho cu _.... mo. 64-2·9866 •••••••••••••••••••••• nr. 1 t • 1 ps. • ... frlvute balconlH lo.'.1 ,..._..vn ••••••••••••••••••••••• •ALUMINUM FNDRY 8'5-toe8 JelM W..t.41. 7071 Ueb bed'°°m..:olk t mo. 2 "' 2 Bo, --UPPER DUPLEX I llr lllO 000._, lakH-• OUND, Yo& aenlla n••••••••••••H•••n•• ocean" bay. , moo ean View Bout ZBr drv-. paiat, r....-. pr, Ba, new'1cleeor'd.1 b ~~.... ,....... •CANDY SHOP• medium n fem ctoa, U..tth)', atronal clean-cut 14M6H Accredited by NA'M'S Dtilbll•lled 1"3 . P'lnancl•l Aid Proarams ,...;J~/:~':!~111om" Zb•. patto.' P•'k Nwo .......... ,.., It •••· No ,.1 •• t • 1 .. c,..m .... blk/....,/wht. Adam•• llY .. •olO •t.,.ent-oddx 631·1400 SubleaH. Tennis. spa ....... .._ .... z Ir I" Ba S. ~pedca'nNwer. e~r: ~::::,....,. •SCHOOL, readln1·1klU Santa Ana Rlver 540-9163 work ol Ill)' kind, ' &Ym· Complotoly '""" -~· '• ' -· ' ~--•Bl!:l!:RBAR H B jol>o, Coota llH• area. lf.V HOMES. Palermo dil het,Unens.etc.6 n1 =-t~~!dtts,':i.~ *'8912 .,...,_.._.. •BUlLDHDWSUSrP.PHLY UNO:RedDoxle.lyr. M-tm•auforRory, •Br & >'R & ,,.w, Sl ot mote,od•'"· no .... aft4,JOPll .... 2 B• Condo, N ~ --•SCHOOL.p.i J•/ ' Vic. Wit,.. & ll"bot, di~ d fac :.00.M2·7093or 644·7770 refsreq,$500.~ Creel. Many au11• •MAIDSl!JtV.,N.p. CM t'79-03ll8 t:.per. la._ reu • ..,..&or ..,d. UW. -... ...... 5T»•rl42·7114 H.8 .S l7l60ranae. CM • tory 1upervlaor. ull B.V. HOMES. 180 Des 1or2 Br. adulia, no pets N•CI• .... ., -MS-U 7 0 : <2> Do11. white• 54W795 'View Large yard, 4Hr Sl75/l200. 2421 E.18thSt LWISUP p;_"!J~alats,5*SJ70 S.Cle•••lt Jt7 •lllOPREERENT• brown El Toro. lmmed. ~;.._ ______ _ 6 Fam Rm. s111s.mo N. lits. IW6-180l TO_. MANI •••-••••••••••••••••• l·Z·1 Ran. olficet1 frota LAUMDIOMAT eoalaet AIUmal Cont.rol, Youna man. • yrs U · ~-1093or6"44·7770 1 11 • ew ZBr. 2ba. frpl , VJ•WDUPLEX UH per mo. AdJ. N--·-ooopw,.ar •not perience palntlft1, needs ---------,Ocnnfront winter renta Ovtt 500 l»ll trttt and dahwa~r. cpti. drps, OCEAN .co · AirportwHotel. Noleue ~ ...... ulf , ' permanut Job. Call Le11Se: Bluffl bay '''t:~· 2 b r , f P r I c. to st re» m s w ilh patJo. Adlt.I. ~ E·l NDelwane~.om•t•~o'25;.2C~l rt'Q.833-3ZZ3Tilnoon d~~l-~n~aen:y. Al ••ad : Do1. bl act Gre1,t'1t-'62l beaul.3 BR,2~, ba. washer/dryer . Avail water falls create a " ,. .,, .. ~ al w/Wlaite cbe6t, pan l.ab.1...:.;..;.::;... _____ _ 1875 Agent 644·1133 Sept. 15th. $400. mo rl'laxinit Sl'tling for Sl.641-SS72. 492-8050 40" PR SO FT help rwa. Most wausu l •·• mo's. Edison HS. Retired Nurse avail. f1>r ---~-----, &aG 2830 your spacioua new t-or "'-P.W JIJ6 .,_ ....__ 1617W~LlFF·NB u._lque operation part time companion BLUF•'SCondolnm ,,.. opartmenl ---_,_ Onqa Co. Own., •ell ..,111on. Compelenl w/ 1 StortlngalS..95 WlNTER BEACH REN .zFr. omr=. Furiutur~ ••u .. u•u::_•_ ...... :: C•illsac 317 AGT.541·5032 (n& to pursue atable __, C.11$$74683 I · 3 TAL • 2 blk to oceao . --• 1 ta wb' 2Br, -·new-=-•••-••••••••• .. ••••u -.. Gd lernaa. Act Found: Black male dog n::.itrences. · · •Agent, 64 .&·lll • Very clean 2 Br dplx un aOvK•1•::~~ts :: ... ~om« COi', lrpl, adlt.a .oolytr. ~ ZBR. ' IBA, up1taira/ 110 I Westclff Dr. m-aoO. . H.B. on ~ach. Call Don, HefpW..W 7100 .Exec. b1>me, Ua lbo it. Nuw rum. 9 mos lse · 9.00 to 6.00 2300 pets. S29S. Gu• W .,... downstairs, bltns. Cl .N...-,on '1nenet.ICtP 530-7539. ••• .. •••••••••••o••••• ·r ontn. Pt. ' & 0 •• R•f'• ••• ·•. .,, ..... · ~vi~w Rd:. i:•"• .,..mo. to-'·-· -.,.. .._...Office 5-ER.obit....., Sectttoriol .......,, Slam"' ea~ '"· • 1 ... m.i din . .3 b• •• 2 frt>I 213-190·'819 ""'· '"°"'""""°· ar... HJZ KILLGORE REALTY Call°"Sl"ll-Temporoi;:. Hal'/,,BU:I· w,., 0 , " Bu•h.,d. •AAAAPOSITJONS !::.l°':!~.~1M,!"' Walk to wat"· $130. VU •••••••m••••••••••••• '"3-ooal 11141141 .. lllext.... ;::;.,':'::. ,:~ ;:.'!: Fou~ln Volley. Co ll =·~· to~l,JK DavldsM Rily 673· p<1id. Snals ok. F'ee Mai 3 Br. Adultsb, no .. ,"· COMDOS -, toual1 --N.B. '"'"''" •" .alee. -capobllltl" •'"'In· 962· •• ~I F c . R<ntols, M0·53!0 d•hwhn, ' o g op '· lat e Z B• .. 3 B•. • --HO p...,u,. bldg. Re-•· """'''" m-<306 aft POUND, lri•h Seu ... VI<. £mr."'yen ar ~ -Bluffs.to1•cly3Br:2'heb . h •-h fu closed&!_l;aape.,BBQ.Gat ~ p~ol rec area.••••••••••••••••••••••• ble.645-3700. lpm•wknds Ma1nolia le Atlanta, L 11 Rellndh•raSAS1ten12' D ••••· Eod ..... "' • ". I -' • • • ..W•!e• ~· .. . . ,..,.; c•..... "'" EXCmNG ~ .. T. ••ocaY H.B. -...... ••II Ne4:m020 ~ :ac~ ~:tj90 view._ Newly upgraded. bayrront ap1t &Nb~~ LAMAMCHAAPTS 0~esaio~rius. p PALMMISAAP-TS. DILUXIOFFtCIS ...._GROSS_,..,OOO.MO. ~1#2 ,.. 1 "or•ppt/""·tab '•c. I Retr1g, washer /dryer Winter or yr y. o _... 778ScollPlace,CM 837 ~ MINUTESTONPT Comml fc lndaU spacea. ..,., '-ti •· ,. ..,. ""' "" •ollew. SG75 o 613·""3. 6U·0073 • BCR ... to _, oq. ft. Ao low Ori"""1 .,.... of 1S yn ,_, Male Slam"•· Vic. ~ p ...,_ lease. 640-8$78. 1 t ....,..,_ leCICll 314 h ,a BR as 3()r sq. rt. Lag Niguel & retirln1. Located heart Hrbr View Hllls. C.ll Ace_.,. ey ' . ~~ Newadu.ltwaterfrontaptt .. ••••••••••••••••••••• Bae , ls as.. . Mi:ts.io_o Viejo a reas. or fasL growln& a.cu. _ _....2Sio.... Peraon prefer COD&t.up, I 38•, 2Ba Twohm. Up --in.._.Y..,,.__ul d I r •b• fn>on I H•ndr to S. D ...... ,, Some freem '"lllng, but wlll tnio •bup -I -l"d<il Ii """· Pool. •••••••••••••••••••••• landa<apl•I · Excep. b• ••• ,~· "'1 ':.tai Adtdlo,NoPeU c.111:11.1400 Some eolO•lna. Al l. LOST' Bnt/bll, long hol• pen,., Cd w/rt1ms. · •""'· p•k. Adul"· oo ..... ,...... llO tiMolly rich lnlerion d<r•. !" (, $\"020 ' ""'""•D•. ..,.._ -.,. ..,, ml•""°"· Type & l~key. Send , .. "''· ""° "'"· "''·"'' •••••••••••••••••••••• 1"2 bd•m• from Sm &lo .... cm. ' (5 Bib Ea" of Ne.._ e" c 11 ff D • l v o. , .,_,. tba. "Chow", vie ,.,.. to penonnel dll'ee· ......... I ·BR opt. B d I ht M.,. Venle Villa" 3 Bd Bo • I 11r 1 Bo Bl•d.J "'••IUod olflca. Air, ' -.it/9Nr/WJM Me,. " TusUo D.: CM. '°'• 2111 Ca mpu• 0,., 3 Br 2"'1 Br. Newport cheerful; bit-ins, s un Mesa Verde Drive East S2H ·P55. Both b av 546·9860 cpt. $11$ mo. Pb 6'2-4W7 lllSSIONVl&JO AREA S4l.olllS Suite 330 Irvine, 92?15. deck. Year leai;e only. Costa llesa. (714 bttu, •patio., encl GI Outataaclla1 loeaUon Tem<e Coodo. "'°· ...,. Mo. Bk• ..... ,... ,......,. Call-LIVE Bf • FFIC ES: "Sm •II· wllh P•llo oe•ll•I· LOST; lriob Sotle• Puo· AHanm••I • "'•kot. T., 968 91 " Laqe·l HUI•· Dl•ld"· G ... -a day and pr, ... fomale, 8 wk" ,.,,..,, otoodr job, .... , lelboa Pn-.. llO Beautifully landscape Hu e 3 br 2 ba w/yard. At Oakwood, .Your wlU bul.11•. ea. Near Baker 1:;:'ln1 Just.perfect tor Vic. lfa1nolla, Santa shop. Once In a lifetime ,,.,.... Sh"b':.'':f;.d•~· •-••••••••••••••••••• &•""" trpo .ad•k ,,._ v!. priv0... Nm H"" rmd .-!'-''" ~otcy & Br h I< I. C •II · llom • j. 00 , Xlttl terma. Ana• 1111t. CM ... _ oppo,.onlty '°' rl1hl 21••,.~·~:-::• . IY l B'P"tlY l•m. ""· >' 1·2-3 B•. D"bwHb" loaton Hubo"'. S<OO. el•b •vona. Tbve' I Own"A ........ m ... P°"lbletoke-o•" Y. --ly. VOi. pold. cnel. I "·· BBQ. G., -ot-2811 mllUoa io ,..,..,.,,., Al\.lll.-FOUND, om.•11 Bea1lc of •hop. °""°' looking s.. .._ '7$·7876 "" waleq•I. Poor. Sw1m .. 101, bllll,.d•, Office Spc A•oll -•OODS Uke do1, wbote "'"'l) 1 6 ,...,..,. to nll,em'"'· ...................... LA MANCHA Ans 3 bib to bch. lbr, frplc, health d ub, tennis. r •11t1hr1t/SD Fwy Million Viejo Area bl_Jc ·~· Fpeml~!·· CM. Apply In person, Thomas I 3 B 2 b lomll• 'm lg c..,...._ loocUll 178Sa>tt Pto ... Cll .. ,, ......... ,., 'Ill> SI. ................... ~ Prime "" ""' ...... p., ••• ,... b"OkoP. v...... • .. "· . Sd~IY ........ m . r. a. ,, I • •••••••••••••••••••••• 642.5073 IM.2-3513. etc. Singles. 1&2 bdrms. Union Federal Saving '~a•__, mlfdle or busy 64.2·3148 Hamilton, Costa Me.a. kitchen. ce~t ra,, 11.•r. o 'PLEX·lower 2 Bdrm. f rn II unrum Model fa of ~ 'CU clean Nr. So ~st r hun & 2 ba. ~•1th yard, pnvuAy New 2 br, •l"• ba. paUo 2 BR , bltn •love, very u . d . I 0 T So. Bldg. All or part o c e n t e r • G r o s s . FOUND: Lrg male pup. • ,. -'-•-c1.-..a.. h 1 L 979 1798 " " "' s open aJ Y 1 · · rry, 0 fica+receptloa. <T• $13.000/mo Ii 1rowlng. Lit• color, vie or Spr· ""'"er-..,.. " "° '· ••" · -'"''°''d p•tlo•. b•UI G•nlen. Ad•I ... No peb cl .. n. Sep. ••• · ...... peto °' ........ ft t. Pnm to oubleue Torma lO q•allfrbU)'". In Id a I e / Ed In .. ,. F 0 " I '°w In M boo I w .. -.1.. 329 '""· '"eplo<e & w!!"" ·~ 5245.64~1003 ent.SW."2·'76' thru Feb. P•rtially fo Aat DJ"100 -mon,t. eo. "•king ••••••••••••••••••••••• terlors. On Catalina ' StTO. 2 br. 1arage, pool, Newport Beech North w /aha red tecretar lal . . . person w/mfg cxper. to t Br. 2 ba. dean + the Palisades. Thr (2)c:b:~:s~~m~s. klds ok.FH. 880lrvlne(atl6tb) clerica&1ervi~1but willADV/Publl s hlnC Co·FOUND:Lrgblkfemdoa. handleheavyworkload ~anlener . Avail. now. as:ent.notee.493-4900. w /rireplace, 1320. 1 MainRentals,540-5370 l714 )64S-0$50 consider alternatives Change ln plans lore• Vlc of Heil 4' Edwards, in payables area. Apply, • 25 "'' fc A•t 55"8 Call962·3314 eale of workln11 lnterest HB.CallM6·3082. Coaat Cau1m1ran, 2026 S<t • ,,o e. G · ~· Ocean Vu-Brand Nev. without fireplace $310. St•"' 1 br pool child ok. NewPortBeacbSoulh • i b l• with M G Irvine I °' "'·""' 2b"2b" bllo" frplc ,20 b"M· "'I• & oven, di•· F"; • • 1100 lah Stlal Dov") PU.IA ~':,.~~ ;!..~ .. "."':...,,, ....., ' frioh Seit ... J•lf ' ow• . COftdomiftfum1 p11tio.&"001S375.496-4292 hwa:>her. MalnRentals 540·53'70 CT14}8"2·8J70 1 __ ............. 1a....... af\erlpm 31. Vic : Huntloa\onAptManagcr.coupleover .... I h d 340 160W. Wilaon. ' X__-a. -..-Beach 9118-5024 30. Apt + phone + rvrn ' • CoroM del Mar 312 BR 1 'A b MIWPORT llACH Cuatom·decorated full ••••• W..t.cl IO I ' . salary, 67 unit•. C.11. ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••• NEWLY DECORATED Condo : 3 h o' o ~· I size view ofc.s. Services.-.-•• "'•••••••••••••••••• Fouod: Wire-haired ter· ........ """ NEAR DOWNTOWN 2 br I S200 New cpl· yearly. C II ren . . 2 Bedrms, bltns, frp c. rtlfled Pr f Secy f I ,_.....,..;__._.,., ______ _ • Spacious 1 Bt.lrm. cond .., fn«! ~Y~:'!ater ·.pd. C2228I !1c~•~e~n~•p.~!~'~. OM THI W ~~-~~ Is eqJp. 1 blk I wiU tovest ID •~in ~:!n/~~~1},,,.h~~:I~; Apt Mar. Semi-retired fum.orunfurn forquiel ~.., ··A Placentia. • A"'8'7:M2lObef SPll somedockuse -.......... Air.Porter lnn. 2082 partnershlp.Have 1 mim Mams/Brookhurst, HB. couple. &5 units. Salary adull.'S. Walking d1:1tanc~ (£? betwn 1·5, 636·4120 .. · JACOBS REALTY Michelaon, Jrvln. e. expel". Upper• \o ower 968-8785 +apt. Call (213>865-1851. to b., 'h & "°'"' '[I. l'!!°!_,! ~-, ~ DeluH >B•, Zba, blbts, .,._ 1$1·1123< 111 •" I ov u t m eal nnnn Pref. bel"' noon. SJS01mo. yearly. DHa• .-w _. gar pat I 0 • 2o1 Write: Cl ... lrled Ad.., Found: Beaut Male While __,;. _______ _ /'VEWE\..L ' A ssociat Es L.A'"'4.l.U HACH 4'4 O U "ORONA DEL MAR 2 Br studio, \.-ll, Ba dfwn. Call~ornia 53f·.4214 o Brliht1 Ire ba51~h.5 FUCmos~a' OfftClllHTAL Daily Pilot. PO Box 1560 w /black She pherd . APT MOR . LovelyUunlt. '-• H'I ba up. Atnum. am 84&-3827 uo urn. .. · • CPTS, ORPS. HEAT Costa Mesa. Ca. 926216 Corner Harbor/Baker, Ideal for. ~Ive retlred. 2 Br T1>wnhouse •. frplc. rm, frplc, pallo twnhs · Meaa.Call751-l5H.. A/C,ALLUTILlHCL ..__....... IOJ CM.Jul)'I0.546·0897. Rer's rcqd.646-6426. Pool. tenn1:.. contlnenta design. No peu. 283 Knox HMut~• 515 aq ft ..._., I br n11kfasl. Some ocean H t H•..... Jl42 •-w 400 . . .-.c:A ........................ FaUlld· All whlte blue-PT MOR. Coupe over " St Nwpt g s area. _...,. -SlOaq.ft, _..., • · k'... A lll + eal ry Catalina \'lews. Close t · ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••• 4SO&q fl ~ $ VENTU I $ eyed Slame1e . ""'Len. 30. pl + u a • C.-"-"' 4 _._.. shopping It fine beach. 28R Studio owner'• unit. 2 NB atep1 to bch, wk'n Gaq: n. SUI '•• v.ic ; Clubhouae Ave, 120 unite Hunllnaton --......... 3425 B-1-l·:!till GIAHDOPINIM~ frplca. 2~ba. ms. mo. fem. kilch priv. SlSG. 11101q.ft. aoo CAPIT-Lidohland.m~t Beach ,541·5300 • •• ~~•••••••• THEIAYLIAF Aat<Zdl-.... 22%1ot<7$.l'JGll CAU.SUJ!:CONNEa ~!,{.": •• ~:·.~~1o"o FOUND: Sm. block As..-w..un I BEAUT .3 D• ''' Bo. dph 2 Bdrm S2 i...1ote H44 I.vine, moll be Mii" 1714114'• I UO minim...,, oo HmK. im > '""''• do1 poulbl• Lab. Lite monuf. M "" opeok I RANCHO polio. gar, nu cpts. 54· Beaullful. spacious ne ••••••••••••••••••••••• room, reuonabb' lo SllAPROPl:RTIES -.nl'lA.MforMr.Lee Haa fl ea c ollar Vic Enrli•h. Perm. Potllllon. SAHJOAQUIH mo.lse.673·7513 Agt. apc.s.Pool,pvt.patlos. a..c ... S. rent, saUlfactory llvin IWPORTC1t4111 Brookhurs t tAdams . Ca.taMesa.•714/U l-oTOO. I Adult.I, no pets. J ..... .a...a. r •ma 1 e pre re r red. H Meftllll!llS. ,,.. 1 Lynn 8'8·0756 Evea. lo.-a."--' VIEW ol golf ""'" ~lmmoc. 2 BR Pool 3"'Maudo,C.11. ..,... -.ic l'lllST .. IOFCS -HJ Asoltt _,... lakf.'. 2 Bedroom + den. carport. S300 l\tofyearly 6SH>S8T orCM2·400S Rentlna from t.260. •s off Ice• a va U . In ..... ••••••••••••••••• • IJIO Permanent, part Ume 1 3 Custom decor. Pool. Agent644·7383 Adult apta. LeHl•I pre-ROOMS as. wk up wit beautifully decorated S°' WtM--· d)'I pef ""· m111t have S>2'1Mo.Sept. • 2 8•. t ba. pool, bltn•. view now In a P....UI• kll<beo. llJ1.$0 wk " •'*"· l>tll ""'-In· lOAflS ID •••••••••'"•••••••.,••• _...,,,.. "P. Btwa 9 Ag<0t1owo"ll«·2932 O'""" Vlow, So of Hwy .• .,,.. '200. mo. No .. ., Jnlne comm•oltr. ....... .., ... ,...._ ol•de Llb"fl• coo Ahez.oJTDi..-Drl .. le1P'°blo~1? •111m, .... 7017, aokJ°' ~~~~~~~~~ ~~\;.~~,; ·~·,:.~~·[;;;~ ..,,.,. I".:::I.!'::~~=;.,.~~':,'.--4IO !~~i~i!-'/ .~:~ ra1~~'•cc•lfNt 'i:l~~1:d~0:~.~~e ~!;,.~~:.~~~dward l:;xec. c ondo, N pt married cpl. No pets.EastsldetriplexS295.mo. of Saa Dleao Frwy.•••••••••••••••••••••• Ground noor. Month • ..._-._,. e. Rl•t." .3BR,38o. 1 '" 1 ' ""'loo. 81'·0111. "'""' 3 b' .2 ba '"'' •dull#. "9·1100 SUNNY ACRES M.OTJ!:L mo• l h , ca II (1 U 60.2171 141o16 II MASSA61 ..,,. m1•. apt + ofll. OK cothedrat ceiling, pool, 1 No pets Bltn oven • eo dbl (1or2> 64441780 "l!!.URI MODILS for husband to work. 120 '''""'""· No ""· '-'• lll, 2 />IA <aoge. 3Yn new, 81'· "-INdl H41 su.io, Q.eon "°'" ZMD T .0 MONIY w ""'" HunUnatoa Beach. s.100 rno. 494--0382 S4SO Yrty leClff / J dlt ••••••••••••••••••••••• KJtdaeoettt·Pool·Phon Prorcsslonat ofc, Laaun• Ter-• be .. ow matketi ISCOITS 5411.5300 COU O' MIWPOIT 1 Br, pool. rp ~· a · '· n Drop a pebble Into th Svc Approx .oe·. llO Glen ... OUfCALL OHL y 1--------R., ... LTORS '75·5511 ~·~!."5..'!m11~!~~!!'0 Ocean from your Apt. 2376NewportBlvd.CM. neyre b\llldlo1. •••i pvt f\lnda, P~n• 631 .Jll I ATTRACTIVE g lrl-~ -· ---••-Lea ... L"'""'· m•rilY. "8·'15' A• I 11, 1111, e o _,,. la your ' o Model-ff.,,_ <rr, '°' AptlnoldCon>nodolNot • ..,..., '.,. ,_ • ....,. ............. 11111eai, Stw a.-420 -· .... .,.._.......... ...-nOH r:-=1an,.!:\1t:':!'~~ :~: ••• I hed•m .......... 2 ... "•"· ...... -'· Hwy.......... ..~~ ................ COM........... •9UICllCAIH• ........... n.r ........ , .... , ..... u ••. Uille lol'"d .3 BR .. 2 ba "'° 1"'1~ otll. °"-o Ad•lt•. no ..... S300 O.ean View Apt. 2B•, I Oorana dol Ila• It blk I •oito .UI pd A/C, ampl T .0 • ..._ Pftg. -av all. wkndl Son>e office •klllo d"i"· home & 2 BR .. I••· 1~1 ~·""" o.emo,.,, """'' bath. balcony. lloolltly Bl& Corona. a 'on. den. pk g'. Wo tion " Co l!:IDor•t<-• .. Co. ""'Holpllne'4T·HI$ ble bul •PP••··~··· "'° • "'~:!;;.~") ................. ,, ...... EA.'ITSl0£ .... , ,., "' ........ rh4111-1311 ., • .,m ..... p/Wk . • .,,._ <ZUllTN ...... l•ct ....... ,,., • •mbotlon lme. '"'" · bo doplex. 1.900 ••· ft ·· ,.,...,.,, Uk• oew. Pool °'"" V•, tiny '""mini 11100 P/mo. Aat ..... 7211 POI LIASI or 171'! -C • ,1~~"':: :r.'f! o 11 a I :::,, '.;:,'~!.~~~~::~~~ ..... ,........ 110 bUl. ""· ,.,..,.,. no pol•. 111 E. 22nd. Sl .... , h,., S225 Inc •hi. B Ibo• Boy Cl•b 2 b' l -H REAL-AU '°""""'' • "Jmal. .... ,,.,.,,, .... Writ e de· •• •••••• •• •' • •••••• '• • rnn na, '"'"" lat, fplc. "'"" 8 No peto. '"· -r~m. oat. A volt Aug. th SI II MO iACH BROKERS A bo•tlon, odopdon & tailed '""' d"'rlbl•I 1 IAYfROMT dshwshr, r µts . drps , ''THESEVILLt:" •-M'--1 llU Sept.83H400or49'-67111 .,.._ C06TAM!SALoc PRIVATE ff Available keepin1. younelf&back•roundlo 1 Bach apt. yrly r9c26nt~! rcrr111 $.'115 1"· 673-751.3 z hr w/itar. Adults, ne ~ •• :?::: ••••••••• """ So Oceanalde ...... 71 •. 1700 fOf' Second Tnatt l>eed1 APCARE 547· Cloulfll'ct Ad No.691, 'i ulil pd &2.10. mo. c. ---c))lS drl)S bttn• rncd y .,1 ""eana ., Ad· 1 .,. on selected Orange Coast Oally Pilot, p . o. box .. ,.,,,.,. •. .,,..,,,. HARP som '"'' 2 ••· ., • 11~: w,;., pd.>Hn,..,poo1.c1 ... 1a · BR. ll• BA Condo. " Proporttes.M0-1111 *SONYA'S * Uf!O_.c(ljlta Meuneas -37•4 dfn. bit.,, poho, "'°· ... ~~ .. "" VI•)• & oce••· >-.om com,..,lty. <om 40 >. E C:..Jo Mato • G44 71'2 ;.19 S .. to ,., .. , . · ...... 21"'4 l A lo ma, off Pool, l•«""· tl•b"""•· -T .0, UIAHS OUTCALL M AS8AO Auto '""" 0 le ••P•t. I •n••••••••••••••••••• CrownVallot,83l·Oll$l. Neo•belll ... manrao --•oal -la aa·l7811 U.S.•fo«i•n,....,too11, . WO. Co~y nH t. Utll paid. Cotta MeH llZ4 CHEERY J Ur upper,....._ _...le e. ll6t <O'l""· 3 ntl. to ocean, Is ptnonal p.,o,.rty -._ a.....J.l-T .. lt tlean, well equip. 1b09. I >'«. •n•••••••••••••n•o••• U d•Pt a. bllno,...W,_. .. • min. to Son Dle10. · Joa•o on r .. 14H<ll, •--°""'· L•"Y Hua& AulO M•I• R'"""· 54n.531o ••••-'·ZB•. > ba. ""· lf11ure ad Its no peu , •••••• •• •• • ••••• "'•••• • A va 11 . now . SI 2 a pa •l mea o 6 •••· '°'Ute lkUoc•"" """"'· l8'SL•1un1 C.· __:.:.:;:;~~----:-:--::-:11;1".d 8 , sm rnc'd y<I. Kie.I• 642,4044 aR WM •111 ntk bch. Dnsteln. J br, week/$400 mo. 541.30 ·Waterfront Exec. office rnerclal propertt.. ueoo lo~call ll11•,•• l1YOn Kd. LO f'UHN. DACH unit, ut okrp No pets from 1195. 2 bo. frplc gar, bltna. or43H422 JJOh. I&. "MB Sq. ft. 34 to 1100 ooo Sta~wlde Clll 711·•1 :.:-------- pd,llSO. 11 1 & ''"· 1,i ,,.1 + .~ •. ""''"'· t 8'11< Ba Twnh•o •1Ylc, $12$. Ydy lse. 811.or>l, Be,.lda D•.. Nawpor Finonce'm.ito1 M.ISIAG & AUTOMOllLI •·~·19.>Z ' ' , brk ro~. "'. tee Pollo, do"',....,.,. 121441h St. Lido Isle l•llY furn. '"' • .. ..._ Aat . ., ... ,., BoU u .. 1 ""' DMY COHTitACT .:..r. .. _ H14 Cotlo ...... I HZ• ................. "'" •• bomo. ·v;~~.. ot11... ... ARFIAIO•oh/ o ... :Tr" ... ~p ... Top girl '" .... , .. . ....................... ...................... '"' ENie• A•e. t19·lllll SIA WIND CONDO .... ........ Pro1-1ooof A.U Bldf. r::~u. ...,Ill ol•.,hlp. Eo,.'d only. CASA VICTORIA 28• ..... 1 ba. -Nlft'Y "" 18• tBo l .... ,... ""****"""*"""'""""• VS DIUNKl/IU ,_ M.,. """'°ll"' al i.ua br. Deluxe Unhir. STIPS TO llACH a Br 2 8 a. &>•a c" 1_..... 441 1~ Mrfl llff UCESSt Bauer Motors. otla f)im IH/'Wtr pd hideaways lM .....,. a I _.... -...... ~ ht rulns llv... Meo 9'79·2500 M tt. N . peg Sec: l~te 3 BR .. 2 botha. S.tw..,. lontl ~ ,;.,,. surf ••••••••••••••••••••.. ....................... Wanttostott7 ------- pC:,1 ~:rrn elev~tors ~achltbbay.1!l$~b'Y ~vail thru Stpt. u: IT llAC Ill.Uc• la .. ert bY.t llven DET()XlPICATION • • .,OM 52$Vktoria .. 24970 2BR.l •·-:~ .... ,... r ~21$Jot2l3·331·3774 a.a.-.. A.ta--Cbal '· lo'9r Pnl REHABILITATION ,,., .. ••--'----'---, 2BR .. 2batru,...,., --wvn,... SCMllts, IN Oounor Calludt·Hrud•)' 1111t1m 1 ll"ffflteol. 1ls 2 Br. 1 ba. From SZOC>. SUMMER beac renttl, Z N r Co •• t ff w 1 It, ea.ta II•• wtll °°' Sou\hCoatt Eam ll'OM)', meet peo. No pets. 400 Merri ma Br, ~ blk to oteat1. !llPt RJv.ule An. 470 lo l be Nlpontlbte lflt ID1 Community Hoepltal pie, aala tonfldence. Call W:cy. 9'19-1911 I. lllOftl1.t7ui. s q ft, wlll reModel. debta or .. b&OO. C!Oft· So. w1una 1·411'.M3ll MO>TCHl orZenlth M35t. ~~-..;;_----.1 R....,...... 1W11. Jtr tnc.tal by aftJOM ot11er1-.:..;:...=;.::::...... _____ I~~~~~~~~ 1 Br apt, ru1e fr mrlg. • $00/IDO + util. W1'n, 1Utr <Jll)nMOOl \ban •YMlf, tn or after _..PHOTO DA.TIM• J.. Avall. ~pt. J or Honer. na lrvhaa. t.elUlls. .. 1..,.. thb dat.e. Aul•U. J'71 Becaute You Deserve ABYSlTrl!:R. t yr. Old Motun odW" onty. N BR 2 .. Xlnt .,.. 6 -......... •••••••••••••••"•••• ·-IJIO lhe Beoll Call £VJ!: boy. Altl ....... ~ii'"' ,.U.117'.mo.MZ..,7' _.·.No,.;.. . ..,. y -UH u.lllW.ll\llo ·-•""'"""""""" .......,.,,....,, "':'.:' Frt. "'•~· IOI i:l eo. Bac~lor 1 br. Pool Marahall RJt,y ns-4'00 ••••••• .. •••••••••••••• IO.O#lq. ft. Neattj new, : llale Oockerll.ab • SPJJUTUAL REAOJ::R :k. ~ m:i :~ ' ut.11 pd. Sefti01' cltlie.n. N 2\.\ba view lux con, For Jlent~ Bia Bear cabin. pleasant car..,.ttd of. mbi. 11111, l -Jtoa ls Fully Llcensed pets.14f.2T38 do· Ocean vltw' frplc. ta 2bdnn,eptl,tlnpke,re· flee• ;•eel puldnt Tultba.C .... u. 112N.EICamtnoReal by1ltter/llte h1kpr. 1 1 Br. bltna. cpta, drpe, wet bar 2 car '1ar lae at."2-oltO. l_.apecl ,.....,. lot. b S.Q••&e.Forappt; baby,arnoe.7:10t.ot:ao. gar,adlts,nopett.-.. 7$ m'.382S ., toSMN 43" PJin only Jetl POfllena, : 8'r-::. Jwn, .... •·• Own t.ransp. fteCs. Stl..al or'4$-0527 . • •••••• .. •• .. ••• ........ CM. t..me. fem cat. Vic D un ........ IJ60 llaturw, ckpendJ. btlln 1-_.;.-----0---it br apt.Hbltnt, poolll 'frpl~ nNDA ROONllAT& E•ettwknd1Mf.4Tl3 C.p.••11 ....................... s.,L146·T4CM. H.D. 2 8r newly decor, near Oat em. • -•caua••D£C'f s1A•1aw••A • • noOr ar laund racll. OC!e.&ft. 1210. mo.Nl·l lU :avv tu.. ~-le.a NG w/ofc. 20 - -a.tired Dllt'M Hall. '°" aby1lller m y home. crpt'1/rp~/stw. Olde Houee-lla~UnUmlted uJlfnr Ir doors l'or_U..NtuntehM1le p/t'laie com panloo Uvc·ln/out.l·llPM.Ref. aclltl0ft)¥.Jll0.Ml>l'7•. Br apt. bU.na, pool, frpk, lli--41J48Jftce 11'71 lpriUa.., comp air. IRlSll SETTER. lm•Q urvlee. Hke auto. req.CM.842·1480 · near Ko• I lh m • • t cl J' ._ elect bo)'lt. 1eac white in•rldu oe rtP& 117.-S • ut. br adoewlbr otUD.SZM.mo ..... 5111 IXOYE· Wu e • ' drt lbr•. 11060 nan11.M~1tl""'9CclM1---------1 Baby11tter DHded to .0: a di bttU Chriltlan Fmmate<a> • Jd.. r;.,. PlafftlUa ,...._. nee Frld~7 P•t'1 Place ln 0Drou del at.vi full.tJme Mlt wit, rr.P1'!: Jaeu:.rnoc.. Br2 Ba, bllnt, sun deck, •••• H.8.i C.M., Ott J:·B· ~Us. .. , ... ,.,. 1(1J MB OC.L Pb ..... for C\IS\olD dellan 1·7 yr* llrl, my bo•• view. Adults, no pets ~· bUc lo ~ean It Ba,r, •ru. Ca I lhm·I m. HM51ttYal. ..,.IMPJ.SMar lf!!!itl!~ «1ounl'1 ·flllevn. M&-9520or64$.IZM yrty MSO mo. '7S.7.. te:l-IMl • t '* -- •• L1 I ~ Wednesday. August'· 1976 * DAIL y PILOT •s r c·,;i:~~~-:::~~~--~----~--~------"""!"'~-:~--~--..,..;;. ... ____________ ....,;.;;.._._. ____ .;;;;--;;...~··~-.;;;.~..-~;.;~=:;;.-:;;.""'..;.-----------;,.,---;;... .. ,.;.. __ :;~:::~::;;::~;:;;~:~T;.~~~~~-~T··~~~~~~~r.~""r-"' Add it ... Build lt. .. Olaper IL.Hammer it ... Caroet SERVICE DI RECT'iORY Plumb i t. .. Patch n ... P1pe It. .. Remodel It ... , lt...cement l t, •• Wlre it...Hoe it .•. Clean it ... Move Roof i t ... L andscape lt...Tlle it ... Trl m lt ... Sew~t. •. I tt. .. Press ft ... Palnt 1t ... Nail it. .. Plaster it. .. Fix it... Haul it. .. Add it... Plant it... Alter it ... Learn •t ... ..... • .,.... ... r Sw•iu • ~ -.:__ • .. • ... , .. Ser'flces • -M .. ....... I ....... " ..... "' ,.. .... jlapolr nae ~ .............................................. ···········.··c·· ............................................................................ • ....................... ~················· ..................... •• ••••· APPLIANCE REPAIR W•Cart'C.r:JH"t Clc•Mrs W11il19 lu llft HA OYMAN·Homea ~ UaullQl·Odd Jobs. Law PROF. MOVlNO. Lowest f'l:."l'ERSPAINTLNti VERYNEATl'ATCll ~ERAMIC Tile Nuw & 110-St'rvkeCalJ Stearnclunoraltampoo Frtee.l 642·!>907 Apt • Cooacaent1ou1 61udent need• work. rail') 8 of A, Llr dt Ins. E"Cpr, r~J, rate~. Ir~( J ODS&1'EXTUHE rmdl. Fl" est/ Sml Job<. ('710S4!1-2U2 Al'IOUJ)hol1tery·AllworkyARD & Ci \RAGE cr&lbrnan &-U GS58 HavtPU.Jlm•!M·S8$4 C:are·Woi.>a. 83•"1100(7l'!>t.C11Gcne5S24&$1$ Fr~t:,.t ~3·l439 'll.1\•lrome 536 2428 & Mua»Hllt au:~:11~":!{!!~~~~l~-sl CU:ANUPS. lite haul CARf'ENTRY. Painting LJGllTHAULINO da)'A) °ACRYLJC BONDCOA"f ,._. .. 9 530t.t03 -•H•••••••••••••••••••• \ng. free est. IH&-•81t. & mlOQI' r pair . lo'l'ee Or1to&eCo. Arca. MOVING? l.tl 2 e,.pr'd Off11rs tO yr. &ndt!d •••••••••••••••••••••••IT,.. Ser•lc:e lleiMrwlU babyall )'Our : C ........ /C...c~ . ei;ll.miltM, 545-l.ol. -613"·~ .. -ltf~ rnov~ ttea1, "ilUllrnnte~. Unh m1tcd llOM t:SA Vt:R · •u•••••••••••••••••••• to 5 yr old. 1'LC. ex io••••••••••••••••••••••~.!'r J1opnn~tc.-t Gardcnc.-;G u.....~-•--.l-. ncr:1.!f'J1S~or$45.·8W colori."& conaultin .i r1urn. blni;&lle11un1t K\M\O ah1. tr1mm11q:. curs1ou llar,...r chool EONITE CONCRETL" ...,mp ma n en1tnc:e • r 0 c • r Y Sb 0 PI> In g ~-....,. ---T • n l' ·e• · thl L'-I I\ t •· l • fl"C •st Lt ·· I ,... s .... • .. , cleanup Fr e1H/reas Sc.-r v1rt'. We ahop for ••••••••••••••••••••••• Moving l:lr&o truck l:rt • ru ~• n r1t.>ct':1tmate . o1w °' pron ni;, c• ~ • . c u. aru. '42·3&02aft6 pm. I> TA ~l f' l NG . Cob · Hiro 7$t.193'7 • )"'If .. d ........ -ld •. ,. ... ., •'IOUSECL'-'"Nl ,, /lift t •!I Rea 0 ll\blt.' JO' .. on phone. 638·~ rdlBhle tt'r\•ice. 110 hr, lull} 1n11uN'd. ~2 .'G:H blestonu brick & tile v• '""'~"'"" ... r l.• ., ~ .WO • v .. w •• '.. !:I I • aeytlmt 847 OJll3. UofA & MC ---LOVING CA RE oitiO!lct~640_.34D JAPANE.'i•·i~xPERT nce\111. Cttll ror rates u rellablecouple.Oood Rellablu st ud ent . · ~ · --WlftdowCl•-"'t l'bc:'d yard Lunch· V ' Land <"lllK'irC1irdcnma Ml~H&W·l720 rc!lC~nccii.5367711 8301413 WAl,LPAPlmlNC. Plumtx•r.Rcpur,lt1JptJX)•••••••••••••••••••u•• &12·~299 Uloclt & slum~tont' brick <.'fill ~S·SlS2 Yt;S MAINTENANCE XI t h l . d l'oWi1t9/ropering All klndi., work 1,:uar ln~tal111t10n & Setvlcei WINDOWS Cl.f.ANF.0 , c..p..,1r ~~~~w:C:~ij7j.~; "c s.:------:-.-----Co m~ l<'t t'·Th rift)' b~ lu~:;e~.::~~~~•en~~.~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~':,~·~;;,~:J I Norm G c;1dley 64~ 9:11~ "Tm;s~E-Ttt~ftu ~O. . .... •••••••••••••••••••• 1 ....:.... -Spnnkl~ rs. Efhc1tnt. <.:on,•er:1e11t Shampoo Dept!ndablc own lr11ns Palnl Hepnlr·3S yr11 111 • Hol....._PI bi l'.,tlmuh!I 4798 ' llMODIL. Cotttrodor . ;:~~~cti1~!s;~~~:~0Ask 1>tl'u1Y\ ~11rpets. ConlpletC' IM7·3637 ' u rt ii. work n1 u n • h lJ> P111nt'(l lnl &. F:xt . Pu per Rellsonable & ":'eu:~e The fast~llt dr11w In ttw i •-·' •Additlo io••••• .... ••••••••••••• -----pnlntini; & t'lcuning.. h ai1tur.Take.idv1U1t.of m)' H a n.iln g//\coust l c Z4hr llV:I 640·930'1 West., .11 0111ty ot. -~rs k b~s, ~e l.\furk Stunemun Quahty Gu1d,,.nang -t.:indsc .. 1X' !lll0-485$ E0perl ouseeluan1rng. expcr. ~-7056 Spray. Gd Rutei.-045-7256 -· -Clnu lfled Ad. Pho : fQD wor ' ca oe s worku1al''u1r l~r1n• Lit clcun-up. You cun orford -wn trun.sporu• on. • , .. . lllooflnc) 642·5678. i •JJI doora. Qua Ii tY 300034 &<19.2756 M9 11710 us !-'or est call Hon Elect ·Plumbing. rel rig. ~ood ri:f:., i..lnt wo rk Paant Your Cas... f rofos1onal t' Jlntmi: In· •••••••••••••••••• •• ••• .-,;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;=i tow'll. Palumbo ?>nstr, __ · --·-__ 17i4>~_.,9117·art •lpm Scrv1~u.$12 8t>rv1ct•coll 6456559 i\wr cxt.l sty.~95 tt'rlor/E'(te~1or. t'rue ltEJ>AlllS·ALLTYPES Wmbr 888. Ph 962-3314 LEE M. JARVIS Npt/(.;M oreo. 645·8400 L..ctscoplftg 2 s~y $39$ lnt. $3S rm. C'!<llmalei.. 646·5315 __ Rt!Bllonable. l'ree est. lie _.,.. s.t-.lce Additions & Remooehng (;It> a.n \IP & co .1 or lkforc 9arn ••••••••••••••••••••••• Pn<"es met mtr'l/labor Patios Wu lt 113():.S020 anytime ....,.••••••••••••••••••• 002·M7J l.1c 3171156 ~pe<"1>1hbt. 1\l:.11, mu" in it.~ L d . . kl Cuar. 1nsr. rree ts l. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ---tnmmint; etc Cdm NB "_.. •0 scape, sprln ers. Tt!CIS367"'""or55201.31 Tete•lsl0ttRepalr Shampoo• ateam clean GERWICl\&SON only. 675 3115.' Sr. Cit :•••••••••••••••••••••• cement&. ma1>onry. """' (>ATIO Coveni. Redwood ••••••••••••••••••••••• ·ma. Color brightener,,. Add1tsons&Hemodclmg rJles l1f1Sonny & Jcr. Frt'e haul patio sod. 557-9180 & t..otsa Pride Fair Prices. decks. Quality work, r<'· CANOPYTVSVCCO • h l car P ts . 10 m 1 n l..ic Bl2ll>t2 ----mg. cleanuv. tree work 9G8· 1230 L.k/lns. Calico Painting. as pn('es. Lie 3\SOGS. llh tst Rate Sl!r\lce · .. bleach. Clean hv rrn, din ~9-2170 613 604t Green La"n Service ror usable 1ttms. fences V----· Ext r only -R efs 646-7'121 or645-0034 at fair Pnrc:i 960 l633 6 hall SIS. Av& rm :\lamt·Cleanups.Tr1m & b l dgs removed . .--rt :Wl-02'l2 .,. • IT.50, couch SlO. chair SS HU I" FM A~ & SUN . Haulmg. $.18·8883 aft 5pm 557-l!CJCJS •••••••••••••• •• •••••• • nastff /R.,_.r Gturttlimpel odor.Crpt Rt>model. cabinel11. F1replaces·Planters Painting. 25 yrs ei.p,•••••••••••••••••••••••Don'tdrop theball!Cct a rec>alr. 15 )'rs expr. L>a form1ca6-lt-7598, 5411-4541 Student nds wrk. Exp Mo\•1n1·Cleanups. Fial Bnck Concrete Patio acoustical ceil'nes. In PATCH PLASTERING job with a low·co t Dully work myself. Reh ga1·dncr. Cln·up. roto & bt>d lruck. Rotollllin&. Block Walls BBQ Pits terior&exterlor.1194 6308 ••ALLTYPES•• Pilot Classif1etl Ad. UllTHI ,¢ DAILY PILOT "PAST llSULT' SHVICI DlllCTOIY For Result Service Call 642·1671 lat.JU $11 .. 101. Want ads Call642·567~ maint. 64~/646·2765 R('asonable 751·5250 Ref. E<sls646·0464 af\ 6Pl\t Free Est 540·6825 Phone 642·5678. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~·~~. .. ,, H.fpW..tH 710~HetpWORted 7100WpW..tecl 7100HelpW..ted 7100....,W..ted 7100 HelpW..ted 7100H.lipW..tecl 7100..W,W..ted 7100HefpW__, 71to • .,, •••••••••••••••••••• 4 .................................................................................................................... ••••••••••••••••••••••• ............................................. . Babfsitter ror 9 yr old CLERK D...tol AssistClftt GUARDS mature woman: Mon L< Exp. Cha1rs1de Newport Eniincer Costa Mesa MACHINIST MEDICAL fri. aA'noons. My home Beach s.14.921 \ MFG ENGINEER Permanent. Full & Part· We arc growing & have o Front Office DllnNE SALES HESTAURA~T Mnrnrnti food preparu lion, full·tlme. Apply Ot•I Taco 25252 LaPu Rd. CoataMesa642-4163Arll RECEPTIONIST D"'~'TAbASCISTANT Time.Phone&lranspre opcn1n~ for tten erul rnr lnlcrntst in Newport rl)U PM 1 ....,,. .., lo take s mall electro· 'd n " d 1 maehll\lst . 1A ith lathe & Benrh Mature adult Phone Sales people , i. The Ually Pllol neccs a J::xpr. preferred. 3.4 mcchn1cal a uemblles q e.,.re we come. , .1 -------- L111tun11 lhlls ·---------i dcrk receptionist for our da\'S. La••una Bea"h f d . . Call 546·0274. ofc hrs 10.2. mill experience. Must uo w/mlnlmum of 3 yrs ex· male or remule, 16 to 6~ R "---AM S ddl b k f! M t . .. ~ mm esii:in engml'crin)t CIO!led Wed. own s~t-ups & work with p r I n m e d 1 c a I years of ut;e. Guuranteed ... _._.. gr. ,. ----. BAIER NlGHTSHIF'T FULL:TIME Apply tn Per on 7amto3:30pm FA.RWIST SIRVICH. IH~. l672 Reynolds A \'e Irvine Equal Op1><>r Employer a " ac 0 ice. • us 494-9737 to production. t:xpcr'd in minimum supervision termfaolovy, veg board. wa"es or commissions. Youn1:1. aaareaslve eicper be able to t)pt:, handle docu mentation, work 0 " u" ooo phones & fronl counh.'r. Dental AuistClflt •tntlon •et·up. tool -'e· GUARDS Short run commercial w 1 l h a g ll n e r a I 250 Easl 17th Street mgr. _.,, mo &r0i11. Excellent cu.m"an~ -Soli"' "ppor ... _.m--'··n " •. " A" 1° Cost a Mesa·wknds. jobshopw11Jlw1devaric knowlC"dgeof back ocrice. Suite O, Coi.la Mesa: Coll9am·6pm,673·9393. \. ., --u-v .... "-UUJ::J..,.. SJ.~ "' pr""ucllon me •" o' or k., L~r 1' n "e " •· l " m ··•1"lh1n 1 "-l 5 00 •· 8 30 n m bnn >f1t \ nllt'n ap I t r H u t I I S1roi>""l-n-n mall ct-uty "+ ... •. .. ,,uum1 r .. su c " ~. "'\~~ .. n. :_"' : ... . l>Cl··· Uap 110,4"') " ~ "· P e:uan o c '" 0 l rou' e s 1001ing ".... · bencf1ls 111rludemed1c11I. weck.toAdNo.S85;'naTiy .,...,~ .... au ... _ "' ~ll14c·,auol)na:..1loynlyp.,1\0Vtn1i Ao•d ~Vkdl· ys only call 818-023'1 Mcchun1cal or Industrial ~~r &2tph~;~f~~~s 1puprf> llfe & pmd hohda)'S. App Pi lot , P .O. Box 1560, Equal Opportunity SPORTING GOOOS • · · 1or nlerv1ew. d('grt.'C cl\!>entlal ly in j:W!r 00 to CO!ita Mesa. CA 92626 Employer Leading m erchandiser Hcl\ 1!>60, Cosla Mesa 549 3041 Uni"ersal Protection C ~ :.('elc s m ana"cm c n t Ca.""""". or '.·ou m3y f1l DIRECTOR or NURSES· • Service. 1226 W 5th St. upitol Machine Co. ., "~"'"" E 1 o E t t"•'• L' Ed s' ..... oril'nted lnd1v. for tak(' out a11plll·~1\lon al th1. R~. F /tlme 7·3, LVN qua ppor mpoyer SA Inte rview hr5 "'"'"'· mger. " ' C•'"-ta :\1°~a oCfsce , 330 W 11-T. Countr.v Club Conv JO·:JO.noon & l '30·J :30pm E.O.E charge spot. Call II. lhll. VJ ~J MEN'S PLUMBER 848·1288. O"nms & Oen· BaySl. Home.CallSl9'3061 Mon·Frl Equal Oppor MACHINIST 1• Exp .• car,tools. nls Personnel Ser vice ot ~ualOpportunrly DISl'LAY MGR. Engineering Employer Im med open 1n it for CLOTHING 645-756.S Huntington Deacb, 16168 BARMAIDS ~~loyer __ Sharp person l'Xi>cr'd In JR ENGINEERING GUYS & GALS general moch1n1!.l un :.w ._ ______ 1 Beach Blvd. Suite 121. "1tlme & f' t1hle. Over~0:\18 INV TYPIST/ A R ml.'ns & womens contem Mission Viejo, El Toro mg i,h1rt Mon thru Thuri. SoilesSpec1aJts l Political rleld work IETAIL IOUTl"'UE 21. Apply Sir Robins CLERK. Must be fa.'>t. porary clothinlt d1spl.iy ORARSMAN ~rea, lo work a few hoors 3-S Yrs eitper on lathes & Must be experienced in Voter re~stral1on. ...,. 'tavern, 177 E. 17th St .. accur. & fJm w l)plni:: to take full ch.ir~e of 4 a day. Fun Job Earn 525 mills. Setup & operate all phases or men's OPE .. ING SEPT I. ~. & u<,ldmg fig. Sm. co. Gd store operation -Refs or A mmimum or 2 yrs ex· to sso per week For Possible ad,·a ncemcnt to clothwg. Outs tanding $2.3 P•r Hour A~cepting 1.1vphcallopi. bl>11er11:.. Sam ~pm. 5 0 ) ix>rtfoho req'd Call fo r pcnunce, preferably in more Information phon~ lead Electronics manuf company benefits with Shifts: Mon 1-'rl. !H~. for lntl.'rvlew:s: IAR •IAID Fulltpt time, wk. Apply :.it Ncwporl appoinlm<'nt small E M devices. Re· 8JO..O'Jl3 Xlnt benefit~ include cll.ccllcnl pay plan. App· Sul tO :i /\II 11vu1l. WOMAN 1n Hii;cl\ Fashion ol1ht1, famil,y bar. :\tannl'£n1011ccrmJ(.8!Yi THELOOK quire d worki n i: EqualO~rtunity mcdical&dcntal.EO.E ly 1n11crson ... JC Pt;N. 400penln9s Mi:mt. & l\l e rc:h. for Salary +. C.M · Dorothy, W 16th SI.:\ u. 615·3632 knowl('(Jgt• or matenuls, Employer ' DISC NEY. LAGUNJ\ lllLLS ~. 4 Womens Dept. it&-5.544 540·4500 <mLSh<'s & tolerance re· I t t MALL 58l·7700. Apply Aug '4' 5· 6· S to J. SALES PEOPLE cxpr'd. F/c HOO COOK: Exp I) 0 •\I' L' J' y-w 0 -R K latl\e to smull monufac· Hardware Clerk. perm nEs rumek "cs l\t fo:quul Oppor 1-:mployer ISO'JSo. Grand. s. A. Call t7l4) G42·(320. Sen•• -"'· "" ' tur1n" 1ndustry w/knowledge or sellin" 102 Bn er, · rcsumo11 Lo· P O Box auto dealer seeks llnw11rds Hestaurnnt ROOM nt•t!cls ex per'd "' & h ., !179 5300 • · · · con\puter oriented ind1v. 67!J.7750Aller 3PM. help Cullt>rs. St>ri:er . ST.ACOSWITCH IMC ~arnt 8 b o4u9~e3~~res .1-----·-----1MyTrH to $10,400 PRESSM.AH lOOi. N.U. 9200:_·_3 __ _ for key st aff positwn. tablcrs. & hemmt'rs i\11 llJ98akcrCosta M~sa aguna c · · M/\IONEl::Dl':D Retail operation seeks Exper'd i\B Dick 360 ttt-Urcdcouple as park!llt Call Cecila Wiii. 848· 12118. COOK p<>sit1011i; now open Ken 549·3041 HELP WANTED. M f f' Lido Shores Hotel dynamic mdlv for non · Opr. Good workmit conds h•r for tow rent mobile Dennis &c Denn111 Pcl'SOn· JOLL y ROGER But C' her 1) r a Per Y Equal Oppor Employ.,. Cooks. Apply In person, Call 673·8800 slop opportunity. Call & lni;ur. plan. 8911-<l628 home l0x45 w /cabana. 1 ntlS.rvlceofllunlln1tlo11 L"'GUMA IE"'CH 54~0203 Kentucky i''ried Chicken Maids. Apply The Inn at B11rbnr11 Mnc. 833·2700. wkdys. 1640 Newport Blvd, ofc. 8e1ch, 16108 ~ach Blvd, "' "' 1 f La1una Beach_. Laguna, 211 No. Coast Dcn!1i~ & Dennis .Person· p /lime Sal<lJI. 140.g70 548·9065 ,. Suite 121. ~:xpcrienei•d. J(ood pay & Driver I n1 u n' or"' hcrow Secretory uot l Hwy .. Laguna Beach Ask nel S<'rv1cc or Irv me, 2082 wk/up. Men, ladies, 11tu· .IC~G1t .... 'LSECY benefits. Apply in routl'. StlOO·SlOOo per At least t year expcr , ~B~LLM/\N & DES K rorMrs.Goblcl l\11ch('lson Ur. dents. Eve:./ Sa lim--------• ..-" 5" person. 400S~~s~I~ ~~ 547·4-llli. i:ood typ1sl. Salary based 968 8378 536 ll04 RH 1 Nneed by Costa Mesa y S w MTED on ability. J\11 bcnefils. C,LERK Maid's Supcrvi3or New "mploymenl oppor. • ' · · ' a,"par/Vachl Mtg. Send COOKS ORI ER A Call Marion Johnson. for Contact Dick Hannan, Top Wages'! The Inn At for me n & women w1Em· Reol Estate lrkr ' -~me "s:iloiry history Rreuld,1:.t H:30nm M~:t"i:2~~~oe~~r a.ppl 833·27'10 I NN Laguna, 2ll No. Coast pressPcarls.lnc.Havea Wa nted young l"Om · COORDINATOR le Sparcr11ft, P.O, Box 2 :Wpm. Sal thru Tut>-.. A I I P . hy lscrow A 1Rp0 RTE R Hwy .. Laguna Beach. treasur<' hunt 645-9478. rnercial broker, tosecurf 11·7 :30AM s hirt. Mu~l !!!;._Costa Mesa . Ca ~~.~cment home , ~J1o~c•" 673~ 1~~rn~ Ask rorMrs.Gobiel '.'/URSE anchor tenants for lge have 2 yrs exper. in -· ll2Sl Slater Avenue S M..W-.. D t LVN'S-«N'S shopping center de· supervision in acutt• .o•T IUILD1t•s COOKS 121 Fountain Valle)' F._-cecullve needs uper Housekeeper , live-in, ~ ......., ., • P /Umc & F /hmc. 3-l l & veloper. 714·493·2460 or hospital. Contact Mn,. "' ._ 6i5.Sl68 N Uh ____ sccret nry wllb t o p days.Careofchildtt.n.S Postage machine oper.. '494-86l8 Jensen, 642·2734. Costll Eicp. journe~·m en . ' · ewport c shorthnnd&t>•pini:sk11ls & u . lie. English. 28.~ some heavy llfimg, ex· 11 7 Wc haveacommon1----------t•1 esa M e morial carpenters for •7'· 106' COOKS w .AHTID Electronic and ab1ht)' lo handle yrs old. 646•3572. per. helpful but nol nee interest "CARING." You RECEPTIONIST HospJtal. 301 Victoria custom fis h boatli & E \ 11 iwr..onncl II E. Develop· Apply North American m3ke the care or our pa· for convalescent hosp. c M. E. o Jo:. )'aehu. Apply lnlcrna-~xper neces!>. ' PP • DQCUMENJOR ment omce near OC House Ii pr /Childcar e. Scn•1ce Center , 1339 E llents possible & we r;ire Full & p/time. Some tyr>-1---------• UOnal Offshore Marine. Thf RIJger Jlestuuront., Airport. Xlnl salary. Oy temp Aug 16·Se p\ ll, Waml.'rSt Santa Ana. for you by Qffcring an · Z!J(IOSo.Sus;in.S.A. t6Faah1on lst.N.B. Isadlv1sron ofAddr~s!IO-appouit.IW·8G80 M·F Refs. $S H r xlnt beneflls package. G~~~~·p~~~l~t:e~~~: RN'S-LYN'S C t h 1 f 11 & J!llll'h/l\lult1graph Corp 963.4899 Please apply. Bever ly Practical•" Orderlies IOYS 10·15 Door lo door •• oun er e p, u 1f you :ire <tllracted by Experienced household · MA.INT. WORICH Mano r , 24 452 Vi a 1445 Superior Ave, N.B . .itcdting. ·Costa l\lesa r>art limr ~ltil)ns avail. the cxcitmg environment rum1ture movers went· Housewives, p /time in S7S6·S927 Mo. Estrada. Laguna Hiils. _64_2_·24_lo_. ______ ~:~ri ~0~:!.~P~~~~~~!1 area. 642·3.132 Tucs thru Sot. Must be 18 or a small company. but ed. Over 21 yrs old for laundromal in C•"" Bch. CO .... CRE.., , t::qual Oppor. Employer. R c~10 ST or older. Apply 1n 11er:son h .11 •. ,,_ " •s E ....-, HI per. Req'd. All shiCfs. run •---------1"rcall.G31 1831. 0"1Ta•'o stilltles1ret eslab1 lYa: local mov1n1 company. P erm pos. 837·6H 7, Fl .... ISHER N Alt d t W1'th good typing sk1'lls. or Pl'tlme . Westcllrr "' " " 1>enef11s 11f a major cor-5111 «l643 496-9051 "' u r s er Y c n a n • BUSBOYS l!:~Sup<·r~~ <:..,:\I __ nnrallon, lhcn consider --S927·Sll44 Mo. mature adult. 9am·12 Able to work closely Nurst>S Reitistery. 1617 ..,,.. C" t t I Op"' · gs w't h TH E "un morn S n e"e w/membcrii. Wed lhru Westclirr Or .. Ste. 212. I COUNTJo:rt lll::Ll' the o pportunit•C!I '"' x P Par me .. nin 1 .:> • u • • COOKS i\ppl) Del Tu co 252!>2 de:srrlbed below· salrspcrson ror Jr. Wear INJECTION DEPT. CITY OF HUNTINGTON 7-fl : 30pm & Wed eve Scun1.1Pvft club1• N.B. area. N.B. 631·0010. I I .• L 11 1,.. •ssEMliLERS l'lout1Sue. Apply Oali.y 7 v an Dorn machines BE Ac H E l\t PL o Y . 6:4S·9pm. 642·7443. a or n l e r v w . 'A 1 Lu AK E n d ,ttl'lll lu. _ul(ur~~ "' Sh th C t Pl MENT & T RAlNfNG 673·3555. => '" n ee " 6 Mo's exper. in PC 1111· ~ ~ ous aia. Mus t know various NU R SES /\J o E s<'n mstrc111, exper. de· Apply ln Pcrson C'l!STOOIA!'/, \hrillt I h mRtc rials & be able lo ADM IN ISTRATION. . Stred. Between 2:00&4 .00 f'M Luthuran Chur<•h & llar seml> y, arneu. connec· Exp. telr. sollt'ilor, $.5 hr run machines, Both require 30 dan ORDERLY R. E. SALES Call 548·3464. ' Srhool. lh•-.po11:.1tllt1e!> tor. or snider alll!embly. settinl( up Lire /\pptmu . C •MIRO pnor unemployment & llpm·7am shirt. Beverly Llc'd • Unllc'd The R.uben l Colorcode notreq'd . Steve Goltra, 751-4610 "' JIR riidcn"'y. Appl'i"'o Manor Conv. Hosp, 340 Fr ...... ,4 day dunns l'l" 1001 yunrll. up· INSPECTOR E/M Manuf turi C " ~ VI ri C M n prox fiO hr:. ll \\ k 1.111· ac n9 °· lions • ll be accepted a1 cto a, · · TroininCJ Couru 5aleslady, cxper'd. lletall clolhlng. Over 25. No eves. 548·5383. E Lee irnunt fk>ndilll ~tllllOt!S Min imum 6 mo'i. FllERGLASS 7601 ClayA•e,HI the ploymenl & it • or~o ~wsar~.6pm._ mechanical inspection LeyupWorir CWcst ofBeach& Training Center , 521 Opportun let IS I I . Coast Hwy -t''CJll'r1rncl' on units & New i.k1 com pony needs South or Garfield) Pecan, 11.B. until 5pm For Am bilious People •Personal instruction Salesperson Ne---' hac:h Cus1odi11n i.ub·systems . Utllitlnr:: fl beralasA lay up people Equal Oppor Employer Augusll3th, 1978. Local executive looking •Management op1><>rly's Dahnkcn of CO!lta Mesa , -r-• Hospltal Custodian ;ipplicablc speciriratlon w/a11<>XY experience. Rm Call 536·2526 Cor port time associate. •tc80'4 Commission 11119 New1><>rt. Blvd Equal Oppor ~:mplo)er 1 yr \' ~ p r c q • d & tooling. Will perform 10 Grow "'th company Call afl6. 673·4786 •Lic'd lralninic 2wks 1--------------------•I 3 I I 3(/vm San Clt•lll('ntr <"lcctncal \lenf1collon & Cu_ll 646-8244 for appl. cla11scs start Im med. Sale Jlerson ----- -(; ,. n 1 11 11 ,, 1,. 1 7 1.i 1 visual Inspect ion 111 oil Management. PART TIME •On the Job training J . tiERIEttT CANTiRl.A HllP 400 Ill:.! levels up to system In FllERGLASS INSURA.HCE PEOPLE PERSON Oathcrmg shinotures for •Many topoHice loc's a..uLL J•WILLe:•s :-.pect1on. Must r~ad blu~ llLLIR Exl.'c. looking for pert Nov ballot u ,$8 per hr. No llccn$1' u~c to opply ..,,.. 5 51\ F/llmc. 10:30arn·7pm ,-:---. --MOLD DESIGHll l 1 ...., Now lntorvlewlng SoutJ1 3en Clemcnlr Gencm1l '-\blOnlcr~vrv 1rn1nl.'e pnnls, know rolor code. AND MAKER. Xlnl op· P/llme, temporary. Ex· lime o ssoc ale ~ Ul+.Cu ll :i51·4407. RED CARPET Coust Plata loc. (or lf~1>1tal.4!l0 ll2l? May I Aulst You? knowled1w or guuJ(C'5 por. tor un ex per'd per. in h ospital In· whole1111lcsupplif'I. Full) -REALTORS 963·919 I quahty aal~ orientated ---l'ublu rd.1111111" 1•11,tl111n tester.-.&tools craflaman. Salary open. surance b1lhn~. flexible 2Pltall7:!d·673·~ PART TIME f'ordetoll11eallLlndri personnel. J ewelry ex CAMVAS MAM/E•pr. 11 av1111. to d1vl11111at11· RECEIVIMG T£CH Apply in person, 1932 E. hrs. Contact Personnel! MASSA.GI! TRHE Consulting firm need!! l>Cr. desirable, but nut -.C:.tom ~,·1rs~n w~nal'I c<• ''.Jll 2 l';' I Vear; d1n·c~. c\ Pomoou, S.A. Cost:i ~,~esa .,M1 em1ort8a Young lody t18_25 , for righl hand lo do 1111 the &lll thlng11 r..11t with Oallyj ni•i'. Call 5•9· l3lO or ROAT & SAIL COVl::RS J I Sl.y. K .. 3 2'100. u,•11111:. J)<.'ncnce in tl'11t1n1:"''" --l~Olil>lta . JOl ~ l.'lOr a t, leglllnante full lime post chores req'd In a 1 girl P!lot Want Ads I ~u.137oeor appl. t'\llltlmi.' & Ot'nnl11 l'enonnl'I !tpcct1on o r dcctron1c GrncralOrrlc:e t;.M ~642·2734 ext 200. lion in Custa l\feiu ofc. Secy/r cpt. Cllln~. nulboaYachl ~rvlce Scrv1c11 ur lrvlne. 2~ l'OmPQnenta. :.1uat handle heavy E.O.r:,. HeallbSpo.Noexp. nee llteacctn'g,etc. Flexible HefpW..tecl 7100HelpW..tecl 7100 : ~-atoo Mtt•helson Or. F.XCF.l.Ll<:NT phonl·s. data ProteK:i, We send 10 -.rh(l(ll. F.nr• hrs .. top poy. top iklll:i • ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• .. ••• .. •• • ._ COMrANV JH~NEFITS AI R cxper. htlp(ul. Call . ' dependablllty a r e -C•LetM• CustoMDrop..-its lnrludes l weC"k's voco Corolforappl.642·1191. JANITOH, n iahts for whilc)'oulcarn./\pplyor q11 ls lt c C rill (7 14 ) ~ Clean new c.ara. Mu11l be tl63·4m. lion nftt1r 6 rno'll., 1 t paid ---private countg club. l:!x· cell 11ny ofl. or 1•vo. :!lJi • • • Gl .... E• "'Lo•,. n .. r. pr•('d. all for in· florbor Bl. Costa Muo 7~1-47oo_. -----etel"trlenced at rellable. holldny11, 1troup ln " ""' n-..-.. <Jood Job. 1ood houra. Dtllvl•rymcn for LA 11ur11nrc 1<t:irta day of AcC"u nte t ypi11t. In· tcrview644·S404 · 114.5·3133 PIX Recipt to $600 Paldvacatlon1.Applyln Tlmt's In N.ll. & C.M. hlre&m11nymor(' t('rclitina cle rical po1I• LondscapeMaint. MATURF. W O MA ~ Jnt'J service agen<1Y pel"IOr\only. Mr. Nielsen. S™>permo.548·1740. AP'11Y In Pt·r~onncl lion ons wc r lnl( cor· Exper aupcrlnten<leot p ft l m e ln we lcom < KCekll pen;oo1tble lndlv. No~call11c:coptod. D.Unrv & Stock IN1'ErtVU·;WtNG rc~pond1•n co. Pa r t\al 1>ularyo....,n.6'16·07Vl nllWCOrners· & conlurt (or key 8f,)(1l. C:ull Cheryl T-Wcll ., O l1Afl1'~~;•1PM form IC"ller sy11tcm. "~ ---merc:hull~.Flexlblchr'l lll·nton,li48·12AA.Dennla .;;,_·, • 'W..._,. F !time. O\•er 18. Neat n ~ t d ti t I •~ I .-__. OOCUMENTOR '11'"" l' uco onu n L......,. R•c--'Tm• Need c11r. Ille typlnR ~ {)(lnn1 11 PM!\onno appe11rance. Must hu 11111 11tlnn. Wiil eon,1cf<:r , __ :...-forwurd ...... tO cxcitinn S47.3()95. Servl<'e of Jlunllnl(ton Hunth!fon Beach able to work \\knda. Al>fl 01\'lslon iwrsons re entering ~ob ...,.," t 1 1 .. -Beach. t6H'>8 Beach Blvd, • CAI WASH Hll.r llyfe.rolnld.peuon. U k for ·Adc1reuo11rAph f min. CiOOd co benefits. lt1lmcs n,,,;;C'racl~t<'l"l• 1Cs1'1' M1ture women. l'(l' fo1 Swh! 12l. - Multlaraph Apply Notion. I Systems, ,on w Mc~ci 0· 0 clcantnc service. Cor ---------18-t~FltJ.~,'w· 'Lo<h·. lllTlmtt..lquor 2921 S.Dai.....,. 436\BlrchSt,N.O. Sota~ eyer. 833·2700, nee. G1 n g h :1m Glr Minro~ Gil 495 &.17lhSl. t:.~ ---l>ennlll. Dennis Person· 645-.5123 l2PEOPL.E Nf.EOF.O ZllOHarborBl.C.M. SuntaAna Girl Frlday/Scty, part nel5ervlccollrvlnc.2082 fl'or 2Wk Tl'mpl'osltlon Gatbler·Theatre. rem . ,rerd. Over •I'• l'f. App· 11 •Surf Theatre, H.8. 12Uth St bc!t"n 8·10eves D ...... AHist•t 546 lMl tune. $3.50 p/hr. Must Ml<"helson Dr MIOICA.L RICll'T SU IWl-;V WOHK t::icr,er 'tl NB. ore EqodJOp1><>rF.mployrr dri ve.s ome tra vel.Li&ht l na f ix t ure Medical exper. req'd. NOf't:l!:S F/t me. 546 l7r.6. :>18·6632 showroom nds Inside T)'pe sswpm. Able to "Call Sue l!am·4Pm Dentel C'h111r Assistant EfKtro.ic GIRL NIDA y salc1person. Decorator work uodcr pressure. 7~2 l31l0 Exnor"d , Newport Bch AtN ... ltr A exp helptul but not Take O'A'll Initiative & WcsternTcmporary CASHIER .. ~ S51Slilnl l o busy 1 """ handlu responsibility S<-• 1 6'1&-@01 Expt-r'd assembler for manai;:er In indu tnal re neccssur)'. AP-P Y al ~-1 II c 11 r l <1t4 rvicea., nc. P'ltlme.Growth Co. DENTALASSISTANT small factory ptoduc1n11 alHloteprop m gmt ofc: S.E. Ma in St. Irvine, :0.-014: or llPP . I . lll862MacArthurBl SLoc. Gd Ply, OvrZO I c al d racbo comPonents In Good ore skill•. Aptitude ~·2901. -Suite lOO lrvlnt Metro Car Wost\ Orthodontc 11 .. rsr e romag. 17955 Sky Partc for figurn . Sim pie rt · Med. Tec-.......i1t Equal OPPor Employer ZllOHarborBl,C.M. New1><>rt.4•~days/v.k Rl\'d, Irvine. Brenda ceivablu Rtcord up · p f • --.,.,,.&llfe~~~~~~~~I CUlder /conceuloft . 18 Orthoexpreq.&42·2626 Tllley.SS&-4041. keep It fllln1. Ablllt)' to MACHINIST rcern rllexper.\A . ....._ communicate bv phone. lie. Exper'd In all phaacs -. a1e. IZ.IO hr. Apply DENTAL ILICTIONIC ~ Rtquires aood aentrnl o r t h e m e ti l c a I penon Wed· Thurs. Ort.hodonUc Ofc. M•r. Semi Independent arier backnround wltb abll1ty l•boratory. Call for appt. oaly, saddleback Sh•-. attract. otc mr.r. ASSIMl IMSPICTOlt learnin g methods or .. ~" 1 _ __. l • 11 0...,.ratlon. p~•"nllal ror to set up 4c opcr:a~ 'arie· 1714 > 640·0140 Y• hy Cinema'•. S•d· witop secretarial sk ll5 m11...v. open n11 ror ne ~ ~... f • ""h .._ft Plaaa, El Toro needtd for rasl 1rowini-; IJllpedoron PC boardl • ~rowt1h. compcllllve Zitts,,~tt~~n&sscco':;~ Rd, Et Toro ortho. ofc, Must be outgo-related com pon ent1. be I n n 1 n I P a "!I operation Jlardlnge used lnJC & job orientated. Call Some lnowlecl1e of OI· w/icbeduled lnueaats. In teb. or small precision Qer1cal It Delivery Work. M2·1800 clllllcope i. preferred. Normal fringes. Ca II switch ports. Small Shop. ::'.t'~~: •. ~s Denta l reccptloni ~t . ~'r:1cl~~~:.1~'i~~~~ GJe::innc.S.158E47l. All aoodooner1ts.day1llin . plusant offlC"t. xlnt oP· DISC r oomer. icper. STACOSWITCH IMC cterlt, look1tort. par\ portunll>' In growln• breede. Shop. Downtown 1139 Baker (:{)stu Mesa llnae. M•t be .. citing, practice. "902 Irvine Ctr. lwf1 =••I• H 8. 536~. 149·3041 cb11amk.'11·Nl6. Dr .. Stt 200, Irvine. JOIE. Baket.C.M. Wantadruults 642.587• EquelOppor t:mployer lelUdldlema 8'f.5f7ll MZ-47ll t79•530D -- • MOW IS THI TIME ror Job atelctrs lo chedt lht Daily Piiot Ht l.i Wanted rfan lflc:a\lnn. I t.M Job you want 11 no! l~~ you m11ht c:onalder o((erin1 your aervlce~ wilh an ad In tht' Jol Wanted uteaoey. Phont 6U·S6l8 rlrl.ct Wcri"'4) Ho.n l ::J0.2.30or 3:30 9:30 Work ti bra a day ear11ln1 S3·• per hr an pleuant s ur roundlnu. Dea l w /t h4' public fn our Irvine otc rep~aentirtll Tl m e Life Book•. Dyn amic personality rnosl likely to "iccte<I. lntert'5tcd hou ewl vea & students a~klng perm. positions call w~s. 11 SALES REPRESENTATIVE WE • Are a national, aooreaalve growth markeling company • Are associated with a $2 billion dlvef'sifled corporation • Have a defined market anci unlQue m&fketing aooroach • Provide an excellent benefit Diii\ • Pr0Y1de a compensation plan that wtll pay you uowardS of S20.000 In the r1r11 ytar Csalaf)'/commias1on) IOI a top producer • Promote trom within IFYOU •I-lave a successful trlCk t.cord • Want a high Income and a future with a too national comoany j CALL 171~1 778-1714 Mr. Adel ltltw:i• 10 & 4 0. '1111'1.., .. ....., . I ' I ~ ! I I I I ' . ' . • , . ' I .. t " D~LY~ILOT * W~nctJCtay,Auoust• 1976 ~ ......... ~~.~! ~: ........... ~~~ ~.~~~ ..... !~.~ HlfpW..ted 71 W..W 71 .... ..CH ao10Mu~l Hll'? Anlq, bufM Welshpony,9yni,&d WOYINWOOD loah.f'ow•r '04 MofOf"Cycles/ 91 S railer .. ,Trav~I 9170 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••-•••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• Sl7S. eh.1n:i cabinet $t7S, dis)>\)sition , S.15-0. •••••••••••••••••••••• Scoot.rs •••••••• •••••••••••••• )•L•a.•u1,.·a.'"A'l'Ous \'alnut 11\l. tbl nu chni Call67S·S2SO. SllADES·To30"~ OH *ZODIAC •••••••••••••••••••••• 71) 35· l'urll !llockt fu<-Sale~ & M11teha11dlJiDi.t H>J"" v ~" " xlol $15-0. dark un1l rum Coll 645.S!ISO Surukr ···~ IOO 3.7(XI 1111 l'u I ··~ 'l'hc Rt.-d &lloon j!j look· T.ch TnM .. s I 0,40 WASlll-:llS on y t:l<S tT l}i\'CCll\ ~ Mc01t Port·I\ Muni\(' ~o at)7 ".··11\l '"111•!. ~u•,o tory 111r. JI I lllJ.: I! u~~ ~ ) \og for cH1•pl ionol t ... ·adiog mO.Aut'. of rudi Rcconditmncd IWPOS h•runl/un tbl ,.:g, rht; .Nw.t 1070 POttTABLE: Stora~e •' 4!Ki .;,~ ,111 r1h\llm mu11t·. r'u\ '\:Ute<'r oric11tut~d l•i•uav. !i<'cki H hool &lt'l'itl>amaj!\I. wrolu lron bae ~~, IT'f bldg,1ox2U,Sl500utbc1t lll'fcotury »a l~>tll d,•lu\c.:JnH1~old Mu~t u1.1t"~l"'r~o11 W/" flair 'ur ~ 1"U"ti''"I " I> ..,.,v. ••••••••••••••••••••••• offer 6-l'' 337l! •-t ofr, 640·0100 t>dl (ul' rni.h llU~·7'7ll9 .. v,.... ~ " • trained i11(hv. w1dei;lr\: "M "' oUcr. l'leu1rn call aft ·-'"'-· in '71lll):'\IJA t:lt 1:.!r, _ fu~h1011 mcrdu1ndi11inH 'c!t Cur .:rowth. Call 'l' :.'fJYF:A lt::i l, O.C. 6pm.61S·7~'l. WANTED Mi•c ..... otn . , • T 'h Super tm ·k nwl.\•l. fi\11' .I) H rl ft r ~W dJ.i;plny. ConUH't the o . JorcJun. IWl·12lQI, Di·nn1" DU~LAP'S -TOP CASlt DOLLAR w;;t;(t 8011 34 C1>tm bit <.:nsr. ,c rl' ,..,,,., cquip~·d. nrnM b.t' • ou ;a111o:c flee at &16·0011 for II\ & .-.t•nni:-Pl·ri.oon~I ~ . 'Urnw11str1vcll lkrculon PAIO L'(>ll YOU ll V&, fl v hr1:. All'. hlll lo lllllH'\'Crnh• Tot.all,\' TrU\l'I Tr.111\'r, ful'Y. i V " 1"1~ N lo\"•)rt IJl\l" (.;M " I 11" II r ••••••••••••••••••••••• • 1 \'lfL' '> S ''ll\1111 .Ill' 1'01111. 2 dr, tcrv cw. Service ol llunt1111i1ton ° "• "" '" ' ' OU\' 1 , t\l' n w • b~ J P.Wt.:LltY. WA1'CJ.1 ES. ,1111... r • -on:m. Ill' lll'W thmuJ,th out $.'>!IS • • iwtlch. llHGl.I &J\'h Blvd. __ <,;,\LL514M'l80 _ SIW. also t'nd talllc. $:!:•. •\HT OllH:<."l'S, t:Ol.O, SSS CASH FOR ~17.~uu Pay h1t11I out, 531.: IWI n•fr & tt·ccl\'1'. rult,\\n~ toSl<il\ Su1h•121. S'S Kdvmator rcfr1i: 18 UH3.-K7:Jgotl 6l'M wkdyi;, S I LVl•:H St::RVICB, Goodu:s•dlurnlr.-fn~s wrw•y !l:JJl?(lHINH .7~ JI J ,.1, IJ I' J,,,'11<.'111~11·.,~,1_:.~t cu1\Q., Company Car cu ft, 40' w1dl.', Cn1lp ·r. wl,nds an)'llnll' fo'I N ,.; .,. U It N & I\ N. frirsfbtove:t S<lo--07Gll $1 1 ~oo ~cu au ft 2:!S I" ~r • ,0,111 f! ,. ,, ~ •Un ...,.,. • •" " .. ~ .. CoftWllUftlcatlon• TEU,HOHE 1 l 'l''U"'" 645 'N'"' · ~ ~. ..vo' 1.i,·i:11111t•r:o. •.. 11 1 · Sl7$ P.I' 61~Hili~O r ~uahty furn LA·~i< than 1 >< "'"· -vv l BUY S 'HAI' lllON & lOiS, lw111 1500 Ml'll',~~ hlkl' Only ~l5 M!i ·ll~il HI '.' ~1·11i..;1 tna1 .c1 . Equipl'IMnt An1werinqlt lllfo •1 )r olll l'om11l hdrm ""'· 40., i·o:ior: OYI" J UNI\ CAKS Junk op .\Jul coral witrlr, s ~1v;i Nik' & \\\•d11111~ Oronac <.:o tc•rr1tory Eaxy work. 1'/lim1• K1mrnort.•\\'u~h,•r& F.c·<' ~175 Solla & ch,1ir , tor• Diumondi.·Why vuy re· plhmC'c1>huuleufr,•c. t:d rudln,deptht1111!\or ... :vc1>'7:t Su1uk1 ~:.u 1;T, "''" lil:'.71:11 ;1v;,11I. Cor JWr!iUUlll\lC ~ •• lory + ('l)ffiln Ai.Ii. lor ll'IC l>n'l'r Sl 50 lwth duruy diut·ululc Ul'I\. Stonc008 30.'llt & wkn(b, ~UH~ll . 1luy1.1 . tll'l'i'<, lullln.:. 1'11•;111. r .... t ....... 0 S•r•i .. • Ir l>c:•rsonullly w/prnmmi·nt L><1rr•·ll. (t.t~ 1911<>. 1-'i·ii.:iduirl.! Gall Drn· ~11;:,. '7ti Zcn1lh :!J" color •~•II'' 645 !IGlt; or :ml-lllSl M•H 121 i.ull• ~!M tlliil ~36\l ~'" "" ..... firm. Call Donnie lkll, --~. Ki•nnwrc Jo:ll•i•ln <'OllbOlc, S4SO. Stl'rl'O roP CASII " l'i\tl> 1-'0R Luwn1,now,•r o. r t:d"cr "'l'll \ ..,. 11 \l'I' , I'' Parts 9400 tia3·l!'700, U<•nn1s & 1>•·11· 'rl·:t.t-:TYl't-: Orv1~r ~!> t:u,1ru1111.1'-·d "' tl0t1sn t run? fukinR "up"' • ,, i , 1 ) r '' "' '7~ K<1wo11<1ln IOO ••••••••••••••••••••'• lllll f'crsorlncl &rvlNl c1f OJ>f,;HATOft !>'llHIGT:! ::':1'::':~'~:~~:'.8it:r~/ ~l~· ~~~~~~~S~>~~11:JP & i;p:>l't~'! c:ivc It lo me, 1 l>ufrll'lll <!ti: rlN'. yt•llo\\ l.11.c Ill'\\ S75u PORSCHE OWHUS.. Jrvinc, <!01.12 M1 t hebo11 Operulc, m111ntuin Uur, S:JS l'i clufct>. pickUIJ ~li·31112 ,-anopy $111100 firm . 515 :l0tl3ufl.:.!pm SW\l'Ml':l-:'l',dun'lnl\s11 Dr. tvlt•lype cqt11pml·nt. No:-./ c v c r u :. c ll . " ha l 1 d rn •· t l t· s e l . m 1 H . WHOLESALE OHL y . 013 rnTo. 8.:10.5 ll7S·::W:! .• , II I . . ... , lh1:0 Olll' i\u~ ; . 1:.~to 11 l'itrt11'lcuct' 11e1•tlcd. Wl• Stai·ked \'fr:.ti ni:hou~c 812.7372 llutillly h•wt•l rv r"•nllr Wunl tu liuy Vront thruw 11fl 5 P~l & Whnlli. :~ 110 > Spt 1 i.t• · .,,.,ooo 1-:1111111t•r . Sunta ,\na. i..:t\ll 'inles t:nr1•cr ·i!l l ru1ly tr>1in. Start S:Jul rno w i.hr /d 1 ~ r H1•a11. ------r { (! 1 l uwn mower Rc·a .,.a t1nnyu\4pm. i Sl?SlliV work. Sl75 Wll·UJ> to lilurt. Meals. hvo~inl!. mcdlcuJ. !JllS·~J:, • 'o OP• I c 1 l' h 1 n,, s 1 i c ur 1 h t• 1'11 c l' a 1 I:: 1 k' · ' "'' IO' ff11rt'o Cluis:.111· Hcaul 673·~'1 lor murt• 111 h. ' • _.._ f'ullt•r lfrush !lll8·8371t ·• I l u , If -... .. .. t>:l2-l732 for anformallon. .ni.:I• nnc .wor ·1.n~ or nul. dc(•orulc\I, :.Ip~ fi , l \\ Ill l f vcnta v rovh l''. :Sc , Mt1i;1e Chtt. 21011 ultl, \\';tt\·rlwll. hcatt'r. uar 'I homp:..011 & VanaSl' ( ul u 6pm961! 1971. Chry11 11,•m11•:., lot"' of :>01.·c l\.\\\'i\SJ\1\1 IJlrt l-'70'11<1 'l'll:l'I' P;~"· .ot o . .-...... ,..____...,.. _ _......,_,_tu.II all1T11·nt' m,11 ~fl l~ hJl'\lt•!lt .:uld, ,.ult I y 11urroundt•i.1 & pcdt·:.tril. 4 Cunll'al'llllS: J~Wl'h:rs M.ailc:ol xtna?I. $22,!)0Q li7S-G8t7 or H1kt.'. l":.1:0.t l-'21 f;11.'ltll'\ llcuclJl'~, ~I~ (.1111 af\(lr~ Salest:oi:t t:lcc toS25K ·~'k ahout our u~la)1u \\arr.111t)'Sl5U.81!Ml·llil ~Jo.,, ulu S150. 531.01;13 - --------lnstru.Mtth 80ll 1i:lll-tl325 mdl : rblt. S2~o. Ph vm 613.007 ----~ I·'•(.; Bkpr/Cu11:1t toSll K f.ntry Prn~ram . .l\1'01) -ll1v1l'l'a Sofa l~·d , 4 mo':. 4'1'J 42f.5 OfrS~rvs/Sl'l'Y S72S Op1>0rtun1Uc1tUk 1 Year ol d I::ll'\'tri< olu Sl2S. other furn & L.iYestock 8075 •:••••••:•••••••.•••u••20• FilJl!r~l:ii.:. Cu ttv-' -• • , • . , C.:ollta ~1\o!(u SIO 10:.!b MaytJI! Ur y{'r. lll't'fcl'l 1111::.c. 53l·Ol33 ••••••••••••••••••••••• COllll Mlll·O·Mahc l'lcc. (;ahin. l651/0 . ~I any 1.:x-'71 flult·11'0 :?:'\\k•c. 1>11·t. "·~ ~~.t ~~~\~lni;,., 1J s::'° lluntm~ton Heh ~Iii<! lllli:!<! <'Ond1tmn $.~I. li7:1 357:1 --. -Reg. Morgan ma re, bt'okc ~rglln, l.!Xl'ellcnt ".ondl· tras, i;real for !iktlng & Xtrs'$'"/nt•('(I~ ;ill. SI is. ces I ~11 ee o s Sn11tJ 1\na 542·~~ -:Sew turn , brn. nu \'111yl lo ride & dri ve, blk t1on.$600.P.P.SJ2·l2W rishin)! S4!1 50. l'h 6~:!31\Hufl.S lrvmc. f'crsonnl'l ,\Al'lll'Y J oin lhC' people Wc:~lln~hous~ hen\ y uuly hv r111 ~ct ,. l.lurin lo' l'.' parudt' Morgun i;chlrng. Off' Fu a Ir l\93"4itlli >lll8~,11th,C-OsluMe:;a wh11'v1.•Jo111cd1heArmy cJJ')t.'r.SSO.tull eou1•h, h'11e. 55ll Hillli. w c7 > 1c• rn .. ur~ torHomH . Su1te2i:!4 612 1470 ---t\7:>"5510 :>-lj(l,11l ~.To11 csl cro 14 Equi.,.,..nt 8085 ---• Sole/Rent ' 9160 _...____......,.. _ _,_.....,~~..._~ TELLER TRAINEE --------------•••••••••••••••••••••••Boats, Sall 9060••••••••••••••••••••••• Twie·Up Special ~·.~ ~:!!I !19. Most Curs. Oil 1:ha11)!'' & l\1hu 88.tm With this J\tl Only 1\l"l'O 1-!MP\>HIU~t • 3\0 Brnu\twt1y. Lag. Bch L SL Dy fo·a:.t i.trowini.: !>uvrn~s & ,\pt 111w Copµt11·1011c Wl·i.t· Do\·cr Shores. M~:.t sd~: IBM Elec T ypewrile1·. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Motor Home R•ntal ....... os for Sole SA E A loan co. ;,eek,. a bn"h\ 1llt.:huusc rctny. lh nlJI. t:rtly rrlc1•d. Cstm Ci M' II 808 0 t:litc.SISO. llOBl!t.,lt "''" Can you sell'! Are you in· smile & t·ar'•"r .1.,.,1"r.. 6i;, 3300 urtrns Span. ln·Mlc llJI. Seuts ll. tsc:e aneous • C<Jll G73·3573 w/trlr. &12U. without 5820 I 8 1h to 32' ••••••••••••••••••••,._.• "L u~~ L . U I ' SJ 5 " ••••••••O.••••••••••••• 67., .,.,c... f' II It ' ,. • / terc:.ted in health & c ·,lt Cheryl Henton , , r It . ll .• ..::iPllll pr .,........," u YS\' .,•mi.:11nt•u Antiques '520 nutrillon? /\ back~round • ,,., I) · & l> · Washer & tlryt:r Sl;,O, or wroui:ht iron & ~Is wall ·WALiTED DESKS. CHAIRS. ETC. Sj)\'eial Wcl'klv Hall's Claulcs I 848-12"". cnm~ . cn. both. Coltbput rd rii.:. Imps SIOO Span d1a11· " MUST GO. Cal 211 no. W2 l.oacJcd H'-':.t•nc for llohduys In sell ng cosmeut·s 11 1' nu; Pl01':.111111cl :sen·1t~ ~ nos~top lrce.tcr, S15U. d ,11 ,' 5511 &tG·26Gll. TOP CASH DOLLAR 61:-,~664e SIJ,SOO Very dean . IU:Gt-:NCY MO'l'\Hl •••0••V••E•R••5••0••0••:·.••5·.~t dept i.torc sules would be Jluntin.:ton lkarh , lultilj 557 7123 ~er:.:. ..:. p t\ I o l .. o R y O v R 6i3-706Uor 17;v•120 11 IE 1 EN' s "' helpful. This IS :t .:rowth &-ach Blvd, Su Ile 121. --~verylhrni.: Mu:.t Go' Li\·. J EWELH Y, WATCHES, Pilney Bowes lU lb scale. --" .__ !)2J N~~lt1rl~; ur,~~11.'s .A , .... INVENTORY''• pos1t1onh111 the rplc~sant ---Cameras & rm den bedrm cJming· AHT OBJlo;CTS, GOLD 3yrsnew SI00.6'10·4337 IJ'METC.\t.Fw trlr.xlnt ••531:!503•• ,, utmo.s p ere o C.:os la . Equipmet1t 8030 ·u~c s~t decur'ator ac-S ILVER SERV I CI'~. · • --l'Ond. 2 set.!. s<lll!>, S35ll -~lesa s}wst llealthFood Tool&01e ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~l'!.." Toi; iiuuhly. Cull t-'l '.'IF: FURN & /\:'11 -'eh 8087 644-1103 lh·nl 2H' G~IC l'\t 11tv ~lore: Salary open. Cull MOLD MAKER Y11sh1ca-O cuml•ra with att4prn.!l:u;~11 111 TIQUl:.:S.&15·2200 ••••••••••••••••••••••• --• -,--. l'all t1:1:1.2Hl6 or Cl2 4Uti7 :Hl.l·l65I. flabh a tt>1duncnl:. & ---------2yngbt0parakects. LASl':R. Xlnt lOnd. Lhill,,, '"''"'r>urt Bcadu'aiir ELZFARGO &C0.1 Schoollus DriYers ll1.-qu1rcs l·;1.pcncn~·l'. Ill :.land. 0\Haed & opl•ratcd ! l w' n bt•ds w I Sealy LUGGAGE TAGS Cage. toys. food, S25. ~~fely Jackt•t & covor • KIOS. Main Sl reel L1c'd ur will train 1 llr ~rce1swnl·~1old fth1r lnJcl&' lly nc\!o•:.ru•an. S50 . P osture ,Prkd 1c mal· fromvourbusmesscard. Call586.Sl37. _!jt5·~--•<il l' Hhl"lll 7,t. ~1...!"1r1 S,\:'ojTA ANA · tio.11 mu u m~c· in.::. · 532 1259 lrt'SSl'S. '1 l' nc•w + Send 'one car<ll for cuch -.---090 30' Bris tol l'ru1s SI "nln~ OITll' i:..i > ..,v_ Ill toll, Mon.-Sat. ~uaranll'e. S3.60 Pt.<r hr lo :ib1ht) to dl':.tgn & fah cJ1·csscrs. Vry rs nble. . 1 >art• We Pianos & Of'C)ans 8 I' , P cont:1111c<I. $150/\\k, 1· 1 dS d !'t;1rt. Equal Oppor moltl~fromdl•l.all Joinli. Vl\'ITAH Slill camera 552·8~0-I. lagpusoncs1. · 1 ,••••••••••••••••••••••• w~s .ip N.U l-ullk~·l.Soli.4!:1245~1!1e\'l'S 'wknJ~ Cose• un ays l';mployer.559-0812. Small i.hur>. u1r rnnd1 latllSLI> w11h 55/1 .4.. ~:~i~"at~rea~~1i\~n~ant l Old upright piano. sails. b~~ndL n.c; J l11~· S.51H3t3d:i~~. __ •_547·970~ -------=-=---tiont:d u,1\ls1ml\~ multi·cnated kn~. \•·t~ tt-a-. be!#e-..._~ oi~v\l, · . • ~ _ _ -$40\J nev_ lgi£ ·~.!L c_ "'-' -_ -_ _ -----SEAMSTRESS STAC OSWITC HIHC /llt'tcnn.c .sys tl•m .s, Lamp. olivl' & blue, S20. strap, m_ectan~ ~Ir 11~ 536.9570after5pm equip. 1\:skw~ S25.500. ,i11y Duzy 17' cubovt.'r. f948FORD Btwt <'ushions & IJoal ll3:1 Buker Costa Mesa 1-:JSmm F2 !I ll·ns. 283 1)4;1"1522. l.O. reqwrement~ .Pr~-Cons1d<'r serious offers. "i5. l>11th:e chu1:.c, H'I') lf2 TOH "CKU' rO\t.<rs. i-:xper'uonly. 549•3041 flash Branunl·w wc111011 . Vl'nl lo:;~ & lhert. F or" ll ammoncl "Piper· 558-0bS-1 niceS7.000 6•15<l15ti 1 !>J>Cl'tl. lou.1¢1.lt.•u & ow. S .1 b Sh k I v s ·11 . fol'i' olrvc & ~old rtorul persunuhzcdtagcnclosc Orgun likenewS8001or----tl'istorcd.(t!J974X>. a1 ~ •• \8~1ur EqualOpporErrrploycr ~i:!-.ir\\'::f'.~t.'cs~~ for c•oudi. Fa11ta:.l 1t· wallpaper, fabric or rer 545.4350 f'ully Equi11. SABOT. A·l 51950 -----•;>_-___ -, ·' · ,. 1 " · buri:ain. S\50. 1142-2374 "Day Gin" paper & we -· · Cond. Jmmac. SC'hock Motor Hom~ • L' ,, -•• -~> 7;>2·8037 -------will lnck & lrim vour 3 yrs new Full" lo>1ded sail. StOO. Can dl'hvcr R•ntals MAR""UIS MOTORS SCcretarv r l't! ..-uiu l'OW Tltu(;K DR IV FR - -'PANl"'ll d l bl & 5 • -. J -9 " ""' AS . c ial,erson I , . , . ' \il\1tur 4:\0 lla~h SLl>,s '. ·~ .. woo a c lag~. llr try two C'urui. con:solc Thomas ori;:an. 581·• :.!!I. (tl)'ll•w::!ifDaiilomat~ MlSSIONVll•:Jt> pe . "·'llCI d, i\p)ll~ G & W ~S:\DI i•:imc:ra 55M\I chairs.~iO. b'H'klubnc·k. Iuwrerrcc Welk model. · 8312880~95 lilO ls so.ught for cxcl~srvc T1mlni;. J7lh & lr\me. ·. · 1· ,,,1,. 1 · 1.1,~1 ~1 ~·Gl 20 • PHl<.:ES: 642 28111. Utwn !lam S~lHlT (7QG7l : /\hone, W '.':cw :10· i-;xplo1wi-• • 11os1t1on w Tcx1·c1>t1orrnl I N u "I. · ·' ' en~ • "' •. -. ngj.tcd for rac111g. ~O I!!> Ne" 25' So11lh\\ 111th -, <'O. Also Fl·c .lobs. Call .!· ·---. 1·'2.!i ll•ns . 283 l·.h•\"lr'.0111l'lhluM• & Gardl•n ran a S2t-a~r.3,1S.~e:i 5prn. Call545·250!l. 11 1Scw2:l'Foul'!lt,1r" 3uo SL llouust cr, l!>liO l'cnnl'Y Young, 8:l3·:?7tl(J, rR,\Vt-:L AGENl'\' h.1s fl.Jllh. Hrand1 rw~; t-ully feature on lhts hOUll{' & ~~~ll::~~~1·~lt·a · Connu2G Ra psodyOt·iwn Loadt•d w ol)lmns 11wl'i.: M..r1·1·1.h•:1, orl~. xlnL l>cnnis & Oc111w1 l'l·r·so11 1mmcd. opcmnj;t for 11111 i:u~rantl'~'1 "0 11 11" at ·s turmshings. Buy all • ,... · ·. 2 lull 61 nute kcybrds 14' /\Mt-' Wtndrtilc with t•olor TV, l\tu·rowa\'l'. \'1m<I Slli.0011 (173-6214 rll'IScn1it'c•oflr'vlnt!,:W8<:! pt ·t1mt1 out~icfr s1.1h·i:; JHJLC . \\or·th S60U. orpartofscveralrooms. lO o~710r;;s1-~o ~ad 1 liltnLesliespkr.r cifr•· traile r . $550/ofte r . d11ulroolair:-.A\all . .as 11/fil <.:onair Lakewood ~lkhelsonDr. lll'r~nn . 751-1581 or Sacnfu·c :,i•t for s:t50. Vclvct lAV -rmSet.l hde-Ut'~ "~" nr~ Cl "Ondiliun. 0Wlll'I' \\Ill li7:1·1729ufter6 orJ!Jly:W.Thcst•an•ncw SlallUll W"ll , aulo,ncw ------• 1~1 "0'"1' 7'>2 ~137 l ·I ·1·h 'I I l). NOC.\ R () . ' "d I t fl l of .. &_·,·retarv " ·o '·' • · a· IC< · omasn e Ill· IJraw vour own or send sacrifirc. S975. 1-'ur 111f1 LI DO 1~. w /Trail1•r ~('. 1 wns 0 oor •'•' c•ni.;, ~50 Ht<! :1:112 Purihasi-bees f)pini:. posllni; imokcs. D09s 8040 ::~fr~'"~'-'~~t·E~~c~~~1':.~ nnr_nllc, ·a.~~r£•ss . 1~lu~fw ~ .iSl·lllOt>\lcs. -No.~~12~5.5·~~14.u~. l>alcs re v Ht•ni.1ls t1w ecreational ---- •• "7 u.1 ~·J"i\I, iM F. 111lorn111l •••••••••••••••••• ••••• v.-c ma,.e orw taru IK!f S • h ' 8093 "' .,,, 9530 Arc emph:isi;n11g the 0 "'c lll'rc·ulon Sola &: J.o\l' . , ·h ew1nqMac 1nes ------of l rrnw.~ll llltl Vehicles ul\·ers1ly ol key µo!lillon offt\·e Hob. !l'l9-0l33 •PET WORLD• "\'Ill " malch1og 1•hu1r lag. Add 2.'i eac · ••••••••••••••••••••••• p •':it ll"W trlr Xlnt •••••••••••••••••••• .... • I · · Send cheek or money or· ·-. . " · · ~ w thdr lop lc\d NI. Cal Ptl ll111li1, l'1•kt•;,, We::.11\'. & 1•tlorna11 1l'Uf 11C•\ d l . liemina. latc mixlel. "Top shaJ>t> .. \skini:: St.550. l'vt OFF ROAD ,\larsha Davi:-. !!:JJ.2700. TYPISTS Tov Fm. .. l'oo1llC',, Shih Paid SllOO Only S.'l9;.. All er 0 · or the lin,"' frel' arm Sl'"' ply. t:all 6Jt-lJ!JI). '7:! t;-i;c.,pu.ue: Lo:1<~~·•l '' l>\'nnis&Dtmni:;Pl·rson-1111. l'oms. Cl•\·kcn. wood corklall tahlc-. PILOTPRIHT~HG ini:: marhine. Available --Wreklyrl'nl.i~.Slt.Jq>~7 l'a l'I :<, Act'l':.1>uric:-, net St-r\lrt• n( lrv11w. 2~ ~~~g,~t ~!~~.'~.~~ ~ll11i Sd111:m1.1·r~ .. Hull Wa-.her Dr.H?t', Appornt P.O. Box l.560 fur rcposi;cssl.!d :ic1•11t !>.(;;\ 1' i\Sll'66G. w /trlr. __ • ~ 5.56· lld ~ _ :-: .. n wt• & Sal.is. VW , ~lichcl;,on Ur. 1-:sttWW Of'l'ltS 'l:Hn i: r :.. s II k •c~ & ml'nt only. 1~·1<!8~_1 __ ~la Mesa. Ca.:_?26~-halam·l' o!· only S2ll7. t'ul. ful_IY cqui pt~cJ,, h~a~t APOLLO :\I I Ill ·True k s. Vu tl:i • • SF..CRl-:T,\ICY for "''tll &CLr:Rl\S '11rkacs.IOOrn1;1.ctlput>-... s r 8'·'PoolT11ble&1':c1uip· ly guar.SlOmonthly OK boat In J:!r\,I\ s lwpe , MOTORHOME 4;1.4'11 <.:uslom.bll p11·i;, S t un 1o\·,, mn ... \ ti lonll'mp. · o rn rom •• l New l o 5225 ur :lll days cash. P & J 675·2:l9t afl5P J.l. . \ch1l'lt's Lsl:tk (.'•1 . In l,.a1:1hlon Nt.'l'd,•cj1mml'\I fur hrl•e•h ()p,•n ''"'-'~. \{B Brnwnnaui;:h.,xlnl men.. P ·Cox Ai.:ncv <Patricia & 29'.440cu.111.0ud~c. MODERMMOTORS tstanrl. ~tu,.l ha',: 4 yrs tc1n1~~·0:H·i1~~;"s1t11111-.. :.:u r,o2; t-011~ ~75. :,15.4749 ~0244 J crry Cox> 548.442 HOBIE 14 Roof & dash. utr, ONf\N OFF ROAD CEHTU., C\{Xir. t ype fl570 "Pm. ,, ,. -"' 1 unylimc Likeneww/lnuler&ac-generator'. t'1'11tcr l>a.th . ('I • 1 , 1 , ( 213 )., 10 .. 800 J ~h l!U \JO wpm . Call <.:allSut• lium·41.m1 ;n•at Dmw l'up~. 1\Kr.'.°':u1t1?3h)'<h• convcrtuh t.' 2 F.LECTRJCKILNS -ecssorics. hlue hulls. C B r :id10, ,\J.1 11-M i Cllluc. _ .. __ ., __ . ' E;1ltN1,t»lll·Ol.23. 7G2 l:JRO 1·tramp hloud \·a l'lcd <·uul'h. 1~~~.,.nu :, bar·3 Oackenson Sl25 C;il Kiln Sporti-Goodi 8094 redl whilel hlu& sa il. s tt'reo. olhc1• l.!x\rui-..4WhHIDrives 9550 1 ---Wel>ll'l'll Tcmpo1 ary 11i.;.-:; & tolors ~I u~I ,,,II sluol:; !156 ih.2 ufl .J um. S75 P h 41J''· 1045 • ••••••~',?••••••••••••••• Sli:!!iO. t~l5·7850 R~al Sllarp ! ••••••~•••••••••••••~·· SECRETARY' /TIME S..•n·u·1·" ln1· ·~l·~ms, ·1\"1,l · Ill I :J:l:to 111 ~01.ltl l'•>rltl · d,1vcnPort .-'·: -: . sx9 l'rofess ion11I Poul la· 34• ColumbiuMKll whl , S25,~00 73 Toyota l.>11uh·f'uhwr l\ut.<d typini:. fihni; & sh. 181'.iti:! :\l:aci\rlhur Bl l',, cs "kmli1 11'7" & mutchrn~ l'<Jffcc & I' Rb E 7. l'~ R • w 3 :s h c r I ble xlnl conll. lkuv) 1 · · · 74 Model on '15 Chassis llT. 52,0110 m1 .. Wann llrs 9 3 or rnurc for ·• <foy Suite 1110 lrv1n1• Two Mal• "'f9hans t'Od labll'"· 2 I.umps. dryer, V.ictoriun Ol'sk. slate. $<175. 9Gtl·l66S et e.ctromiclsl 't·ckustomm 11'~· Sold new.in '75. hul))., 11111 l.1>11', 5'1.8·5735 wk. Perm. 110:.111011 in 3 F 10 f' I ~~ :-.'1•1-l~tund 4!)3-tlllli6 ch a ndelier . concrete -------l'MOr, w .a es a .er da.vs. .., .. man managl•m,·11t l'OO· .ijua PlllH" ·.mp nyn \\'1th Pape>rio. • .1-t • ---pols. t:tc. &14-4196. 6'2" Kennedy boal or c:a r 111 trude. Call sultanl olc. Airport IU\:.. 2\'~•;11·~.a Yl•Jr~ Me'11t lahh• w/wroUJ{hl ~. ----.-----Surrooard 673-3074C\'es. P atric k Swift , ·11:.!IWi\ITRF:SSwanle<l,21& tTan.llllu(• ll'Oll t>:HH' sso1nrrcr. 5 Wh1tcwed~1nggown ~llC S2S 496·2451 idol4,no.3155,2suils or Wcsll'rly l'I. ~le U5. N U ovt••'. foll·l•mc. tl;i•· h r Good Home Only! m 1,." i·hairs rcd/hlk 8·9. Beaut1rul cond1t1on. ---.------, .,..,.. ....,., 7''"9 TV R-...1: saib. tt·aih•r & cover. i5:.! t2:1-1. ni.,ht. ,\l)f>I>• Ill 111·r:-;1111. <u''' l'""I \ m vl. tnl'l!ll Sl.l, c·:ible il>JV. ,,.,.,, • .,.._ • • VUtO, .. ' '"'" ""' . HIFi St 1098 S137S. 673· 19111or675-t.i516 hl\u1 111·2. ot' ult (II' ~I. 1::1 IS!12-59GG 1;12 1~133 s1lool Sl5. Call after 6pm. --, e,-.o ~~:C'HF:TAHY lur Prcs1 ;\I u t-a cl or t M 1• x . l -&15·7B.'>7. Hand Croc"-ted ••••••••••••••••••••••• 14• HOBIE Cat '75 w/cust. THEODORE ROBINS FORD 10b0 HAPBOA 61VO (Q!ITA MESA 642 0010 s.~.:wo ·74 llod~e. Rmcbj·c,, l!r. 1s 1>: 1 :1uo v -8, a.ii' •• t rm·k tires & whls, h v,v ,dt )' hum1>r. 1-;vcs "' wknd~. 5~11 .. 1011 : day11, Q.ll lll/l. . dent of uro" rng <·oni lll.!~tau1·>1nt 1768 Nclo\pOrt OXER Pupple:; for ~al('. . kingsile lechpread 25" RCA color tv. 2 yr trlr & xlras. $l200. Call - p uny. In hi' a Ith t•arc· Hlvd. c M. Champion s1mJ. l)l'l & Thomasville 1930 era .twin ore white. Rcautirul. warrn. Like New. $158. 998·7851. •73 Roadliner 28' '75 Ooclgr :\'4'1' P .U. 4·v.;IJ~ (1\'ld <.:un~tructionei<t>l.!1 -s how. 1\rt 5 wkclys lx.'<is.lar~eroundm1~ror Never used. In plastic TVJ ohn.645--4276. , . . F ll E u·pped .0 drive. 12M m1. Askin& ht'lprul. l!alarv 01x•n. Call W;iitress. Sml c-offec 002·8031 · vanity & bench, night bag stored in cedar • 10 W1tdC1re, xlnl shape, U Y q I l • ~.500. 581·77!.>8. ;\Ir Kyckclhahnl!42·7724 :-hop. Newport lil'U<'h. stand & chest. Good chcsiforpl!st5 yrs.Cun't 13 ' C!r TV, almbosl l new. extras. Sac rifice $225. cld. 2 air cond. & ----~--- --------!.l·:J.C:.tllaft5.541H702. blr Pu1>. male. J\KC. cnn J . S225. Large use. No Kingsixe Bed. Adm1rnl Porta e .. $170. 673.5624 generator. 13,000 '73 SC'out 4_x<t. et1uipct, gd SECRETARY --------Shots. curs crop11ed. mahogany buffet Sl75. S 17 5 . 53 4 •75 33 . 493.7291 . S C 1 (,42 cond. Mike 1147·1936/ WAITRF:SSF.S s1rio 642·1~3 c 11 9686709 .o· G a rr Rig a ll wood m • · ~ a · ·" 644·5025/1126·9790. 1A~ for HuntinC)ton t-:\'.il<'r'd. 1-'ull or p/t. a . . Eves/wknds. loat1 & MariH Sloop. Head, l/B e ng. Harbor Blvd. CM T--lcs _, Harbour Realtor. Good hrs Nl'llt ap1!car. FGllAN l'urebrc·d . no l Bdrm sel, Broyhill. l p M 22,. R Equipment sips 2. SlGOOl bs l ofr. • -95tO· Nrw •11r 1•0111t off1cc,.., 5 o ver 21 papers. lO M!''s to good corner group & dresser. ~erp ~w~f hOO<fot~r:r. •••••••••••••••••••••• 494-65S5or642·7599 rail.rs, Tra•el 9170 ••••••••••••••••••••·~ 11:1) wk. s.500 mo Ca 11 IMI Surf & Sirloin Jhome. Love kid~. Has all Glass lop coffee t bl &end d · ~ ~6~1525 air GeMral 90 I ••••••••••••••••••••••• *CHEV. '76 Hew ; l'nrccll (7M > l!JG-2848 5tl31l W. t:ou1>t llw)', NU shu~ S7!'i. ~~-11!1.J~cs this. ~0·2522. ryer, · · •••••••••••••••••••••• loah, Slip$/ 74 Cardinol 13'. Li kt• 11\'W. Two Ton Jll> C&C~· ~f'.Cf>L',1'1\l'V :'\o PhoncC:.tll!I! ! ! \KC ""ll•1mpinn s'11·ed S1)r. <' s-r, Bed S300 COLOR TV. Portable, 22'' SURPLUS teak doors DOfkS 9070 many xlras. Ai.ki n ~ {;I\, 2 s11d. It.A. & 7M. ~ 'r "' -----'· ' · · ,ueen ° a • · \V k ood k I ••••••••••••••••••••••• SI 800 '73 8 7 () I IH.:CEPTIONIST . WAITllESS WANTF. inl(er Spanlc~ PUllPl()ll. Spanish 5 pc glass top or ·.s ~e!'Y g . $175. drawers, tea . umbr Dock up to 28'. Nwpt fs. . .6 . 61_. __ -(145736/0102). n y l ~om:ut orricc seckin~ Sur itcnll's Rcstaura111 1.rvc?r ,'~ wh ile !Jwk11. l?in~ttl' Set , S250 . CallG4Sl52S. ~~!Jf'·~::sp~!~!\:~~ Pwr only, 0 0 sail. HOWARD .i..k1llcd pl'rson for 1m 1:1<13 W. l~lh SL CM. ·19!1· 1082 s11mush glass lop Coffee Ga 7.cbo, large, outdoor : der ~8206or 751•3532 W \ r / P w r / b al hr m NOTICE CHEVROLET, Uove & nW<I. 11l11l'cmrnt an ~row· --Tbl, 575. Liv.rm & Din· while lalti<'e. Excep. · 673_3053 how Daily Pilnt Class Quutl Sls., Newport •n)! urd11lCl't11rul firm. Wanted, pa~t li~c co.~~~, Free ta You 8045 rm Drapes, S50. Xlnt tlonal s tructure. a ll Sac. Illness $700. Bay .. Ci · ifilld ads display lhl'1r lk>a1•h. t ntl't'csllni.: 'anctl at• 1~on & cln' ~·r, r r<'f ko 25, ...................... concl. 8-12-32:~4 redwood. S2300. 893·5333 ly model no. l62o. 2.0 Slip -Sail bouts 22" 27' me~sagcs with ll•l!ibility 833·0555 .. 111•1l 1l·~. Tvp sccrl•tul'l~il for mulr han1l1tt11lflflNI . . hull g lass v ·8 For Elec/Water on Dock and rm pact ? Our ads, we ~it '<ki111< +-dl'i;irc 10 jnin, a eollei;e ,.111d,•111 Call al 1 week old llUJ>l)lc~ Irish (2l Twin Beds (rnultress oisplay cusc. Gd cond. M : y 'r. . h (7l4 Fl"eeprk'g.everylhinst arc proud to ~uy. r1>ally '71 1::1 Cami n,o SS4a4': ha111.1v ui.:~rc:.MVll tt•um ll'l'llO(lfl!4fH:!i:!'J6:1 S\'ucr mnthcr. l'rl'e le & box11prl n ~s ). Good Approx size 5'x2'. Call 84;.~~~ ou llllS • lstclnss·Bcstin Nwi>t get r e s ult:.. !'hone Man_vcxtras.l;ullufter t> s 1.i,1ry l'om mcn~urul'' • - -It 0 o d . ho m <' • 5 a coml. Barker ii. $35 ea. 4!M·4074. · 673·8711 lill JO P M. tH2·S6_78. 1Hl1. ~52 111117 .vilh i·xv(•r l' 111 lil r Ill· Wlrn<I help. Snll ~u,•st Westm tn!>ter , Ncwr•1r <ltl!l-1915 loots Maillhnmc•/ ----- 1 . 11111 & ·11,,11111 n• ho11w. In ~nstu Mt•i.u, llciJ:hls. u4 Z·tl9 1Z, Swin g set. 3 t ricycles, ~ice f02 Dcluxc 45'boutslip ~.New 9100 Autos, New tlOO ,.'~11 1~111~ : 1 0 , ~I 1<'huc1 i\llcrflp1n l'ull. :Jf.Jll.:11:111_ !161!·429a I·' or 11 a I c : de sk toys, pluy luble, s maJI •••••••••••••••••••••• S200 Npl lkh ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• "'. . , . 1 -. . r-rcdcniu. hkc new. S400. chairs. 646·0160 675·4927 • l rllwt•1. l \'lc1 A. ,en· W0:\1 1\N llm1kkcc11cr I l''rl•CKlltl'niitoguod hme. 559.0780 leave message · Expcr. Y<1rht Malnt _. •!n11~1 A~:..111;.. wot .~~~·1• Ut•o'I ore P \lmC' c>vr I h·mulcs. <.:all 045·41140 ~"t.11217 edding dress, sr. to. palnl, v~rnish, decks re loats. Speed & ~t; Sujf(• l!I;, N.U .. l.htiO. yrx. niuld h1• f\'ll1Nt llr St '12(}.I Chantjlly lace w/lrain & fed, wiring & e n{( wor Sid 9080 ,f>;!!)llll lyr11ll· to 11111dhcalthrn.•. -. GcrCIC)eSofe 8055 vcil.64().4387 done reasonubly ••••••••••••••••••••••• Cull GHl-407l 9am·l'll1tJ1\ 111 2nbuntlonc•I male k1ltco11 ••••••••••••••••••••••• _ 642-7029or642·4615 t>plll !rpm hmc 1n11J.' w11.1 vuedn11ll '1·1''AMILV. S;it . & Sun.! ~ckets, Aug 21sl P~ul loats. MClrifte & all\•r. M4 01.19 ll<-frift. $25, 2 rouchcs. Williams Concert /Univ. 1 .. ,....... 14' Ski bout w/trlr. 00111' t:vinru<tc 494-S!lll(I ---------1 ~1-:c1H:TAHY for law ofr :-J H. I•:iq >t'I' nol 0<'<" , will train. Ci1x>\I typln~ & i<h 1•cq'<l. llt14·51>10 ----i Tn itd hmc. f.llb/Sprinl(c $20 ea .. 4 easy chti1. $1 AmpTheotrc497·3254 •••••••••••••••••••••• h di mall!, 1 yr,111ayru1 & Inv t•a., 2 m;irblc lot1 c•offoc usl Sell Fast! PerllC'k .. 72 Mercury ouibourd 7 17' California 1.0. Glass. SECRETARY /leCJal ~~.:-!' •• ~~••••••••••• ubfc. Rhol:1 & tic. l'h. t ablc11. biil or~. Misc. Bar, Booths, Stools, Si~k JIP. Xlnt cond. • V·Dottom , 130111~ Volvo. P.xpr'rl, "1111 sk11111 for 11 ... -.e 8005 1;..16-5 155 k1trhcn utcrnul:., pie· & More. 2101 Placentia, $\.50 a7s-.Ot69 (;()w' 11!v1.S.~orir.nlut~~r~.w.hlXtlrnl~ all Ol'llCY orr1 cc in ...... , ... s • lures, lamps & 0th.er CM or~-J3.Huft5. _____ . ____ _, "..... ~ ~ • Ncw11orl Cenlcr. Ca II ••••••••••••••••••••••• Fr1•e lo Ad hom e. whl good lh'nits . 32115 M'in· 25HP Evlnrude mlr, oar11 con<I. llsl orr. 1133·2292 ur 1;.10 111100 JONATHAN'S Gl'rman Shep, found l~s ne!lot11. CM~ -1.5-4004 ' paddles. skis, dollies. IH 644·1il07. • , -•SUMMf.:it 1110 Mii yr. IOVlll)"(, obc. , • . SCRAM LETS Jal'klll,11ai.l.496·0M9, ----~I.II'\ Ice l"t:rt~on J\ttcn t'l.1':AHM•H;t-:• \lr(•nl 5.'iH liHllO wkdyll, J\NTIQUF.S ( ) Sporllni.t • Glusspnr G·a w/J ohn:mn d,nnl. 1•x1wr <I Day & EVF.RV'fHING GOES! 49H73l ev<''I. Goodx & 4 Cl~csts. o! ANSWERS 8' Ding hy 75 + many xt ras. Sl.200/ Ew:i;. t-'ull & p t111w. AJ•· 20• 10 Ill'~ 01"1'' drawers. nd p~11nt. !!:le( Jo'ibcr~lolll' t:n11ofr. Aft fl,075·11511. t>I>'; Shl'll StuU011, 17th & <12.2:1t~St~ Ntrn73 OOOl 2 yr old Sprin~<'r Sp{mld motors + 11houl ~000 old 675·492'7 "J,i\STPON '"/\Kt,SON lr\'lnl' N. ll. max. GOOfl w /ehil(Jrcn ti m e 78rpm rccord11. Tawdry -Ch1~ck -u • "' ' Antique R11ll&Clnw huf 11CJ·320San51'M Hltl6, l!J48 11/0 trains. Siiky -Python-Murln e Dlese-1 4 cyl Ski8uat,50 11J't;vinr~h· Survi('e S ia. J\tlcndnnt f 8300 SI lld k Pert -----25612 Santo Or. Missio WHJSKl-:V Hercules w/rcblt trans & Trailer. Only $l:il):l. ut • f\111 & p1time. Ex1>tor'd. cl." · ~ ou" 1-~rtlC' to J.111 home y ni.t Vlejo.S8l·0008 /\bout u boozer : "The fresh wate r cooling, 2·1 Mcu Boa l Cent er. Apply Ruy Ca r ey conll w ilhoot hutch. maleGermShepmix.ln 5keletoninhlsclosells ln ratiotrans.542-<>967 646-053V Chevron, 60& S. Const 1.140.Wl:J lelllgcnt, personable. WED.thruSUN. the11hapeofaWlllSKEVl-:.;_----...;._------1·--------- Hwy., Laguna f\ch. 64<1·2023. 3060 Roy('e Ln .. C.M. bottle." Ta mu ya sextant TnMSpOrtatioft • SlRVIClSTATIOH ANTIQUING IN T~STIN rnitwe 8050 C()MESEE! 557-1858 ·72 Ford PU t ailgate, 646-Ml6s:~~cr5pm. ••••••••••••••••••••••• TTE ... DAHT 00 you k,now there ~re 13 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 2·fam gara~e sale. Lots of green, $35. Roto tiller, C~n, StAe/ A '"" fine Antique Shop~ in Old B Qoodies Sat All.ll 7 10. new Ghp motor $150 LrJt loah p 9040 fteftt 9120 n~cltl lire & ,tube exp. Town Tustin! f~~ qua II· **I UY* * only. 320 E. 19thSl, C.M. air compressor .;. ICP ••••• ; •• ~~~~•••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••• AM & PM openmg. Apply ly & selettlon. v1s1t a ll ~I Good u~ed Furniture & impact wrench & hose , '711 Dodtt~ Vfln, Xlnt cond, (j r a n g c Co u n l Y us. Located al l sl, t:I ppllanceii-Oll 1 will .Divan. books. clothes. $\Sf> Hea"v pool cover Baby Whaler, 8 whule Bubble top, s i ps 4. •I Autom~Uve Center. i 101 Commo Real& Main . sellorSl':LLforYou. misc. Wed · Fri. 2250 ll A 16xJ6. $50. Complete pooi l)'pe dingh>:· bow r ail, b\l r nc r 5love, 11ink . N.T11.stm.SantaAna. MASTHSAUCTION f'amelaSt.C.M. s weep w /cloek $l OO. center slcer1ng wheel, ict•box. Asking $5500. Ph Sewing M achine Opr . Beaut. Ot1k dln. tables, 646-8616&133·9625 C hil dren g r e w up Swim nos .& mask SIO. ~P ~~ ~5\ s~~i.1"'_64_4_·_8i_09 _____ _ Canvus products busl· one ornately carved , A~ 6 CALL 55.C.7293 Grandma.moved in: hun: S7vw5 t~pl 13~pe~0°;e ·~~~::;. o~~·ves. 644~36' led likes 9140 l'ICSs. F /time. begin im· J><'rt'. w nd. G Matchinll dreds of items for sale, · med. Exper. prel 'd . Oak ch:urs; authenll~ AVE! New & IJSNI turn. che.ap. 10•4, 1581 N. ll:tn· S3S.. 10xl5 s urface l)lute ' fo'brgls motor wha.le fi45·rl-14 barber polo. rarm llem6 uppt ·s. misc. Wilson's dy. orange. Many, ma ny ..;S35;.:....·..;64_2_·_337_9 _____ 1 boat New die.el motor. for wall decor. Misc. 811qtaln Nook, Now 2 b1.1rgalns FIUDGIDAIRE S7,500. 642-70S6. STOCK CLERIC 893·~ St()res -545 & 814 W. ---------i Towork art lime Stock 19th, C.M . 642.7930 & Pool tble. piano, s tereo. Deluxe frost.free. $75. shelves Pro<-eive ·chi/ck Antique uak c law·foot 54&-32f>2. dive t!ear. furn~ tik1s. Dryer , $50 . Blac k Sprtlisher. r~cent over· oul cus'tomers $2 so hr tables. t lion & I camel --. l\like847·1&36/826·9790. Knee ho le d esk $45. haul, lo hrs $22.,000. Eve ~ rt cau548 t6s... root. Very rore. ~7·7123 BeauUrut Gold 9 Sora, Tb d I , n 3 644·0261. .. ._846.. __ '1_883 ______ _. a · · · -I005c 1Jp~t-0d cu!lhloM ors ay on y, .. nm· pm. ·-, . r anc•s 80 I 0 un se1.1L' & buck Quilted l44ll Culncv11. 11.8 . S1>t· Table w/4 swvl Clirs. Bx l6 Evlnrude Trlbull. T:i/C hpre'parcr3• l e:1P~~· ••••••••••••••••••••• vclvct Perl'ecl c~nd sus tnltdale. N. of Oo\sa. turn spgs & m att. Be n eh HP ONC It trai~r. Onl p1'f.u~{ ti~cm~11! C:,rp: Fre~ht Damag" Jlotl)f>int Alilo 6· Circcn, white /.; on Croupier . Wo mcn3 Pre~s ... Refri.e. wrks well. $2605. at Mesa Boa o( Amcrka ean ·7 Da)s Sate. 3308 w. Warn\'r, bl\1e floral .sofa, itd cond clothes slie 10. Mor S'l.S. New Skis, Rossignol, Center. 1595 Newpor Dam·tpm. Ph 548-0l9l ' near llt rbor, Snnta Ana S65. SM '60ol2 Item• 170. new. Bst oCr. 645-6889 Blvd, C.M. 646-40l? _ • • -. , - I . • ' • ...... l•aW"IM ....._ ... ,,w. J..._, UM4 Wednetday.August•.1976 • DAILY.PILOT D7 • . ..r ...,.L.-"" •••••••••••••• .. ••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ....................... .. ""' .. s.l•p•rttw ....._ .. ,,,w lolls•-• 971 , ... ...,.. t770AMC 9905......_UN4 AlllM.UM4 Alltel.UM4 ·-. ,_ • ...................... ...................... ....................... ............. .................... . ................................................................... . w ' ••••••••••••••••• ••• • ••••••••••••••••••••• ·~7 ~~n~~~<l.c~ ~ ••••••••••••••••••• ?.' ••• =.~~ .... !?.~! "'8!':.e4~·J·,~~u~-O: ~~~e~:~~:~u'a?r •• ~ •••••••••• !!.'.~ ~ •............ !!.~! ~ ............. !!.~~ fi'Z.o42() ottAMGICOUMTY'S '69UtM.AHHGHIA, Um 11000.493-Mil . l\M/FM st~reo. p1n~l·'T4 Cad El Dorudo. Dlu4• "70 f ordTorlno4dr. 91~ rlnto,Runa boul. OLDIST $11100 ti1~ Ina. tuaaaiio r1ack, 6 c.:yl, w wlu\@ colir 011.:t top & C1illM'f.1M8 MC:.. • spd. n1.:w radltil ~~.11~1~~ .P~~~u~ho~=;J & 'IT VW Bue. 'ood nmnl.n1 Buutllul Cltr, OFto'.t:R. Int .. i1nrf, ctw111.1, lolidc<I, H ytlmc tlr~ "•~lea, :n.ooo ml, . lt70Ghla, new reblt en(I, cond . .00 or w at ofr 98M9'1l a(t.G·OO PM lomi -400 t14ll·•a..4 Or 11. O•nr. S2,0t>O 11\.lnmof very clean t.-ond_ xlnt con<i new brks. •'49daftS. -~·· · · •1,a Crand 1'orlno. ~dt. ~1 llOOt>.A3:H!l'JOOchlJ1e S I S. I L I i2100 OO·~T9or64$'1lll4 '62 C1u1111ac, 111r <'Ond hrdtp, V-8, p/a. P/b, fact ----~--• n rv cc>· . u .n1 a oiro WHOAn "14 Hatchhclc, a m/fm '75 aa1ML1M llOOtl llrt"a. ¥ood cund. air. lo m1, omtfm stereo, I r l.nlo. 4·11r>J, MM m1 67'1'pyoto Sl-0ut Pkupr ·Nil Ro~CcrYtt, hie. Mere .. ,••• 9740 1hmeo. chrome "'bis. /u new. :tOOO Mlle". Go· ~-". """' 3008 vin)'I top. runs j.tr'-'ut. XJnl eondltlun ln & out COi worlt, mak(' or er .() <>-Ila OY•'"' 8""' ... ••••••••••••••••••••• .an,000ml P>•u.. •••,•~n "' -....., 5• 00 b f ·•13 $1 ~ ""'l ••->t t rlld • T 548·3881 dy•: °"'"' ~" ..... "' "....,., .....,......., loc very rcu••· Oreen. .... !fl u r . c:. > • ·-,_.. LlWO Ja mboree 1900l't1erc:cdc~:?W.•1pd, oyot. 9765 'G3 B t l 1 bo O w ner mu i.t a.ell !1968 1'1et:."lWooc:l,ollxtras. 692-1045. ~<'\'C_s ___ Newport~aC'h 640-G444 AM/l-'M radio. new 1n· ••••••••••••••••••••••• AMt':Mc':.,.·11 nt.clce x, &.wUH ~or offer. -::-:-::-:-::~::::-·Pt~•th °""un '13 r U 43~1 To -lf'rior & tlro!'. 2.) m1 por SOUTHUM • n • en&. 6-&2 3312 •6J llAllLANI tHO t"t\ s hell.. Xlnt ~on' apri 9715 aal. Seal offer or tr111le .._ ... ..._ICOU..-'S -.·k,ti.t ofr.646·3814 •1or tllllM61 ~.400 475:.buf lOAM:••:•••••••••••••·~··• ~or pickup or panel.~ "" •67v ,W.BaJa.S800. Well 9tl0 '1S COV. 11 11 ic l rnll r, ~-1972PLYMOUTH oiaft 10.30 t•M. 72 Coprl 2000 . .a ~pd, 111r. !I 675'0'J70 da)I or Gn ·987G VOLUMI <:all Ounn)' aft. •pm. ••••••••••••••••••••••• f'lrcm1st blul.'. WM top. 00 LTD, 4 dr, air. pwr. xlnl Sebri11• H.T. c..,. • track. Xlot cond. $2005. aft Opm. TOY OT A DIALll 67J.60t!G 197l IUICK llhr. S81SO. 499·4290 pvt eund. M usl i.cll. $100. t\ fro n i II n e car I "73Sedan 1le Vllll'. 37,\1 all Ph 751·~ -..... Sport Coupe !~· C11ll ll7:J·li?_!l2 __ ---<:MOOJIW >. i~~31;h~~'~;~ ~or~~· ._ ---9720 Lease Tryuis,>·ou'll Ukeua! 1!itp;s:::;:0• w41t~~: VII, .uulomal1c. pwr 'li8 Ford w,11• A/C, runs SI 555 IOAM or ufl 10 :ro r~t . •••••••••••••••••••••• New• Used xlnt cond. S4·1W2l st~nng, air cond., vinyl CM"'*t 992 &real. $"7$0. Cell MAR9UIS MOTOaS ---S•s & Leeti*J OVU I 00 lop & pwr . windows . •••••••••••••••••••••• 613·~. MISSION VIEJO unit "" Ton Toyota l'kup TOP Dollar Paid MERCEDES 'Ill vw 7·pssngr bus. Nu UM7J PM. • use I•# I . . Ul-1110 495.1210 Lo m1, tuµ i.h;ipc, SJOOO. On ALL Trude·lns OM DISrLA y eng. rnd10, Z·bed, Sl.350. $2699 CHlVY I•# I Ve~n~f:an~~~11; ~~~: - AfUPM 838 12.)2 MIWrORT DA TSUM 1168 ~. MARQUIS MOTORS Har MIUI in SSS(). Call ~-9462 ms HI Do•• Strttt House of lm~1 "10 vw Van, good cond. MISSION VIEJO (lauJ lt«'t! cClass of '7S -1------ ••••••••••••••••••••••• NenrltJacArthur ~tE~~ig~~t;~OLEJl Buill·ln bed. lape dk . 131-2110 495-1210 l\appuS1amn) 1965 FORD VAN & Jamboree Roads 6862 Manchc1>ler, '73 Celica ST, 31.~ ml, tl800. S48·0855. ''16 Opel lsui u. Brand CONNELL /\ "Surror's Delighl''. 833-1300 Buena Park lrnmac. Vinyl roof 1 "66VW new,won on gameshow. 'i3 Llnc:oln Town Car.fo\il IR&:llm>. '75 280Z . .im1rm . s tereo, S~l-7250 • ma gs. auto tra n s . S675. 646-233Sart.6. Oeal~r price$-IOOO.Make CHEVROLET pwr, cruise l'Ontrul. lth1 .1 ONLY s 127 6 air m"" whl• ~1lver blk On l~.e Sanla 1\1111 fwy. ~l\f/FM. A/C. l\\r. pp orr.673·2112. "-"'Harbor Blvd. lnl. um I rm St e r eo ~.R"'UIS MOTORS · · u,., '"" ' ------S'.!1195, Ph 638·3l?2 V-.J•o 9772 -------,,.,..., MA .,. 1nl. Assume lse or buy. •73 2IOC C 111111 ,._ ..... __ 9915 COSTA MESA 54,800/bi;I oft. P P MISSION VIEJO f · 11 • -·7 fie· k ••••••••••••••••••••••• --6l2·2308. 6~:!·6~:! . • •11.2'a10495·12 10 Altipm ca_496·•11>. (004UG\') 72 Cor<>na Mor 11, 4 dr, S UTHIR ••••••••••••••••••••••• Bus.546·1200 ttes.5Sl·S231 ..... ~ air. aulo, xlnl cond. S1800 0 M 99 •••••••••••••••••••••• ATLAS Chry1 .... fPly..tll Open Doily & Suo. 'tll 10 PM 2929 Harbor Blvd .. Costa Mesa 546-1934 '70 Ba rracudo Gran C~ l ownr. xtra <'lcun 6'73·38119. ---14 610 Dabun Loaded, $8,450 firm.Ge<>rge.G73·6833 OIAMGICOUMTI'S WANTEDI '69 Chevrolel lmpala Mercwy 5 'Hr DodKe Vun. "• ton. auto, xlnt rond Sac al Ji'm 51 .. _s VOLUME • sedan. Gd condition ••:••••••••••••••••••• t;\f,,n l ccJnd. Loa d cd sa!Oll 64!>-2233 .... ._ Toyota Coroll:i Wagon. P.P. S46-M72. ;3 MarquJs Sla Wi:o. '68 Fury Ill. P s. 11/c, 1w" leaul camp1:r Ill le nor :. -;--:----IMports 1970. air. new tires. rack. VOL VO DEALEll 19 6 9 or 19 7 0 Soper 5harp. Loaded. pa\nl. S'1SO or be:il orr~r 411(.9737 d J y~. c\·e s ,,a 260Z. auto. air. lapc 631•1276 S9SO.b6lofr.497·2978 1961CHIVYSS 997·10l0or846·J;ig7 Calll!32·28S7. ~· deck, etc. Loaded. lhgh . VOLVO Cadillac Has ele"-tric wlndo~ & , · blue bk cond. must sell al '6l! 2505. full pwr .. ti cyl.. 'TS Cellca GT. 8.000 m 1, buckel seals. A black 7 4 ~l 0 11 l eg!' ~t X Olltioc tt6S Autos W•t•d 9590 low. book. S..!JOO P'l pty. b5l offer. Days, 998-7300, Blaupunkl FM cassctle, WAGONS Convertible Beauty! IGFB781>. ~.rougham. P tS . 1 t n. •••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• 645·2233. eves & wknda 530·~>3. immac. ~650. 673·3083 1976 245 CASH IUYIR $699 ;ur, a m/fm. till whl, ITC\\ '73 Grand Prix SJ Kil , W"' PAY TOP DOLLAR ---ri.-..., 9767 DEMO. 4 speed, over· To-.• C-t..v 9l7ir9e.'f,,·o,,c. lcun. llsl o£r. '1n,)'I .. Al<;_,. n 1 iany xlra~. "' 412 200Z. Hl.OOO ml, brn. Classic Mercedes -....... d · A•t 1Fu •547 9709* ...... _.._.. ., '"°"" "I " "''1 c 642 934" ,..6RTOPUSEDC/\RS blk int, i\m /1'"m, tupc, ••••••••••••••••••••••• rive, " 1•• s tereo • AutoSalcs &Leaslng r ..... ac . .,., ~... ' " ~OREIGN. 0 0 1\U;sTIC fac. oir, mags. 640.1760 lOOSE Coupe '71 TR6 Xlol condition cassette, fog lights, Jac·liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiill 2161 Harbor. Co11tu Mesa Multanq 9952 1973 Pontiac Lo Mo n~ orCl.ASSlCS ----J\llnl 1968 t·vndit ion . JM.OOO ~i. new tires & torykai0r ro1nd. & luggage! CALL 646-4446 ··~··•••••••••••••••••• s~rts cpc. Landau toii. l( your car Is extra clean '72 Wgn w/11ir. Custom silver lacquer clutch. Best offer, Call rac . n Y 6513 miles. (S} 66 Mustani: restored. ~-'tiOil/ofrcr. 003.7600 i.ee U$ f1rsl. S2,1SO flmsh, na\•y leather In· Tom 833·0887 (06839S). . -. Super cond. $1800. IAUU IUICX-•---=968~·-S792llfl S. ttrio~unroof, AM1FM1---------1 SAVE COtMt 9927 400.1208 i l t-'lreblrd Esprl\, $239~. 2925 llar bor Bh·d stereo casselle. new u 19'-T6 ••• .. ••••••••••••• ... •• .. , , At, o....15, 1tlnl cond. Costa ~h.-sa 979.'2$00Da t s u n , 'H '2 . 260Z. Mlchelins, St0.000. Call On ly ~~.~o m iles. 1974245 '64 ComeL.goodcond,23 61 .289 Vinyl lop. n.e~ 492·H37l _____ S1~\cr blk. •I-I.pd, mags. 644 .9 13 0 fo r appt . . mi per ga l. s.150or best point, br a kes. li·1rk1----.-----TOr IUYER :\hc·hehn:s. am1fm ler weekdays only. Original through oul. Automatic, radio & only offer. 642·2145 stereo w /4 spkrs. S9~ 1968 Pontiac Tempe l. 6 Se r &I •T tape 38~1 m1 142LVZ.----_.:.----1 L1c.644AUK.S219S. 20,302 miles. Local Nabe 63l·l~l c•·l.auLo,radio.hu ler& !Cl us irst, ast. op PP. s.l.800. Perfect <·ond. CLASSIC USED •THl CAR PLACE• Corona del Ma r car. IS cont-...al 9'30 ~ dollar paid for im porlS. Work. s.a l·iS 10. home, Mercedes Dleuls 2100 Harbor Blvd, CM <003L1',X ). ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1966 Mustang, 289 VS uir. 5850· G-12'3372 ~.~COSTAMESA A94""'"'· 631 ·2620 S"'VE Cadt•Uac radlo heat •r &"11to rT'hl...t..-6!.lrd r DATSU.... .. --luy or LHte A ''14 Ma rk IV. Super sharp. sciso. 64~·3372 . , ,.. '70, 1600 Roaclslcr. Olk Great Selection •71 TR Spitfire. Xlnl cond. 1972 145 White on white, loudcd.i----------1, D' 1 1 t '2845 llurbor f.lhd. w1red ml. nu lop & liros. Trade·ins Welcome Must sell by weekend. i f Quality and Price 997-1010 or ll4tl·3387. lnObile HSS 7be5T1 · tbrdl ·~!.~kt, ow m .. r-tu ~1,..sa c.111 G'Alo Gd c id ~1 u l ' ·e ll H f 1 rt Automat c, actory air Guaran teed ---------·'-.,••••••••••••••••••••• ow ue uvv "'"" ""· " "' 545·98;1 · ••fl ~ 11 • ouse o mpo s Besl o rr o~r U GOO. cond .. AM/FM radio. C:O.-.ette 9912 .69 Old v· C 1 645·0202. w i:: BUY · C\'es. a 714/523-7250 552_·7_7_49 _______ 1 luaaage rack & 26,390 Lc.1sing Specialists ••••••••••••••••••••••• s Isla ru scr1--------- H70 •USED <:ARS & t97 l Da tsun Sl alion --. -.. v----9770 miles. One owner, extra Preterrcd Rates HardtoPlttclM_.. wgn, 10 ml. l·o wner. gd ecJCI 9974 TRUCKS• Wagon, 510. )(Int rond. 73.:20 Mercedc;1 .:':'::':~ ............ sharp! (196GIV). L.1rges1 Sclcction cond.Sl,200.G40.6:!44 ..................... .. Comeln orCall Sl7$0 o r besl oft e r . Clean.Xt,ntco.odltiun $AVIE ofNcw& Used VETTIS '74 Wo 9957 Chevy Vega 2300. 1.:\1 # I ' I MEI Appraisal 49;1.4621 bef IOA :H Sti900. r h &iG-IS70S 'il VW Sqbk. New auto C d'll . Mercedes Bcn.c •••••••••••••••••••••• body. gd cond. Bargain 1----------1. tr:uu. e ng, tires It rea r " 1 "'5 in Trade· ms I 646-8610 n G Grott.Ch .. rolet Rat 972 72 250C. Low m1lc11ge. t'nd within last 1000 ml. 1970145 Or.ingcCounty l Choo 73 S qui r e Wg n , h t sac. a 18211 BeachBlvd. Xlnt cond1uon. Paint.bod lnt perf cl Automa t ic, r a d io & to MPf'Otft mileage, :iut o, o l r.'7~Vcgawaaon,1luto,alr, I flunlinf!lon Beach •••••••••••••••••••••• 673 9339 Air . s 1s /01btt_ off~r: healer. l.c>cal Laguna Open Sunday tto.s. of...,...., radials. II ave Co. car , 16,000 ml. deluxe. Call 1'74017 • 549·1331 , .. "9~ .61 :nos..:. ;::bit. molor. 642·2072 ~~A\.o~t new by us. M~!~i~~~ler 714/S2l·72SO makeoHcr !>~·1332 846·3i06or846.&862. "'l'OPDOL.l.AH ... 6.fil .. xlntcond. 1900. '66VAN.runs good. 2600 H.irbor Blvd. VE'M'E '73 4$.t, 4 spd. AMlot,Mew tl00Allles.M•w tlOO PAiu · "42-00li •1200 am/fm. ndlals. T·top. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• Buy OR LI "'SE • · Co>t.s Mes.i 540·9 l ~ • h lMF.l>IATELY "" MG 9742 83'7·8853 loaded, 2·1,700 ml, >clnt '-'ORALL I 5•a...1y• &a...1& Nabe cond. PP. $6600/ofr . r ft """" " """""" ••••••••••••••••••••••• '72 VW ~u WAGON rs fo'Oll Elt:N CARS , 557-0741 ;\lG M1d1?ct '711 5,()l)C) ml., Deluxe extras! Sharp! C.\LLOR COME I~ P\'l pty. 53550. C..11uft 6, S2200.640·s.560/644·0505 ~))a Cougar ~~ci:i~~;ORTS IHO_·•_l3_16_' ------1 vw u ES c ...................... . ,_..... I S -197 1 Cougar XR7, a ir, 11100 W. Cst ""~. ~U ::\IG Midgl•l l968. · power. Landau. Sl8SO . ... -• 642-'405 __ Sl .450 '72 S.-OOf #7917 OllAMGICOUMTY 6•.i.s142or:w9.a~ .........___ l!>tW566 •speed. Hard to nn<s. VOLVO USE THE 'tllU\' JU~K C.\RS ----1 CSIW .\UTOPMlTS 12ow.Warner 1t Matn GI 9744 75 ...... IHMXO EXa.USIVELY VOLVO DAILY PILOT ••••••••••••••••••••••• 4 speed, a ir ccmd. Lar1est Volvo ~aler '"AST ~~--1117!1637 SantaAna SS7·2132 .70 MC ·ll Convcr llble. 707P....-411191 lnOrangeCc>u.nty! llSULT" Auto1,lmporled .15 ~PYD ER 5 d Tonnulcuvcr. Wlre whls. Supernice! BUYorLEASE ••••••••••••••••••••••• Mt7FM IJ t rack, 25~PI!: yellow, lo mi, xlnl eond. 7l 7 P51M)r 64tGYD DIRECT SllVICI Geweral 9701 10 ml. clean & sharp! ~firm. 495·6'197 Air. 4speed DlllCTOIY •••••• • •••• •••••• ••• •• • Best orr M2·~28 71 7 P""Jf 711DDD ·r~ t\udl, air. om/fm. Ponche 975 LomUes,extraclea"! For Result :fulo. 11°11, S4.tlllO. '69 19'14 Xl t . lo ml, Coe •••••••••••••••••••••• Service Call 'i'nYota ('oronu. iid cood, mats. Ania exhuutt. ori '67. 912. white. mlnl cond 2.025 S. Manchester 642·56 71 GAPOEN WfST YW ~.PP. 193·6.'>3S 0"11r. Xlnt cond. Sc~ l SS,300. All ~ervlcc r e Anaheim 750-2011 9707 upr1r('C. tH4 °"°" cords. 6-16-5538. bt. ui. ! •• • ' ' ................. ·-···· F1~11 i2. 1.u Sporl <.:pe, '66 Porsrhe 912. Goo 1. • • ... ' • \\' ·71 t'o . xlnt. cond ·Nt'w nrpcrfccl 5:!350. oond. SSOOO. lllllli•lllil t1fcs. S3400. s-19.9349, ___ ~ l:!!>1. __ -i1 ___ ea_ll_K_4_2·_36_7_o __ ..J----..;;;;:===== ~W1tys ur_i _s ____ 1c;r~11t buy on •74 ltuby red Purschespokcn here VW CAMPERS IMW 9712 fiat 124 ~edan. AM /FM rORSCHIS '6' ,_._ #7445 • .,........... ••••• ••••• ':.1~·-0flj;! ownr 83~ 5 to Ct.oo1e FroM w::t'pballa Honda 9727 1972 • 1976 91 t models 7 t POPtoP · #7967 ••••••••• •• •• •• •• •••••• Mercedes Beni Weitphalio Trade· ins ,71 .... top HtCICP SADOLEBACK BMW lr•dMew'76 HONDA Cars OVER 100 House of tmporls Like new, lo miles 714/521·7250 '71 P~#2312 . BUY OR tEASENOW :Yo Choose"'°"'' 'MC, mustscll! S arp $4100/bestorrer. 72"-tTop 211JHY UNIVERSITY 675-8772 &Ind I.al I W TR OE ' ..... OW.MObH• ·oo 9t2, 5 t>pd, Jae. air M A • n I G C chrome whls. Blaupunkt "'12 20fr.! 1\.11211-'TQ l. HOftda Con • M AM/t'M s lcrco, 6700 ' "7321102 Snrf.1~1 Truck1 orii:. ml. engine over '73 U11q 1r1a rn:111\l)NI 2Ati<I llorb<>t 111\·d. hauled within lai.l l .. 6p>I.\ l,thl•I. t I' 1<; 14 \0) ('ostu l\h·~a !>40 9640 mi. Concourse cond. In/ oul. M<'ch. rc•cords avail ··')I 2040 495 4949 '7 3 11 0 " cl 11 C 1 v 1 t' ~i2SO. firm. Call for appl • • llotchburk Xlnt rond. lo Serious inqulricll only, Week-end Special '72Poptop 416FOG Westphalia, air '74 llMletop #4550 "SU ndlal ".frig & &love sink; water tonk. Full camperequJpped. Must beaeen! ·S~LES •SHVICI •LIASIMG 0•..-Hal Delivery you"ll Ilk• •IKE- Servlce It parts now open on Sa\'11 8 to ( for your convenience. BUY SELL TRADE **** T llF. DAILY PILOT CLASSIFIED SICTIOH Is tho PEOPLE'S MARKETPLACE Dod9t ••••••••••••••••••••••• '68 Dodge Dart, runs good , m unuul t r ans, $00/bsl ofr. !17&·8768 art 5. '72 Monaco, 9 poss. Sta. Wgn, full pwr, cruise control. rack. a m trm. Clean. 640-2779 tt40 'GJ Ford CtySq. Wgn . Ca II aft 6, 645·3423 $975. Must sell '70 LTD Country Sq, 9· pass, a/c, aulo, nr n u Mich. $1,000 67J.2136. "71 LTD $1,250. Auto, p/s, p/w, p/b, lape, xlnt cond. 640-9019. '730rand Torino Sq. Wgn. Air. stereo Pwr wind., pwr seals, t ownr, cxcep· tlonally gd cond . $2650. 644-7961. '72 Galaxie MIO, 2 dr H.T. Gold w/brn v top, P/S. P /B, A/C, a uto, R&H, new radlals. 36,000. XJnt cond. 581·9382 72 f ord LTD Wl(n, Cntry Sq A/C, lo ml, $2150. P vt Ply. M9-1341 ~111. !t.!315. l'h ti31 !II IS .ift 675 8624 eves & wknd1 .• pm ----- -i. 5 1 -,.1~1 -1 --·ro. !JJ2. Eim~pllonal rond CREVIER GARDEtol WHT VW > ·' ·t Alltes.Mew tlOO ;i Sill • • • m · •lei en. Artl/ FM chrome whla $1 n • lllOADWl'Y ~1~~'.,r;;k· verfcrt $3,000. Mi rh tir~s.1193.5333. SANIA ANA "'.,-,.,.... 835·3171 .,,.._ Ghle 97JS '15 Carrera. 21.000 ml ~ xlnt cund . l rn mac n""'""""".r• 04'rll'l'O "'•C"'"' ••••••••••••••••••••••• S19,SOO. 540·0'l24, ~1 · '1319 '•USED IMW'1• 'OU Karm11nn Ghl11 ---' 11 2<"':? 1w.u:ni;1 t:ood roncl. Huns xlnl. '75 Por. chi'. !111 s. I •" ' I t\ ~•I ' "73 145 Wgn. 4·spd, :iir. "74 Dl.llher , 18,000 ml. s radio, orng/blk, ou w od. Yr/llOM ml warr. 20 r .• $4,100. 968·4523. sunrf. stereo. 536·'17\l. Alltos, UHd ••••••••••••••••••••••• · 'i.:l 2uo2 \ll!HiK l'V 1 IM6· ll()t Sunroof. slt'r('O, whit VW '71 cm pr. all electric, "'7 T 1 K , . w/t18Cldle lntr. 20.000 ml. nu radiala $2350. GROTH •~ooz I (Oll7 X \) 70. olr, lo inl, xlnt <·ond. 113 850. Ph 67:1 4203 963-1251. '74 3.0C~ <3 t7U 'Ml O.·i1l nrter ovl'r s1,100. --·--------1---------·1cHEVROLET Clo.!_Ctd Oft S.nda~ 613·17 \3. 'tll 911T. New en,inc, fin •e.s VW bug, nu Urea, body W... Mtw AMlot, Mew tlOO rond. $6.m:;~ ~~5g~b~'t c:frr~d•c:1~ CO ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1213)433·291) dys only TR ... DE·I .... '7S 914 t 8. Gold/black. • ~ "" ~~ ........... ~Ml/FM . mags. 35. '70 VW Squareback. x lnt SPECIALS m i. Xlnl :eha pe . J o running cond. Sl3SO/blt 'ff CAMARO 64$-.4.99'J &642-6971 oC'r. 1181-8003; 638·9909. u-w tlOI ...... ..._ flOI I Cyl •• auto . trans., ""' r.clkl. htaltr. YUN-802. ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••• .. ••••••••• SIJ99 MT MC10IY Auntael• .................. 0-.. ........ 120w.w ........ s.. ........ A-. • 7JVMA IC_._llW..- 4 Speed. air coadltionlng. Ql.JDP. $1599 '7Z C4Pll CPI 4 SpHd. AM/f'M r"dio, M.ater.M-FWA. $1199 754HIMLIH 3 Spee d . rad io, bealtr 204·Nlll. $2199 7JptAT 124 CPI .S Soeed. radio, beater. '12•1iFf. $2699 76VOLAH'4DR e C11 .. auto. tuns .. radio, !letter. wnyl roul. Ml·PRO. SJt99 11111 ........ .. HWlllnaton Beat h 14 ~7 14t0 JJJI •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• 1'11to. treOIS .• whllt w•ll tlrn, cOMOlt, rtmote COfttrel mirror. (1SMl706N5'77SI) SAVE$$ NOW 1W3TOYOTA S3699 · lANDCRUISER •••••••• _,,_ 4 _..,, 4 .,,. .. clrlva, -·-(SEA. 3Tfltll 1976GRANADA . $5199 '2-Dft COUPE ....... . • 000 ..,11 ... "" ton<11t1unl•o. pwr, sl-.. rid Yltlyt 1<11-. (204N.ICGI ~u~~ ............ $4199 12 131 -C:U.IOlll t llO, 11~ .. 1.11> --· AM!f'M -IS.. ita.111 ~VJRM~~.~ ......... S'J.999 Only 9.600 _,...._toe M>-o.tu>e & ...-11.-col 14174 CHEVY S'J.999 NOVA HATCHBACK •••• V.n'I' tOOI ..,,. ,,.., 11 t yl . •w, ....... 1r.-'""'° ,.._ l~l'CI 1975 FORD s4999 f-100 PICKUP ....... . ,, 000 ''""'' 4 ....... 011 ... '-· .,..,, -· •• ... , ~ 0"'4 -~ .. 11q141'fl ~v~~~ .......... s3199 "-till. llit. Al.ltrM '"""'· -IWMTI lm~~ ........... s2699 ~ "<~rt:,o. "•"'-""'· ---•"'°°""" """'M. ... 14173 FORD s3499 ~TON PfOCUP ...... II.fl tulO. lrM!t.. '"°'°' l'INltr. ll»IOMI ' ~-.......... $4199 .000 ........ a..-.• --·•-lt•tlf\.I) :i'~~ -~~~~~.~~ ....... s2399 t1#l4""'91.~·--.(~ o.tstoadi•g VolffS Oii Ir.cl .... 1976 An-ows •.• It's ywr ti• to so•e liq • tM Arrow of y0/111' ehoict1 BRAND NEW 1976 PLYMOUTH AR~OW 4 speed manual trans 4 cyl 1600 engine vinyl bucl\el seals. vinyl side moldin gs accent slrape & 600li13 lores. (7L24K67300955) BGNUS SAVINGS1>N ALL REMAININti '76 ·MODELS! BRAND NEW 197 6 PLYMOUTH FURY 8 cy1 318 CID. Torque lrans. bench seat in cloth & vinyl, bumper guards lronl & rear & F78x15 tores (RL23G6G224996). FABULOUS 11BUYS11 OM FINE USED CARS 1973 CHEVY MALllU 4 ctr sf'dJn va. auto trans .. radio. l'leater. pwr st('erono wh1I(' sidewalls. air cond & vinyl top (:'77GXVI 1976 CHRYSLER CORDOIA :i Or. vs. auto trans. AM FM radio. hearer. pwr. stcl'f1no. pwr brakM. wMo ~.1dewalls. 111r cond. vinyl too 3 pwr windows t492MXOI. $1991 1972 TOYOTA 4 cylinder. 4 soeed. radio heater. white Sidewall tires & v1nvt 100. (275GVE). '1191 1975 PLYMOUTH RllY Cusfom sf'dan. va. m.110 trans. rlld•O. hNJIPr pwr Sle<>rinq. white si<k>wall5, air cond . & vinyl 100 (?3SMIU). $3491 1973 FORD PIHTO 4 cvhndrr auto trnns . r/ld10. heater. bucl\et seals & air cond (434HEVJ. '1991 1974 PLYMOUTH SEIRIMG + VB. 111110 tmni.. ra<:110. NMlt;ll. owr •.teenno. pwr. brakes air cond • while "1dl'waw .. vinyl IOP & mags...(894KJSJ. $2691 '"' sAt..• YIA\" ALL . S• ttdllMAtlOMAL • GIANT SAVINGS ON ALL REMAINING INTERNATIONAL VEHICLES IN STOCK! SEE ATLAS NOW FOR GREAT VALUES! BRAND NEW 1976 INTERNATIONAL SCOUT II TRAVELER va. au1oma11c trans. track·lock rear 3)(1e. AM radio & more' (F0082FG026473l. BRAND NEW 19·76 INTERNATIONAL SCOUT II TERRA 4 WHEEL DRIVE 4 speed w/2 speed transfer case. radio. deluxe interior & exterior package. bench seat. door ed~ guards & morel (F0092FG016563). Complete "Heavy Duty" service available for your R. V. One of the finest service facilities in Orange County. Open Saturdays 8:00 AM to 5:00 PM. Monday thru Friday, 7:30 AM to 5:30 PM. • i ' ,. Huntington Beaeh Fo1•ntain Valley EDITION , , VOL. 69, NO. 217, S SECTIONS, 50 PAGES -. ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA WEDNESDAY, AUGUST~. 1976 J-\fternoon N. Y. Stocks TEN CENTS... llB ~olice, Huntington Beach police Rf. ficers reached agreement this week with the city on a 27·monlh saluy contract. City Reach Pay Accord Under terms of the contract. police orficers will receive an 8.2S percent salary and fringe benefit increase for the first year. Terms of the contract are retroactive to July 1~ They also will receive a S41 per month salary increase on July 1. 1977, amounting to a 6.7 percent increase for the second year. Don Lewis, a member of the city's negotiating team. said Tuesday that the increase will add $39'J,OOO to the city's payroll for the force of 173 police officers and 36 civilians for the first year. Additional costs for the second year will be $315,000, Lewis said. Lewis said the police bargain· ing unit al\d the city were aruc· ioua to'have the contract expire beyond the normal JuJy 1 expira· lioo Ume. It ends on Oct. 1, 1978. Lewll aald both parties didn't want future negotiations to become mlntled with planning for a July 4 parade. ii there is to be one. The parade was called otr July 1 roe one day this year after state· ment.s were made that police al· legedly were using lbe parade as a wedge in negoUations. Mayor Harriett Wieder re- sumed the parade the next day, however. after personal as· s urances from Chief Earle Robitaille that the event would receive adequate police protec· lion. Lewis said the 27·month con- tract was ravorable to the city in that it will help to permit. long- range budget planning. All of the city labor associa· . lions, including the police, had been working on one-year con- tracts that ended June;.,, The agreement with police was the first reached by the city's negotiating team led (or the first time by Nicholas Counter, labor relations counsel. Talks with another city group. the 600 m e mbers o f th e Municipal Employes Associa·· tion, have not gone so smooth'=' a nd a n impasse has bee4C declared. • . An outside arbitrator hos beeq • called and talks are scheduled ID' contln\le soon. . Making up the city's negotiat .. ing team along with Counter a'1Sf: Lewis are PersoMel Director~: Thompson and Tom Bonokosk1. also or the personnel depart· ment. =· . Friends Lost? . Valley Couple Await Word A Fountain Valley couple wait- ed anxiously today for word ,!!iflt~~!C!!!-~r:r~om. 11 relatives and friends who ~ ld-hav~ been in Colorado's •..:.~~.~~-Big Thompson River territory Pla11e Do1v11, S1111 Up -I luntington Beach sunbathers ignore light night from Palomar Airport in San Diego Co unt y to Huntin g ton Beach 's Meadowlark Airport. No one was hurt. Plane was to be dis mantled and trucked away today. plane that appeared in their midst late Tuesday arternoon as they catch sun's rays. Pilol Russ Pignato of Westminster landed a l Bolsa Chica Stute Beach after the plane developed engine trouble on a Doctor's Wife Tells Murder Plot Story HB District Okays $12 Millioll BUdget By TOM BARLEY Of IM O•llf ~i191 Matt A Newport Beach doctor's wife who spent four days on the run with a confessed "hit man" arter he told her over the luncheon table that he had been hired to kill her spent a long day explaining her actions Tuesday In Orange County Superior Court. Defense attorney Al Ramsey waa Janice Robinson's inter· rogator and he asked h er several limes vin different questions to explain why she ned with Anthony ~alise from her Bi g Canyon, Newport Beach, home Feb. 21. Scalise, 29, rlrst took l\trs. Robinson. 38, to the Huntington Shores mote l In Huntington Beach after he showed her a garrote -a corded rope used in strangulation klllin1t11 -which he said he wu supposed to use on her. The s et(.con(essed lifetime ton man. driven by a youni? man Identified In l~tlmony os Gary, then look Mrs. Robinson CSee OOCfOR. Page A%> Coast Weather Fair weather Thursday with low morning cloud.OJ. Coast temperatures should reach low to mid 70s. Overnight lows down to low50s. INSIDE TODAY TM Cl A r-rforrnftl dnig tt· ~ on 111noUtiRg f'llfor· maiu. and criminol IUJ)«f 1, occording to newly acla .. ff1ed document•. It al.o IOOftlftl to ust dnlgs on tthmd.ng POW1. Stories on l!Ol/eAf. Cl •• •• ... , .. A4 ,,,, Huntington Beach elementary school trustees approved a 1976· 77 budget of S12.0S6,391 Tuesday night. Tbe budget Is up nearly Sl million from last year. The anticipated dlstrict ~eneral purpose tax rate was placed at $2.57 per $100 assessed valuation. down seven cents from 1975·76. However. th~ assessed valua· Uon increased about 18.s perceQl for district property owners, re· suiting in an overall climb in pro· perty tax bills. Last year 's budget which in· eluded reserves was $11.191.771. Robert Hawthorne, director or fiscal services s aid that teacher saJaries have not been Included in budget projections. lie said s alary adjustments will be taken out or contingency funds and reserves which will be around Sl,788,391. Hawthorne said that just a one percent salary increase would take a chunk of $332,000 out or the budget: Hawthorne said the major new expense for the coming school year will be in the opening of the Jack Clapp School for mentally retarded students. He said the school will have an approximate enrollment of 82 pupils and will require a staff of 33. There are 13 schools in the kin· dergarten through eighth grade district with a projected enroll- ment,of 8,587 .. Last year's attendance was 8,456. Countian Suffering Disease Symptoms By WILLIAM SCHREIBER 011-• Oallf l'INC ~ft An Orange County airline pilot who became ill after a night rrom Philadelphia late last month may be California's first case of a mysterious disease that has killed 21 people in the put week in the East. County and state health of- ficials are examining blood samples taken from the pilot, whose identity and place of re- sidence are being wit.bbeld. Of. ficials were notified of the ail- ment Tuesday by the man's private physician. "At this point, we are unable to say for certain if it ii the same disease as that back Eut." said Dr. James Chin, slate health director. ··n may be a couple of days before we are able to de- termine from the samples what ls present in this case. ''The samples were taken late in the progression ol lhe illness so we may find it im,pouible to isolate anything at thls poiat." on his return Olght and when he arrived ln Orange County, he consulted his physician," Chin said. "When all the publicity came out about the deaths and the dis-cs. MALAD.Y, Pace t\2) * * * Doctors Seek Legionnaire Qisease ID HARRISBURG, Pa. (AP) State health officials said today they don't know when they will be able to Identify the mystery "Jqionnaire's disease" that has killed 22 people who attended an American Legion convention two weeks ago. But some persons who had the dileue have rttovered and that may aid researchers ln trackinc down the flu·llke agent., state Health Secrellry Leonard Bachman told a news con- ference. when devastation struck last weekend. (Related story Page A3.J Eight are from Orange County and the fears were mounting, because one of the group on a cross.country trip failed to call home Monday to arrange a plane trip home. Earl Northrup. of 1888 Acacia FVCouncil Cuts City Tax Rate The Fountain Valley City Council slashed the city's tax rate 13.S cents Tuesday night. Last year, Fountain Valley property owners paid Sl.43 per SlGO Uff•sed vaJuaUon for city taxes. Two Wffks aao. the council said it was considerint as much as an ll·cent cut, but local homeowners have been clamor· ing for an even greater cut in the rate because of unprecedented high property assessments. Charles Foley, organizer or a "backyard tax protest'' lnvolv· ing more than SS homeowners, asked the council for a 1976-77 tax rate or Sl.20 per $100 assessed valuation on behalf of his group. But Mayor Al Hotlinden, because or funding needed for the . city's paramedic program and a pending lawsuit againstlhe city, suggested the 13.5 cent cut. He said it would "preserve our financial integrity." The paramedic program. not included in the city's lO·year no. growth budget. will cost about St64.000, city omclals said. Coun· cilmen briefly discussed the cost and benertts or the program before voting unanimously on the 13.S cent tax rite cut. Councilman Bernie SvaJstad suggested the city charge a users' fee for the paramedic service . "I think we should charge for the paramedics and give the rest of the citizens a big· ger tax break," he said, adding, "After all, only two percent of the population uses it." The mayor, in response to Svalstad, said. "Only two per. cent or th e people u se paramedics but only one percent avail themselves or the fi re de· partment -should we charge a users' fee for that?" Holtlnden said other cities that have tried a users' fee fo r paramedic service have found that It is "impossible to collect." St., Fountain Valley, said today the Red Cross staggered by 82 bodies found to date .:._ has not been able to clarify identities of . the victims. .. An attorney Crom Greeley has offered lo help, but we haven't re· ceived any more word from him, .. Mrs. Northrup added. Northrup said friends of the family flew to Albuquerque and are expected to caU with news from Loveland, Colo., sometime today or tonight. The missing group includes: Dennis and Barhara Schultz, ar~ 31672 Scenic Drive, Laguna I Beach : their children, Brian, l S, Sle..v~. 12, and Rene, 10; a sister· in·law. Mary MacAuley, of2l21.t Eighth St.. Huntington Beach;. the sons of Neal ~hultz, ot Needles -Michael, 16, and his brother Ch ris, 13; and Mall Baird, 12.orYorba Linda. They were travchng together in two vehicles on the vacation trip and were scheduled to be in the disaster arcu when the flood struck. 2·time Loser Good Deed Turm to Robbery PROVIDENCE. R .I. <AP J -Robert A. Greenway Jr. says it just wasn't his day. Greenway, 62. of Providence, told police he was walking home Tuesday night when a man ran up. grabbed a bag out of bis hands and fl ed. The bag't:on· tained a six·pack of beer and tomatoes. A few m inutes later. however. a second man · brought the bag back, Greenway said. "I saw what happened and I got your bag back,'' the second man said, according to Greenway. "Now give me a reward." Greenway saiu he offered the man two quarters but the man complained that wasn't enough. The man then pulled out a gun and proceeded to rob him of Sl30, Greenway said. Huntington Crash Injures 6 Persons Six people were injured when on~ pickup truck smashed Into another early today in front or the Edison Company steam plant on Coast Highway in Huntington Beach. The driver of one of the vehicles was booked, released - then was being sought later for possible involvement in another earlier crash with a motorcycle in Newport Beach. Lawrence Ross Heald, 19, of 8282 Artista Drive, was arrested and booked on suspicion or felony drunken driving ronowing lht! 1?:30 a.m. collision. Investigators from Huntington Beach and Newport Beach police departments this morning were attempting to locate Heald, who was released on his own re· cognhance afterward. Ne wport Beach wants lo establis h whether It was hi s pic kup that s truc k cyclist Charles Shipp, 37, of 14322 Purdy St., Westminster, a few minutes earlier in Newport Beach. Shipp was admitted lo Hoag Memorial Hospital with possible internal injuries after being hurled from his machine at Hospital Road and Newport Boulevard. A few minutes later, a '\4 ton pickup truck driven by Nichols Her genreter, 23, or Garden Gr ove, was s mashed .from behind on Coast Highway at Newland Street. Firemen had to cut Heald from the wreckage of his vehicle, which wedged under the other truck. The imp act flipped Hergenreter 's vehicle forward and into the air. Injuring the driver and his passenger, Sheila Lewicki, 18, of 6522 Segovia Cir· etc. Hun tington Beach. The crash sent the three occu. pants to lloag Me morial Hospital for treatment but they were n()l admitted. Investigators saJd two other people complained of in- juries, but it was unclear on the report Ir thev were also passengers in llcrgenreter's pickup. Police said they could have been bystander11 hit by flyint debris. C1.J aM .... Chin said the pilot. whom.for American Airlines, stayed al one of the hotels houslng American Legionnaires attending a conven· lion in late July. Most or those Who bave died of the strange bug attended the con· vention . Doctors also do not know how I to treat the 122 persons still " e H •• •• ·"This pilot started feeling U1 '---~-------.., shocll,y before leavinl tbe1 ~t , hollpitalized with symptoms, o( I high fever, con1•.•ted lungs and CMI"' ,. ........ ,... 1 chest pains, Bachmanakl FIREMAN CLEANS UP OE8RIS FROM COAST HIGHWAY WRECK IN HUNTINGTON <See M\' 1 STERY, P-.e f '------Drtver of~ Vehicle Walked Awey From Wreckeg• After CrHh Eerty ~odey ~ A2 DAIL v PrLOT H /F TELLS HER STORY Mra. Janice Robinson Marine Pilot 'Escapes Jet Plane Crash A Laguna lhlls Marine pilot eJected from h1i. A4 Skyhimk JCl before it crashed in the desert near Needles Tul•sday morn111i: The pilot, 1st Lieutenant \\'ade C. Straw. 21!. of La~una 111111'. "as on a routine traininit mission when the c ras11 orcurre<I. lie was picked up following the 8:30 a .m. crash IH· a rescue helicopter from Gcor~e Air Force Uase and transported to the Na\' al Hospit al. Long Reach. \\here he is reported in i.t able condition. The A4 Skyhawk 1s a smitlc·seat .1et attack aircraft used 1n support of ground forct>s. The pilot 1s al· tached t o M ar1ne Attark Squadron 2 1-1. the Alack Shet·p squadron at M arml' 'orp:. J\1r . ·1at1on. El Toro The cause of the crash 1:-. under 1nvcstli;at1on. ,.,.... P-.eAl DOCTOR'S WIFE. • • • in her car on a circuitous tour of lhf'ef' counlJH that was de· . lsntd. the p~ut1on daims, to shake olr any purtuit ol Scallte or Mrs. Roblaion. Mn. Hobinson expla.lned that she w3s tem rled ofhttestranged husbnnd , Or. Wayne Les ter Robinson, 42, who is now on trial in Judge J E.T "Ned" Hutter's courtroom on t harges of ~licit· 1ng her murder . Sc3Jlse has explained that h(' was afra id of both Hobinson und police officers who might question his involvement lo the Robinson affair since be is on parole fr o m 11 f ede ral rouuterfelting con\'ict1on and a state forgery conviction. "I was in a st ate or shock." :\lrs. Robinson explained on sev· era I occ as1on,;. "I scootched down in the back or the car where no one co:ild see me and all I ever saw from that pos1· t1on was a lot of sky." Scahse had earlier explained from the witness stand that he had been promised two pay- ments of at least SJ0,000 eoch lf he killed ~J rs. Robinson a nd confirmed her death for her husband. lie has tes tified t hat he changed his mtnd and decided to help Mrs. Robinson after he invited her to lunch at the Vel vet Turtle restaurant in Newport Beach under the as· sumed na me of John Foster. a Nevada realtor who was in· terested in M rs. Robinson's Ri\'erside properties. The jury h~ listened to tapes and telephone conversations in which a voice identified as that or the I rvinc physician dis· cussed the supposed killlng with Scalise in a matter of fact man· ner. Mrs . Robinson, obvious ly tired after a long day on the witness stand. appeared lo re· sent Ramsey's probing into the \'aJue of the couple's commum· ty property. She refused to confirm if the propert y j ointly owned by herself and her husband was rorrectly \' alued at the figure listed by her di\'orce lawyer in !\o\•ember. 1975 -52.114,183 in net worth. It was the only question or that type that Judge Rutter seemed prepared to accept and he practically told Ramsey that in a hearing held outside U1c presence of the 1ury. .. I don 't want to hear l he domestic r elations issue oC Robin son vers u s Rob10s on argued in this courtroom." he told Ramsey. 'Tm not happy about this k ind of questioning because I think you might open a Pandora's box that is not con. nected with this criminal trial.·· The bulk o f the \'aluat ion figur e on the Robinsons' com· munity property is reported to be in a chain of pizza parlors 1omlly op~rated by the couple befor e their separation last July. Other element5 of the valua· tl on fisure include Dr . Rob nson's practice in Irvine a.nd ~Jrs. Robinson's $300,000 home on Au11usta l..Ant ln Big Cilnyon. Ramsey appeared to press Mrs. Robtnson hard l:ite in the day on the issue of lh<' sleeping ,1rraogem ents in the motels visit· ed while the pair sought refuge in Huntington Beach nnd Los Angeles and Ventura counties. Ques tioning thl· attract ive blonde witness on her slatement that all she took with her from her home was a single change l)f clothing. $5 in cash and no credit cards. he asked her 1f she ever made the st atement to rut tn· vcstigator : "And then we went to bed." "No," Mrs. Robinson replied. "l didn't and we didn't." "Well. did you ever make the statement to an Orange County in· vestigator that ·we got up and t hen called Lee l a family friend "Ramsey asked. ··1 don't remember that. I was probably s peaking in ,·ague terms." Mrs. Robinson replied. Mrs. Robinson told Ramsey that there were se\'eral reasons for the flight from Newport Beach for herself and Sc·aJisc: among them her fear of her hus band, Sca lis e ·s fear o f Robinson and the police and the need to allow her family and friends to list her us a missing person. It was not until an Orange County lawyer came to Ventura and spen t a day convincing Scalise that he would not be jailed if he came bark lo Sant<i Ana and told his story that she and Scalise were able to return, she told Ramsey. She told Ramsey t hat she ne,·er undressed in the presence of Scalise. "I only had three or four hours sleep during the whole trip and mos t of that was in the car." she test1f1ed. Mrs . Robinson readily iden· llfied the garrote held up in the courtroom by Ramsey as lhe de· ath instrument that Scalise said he was supposed to use on her. And she identified as forceps the surgical instrument which Scalise said he was gi,•en by her husband. The hit man told the jury that the forceps were to be used to extruct Mrs. Robinson's birth control device from her body as proof to Robinson that she w as dead. Robinson was arrested Feb . 25 at u Santa Ana service station after he allegedly paid Scalise a furth e r $1 ,000 in a trap engineered by district attorney's invesli~ators. Officers said a loaded gun fell from the doctor's waistband as they O\'erpowered him near the gas pumps . B o th Scali se a nd Mrs . Robinson testified that the hit man took Sl0.400 or Robinson's money with him when they left on their four·day tour of three coun· ties. Mystery S11bmori11e Wha t was this unmarked submarine doin~ off the OrnnJtc Coast last week? It n ew an American Flag. but the U.S. Navy refused to idcntHy the vessel. In fact, officials at the U.S. Navy sub base in San Diego de· nicd its ex i s t e n ce. Coast G uard spokesm e n said all they knew was that a Na\'y sub was in the area. They couldn't explain its lack of markings. Newport Beach police spotted the sub. but said they were uns uccessful in determining who it belon~ed to. or why it w as cruisi ng off their city. ORANGE COAST H1f DAILY PILOT t,._ Or~ (6A\t 0.Ht' P1kM. ""''"' wrtNf" h ·~ ,,.. ,_., ... , '" .. ,, '" tutM1"""<.t by ,. Or~ (M \t ""Oh .f\IM C~w .._fllf'·"' l'dil\f(W'lt "' pvb'tt""'"' ~,., ......... ~ ,,....,.. "" c .. , .. -w ....... _, ........ --.. M.Ptl~•·•••flll v.11,.y. ,,... ..... w.. .. b.<• V .. ,., ... ._._. IWH~"4M~ C-.i /I ...... ... -1 ... 11<1'\ I\ "'"'l\llto "°'"'°'''-'""' ~ ~';'sr.':O"l':'r.!,~':::~=~~ u11 Rober1 N . Weed "'"*"' __ _ J4'Ck R. Curley VIC•~"'*"'""" C..,,.,01 """-' Tttomas Keevll l•llff Thomas A. Mursitllne ""',...,,..,o.w Charles H. l.oos Richard P. Nall AW•"lfttlN ........ tt ..... Robert 8•rlter """•' °'-c-•• l•"" Tee.,."°"• C714l .. HJ21 Claltfflfd Adwrtlsti,. 64N671 ,,_ ... ,. .. °'-c-1.; C.:-•lin ~1120 · ~It'll. ttU 0.-C..~• -'"'°"' C.0-• ..... .,. "' ............. ~. 111 ..... -• .,,,.,,,, .. ""'Utt •r •fW•IU\eM41"h ,,_,,.," "'•Y ~ ,.11,...,c" wllflhl '"''•' ~.,,.,, .. ..., •' ,.,.,,...,._, . S.r..W <I•\\ .,.., ... p•14 •• Co••• Mo-.,. ~,..,,.... $tAW:P .. f+'t ,, f4UI'#'' ~)\ ""'1illl tM,,ey"""t"t\,....IM1 tN•1Mtc>\••t\M,.... SUS-f- ~~~~~~~~~--~~~~~~--~--~--~--~~- Judge Bias Claim Set lor Hearing A motion seeking the removal o( Judge William C. Speirs from the Or ange County Superior Court trial of Dr. Louis J . Cella Jr. and an assodate is sctH!duJed ror a hearing next Monday. Judge Speirs will respe>nd at that time to derense allegations that he has displayed bias and prejudice in pretrial actions he.Id thus far in his courtroom. Thethrustofthede.fensemot.lon is that Judge Speirs has reported· ly been told by presiding Judge Claude M. Owens that. Ir the trial ls moved out or Orange County, Judge Speirs will go with the lawy ers and defendants to whichever location lsselected. Lawyers for Cella. 51, and former hospital administrator Stephen Robert Evans. 31, of Mis· sion Viejo argue that heavy pre- trial publicity has ruled out any chance of a fair trial in this area. Cella, Ev3ns. George Lows di· lendorf, 45. of Laguna Beach and . Theodore SchJffman. 53. of Santa Ana. were convicted lo Los Ange,Jes Federal Court last month of muJtlple crl min al charaes filed after they defrauded two county hospitals controlled by Cella of an estimaledS2 million in funds. Cella. drew a fi ve.year federal prison term. Schlffman was sen· tenced to two and one half years and Evans and Olleodorf to one year each. Both Schiffman and Ollendorf' have pleaded gulllY in Orange County Superior Court pretrial action and will appear as wit· nesses for the prosecution against Cella and Ev ans. FirmA Must Tell WASHINGTON \AP> -In n move lo prevent American firms from making questionable and U· le1a1 expenditures abroad, PreAidenl Ford proposed legisla· lion Tuesday lo require U.S. col'· poratlons to disclose payments to foreign f\fflcials. o.tlly "* $4.t" ,_ .. ACCUSED OF PLOT Dr. W•yne Robinson That 'Quake' False A.lann Did the earth move for you this morning? Well, it wasn't an earthquake. A call to the Cal Tech Seismo- graphic Laboratory in Pasadena confirmed that no earthquake was recorde d on Cal Tech's sensitive equipment this morn· Ing. .. More than likely it was a sonic boom," explained public relations r epresentative Chris Orlowski. Bus Law Move SACRAMENTO (AP> Legis lation that would make private buses meet school bus standards when they carry stu· dents has moved to the Assembly floor. · f're• Pa,,e A I MYSTERY DISEASE • • • ·'Some are settiq antibiotics and .ome aren't and that hasn't had an erreet one way or the other." he said. There are no signs lhot the out· break was abating. A 72-year·old Philadelphia woman died Tuesday n.l~ht llnd a Pittsburgh man died early today, bringing the death toll to22. ''The disease has not leveled off." said Bachrpan. "Apparent· ly both the number ol deaths and the number of new cases have In· crea.sed and are increasing." More than 100 federal and s late medical researchers have been mobilized to identify the disease. At the federal ~nter for Dis· ease Control In Atlanta, re- searchers planned today to ex· amine the first cultures grown from tissue samples taken from vicUmaofthe illness. The cultures couid provide a clue. , "We are ruling out nothing," said Dr. Walter Dowdle, director of virology at the center. "This could be anything from an infec· tious diseue to a toltin." All the known vidims of the disease -including two hospitalized in New Jersey and one in New York -attended or were In some way connected with a state American Legion conven· tion in Philadelphia that ended 11 days ago. It wu earlier reported a Con· FV Planners Eye Ailtellna Case Tonight Fountain Valley amat.eur radio operators are rallying around the efforts ol Donald Royer, a local attorney, to have the city adopt a new ordinance pertaining lo the installation of antennas for their equipment. The planning commission will hold a atudy session at 7:30 tonight to review zoaing criteria for antenna lowers. The city council adopted an interim or· dinance June 15 restricting the height or such structures to 35 feet. The attorney. who operates a local amateur radio from 10 to 12 hours a week, said Tuesday the current city ordinance could be applied to all anteMas -includ· ing television apparatuses - within the city. "This is clearly violative of the ~tale and federal constitution." Royer said, adding, "The or · dinance prohibits amateurs rrom using their equipment in a lawful maMer.'' ffi_o__n_ti_n FURNITURE oeclicul man also bad the ells· Hie. but Connecticut health ol· riciala latl'r said he does not. have lt. Thtre has been no confirmed evldtnce or secondary sprcod of 1 the disease. Bachman aid. but addM that It wa11 allll too early to discount the po slbUlty that the diaeue may be spread to others. tn an Interview early today. however. a state health depart· ment spokesman aakl lhere were isix unconfirmed reports of the disease nmon g people In Philadelphia who did not attend the convention. "That has not been verified," said the spok esman. Bob Costello. "fl looks like It might be so.•• All the v ic tims h ave ex· perlenced the same flu-like symptoms : he adache. high rever, congested lungs and chest pains. Bachman said thOff symptoms are consistent w ith the swine· type flu thal appeared in New Jersey this yeur, prompting plans ror a nationwide im· munlzation program. They are also c onsisl e nt with viral pneumonia, he said. * * * f'ro• Page AJ MALADY ••• ease in PennsylvanJa, he and his doctor put two and two together and r e ported to the County Health Department for tests," the stale ortlclat added. "By that time. however, he was in his recovery phase and feelln~ better." Chin said. .Dr. Gerold Wagner, Orange County health services director. said the county man was never hospitalized, despite press re· ports to the contrary. "By the time he came to us, he was reeling much better than he had ln the early stages," Wagner said. "He was r eceiving ex· ceUent care from his own doc· lor." Wagner said the piJol was at home with his family. According to Chin, the family will be ke pt under observation to detel'mino if ther e was any spread of the Ou ·likc illnt?Ss. So far. he noted. ·'the rest of the family Is in good health ... ''The pilot is not in any particular isolation beeause the disease ls In a late. generally non·contagious s tage," Chlo said. Wagner noted il appears the malady th a t e rupted in Philadelphia "is a precisely limited thing to those who were actually at the convention hotels." Principality . Pto.inc~ Mec;l.terroneon ~ in\Pre lhi' - coleoion of bldoom f""""'• from ThomofW!e. • He<e. 1olented de\iqn.,, hove blended the cheni\hed I 7rh CW\rf decoroi-"'°"f' of ililed aoftsmef'I from t+. bord.r c>90\ ol ltoly, Fronce ord 5pJifl. It-t..pnq ...ti t+. cewwy c.owalne\' of the cClhc:lol. pedy p«Cl"I ....,_,_ oo6 ~ ord wood ~" or. o:nf.Ay telected ord ~ toqe!het to pr~ o qcitn te.ve cq>rophote •o rhe ltyle. Fer cmp ~ wilh lmlinq '"lflCJh. cet!oin decootN9 ports ord canoed .ffectt ore "'""'°'9d wood. tbod ~ I by Qr~. . . . ·: ord °"* 1f*ial ~~ °*" 0 .... f,.ih fa PttlNCWIALLY with ~ clarity ord ~ 10 teveol the ~ ~ of rhe wood qcitn. Wlielhet Ml«!ed fOt !he mew• bed-oom or 911911 toom. PQOAUTY olfer\ you .... ~ <°""'"'! Md .. ~ becMy ord • I .... Thomo\Yille "'°"'Y i+.ot yo.I home~ : :: .. · 11 61'• Offner. ~ ..... ., Mtttw. q... H11A1"'4eMTwlll .... ...... ..... _,,1949 s749 JL~ 1865 HARBOR BLVD. DOWNTOWN COSTA MISA· PHONE 548·5 I 31 I 1 I • I .. • 1 ~ f . \. . .. Irvine EDITION '* ',) ; Todn,··s Closi ng_=: · · N. ". Stocks ~= --· -.. ... VOL. 69, NO. 217, S SECT.IONS, SO PAGES O RANGE COUNTY, CALI FOR NIA e 'Open' to Taking Coast The Irvine City Council voted 4·1 Tuesday to leave the door open ln case it wants the coastal region belween Newport Beach and Laguna Beach to become parlor Irvine some day. The councU passed a resolution (cw the Local Agency Formation Commission <LAFC) saying that Irvine would like to be con· sidered when the commission de· <'ides into what city's sphere or influence that land should be placed. Already. Newport Beach and Laguna Beach have asked the land to be included in their s pheres. possibly paving the way for future annexation to their cities. Councilwom a n Gabrielle Pryor cast the djssenting vote. She said it never will be In Irvine's best inte rests to annex the land. "There's all kin& oC problems with that land -including drainage. fire protection and the fact that it's completely different geographlcaJly from the rest or the city." Mrs. Pryor said:-- "Tbat 's how cities fail. They get too big for their boots," she Ifidliap Suspects I Plead Innocent 2·thne Loser Good Deed Turm to Robbery PROV IDE NCE. R .I. <AP> -Robert A. Greenway J r . says it just wasn't his day. Greenway, 62. of Pro\'idence, told police he was walking ho me Tuesday night when a man ran up. grabbed a bag out of his hands and fled. The bag con· tained o s ix-pack of beer and tomatoes . A few minutes later . however. a second man brought the bag bac·k. Greenway s aid. .. "I s aw what happened and I got your bag back. the second m an said. according to Greenway. "~ow give me a reward." Greenway said he offered the man two quarters but the man complained that wasn't e nough. The man then pulled out a gun and proceeded to rob him ofS130. Greenway said. F irst S iaie Case? Countian Suffering Disease SyrnptoIDs By WIU.IA~I SCHREIBER 01 Ille O•tlf P•lol SuH An Orange County airline pilot who became ill after a flight from Philadelphia late last month may be California's fi11t case or a mysterious disease that. has killed 31 people in the past week in the East. County and state health of· ficlals are examining blood samples taken from the pilot. whose identity and place or re· s1ctence are bein~ withheld. Of· ficlnls were notified or the nil· ment Tuesday by the m an's private physician. "At this point, we are unable lo say for certain IC it is the s ame disease as that back East." said Dr. James Chin, slate health director . "It may be a couple of da)'S before we are able to de- termine from the samples what Is present in this case. vention. "This pilot started feeling ill shortly before leaving the East on his return flight and when he arrived in Orange Counl,y, he consulted his physici\Ul," Chin said. "When all the publicity came out about the deaths and tb• dil· use In Pennsylvania, he and his. doctor put two and two together and r eported to the County lleaJlh Department for tests," the state official added. "By that lime. however, he was in his recovery phase and reeling better," Chin said. Dr. Gerold Wagner, Orange County health ~ervices director. said the county man wa.11 never hospitallicd. despite press re· ports to the contrary. .. By the ti me he came &o us, he was feeling much better than he <See MALADY, Page A2 > * * * H e aring Security Tight CHOWCHILLA (AP) -Two men charged In the mass abduc· lion of 26 school children ap· peare<l in a packed courtroom to- day amid stringent security and pleaded innocent to 43 charges of kidnap and robbery. James L. Schoenfeld and Frederick N. Woods, both 24, ap· peared in Justice Court with Schoenfeld's brother. Richard, 22, who entered a plea of innocent lo lhe same charges a week ago. Judge Howard Green con- tinued $1 million bllil for the two defendants and scheduled a pre· lirninary hearing ror Aug. 26 for all three. Woods and the elder Schoen· feld said nothing as Green leaned over his bench and explained they could be imprisoned ror life if convicted on all charges. Schoenfeld. wearing a striped shirt and gr ay cordW'Oy pants. nodded. ''I want to rnake you aware that the first ~ount ol kidnaping ot Frank Edward Ray carries wltb it a penalty or life imprison· ment without parole. because be suffered bodily harm," be said. Ray,· the bus driver, cut his hand during the ordeal. Green asked each of them separately if he understood his rights at each step of the formal proceeding. Each answered "yes ... Deputies were posted on roof· tops along the two blocks of Main s treet. The e ntire 12·man Chowchilla police force was on duty. The younger Schoenfeld sur· rendered nearly a week before the other two were apprehended . All three are jailed in Alameda <SeeKIDNAP, Page AZ> "The samples were taken late In the progression of the illness so we may find 1t imposs ible lo Isolate anything al this point." Chin said the pilot. who nieR for Amel1can Airlines, ~toyed at one of the hotels housini: American Legionnaires allc ndini: a conven· lion In late July. Most of those who have died of the strange buu attended the con· Health A.ides Eye Mystery Disease Coast Weath er Fair weather Thursday with low morning clouds. Coast temperatures should reach low to mid 70s . Overnight lows down to low :;os. INSIDE T ODA V • TM Cl A pn/ormed drvg tt- ~IMM1 on amwfttblg in/CK· malll1.ond criminal .ip«U. according to newly d1clcu1i/ltd documnt11. It al.o toanted to u1e dn'!lt on rdurning POW1. Storie1 on Poge.44. l•d~x AtY-S.0-•k• •s-~ .... j"' 01 ....... Al ....._.T'" CJ • • •• ~...::r: ,.,.....,.., •w ~ ONl ...... fl'_,, •• c .... CH __ ,..._. •• 0.01-.. CH Or .... CMMy "' o....,_lcff ,.,..._. (1-J ......... ~ ... ··~ ••-1 .,._._, •s.r SM' Ml,_• .... fl'i"""• .... , .. .,,.,, .... ., ..... c .... ,,..*" e J.r ,., .... he.,. "' ........ AA .. , ..... .,~....., •• --Cl HARR ISBURG, Pa . <AP> - Slate health officials sajd today they don 't know when they will be able to identify the mystery "legionnaire 's disease" that has killed 22 people who attendecl an American Legion convent.ion two weeks ago. But some persons who bad the disease have recovered and that may aid researchers in tracking down the nu.like agent, slate Health Secretary Leonar d Bachman told • news con• ference. Doctors also do not know IMNf to treat the 122• persons sUll boepitalized with symptoms of hi1b fever, conJested lungs and chest pains. Bacbmansaid. "Some are getting antibiotits and some aren't and that hasn't had an effect one way or the other." he said. There are no signs that the out·· break was abating. A 72·)'ear·old Pbiladelpbla woman died Tue.day nleht and • Pittsburgh man died urty toc111. bringing the death toll loZ2. "The disease bas not leveled orr." said Bachman. "Apparent· ly both the number ol cleat.hi and the number of new cases have in· creased and are increasing." been 'mobilized to identify the disease, At the federal Center for Dis· ease Control in Atlanta, r e· aearchera planned today to ex· amine the first cuttures grown from tiss"e samples taken from victim.a ol the illness. The cultures could provide a due. "We are ruling out nothing.'· said Dr. Walter Dowdle, director of vuOloey at the ceiKer. "Thlr could be anything from an infec- tious disease to a toxin." All the known victims of the <See MYSTERY, Page Al) HE W-OKE lJP TO A S.4LE "The first caller woke me up at 8:30 on SaW(day mornin1 and wanted to buy the bike. He paJd the full price." That'• the advertising success lt.Gr7 told bJ tbe Colt8 Meu man wbo pl~ ~" clastfied ad: Bleycle. motebecane 10 apeed, 1570. Day cw"'"" u you ftave wheels you want to move, call '42·5878. We make It easy rcr you to put a few words to work, ln the Dally Pilat. added. The other council members did not say they necessarily want that lan4 within their sphere - cw want it annexed at a later date. But in order to be considered al the upcoming LAFC hearing, the resolution had to be passed prior to Thursday. The council will attend the Aug. 11 LAFC meeting lo MSk that the A"i· 25 hewing date be po&tponed. Irvine officials could then gatber more information re· garding whether or not they want that land to be part of their city':, sphere of influence. City Manager Bill Woollell said the city of Laguna Beach also wants a delay. Newport M y stery S ufJ•arine Beach wants tho helll'ini;: lo go tt~ Sl'heduled. "Unless the three cities mnkt' u united request. l.AF(; might not ronhnue the hearing.·· Woolleu said. The council also direl·led cit~ planners to b c~in stud yln~ whether or not includin~ that land in the c1~"::. sphere would lw in the bt>st intt-rests of Irvine. What was this unmarked submarine doing off the Orange Coast last week? It Oew an American Flag, but the U.S. Navy refused to identify the vessel. Jn fact, officials a t the U.S. Navy sub base in San Diego de· nie d its ex istence. Coast Guard spokesme n said all they knew was that a Navy sub was in the area. They couldn'l explain its lack of markings . Newport Beach poli ce spotted the sub. but said they w ere unsuccessful in determining who it belonged to, m· why it was cruising off their c ity. \Tictiin. 'f estifies -:· ..... Newport Woma n Cla ims Siwek TELLS HER STORY Mra. Janice Robinson By TOM BARl,~Y Of , ... ~"' ~Itel SU.fl A Newport Beach doctor's wife who spent four days on the run with a confessed "hit man" after he told her over the luncheon t able that he had been hired to kill her spent a long day expl aiping her actions Tuesday in Orange County Superior Court. Defense attorney Al Ramsey was Janice Robinson's inter· rog ator a n d h e asked her sever al limes via different questions to explain why she fled with Anthony Scalise from her Bi g Canyon, Newport Beach. home Feb. 21. Scalise. 29, first took Mrs. Robinson, 38, to the Huntington Shores motel in Huntington Beach alter he showed her a garrote -a corded rope used In strangulation killings -which he said he was supposed to use on her. The self-confessed lifetime con man. driven by a younit man Identified in tcs!imony as Gary, then look Mrs. Hob1nson in her car on a circuitous tour ol three counties that was de· signed, the prosecuUon claims. to shake off any pursuit of Scalise or Mrs. Robinson. Mrs . Robinson explained that she was terrified or her estranged husband, Dr. Wayne Lester Robinson. 42. who Is now on trial In Judge J .E.T . "Ned" Rutter's courtroom on charges of solici t· ing he r murder. Scalise has explained that he was afraid or both ~otiinson and police officers who miAht question his involvement In the Robinson affair since he is on i>arol e f r om a f ede r a l couuterfelling conviction and a state forgery conviction. "I was in a state of shock," Mrs. Jtobinson explained on sev. eral occasions . "I scootched <See DOCTOR, Page AZ> o"''"'""tu"-ACCUSEO OF PLOT Dr. Wayn e Robinson History Buffs Lose t· Packing House to Make Way for Builders By HILAR Y KAYE Ol Ille O.lly f'I ... ,_... -Irvine history and culture buffs made an elevenlh·hour bid Tues· day night to save the old Francis Packing House in Northwood, but plannin1 commissioners l>Ol· ed J-J to allow residential de· velopmeat there instead. The Clt.J Council chamber was f)8Cked with cit.izena as the com· missioners dellberated and near· ly a doaen residents spoke in favor of saving the old building. T'laree persons asked that t.he t.ildiq be torn down and re· lldentlal development be permitted . Charles Horrm1n, said, "The packing house Just wouldn't flt in with the surrounding residential uses already , approved la the Northwoo d planned com · munlty." "IL would stick out like a sore thumb," Johnson added. Comm(ssioner Bob Marlin. who favo~ed savin" the packing hoUse along with Commissioner Ellen Freund , said the com- mission's action violated the city's general plan. "The 1ene1 al plan says the city must evaluate historical sites to see tr they should be preserved." said Martin, who is also presl· dent or the Irvine Historical Society. even want to take that initial step and evalu ate the situ." he suld. The packing house, on Yale Avenue at the ruiJroad tracks. was built in 1916 lo process Irvine Ranch oranges. It was last used in 1970. The 48.000 square foot building is on Irvine Company land, but Leadership Homes is planning residential development lhere. .. Pending ~olutton di the pick- ing house issue. the plannln~ commission last month wilhhel approval of the Leadership tra map and also two adjacent tratt maps . The two adjacent parc•ls would be affected if the VaJe Avenue realignment is chanfed from ils present route. which ~- More than 100 federal and atate medical researchers httve t Commissioner Lowell Johnson. who voted in favor of resldenUaJ development along with Com· missioners Wall Rungailis and "Last night, three com· missioners decidfi they dJdn't .,___ <See llOUS£, Page t\Z) , ' . ' I '_., .- • . AZ DAIL y PILOT Hinshaw Delay I Denied Ao elevcnth·hour mOH' b)' Cong-ressman Andrew llan haw for a delay or h is IU'CMd Oreni.:o ~unty Supcr·ior Court lrh1J pend· iog an appell1Ate court rulmg wus firmly denied today by Judge I-Yank Domenichanl. Notine thul the Newport ~al'h Hepublican's h1wycrs are await· ing the outcome of un Oflpeal before the Californiu Supreme Court, Judge Domeruchin1 !>aid ~e saw 110 reason why Jury selec· uon could not get un<Hr wa) to ri;,y . Wh!le the first pnnel or pro- spective Jurors was on its way to t~e courrroom. llinshow, SJ, de· d ded to hold a press l'Onfcrence in the hallway to disl'uss his future political career. "I may nol have one," he t·on- ceded ... But l a m confident that ~ first conviction on bribery d targes will be overturned an the appellate court and that I will be cl eared or the charges I face to- day." That conviction was in federal l'Ourt. 1 le is at•cused in the Superior Court <'Urrent trial of misusing county manpower and materials while he s erved as Orange Coun· ty assessor in 1972. It is aJleged that assessor's employes worked on his congressional campaign with his knowledge. llinshaw has been sentenced lo one to 14 years in state prison on rederal bribery charges stem· ming from misconduct while serving as county assc:.sor. Ile 1s free on appeal. Hinshaw today strongly con- demned "tho:-.e who think J s hould resign m y offke for the balance or my term whil'h ex· p1res in December. "I a m doin~ a good job for Orange County in \\'as hinitton." the lame duck congressman s aid. "The ract that I am not allowed· to \'Ole or part icipatc 111 com mil· tee work docs not pre\'ent me from protcctinJt my d1stnl't's in· t erests in the nation's <'ap1tal." llins haw re~rctkd thal he had been a \'ictlm of what he described as "the kind of at· mosphere of s uspil'lon that sur- rounds anyone in politics today. "But those who look for me to retire can forget 1t," he said ... A lot or people have called me a lot or things but they can never call me a quitter.·· f'ro• Page A I KIDNAP •.. County. 95 miles to the north. Defense attorneys have hinted that a request to hold the trial outside Chowchilla is a virtual certainty. The July 15 m ass kidnaping and the arreslS or the three youn~ men, members of families living in the affluent suburbs south of San Francisco. have kept tension high in Chowchilla. Nearly three weeks aft.er the abduction or the farm children ' and the bus driver , no motive has ,surfaced, and speculation is ram· J>ant. A gag order has barred dis· ~J osure or evidence, bul published reports quoting un· ldenlified sources have said a rough draft or a SS milllon :ransom note was found at Wood!>' home in Portola Valley. ' . Fond. Audit Asked WASHINGTON <APJ -Th<' 1overnment should require th<' 39,000 stale and local govern· ments that receive federal re· venue·sharlntt lunds to undergo re""11ar audits, the General Ac- counting Office says. The GAO said current audit procedures arc ineffective In de· terming wh ether reve nue· sharing is spent properly. ORANGE COAIT DAILY PILOT Robert N. Weed ........... -,.ubl·- Jack R. Curtev VK" ,..,"''°'""' •Mc;..Mt.-Mt~· Thomas l(eevll Editor Th0n'l8S A. Murptllne ~MQlflql:"'* CNrlU H. Loos Richard P. N•ll ........... ~Mflflt ,.,,,,.. Tee.pMM C7'4).U..ut1 Classified Advertl1lng 642"5671 s-l•b<K• Y•h•y ... W\OHk e 511-4310 ''-i.."c"""~" 4tJ..06lO °'"''t:· ,,,. 0<•-, .. ,, _l ....... c-:::.,, or"'.:.::r.~~;~~t.:e :.i:-:: rejlf'_( .. •11 ... WI l ... (t•I 11trml\>ltfl et ""',...._ .. Stt-(I.\\ •••t• .. etlf M C.0" .... ~. ~ .. ~ .. ,.~ " '"'""' ,., t'! -....,, ............. t•-t"'' .... 11 .............. - ~ll)-l\I~ • o.ll• "tel SC.fl -· ONE OF 50 CHERRY TREES PLANTED AT UCI Plaque Describes Japanese Jaycee Gift Tree Traders Irvine, Japan City Swap Irvine Jayl'ees will leave for Matsue. Irvine's "brother city" in Japan, Aug. 18 to help that .Jaycee chapter celebrate its 20lh anniversary. The Irvine Jaycees will take wit h them 100 l'edar or redwood trees an<! a plaque to that city. al'l'ording to Jaycee President Palnck Mullaney. Jaycees from Matsue. a beach co mmunity just north of Hiroshima, visited Irvine in February and brought witb them 100 cherrv trees. Fifty o( those trees are already planted at UC Irvine. on the grassy knoll behind the ad- ministration building. The other 50 will be planted in 1 lentage Park when ;l is developed. Acl'ording lo Mullaney. 10 peo- ple will make the l(}-day trip, in· eluding Irvine J aycees Richard Alderson. Dave Sweet, Yuki Sekiya and himself. The others will be famil y a nd several Newport Beach J aycces. Mullaney said the travelers will be on Japanese TV and will meet with university officials to discuss a student exchange pro· gram . Judge Bias Claim Set for Hearing A motion seeking the removal of Judge William C. Speirs from the Orange County Superior Court triaJ of Dr. Louis J . Cella Jr. and an associate is sl'heduJed for a hearinit next Mon day. f'ro•Pa~AI MALADY .•• had ln the early staA~." Wagner said. "He was rece1vlna ex- cell ent care from his own doc· tor." 1 Wagne r said the pilot was at hom~with his family. Acl'ord10g to Chm, the family will bf' kept uoJt-r ol!M'rvulloo lo dct~rmin~ 1f there was any i;preud of tilt> flu·llkc· illnCl'lll. So far. tw Mll•d , .. the r<'st of thu family is in good h1•allh." ·'The pilot is not in any par til'ulur Isolation bccnui;e the disease is in a tut<'. gent'r<tlly" non·contug1ous :Huge," Chin said. Wagner noted 1t appears the malady that erupted in Philadelph ia "is a precisely hmited thlni! to those who were actually at the convention hotels." lie said 1l Is "l'ertainly a serious thing a nd we are all ... ery l'Oncerned. But there are many researchers and Jaboratories working to fmd out what the dis· ease 1s and how to halt it if nccessar)." Chin said his agency is con· ducting 1nvest1gat1ons around the state into other airline employes who might have con· lracted similar ailments in re- l'ent weeks. Though some have been reported. he soid none have been conrirmcd. * * * f'ro1t1 Page A J MYSTERY. • disease -inc luding two hospitaliied in New Jersey and one in New York -attended or were in some way connected with a slate American Legion conven- tion in Philadelphia that ended 11 days ago. It was earlier reported a Con- nel'ticut man also had the dis· ease. but Connecticut health of· ficials later said he docs not have it. There has been no confirmed evide nl'e of secondary spread of the disease, Bachman s aid, but 1 added that it was still too early to discount the possibility that the disease may be spread to others. In an interview early today, however. a state health depart· ment spokesman said there were six unconfirmed reports of the 1iisease among people in Philadelphia who did not attend the convention. "That has not been verified," said the s p okesman. Bob Costello. "Il looks like lt might be I SO." All the vil'tims have ex· pe rie nced t he same flu-like symptoms : headache. high fever, congested lungs and chest pains .. ,.,...,._,Al DOCTOR'S WIFE. • • down in the back or the cor where no one could see me and aJI J ever saw from that posl· tion was a lot of sky." ~alise had earlier explained from the witness stand thal he had been promised two pay· mt'nll of at leaJL $10,000 t>ach If he killed Mrs. Robinson nnd confirmed he r death for her husband. H e has testHie <l thut he chan~ed hh1 mind and decided to help Mrs. Robinson after he in ''ited her t o lunch ut the Vel vet Turtle r est aurant 111 Newport Beach under the as· sumed name or John Footer. n Nevada realtor who was in· ter ested i n l'tlrs. Robinson 's Riverside properties. The jury has listened to tapes and telephone conversations in which a voice id~tified as that of the I rvlne physician dis· cussed the supposed killing with Scalise in a matter or fact man· ner . Mrs. Robinson, ob viously tired after a long day on the witness st and, appeared to re· sent Ramuy's probing into the value o! the couple's communi· ty property. She refused to confirm if the property jointly owned by hersetr and her husband was correctly valued at the fif;!ure listed by her divorce lawyer in November, 1975 -$2,114,183 in nelworth. It was the only question of that t ype that Judge Rutter seemed prepared to accept and he practically told Ramsey that 1n a hearing hel d oulli1de th4 presence of the jury. "l don't want lo hear the domes tic relations issue of Robinson ver s us Robinson argued in this courtroom." he told Ramsey. "I'm not happy about this kind of questioning f'ro• Page A I HOUSE ••• goes through part of the packing house. If an appeal is not filed with the city within 15 days, developers may go a head on the three parcels approved Tuesday. Sub· dividers and city council mem· bers are the only ones who can appeal the planning commission decision. Martin s aid he expects one or the council members to appeal the ruling, but would not say which one. At the last t'ouncil meeting, when the council con- sidered the packing house qucs · tion and sent it back to the plan· nine commission, council mem- bers Gabrielle Pryor and Mary· Ann Gaido both favored prescrv· ing the packing house. ffi_cuW_n FURNITURE because t think you might open a Pandora's box that Is not con- n«ted w.lth this crlmlnaJ trlaJ." The bulk of the valuation figure on the Ro~AA-Otl!l' com· mu.nit)' property is reported to be in • chain or plua purloris )olnUy operated by the COUJ>le before their separntlon hast July. Other elements oC the valua- t Ion f igu r e includu Dr . noblnton 'a pr artlco In I rvlne and Mrs . Robinson\~ $300.000 ht>nlt' on ·Augusta Lane Jn Bl~ Cauyon. Ramsey avt>eared to press Mrs. Robinson hard late In the day on the Issue or the s leeping arrangements In the motels visit· ed while the pair sought refuge in Huntington Beach an~ Los Angeles and Ventura counties .. Questioning the attractive blonde witness on her statement that all she took with her from her home was a single chanae of clothing, $Sin cash and no credit eards, he asked her if she ever 1nade the statement to an in· vestigator: "And thenwewentto bed." "No." Mrs. Robinson replied. "I didn't and wedidn'l ." "Well. did you ever make the statement to an OranscCounty ln· \'estigator that ·we got up and tht>n called Lee (a family friend 1?" Ramsey asked. "I don't remember that. I was probably speaking in vague terms,•· Mrs. Robinson replied. Mrs. Robinson told Ramsey that there we re several reasons for the Iii ght from Newport "Beach for herself and Scalise; among them her rear of her husband. Scalise's fear of Robinson and the police :rnd the need to allow her fomily and friends to list her as a missing person. ll was not until nn Orange County lawyer came to Ventura and s pent a day convinl'ing Scalise that he would Ml be jailed If he came back to Santa Ana and told his story that she and Scalise were able to return, she told Ramsey. She to ld Rn msey that she never undressed in the presence or Scalise. "I only hnd three or four hours sleep during the whole trip and most or that was in the car." s he testified. Mrs . Hobinson readily iden· ti(ied the garrote held up in the courtroom by Ramsey as the de· a th instrument thal Scalise sald he was supposed to use on her. And she identified as forceps the surgical instrument which Scalise said he was given by her husband. The hit man told the jury that the forceps were to be used to extract Mrs. Robinson's birth control device from her body as proof to Robinson that l5hewasdead. Irvine Firm Wins Approval On Land Swap Judge Speirs wiil respond at that time to defense allegations that he has dis played bias and prejudice in pretrial actions held thus far In his courtroom. The thrust or the defense motion Is that Judge Speirs has reported· ty been told by presiding Judge Claude M. Owens that, if the triaJ is moved out or Orange County. Judge Speirs will ~o with the lawyer s and defendanti1 to whichever location 1s selected. Principality f>ro.,«ial Moditertoneo'I dMr •• IM flflW colleclo0n of bedroom f~e from Thomo,,,;tie. Hf!fe. tole.,ted de•iqneu 1-e blended Ifie a-;~ 17th (en•"'( decooiW. l"Otifs of vied aolt-''°"' tlte border Oeol of ltcly. NOl'<e o-d Spain. In ~~ with t+ie t°"'1y cOWQll\en of the collection. pec\y pecan~ oc* ~ o-d wood product' en coeflAy wilected or-d bl...ded 1oqether to pr~ o """' •eat11e Clf'Pop>Ole to tho \lyle. Fat ail.p dtto'McJ •rh lo\r.ng sttenqlh. cert0111 deco0t1ve per" O'od cav«f eflKts are """"°'ed wood. Hord~ o-d other ipecd fn\hinq tee~ aeote o "9W fns>t ro, PRINCIPAll Y Mlh ~ clor•ry o-d br,ilor.ce to reveal the 0-arn:>toe ~ of the wood qon. Wherlwlr ~ed fO' 1NI mnter bedooom o qiew '°°"'• PRN:IPAUTY offers you 1+19 ~ couniry Medten°'9'lfl beauty o-d Irvine Company officials said today they hope lo begin work before the end of the year on the Garden Grove industrial complex following acquisition of the Nike base there in a land swap with the federal government. Edward P . Lee, vice president of" land development for tbe l'Om· pany. announced the $10 million 11wap Tuesday afternoon. J le said it ls one of the larcest In Orange County history. The swap includes the 21S·acrc Nike base in Garden Grove, which the land company wants lo de- velop into an industrial comolcx by 1986. The company also received n 17-acre site in the Islas Creek sec· tlon of San Francisco. near Hun· ter's Point. That site had four warehouses, which company spokesm an Jerry Collins said already have been sold to the Goodman Lumber Company or San Francisco for an undisclosed sum . The.land company also got a seven·ncre tract near the Santa Ana Marine Corp helicopter sla· lion in the trade. The U.S. Navy, whichnegoliat· ed the trade, received a total of729 acres around the El Toro Marine Corps Air St ation, which com- pany officials said the facility needed as a burler aginst en· croac:hments into the air field's night palternS". The company's plans to develop the Nike site into an $86 miJUon in· dustrial area may meet with some resistance b y County SUpervisor Laurence Schmit who has said be wants 50 acr-es of it for a regional park. A public bea.ring on the county acquisition or o park site will be held Aug.1'). Lawyers for Cella. 51. and former hospital admmistrator Stephen Robert Evans, 31. of Mis- sion Viejo argue that heavy pre- trial publicity has ruled oul any chance of a fair trial in this area. Celln. Evans, George Louis 01· lendorf. 4S, of Laguna Beach and Theodore Schiffman, 53. of Santa Ana, we re convktcd in Los Angeles Feder al Courtlast month of multiple cri minaJ charges fil ed after they defrauded two county hospitals controll<'d by Cella of an estimated $2 m illion In funds. Cella, drew a fi ve-year federal prison term. Schiffman was sen- tenced to two and one half years and Evans and Ollendorf to one year each. Both Schiffman ::md Ollendorf have pleaded guilty m Orange County Superior Court pretrial action and will appear as wit· nesses ror the prosecution against Cella and Evans. That 'Quake' FalseAlann Did the earth move for you this morning? Well, It wasn't an earthquake. I\ call to the Cal Tech Seismo· gr aphic t.aboratory in P asadena confirmed that no earthquake was recorded on Cal Tech'11 sensitive equipment Utls morn- lng. "More than likely It was a eomc boom... explained public rf'latlon1 r epresentative Chris Orlows,l. by or~. .•·· '. • , t"o Thomcn"i11e qoty thot 'fOo' hotnt de-\, ; :: ... I I Rf9Ul.,..y 1949 5749 J~$, 1865 HARBOR BLVD. DOWNTOWN COSTA MESA PHOME 548-5131 } I ; Wednesday~8 Clo1in8 Prices NYSE COMPOSITE TRANSACTIONS r Wedne1d11y. August~ 1976 DAILY PILOT 89 Bydra·heoded Is Teledyne Lonely at Top? By MU, TON MOSKOWm If you're a t'onglomeratc·wntt'hl'r, •~ I am. the one to watch right now Is th\' 1.os AngelPs·based Tnledyne Inc. You may never have heard of Teledyne. It doesn't hovf' Wo much consumer bw1lnes11. and It's a young ouWt. But il ts a hydru·hended corporaUon with a voracious appetlle for other companies. It's already blHer than s uch compani~11 as Reynolds M etats, Campbell Soup, GUJette and H.J. Heinz. And ll appears sllJI lo be hUh· 1ry. Prior lo 1960 . lh\'rc.- was no Teledyne . It was rounded in that year by Money Tree Henry E. Singleton. who t'UmC from the granddaddy. or con· glomerntes, Litton lndustrie.-s. Sin~leton is still chairman to-day. LITTON PROVED WHAT SEEMS to be obviou1. that II you want to become big quickly. buy u pussel of compon1es. -while Sin1tleton wu~ lhcre. Litton ucquired 20 compunics. After he left, Litton bought 80 more. Running his own show. Singleton demonstrated thut ht' l'lad learned this lesson well. Between 1960 and 1968, Teledyne bought 125 c.'Ompanles . By 1967 he was boastinl{ that "it took Litton 10 years lo do what we did in six.·· At first Teledyne coneentrated its purchases In defense. oriented, high·technology firms. Then it branched out into metals. steel. insuranet>. Among t.he companies it bagged were Sprague Engmeering, Brown Engineering. Vasco. Gill Electric, Wah Chang, Electronics Microwave, Geotronicl'. Firth Sterling. Philbrick Nexus, Ryan Aeronautical, Packard Bell, Rodney Metals, United Insurance Company ol America, Argonaut insurance nnd Fireside Thrift. MEANWHILE, SINGLETON WAS not the only one who benefitted from the Litton lenrmns experience. In 1964, as Teledyne was a buHding, another Wtton exttuhve. Fred R. Sullivan, left to join Walter Kidde & Co. in the East. And KJdde s ubsequcnlly sc.'oopet.I up 80 comf)an1es, among them Globe Security. Lighting Cori>. of America and United States Lines . :a. With all these conglomerates hunUnK during the 1960s, it's a wonder there were any small companies left In the country. The 1970s have been a different story. Conglomerates found it wasn't so easy to run so many companies under one roof and they have been shedding units. One company, Los Angeles-based Whittaker Cor1> .. has divt:sted ilselr of 8'.} • companies since 1970. Litton, Kidde. Republic and U.S . Jn. dust.ties ha vc all lightened up on the companies they hold. BUT HENRY SINGLETON was smarter . lie had \he foresight to buy insurance companies. which have funds lo invest ln companies. and so the latest turn In the .con- ~lomerate screw is that Teledyne has become the largest single stockholder in Litton Industries. owning 12 percent of the outstanding shares. Nor is that a ll. Teledyne had also acquired 10 percent of the outstanding shares of Walt.er Kldde. In the end we may not have to watch so many conglomer ates. There may be justone: Teledyne. · Big Breakfasts Bulge Budgets By'lbe~lated Press Bad ne ws for consumers who like to start the day with a hearty breakfast: An Associated Press marketbaskel survey shows prices for such staples as butter. eggs and coffee increased during July . The increases at the retall store generally renected trends at the wholesale level which, in turn. mirrored the over·all supply situation. mE AP DkEW UP A random list or 15 commonly purchased food and nonfood items, checked the price at one supermarket in each of 13 cities on March 1. 1973, and hns r echecked on or about the start of each succeeding month. Los Angeles is a checklist city. The latest sur vey showed the marketbaskct bill increased Jast month at the checklist store ln eight cities. rising an average of 1.7 percent. The bill decreased at lh check.list store in four cities, down an average 2 percent. and was unchanged In lhe 13th city. Over·all . the marketbaskel bill at the checklist store incrensed a little less than half of 1 percent during July. ., l' The situation r epresented an improvement over June, when the marketbasket bUI went up at the checklis t store In · nine cities and the over·all total was up 1.3 percent. THE GOVERNMENT HAS predicted lhal retail prices for food alone will increase 2-S percent this year, alt.hough the exact site of any increase depends lo some degree on the crops still being harvested. The r ecent slril(e by California cannery workers could provide a n uncxpecled boost In the cost of canned fruits and vegetables. July's major increases occurred in breakfa~t items. The price of a paund of butter went up at lhe checklist stor e In 11 cities. rising a n avenge of almost 10 !*'cent. The price of n pound of coffee increased a t the checklist store ln seven or the cities survcyc'd. Coffee no)V average11 about $2 a pound, an increase of more thanS<> percent over the past year. The price o{ a dor.en eggs went up at lhe checkllsl store In 12oflhe citieuurveyed. On the brighUlde, t.he price or fronkfurters decreased at • the checklist store in eight cities, as did theprlceof a pound of:: chopped chuck. rncreasecbuppllc1', combined with scatl<tred : : aummersalea,wcrercspon11iblcforthe droplnprlcea. : . Stadimn in Black A net income to retained earnings of Sl.314.285 has been : ~ reported tor the com~ Anaheim StadJum. Anaheim :' Convention Center and the city's two public golf courses, :, according to department director Tom Lle•ler. : ' Perhaps one of the moat significant improvements In : the floaodal report was for lhe 4S,ooo seat stadium, which : has reported being in the red 1lnce It opened In 1966. ; Lte1ler said lt bad an income of S81M,249, with •rating : , expenses and bonded indebtedness of S&s4;090, luving : $40,153 in retained earninp. : "11\e figures for 111 lour operaUona are prellminary,": Uegler said, "but they renect to the best of our knowledt• a : • very 1ucce11ful and profitable year." : • Division Renamed . . . . , Irvine's Environmental Technology Division of Dresser~ Industries, Inc ., has been rena med tbe Advanced:: Technology Center. : The center was responsible for the development of the: Dres.serator tueJ inductor, a device designed to reduce · automobilecxbaustemiuiona. :, . Vice President Quitst "' Augual F. Werner announced hla resignation u vice= president. ceneraJ manager ol Datatron'a Shelly and MTL: subsldlarte1. Werner aaid he 11 leavin• Datatron i.c : Irvine, to aJtume another position. ·•., t ~ l I ' BJ. DAIL y PILOT Wednesday, August 4, 1918 Judge Favors 'Pa:pa' Author • in Suit CUPPED WING SJJU SOllGHT NEW YORK <AP>-Afederal judge who does not think much of the late Ernest Hemingway has ordered the Doubleday & Co. publishing firm to pay Sl.2S,OOO lo a biotrapher and confidant of Hemingway's who claimed he wu libeled by a book about Hem- in91way. Charles Brieant approved tut April's jury awacd lo A.E. Hotcbner of Westport. Conn., who charted In a $1.S-milllon l awsui t that he had beeo mallciously maliened by the book "Hemingway in Spain." The book. by Jose Luis Castillo- Puche or Madrid, was publiahed ln 1974 by Doubleday. IN UPHOLDING ntE award, Brieant called Hemingway a "rich llbfftine and a destroyer of wUdJife" and said he was puUled by the conUnuing public interest in Hemlncway 10 years after hls death. Hemingway.'' He has adapted many of Hemingway's books ror movies and television and Ice· lured extensively on the author's life. BRIEANT SAID Doubleday published .. He mingway in Spain " with "recWess disregard for truth or falsity" and belittled Holchner's status as an authority on Hem1f\gway. Holchner claimed th3l the book typed him as a "publicity bound and sPQDger " and "not a true friend of Hemingway.'' - Sales of the book, 'f'hlch sold for $10.95, totaled 3.4S3 copies. court records showed, while ··Papa H~mlngway" has sold 630,000 copies. SAN DIEGO (APJ -A one· pound portion of a wing nae which fell Crom an airliner over an Dlefo1uilll_belng_aought. The piece meuurin& lour feet by 10 Inches was lost Friday U.S. District Court Judge 22 oz. 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CLEARASIL Ac11e Pimples Cru11 Medication Now Is the time to clear up yoor complexion! ~IL Dry Flt'llllla SHOP 7 Di'\YS A WHK 1 9 30 AM to Q.30 PM. MON. THRU SAT.--10:00 AM to 7:00 PM, SUNDAY .,,..,. NIWPORTBEACM-lWrmr: W-ealfff .... u l .A...a11 '°"'" ~ttOI St. El TofO-24372 Rocllflefd "or MARGUUITI PkWAY-Mt•~ v..,o I • I Lag1•na/SOuth Coast EDITION , , Afternoon · · N. Y. Stooks VOL. 69, NO. 217, 5 SECTIONS, 50 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 4, 1976 TEN CENTS..., .. Crash Ruins SC Eaterg for 3rd Time· I By PHIL llOSMAllJN Of ... O.lly ""• ~ A 65-ton crane rig lumbered too fast off the San Diego Freeway's El Camino Real offramp in San Clemente al 5:40 a.m. today and demolished a hamburger stand. No one was manning the fast foods restaurant and the driver was unhurt -not even scratched-despite the fact that the collision peeled away the cab ol the truck above and around him. · It was the third lime a vehicle slammed into the stand In recent years and the fourth time it will have to be rebuilt. Once it was damaged by fire. Posts that had been laid in con- crete In front of Love Char. Broiled Burgers lo guard against just such an accident were smashed Crom their moorin~s. The truck. owned by Brau Crane Service of Long Beach, went straight on through the bar· riers and hatrway through the burger stand, at 1402 S. El Camino Real. The front, roof and sides of Love's were caved in. The crane missed hitting the Red Lollipop Pre-School by jus~ a few feel. There was no one there <See DEMOLISH, Page AZ> I Mystery Virus 0.llr ... , .. SYll -10 CLEMENTE BURGER STAND HAD UNSCHEDULED APPOINTMENT WITH WRECKING CREW 65-Ton Crane Trucking Rig Brings About •Premature Redevelopment Cult Asks Soliciting OK Lag,ma Police Review Hare Krishna Request The Ha r e Krishna sect 10 Laguna Beach has applied for a city permit to conduct street solicitations for money. The permit application res ts today in the police department. Under city code. background checks may be made to de· termine if organizations Sttking such permits are responsible. The application s tales the street solicit.ations "to raise money for spreading the love of God" would be made "in a hum· ble indi\•idual approach with a nower or candy and request for donations." The application Is signed by R.C. Richard, secretary, at the Krishna te mple, M4 S. Coast lli~hway . The city has h Ugation pending ai;:ainst the sect for operating a church in an area not zoned for such a us e . Complaints by near by res idents sparked a re· view by the City <.:ounc1I. After the background check by the police department, the ap· plication goes to City Manager Al Theal who may approve or deny lhe request. IC Theal denies the permit, lhe Krishnas may appeal the de· cision to the City Council. There is no provision in the city code for anyone lo appeal Theal's decision if he approves the <See KRISHNA, Page A.2) Coast Rire·for·kill S~laenae ! .. ( Plot Shocks NB Woman i 1 By TOM BARLEY Of 1~. 0•11r Pilot si.11 A Newport Beach doctor's wife who spent four days on \he nm with a confessed "hit man" after he told her over the luncheon table thut he had been hired to kill her spent a long day explaining he r nct ions Tuesd1ly 1n Orange County Superior Court Defense attorney Al Ramsey was Junice Robinson's inter- ro~ ator a nd he as ked her se\1eral times via differ ent TELLS HER STOAY , Mrs. Janice Aoblnaon questions to explain why she fled with Anthony Scalise rrom her Big Can yon. Newport Beach. home Feb. 21. Scalise, 29, first took Mrs. Robin.son, 38, lo the Huntington S.,ores motel in Huntington Beach alter he showed her a garrote -a corded rope used in strangulation killings -which he said he was supposed lo use on her. The self-confessed lifetime con man. driven by a young man identified in testimony as Garv. then took Mrs. Robinson in h·er car on a circuitous tour of three counties that was de· signed, the proseculion claims. to shake off any pursuit of Scalise or Mrs. Robinson. Mrs llobmson explained that shr was tcrri fled or her estranged husbnn<i , Dr. Wayne Lester Robinson. 42, who is nowon-trial 1n Jud~e J E.T . "Ned" Rutter 's courtroom on charges or solicit· lnR her murder. Sct~lisc has explained that he wai; afraid of both Robinson and police officers who mJght question his involvement in the Robinson affair since he is on p a role from a f e deral rouuterfeiting conviction and a state forgery conviction. "I was in a state of shock." Mrs. Hobinson explained on sev- er al occasions . "l scootched down in the back of the car where no one could see me and all I ever saw from that posl· tion was a lot of skr." Scalise had earlier explained from the witness stand that he had been promised two pay- ments or al least Sl0.000 each if he killed Mrs. Robinson and confirmed her death for her husband. He bas t esllfled thal he changed his mind and decided to he lp Mrs. Robinson alter he invited her to lunch al the Velvet Turtle r eslauranl In Newport Beach under the U · sumed name or John'Foster. a Nevada r ealtor who was in· terested in Mrs. Robinson's Riverside properties. The jury has listened to t.pes and telephone conwnatiom in which a voice Identified as that o( the Irvine physician dis· cussed the supp<>sed killing witb ScalL-se in a matter <A ract man· nel'. Mrs. Robinson, obviously ty property. She refused to confirm if the property jolntly owned by herself and her huaband was correctly valued at the figure listed by her divorce lawyer in Novem~r, l~n5 -$2,114,18.1 in net worth. It was the only question or that type that Judge Rutter seemed prepared to accept and he practically told Ramsey that m a hearing held outside the <See oocroa, Page Ai> tired after a long day on the ....., .,.. ......... witness stand, appeared to re· ACCUSED OI' "-OT sent Ramsey's pr®tnc into the walue oC lbe couple's conamuni. Dr· W8J11• Rollll'fOR ~ In. the County? Pilot Has Illness' Effects? By WILLIAM SOIREIBER Oltt>eO.il•l'l ... IUM An Orange County airline pilot who became ill after a flight from Philadelphia late las t month may be California's first case or a mysterious disease that has killed 21 people in the past week in the East. County and state health of. flcials are examining blood samples taken from the 1>1.lot. whole identity and place oC re· sidence are being withheld. Of- ficials were notified <A the ail· ment Tuesday by lhe man's private physician. ''At thls point, we are unable to sacy for certain il it is the same disease as that back East." said Dr. James Chin, state health director. "It may be a couple of days before we are able to de· termlne from the samples what is present in lhis case. "The samples were taken late in the progression of the Ulness so we may rind· it impossible to isolate anything al tb.ia point." Chjn said the pilot, who mes for American Airlines, stayed al one ol the hotels housing American Legionnaires attending a conven· lion in late July. Most of those who have died of the strange bug attended the con- vention. "This pilot started feeling ill shortly before leaving the East on his return flight and when he arrived in Or ange County, he consulted his physician," Chin, said. "When all lhe publicity came out about the deaths and the dis· ease in Pennsylvania, he and his doctor pul two and two together and reported to the County CSff MALADY, Page A!) NEW P.RINCIPAL SELECTION DlJE Trustees or the Laguna Beach Unified School Ola· lrict are expected to name a new principal tor Top of the World Elementary School at 6 p.m. Thursday al district headquarters. 550 Blumont St .. in a special meeting. * * * * * * Some Reeovering Health Aides Eye Mystery Disease HARRISBURG, Pa. (AP) - State health officials said today they don't know when they will be able to identify the mystery "legionnaire's disease" \hat has killed 22 people who attended an American Legion convention two weeks ago. But some persons who had the diseue have recovered and that may aid researchers in Lracklng down lhe flu-like agent, state Health Secretary Leonard Bachman told a news con· ference. Doctors also do not know how to treat the 122 persons still hospitalized with symptoms of high fever, congested lun6S and chest pains, Bachmansaid. "Some are gelling antibiotics .Niguel Beach Park Opens To tlw Public Arter O r ~nge County su~rvlsors approved an agree· ment with Avco Community Developers, Inc., this morning, Niguel Beach Park near Dana Point was opened for public use al noon today. The agreement ended a long series or delafs that have stymied the 35-acre beach park's opening since 1973. Under terms of the agreement, the county will take UUe to the park while the company con- Unues to finish Sl5,000 worth of construction projects. Suspended for the time being is a quarrel over who will pay the estimated $40,000 it will cost to connect the beach's restrooms with a sewer line. When order Ing the park opened today. supervisors asked the sheriff's department to increase patrols ther e, a measure taken lo reduce vandalism. They also directed the county environmental agency's staff lo prepare a plan for staffing the park, Including llteRUard aervlce as well u required maintenance and cleanup services. and some aren·t and that hasn't had an effect one way or the other," he said. There are no s igns that the out-· break was a baling. A 72-year -old Philadelphia woman died Tuesday night and a· Pittsburgh ~an died early today, bringing the death toll to 22. .. The disease has not leveled olf," said Bachman. "Apparent· ly both lhe number of deaths and the number of new cases have in· creased and are increasing." More than 100 federal and state medical researchers have • been mobilized to identify the disease. At the federal Center for Dis· ease Control in Atlanta, re- searchers planned today to ex· amine the first cultures grown from tissue s amples taken from victims of the illness. The cultures could provide a clue. "We are ruling out nothing," said Dr. Walter Dowdle, director or virology at the cent.er ... This could be anything from an infec· tious disease to a toxin." All the known victims of lhe disease -including two hospitalized in New Jersey and CSff MYSTERY, Page AZ) Club Seeking Gym Funding The San Cleme nte Boys Club Is trying to raise $50,000 In local contributions to complete a $256,000 gymnasium. Appeals are being made to business and profession al persons. local clubs and or· ganizations, and residents within the Capistrano Unified School District, the a rea served by the club. The money is needed to build the walls and roof of the gym In Bonita Canyon Bicentennial Park. The foundation and noor slab have already been com· pleted. Coa8t Status Awaited Weather Of Laguna Family A Fount.ajn Valley couple wall· ed anxiously toda,y for word from 11 relatives and friends who would have been in Colorado's Bil Tbompeon River territory when devastation struck lut weekend. (Related atory Page A3.) Eilht are from Orance County and the fears were mounting, because one of Ule Jr'OUP on a croa·country trip failed to call home Monday to UTante a plane ~home. &art Northrup. ol 18 Ac.cia St., Fountain Valley, saJd today tbe Red Croes staggered by 82 bodies found to dale -hu not been eble to clarify identities ot the victims. "An attorney from Greeley hu offend to help, but we have 't re· ceived any more word from him," Mrs. Northrup added. Northrup said friends of the family new to Albuquerque and are upected to caU wltb news from Loveland, Colo., sometime today or tonl1bt. 111e mla1in1 group Includes: Dennis and Barbara Schulu , oC 31872 Scenic Drive, Laguna Beach; their children, Brian, 15, Steve. 12, and Reoe, 10; a sister· in-law. Mary MacAuley, ol 212~ Eilbth Sl., Huntington Beacb; the sons of Neal Scbulta, or Needles -Uicbael, 16. and his broUler Chri•, 13; and Matt Baird. 12, of Yorba Linda. They were lravelinl lolether in two vehicles on the vacation trip and were scheduled to be In the dbuter area when tM flood struck. Fair weather Thursday with low morning clouds. Coast temperatures ahouJd reach l ow lo mid 70s. Overnight lows down to Jow50s. INSIDE TOD-' V · Tia.CIA per/ormeddntg ez. pmmntt on umottUng mfor· manl1.0ftd crlmillal ""'*''· according to n~WIM d~clo .. ifiH dOCIUrlefttt. J& olao tOOlt&ed to "" dntgt on rdJlndng POWt. Storift °" PogeAf. latlex Cl :: I ... , ... M Al CH . .. , ... , " . .. , •• M ~ # \ ~~~~-='"=~---------~--~·~-----..---~~~ .. I A z DAIL y PILOT L/SC LBUSD Approves Budget With no public comment und a ''Whoopee!" trom buslneu manager Clyde Lovelady Jr .. the Laguna Beach Unified School District decided Tuf'Sday how to spend $6.4 million of taxpayers' money. The 1976-77 budget compares to lul year's budget of $5.7 mlllion. The spending plan depends on a tax rate of just under $2.70 per $100 assessed valuation. Minus the 18 cents of that used for bond interest redemption, local tnxes will then generate about $4 8 million. The tax rate went down 261,.'z cents because of increased dis· trict assessed valuation. Under state school financing law, dis- trict base revenues stay the same regardless of assessed valuation. When AV goes up, the tax rate corresPondingly goes down. -bovelady. burat... oui.. with-b~ "Whoopee!" arter the board's unanimous vole to aµprove the budget. because he had put in un- told hours working on it. District officials said there never was much public input on the spending plan. The budge t includes $2.6 million in teachers' salaries. The district and teachers, however. are sttll eng-aged i n collective bargaining talks which make that figure only an estimate. 1Nednesday.August4, 197& Mystery Sufl•ari11e What was this unmarked submarine doing off the Orange Coast last week'? It n ew an American Flag, but the U.S. Navy refused to identify the vessel. In fact. officials at the U.S. Navy sub base in San Diego de- nied its ex istence. Coast Guard spokes men said all they knew was that a Navy sub was in the area. They couldn't explain its lack of markings. Newport Beac h police spotted the sub, but s aid they wer e unsuccessful in determining who it belonged Lo. or why it was cruising off their city. Safariland Parking? Proposal Would Bus Visitors to Laguna By JACK CHAPPELL 01 the O•llY Poi.& SUH "You have the jam, we have the preserve" observed a Lion Country Safari offidaJ who has proposed the city of La~una Beach could alleviate its annual summer traffic squeeze by using a porlion oT tl'le park's "'JS-acre parking lot. Jerry Kobrin, Lion Country Sarari vire president for public relations. said the Laguna Hills attraction has parking for 4,000 cars. In a letter to Mayor Phyllis Sweeney, he invited the city to in- itiate discussions on a "matter of pc>Ssible mutual reward." The idea is that visitors could park at Lion Country and be bused to the Art Colony. salesman must have been work· ing these parts,•· Lion Country has 200 unused a'cres not required for immediate future expansion. There's about a half mile of frontage on Laguna Canyon Road and 27 acres fronting on Moulton Parkway nearby. Judge Bias Claim ·Set for Hearing Kobrin, a Lagunan who lives in Arch Beach Heights, said Tues- day the thought came to him as he wallowed in s talled traffic one Sunday en route to eight and a half miles to his olfice al the pre- serve. "You're talking to a man whose normal 18-minule ride was one hour a nd 20 minutes," Kobrin exclaimed. Kobrfn's previous publlc rela- tions virtuosity made Frazier the Lion famous and promoted lion dung as a repellent to deer wruch nibblethelandscapiogofhillslde homes. Fro• Page Al KRISHNA. • • A motion seeking the removal of Judge William C. Speirs from the Orange County Superior Court trial of Dr. Louis J . Cella Jr. and an associate is scheduled for a hearing next Monch1y. Judge Speir:c; will reRpond at that time to defense aJ legations Irvine's In For Coastal Land Sphere The ln•ine City Council voled 4·1 Tuesday to leave the door open in case 1t wants the coa. tal region between Newport Beach and Laguna Beach to become part of Irvine some day. The council passed a resolution for the Local Agency Formation Commission (LJ\1-'CI saying that Irvine would like to be con· sidered whe n the commission de· cides into what city's sphere or influence that land should be placed. Already, Newport Beach and Laguna Bench have asked the land to be tncl11ded In their spheres, posRibly paving the wuy for future ann<.'xalion to their cities that he bas displayed bias and prejudice in pretrial actions held thus far in his courtroom. The thrustofthedefensemotion is that Judge Speirs has reported· ty been told by presiding Judge Claude M . Owens that, if the trial is moved out of Orange County, Judge Speirs will go with the lawyers and defendants lo whichever location is selected. Lawyers for Cella. 51. and fo rmer hospit al administrator Stephen Robert Evans, 31., of l\tis- s1on Viejo argue that heavy pre- trial publicity has ruled out any chance of a fair trial in this area. Cella, E vans. George Louis 01· lendorf, 45, of Laguna Beach and Theodore Schiffman. 53, of Santa Ana. wer e convicted in Los Angeles Feder al Court last month of multiple criminal charges filed after they defrauded two county hospitals controlled by Cella of an estimated S2 million in funds. Cella. drew a five-year federal prison term. Schiffman was sen- tenced to two and one half years and E vans and Ollendorf to one year each. Both Schiffman and Ollendorr have pleaded guilty in Orange County Superior Court pretrial action and will appear as wit· nesses for the prosecution against Cella and Evans. ·"fhe other day, I was cooking a Chinese meal -I'm into cook· m~-and I needed one key ingre- dient so I started out to a Hon~ Kong restaurant in town. ··When I got down the hill. I saw this massive killer wave of metal coming at me down Glen· neyre. I fl eet in terror back up my hill." Kobrin said. S-0 far, the letter dispatched the end of July hasn't provoked a response by Mayor Sweeney. Kobrin said it was too soon to say 1f the parking would be offered gratis to the city. He noted. however. thal while the plan could alleviate some of the city's traffic difficulties. it would also increase the exposure of Lion Country to thousands of people. It appears too late to do anything this year. he said. In addition to the paved park· ing lot. which Kobrin said w as constructed in 1970 when the ''world 's g r ea t est asphalt Fro• Page A J MALADY. • • Health Department for tests," the state official added. "By that time. however, he was in his r ecovery phase and feeling better .·· Chin said. permit. Theal s aid the code sets up several s t:mdards for issuance of the solicitation permit. Theal said it has be to be de· termined that the managers or operators ar<' of ~ood character with a reputation for honesty and integrity, that the solicitation will be conducted bv rcsPonsible and reliable persons and that the object of the solicitation is lo finance a charita ble cause. Police Chief Jon Sparks said the back~round investigations ought to be finished about the middle of next week. ''There's a good deal of work involved inasmuch as they've never bad a permit before," the chief said . The background check will In· elude complaints made against sect members. f're• P,,.e A I DOCTOR'S WIFE. • • presence or the jury. "I don't want to hear the domestic relations Issue or Robin ~on versus Robinson ar(:u~ in this courtroom.·· he told Ramsey. "I'm not happy about this kind or questioning btcausc 1 think you might Optn a Pandora's box that ls not con· nected with this c riminal trial." The bulk or lhe valuation figure on the Robinsons' com· munlty property la reported to be in a chain of pina parlors jointly operated by the couple before their separ ation l ast July. Other element. ot the valua· tion figure include Dr. Robinson's practice In Irvine a nd Mrs. Robinson's $300,000 home on Augusta Lane in Big Canyon. Ramsey appeared lo press Mrs. Robinson hard late in the day on the iuue ot the sleeping arrangement.a in the motels visit- ed while the pair sou&ht r~uce in Huntington Be.eh and Los An&elea and Ventura counties. Queationin1 tbe attractive blonde witness on her statement that. all abe took with her from her home was a single change of clot.hint. $5 in cash and no credit cards, he a aked her i( she ever made the statement to an • in- vestigator: "And then we went to bed." "No," Mrs. Robinson replied. "I didn't. and we didn't." "Well, did you ever make the statement to an Or angeCounty in· vestlcator-that 'we--«ol up-.and then called Lee <a family friend>?" Ramsey asked. "I don't remember that. I was probably speaking in vague t.erms," Mrs. Robinaan replied. Mrs. Robinson told Ramsey that there were several reasons for the flight from Newport Beach for hersetr and Scalise; among them her rear of her husband, Scallse's fear of Robinson and the police and the nttd lo allow her family and friends lo list her as a missing person. It was not until an Orange County lawyer came to Ventura and spent a day convincing Scalise that he would not be jailed if he came back to Santa Ana and told his story that she and Scalise were able to return, she told Ramsey. She t old Ramsey that she never undressed in the presence of Scalise. "I only had three or four hours sleep during the whole trip and most-of that-was in-the car," she testified. Mrs. Robinson readily iden· tin~ the garrote held up in the courtroom by Ramsey as the de· ath instrument that Scalise said he was supposed to use on her. And s he identified as forceps ffi_a_n_tin FURNITURE the surgical lnstrum~nl which Scallle said he wu etven by her husband. The hit mnn told the jury that the forceps were to be uacd lo extract Mrs. Hoblnson's birth control device from her body as proor to Robinson that 1bewaa dead. Robinson was arrested Feb. ~at a Santa Ana service station after he allegedly paid Scalise a further $1,000 In a trap engineered by district 11uorney'1 investigators. Officers said a loaded gun Cell rrom the doctor's waistband as they overpowered hlm near the caspumps. Both Sca lise ond Mrs. Robinson testified th1.tt tbe hit man took $10,400 of Robinson's money with him when they left on their four-day tour of three coun· ties. Repair Done; Ollofre Back In Operation The San Onofre nuclear power plant was back in operation today after being shut down almost four days for repairs to one of its three steam generators. A leak in the generator was dis• covered Friday. Southern California Edison Company said a tube urry-lng hot water from the 450·megawatl reactor was leaking but later plugged. The power output is being re- duced gradually before the plant is shut down Oct. 1 ror probably two months. a spokesman said. A new co"crete and steel dome will be built along with improvements costing about S38 million. Arnone the additions will be a conl3inment sphere designed to provide more protection from radiation. That 'Quake' False Alarm Did the earth move for you this morning? Well. it wasn't an earthquake. A call to the Cal Tech Seismo- graphic Laboratory in Pasadena ~onfirmed that no earthquake w as recorded on Cal Tech's sensitive equipment this morn- ing. "More than likety it was a sonic boom.·· e xplained public relations representative Chris Orlowski. CouAc i lwom nn Gabrielle Pryor cast the d issenting votf!. Stie s n1d it ncv<'r will be in Irvine's best interests to annex the land. Fro• Page Al DEMOLISH Dr. Gerold Wagner, Orange County health services director, said the t'Ounty man was never hospitalized, des pite press re- port.s to the contrary. Principality ~o Mf!di!et"'''OOI\ ~ ;,.l(>ire If,;, -colec'1oon of bedrOO"' l.,rr.11111 ft0m Tho..,cn.,.lfe. Here •r.>lenied d c\•qne-\ hove blended •he c•v.ed I 7th (""'""" rll'<cwat.ve mo11h ol ~i'led oofr"""n l•om ,..,,. br• J·• af'JOt of holy. f:.once ond Spo:t. In ief'l •"'1 worh r+. <°"*Y (~\ .,f !he c oll"C ''°"· ("'<I y r-an ,,,_\. col \olid\ ond wood ptodu<•\ O'tl co ef.Ay id«!ed ond ~ •OQ"•he< •o ptow;le o qo.n lt111ure appc;ptlQle 10 thn "'""' fo 0 114> do!•<>'nq Wlfh l;tthnq \11f1<>11h, (Mll)>I\ dtoctvQloVft pcYI\ ond C~ efle<I\ '7f' ,,,,,..,._,,.,! .......,j. t1otw:j r~ ''1'here's all kind:c; of problems with that land -includ1n~ dr:una.:e. fire protertion and the fact that it's romplctely different s:eo1:rnphicolly from the rest of the city ... Mrs . Pryor s<uct. .. That's hnw 1•lt1<'S fml. Thl'y i.:t>t too his: for l hc·1r hoots," sh<' nddcd. Th\' otht'r eounc•1I ml'mbcrs <lid not sny th<'y rl<'Cessnnly wunl that l;ind "1thm lb.Cir :.µltcrc. or w~int 1t annl'Xl'<l at n latrr ct ate Uut in orde r to tw considered al the upcomini; I.AFC hc>t1rl11~. tht> rt!!olution hull to he passed prior to Thur!4clay . ORANOE COAST DAILY PILOT :-~~.~~~~·.·~, :::..;,:;;,';;.;~': ~'' PtA>H\1'11"'411 (eft'o ... nv !rffH'f"ti1 <f•'t\.111'"',.'"' """11\NtO Mond10 tf\fOVO~ • ftlMY t-w (O\tit Nw-.. fh_..,pOrt 0.-<." tl~l"'Jt~ bttkt-t 1-wft tittf\ Vitll•f h ••"f: ~ HIOh M t Y•Ot • •N L~~fkM'"\&Wt~(H\I A¥ftOIJirr~t••• h~ I\ ""9>11'\""'d ~•vrdttO ~ ~,.-., 1M-\~!;!~0:.:~:.':!1.~,t~':~~\~ 'A•~ cu. Robert N. INe«J .......... _p_,_ J•c.k R. Curley VKt Pr-t~I ~ (;4'Ntfl M,;Nt"' Thomas Keevll (0119> ThomHA. Murphine ,...,...1,..Le1i.< Charles H. LOOS Ric.~rd P. Nall ""'""•'" --... td>'°" LHUU BH<tl OH6" T1MGi.,...o••'""' .......... ........ p 0 ""' .... ··~ Otlkes (~la~· UO ""''' 0.0• '''"' "=~~~..!''I~~~"....~..:"' ti !Min 01<90 I •-~· T•lepftone (7t4) .. 2"4.Ut ctnsltl~ Adv•rtlslnt .. ,..5671 UtUfl.t .. actl All ~"'"""s: T•~4'4-'46' , ......... , .. ..._ .. 4ts.t6l0 Qe"'""' .. ,. °'-""'" _,.,..,. ~ ....,.. Ht ,. .. , ~ ... , .. , •th1\4•4"1fl'l'\. t'tft ...... ••••tt .,. Hwerthf f"11•111t\ ..,., • .,,. ff'•r • t•ltf .. Vtt• ••tMVt \P9C.l.e HtMt\'\ ... •I c_...,._. $.(-(If\\ "''•'" ~ 0 f l ( .. If Mf~t, ~ .... ~ .......... CM".-U.1' ....... ....... -• .. H.....,,,..,, ""1••...,t1<4--\J l)-ltoty allhetime. Driver Jaime Kimes. 22. or 17040 San Bruno. Fountain Valley. blamed the crash on brake failure. t"1remen said the freewny of- framp m ay have been as much to blame. They called the turnoff (!C'<'eptive-a short, hard turn down a ~teep incline, with no in· d k atlon of the 90-degrec turn on· to El <.:amino Real. An1tclo H iou.-eas, -the owner of th(• htimbur"er dnve-thru. was. to say the least, discouraged. He picked throu(!h some of the rub· ble and reflected on the little restaurant's fate. Ile h ad just rebuilt It I ast February. About eight months ago it had been pulverlted by a dumo truck that. came barreling through the s ame offramp. Before that. a large sedan car smashed into it. In between that was a fire. lliureas said that had the truck come by four hoors after tt did. four or five cmploycs m1ghl ha\'e been buried in the rubble Of his stand.-- Will he rebuild? "I don'l know." he s aid. "That's a good question right now.·· Actually. he added, he 's think· ing or relocating. HE WOKE IJP 7V .4 S.4.LE ·'The firs t caller woke me up at. 8:-30 ~rr~aturday mornin~ and wanted to.buy lhe bike. lie paid the full price." That's the advertising success story told by t.he Costa Mesa man who placed th1" classlOed ad: Oicycle. motcbtcan~ 10 s~d.S10. Day or Night u you have wheels you want to move, call 642·S6T8. We make it. easy for you to put a few words to •·ork, in the Daily Pilot. "By the time he came to us, he was feeling much belter than he had in the early s tages.·· Wagner s aid . "lie was r eceiving ex· cellenl care from his own doc- tor." Wagner said the pilot was at home with his family. AccordinJ? to Chin, the family will be kept under observation to determine 1r there was any 11prt'ad of the nu-liko illnc...s. Sn far, he noted. "the rest of the family is in good health." "The pilot is not in any particular isolation because the disease I~ In a late, generally non·contagious stage," Chin said. Wagnt'r noted it appears the malady that e rupted 1n Philadelphia "i:c; a precisely limited thing to those who wen• l\ctually a t the cOn\·enlion hotels.·· * * * Fro•Pa~AI MYSTERY • • one in New York -attended or were in some way connected with a state American Legion conven· lion in Philadelphia that ended 11 days ago. ll was earlier reported a Con· necticut man also had the dis· case. but Connecticut health of· Cicials later said he does not have iL There has been no conflrmt evidence of secondary spread of the disease. Bachman said. b t added t~at it was stlll too early to discount the possibility that the disease ma)' be spread to othc.>n;. 1n an interview C'Mly today, however. a slate hulth depart· mtnt spokesman sajd there were six ~ncon(lrm<'d reports of the disease a m ong people in Phlladelphl3 who did not attend the conv('ntlon. by or~. ~ ' Q ~ .. I ... .. ... and otht.r \f>'t<d '""'h.t\q l{V~\ t•OOlll 0 -l~-.h fet PIUN(IPAI l Y with ,,,,., .. , tlot•y ond h ;Jl.w " to 111v•••' t~ •~ ""''" t,..,.,..,, rl,.... WOO'..I 7o.n Wholiwt ,,J,••"'1 f,.. '"" l'l\l\ll'f 1..-dOOM o. q..HW room f'fl,1¥'1PAUT ( allw, '(('OJ •ho rJOO'""'Q tounl .... Mf"itll•ICY>••"' b •N'Y '11\d ti,., T~\Vlllt qvo!oty 11.c,1 yo., f;..,,,. cJ.• ·''""' . :· I I ..... • .... ..ty '949 1865 HARBOR BLVD. DOWNTOWN COSTA MESA PHONE 548·5 I 31 ' \ . ' ~~---- --a -•---/Jr-- Wednesday. August •. 1971i DAIL y PILOT AG Case Rested . Viking's Arm .Jams Faul,t Thwart. Second!Teat for-Life S~· ~ .. ,.Jn Pugil Death ' EfUl..,..d S11e• Actor Clint Eastwood and seved other in· vestors in a Fiji plan- tation are suing a ninth for neglecting the Island property. Th ey want t h e partnership dissolved a nd th e cattl e . banana and pineap- ple plantations sold, plus damages from c hocolate magnate Paul De Donenico. J PASADENA (AP> -A balky r~ arm on the VUdnc 1 lander has Jammed toe tbe second lltne, thwartlnc aclentisu' efforu to mue ., orcuic analyais ot the highly acllve Martian soil that could determine ir it holds life. A decision on how to get the arm movin& again wu expected today. Vikinc offklala reported Tuesday night that the rn«hanlcal arm used to collect 1011 for experlmenu In the lander's sophisticated automated la boratory had not completed its programed m1s~ioo after di&- ging into the M artlan surface ONE OF THE laboratory instruments, a gas chromata1raph mass spectrometer, "did not. re· ceive a soil u mple today," said Viking spokesman Larry King. The extension arm reached out 95 in· ches, dug up some soil and retracted about six in· cbes before 1t stopped, he said. Viking officials met during the night to de· termine what m ight have caused the arm to j am. It had also jammed during preliminary testing, but scientists then round a way to dislodge a pin that blocked the arm from mo\"1ng. FRA NK BRISTOW, Viking news chief. i:aid s~ientlsts believed the probl em might be in a Cail · sale mechanism of the lander designed to halt the arm in case of some related problem. The arm had previously delivered soil to two other experiments using separate mechanical sequences. Bristow said that ViklnJt scientists have theorized that In order foe life to exist on Mars lhe ruat·colored soil must contain orcantc molecules. ~ orgaaic experhnent that was temporarily atymled by the stuck arm would help to determine .whether such compounds are present. MEANWHILE. VIKING seieftti1ts said lh•Y now believe an unexpected abandance of oxyaen produced rrom the Martian soil in another of Vlk· Inc's test cells probably was not the result of life forms. The researchers said Tuesday the unexplained generation ol gas from a soil sample had alm01t ceased. "We ar e gravitating closer toward a non· biological explanation" of the gas production, said Dr. Harold P. Klein. head of the Vikinc biology team. "But we are not 100 percent sure it's not biological." · THE STRANGE GAS emission from the soil sample probably resulted from a chemical process in which surface oxygen. released by sunlight, de· composed a liquid food added to the soil in the test cell. scie ntists said. Al first there had been speculation emiss•on was caused by some life for down the nutrient. But Dr. Fred Brown, a biologist for TRW Systems , manufacturer of the life-seeking laboratory packaee. said the experimental data "have almost zero chance ot being a message about life." He added that many or the scientists on the of· ficial Viking biology team agree with him. P""'i•her Dead Lord Thom son of Fleet, owner of an international chain of newspapers in- cluding a number in California. died in a London Hospital to· day . TV Medics Face Real Emergency PALOS VERDES SAN DIEGO (AP> -The government has rest· eel ita case rn the hearint Lo deter mane If M arlne Capt. Cecil V. Taylor will be tried on char&es sle!fl · ming rrom tbe death of a recruit. Maj. John Gr'1nt. defense counsel for Taylor. was expected to complete the defense presentation todl'I)'. MAJ . ERNST U.A. Schultes. ,.•ho has been con· ducting the hearinft. will then recommend whether Taylor will face a f:t>ncral court·marlial on charges or dereliction of duty in fuilin~ lo instruct and super\'ise personnel under his commatld. Taylor is former head of the Special TralnlnG Branch. a unit for problem recruits, at lhe Marine Corps Recruit Deoot. IT WAS IN Tayldr's unit where Pvt. Lynn E . McClure, 20. of Lufkin, Tex .. wa~ Injured Dec. 6 \ while being forced to undergo special pugll stick bouts. McClure remained io a coma unUJ his March 13 death In a I lous ton hospital. Let•Q Oo ~ailing ... IM llAUTIJUl DAMA f'OIMT HAHOI RENT A SAILBOAT VICTORY 21 OMEGA 14 CORONADO 23 A THllLL YOU'lL MIVll 'OllGIT •DrySt-.,. ............ ...... ~ .... &ror Was Fatal DR. NORMAN HOROWITZ, head of the chemical release experiment. which is looking for signs of photosynthesis by Martian organisms - among other things -said preliminary data have ind icated only that Martian soil is quite dry. CAP> -The television EMBARCADERO crew for the Emergen- cy series faced a real MARINA Execs Transfusion Wrong LOS ANGELES <AP> -The death of Taft Schreiber. a director of MCA. Inc .. who died after transfusions or the wrong type blood. was caused by clerical error, a UC LA HospitaJ of· ficial reports. (.....__s_1_at_e __ ) Cops Nab Chino Slaying Suspect emergency while film· ..._~ ..._. ing at Marineland Pier D-, .... Hwt.or. CA. in Palos Verdes. ~~,,...._.~~: ~17~14~1~'~'~'-'~17~7~~!~~~~~~~~b--~ -A scuoa diver on the c rew was apparently s uffering from the bends. more technically known as an air em· bolism. County fire de· partment crews rushed to the scene, and a U .S. Coast Guard helicopter new Nikki Amorosino. 25, to Santa Catalina Island for examination. Dr. George S. Smith. director of cltnlcal laboratories at the hospitaJ. said a technician in a blood bank, who was typing two blood samples at the same time, wrote the wrong type on &hreiber 's c ha rt. • ·The 68·year·old Schreiber was ad· roitted lo the hospital on June 3 for urolog1c surgery. I le died Jun~ 14. "The tec hnical work was ar· curate." Smith s aid in an inten·icw .. A human error fouled up the S)'$tem." C111pt Site ot Sfa8in9 The council -on a 10-4 vote - uked tbe s t a t e Department of Transportation to end the project restricting rus h hour use of one lane to car pools and buses. Councilman Marvin Braude said the Diamond Lanes waste time and energy and Increase accidents . \"o-f aulf Die• .-l9ab1 SACRA MENTO <AP! -The last no.fault automobile insurance bill or the year is dead. Opposed by insurance companies and trial lawyers. the bill would have required insurance companies to is· s ue policies r equiring, payment of COMPTON CAP1 --A 76-year-old d rivers' costs in an accident. regard· South San Gabriel woman who visited less of who caused it. ~the cryp s o er a e husffnd.-.----.---, dauahter and son·ln-law has bee n The tro~blesome question prov.ed to 1 bludgeoned and strangled lo death. be the right to sue for additional ·police say. losses. LOS ANGELES <AP> -Chino police arrested a man early today in con- nection with the murder last May or two Catholic church members who were gunned down as they patrolled the church to prevent vandalism. Los Angeles Police In· vestig a tor Jack Jung said Chino police accom· panied by LAPD officers a rrested Gilbert Corde r o , 23. al the Gr eyhound Bus terminal in Los Angeles. CORDERO WAS taken to Chino and booked for investigation of murder. Manuella Cortez and tglacio P1tdUl-a w•s:e. killed In a fusillade of ri· ne fire May 17 as they stood in the yard al Our mother of three, died on the eM of her 30th birth· day and on her llnt night of patrol. She and Padilla. a 43· year-old maintena nce man with six children. were talking with her husband when the shots rang out. Amorosino was found to be out of danger by doctors. SENIOR CITIZENS loat Off All m 1V Parclaa••• . v ON ALL ,Ult HASES av 1£COMING A :.\ .. \ctt OF OUlt sf11110• CITIUNS SAVINGS P\.AN AT NO COST TO YOU. ALL Prt·P.W IX Pntrw•• NtHrt~ RENTALS' • ._ ......... ...._ SIGN UP NOW SALIS ..-nww VH91' : C0ll0ge Pharmacy • . . ;, • ' I· ..... : I Style change and discontinued ~Is by-Adidas. Limited sizes and quantt1 .. s. mm llOllTECAIL0.1 ... $24.95 ADYUTAIE ....... $2US -------.. SPOln .......... $26.95 IOIY ........ 1 ... S23.9S NOW s19ts ROD LAVER REG. s15ts $19.95 AMERICANA 1EG. s1as $23.95 -.,-- Mar tha Ed di nglon's body w as round 1n tht' mort uar)' after an anon~ mous telephone lip. a Compton p01ice spokesman said. Ra~k Ban Ruling Soughf Lady of G uadalupe '!~~~~~~~~~~============::.....:~~================:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;..._;;;.....~~~ Catholic Church. .- • • •.. 1·~ ·---~--· She had gone to an alcove in the two· s\()ry indoor mausoleum on Sunda) •e1a111end• End ,\•ked LOS ANG ELES (API -Diamonds are forever, but the City Counci l is hoping the s ame is not true of the com· mljlter Diamond Lane project on the S,anta Monica Freeway. LOS ANGELES CAPI -A city ('ouncil committee voted to seC'k re· rommendations aimed at controlling sidewaJk newsracks after 500 persons atte nded a hearing on the matter . Mos t complained that the curbside racks were unsighUy. dangerous and sold publications which contributed to juvenile crime. . The committee asked for recom· mendatlons in two weeks. Mansion's Sale Stalled in Vote SACRAM ENTO <AP> -An attempt to put lhe vacant Sl.3-million governor's mansion up for saJc has s talled In an Assembly committee. but its author says he will try for passaf'e again next week. The bill by Sen. AJfred AJquist. D·San Jo!>e, w11s blocked on a 4·3 vote of the Assembly Governmental Organization Com mlttee. one vote short of passage. THE MANSION, a project of former Gov. Ronald Reagan. sits unoccupied on a bluff 'bovc the American River about 14 miles east of downtown Sacramento. It has been a problem for the slate ever since Gov. Edmund Rrown-Jr. called 1t a "Taj Mah al" and refused to live In It. BEFOR E TllF. vote on the Senate·passed blll, A\quist amended It so the mansion and Its ll·acre site could be aold or exchanged. tic sald Sacramen· lO County mliht be Interested In such a deal. MRS . CO RT EZ, 2 Appointed SACRAMENTO (AP) -Thomas K. Beard of ·Stockton and Michael Glazer or Los Angeles have been appoint~ by Gov. Edmund Brown Jr. to the Callromia Water Commlasion. One of the "no" votes came from commJttec (halrman Bob Wilson. D·La Mesa. who said he did not think the state could recover anywhere near Its expenses for the mansion. • We pay 15C. lb. C8lh forlkriuncenl & other. dean,houllhotd eUniUn. .. ... 'Ra ~uarlar ~c THE NEWEST IUT MOT JUST 4MOTHH STEAKHOUSE Yoo personally e>lck your own steak from our ~ourmet showeaSe. Choo9e the cut & thickness YoU deSlre from our ChOlce Eastern Com-Fed Beel. Salad and potato llwlYS Included. GRAND OPENING SPECIAL! wtM A NH DI ..... 9' YOU UISSTHlllACTSllllAlltYT*MCt OYIA 6 01.I OF YOUI STl.U '-cit M .. ..flri.-1 l·Z:JO ....,,....,..~ . °"""""°..,_.., , COMI JOli4 OUI ..,,, ............ . _ .. _.. .... ... .......... ,. c....c11..-1..011 9:00 P.M.-l:JO A.M. 2531 I. Cent lhry., •rt ludl 141·1177 •• whlell 11'<:1uoes tlumlnum loll: pie pans, lroi.n IOOd and din Mr ueya: dip, pu0d1ng and metl eon1e1,,.,. cerialn otfler eleAn, all· e1um1.num 11em1 ~n Dt redMmed. CAii your C.ntlf l0t details Iring It to Atynofda Aluminum .Orange Recycltng Pl•nt, 210 E. MHte A'enue RIYeflldeF • ] " MNllAV.. • KatenaA.e. Tuesda~ Saturday -9:00 a.m. • •:30 p.m. Phone 271 tor Information on MOblle Unit schedules In yourareL ti Cart Ka'"""' El'llOIOl•$9. Inc. 11176 r ~ . .. A 8 DAILY PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE .. . Shock Value No Help Old mule skinners us ed to s ay to train tbe critters. it was rirl'lt necessary to get their attention. This sometimes was done with a blunt irultrument. It can be assumed thJs same thi nking was behind a planning commJss1on suggestion that to relieve .Laguna's chronic s ummer traffic congestion. the art restlvuls s hould be shut down. Eve n if done for s hock value, the notion did more harm than good -not so much because anyone would take it seriously, but because of the ill will and s us pi· cion such a s tatement is likely to make. Festivals are not the town's only attraction. The things which brought people here to Ii ve also bring the visitors . And, while art certainly is one , residents within blocks of the beaches know well how their s treets pile up w ith visitors' car s . The proble m is one that would tax Solo mon, who Just doesn't h appen to be In residence. It certainly i!> one whkh cannot be attacked without the goodwill tmd coope ratio n or all. Saying the unthinkable doesn't )le lp. . . . . . Accept the Solution · It took a while to gel the City of San Juan ~apistrano moving to correct a double taxation pro- blem for Mission Bell Ranch a nd Marine rs Village re- side nts. but the city has m ade up for lost time . . When the Local Agency Formation Commission lLAFCJ approved annexation of tpe a rea to San Jua n ln 1973, it direc ted the city to detach the land Crom two iiervice districts to a\·oid duplicate cha rges. It was not (lone. Angry homeowners caJlcd a m eeting to dlscu i.s de·annexing from the city. They \'Owed to raise hell at city ha . Meantime. the r its has initiated detachment pro· ceedings from the scrncc districts. In addition. an Juan bas offered to refund er roneouslv colle<~tcd lUA es not only for this tax year, b ut for 1976-77, to be re funded in advance. Homeowners certainly were justified in prote~t ing double taxation. bul now thut t he citv ha:. responded so quickly and responsibly. fu rthc1· thr<.'ul:, of de-annexation should cease Iron Fist Approach San Clemente may have received the brunt of lhc San Diego R egional Water Quality Control Board 's wrath-a n order burring new sewer ronnections. and hence. new construction -but the shockwa\'e~ reached Lag una Beach as well. San Cle m e nte has been in ttte forefront of water reclam ation well before the multimillion dollar re - gional treatment consortiums called A WM A and SERRA supported by the regionaJ board were formed along the Sou th Coast. There are conflicts over the particulars on the s hutdown. The regional board says one thing, the city another. The essence is that the board maintains the city's s ix-year -old treatment pla nt is not working pro· perly, a charge the city denies , T • At the time of annexation . the land was uninhabil· $?d. Residents moving into the newly constructed Mis· $ion Be ll homes were outraged to disco\'er they were being c harged twice for sanitary ser\'ice and p arks and recreation- There is no difference of opinion howe\'er, on the de termination of the board to pursue r egiunal sewage treatment tJ program San Cle m ente abandoned because of high costs Laguna too has had differ ences with A WM A. so U1c: dcm onsu·ation of the iron fi. t bt>· ing applied in San Clemente was not lost on the Art Colon_y. LISC '\V£>1l. I do11 't n 1re \\'hut r o11 think -.·ou ~ee ... our air force ju ... t rC'lc•:i!ied u rPpor t di.~rmmt inK (mident 1/'ied 11-.·inK objects!' :Figures Reveal Threat ( SYDNEY HARRIS ) Most people have no notion of what Sauvy has called "the tcrri· ble power or the exponential ... If they recall the exponentiaJ al all. tl is only as a vague term from hi&h·liChool math. Dear Gloomy Gus Modern Oriental prover b. Politician who proclaims ··open go\·ernment" may find mouth is right size opening for foot N.H. A Natural Tranquilizer Let's Keep the Green Fields Tothe Editor· Our feeling about larmland and fields in South<-rn OranJ?e Count~ ts backed ur h) J?rowmi: up on an orange ranch and being ltfclong residents or this rnunty. Whtie not opposed to expansion or orderly growth or houses being built. we enjoy seein~ the green fields of vegetables or berries in the Foun. lain Valley and lluntin~n Beach area where we live. But how long can the hold-outs on these farms keep from being ( MA ILBOX A 11der•o11 Criffte To the Editor: ) veterinarians. pet shops and hy mail. It will save you and }our pct a lot or heartache. t. Rm ·s11 (,'r1111t-hed To the Editor: The required enclosure tn lust week's San Di<'go Gas and EICl'· tric Company bill explained that the <'Ompany was again ~oing to the Pubtic Utilities Commission to seek rate increases and adjust· 'llents Families a nd l'rtcnd:. \\a!. a part of an~ "eontroH•rsy .1r<1u nd Fail'\ lt'W... unless our :.11H'e r<' and rt-peat Ni 'nH'l'<I "1111w1r1 or our ml•tlkal dlr't'Ctnr \\,I!-. l'Of\ stru <.'d ln h1• 1·111111'11' t>r~tal F'rankl~. Wl' an: ani.!l'l'l'tt a"cl rat her bewildered b~ the Ot•p:.iJ'1 mcnt ofllealth ·s action. !-{ere is a simple illustrnuon of what ts for gotten. if ever know n. ____ • SuPl>Qtt -I--'-....._ _____ _ I buy one ticket in a lottery where one rn I I I I o n seems a small figure -yet the gobbled up by builders? How long talion will nearly dou,10bl_e_,,irn11nar-~c~an~th!.!:e~· !.:re:2s1st the big dollars paid Mr. Ja<'k Anderson's <'olumn of July 20 seeks to dis<'rrdit the "La Ameriras " housing pro· ject. apparenlly oblivious to the fact 'that this-w<!S one-of-the-re markable ach ie\'emenL" of thr Nicaragua ~overnment in the 1m· mediate post-c-arthquakc period. The S3 millio n dolhirs warm heartedly Rt\'Cn by the U.S. Agen cy for J nlt•rnationa l Development and the American This week's Daily Pilot "Tak· mg Stock" column CJuly 271, not· l!d a 4SO]>ercent grunan profifa hy San Diego Gas & Electric ever the i.ame quarter last year. This re· cent increase in profit is part of the trend which has seen their profi ts nearly doubleinayear . AS PARENTS who haH' h~u the plcasurr or work inµ with Dr. Toto since the incept ton or our or i:ianization some 12 years uµo . wr have found him to be moi-t sup portive of our cfforL~ and ex tremely fa ir. R egarding lt ii; manaRemenL _we consi<trr Lhc... posili\'e feedback we have had over the years lrom the O\'et"·, wht'lm ing m ajority or our mem • t1 <'ke t s arc sold: obvious· J y yo ur r han<'e Of Wtn nmg Is one 111 a million. S uppose there are two lotteries. each sell· .mg a million tickets. and you bey one ticket in each. What is your ·chance or winning both? Not one in two million, or one 1n tO million, or one in 100 million, or even one in a billion. It is one in a rnllion -It million million to one. THIS IS the terrible power of the exponential. It was known to ;antiquity: recall the malhcmati· ;c1 an of legend. who requested a ,sultan to repay him for a great fa\'or by "merely" ~i\·mg him ;i chessboard of rorn gr am The sultan was to put one gram or corn on the first square or tht> board. two on the second . four on the third. and so forth, dou blin~ l'ttCh square to the 64th. Of course, the sulta n quickly le urned :thnt there was not enough rorn on :the wholt' earth to satisfy t/tts de· · tnnnd. What does all this mean ul prucllcal terms? It menns that most of us hav<' little idco or tht' strength of :i geometric pro· gression. Thus. an annunl n 11C"of three per <'ent in a population ~neration a 1s ra e . by an companies.., same, of course. is true or inna. tion figures. A TABLE showing the incrcas· ing population of the world gives a most dr amatic example. Al the time of Christ, there were about 290 million people living on the earth. It took one thousand years to r aise that figure to 3SO million people. Then it took only 600 years to add another 200 million by 1650 or so. Then it took only 100 years to add 200 million more peopl e. Next. in the century between 1750 and 1850, some 450 miJlion were added. And In the century from 1850 to 1950, the world's popula· tion more than doubled, from 1,175 million to 2,510 million. F I NALLY, in th e quarter·t:tmtury between 1950 and 1975. about 1,500 million J>C<>plc were added. bringing the total to 4.000 million. or four b11l1on in· habitants. Even with our redu<'l.'d birth rates today. this will doublr agatn soon after the turn or thl' <'l'nlury. I did not start out to write about ropulation. but about the deccp· ti vc qualit y of a "r ate of ~rowth." Figures that seem . at first blush. s mall and unimpor tnnt can bear thr most ominous 1mplications for the near future The terrible power or the e,. pon<'ntial may threaten ui; more than th<' It.bomb. 111E GREEN fields spanning the a rea next to our freeways gives the feeling or open space as well as lovely ~r<'en \•iew or fields soon to be harvested. Thts lol'ally grown produc<' a nd fruit helps to keep our cost of ~rocenes down as well as r c\'cnue to the local farm stands nearby the residential area. When! do we continue to get these supplies 1f a ll the land 1s sold for buildin~. other than \'alleys in central California and lm!><'r1al County? In a busy and hectic schedule. 1t is a welcome sight to come upon a lush field with prople pickin~ crops as we r eturn from a busy work day. It acts like a tran- quilizer without lht' harmful side effects and makes us reel as if we ha\'e tht' best of two wort& agriculturr and the bu-;mcss rom· mumty CAN'T WF. do soml'lhtn~ as a ~roup of tOnl'l'rnt'd <'llllen.o; to keep the small rrocluc·c a<'rrs nl farmland tn tlw ~outh<'rn Orange County an•a and he lp our <'colog1enl c•ond1ti1111. our hl':.ilth und c·ontin11r to c>n1oy thr :ihun· dance of fn•sh pro<lllC'l' in 11u1· mark<'ts'.' Is thc•rc· an' l)ll<' <'lsc out thl'rt• who nJ{rl'l'S :inti (1•1•ls :t)> wt• do :ihout our f<-w rrmt11nini: I 1chl" und mull farm"" llORP.HT I' BAltTOI. OAK lii\HA A U1\HTOl, . • • The Bureaucrats Collle First WASllJNGTON-Thc Amencun taxpayers <'Ontribute generoosly lo a var iety of worthy rnuses. Rul the deprl,·cd a nd the dc•prcssed. the aged and the Alling. usually ·wind up merel y with tmc11lar} benefits. The rent ben<'ficiaries. .. nvarinbly. are the bureaucrats ~who manage the pr~rams. They ·P•Y the m s elves generous ;s a I a r i es . 1>rovl d e t.hc m sel ves Janey offices :Md surround •t he m s e 1 v e s :w l th sec · ·r e t a r i e s ·and s u b · :o r d I n a t e s . • The bu sy :t>ureaucrats -then form com mfflees. hotd 1neetings. condu<'l studies. write :reports a nd issue statements . ; Alter a ll this has been puld fnr. :on.ty a tiny fraction ol the money ~ls left for lhe pUl'pose that was In ~ed. We have taken up the ~ypewriter . tor example. to champion th• mi1rant form worlter• who toll under miser•· • ' (JACK 0 ANDERSON) ble conditions to make America the besl fed nation in history. We sent our reporter . llal Bernton. to live and work with th('m, lie round them living in 11qualor. ex· ploited by the planters. nef.!leded by the government, ignored by society. TH E BUREAUCRATS woold never let an opportUnlty like this go b y . At the Labor Dept .. bureauc rats wangled S60 million Crom the taxpayers this year to help the migrant laborers out oC the stream and to place them in career jobs. The bureaucrats sat at their desks and , with a great shufnrilg or papers and ctacking or typewriters. drafted programs to rescue the lowly s loop laborers. Yet these bureaucrats had neve.r even met a migrant worker. The results are now in for lh«- flrst half or fiscal 1'71. A stauet· Ing $30 million. of course, •ent for the ure and comtort of the buruucr a ts . Our columns ubout reporter Bernton's exper1cncl's amon~ the mi gra nt workeric , mean while. brought down un avalan<'hc of lcltcr:s upon lht' Labor Dept. 'fhe mrul was so heavy. secretaries had to use ;.1 form letter t o r~spond to all the inquiries. THIS HAS produced some favor abl e r e s ult!'. l.a bor Secretary William J . Usery met with Agri<'ulture Secretnry E~l Buti to discuss what th<' Ad· ministration <'OUlrl do to help mi· grant workers. Our sources say Usery sincerely wants to press Cor collective bargaloing rights ror farm workers. lie also met with representali\'CS or the Na tional Assn . of Farmworker Orgaruzalions. a group lhnt has been rebufftd by the Labor OC'pt in the past. As a direct result of our <'OI· umns. the 0<'cupational Safety 3nd Health Admlnistrouon has also agrted to inspect five times more migrant housing nexl year. More compre hensive standards wi1l alao be issued. . people helped my government bwld no l<.'ss than ll.400 dwell ings tn thl' record tame uf90 days to house 00.000 homeless. This U.S. Agency knows of the correct investme nt of this sum as it has certifiefl that these funds ha\'l' been properly used. This 1s ''er} easy to verify \\'ITll TJI E emergency action period over, P resident Somoza. again with the generous as· sistancc of the U.S. A.l .D., has already commen<'cd a full-scale program to up~rade and tum thest' dwelltng " into permanent homes with :.ill roll\cn1enres. consistent with the originaJ plLin ning. Mr. Ande rson would nlso know. i ( he C MNI lo look into it, that m y JtO\'ernment has pro. V1ded homes to 100,000 inhabi· tnnts or nearly 50 percent of the p1•t>-earthquukc population of the copital <'t ty of M anugua. An add1 tlonal 20 .000 huusini;: units arc• <'Urrenll v u ndC'r construct ion ;i-. part of 'thC' ,:tov<'rnment " com prt•hc n s 1\l' plan to provitlc further houst>s f<1r the IO\\C'SI in<'ome S<'rlor'i of the 1>01>ulacc c; 'ILLERMO SEVl f.1.1\ SA CASA Am bus1>1uJor of N1curu.:ua P~• lnr r •fltaenf To the Editor : Hegardln~ lh(' Afgh:.m story. "Lassir Com e Home·" AAain we sec an a nimal tragically lost. confused. amonJ{ .stranaers. whose life would haw been over. Literall y thousands or lost animals pai.s through Or anAe County Animal Sheller yearly. In most cases, had the anJmal been wearing a license and idcntifica· lion ta~. the owner and animal would be happily rf'u nitcd. Too many pet owners feel their pet will never run awny. A visit tn the shelter denies that. Please. dog and cat owners. spend a small a mount of money for an l.D. tag available through Quo tes Rights ituar;rnteed un<ler the t;,S, <.:onl(litution "do-not cn('(>m pass the riAht to bath<' in th<' nurtl' ot the Cap(' C'otl S.-:1shore ~o tion;it Pttrk ·· The 1st l '$. Clr<'ult Court or Av11f':als in Hoston, in UJlholdtnA a i':ntion~l Park Sen•lcc ban on skinny dip· iung, What about t he continu1nA energy crunch ? As usua l. the only ones beini:t crunched are th<' con- sumers. :\1 ARCIA WI LLIAMS Poodle Pat. To the Editor: This letter is regarding the arl1· rte about Pookie the Poodle, which appeared in your paper July 15, written by Anne Cooper. The r esponse to Pookic's dilcm· ma <a lost pooch whohndohvlous· ly recently given birth to <i litter o( pups by a Caesarean section I wa!. overwhelming! My neighbor. Sue !\tiddlebrough. and I rccci,·ed :ip proximately SO phone calls with offers or food. new homes for Pook1e. as well as mon<'lary dona lions to help pay for her nccdecl surgery. WE WISH to inform you and your readers that, with their help, we were able to have the necessnry surgery performed ,·cry successfully. Shl' is r e· cupr ratintz nic<'ly. We also h:ld enouith money lcfl O\'cr after the :.urs.il'l'Y to have Pookicspuyt·d. We hacl informe<I the Animnl Assistance League that 1f an~ monc-y waj\ lefl alter lhc cyi.t wu !I rcmo\•ed that it would he donatell to their or~anlzallon. They told us instead to use thl' money to hO\'(' her spayed, which has bcendom• . Thanks to e veryone who hd11t•d resolve Pookle'i; many problems . It turned oul she hacl four OWn<'rS in f~tlr weeks beforc• turn in!'( up ut my home. Pooki<' now has n permnne nt home here with my family . She won't lack for IO\'t' unc1 allention in s11ite of the fol•t w(' hn\'e three \'l'ry small r hlldrt'n and twl) other dogs DOl..01n ::s SHA y Fcdrr lew f'ri.-nd• To the F.ditor : In the .July 2:1. lssut> of tht.> Dally Pilot, Mr. Don 7.. Miller. of the Of'pt. or llcolth, was quoted as sayinl(. "There has been considerable con- trover sy around Fairview. in· \'Olvlng two different groups of parent5." As president of Falrvlt'w Fam ilies a nd Fricndis. the l.700·m('mber organiiatlon or pnrcnti, and frie nds of the Fair\'1cw <'lic:lts, we are C<'rtaln· ly not aware or any ot her ho11pitol-wirle "group of f)8rl'nL~" t1\ Jo"nlrvlew. and wo fccl \hot Mr . Miller's s tatement. lhcrc(Or(', could l~a~ to misconceptj_on.<1. Jn addition. we arc Ct'rtt1inl y not aware t h at 1-'a ir vlc ~ bers to be significant. · The changes for the good thut han• orl'urred ut F'a1n·1ew dur· int? Dr. Toto's tenure cannot bl' denied. and in our opinion. thl· swte has foolishly prrmiLtecl Uw loss or a n extremely cap~t bh· medlcal d irector uncl has shown litlle re~ard ror thC' f'111n IC~ clients by this action WARREN J\. SNO\\' Lo8"·~od F '~"d To the Editor : With food shortaAe~ becom1nl( more serio u s everywhe re. could n't you do something lo pro· mole the manufacture ~ind sale of grapefruit marmalade, making use of the millions of tons of gr apefruit hulls which are now be· ing thrown out to rot'> They make ii tn Argentina. they make it 1n Jsruel. but I am sure no one m akcs it in this coun· try . llERF. IS u potcnlrnl rcsourc<' available frl'e throuf(hout tht> Southwest und in 1•1oricla. I prl .. fer the Ar~entrne it rupefruil marmalade to Lhl' oranitc pro· duct it has more of the tan~ of the Se\'illl' oran ~l' produ<'t, prl!· rl•rred by <'PiC'ure!'. 1t may take :.i lttlle promot ion I<> ~et it sturt{'d. but ('011s1dl•r how ottrurllV(• tlw rl't:lil pri<'I' Rhoulcl tw. with the low coi.t of th1• in i.1rl'dit•nt~ • If wf' woul<I look uround 001 country with un 1nq11lr1ng <'Yf', I w;i~er we would rind mun~ V<.'llt•tohl<.• 1>rod11Cls. now c·on . id ·rPd worthlcK~. which could be• conv<:r ti.'(l Into low <'OtH nour1shrn~ Coo<!. l"RANK KLOCK ORANGE COAST DAILY PILOT llobrrt N. W1fd, IJubl1.•hrr TllOIMI K t!fUfl, 1'.'d1tor Horbnra Krr1b1d1, ed1tor101 1•oae E:dltor The edilorlal fl81lC o( the Ds lly Pilot seeks to Infor m ond stlmul3le re3d<'rs by prescnt1n1t on this page diverse commentary on topics or interest by syndical· t'd colu mnlst11 and cartoonl.\lt~. bv prov1d1n11 o forum ror reade,.S· \'ll'lo\S and by prescnt ln11 this new•pnpcr's opinions and id<'n on rurrenl to_elrs. Th4' rditoriol 0pfnion:o. of the llalry J•lfol appear t)flly In the editorial column 11t the lOJ.) nr the page. Oplnfon11 CX• r>ress('d b> the <'Olutnnl!1ts und tort1.winlist~ nnd letter "'i1ters ore lht'lr o"'·n and nu C'ndor!Wml"nl ()( their Vit'W!I by tht Dally ruat i.hould be lnfl'rred. Wednesday , August 4, 1976 ... Orange COast EDITION VOL. 69, NO. 217, 6 SECTIONS, 62 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA Today's Clo~lng·~ • N.Y. StoekM WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 4, .1976 c TEN CENTS \NB Wife TellS ·of Trip With 'Hit Man'.; By TOM BARLEY was Janice Robinson's Inter-strangulatfon killings -which Mra. Robinson explained that p arole f ro l\1 ti f e d e r a l had been promised two pay• l 0tt"90111y Pneuw" . rogator a nd be asked he r he said be was supposed to use shewaaterrified orherestrangcd couuterfeiting conviction and n ments or at least $10,000 each tt • A Newport Be ach doctor's sever a l times via dllferent on her. hus band, Dr. Wayne Les te r stale forgery conviction. he killed Mrs . Robinson and t-'ife who spent four days on the questions to explain why she The •elf-confessed lifetime Robinson. 42, who is now on trial "l was In a state of shock," confirmed her death for her ~with a confessed "hit man" fled with Anthony Scalise from con man, driven by a young in Judae J .E.T. "Ned" Rutter's Mrs. Robinson explained on sev-husband. lfter he told h er over the he r Big Can yon, Newport man identified in testimony as courtroom on charges ol solicit-e ral occasions. "I scootched He bas t estified that he luncheon t able that he had been Beach, home Feb. 21. Gary. then took Mrs. Robinson ingher murder. down in the back of the car changed his mind and decidect IUred to kill her spent a long Scalise, 29, first took Mrs. in her car on a circultou.s tour Scalise has explained that he where no one could see me and to help Mrs. Robinson alter ~ Cla y explaining he r actioni. Robinson, 38, to the Huntington or three counties that was de-was afraid of both Robinson all I ever saw from that posi-invited her to lunch at the !Tuesday in Orange Count y Shores mot e l in Huntingt on signed. the prosecution claims, to and police officers who might tion wu a lot of sky.'' Velvet Turtle restaurant ft\ Superior Court. Beach after be showed her a shakeoffany pursult oCScaliseor quesUon bis involvement in the ScaUse had earlier explained Newport Beach under the as· J Defense attorney Al Ramsey garrote -a corded rope used in Mrs. Robinson. Robinson affair since he is on from the witness stand that he <See DOCTOR, Page A%) ~ . Bus Bail NixedJ .. .. . KUlnap Suspec~ Plead Innocent ., CHOWCHILLA <AP) -Two men charged with \he abduction or a busload of school children appeared in court today amid a t.brona_ of reJ)Orters and curious townspeople and pleaded inno- cent to 43 counts of kidnap and robbery. ·~-~ MICROBIOLOGIST DONALD GENSEMER HOLDS SPECIMENS FROM DISEASE VICTIMS Judge Howard C. Green con- tinued ball at $1 million each tor James L . Schoenfeld and Frederick N. Woods, both 24, and turned down an attorney's plea to !'educe the amount for &hoen- feld'a youneer brother, Richard. He pleaded innocenl to the same cbarees last week. Health Officials Puzzled Over 'Leglonnalrs' DiHIH' Which KHled 22 "He is a classic case, a good undidate for ball," said at- torney William Gagan. "He sur· rendered to the Alameda Cou nty district attorney the day the ar· rest warrant was issued. Except for a charge or vehicle tamper - ing, he has no criminal record." County Pilot Suffering From Disease? By WILLIAM SCllREJBER Olli.•O>l•lrl'ii.t- An Orange County airline pilot who b<'came ill after a flight r.o~iladelp hia tale last month may be Ca 1 ornla's first case of a mysterious diseuse that has killed 2.2 people in the past week in the East. County and state health of· (iclals ar<' examining blood sam1>les taken from the pilot, whose identity and place of r e sidencc are being withheld. or riclals were notified or the uil- ment Tuesday by the man·s private physician. ' ··At this point, we are unable to say for certain if 1t is the same disease as that back East." said Or. J 1tmes Chin, state health director. "It may be a couple or days before we are able to de- termine from the samples what ls prC'scnt In this case. ··The samples were taken late In the progression of the illness so we may find it imR05slble to ·Isolate anything at lh1s point." Chin said tbe pilot. who Oies Cor American Air lines, stayed al one -Of the hotels housing American Legionnaires attending a conven- tJon In late July . Most of those who have died or the stranitc bu~ attended the con· "en lion. "This pilot start('(! feeling Ill 1111hortly ht-fore leaving the East tSt'e MALADY. PageA2l ;Trustees OK ~$46 Million ,School Budget J After o brief public hearing - iwhich featured testimony from only two teachers and no one else trustees of the Newport-Mesa ,Vnlfied SchooJ District gave fin al •approval to a $46.6 million budget CTllesd ay night. • Jn approving the budget , trustees ulso set tax rates which are about 50 cents lower than last )'ear's. Total tax bills will go up, however, because of increased I property valuatlorut and adjust- m c n t s in s tate Cin a n cin g fbrmulas. 1 The two teachers who spoke up i «i the t>Udget. Maya ~ker and . Bill Cue, were r epresenting the 'Newport-Mesa Federation or T eachen. ! Mrs. Decker questioned a new Hdioa· of the budget which lists ~allocations for negotiations with I district employes. t District officials s aid the al- •locations are allowable under lbe t ne w state collective bargaining flaw .. Charging that the district ls ••using a sledgehammer to kill a · ny," she noted that a total of 1 Sl33,377 has been set asJde for 1 neRoUaUons. inchsding half the I salar1es or Kevin Wheeler, an as- <See BUDGET, P_,eAZ> . -- Health Aides Eye Mystery Disease 11/\RRlSBURG, Pa. <API - State health official• sa.id today they don't know when they will be able to identify the mystery "'legionnaire's disease" that has killed 22 people-who attended an American Legion convention two weeks ago. State., Local Meeting Eyed Over Fairview Scbedulina of a date fer-a fae. to-face confrant.aticJD • .-itkal issues at Costa Mesa's Falrvtlw Stale Hospital was being worked out hurriedly lod•Y between the hospital's advisory board and California's chief health ofCicrtr. Director of Health Dr. Jerome F . Lockner agreed 'l\MledQ to the meeting demand issued Mon· day in a reply lo Fairview Ad· visory Boar d Chalrman Dean H. McCoy. "Lockner will definitely see us," said Board Me mber Michael Nason, of Mission Viejo. "There as just a scheduling conlllct thal ha.<1 to be worked out." Chief Issue before the seven· member board is the methods and motives behind Dr. Anu,any N. Toto's Aug. 22 resignaUon. Speaking for the advisory board after it met In a four-hour c'<ecutive closed-door session Monday, Nason said members 14•ant to know why they were not consulted on the Toto matter. /\ letter c alling for an ln- vestig a lion by California Al· torney General Evelle J . Younger has been written and will be mailed after lhe 1,;ockncr conference. <See llOSPlTAL, Piie A2) But some persons Who had the disease have recovered and that. may aid researchers ln tracking down lbe nu-like aient, atate Health Secretary Leonard ltadrmllll told a -nm con ference. Doctors also do net know how to treat lhe 122 persons still bo9pitaliJed with ayQllJloms of bi&h feve1'. congested Junp and cbestpaina. Bacbmanaald. •'Some are getting antibiotics and some aren't and that hasn't bad u errect one way or tbe Gibe', •• be •aid. 11Mre are DO alps that the out· '-'eak•uabaUAI. · A 1Z·~ear-old PhiladeJpbia W01DU died Tuesday niPt and a Pitta burgh man died early today. bringing the death toU toZ2. "The disease has not leveled off," said Bachman ... Apparent· ly both tbe number~ deaths and the number of new ca.es have in· creased and are increuing. •• More than 100 federal and state medical r esearchers have been mobilized to Identify the disease. At the federal Center for Dis· ease . Control In AUanta, re· searchen planned today to ex- amine the first cultures grown from Uuue samples taken from victims of the Illness. The cultures could provide a due. "We are ruling out nothing,'' said Dr. Waller Dowdle, director of virology at the center. "ThJs could be anythlne from an infec· lious disease to a toxin." All tM known victims ol the disease -including two boepitalized in New Jersey and one in Ne1L' York -attended or were ln some way ~ed with a state American Legion conven- tion In PbUadelpbla that ended 11 days aso. I /tlgsterv S•limarl11e Charles Hoffman, acting dis- trict attorney in Madera County, opposed the motion and said there .. is a great danger, a great possibility Mr. Schoenfeld w~ld fail to appear in court in the future," be said. He said when the younger ~bomfeld auue.nckred he was not aware he could be sentenced to life in prison without parole if convicted or the offenses. Hoffman said Schoenfeld was "very· upeet" when Green .ex· plaioed the penalties to him at his arraignment last week. •'Ta.Jclng into consideration the seriouaness of the charges, bail will Hmain at $1 million," Green said. Green scheduled a preliminary hearlnC Au1. 26 for all three. Tbey are cbar1ed with 27 counts of kidnap, covering each d the cbUdren and their bus driver. and 16 of armed robbery. Tbe robbery charges cove r clothing and other items taken from the children. Woods and the elder Schoen· feld said nothing a s Green leaned over his bench and explained they could be imprisoned for life if convicted on all charges. Schoenfeld, wearing a striped shirt and gray cordW'Oy pants. nodded. HE WOKE VP TO A SA.LE .. The ff rat caller woke me up 0 at 8:30 on Saturday morning and wan~ to buy the bike. He paid thefull price." That's the advertising success story told by the Costa Mesa man who placed th!' ctualfled ad: Bicycle, motebecane 10 speed,570. OayorNlghl u you nave wheels you want to move, caJI 642·5678. We make it euy for you to put a few words to work, In the Dally PUot. What was this unmarked submarin~ doing ocr the Orange Coast last week? It flew an American Flag, but tbe U.S. Navy refused to identify the vemel. In fact. officials at the U.S. Navy sub base in Su Diego de- nied its ex istence . Coast Guard spokesmen aaid all they knew was that a Navy sub was in the area. They couldn't explain its lack of markings. Newport Beach police spotted the sub, but said they were unsucceuful in determining WhO It Woagecl to, or why ll was cruising on t1aetr city. ' . "I want to make you aware that the first count of kidnaping or Frank Edward Ray carries with it a penally of life imprison- ment without parole, because he suffered boailynarm. 'llesald. Ray, the bus driver, cut his hand during the ordeal. Green asked each of them separately if he understood his rights at each step ot the formal proceeding. E a ch answered ··yes.'' Deputies w~e posted on roof- tops along the two blocks or Main s treet. The e ntire 12-man Chowchilla police fOC"ce was on duty. The youn~t Schoenfeld sur- rendered nearly a week before the other two were apprehended. All three are jailed in Alameda County, 95 miles to the north. Defense attorneys have hinted that a r equest to hold tho trial outside Chowchilla is a virtual certainty. Water Distri«!t Land Mesa Hikes Off er .. For 2-acre Site The water district didn't like the city's first offer, so coon- .cllmen u_pped the ante. Colta Mesa CO\lncilrnen bad of- fered '$275,000 for a two-acre landacaped park just west or the Civic ceoier, but the board of directors of the Costa Mesa Coun· ty Water District wanted $300,000 for the surplus land. Council members have now ralsed the offer to $285,000 - splitting the difference -and added a bit of sugar to what they called thelr llnal offer. Councilwom an Mar y SnWIJVood suggested that the ci- ty extend the water district's low rent for office space at city ball "for a reaaonable amount of time." The council's feeling was to keep the re nt on the 4,200 square foot office at $800 a month until the issue of consolidaUon of tbe water district wilb the city is re-, solved. Water .dialrlct otnclal1 have made It no •ecret that they lntend to move Into new headquarters on Placentia Avenue when their lease with the city expires in 1m. ''I'm concerned the water dis- trict will use these funds (from the park saleJ for &heir ne-.t head· quarters," Councilman Ed McFarland said. "I would object to that before the public can wte on a consolidation." Smallwood disagreed. ..We have no right at all to tell them how to use the money any more (See OFF Ell, Page AZ> Sclwol District Might Dump Area Faced with a potential in.nux of up to 4,000 students, trustees of the Newport -Mesa Unified School Dlatrlct tentatively talked Tuesday about takJng the Jrvlnc cout area out of district boun- daries. About one-third of the 10,000 acres of Irvine Companv land between Corona del Mar and Laguna Beach Is in the Newport· Mesa district . With plans under way for de- velopment of the area, school of- ficials have begun to sound warn- ings that the dlatrlct has no pracUcal way to provide schools for the student.a anlicipat.ed from homes bullt in the coastal area. Ray Schnlerer, who has been representing the school district in the planning process for the area, last month testified before the county planning commiuion that the district faces a severe hardship if the area la developed. School omcials estimate the population within the Newport. Mesa boundaMea woWd result In the need tor three eJement.ary schools, one middle ~hool and a hJth echool, which would cost $40 million to build al today's prices. That 'Quake' F ahe A.lann, Did lbe earth move for you this morning? Well, It wasn't an earthquake. A call to the Cal Tech Seismo- graphic Laboratory ln Pasadena confirmed that no earthquake was r ecorded on Cal Tech's sensitive equipment this morn-ing. ''More than likely it was a sonic boom,'' explained publJc relations representative Chris Orlowski. • •• Trustees were critical of the lack or attention that bas been paid the school district's warnlne by people involved in the plan- ning process. Superintendent John Nicoll agreed. "We're low on the plan- ning priority. They're more wor· ried about a colony ot rabbits on Pelican Hill than whether we can afford to put a school there," he said. Trustee Maria n Bergeson Wfl'· ly noted that planners have bee,) <See DISTRICT. Page AZ> Coa8t Weather Fair weather ThunK'ay with low mornin& clouds. Coast temperaturea lbould reach low to mid 70a. Overnight Iowa down to low50s. INSIDE TODA V The CIA performed drug tZ· • periment• on umofttfng U.for· manta. and crimi"4l ""'*''· a cco rding to nt~ly dtctauifitd docurun.11. It aw tomllld to .,._ drugs °" rtn.ndng POW1. Stories °" Poge .44. ' • l ' I .a I :: I c~ :l1 ., ... , :J c An eleventh·hour move ~ c.oncl'euman Andrew fhn ihaw for a detay of his second Orange County Superior Court trial pend· iAI an apptlttlte tt)W't n.1nn1 w4.1s Ormly denied todl.Y by Judge Frank DomtnlcMnl NothlS that the Newport Beach Republlcan's lawyen are await.. Ing the outcome ol an uppcaJ before the California Supreme Court, Judge OometuchJnl said he saw no reason why Jury selec· tlon could not cet under w~ to- day. While the first panel or pro- spective Jurors was on Its way to the courtroom, Hinshaw, 53, de- cided to hold a press conference in the ha llway to discuss his future political career. ·"I may not have one." he con- ceded. "But I am confident that. my first conviction on bribery dlar ges will be overturned in the iQ>pellat.e court and that I will be d eared of tho charges I race te>- ¢ay." That conviction was in federal court. He is accused in the Superior Court currenl trial of misusing county manpower and materials while he served as Orange Coun· ty assessor in 1972. It is alleged that assessor's employes worked on his congressional campaig n with his knowledge. Hins haw has been sentenced to one to 14 years in state prison on federal bribery charges stem· mini from misconduct while sen·ing as county assessor. lie is free on appe::il. Hinshaw today strongly con- demned "those who think l should resign my office for the balance or my term which ex· pires in December. "l am doing a good job for Orange County in Washington," the tame duck congressman said. .. The fact that I am.not allowed to vole or participate in commit· tee work does not prevent me from protecting my district's in· terests in the nation's capital.·· . Hinshaw regretted that he had f'ro• Page 11 I BUDGET ... sistant suilerinle ndenl, and Jean Harmon. the ad- ministraHve assistant to the superintendent. Also included in the negoUa· ' lions budget is a full·time secretary at su.sa. consultant fees of $29,000 and allocations for legal expenses of SS.S.977. District officials said the legal expenses need to be bud~eled because the eounty counsel. which handles the district's legal work~ has Indicated that he wilt not handle legal problems stem· ming from negotiations. Cue also noted that under budget allocations for the school board, an additional $40,000 was set aside for legal expenses. TONIGHT COAST COMMUNITY 'dOLLEGE BOARD -Regular ·meeting, 1370 Adams. 8 p.m. SUMMER CONCERT -steve Aker and the Third Creation play music or 50s and 60s. South Coast Village, 7 p . m. Free. "IN Jo'ASHION" -South Coast Repertory Theater. through Sun· day. 8 p.m. Also Sunday 3 p.m. TllVRSDA V, AUG. 5 UBRARV StORY llOUR Co&ta Meu Library, 10:30 n.m. ORANGE COAST DAILY PILOT J a<k R. Curlt!'f 11 .... ..,, .. ,_,_Gt_ .. ~ Thomas Kff'Vll '"""' Thomas A. MurPl\lne W,..tlfltf .. MI O\atles H. LOOS AichBt'd P. Nall ..., ........ ""-, ...... OffkK U-.. MM 1-G-•ll"fff ....... ~-"1 1"91i .. oot"-CI --· ....... y J\ltt v ,.., 11...i .. -o....•·- ~ "" 0 .. ft" 0.,,<I """''1111 ... ~ -· ...... °"' ••O<•U. 111.,;l<t!-"''"'"" ""'Off •«-M 111t tl\•M•ftO ~ttlflll f"IAY _. ,..,.-,<t. •l!M•I , .. ~161 ettfl'll•ltft •I _..,._, $1( .... (IU \ _ .... ••1d .. C.018 .... Qll_... .. !•ol>•Ct!IM-.., O•-U U -:r;:..."'.!!~~·U.-M'f, ,.....I.WY.._._ Wedn.etd.a • ,. ust 4, 1979 been a victim of what he descri~ u-"Ute ltnd « at. mosphere of 1u1pickln lbat eur· rounds anyonu in pollticg tod•Y. "But those who look for me to retire can torret it,'' be saj(I. ••A lot of people have called me a lot ol things but they can never call meaqultter." Apartment Plan Nixed By Council The doctor thought he had a re. nsonabte r equest. He said he even expected the cily council 's blessing on his ltonrovia Avenue development. · But he didn't count on a tougher attitude on hilh·denslty apartment.s by freshmen mem· hers of the Cos ta Mesa City Coun- cil. Or. Jay Needler oC Santa An a wanted to build a high density apartment complex at 1973 and 1974 Montovia Ave. The city's planning commission had turned down his request so he appealed tothecity councU this week. Needler proposed developing the complex on two 3(ijacentlot.s. His argument w as that all his netghbors had successfully de· veloped R4 complexes around him. "I see what is around me," he continued. "We ha\'e poor pco. pie, low-incomers. they are look· ing for low-cost rent, not luxury units. IC RS (medium density> ls forced upon me, it Is not going to help the elderly and will not be consistent with the area." Needler pointed to several developments surrounding his Jots that are highly developed, in· eluding one apartment complex where the individual units only comprise 1,000 square feet. Co un c i l w o man M a r y SmaJJwood interjected, saying, "You're dealing with an evolu- tion. There has been a revamp- ing or policy ... She said the new council wants to upgrade the quality of life in Costa Mesa. "That sounds lik~ec che: but those units around you e exact· ly what we are try avoid," she said "And you have to at.art somewhere." The council voted to approve nn R3 CP (medium density) zon. ing on the property if the two lots are combined~ The CP designation means the city has the right to place condi- tions on the development plans before final approval. The vote was three to one. with council members Norma Hertzog, Mary Smallwood and Ed McFarland supporting tbe zone change and Vice Mayor J ack Hamm~ dissenting. Mayor Dom Raciti ls on vaca· lion. 2·time Loser Good Deed Turm to Robbery PROVIDENCE, •R.J. CAP> -Rober t A. Gr eenway Jr. says it.Just wasn't bis day. Gr eenway, 62. ol Providence. told police he was walking home-Tuesday night wh n a man ran up. gr abbed a b ag out of hls hands and fled. The bag con· l alncd a six-pack of beer and tomatoes. A few minutes later, howc,e1-. a s~cond man brought t he bag back , Greenway said. "I saw wnat happened and l got ·our bag back." the second man said, according to Greenway. "Now gt vc me a reward." Gr eenway snid he offered the man two quart ers but the m an com plained that wasn't enough. The man then puJled out a gun and procec<ied to rob him of S130. Greenway said. Status Awaited Of Laguna Family A Fountain Valley couple watt · ed anxiously today for word from 11 relatives and friends who would have been Jn Colorado's Big Thompson River terrltorv when d e vastation struck t a~t weekend. I Related story Page A3.) Eight are from Or ange County and the fea rs were mounting, because one or the group on a cross-country trip failed to ('311 home Monday to arrange a plane trip home. Earl Northrup of 1888 Acacia E'ro• Pag~ A I DOCTOR ••• sumed name of John Foster, a Nevada realtor who was in· terested In Mrs. Robinson's Rivers ide properties. The jury has listened to tapes and telephone conversations In which a voice Identified as that of the Irvine physician dis- cussed the supposed k1U1ng with Scalise in a matter of fact man- ner. Mrs. Robinson , obviously tired after a long day on the witness stand, appeared to re- sent Ramsey's probing into the value of the couple's communi- ty property. She refused to confirm if the properly joincty own~d by herself and her husband was corr~Uy valued at the figure listed by her divor~e lawyer in November, 1975 -$2,U4,183 in net worth. : Jt was the onJy question of tbat type that Judge Rutter seemed prepared to accept and he practicaJly told Ramsey that in a hearing held outside the pr esen('e of the jury. "I don't want to bear the domes tic relations issue of Robinson versus Robinson argued In this courtroom," he toJd Ramsey. "I'm not happy about this kind of questioning because I think you might open a Pandora's box that is not con· nected with this criminal trial." The bulk of the valuation figure on the Robinsons' com- munity property is reported to be in a chain or pin.a parlors jotnUy operated by the couple St .. Fountain Valley, said today the Red Cross staggered by 82 bodies round to date -has not been able to clarify identities or the victims. "An attorney from Greeley has offered to help, but we haven't re- ceived a ny mor e word from him," Mrs. Northrup added. Northrup said friends or the family flew to Albuquerque and are expected to call with news from Loveland, Colo .• sometime today or toniJht· The missing group includes: Dennis and -Barbara Schultz. or 31672 Scenic Drive, Laguna Beach; their children. Brian, 1$, Steve. 12, and Rene, 10; a sist.er- in·law, Mary MacAuley, ol 212~ Eighth St.. Huntington Beach; the sons of Neal Schultz, or Needles -Michael, 18, and hla brother Chris, 13; and Matt Baird, 12, of Yorba Linda. They were traveling together in two vehicles on the vacation trip and were scheduled to be in the disaster area when the Oood struck. Froa Page A I OFFER .•• than we could let them tell us what to do with the park land;• ~esald. City Manager Fred Sorsabal said the rent on water district of. fices was to go up to $2,520 a month in 1977. Sorsabal said he thinks the water district will accept the new offer. Cella Trial Now On Other Side Dr. Louia J. CelJa Jr. wUt have but one defendant at his side Oct. ' when h• faces trial la Orlll8u Couty Superior Court. Former boapital controller Theodore Schiffman, S3. Santa Ana, became the second of rour original lndlctees to withdraw ftom tbe doctor's side Monday when he pleaded guUty to live or lZ1 relooy count.a. Those counta include charges o( grand theft, forgery Ind COO· spiracy. Schiffman faces a possi- ble state prison term of one lo M years whlcb could be added on'to hls recently imposed federal priaoo t.erm of two and one half years. Judge Wiiliam C. Speirs told Schiffman he will not be sen. tenced until the conclusion or the Cella Trial. The judge indicated he will U)en dismiss the remain· ing 122 count.a. Schifrman ls expected to ap. pear as a prOHCUlion witness against Cella and will receive priaon or Jail time which will run concurrenUy with bJs federal term. Appearini with him tor the prosecution will be former Mis· sion Community Hospital ad· ministrator George Louis Olien. dot!. O, La1una Beac:h. who pleaded 1ullty last week to five feloa.y counts. Judie Speln, the Cella trial Judie. aentencedOllendorf to one year in the county Jail and placed • * * Cella Judge Challenged As Bitued A motien\1eeking the removal of Judae .wftliam c. Speirs from theOrenceCountySuperlorCourt trial of Dr. Loui• J . Cella Jr. and an uaoclate Is scheduled for a he&rin~next Monday. Judge Speirs will respond at that time to defense alleaations that be has displayed bias and prejltdice ln pre.trial actions held tbws far In hlJ caurtroom. The thnaat Of tbe defense motlon ls that Judfe Speln bas reported- ly been told by presiding Judge Oaude M. Owen& that, if the t.riaJ la moved out or Orange County, Judge Speln will go with the lawyer& and defendauts lo whichever loc a lion is selected. m_a_nfu FURNITURE him on two year probation. Tho orw year term wltl run concur- rently w1th has one year fe<Mral ~Ce. Both men wcrt' round ~ullty with Cella, 51, 3nd former Mercy General Jlospltul udn"Unisltator t cphen Robe rt Evans, 31 . t oguna Beach, on felony counts t'ontalned in u Los An&eles }'edtral Gr:m<t Jury Indictment. Schllfman WM convicted of 10 counts and Ollendorf pleaded guilty to two coun~. DISTRICT •• more concerned with resou.rl'.'M such as water , sewage and even air quality. "As Tom said, It seems a kid is not as important as a H wer," she said of a com· ment apparently made earlier by either Trustee Tom Casey or Tom Henderson. Trustees acknowledged that there is JltUe they can do to change plans for developing the coastal area, but a few men· tloncd the possibility or withdrawing the dl&trict boun· darles back to the exisUnc Newport Beach city line at Cameo Shores. a·oal'd -P r ealde nl Don Smallwood s u ggest e d the possibility of starting le1lslation to have the entire 10,000 acre tract formed into an independent district. He also talked about. turning the area over to another district. The Laguna Beach and Irvine Unified school districts also cov- er portions of the coastal area. The problem, as outlined by Newport-Mesa officials, is that the district cannot reasonably expect to raise the money to build new schools. Therefore, the students would either have to be bused into schools in Costa Mesa where enrollment is declining or the ex- isting attendance boundaries would have to be skewed so those students could be absorbed ln schools in Corona del Mar. Nicoll told trustees that either option is likely to prove highly unpopular. "It would be civil war," he said. "I think Dr. Nicoll'• comment on civil war it eJtber of these plans were instituted, is on the pleasant side," said Smallwood. Drugs Blamed For Newport Man's Death before their separation last July. Other e lements ol the valua- tl o n figur e include Dr. Robinson's practice in Irvine and Mrs. Robinson's $300,000 home on Augusta Lane in Big Cai•yon. Principalicy A coroner•s autopsy bas con.- firmed that J effr ey Lynn Dauftherty~ 22, of Newport. Beach, died of a dnag overdose before his body was stuffed in n trash bin in Costa Mesa last Saturday night. llis body was round wrapped in a cardboard box last Saturday by a woman living near the trash bin at 1996 Ma pie St. ''It doesn't look like foul play at this stage or the game." aald Jn. vestlgator Gerry Thompson. "But we won't. have the tox· lcologist'J report fOt" another COU· pleorwHks.'' Coroner's deputies conf'1rmed that death waa caused by a drug overdole, but the type ol drug "used bas not been determined. Cost a titeu police located Da ueherty's car outsjde a Ctiend'sbome in unlln(ton Beach. F,..aPageAI Ramsey appeared to press Mrs. Robinson hard late in the day on the issue of the sleeping arransements in the motels visit· ed while the pa ir sought refuge in Huntington Beach and Los AnjeleR and Ventura counties. Questioning the attractive blonde witness on her statement that all she took with her from her home was a single change of clothing, SS in cash and no credit cards, he asked her It she ever made the statement to an ln- ve.11tlgator : "And then we went to be<t." . "No," Mrs. Robinson replied. "I didn't and we d idn't.'' "Well, did you ever make the statement to an Orange County In- vestigator that 'we got UI> and the n ca lled Lee (o rnmlly friend>?" Ramsey asked. Robinson was arrested Feb. 2S at· a Santa Ana service station after be allegedly pald Scalise a further $1 ,000 In a tr ap ~gint;ered by district attorney's 1nvesugators. HOSPITAL. Officers said a loaded gun fell from the doctor•s waistband as • they overpowered him near the ga.spumpS. Deputy Director or llealth Don z. Miller accepted Dr. Toto's re· slgnaUon as medical director after 14 years w hen he declined to accept reassignment t o Camarillo State Hospital in Ven· tura County. Officials of the overall parent.<;· organliation, Fairview families and Friends Inc .. and California State Employes' Association <CSEA> have reacted negativdy to Dr. Toto's departure. They said continued Improve· ment.s have bttn made in care or \he 1,110.plus c lients b,y a state or uoo. Dr. Toto, S7, w\ll be replaced by Dr . .tiJ lchael Le''i:ne• JS, on SepL l. Fro•PageAJ MALADY ••• on bis return Olght and when he arrived in Orange Coonty, he consulted bis physician.'' Chin said. "When nil the· publicity came out about the deaths and the dis· ease in PeMsylvania. he and his doctor put two and two together and reported to the Count.r. Health Department for tests, ' the stale official added. "By that lime. however, he was in bis r ecovery ghuc and ,feelin5t better." Chin said. b¥ or~. • •• ..,'949 s749 l~ 1865 HARBOR IL VD • DOWNTOWN COST A MESA PHONE 548·5131 ... Wedl\ellday. August •. 1916 OAILY PILOT A~ Viking's A.rm Jams I Faul,t Tlamrta Secontl !Test for Life Signa· I • - PASADENA <AP) -A balky robot arm on the Vtk ni l laAder haa jammed for t.he second timt-, thwartinc 1cienU1ts' efforts to make an or1anlc analysis ol the hi1hly actJve MarUan aoll that could determine lf lt holds Ute. A decision on bow to get the arm movln& a&ain wu eicpeeted today. Vlklni orflclala reported Tuetday night that the mechanical arm ual"d to cOUttt soil ror experhn enu In the lander 's sophisticated automatl"d laboratory had not completed its programed mission arter di&· glng into the M arllan surface. theor1.ted that in order for life ·to exist on Mars the rust-colored soil must contain orgaruc: molecule . The organic experl~l that w11 tt-mporarily stymied by the st'1ck arm wouJd help to dt-termine ~·ht-th er such compounds are present. MEANWHILE, VIKING scienhsts said tht-y now bl"lieve an u_nexpected abandance of oxygen r.roduced Crom tne 1.1...Uan sou ln another or Vlk· na's test cells probably wa. not the result o! life forms. The r~surchrrs said Tuesday the unexplained 1eneraUon of gas from a soil sample had almost ceased. "We are gravit ating closer toward a non· pu&.lf fl D d biological explanation" ol the gas production, said '"" • er .. a Case Rested In Pugil Death SAN DIEGO <AP> The government has rest ed its case in thi! hC'anng to determine 1f M1mne Capt. Cecil V. Taylor wall be tried on char&ei 11tcm ming from the death of a r«'ruil. MaJ John Gr ant. dt>fense C'Ounsel ror Taylor, was ex!)t'cted to comp! •te the dt'ft-n e presentation today MAJ. E RNST · A. S('hulte . who has been <'On· ducting the hearing. will then recommend whether Taylor w111 face a ieneral court·mortltl on charat's of dereliction or duty In falllnl! to instrurt and supen •)se personnel under his command Taylor is former h :1d of tho ::\p clul 1'ralnlnQ Branch. a unit for problt'm rt-eru1t11, at tho M arlne Corps Recruit Deoot. IT "'AS IN Taylor's unit where P vt. Lynn E. McClure. 20, of Lufkin. Tex .. wu.s h\jured Dec. 6 while being forced to undergo special pugll slick bouts. McClure rl'mained in a coma until his March .. ,. '• .• &ui .., •• d s ..... Actor Clint Eas twood and seven oth er in· ,·estors in a Fiji plan· talion are s uing a ninth for neglecting the Island property. T he y want th e partnership dissolved and th e cattl e . banana and pineap· pie plantations sold . plus damages from chocolate m agnate Paul De Oonenico. ONE OF THE laboratory Instruments, a &as chromatagra ph mass spectrometer . "did not re· ce!ve a soil sample today," said Vlklo1 spokesman l..arry King. The extension arm reachl"d out 9S in· ches. dug '-14> some soil and retracted about six In· rhes before at stopped, he said. Viking officials met during the night to de· termine what might have caused the arm lo jam. It had also jammed during preliminary testing, but scientists the n found a way to dislodge a pin thut blocked the a rm from moving Or. Harold P . Klein .. head or the Viking biology Lord Tho m s on of team. ''Bul we are not 100 percent sure It's not F leet, owner of an biological." international c hain 13 death in a Houston hospital. • , THE STRANGE G~ emission from the soil of newspapers in· sample probably r esulted from a chemical process eluding a number in in which surface oxygen, released by sunlight, de· California, died in a composed a liqujd food added lo the soil in the lest London Hospital lo· -;;;;ii~~=-=-~~~ FRANK BRISTOW, Viking news chief, said scientists beUeved the problem might be in a fail· safe mechanism or the lander designed to halt the arm in cast-or some related problem. The arm had previously delivered soil lo two olher exper iments using separate mechanical sequences. Bristow said that Vikinit scientists have F.aror.Was Fatal Execs Transfusion Wrong LOS ANGELES !AP! Tbl' death of Taft Schreiber. a direl·tor of l\IC,\. Inc,. who died after transfusions of the wrong type blood. was caused b) rlerical error. a UCLA llospital or ficial r eports Or. George S . Smith. director of clinical laboratories at the hospital, skid a technician 1n a blood bank. who was typing t\\O blood samples at the same time. wrote the wrong type on Schreiber's <'hart. The 68·year·old Schreiber was ad· mHtrd to I he.> hos pftal on June 3 for urolog1c surgery . I le cht.'d June 14 "The tec hnical work \\ u:. al·- <'11rat r." Smith saul in an i11ten·1C'w 'A hum<rn <>rror foul ed uµ the system." Crypf Slfe of S laying COMPTON I /\ P 1 A 76.year -old South San Gabriel woman who visited the crypts o r her late husband , dauAhter ancl son·in·law has been bludgf'oned and strangled to rleath. · p01ice say Mart ha F:dd1ngton's body "u~ found in the mortuar} after an anon\'mous tf'lephone tip. a Compton police spoke~man said. She had gone to an alcove tn the t" o st<Jry indoor mausoleum on Sund a~ ·Dla111ond0 End 1l•ked LOS ANGELES !API -Diamonds are fore\'er. but the City Council 1s hoping the same is not true of the com- muter Diamond Lane proJC'Ct on the Santa Monica Freeway. ('--_s_1_a t_e __ J The council oo a 10-4 vote asked the s tate Depa rtment or Transportation to end the project restricting rush hour use or one lane to car pools and buses. Councilman Marvin Braude said the Diamond Lanes waste time and energy and increase accidents. ,\'o-faul• o•~· ,lgaln SACRAMENTO IAPI The last no-fault automobile insurance bill of the yt>ar is dead. Opposed by insurance compun1cl' and trial lawyers. the bill would ha\'e required insurance companies to is- sue policies r_cquiring. payment or dri vers' costs tn an accident. regard· lf'ss of who caused it. The troublesome question proved to be the right to sue for additional losses Rark Ban Ruling Sougfd LOS ANG ELES tAP1 -A cit y council com m1llee \'oted to seek re· commendations aimed at controlfing sidewalk newsrack~ after 500 versons attended a hearing on the matter. Most complained that the curbside racks were unsightly, dangerous and sold publications which contributl"d to Ju,·enilc crime. . The committee asked for recom· mendaUons in two weeks. Mansion's Sale Stalled in Vote SACRAMENTO CAP> i\n attempt to put the vacant Sl.3·mllllon governor 's mansion up for sale has stalled in an Assemhly committee. but its ttulhor !lays he will try for passaJ(e a gain next week.. The bill by Srn. Alfred Alquist. D·San Jo:.e, was blO<'ked on a 4.3 vote of the Assembly Go"ernmental Organization Com m1ttee. one \'Ole short of passage. THE MANSION, a project of former Gov. Ronald Reagan. 1111.S unoccupied on a bluff above the Americ an ll1vl'r about 14 miles east of d°"•ntown Sacramento It hus been a problem for the stute ever since CiO\'. Edmund Brown .Jr ralll'<I 11 rt "Taj Mahal" and refused to live In 1t BEFORt: THE vote on the Scnate·passed bill. i\lqulst amended it so lhe maM1on and Its ll·acre site could be sold or ext'hanged . Ill-said Sacramen· to County might be interested In 11uch a deal. cell. scientists said. d a y . At first there had been speculation that the ------- emission was c aused by some life for m breaking down the nutrient. But Or. Fred Brown, a biologist for TRW Systems , manufacturer or the life-seeking laboratory packaae. said the experimental data "have almost zero chance or being a message about life ... He added that many of the scientists on the of· ficial Viking biology team agree witb him . Dll. NORMAN HOROWITZ. head or the chemical release experiment, which is looking for signs of pbotosrnlhesls by Martian organisms - among other things -said preliminary data have indicated only that Martian soil is quite dry. Cops Nab Chino Slaying Suspect LOS ANGELES <AP> -Chino police arrested a ma n early today in con- nection with the murder last May of two Catholic church members who were e unned down as they patrolled the church to pr event vandalism. mother or three. died on the eve of her 30th birth· day and on her first night of patrol. She and Padilla. a 43· year-old m aintenance man with six c hildren. were ta lking with her husband when the shots rang out. 1V Medics Face Real Emergency PALOS VERDES IAP) -The television crew for the Emergen· cy series faced a real emergency while film· ing at Marineland Pier in Palos Verdes . A scuba diver on the crew was apparently s uffering from tht! bends, more technically known as an air em· bolism . County fire de· partme nt crews rushed to the scene . and a U.S. Coast Guard helicopter rtew Nikki Amorosino. 25, to Santa Catalina Island for examination. Amorosino was found to be out or danger by doctors. Los Angeles Police In· ,·estigator Jack Jung said Chino police accom· panied by LA PD officers ar r ested Gi lber t Cordero. 23. at the Greyhound Bus terminal in Los Angeles. SENIOR CITIZENS loat Off All CORDERO WAS takeo to Chino and booked for investigation or murder. Manuella Cortez and Ignacio Padilla were killed in a fusillade of ri· ne fire May 17 as they stood in the yard at Our Lad y of Guadalupe Catholic Church. MR S . CO RTEZ, 2 Appointed SACRAMENTO (AP> -ThomH K . Beard of Stockton and Michael Glazer or Los Angeles have been appointed by Gov. Edmund Brown Jr. to the California Water Commiasion. m JU Parch•••• ' AV( ON ALL 'UllCHASts IV E.COMINC A ttMIER Of OUR SCNIOll cmzPNs SAVIN~ 'LAN A f NO COST TO YOU. All Pre·PeW IX Pro9re•1 Honored Al:Zti: " L•fte4 Offer SIGN UP NOW : Colle g e Pharmacy e , • ,' I\ , • ~ \ 1 /\ ·.~ f ,\ • •, 1 , I I • I I lf \, ,.. 1 -------- One of the •·no" votes came from committee chairman Bob Wilson. D·La Mesa, who said he did not think the state could recover anywhere near Its expenses for the m11nslon. Wepey 15C a lb. C81htor8"'Nuncana & other, cle.,,houlehold 8".mkUn. 'Ra ~uarfar f/XJcK THE NEWEST IUT HOT JUST AHOTHER STEAKHOUSE You oersonetly pick yOUr own steak from our gourmet $h0Wease. Choose the cul & tt11ckness YoU destre from OUf' Choice Eastern ~fed Beel. Salad and Potato alwlYS included. GRAMD OPEMIMG SPECIAL! WIH A NH DIHHU IF YOU UISS TMI llACT sru IAMnHtHG on• • OJ.I °' YOUlt STIAK '-cll-Mofl.4".-1 l·Z:JO "::::"I I: 6 c~ '°'" oua _.,-.a.t•NM .. _ ...... __ Mt..-Uf. CA4.U--.&- f:tl P.M.-1:11 A.M. 2531 W. Clast llwy., M•••trt teaa 141-1177 which 1nc1uaes elumfnum roll: pl• pen•. 11ozen food end dlnnor 1r'eye. dip, puad1no and meat con111nera cer1111n other clet1n, ell· 411um1num Item• e<1n be re<leetned. Cell your Center 10< d1ta11a. lrtnt It to Reynold• Aluminum Or•nte Aecycnno Plant. 210 !. MHta Aftnu• Alver.ldeF . ii) .; j > • t £ ~ ;; C> ;) ~ .-I M•tsAve. • ' KatetlaAve. Tuesd~ Saturday -9:00 a.m. · 4:30 p.m. Phone 271 for Information on Mobile Unit schedules In your area. \ • • Let'Q Oo ~ailing . . . IM llA'"""'-DAMA f'OIMT MAllC>a REMT A SAILBOAT VICTORY 21 OMEGA 14 CORONADO 23 A THltlLL YOU'LL toilVil fOAGIT • Dry ster.,. . ............ "" .... • .... Holth •lottoMCle ... i'"f ·•-.L-'""9 ..... s.i .. CLEARANCE SALE Style change and di.continued models by Adidas. limited sizes and quonitites. mm llOllTt CllL0.•99· $24.95 UYAllTAIE ... a99. UJ.95 --------. SPOITY ...... 199. S26.9S IOIY ........ •et1· $23.95 NOW s19ts ROD LAVER REG. '1595 $19.95 AMERICANA aEG. s15es $23.95 • . . . . . . . ,., ... ! -·- A 8 DAILY PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE . . ~Cross-town Route The Costa !\lesu city council will be consider ing a plan lo widen Od Mar A\'enue and fo'uir Dri\'e in the ne.ur lulurr, expunding the roads to six lanes . based .o n a re('('lll rc·co mm •ncl nlion rrom lhl' C'lt\'0S planmm? comm1'ision. · Tho cxpamuo11, \\ h1c·h has bci.'n on th cit}·~ muster p la n for se\'cruJ ~curs, would pro\'ldl' <.:ost u ;\lcsa with a tn:lJOr caM ''l'St ro ute . ur~entl v needed to r elieve lht> c ity's trnlf1c \\Ocs • , ='Je wpo rt Be uch counc1hncn r ccl'ntly killed a pro· :JX>Sal to extend lJniv<'l'~it~ Dri\'e, the exte ns ion of Del ":\Ja r , a round the l 'ppcr Bt•Y by re fusing to ~o uhead .Mtith an environmental impuct hl a tc mcnt on the pro ·ject. Un1 \'crsit~ Orin· 1:-:-.ho wn on ;1 'anl'ty of _m as ter plans. including Costa ~l esa 's, ='ie wport's and :Irvine ·!'>, as t·onn(o•cting In inc with I lu ntmgto n Beach . : Cost;1 ;\I ('Sa anrt lhC" coun ty mu~· i.t11l d t>ct \O 110 ;ahcutl with the D<'I Mru· w1dl'nin~. to l r\'lne AH•nue in :Newpo rt Beat'h. how1;1vcr. un tht• bet 1s that it IH'O\ id('!- ;a vtJ!uabh.• c·r1>i-:--lm\ n ('onn('c·tion bet ween llw a 1q mrl :aJ·('a a nd I l arh<w Houle' ant Traffic Study • Speak in g of ·traffic pla ns. the Costa M es a Cit)' :Counc il has instruc ted t he city's own pla n ninf.{ staff to -complete a tra ffic circulation study for the congested -downtown a r e3. • The council's dec1 ion to go with a n in·ho use ~ludy rathe r tha n hiring a cons ultin g fi rm is a sound :one . The re ore fnctorh uni<1uc to Cost u Mt·sa. rncludtnjt doubts rulbed O\ er wh<.'ther or not th~ Newport freeway will even pus~ throui:h lhl• r1t> The $80,000 f\.'<le rally funtkd btUl.l> '' 111 inc•ludc plan~ for u frc<!wa~-. w1thotlt u l n'<'Wtl~ but an e:\ p re sswa y, and without a frecwu~· o r l'Xf>l't.'bS\\ a> pU~b 1ng through th<' do wntown :.H·e:.a The city 's conct•rn 1s to inOH' t rull1t' throuszh <.:osta M c. a Wit h a.-, ~mall :.amount or disr uption :.ti> pos sihle . without c ulling ort traff1r to dov. nto'' n h us1 ncssc-s. It's u big tai.k. but t h~ t·1t~ ·~ O\\ll ('ll~lllel'I'" ;.1r~ the ones m os t It kel~ to cotnl! up" 1th u "nurHI olullon Hazards of Ser vice Former Cos ta :\k ba Councilrn~1n \\'1llar d J orda n must tx-ho\'ing som(' doubt~ a~ to whL•thcr h1b (':>: 1x-ricncc u:; a publi<' !)Cr\'ant ii-a ' aluablC' c·ommod it~ Tht• lll'l'h1ll'N. :.a 12-~l'<U' ·o~l<I :\1t•~a c•ouncil nwmh<.'f'. lost out 111 a c·<mtru<'l t ug-ol "ar a mong JO bu1d1:rs lor <l <'s1gmng lhl~ SS00.000 fin · 'l a l 1on pro po~ed lur tht' l'l l~ ·~ downt•m n :ir\'U 'fhl· council decide d to r l'tum :\l d .'ullol.'h and ,\~ /\odat cs ol Newport Ueach. ~aying that t·ou~t 1'1r m 0!\ pla ns c·o mple m ent commun ll~ pla n!) toi· the so-called Super Block nea r l,,1on·s Park. \'itc ~l ayor J '1ck Ham mett s aid the counc il \\('nt O\'erboard in its nttc m pt to be abo' e re proa ch by rlot hir ing a forme r council mem ber for the job. llamm elt m a y ha,·e been right or he may ha'e been w rong in this analysis . J orda n doc~ ha ' e <.':>.· tens1 \'e exper ic ncC' in fir e stat ion d esign . Councilme n figured. the city planning staff h as .the lim e and is mor e kno wlcdgable than a n outside ?·irm in cin a ly zing Cos ta :\Jcsa·~ traffic p roble ms Wha te ,·e r h i~ qualifications. h<.' must lie "onde r in~ if thvs c three t(·rm~ on lhc> c·o unt•1I 'H'l'e an '"Sl't or u lwh1li t~· '\\'ell. I don ·t •'<l/'Cj u·/wt H iii think \Ul/ .... C'<' 11t1r mr /i>r('t' ju.'t n ·lc:1 ..... <'rl :1 '"'pnrt rli.~"011111 in).! 1.111uhl 11f ti i1•t! 11\ 111).! o/Jie<'t~1 • c .. I !~at11ral Tra11q11ili:er Figure s Reveal ~ar Gloon1 y Gus Let's Keep the Green Fields Threat (SY DNEY H ARRIS ] · Most people ha\'c no not 11111 ol ·what Sau\'y h:is c·alled "the t<·rn ble power of the t'\l>Onenlial · I I they recall the l'Xponentiul al ;111, it Is only us a vu~ue term from high.school m a t h Here is u simple.-11lustratwn of what is forgoU('n, 1f t-vPr known -'iuppose ·ou :buy one ticket "'1li n l otter~ where o n <' • m I I Ii on • t icke t s a r c sold: Otl\'iOU!i l y your cham·e of " tn· ning is one m a million. . > S u P.iP o s e • there are two lollcries. eac·h sell· : ing a million tickets. and you buy :-One ticket in each. What is your : chance of winning both7 Not one ·in two million, or one tn 10 million, or one in 100 million. or e\'en one in a billion. It is one in a 1nUion -a m illion million t-o on<'. THIS IS the ternble power of . the exponential. It was known to ~mtiquity ; recall th<' mathemati· : clan o ( legend. who requested a ·sultan to repay him for a r!rcat favor hy "m<'rt'ly" Al\'in~ him 1t chessboard of r orn J?r ain The sult an "as to put one 1-,'l'aln of corn on the f1ri;l squar<' of the bonrd. two on th\• se<'ond. four on · the third. anct so forth, doubhnit : eac h square to the fi4 l h. Of : r our:i;e, the sulta n quil•kl y l<.'arnctl that there was not ('nough corn on · the whole e<>rth to sat1sry this 1h'· mand. Whol doe!' .111 llm; mean in J>r:tct iral tC'rms'! It menni; that most of us h ave liWc idea of thf' strc nAlh of a Acomctrlc Jlro ~r<'llsion. Thul'i. un ;mnual rise or three Jll'rct"nl 1n a population Isn't wE'sLc;ide Costa Mesa a b1~ enouf!h eyesor e without lheweekl~ dcl l\·cr~ ofadd1 · t1onal trash in plastic bng:. ~c alt ered a ll o,·c·r th1• s treets ? llfl w a bout somc litter laws·• ~Et\TNIK o_, Gu• t•"""•"O M• ,......,_ i., .. ~-................. , ....... ... •I•"" et IM ""•~•"'· SeH ,_ '"4 _ .. le o ...... , Ov>, O•lly ~11414. scC'ms a small figure yet the population will nearly double in a gt'nl•ra tion at th is rate . The ~ame. OITours <>. Is true of 1nf1a· t1011 fi gures. A TABLE showing lhe increas - ing popul ation or the world gives a most dram atic example. Al the time of Christ. there were about 200 million people living on the earth. It took one thousand years to raise that figure to 350 million people. Then It took only mo years to add another 200 m imon by 1650 or so. Then it took only 100 years to add 200 million more people. Next. in the century between 1750 and 1850, som e 450 million were udded. And in the century from 1850 to 1950, the world's popula· tion more than doubled. from 1.175 million Lo 2,510 million. •·I NALLY. in th e quarter-century between 1950 and 1975, about 1,500 million people were added. bringing lhe total to 4,000 million. o r four billion in- habitants. Even with our reduced birth rates today, this will double a~ain soon after the turn or the century. I dirt not st art out to write about po1lul at1on. hut ahout the decep- t l\'e qu alt t~· of a "r a te of J;(rowth ... Fi~urcs that seem. al first blush. s m all and unimpor- tant can bt>ur the m06t ominous implications for the near future. The terrible power or the (.'X· ponenlial m ay threaten u~ nlorc thon the I I-bomb. To the E dito1· Our feehni.: !lbout turml:rntl ancl ll<'lds in Southl'rn Or:ini.:t• Cnu nf\ I~ backed up h~ ;.:rO\\ 1n j.! Uf' un an oranAe ranc h nnd !Jt•ini.: ltf\'1011~ residents of thb l'Ount~. Whlll· not 11ppos('d lo c.·x1>ansion or orclt·l'I~ growU1 or hous es being hwlt. \\'c• enjoy s eeing the ~rl•cn li<'lds ol ,·egetables or berries m U1e Foun ta in Valley and I lunt1n~o11 l.Wa<'h area where we Ii vc. But how long can the hold·outs on these farm s keep from bcinJ! gobbled up hy bu 1 IClers'',llow long ca n they res 1st the lug ilnllar~ p:11d by land companie~ TUE GREEN fteJc.ls :-.panntnJ! the area next lo our rreewiws gives the reeling of open space a~ WE'ii as lovely gr een \'iew of f1clcb soon to be harvested. This lot· ally grown ptoduc<' and fruit helps to keep our cost of groceries do" n a:. well as revenue to the local farm stands ne arby the residential area. Where do we continue to gl'l these supplies if all the land is sold ror building, Other than \'aJle~ S IO central Cali fornia and Imperial County? In a busy and hectic schedulc, 11 is a welcom e si~ht to come upon a lush field with people pickml! crops as we return from a busy work day. 1t ucts lik<' a tran quilizer without the harmful si<fe effects and m akes us feel as 1f "l' have the best o( two worlds ;igriculture nnd the husinC'ss rnm munity. CAN'T WE do something 11s :i ~roup of conrerned c1t1zens to ke<'p the small produce a<'rcs 01 farmland 1n t he South1'rn OranJ!t· County a r eu a nd t)(•lp 0111 erological t•nncl 11 1on, our hC':ilth and continue l<l cnJny 1 hi' alum dance of fresh produc·<' 111 our m;irkets? Is there Jnyont• C'l~e oul there who UJfrC'eS ;met (t"i"IS U:o. \\It' <lo nhout our few rl'mo1n1nJ.t field:. and s m uJI fo rms " ROAF.RT I' BAH1'01. lli\HBAHA A. R/\f{TOI. The Bureaucrats Collle First WA.SlllNOTON ThcAmeM an taxpayers conti:i butt-J:enerously to a \•arlety of worthy causes. Oul the deprived und the depressed. : the oged and the ailing, u11ually wind up merely with ancillary • benefits. ThC' renl bcnen claries. · fn \':lrlably. arc the burcaucrali; . who manage the programs. They 'pa y th m sci v cs f(e ne r ou11 s al ar ie s . p rov I cit> t h e m s <' 1 ,. cs ran<'v of£ice11 and "sorround · l h<'m !!cl \'e s 'with S <'<'· r t.·la ri c ~ and s ub ord i n a t es. • The busy ·bureaucrats • then form committees , hnld meetings. conduct s tudfes. write reports and Issue stateme nts . • After all this hus Ileen paid ror . : only a tiny fractlon of the money ; is left for the purpose thal was ill· ~tended. We have taken up the . t y pewriter. f or e:rnmplc . to champion the mh~rant farm workers who toil under mi~cn1· (J AC K AN DERSON) ble conditions to make America lhe best fed nation In history. We sent our reporter. Hal Bernton. to llve and work with them. lie round them living In squalor. ex- ploited by the planters, neglected by the 1tovernmenl. lgoored by society. THE BUREAUCRATS wouJd ne ver let :m opportunity like this ~o by. At the Labor Dept .. hurcaucrat.s wangled sa> mUJion from the taxpayers this year to help the migrant laborers out oC the stream and to place them in career jobs. The bureaucrats sat :it their desks and. with a great shurning or pa pers and clacking Of l)'pe\\Titers. drar'led Pr'OfCl"Ams to r e s c u e the lowly stoop laborer s. Yet these bureaucrats had never even met a migrant worker. The results are now in for the rlrst halt of fiscal 1976. A stagger· ing S30 m llllon. of course. went • for the care and comfort of lhe' bureaucrats . Our l'Olumns ubout r<.>pnrll'r Bernto n's c xpcn cm.•t•s among th e mi g r a nt wo r ker s . me anwhile. brou~hl down an avalanche or letters up<ln the Labor Dept. The 'mail was so heavy. secretar ies had to u~<> a rorm letter to rf'Spond to all the Inquiries. THIS H AS produced som e favorable r esult11 . L a bor Secretary William J . Usery met with Agriculture Secretary Earl Butt. to discuss what the Ad· ministration could do to help mi- grant workers. Our sources say User y sincerely wants to press for collective bargaining rights for farm workers. He also met with representa tives or lh • Na llonal Assn . of Fa rmworker Organizations. a group lhal has been rebuffed by the Labor OepL in the past. M a direct result of our col· umns. the Occupational Safely and Health Administration ha~ also agreed to inspect fi ve Um<.'S more mi9rant housing next year. More comprehensive 11tandards will also be issued. ( MA ILBOX , I 11d.-r11ot1 ('r i l i c· To U1e Ed •tor: J Mr. Jal'k Andt•ro:nn ~ l'<llomn ot .lul~ 20 s et>ki. 111 1hs1·rl·d11 tlw ··1.u~ Amcr1 C'u~" lm11s111g pro IN'l. apparent!~ nbh' 111t1 .. 111 th1· fact thut ttu s "as 0 111· ol lhl' 1 1• markab}(' ac-hiewm1•11t" or I la• :"'1curagua go,crnnwnt 111 the im mediate post·<'arlh11u11k1• 1wruxl Th<' SJ m il h on dollar-. "<trm hc ar tt.>dly gi ven h~ l ht• c .~ A g e n c y f o r I n t e r n :1 t 1 o n a I De\'elopml•nt a nd tlw J\mcn can people helped my ,l.!O\ernmenr build no less than 11.400 d"ell ings In the record time of !JO days to house 60,000 homl'less. This U.S. Agency knows of Uic C'orrect inves tment of this sum us 1t has certified that these fun<lli ha' t· been properly used This 1s 'c•r) l'LISY to ver i f~. WITH TllF. e mergcnc' <icllon period O\'er . Presidl'nt Somo1.a. again with the generous HS· sistance of the U.S. A.f.D .. ha~ already com me need o full ·scall• program lo upgrade and turn these d welhnfo?S into per manent homes with all convenience!). cons iste nt with the original plan nlllE:. Mr. Ande r son wo uld a l s o know. if he ca red to look into it, lht1l m \ J:O\Crnmenl has pr o· \ 1ded homL'S to 100,000 inha bi· tunts or nc>3rl y 50 f)('r cenl of the prc-earthquukt.• population of tht• capital city of Managua. An add1 ttonal 20.000 housin~ umts <1rl' currently under c-onstrueuon as µnrt of the governm<'nt's com µr che ns 1 ve pla n t o 11rovidc• further houS<'S for I hr low<'i-l in Mme S(lt'I ors of the ll(>Plll a('t' tit ' 11.1.t-:H ~10 Sfo-:Vll.LJ\ SAC.:AS1\ 1\ mha ssailornf Nirarn~w11 f 'olr D.-al ro the Editor Th i~ yr a r 's Oran.I.!<' County Fulr was a n cnormou!\ i,ucces~ fnr ull or th<' pt•ople invol\•t•d unrl prO\ e<I t hut 1t ri tis u ma 1or net•d for lht• pt•oph• of the coonty. We art• of course ver y happy to ha\C' ha d a n•eor<I a ttendanc<' a nd to have hrou12ht plt·u~ur(' to ~uch u lar Jte numb<'r of c1ltL<'M . Ttw only nc~utiw "~IW<'l or th11'i y1;1ar 's fair has b<>en thf' knowlech;e thul lh<.' noii;c from the foirgrou11<.1:. hus c·aused ells <'<>mrort to lhl' rc11idt•n ts nf Mesu llf'I Ma r. Wl• \\ant th<'m lo kno~ that wt• ha\<' located the sourc«· or the prolJkm a nd lh~1t 1t wlll lw rorr.e N NI hy Fa ir lime> nf'xt ) ear. or course. we ;tpologite a nrl hope tha t the nexl fair will be an asset to the residents or Mt>sa Del Mar as well ns lo the rest of tho county . ' .I. F.. PORTF.RFIELD General l\lana2cr V"falr Cltargr To the Editor· t deplore the s ptrlt of l\I r Pall· 1n g 's le tter 1n the J ul)' 2S l\13llbnx. lie seems to in(t ica te that on adult i~ not responsibl1• tor his a ction:.. 11<' furthl'I t•ast' as persions 1>n a m~11\'~ drnn n·tt•r bl•rausc he has h1•1•11 111 llw 'l'I'\ ICC' I rl'Sl.'111 thli- WF, st-::\U a m an our lo 1111 .1 1nh and !'.l'I'\ t' hjl' cmlllll'' anti <lo our chrt~ \\ ork. ltll'n wt· 111tli!'a1t hC' ha s u bt•nt for murcli.'r I am an t'' :\l :mm· and in tlll' :u \\.'llfio that I hU\t! bet•n out I hU\ (' neH·r had worse th;.1n a trulfl1· ttckt•l Thl• Riblc l'Om m,mcls scrvi<.:l' l11 one's ('ountn . \\'c also send lh1• 11ohre to do our ch rl\' \\llrk for u~. i.huuld "l' al:.u condemn lbc.m a~ l.l\:ing 1nclmt.•tl lo lit• k1lll'rs·? t-:n\'ironmcnt docs not shapl' :1 man A real man shapes his Pn '1ronmcnt Many of our W l':ll leaders we re cx-scr\'1cem1•n. All ot us ha ve a <·cess to ituns . bul \\i.' arc a<lults und responsilllc for our own act ions Others might help us b~ b<•ing goo<I nl'lghbors. hut they an • not respcmsihle for our art 1oni:: hefon• < ;od or thl' I ;m JAM ES BOLDIN<: Pt)od le Pal11 To the Editor This letter 1s regardin~ the arlt d e about Pook ie the Poodlt•. which a)lpeared in your paper July 15. written b~ Anne Cooper The rcsp()nse to Pook1c·:. diJem· ma (a lost pooch whohud obviou~­ ly recently given birth toa litter or µups by a Caesarean section 1 was overwhelming! My neighbor , Sue :\1iddlebrough. a nd I received ap- proximately 50 phone calls with offers or food. new homes for Pookie, as well as monetary dona- tions to help pay for her needed l'iurgery. WE WISll to inform you and your readers that, with their help, we wer e able lo hav<' th o neces sary surAcry pcr rormed q~ry suC'cessfully. She is re c-uperatin~ nlc<'IY. We also hutl enough money left over afte r I ht• surgery toh:w c Pookie spuycd. We had lnforml•d tht• Anlrn al 1\s111stance l,c•u.iuc that 1f am money was left afll'r thl' t ysl w11:. removl'd th al 1t would IK' donatNI l•H heiroq :nnl:r.ation. They told us instead to u11e lht' mon<'y to hav•· her spayed, wh 1ch has bcm dorw Thanks to c' eryorw who helped n •soln• l'ookw's many problcm!'I. It turned oul sh1' h11t1 fou r owners in rour weeks b<.'for <' turn mg up at my home" l'ookll' now hos a perm•ine nt home here with my family. ~he won't lack for love and ul\<'ntion In spite of the fa<'t wt' have three Vl'ry s m:lll <'hildren nnd twoottwr dous. 0 0 1..0rt t:S SllAY f1 afr.,fe ae f 'r l.-nd• To the Editor · In th\' Julv 2J. l'l~ll • ot thl' Dally P i lo t. Mr Don 7.. Miller . or the Uept. or ll<'alth. was quoted 011 suylnl(. "Therr hus been conRldera bl c con Lto versy around .,°<lfr view. in- \'Olving two d ifferent JtrOl.lfllil of parents." As presid ent of Fairview Fo m1lieft and Friends, tho l,700·m ember organlution of parents a nd friends or lhe Fairview c lle;1lS, we are certain· ly not a w a re o( a ny othe r hospltal·wide "group of porenL'I" at Fairview. and we reel that Mr. Miller's s tatement. therefore. could lead tn misconceptions. In addition , we arc certninl)' no \ aw a r e that F'nln.lew Fam1hl':o. und 1-'nl•nib ''as u pal'l of :111' • t•onlttl\l'I':.~ uruun<I 1'':11n ll'''. ' unleo!'. ... 0111 :.tl1('i"r1· ,1ml fl'l'<'al1•cl \ 111(0\•tl '"Pfl"r l 111 our nwdtt al 1t11·1·1·1t11 \\u' t'lln ... 1n11·tl l tt lt t· t 11nlrn\1·r~1:.i l Fr .1nkl~ \\ 1• at 1• a11i.:1·rl'tl :111d rathc1 IJl'\\ il1 h·r1·tl II~ I ht• l>l'J}arl ment of lh':t ltli'~ .1l'1 11111 t\S rt\Kt-:NTS \\Im h:.sw hml llal' plt.>:.i:o.un• ol \\ orkinit '' ilh Dr Toto ~<inc·1.1tl11·11wcpt10n of our or 1-(:llll?.Utton SllnH' 12 \ l'ars ago,~\' ha\'e found him to Ix• most :-.up pnrt1n· ol our efforts and c>. lrt.>mely. fu1r lh ·1rnrrhn1o: h1~ m;111ul(l' m1•nt. '''t• <:nn~1dl·r t ht· poi-;itiw fn•db<1l·I. "''' ha\l' hutl n\'er th<' \ t'al':r-1 rom the tl\'f.'I' \\hdmtng 0maJt>rll~ O( llUI mclll· hers to be s1j:(nificant The chu n~es for lhl• good th.1l have occurrC'd at Fa1r v1t•w <lur- ing Dr Toto's tt.•nurt"' cannot ht• clenicd. and in our opm1•in. lh1• state has foolishly 1>1•rmllte<I ltll' loss of nn cxtr<'rncly 1·ap:1bll' medical dir ector und has !iho~ n little regard for tilt.' fttin icw dients hy this a c'tion WAR Rfo::\7 A. SNOW Ltue •t•o 11f f 'ood To the Editor With food shorlut.:cs hecomin).! mor e s e rio u s eVl•ry whe r e , couldn't you do so mething to pro- mote the manufacture and sale ol grapefruit ma rmalad<•. makin~ use of the millio ns or tons or gra pefruit hulls whk h are now be- ing thrown out to rot? They make it in Argentina . they make it in Israel, but l am sure no one makes 1t in thjs coun. try. HER f: IS u polC'nl111l resourco a vaila ble free throughout the Southwest and in 1·1orida. I pre- fer the ArAe nt inc l(rapefruil marmalade lo th<' oran~c pro- duct -it hus more of lhc tan~ or the Sevillo oran~t~ product, pre· ferred by epicure s It may take a lillle promotio11 to i(et it started , but comlidcr ho'v attract ive the rel<11I prH·1• shoulcl I be. with th(' low \'O!'ll or th{' In• l(rcdients! 1 If wt• would look nround our rnunlry with a n 1mtu1 rin~ c•yc. C WUAer w t• wo uh1 find m nny \'cgctnble prod ur t11. now con• 1 s1de rcd worthlCHS, which could 1 ht• (•onvC'r ted i nto low-coiit • l nounshinM food I !-'HANK KLOCK OltANOe COAST DAILY PILOT R11bfrt N. Wttd. l'ubll3hPI' Thnmt111 #<4lr.vll. ~dllor IJarbara Krrlblct1. ,.;ct11onal f>ag(' £dllor Thr t'li1tori11l pug~ of the Daily l'llol Heks lo Inform and 5t1mutn1 • rct1dt'r.1 lly f>rt'8enlinit QI'\ thl3 p~~e diverse comment3ry fin lopica ol lnter('lll by 11yndico~ ed columnists and ca rtOt.11usts. by providinJt 3 rnrum for re..<tcrs' views and by presenting thla newspBJwr's opinions and Ideas on current topics. The t'ditorinl opinion3 of the Delly l'llot ap~ar only In lhe edltor1al column 1t lhc top or the puge. Opinions eic· pressed by the eolumnists and r•rtoonlsls and lcller wrtlers are tht"lr own and nQ l'ndorscment ar •heir virws by thl' Dft1ly Pitnl hoold be lnftrrcd. Wednesday. August4, 1976 ) Oi-ange Coast EOITJON '*· ',.I VOL. 69, N6. 217, 6 SECTIONS, 62 PAGES - , " ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA Tod11y's Clo~lng N.Y. Stoek~ N TEN CENTS :NB Wife TellS of Trip Witli 'Hit Man:· By TOM BARLEV O' , ... 0.11, ...... - A Newport Beach doctor 's wife who spent four days on the run with a confessed "hit man" after he told her over the luncheon table that he hud been hired to kill her spent a long day explalnin.: her actions T ueNday an Ornnge County Superior Court. Defense attorney l\J Ramsey was J aflice Robinson's inter · rogator a nd h e asked h er several limes via differ e nt questions to explain why she fled with Anthony Scalise from h e r Big Canyon . Newport Beach. home Feb. 21. Scalise. 29. first took Mrs. Robinson. 38. to the Huntington Shores m ot el an Huntington Beach after be showed her a garrote -a corded rope used in strangulation kllllnp -which he said he was s upposed to use on her. The self -conresscd lifetime con man. driven by a youn~ man ldentUied in testimony as Gary, then took Mrs. Robinson in her car on a circuitous tour of three counties that was de· signed, the prosecution claims, to shake off any pursuit of Scalise or Mrs. Robinson. Mrs. Robi1U1on explained that she w as terrified of her estranged hus ba nd, Or. Wayne Lester Robinson, C2, who ls now on lriaJ in Judge J .E.T . "Ned" Rutter's courtroom on c barees of solicit · ing her murder . Scallse has explained that he was afraid of both Robinson and 1;><>lke officers who might question his Involvement in the Robinson affair since he is on p a r o l e fr o m a fed e r a l couuterfeltlng t!OOVlction and a stale forgety conviction. "I was In a state oC shock," Mrt. Robinson explained on sev· e ral occasions . "J scootched down in the back or the car where no one could see me und <lllll I ever saw from that posi- tion was a lot or sky." Scalise had earlier explained from the witness stand that he had been prom is ed lwo pay. ments of at least $10,000 each lr he killed Mrs. Robinson and confirm ed her death for her husband. He has testified that he changed his mind and decided to help Mrs. Robinson after he invited her to lunch at the Velvet Turtle r estaurant i n Newport Reach under the as· CSee DOCTOR, l'age A2> • Bus Bail Nixed Kidnap Suspect.s Pkad Innocent .,. ......... CHOWCHILLA <AP > -Two men ch11rged with the abduction of a busload of school children appeared in court today amid a thronJ[ of repor ters and curious townspeople "3nd pleaded inno· cent to 43 counts of kidnap and robbery. MICROBIOLOGIST DONALD GENSEMEA HOLDS SPECIMENS FROM DISEASE VICTIMS Health Offlclals Puzzled Over 'leglonnalrs' DfH•••' Which KUled 22 J udge Howard C. Green con· tinued, bail at Sl million each for James L . Schoenfeld a nd Frederick N. Woods, both 24, and turned down an attorney's plea lo reduce the amount for Schoen- feld'• younger brother, Richard. He pleaded innocent to the same char ges last week. "He is a classic case, a good candid ate for bail," said at· torney William Gagan. "He sur· rendered to the Alameda County district attorney the day the ar· rest warrant was issued. Except for a charge of vehicle tamper· ing, he bas no criminal record." County Pilot Health Aides Eye Suffering • From Disease?. Mystery Disease Charles Hoffman. acting dis· trict attorney in Madera County, opposed the motion and said there "is a great danger, a great possibility Mr. Schoenfeld would fail to appear in court in the ruture." he said. By WU.l.1101 SCUREIBER 01 lht O~tly Piiot $1•H /\n Oran~e County airline pilot who ht.•ram<.• ill after a night rom 1mntetp lh :rt-:rrc -tm; month may be C111irornlu's first t':lSC of a mysterious di:.ease that has killed 22 people in the past wcl'k an the East. Countv and s tnle health of· fic1als 'an• rxam1mnA blood samples taken from the t>ilot. whos<' identat~ and place• of re Sldl'l\l'l' are bl'tnj.! \\ 1thhl•ld Or ricials were not1f1cd or the ail· ment Tuesday by the man's pri\'atr physician "Al this point. we are unable to say for certain if al 1s the :;ame disca. e as that back F.asl." said Dr. James Chin. stale health director. "It may be a couple of d~·s before we nrc able lo de· termme from thc :.amplcs what 1s prt'sent an this rasr. "The samples wcrc taken late in the progrrssion of the illness so we ma)' find 1l 1mµoss1ble to Isolate anything at this point." Chin said the pilot. who naes for Am rracan Aarltncs. stayed at one of thr hotels hou:.ang American l.ei.:1onna1n•s allemlmg a tonven· lion 111 latc July. Most of those who have dat'd of the strangt• buc uth>ndt>d the con· \'COiton. "This p1lnt ~t nrtNI fc-eltnj? ill shortly hcforl' ll'U\'tng the East (Sec l\1 A LAD\'. PaJ{t' A2 I Trustees OK $46 Million School Budget Aftcr a br1<'f public hc:mng which foaturcd testimony rrom onl v two tt'achers nnd no onr else -trustees of the Ncwµort Mesa Unified Sthool District ~ave fanul tlpproval too $46.6 million bud~ct Tuesday night. I n app r o vin g the budget. trustees ali10 set tax rates which are about 50 cents lower than last ,·ear's. Total tax bills will go up, however , bee a use of inc reused property valuations and adjust· men t s In s tate fina ncin g formul as. The two teachers who spoke up on the budget , Maya Ottker and BUI Cue. wer e representing the Newporl·Mesa 'federation of Teachers. \ Mrs. Decker questioned a new '6ec\ion or the budget which lists ia.!locatlons ror negot.iatioos with 4<1istrict e mployes. a District officials said the aJ. :locations arc allowable under the ,new state collective bargaining la•. • Charging that the district is "usin& a sledgehammer to kill :i Oy." she noted that a totaJ or S133.3n has been set aside for nego\,i alions. including half the , salaries or Ke,•in Wh~ler. an as· <See BUDGET, Pagei\2) HARRISBURG. Pa. <APJ - State health officials said today they don't know when they will be able to identify the mystery "eg10nna"'o'i d isease''-lbaLllas killed 22 paople who attended an American Legion convention two weeki ago. Bal Isle Man Dies in Swim Off Newport ECforts by two beach visitors and Newport Beach paramedics proved futile Tuelday af\.emoon when a Balboa Island resident s uffered a ratal heart attack while swimming in the channel north or the island. The cause of \he death of Glen J . Weir, 56, or -Coral Ave. bas been a tlributed to a heart attack by the Orange County coroner's offi ce. According to POiice, Weir was s wimming oH the Apolena Avenue beach when he apparent~ ly suffered a m assive attack. Robert Shaughnessy of Brea who was sunbathing on the beach said he sow Weir stop swimming. so hr dove into the water to aid him. Shaughne11sy pulled the un· conscious swimmer to the beach nnd with the aid of an unlden· t ifird passerby, administered cardao·pulmonary resuscit~tion until paramedics arrived on the scene. Medics continued resuscitation attempts while laking Weir to lloag Memorial H08pil.al, where he was declared dead ~ arrival. Weir 's wife told police thal her husband had a history or heart llroblems. But some penons who had the disease have recovered and that may aid researchers in tracking down the. nu-like agent, s tale Health_ S ecretary Leona rd Bachman to1d a news' c on· rerence. Doctors also do not know how to treat the 122 persons s till hospitalized with symptoms or high fever, congested lungs and chest pains, Bacbmaosaid. "Some are getting antibiotics and some aren't and that hasn't had an effect one way or the other," he said. There are no s igns that the out·· break was abating. A 72·year-old Philadelphia woman died Tuesday night and a Pittsburgh man died early today, bringing the death toll to 22. •'The disease has not leveJed off," s aid Bachman. "Apparent· lY both the number of deaths and the number of new cases have in· creased and are increasing." More tha n JOO feder al and state medical 1·esearchers have been mobiJized Lo identify the disease. Al the federal Center for Dis· ease Control in Atlanta, re· searchers planned today to ex- amine the first cultures grown from tissue samples taken from victims of the illness. The cultures could pl'ovide a c lue. ··we are ruling out nothing," said Dr. Walter Dowdle, director ol vlrology at the center. "This could be anything rrom an infec· tious disease to a toxjn." AU the known victims of the dis eas e -in clud in g two hospitalized in New J ersey and one In New York -attended or were In some way connected with a state American Legion conven· lion In Phlladelphla that ended 11 days ago. Mgsterg Sllfiilarlae He said when the younger SCJi>enfetd surrend~ed he was not aware he could be sentenced to life in priSGD without parole if convicted of the offenses. Hoffman said Sctioenfeld was ·•very upset" when Green ex· plained the penalties to him al his arraignment last week. "Taking into consider ation the seriousness of the charges, bail will remain at Sl million," Green said. Green scheduled a preliminary hearing Aug . 26 for all three. They are charged with 27 counts or kidnap, covering each of the children and their bus driver, and 16 or armed robbery. The robbe r y c ha rges cover clothing and other items taken from the children. Woods and the elder Schoen· feld said nothing as Green leaned over his bench a nd explained they could be imprisoned for life if convicted on all cha rges. Schoenfeld, wearing a striped s hirt and gr ay corduroy pants, nodded. HE WOKE UP TO A. SA.LE "The first caller woke me up at 8:30 on Saturday mom.Ing and wanted to buy the bike. He paid the full price." That's the adver tising success story told by the Costa Mesa man who placed th'o; classified atl: Dlt-yl'le, motebcrone 10 s1>ee1I. SiO Duy or Night 11 you have wheels you want to move. call S.2-5678. We make It easy for you to put a few words to work, in the Daily Pilot. What was this unmarked submarine doing off the Oran~ Coall lut week? It new an American Flag, but the U.S. Navy refused to idenlif y the vessel. In fact, of'ficials at the U.S. Navy sub base in San Diego de- ni e d its ex i s t e n ce . Coast Guard spokesmen said all they knew was that a Navy sub was in the area. They couldn't explain its lack of markings. Newport Beach police spotted the sub. but said they were unsuccessful in determining who it belonged to, or why it was cruising orr their city. ...... --· I ''I want to make you aware that the first count or kidnaping of Frank Edward Ray carries with it a penalty of life imprison· ment without parole, be<:ause he sulf e red-bodily..h arm,..'.:hesaid- R ay, the bus driver, cut his hand during the ordeal. Gr een asked each or them separ ately if he understood his rights at,..,each step or the formal proceeding. Each answer ed "yes." Oeputies were posted on roof· tops along the two blocks or Main s treet. T he e ntire 12· m a n Chowchilla police force was on duty. ..Tbe _younULSc~eld sur· rendered nearly a week before the other two were apprehended. All three are jailed in Alameda County, 95 miles to the north. Defense attorneys have hinted that a request to hold the trial outside Chowchilla is a virtual certainty. Newport. Wants It Irvine to Remain 'Open' for Coas·t .•. . .. The Irvine City Council voted 4·1 Tuesda y to leave the door open in case it wants the coastal region between Newport Beach and Lagun1 Desch Lo become part of ll'vine someday. The council passed a resolution for the Local Agency f'ormalion Commission CLAFCJ saying that Irvine would like to be con· sidered when the commission de· cides into what city's sphere or inOuence that land should be placed . Already, Newport Beach and Laguna Beach have asked the land lo be included in their spheres, possibly paving lhe way for future annexation to their cities. Coun ci lwo man Gabr ielle Pryor cast the dissenting vote. * * * She s aid il never will be in Irvine's bcsl interests to annex the land. "Ther e's all kinds of problems • with lhat land -including drainage. fire protection and the facllhat it'& completely different. geographically from the rest of the city." Mrs. Pryor said. '1'hat's how cities fail. They get too big fo r their boots," s he added. The other council members did not say they necessarily wa nL that land within their sphere - or want It a nnexed at a later date. But In order to be considered at the upcoming LAFC hearing, t he resolution had to be passed prior to Thursday. <See COAST, Pale A2l * * * School District Might Dump Area Faced with a potential influx of up to 4,000 s tudenls, trustees of the Newport-Mesa Unified School District tentatively talked Tuesd ay about taking the Irvine coast area out of district boun· daries. About one-third of the 10,000 acres of Irvine Companv land between Corona del Mar and Laguna Beach is in the Newport· Mesa district. With pla ns under way for de· velopment or the a rea, school of· ficials have begun to sound warn· ings that the district has no practical way lo pl'ovide schools for the students anticipated from homes built in the coastal area. Ray Schnierer, who has been representing the school district in the planning process for the area. last month testified before the county plannin1 commission that the district fa~ a severe hardship If the a rea is developed. School o m cials estimate the population within the Newport• Mesa boundaries wOJ.Jd result 111 the need for three eJementary schools, one middle school and a hjgh school, which would cost $40 million to build a t tod._y•s prices. That 'Quake' FalieAlann Did the earth move for YoU this morning? We ll, it wasn't an earthquake. A call to the Cal Tech Seismo- graphic Laboratory in Pasadena confirmed that no earthquake was re corded on Cal Teeh's sensitive equipment this lllOm· Ing. "More than likely it was a sonic boom," uplalned public relations representative Chris Orlowski. Trustees were critical of the Jack of attention that has been paid the school d lstrict'swarning by people involved in the plan· ning process. Super intendent John Nicoll agreed. "We're low on the plan- ning priority. They're more wor· ried about a colony oC rabbits on Pelican Hill than whether we cui afford to put a school there," he said. Trustee M arla n Bergeson wry. ly noted that planners have been CSee DISTRICI', Page AZ ) . Coast \l'eather fair wea\her Thura<!a y with low morning clouds. Coast temperaturu should reach low l o mid 70s. Overnight lows down to low SOS. INSIDE TODAY TM CIA pnformeddrugtz· pmment1 on ¥nw'Utng fn/or· manta. and crimfllGt ""'*"· accord i ng t cr ne10l11 decla11i/I~ doc¥ments. It also t.OOnted to u1e drug• on returning POWa. Stl1fWt on Poge A4. Cl .. ., .... .. At ., CltJ .,., .... , ., ... , At A4 • • AZ OAILYPILOT N 're•P•9e ;\J DOCTOR ... sumed name or John F~t cr, u Jllf-vada rt1Uor wtlo waa In· teretted In Mu. ftobln11on'• Riverside proptrlies. The Jury hus llstenl'<I to ta1>t-~ and telephone conversations in which a voice Identified as that of the Irvine pby11 1cl•11 dis· cussed the 5\lpposed kllllng with SeaURe tn a matter ot f ct man· ... Mrs. Robinson, obvlousl y tired after a lotlg day on the wit.nns stand, apptan.-d to re· sent Ramsey's J'lrobing lnro the value of the couple's communl· ty property. She refused to confirm If the pro1>erty Jointly owned by herself and h~r husband was ~orTecUy value<l al the tli;urc h1ted by her divorce lowycr in November, 197~ -S2,114,183 In ~tworth. It was the only question or that type that Judge Ruller seemed prepared to accept and be practically told Romscy that tn a hearing held oulsadc lhe presence of the jury. "l don't want to hear the domestic relations issue or Robinson versus Robinson argued in this courtroom." he told Ramsey. "I'm not happy about this kind of que,uoning because I think you might open a Pandora's box that is not con· uected with this c riminal lrial." The bulk o f the valuation figure on the Robl050ns' com· munity property is reported to be in a chain or pizza parlors ~ointly operated by the couple before the ir s eparation last July. Othtt elements of the valua· t1on figur e i n clude Dr . Robinson.'.s praNke in Irvine and Mrs . Robinson's $300,000 home on Augusta Lane In Sig Canyon. Ramsey appeared to press '\1rs. Robinson hard late in lhe day on the issue or the sleeping arrangements In the motels visit· <.'d while the pair ~ought refuge in Hunting ton Beach and Los Angeles and Ventura counti~. Ques tion ing the attractive blonde witness on her statement that alt s he look with her from her home was a single change of clothing, $5 in cash and no credit cards, he asked her if s he ever 1nade the st;itcmenl to an '" \'est1gaior : "And then we wl'nl to bed." .. No," Mrs. Robinson replied ·•1 didn't and we didn't " ·"Welt, did you ever make the statement to a n Orange Count~ tn· \'estigator that 'we got up :ln<I the n called Lee t a family friend>?" Ramsey askt.'d. •·r don·t remember that. l was probably spcaktng In vaiu~ terms," Mu. Robinson replied. Mrs. Robinson told Ram11ey that there were several reasons for the flight from Ne" porL Beach for herself and Scalise: among them her rear or her husband. Sca llse's fcur of Hobinson and the police and the need to allow her family and friends to last her as a mis!>ing person. It was not until an Orange County lawyer came lo Ventur11 and spent a day convinclni:: Scalise ·that he wowld not lw jailed If he came back to Santa Ana and told his story that she and Scalise wer e able to return, she told Ramsey. She told Ramsey that s he never undressed in the presence of Scalise . "l o nly had three or Coor hours sleep during the whole tnp and most or that wa1' in the car,'' she testified. Mrs. Robinson readily Iden· ~ificd the garrote held up In the courtroom by Ramsey as the df'· :llt\ instrument that Scalise s aid he was supv<>sed lo use on her. And she identified as forceps the surgical Instrument which • calise said he was ~lven by her husband. The hit man told the Jury thal the forceps were to bo uscc1 to extrnt't Mns. Hoh1nson's birlh control device from her body as proof to Robinson that shew11dead. 09'ANGt'. COAS"T N DAILY PILOT 1tw-()f~ (M~f 0.41¥ ~ .... whf\ wfill• f\ '' c.......t>.ntd tf'41 f.lt t1111\ P .. "• I\ OUbh"'-'d b, tr-- ()<-c ... t ...... ,.,. .... <-· ......... . ..... ~ 4Mt ..... ,~ ....... ,...~. Uw .......... , .. i." : .. c~:.-.:::~~ ~:r.~' .!'::.~ =::~~, V•H•• •fllll YO~ ... <""-"'f\( .. \I A \.t .... ~""°""'' •tt.t .. " It W9h•ft\e MIVt.,Y\ MCI \urn n .. ~. "'4 0-•Mll><tl .... ~11\Mf'CI ....... 1\ 41 la Wn t .... SM1tt. (t\f• M•~•. l4'iklHW• t'h.~• ~Obert N . W~ rr. •fl•"'"""'""°''""' 1 homu Keevfl I ditOt Ttlomtr. A. Murphlne M•Mtl ... I O•tO< o,yt•..,., m• a.-C:..\I _,,,..,.. c- -y .... ""'"' .it(••" lll\lllt•llOll\, ........ 1 IP'•Ut• •t M•erth t m•f\I' f-.t••" ,..,. ... " .. t.vuo .. 11~t111 •'*'it••• .,.,..,,, .. .., t r r-ION- ...... f <la" M\I ... t•'4 al c .... IN ... ( ........... ~, .. h.,. •• t.tr'•lif"f \,11\ .... "'''·"-'" "-~··· .... hlM't-·--U.ll-•r 0.lly l'llol )~II l'l>Olo FIREMAN CLEANS UP DEBRIS FROM COAST HIGHWAY WRECK IN HUNTINGTON Drlv•r of This Vehlcl• Walked Away From Wreckage Arter Crash Early Today Huntington Crash Injures 6 Persons Six people were inJurcd ''hen one pickup truck smas hed into another early today in front ol the Edison Company steam l'lant on Coast Highway In Huntington Beach. The driver or one of lhe vehicles was booked, releasl'd · · then was being souJ.1ht taler for possible involvement in another earlier crash walh a motorcycle in Newport Beach Lawe-e.nce Ro11s J lea.id. l!l. or 8282 Art1sta Drh·e, was arre:.te<l and booked on suspit·ion or felony drunken drivin g following the t2· 30 a.m. collision. Investigators from I luntington Bench a nd :-.lewporl 8<.'ac:h police d<'partments this momin~ were allcmplmg lo IOl'<tlt' Jlt•ald. who was r<'le ascd on his own rl' cognizance afterward Newport Beach wants to establis h whether 1t was has pick up that struck cyc:llsl Charles Shipp, 37, or 14~ Purct~ St., Westminster. a fC'w minult's earlier in Newport Reach Shipp was adm1th'il In lloa~ Memoriol llospatal \\Ith poss abh• inter n al injuries after lwrn~ hurled from his marhmt• ~·' llospalal fl o acl and Nt•v. po1·t Boulc\'arcl. A (ew minute~ lutc.•r. a 3'1 lon pickup track dr1 vt>n by Nicholi. ller ge nre t e r , 23. (lf <iardt>n Grove. w as s m a!'hed from behind o n Const Uighwa} s l Newland Street. Firemen had to cut Heald from the wrcc kag(' or hi11 vchicl<'. whiC'h wedged under t he olh<'r truC'k The impact fl i ppe d lleri::enretE'r's vehicle forward and an to the a 1r . in111ring the driver and his pas11en~er, Sheila Lew1ck1. 18. of 6522 Sego,·ia Cir· c:le, llunlington Beach. The crash sent the three occu· pants to Hoag Memorial Hospital for treatment but they were not admitted. Investigators said two other people complained of in· 1uncs, bul 1t was unclear on tht• r eport 1r thev we r e also passengc r~ 1n l11:r~l!11rt'lt'r ·~ pack up PoliC'e said till'' l'ould haH• been bystanders ·hit by 0} mg debris. Marine Pilot Escapes Jet Plane Crash f\ Log una II ills M arinc pilot t'jected r ro m h1~ /\4 Sk~ hay, I. Jt'I before it cra:.hed in lht> dcllcrt neor Nee<lll'S Tuesday morning The pilot. 1st Lieutenant \\'ade C. Str aw. 28, of Laguna ltalls. was on a routine lrainin~ m1:-.Mrm when thr c ra~h occurred. tic" as p1cl.t'd up folio" ins: lJlC' R.30 a .m cras h by a rr:.cu1· hel;copter from C: rorgP Air f'orcc Ruse an<l lruns porlcd to the Na' al llospilal. Lon it Bcal'h, "here he as reported in i.lablt' condition. The A4 Sk~ ha\\ k 1s a1'an~le seat J<'I attack alrt raft u.s«.'d 1n :.up110rt of ground forc·cs. The pilot 1:. al 1 a c h c d t o ~1 a r i n c All a c \.. !'\quadron 214. the Bluck Shcc11 squadron at M w·111c Corps /11r Station. El Tol'o The cauSl' or thl• d 'a"h ill under lll\l'stigution Frottt Page A J DISTRICT .. more concerned with rcsnurcrs sul'h as water, st>wai::e ;mt! "''en air qualit~·. "f\s Tom said. it seems a kid is not as imporlnn~ as a sewer ," she said or a com· ment apparently mode earlier hy either 1'rus tcc Tom Casev or Tom Henderson · Bias Eyed In Cella Hearing A motion seeking the removal of Jud~e William C Spears from the Orange County Superior Court tn:il or Dr. Louis J . Cella Jr. and an associate is scheduled for a heurin~next Monday. J udge Speirs w all respond at thal lame to defense allegations that he has d1spla)0<.'<I bias a nd prc1ud1ce in pretrial actions held -1.hus r ar Jn his-e.ourtroom. The thrust or the defense {notion is that Judge Speirs has reported· ly been told by presiding Judge Claude l\t. Owens that, if the trial is moved out or Orange County, Judge Speirs will AO with the lawyers and defenda nts to whac-hevt>r 10(':.ition is selected. Law\'ers for Cella, 51. and former hospital admJnlstrator StC'phcn Hobert E vans, 31, of·l\lls· saon V1c10 argue that heavy pre· trial publicity has ruled out any chance of a fair trial in this area. Cella, Evans. George Louis 0 1· tendorr. 45. or Laguna Beach and Theodore Schiffman, 53. of Santa Ana. "crc convicted in Los Anµ cl C's F(•deral Court last month or multiple criminul charges fikd after lht'y de frauded two county hospitals controlled by CellaoC an estimated S2 miJhoninfunds. Cella, drew a Cive-ycar federal prison term. Sc:hlftman was sen- tenced to two and one half years and E\'ans and OUcndorf to one y('areach. t Police Open Up On S. Africans JOll.\NNESBURG, South Al"ea I.AP> -Police opened ftnt on some ao .ooo black de· monatratora la Soweto towrwhJp today and witnesses said at least Ulrce people were kUled und 18 other• Injured. But ,police dtnl.cl anyone was killed lJ\ tbe cl11b and aald •bout 12 people were h~urtd. They claimed the te1r11-.ted black lOWnshlp wa1 calm and under control. . The witness-. Jn~luded a black jouroali1t who aaid he was carry· int one of the viclima lo a ho&pitaJ when he <lied. Jt wu lhe Clr1t major outbreak of violence ln Soweto since a SlU· dent demons tration June 16 touched otf an upheaval in black townshiPI around JGhanHsburt and Pretoria In which at least 176 people were kUled and more lhan 1.100 injured. All but two of the dead and moat ot the Injured were black. WHne11es reported the township, home to more lhan one million blacks. wu In chaos to· day as rovinc mobs Ml fire to ShOPI and Urt. A key raHw~ signal block was burned. Com· muter trains were halted. Heavily armed police were re· ported tourinc the township, elsht mil•• south of Johan· nesbur1, in armored penonnel carriers and dlapenlq crowds wllh 1Hr 111. Pollc:e;-se.ted oft au exits with roadblocks. The lar1e1t confrontatJon was in northeastern Soweto, where an estimated 20,000 blacks, ap· parently tryln1 to march on Johannesbur1. were turned back by police. The marchers were protestjng the detention of stu· dent leaders •ad other &rievances of Soulh Africa's black majority. The protesters twice broke through a police barricade head· ing for the New Canada railway Junction on the outskirts of Soweto before being stopped and dispersed with tear gas. Police officials said they were trying t o avold shooting whenever poss ible in quelUng the disturbances. Gen. Cert Prlnsloo, the police c.,mmissioner. said be had no knowledse of any deaths in Soweto. "The position is that throughout the d~ there have beernnarchea with posten beJng brandished and slogans shouted by youthful blacks. m_a_n_L_n FURNITURE "They ore istlll ln 1roups In various plates Ir\ Soweto and at New Canadu nnd Noordceslg. The s1tuution is stJll strained but In i;ent>rnl the i-ltuoUon is under ('Onlrol," Prinsloo sutd. r1:1rurda carried by student~ read," "Hele&.»<• our brothers," und "We <Are born free but ever· ywhere we are 1n cht\ins. · · Police efforts to conlrol the rioters were handicapped by a strong wind that blew tear 1a1 back towa rd police lines . New•men ut the outskirts o( the township sold police had taken l\tringent m ea 'urcs lo keep journalists and photogruphers out of the s trifc.tol'll township. There were several reports of photogl'a ~bcrs having their cameru confiscated a nd tllm destroyed. MALADY ••• on his return Clight and when he arrived in Orange C4'm~y. he consulted his physician," Ch{n said. "When all the publicity came out about the dealhs and the dis· ease in Pennsylvania, he and hl• doctor put lwo and two together and reported to the County Health Department for test.II," the state offtctal added. - "By that time, however, he was in his recovery phase and feeling bette r,'' Chin said. Dr. Gerold Wagner, Orante' County health ser vices director , said the county mun was never hospil aliied. despite press re· Ports to the contrary. "By the lime he came to us, he was feeling much better than he had in the early stages," Wagner said. "He w as r ecei ving ex· cellent. care from his own doc· tor." Wai:ner said the pilot was at home with his family. According lo Chin, the family will be kept under observation to d el cr mint' if there was any s pread of the flu-like illness. So rar. he noted. "the rest of the family is in good health." "The pilot is not In any particular isolation because tho disease ts in a late, generaJly non·contugious stage," Chin s aid. . f'rona Page Al BUDGET ••• Trustees aeknowled~cd that there is lilll<' they can do lo change plans for developing the coastal area, but a rew men· t lo n ed th e possibi lity or withdraw1ns: the district boun· daries back t o th<> <'><i sling Newport Beach city lane at._ Cameo Shores. Board Pres id e nt Don S m allwood suggested the pQssibihty of starling legi:-ilatlon to have the entire 10,000 acre tract lbrmed Into an independt'nl district. lie also talked ab<>ut turning the nrea over to another district. Principality P.o.inciol Mect;1..,aneon deliqtl iMpOe 1"1 - <~'""' of i,.d,oom '""""' llQln Tho•n:H...Je. Hett. •olen•ed de ... 9nou hove ble<>ded ti.. ct..mshrd 17th Cet1•ury deco or.,. mo1of, of '1Jl.d CfOft""""" from rhe botdei o ecn ol ll<lly. ftonce ord Spoin. In \ffptnq wifh 11\e <°""V (~H o( 1he colfecriori, pe<\y pecan v.-\, oak soltd' ord wood produc" ate cO'ef.Ay M!lec1.d ord blerded toqet~ •o provode o q on 1e1~e c:ippopnote IO lhe \"fie Fa ~ det«>'nq ,.;th lollmq '"""1'"· CetlOn decoOIMI PQl'I' and cor-l effect\ O't! \tmUlo1ed -ood. Hond r..t:Onq ord o'1'8114)e<oal f.,..\hnq tec1nque, creole o ,,.... sistanl s uperintendent, und Jea n flarmon , the ad · mlnls trah ve assistant to the superintendent. Also included In the negotin· !t o n~ b u dget 1s a full.time secretary al $12.828, consultant recs of S29,000 and allocallons for leaal expenses of $55.977. District officiuls said the legal expenses need to be budgeted because the <'Ounty counsel, "hk h handle!-! the district 'a legul work, hall indicated thut he will not handle leul problems slcm· min~ from ncgoti otions. Cue also noted that under budaet t1llocations for the school board, a n addit ional $40,000 wo~ sel aside for le1tal expen•~· In approvini the budget. trustees were crltic11I ol slate law limllina tho amount u d11tr1ct can 1ptnd 1tnd lhc amount of money given to the district by the state. Trustee M arao.n Bersteson pointed o~l that this year·~ budget reflects e $2.5 million re· duetlon in the s tate's contribu· Uon to lhe district . "That difference I!\ CQminll out or the taxpayers' pockets," she said. "I think we ouaht to get the stote to pay its fair share." The new budget, in addition to the $48.6 million set U£lde for operating expenses, features a S2.8 million reserve somethinJ.i the district has not had for several years. Based 9n Tuesday's action. taxpayers in Costa Mesa will pay $4.25 per $100 assessed valuation. In Newport Beach, the rate is $3.94 per $100. The decline in the t ax rate does not mean that t nxpay rs will pay a lower total tax bill to the school district. An average 22 pcrconl increaao in the assessto<.I value of property le the d istrict mean. that total school tax bills will be higher this yc;1r than lut /or most homeownc~s1 The Laguna Beach and Jrvinc Unified school districts also cov. t"r portions of the coastnl area. The problem, as outlined by Newport·M csa of£1ciols. Is that 1 lhc d istrict can not reasonably ' expect to ral~e the money to build new school111. Therefort'. the stud en ls would either have to be bused tnto sc hools in Costa Me!tn where enrollment is declinin.R or \he Cle· Isling ollendanc<' boundarlc11 would hove to lw skewed ~o lho:.t' :-.turlents rould be absorbed in schools in Cor ona d el Mar Nicoll told trustec·s that elth(•r optinn Is llk1•ly t<l prov(' h111hly unpopular. "It would he dv1I wur," he s aicl. "1 think Or. Nicol1'11 commt'nl on c ivil war 1f either or lht•sc plans were instituted, 1s on the vleasani side.'' Auld Smllllwoocl. f'ro• Pag~ A I COAST •.. The council will ottend the Aui::. 11 Lf\f'C met>lln~ to ask that the Aug. 25 heuring du le be postponed . Irvine ofNch118 could then gather more IAformtatlon re. Aardlng whether or Ml they want that land to be Ptrl of tbe1r city's s phttrc of lnflucnce. City Mnnag<'r Bill Woollctt said the city of Laiunu Beach also wants u delay N(•wporl Beach want.!> 1 hl' hearinit to i;o ''~ scheduled. •·unless the three cities make u united request . LAFC mlAhl not continue the houri~." Woollcll said. The council nl1>0 clirt>cted caly planners t o b g111 sludya ng whether or not incluc.hnA that land m the city ·s sµhere "ould Ix.· ln the best intcn•sts of lr\'lllt'. by ~~. ' ~ lirWI fO' PR INC IP N.L Y """h LflU\UCI clor•'Y and ' ~e to roveol tl.e diatroti< ~y ol the wood cpo.n. W"9thet l<!lected f0t the "'°''"' 1, bectoom o QliO\I room. PRINCIPAi.HY ofler, ~ I 1 .... pleo\lft9 <O•""'Y MedltrfO"eOft ~y ord 1 • • , lhe Thorro,,,,,. quality rt.oe "°" heme dew,,.'- .! ~: : ::.-· 11 ,, '/ •.• 61" Du•""• Vertie .. Mir,..,., tll1A1~ .... Twhl~S.... .::·.'/ ••..tr'949 ~.l ~ '749 -~~---~ ~ JL~-1 1865 HARBOR ILVD. DOWNTOWN COSTA MESA PHONE 548·5131 • £cut leOOcl s IN!# Actor Clint Eastwood and seven other in- vestors in a Fiji plan· talion are s uing a olnth for neglecting the Island property. The y want th e partnership dissolved a nd th e ca ttl e. banana 11nd pineap- ple plantations sold, plus damages from chocola t e m agn ate Paul De Donenico. Wednesday, August 4, 197'8 DAIL y PILOT AS Viking's Arnt Jams Fi:uUt Thwarta Second!Te1tfor Life S~· ; P~ADENA (AP) -A balky robot arm Oft the Vikinc 1 lander hu Jammed C<r lhe second time, lhwartin1 aclentiatt' etroru to make an or1anic analysis ol th• hllblY active Martian son that could determine tilt bolds We.· A decl•lon oo bow to get the arm moving 111ln was expected today. Vlkln1 oltklala reported Tuesday ni1ht that the mechanical arm used to collect toll for experimtoU in the lander's sophlaticated automated laboratory had not completed Its programed mission after dl&· ging Into the Martian surface. ONE OF THE laboratory instruments. a 1a.s chromata~r aph mass spectrometer. "did not re· celve a 1011 sample today." said Vlklne spokesman Larry King. The extension arm reached out 9~ In· cbes, du1 up some soil and retracted about six ln· che1 before it stopped. be said. Viking officials met during the night to de· termlne what might have caused the a.rm to jam. It had also jammed during preliminary teatin1. but scientists then found a way to dislodge a pln lhat blocked the arm rrom moving. FRANK BRISTOW, Viking news chief. Sa.id acienUst.s believed the problem might. be in a fail- safe mechanism of the lander designed to halt the arm In cue of some related problem. The arm had previously delivered soil to two other experiments using separate mechanical sequences. Bristow s aid that Viking scientists have theorized that In order for life to t>xlst on Mars the rust-colored soil must contain organic molecules. Tbe organic experiment that was temporarily 11ymied by tbe stuck arm "·ouJd belp to determine "'hether such compounds are present. ME~NWWLE, VUDNG sclentlst.s aaid they now believe an unexpected abandance of oxygen produced from the Martian soil In another of Vlk· ing'J t.esl ceUs p.ro.bablr was nol the result or life forms. The researchers said Tuesday the unexplained 1eneration or gas from a soil sample had almost ceased. "We are gravitating closer toward a non-p....,f It d biological explanation" of the gas production, said • er Dea Dr. Harold P . Klein, head or the Viking biology Lo rd Thoms on of team. "But we are not 100 percent sure it'a not Fleet, owne r of an biological." international chain THE STRANGE GAS emission from the soil of news p aper s in· sample probably resulted from a chemical process eluding a numbe r in in which surface oxygen, released by sunlight, de-California , died in a composed a liquid food added lo the 10U ln the tes t London 1 lospital to· cell. scientists sald. day . Al first there bad been speculation that the--------- emission was caused by some life form breaking down the nutrient. But Dr. Fred Brown. a biologist for TRW Syst ems, manufacturer of the lUe·seeking laboratory packaae. said tbe experimental data "have almost zero chance ot be.ing a message about life." He added that many or the scienwta on the of· Cicial Viking bioloey team agree with him. Case Rested In PUgil Deatb SAN DIEGO <AP>-The~erMMMbas rest- ed its ease in the hennng to determine ir Marine• CapL Cecil V. Taylor wUJ be tr'led on cbargc.s stem · ming from the de11t.h or a recrwt. Maj. John Grant. ~en..1e counsel ror T aylOl'. was expected to oomplt'tt lht deftft~e presentation tod3)'. MAJ. ERNST U A. St'...U.U., who ha.1 bff.a ron ducting the hearlog. will thm recommtnd wheth« Taylor will face a &;encral oou.rHnartial on cbar&es o! derdJe.tlon.. of duty in fltilu>& to instruc t and supervise personnel under hi" command. Taylor is formar bad ol IN Sperial TrlWlini; Branch. a unit for problftn retndt1. at th<' Marint Co.rps Recruit DePOt. JT WAS IN Taylor's Wl lt wbere Pvt. Lynn E. McClure, 20, of LWltin. Te.¥ .. wu l.ljurcd Dec. 6 • while being forced to undlTgo spcctal 1>ugtl stick bouts. McClure re1n~U>ell ln a.c1oma WIW hu March 13 death Ln a Houston hoepit.al. Let•Q Go gailing . •• IH HA""""' OA.H4 f!OINf t&A.11°" REHT A SAILIOAT VICTORY 2A OMEGA 14 CORONADO 23 A THI.ILL. YOU'lL. 1'41VP f09CMT 1E1ror.Was E tal DR. NORMAN HOROWITZ, head or the a chemical release experiment, which is looking for signs of photosynthesis by Martian organisms - among other things -said preliminary data bave i.ndjcated only that Martian soil is quite dry. TV Medics Face Real Emergency PALOS VERDES CAP' -The lelevisioo EMBARCADERO crew Cor the Emergen· \ . Execs Transfusion Wrong cy series faced a real MARINA emergency while film· llllMrc~• "-• ing at Marineland Pier o-re11tt Hnw. c.,_ A scuba diver on the crew was a pparently I LOS ANGELES !AP I -The death ol Taft Schreiber. a director of MCA. lnc .. -who died after transfusions or the wrong type blood, was caused by clerical error. a UCLA llospilaJ of- Stat ~ J Cops Nab Chino Slaying-Suspect in Palos Verdes. ~~,...~~~· ~17~14~1~4~t~,_.~,7~7~~!!~~~~~~~ s_\Uferi ni.:-fro m the __ _ ficial reports. Dr. George S. Smith, director of clinical laboratories at the hospital. !aid a technician in a blood bank, who was typing two blood samples at the same time, wrote the wrong type on Schreiber's chart. The 68-year-old Schreiber was ad- ll\itted to the hospital Oil June 3 for trologic surgery. He died June 14. "The technical work was ac- curate." Smith s aid in an intcr\'iew. "A human error foult>d up the system.·· c.,,pt Sii f! of Sla11lng COMPTON CA'f'I A 76·year-old South San Gabriel woman who visited the cry pts o r her late husband, j daughter and son-ln·law has bel'n bludgeoned and strangled to death. 'poUce say. The council -oa a 10-4 vole - as ked the state Department of Transportation to end the project restricting rush hour use of one lane lo car pools and buses. Councilman Marvin Braude said the Diamond Lanes waste time o.nd energy and increase accidents. No-fault Die• Agah1 SACRAMENTO <AP> -The last. no-fault automobile insurance bill of the year is dead. Opposed by insurance companies and trial lawyers, the bill would ha\'C required insurance companies to is- sue policies re.quiring. payment of drivers' costs in an accident. regard- less or who caused it. The troublesome question proved to be the right to sue for additional losses. LOS ANGELES <AP J -Chino police arrested a man early tod~ in con- nection with lhe murder last May of two Catholic church members who were gunned down as they patrolled the church to prevent vandalism. Los Angeles Police In· mother or three. died on the eve of ber 30th birth- day and on ber first niitll of patrol. She and Padilla, a 4S- year--old maintenance man with six children. were talking with her husband when the shols rang out. bends, more technically known as an air e m- bolism. County fire de- partment crews rushed to the scene, and a U.S. Coast Guard helicopter fle w Nikki Amvrosino. 25. to Santa Catalino. Island for examination. Amorosino was found to be out or danger by doctors. vestigator Jack Jung ===================1 said Chino police accom- panied by LAPD officers arrested Gi lbert Cordero. 2 3. at the Greyhound Bus tcrmjnal in Los Angeles. CORDERO WAS taken to Chino and booked for investigation of murder. SENIOR CITIZENS loat Off All m .IV Parch•••• . v N All rultCHASES IV B(COMING A L~M\£~ or ova HN1oa cl'nl.£NS SAVINGS "-AN AT NO COST TO YOU, ALL Pre·P•W IX PretN•• N•••rt .. RE:~~: • Ll•lte.. Offer SIGN UP NOW : College Pharm acy I , ', • ,\ jl ! I ' •: ••1 • • I • , • ~ • • i • • Styte chonge and di.continued model• by Adido•. limited sizes and quonitites. mm! llllTE CAllO ..... $24. 9S UHITAIE ....... us.ts -------... SPG1n .......... '26.•s lllY ............ $23.95 NOW $19 95 IODUftl llG .• , .. $19.95 "iT- AIERIClllA UG. llal SU.95 -.,-- .. Martha Eddington's body was round in the mortuary after an .anony mous telephone lip. a Compton polke spokesman said. R~ck Ban Riding Sollflltt Manuella Cortez and Ignacio Padilla were killed in a fusillade of ri- ne fire May 17 as they stood in the yard at Our Lady or G uada lupe Catholic Church. .~~~~~~===========:====--==========~------------------ • She had gone lo an alcove in the l wo· It.Ory indoor mausoleum on Sunday. •Dfa•end· End A•ked LOS ANGELES IAP> -Dia monds are fore\' er. but the City Council is hoping the same Is not true of the com· muter Diamond Lane project on the Santa Monico freeway LOS ANGELES <APJ -A city council committee voted to seek re· commendations aimed al controlling sidewalk newsracks after 500 persons attended a hearing on lhe matter. !\lost complained that the curbside racks were unsightly. dangerous and sold publications which contributed to juvenile crime. The committee asked for recom· mendntions in two weeks. Mansion's Sale Stalled in Vote SACRAMENTO (API -An attempt to put the vacant Sl.J·m illion governor's mansion up for sale has stalled In an Assembly committee. but its author says he will try for panage again next week. The bill by Sen. Alfred Alquist. D·San Jose. was blocked on a 4·3 vote of the Assembly Governmental Organizallon Committee, one vote short of pass age. THE MA NSION. a project of former Gov. Ronald Rcaaan, sits unoccupied on a bluff above the American River about 14 miles east. of downtown Sacramento. It has been a problem for the state ever since Gov. Edmund Brown Jr . called it a "Taj Mahal" and refused to Ii vc In it BEFORE THE vote on the Senate·passed bill. A.lqulst amended It so the mansion and its 11-acre i1ltc could be sold or exchanged. I le said Sacramen- to County m larht be Interested in such a deal. MR S . CORTEZ, 2 Appointed SACRAMENTO (API -Thomas K. Beard of · Stockton and M lcbael Glazer of Los Angeles have been appointed by Gov. Edmund Brown Jr. to the California Wat.er Commission. One of. the "no" votes came from committee chairman Bob Wilson. D·Ln Mesa. who said he did not think the state could recover anywhere near its expense• for the mansion. w. pay'S a lb. calh for ak.nirun cana & other, cleai,houl•hold ak.nirun. '/io CfJuarfor ~cK THE NEWEST IUT MOT JUST AMOTHEI STEAK HOUSE You pefl()nallv pick your own steak from our gourmet shoWCaM. Choose the cut & thickness vou dHtre from our Ch<>I~ Eattern Com-Fed Beef. Salad and potato always Included. GRANO OPENING SPEC IAL! W"4 A NH DtHHH IF TOU UHS THI UACT sru IAMYTHtMG OVU 6 OLI Of TOIM STUK '--<~-1 l·l:lO ~.._...,...,.......... ~..,_.., .. COMI J094 OUl IAmS&t•PIAllllM __ _,.. MS.-JAf, c.M. IOSS--. I - ttH r.M.-11JO A.N. ZSJl W. C.ast llwJ., Mn,trt lead . 141-1177 • • , which Include• a•urnlnum toll; pie pane; troten food and dlnnor treys. dip, pudding and mNI coni•lnera. Cer111n other c1e1n. ell· aluminum l11m1canIle110Hm1d C.11 your Cen11r lor dotalla, Bring It to Reynold• Alumlnum Or1nge Recycling Pa.nt, 210 E. MHta Avenue At•11deF . .; Cl) • ! > < t = £ IL a .. ;) "' ...... i M"ts Ave. l ~ • z Katetta Ave. Tuesda~ Saturday -9:00 a.m. · 4:30 p.m. Pbone 271 for Information on Mobile Unit schedules In your area. · 4 , . . •' :: .. . ... • I I I ' A8 D 1'1IL'1 PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE ·-. . . Doubtful Investment To s peak u1 opposition to projects ror senior t•1tl1ens is to oppose apph.• pie. motherhoo<l ~nd the t\mcri<·an dream, so \\c do 11 rcluctunUy. The Newport Beuch Cit~ Council earlier this year us;rcctl to use S450,000 u( u tcderal grant to buy frc.-way right of way from thl• bl a tu for a site for u. st.'nlor cilizcr\ center 1n Coron<-t dcl M ur. Smee then. the Communit~· Oevel6pment Citizens Advisory Committee. whkh was formed to work on IJt'Ojccts for s enior citizens. has presented a report to the council layrng the ~roundwork for a 2.900·square foot center lo house city proJects for the elderly. We question that <'ondusion. According to the t·om mittce's o~·n r epol'l. the highest attendance :·figure for the center would be 560 people. and that in· : dudes 220 from tht.' west side or town who already use • U1c cxistin~ center run by the Zonta Club. We ar<> not suggesting that senior cit izens shouldn't ha vc a center. But before the city puts any more money into one r egardlt!ss of the source of Ulat money l'areful consideration ought to be given to the use or t•xisting buildings. sueh as the Zonta·s center. More Traffic Due? The Costa Mesa City Council is considering a plan .. to widen Del l\tar Avenue and Fair Drive to six lanes, bused on a recommendation made last week by the c ity's planning commission. •1head with '1n l' \1ronmt•11tul 1mpat·t ~ltttt•mc·nt on th<.· 1>1·ojcct. Al the ~atd tht• Newport •. ulJu:iab 111 In '"'-' tmlf ('0:-.t,1 ~k~.1 ~m:.H'h'<i of M•ll1!>h µuroditahsm b> Univ(' ' Dri''-' b ~hm\11 on "' q u-ict' or mastcrplani.. 'H lud1ng Co::-t:1 )Jesu'i-. :\t''' port·,: ~rntl Irvine's u~ COlll \ tnl.' \\1th 1 luntm~ton Hl!at•h Costa M e~an!) :-.a~ lht:. cc< t' · • ·ad\\~·~ anyway to pro' iii(• tht:ir 0'' n tit ~ "1lh u major ca " \\tSl tl't1ffic routt• That mc·an:-tht• t>~1..,tl10und trnf'ltt' 1s onl~ going to have one plat•c to t•11<! up on In till' ,\' cnm· 111 Newport Beuch. That doc>sn ·t rnakl.' t ht' ~""port council's refusal to t•xtt•ntl l'ni' ,•rs1t~ look lakt· u H'I'~ far-sighted tlet·1~101\ RV Campground Lust week. the Nt·w1>0rt Beal'h Ctl.' Council \\iSl'· ly kilkd u plan to turn µart or the BalllO~ Pier purkmg lot into a recrt«1tional H'lrn:le campground. While tht• proposal "a practical I rom a monl.'~. making point of view. it was simply not attracth e in terms of the location. At the time they turned do'' n the t•ampground propo ·at. counc il memtx>rs went one step further and asked city st aff members lo look around the cit~ to see if they couldn·t come up with som e more pracli{'ul site for such a c:.impitround. One alreadv cxtsts al the Dunes and councalml.'n indicated interest in finding additaoni.11 s paC'cs tor H\' campers. I '1 For Newport Beach residents ''ho don't know. • Dl'l Mar-Fair is the Costa Mesa end of University -Drive. As residents may recall. Newport Beach coun· cilmcn killed a proposal to extend University Drh-e al'ound the L'pper Bay into lrdne by refusing to go It seems to bl' u fair approach lo the proulcm. The council is dem on~trating laudablt• jud gment 111 con- tinuing lo explon.' the is~ue rather than ignoring it. '\\'ell. I don't rnrc wlwt ro11 t hi11k n>11 .sec . . u11 r air force just released a rPport di,;cotmfinJ! 1.111ide11t ifit>cl II,\ in,: ol>Ject .... !' N A l~at11ral Tra11q11ili:er .: Figures ~Reveal Dear Gloomy Gus Let's Keep the Green Fields ,• ·!J SYDNEY HARRIS) Most people have no notion of . what Sauvy has called .. the tern ble power or the exponential ... rr !:.lhey recall the exponential at all, i:;t is only as 3 vague term from • bigh·school math. • llere is a simple illustration or , ._what is forgotten. if e\'er known 1: Suppose you t buy one ticket • an a lottery wher e o n e • m i 1 I i o n : ticket s arc , sold ; obvious <.i v vo ur chance or wan :· nm~ is one an ~; a m1ll1on . supp 0 s \' there are two lotteries. each sell- ing a million tickets, and you buy one ticket in each. What is your : rhance of winning both" l'<ot one an two million. or one an 10 million. or one in 100 million. or ·.even one in a billion. It is one in a • lnllion -a million milliontoone. TlllS IS the terrible Power of the <'xp~>nenti al. Jt was known to antiquity: recoil the mathemali· r1 an of legend. who requested a Millan to repnv him for a Jtrc•:1t favor by .. mcrclv .. i::1vm~ ham :1 l'hessbonrd of corn J(rai11 The sultan was to put11nc• J,!ram or c·orn on thl' firs t square of thC' • hoard, two on thC' second, four on ::the third. anfl i.o forth. doubltni.: • t•ac·h square to the• IHth Of 1·our11c, the• sull un quickl~· karnt•ll •that thcre was not enou~h rorn on the whole earth to sat1!-fy this rk m<.and ~ What docs nll this mt•an an . pruclil'fll tcrms'.' It means thut m~t of us have ltltle itlt•a of the t:trcnglh of a J.!t'Om<'lric pro ~r<'ssion. Thu"I, ~an annual rbi<' of 0 1hrl'<' llerrent an u populution When the Newport Beach City Council's committee on the park acquisiton bond issue makes its report, will their shopping list include the Queen Mary" ,J.11. _,co...<-• .. ,...,. .... ..., ,....,..,. .. ,..wc•u.rfly..-ct.,. •k._. .. IM ,...._,. -yew ."" _.,. .. o_, o ... 0.11, "1i.&. s(!(?mS a small figure -yet the population will nearly double in a l!eneration at this rate. The same, or course. is true of infla- tion figures. A TABLE s howing the increas- ing population of the world gives a most dramatic example. At the time of Christ. there were about 290 million people living on the earth. It took one thousand years Lo raise that figure to 350 million people. Then it took o nly 000 years to add another 200 million by 1650 or i-o. Then it look only 100 years to add 200 million more people. Next. in the century between 1750 and 1850. some 450 million were added. And in the century from 1850 lo 1950. the world's popula· tion more than doubled, from 1,175 million lo 2,510 million. F I NALLY, in th e quarter-century between 1950 and 1975. about 1.500 million people were added, hringing the total to •1,000 million, or four billion in· habitants. Even with our reduced h1rth rates today, this will double n):l"nin soon after the turn or thr t•entury. I chd not start out to write about population. but about the deccp· lave quality or a "r ate or itrowth." Figures that seem, ul first blush, s mall and unimpor· tnnt can bear the most omino11~ implications for the near future. The terrible power of the ex · ponenllal may threaten us more than th<' ll·bomb. To the Editor Our fcelinl! about l.irml;tnd and fields in Southern OranJ.!l' Count~ as backed up b~· growing up on an orange ram·h and bcin~ hfelong residents of this eour1ty. While not opposed to cxpan~mn or 11rdcrl~· growth o r houses hl'IO(.! huilt. "l' enJOY secinit the J.\r('l'll fields nl \'egetables or bcrru:s in the Foun· lain Valley and Huntington Bcad1 area where we Ii ve. But how long can tht• hold ouL>- on these farms keep from bcinJ.! gobbled u1> by builders·? llow long can they resist the big dollars pa11I by land companies? · THE GREEN fields spannin~ the area next to our frC"t?\\ a~~ gives the fcl'ling of open spac·e a~ well as IO\'C'l y i.:r<'en 'iew of fields soon to be hanl'stcd. Tlus loralh grown produce and fruit lwlp" 1i1 keep our cost of ,:rocencs down a:; well as re\ enuc to the lv(-.iJ form stands nc urhy the res1dcnt1:1I area. Where do we c·ontinur lo t.:t'I these supplies 1 fall the land as solt1 for buildini:. other than' alle~.; 111 central California and lmpen:al County? In a busy and heetir ~chedulc. 11 1s a welcome s ight to come upon a lush field with proplc picking t'rops as we return from a bu~~ work day. It acts like a tran quilizer without the harmful s1d1· effects and makes us feel w1 if''•' h::a \l' I hi.' bt'st of t "o '' 11r11b :igncultun• and the h11..,tnf''" ''•11r1 muntt) CAN'T \\'t: do soml•lh111i.: a~ :1 i:roup of l'ClllC'l'rn(•d rtl lll'n" lo kccp thl' small 11111lh1u• .tlTl'l' 111 farmlann in tlH' !'io11llll'rn Oran).!1· Co unty arC'a anti ht·lp our ecologtl'al ('ondillnn, 11111' h1'allh and conltllUl' IC\ c·n1oy 1111· ;1hu11 dance nf fr<''h pr ud111·l' 111 11u1 markets" b th\.'r<' Jmon•· l'l ,1·0111 thcr<' "ho a)!rN•s :111cl 11•1•1 ........ "'' do about our fl'" ren1111111111• tll•ld~ i111d !'>m;.111 farm ~" Ho n 1~ n-r I' 11,\l<To 1. BAH BJ\HI\ i\ ll,\l!TOI. ·: . .. The Bureaucrats Corne First WAS lllNGTON-ThcAmcr1can :1axpayers cnntrib\rte JH'n<'rousty to a variNy or worthy causes. But ·th<' deprived and the depr<'ssl'<I, : Jhc aged and the uUin~. usually w1nfl up m<'r<•ly with onc11l11ry henents. The r eal tx-nericlnries, • ln,•arlnbly. arc the bureaucrats who mllnage the pr..,..rtams. They ;pay them sc l\cs generous ·s a l aries . :prov id<' ·themselves ·fancy offices rnd surround : h e m sel vell 'with S <'(' r e tu r1e:- and s ub · o rdinat es . • The bus y ~bureaucrats then form committees. hold meetings, conduct studies . write reports and issue-.statements. ·: After all this has been paid for. • only 3 tiny fraction or the money is lt'Ct for the purpose that was in- tended. We h1wc taken up the "lypcwriler. for example. to :~hampion the migranl farm ·workers who toil under miscra· (JACK ANDERSON) blc cond ition!' to make America the best fc.>d nation in history. We sent our reporter, Hal Bernton, lo live and work with them. Jlt> found them li ving in squalor. ex· ploited by the planters. neglected by the government, Ignored by ociety. THE BUREAUCRATI; would never Jet an opportunity like this 1o10 by. At the Labor Dept., bureaucrats wangled $60 million from the taxpayers this year to help the migrant laborers oul o( the stream and to place them In rnreet jobs. The bureaucrats sal at their desks and, With a great hufning of papers and clacking of typewriters, drafted programs to rescue the lowly sloop labonrs. Yet these bureaucrats had never even met a migrant worker. The results are now in (Of the first half or fiscal 1976. A stag er- ing $30 million, of course, wen for the care and comfort or the bureaucrat!'! Our columns about rt•porlt·r Rc rnlon 's ex p<'rlcnre.; Mnon1• the m1 granl worket l- mcanwhlle, br oui:ht down 1111 nvalanchc of · letters upon lhl· Labor D.epl. The mail wai; $0 heavy. sttretaries hud to use a rorm letter to respond to oil tht! inquiries. THIS llAS produced soml' fa"orable r<'sults. L al)or Secretary William J . Usery met with Agriculture Secretary Earl But.z to discuM wh:il the Ad· ministration could do to hdp m•· grant workers. Our sourc{'s s ay Usery sincerely wants to press for rollective bnrgnlnini:: rights for farm workers. lie also met with representatives or the Na· tional Assn. of Farmworker Organitalions. a WOUI) lhat has been rebuffed by the Labor Dept. in the past. As a direct result of our col umns. the Occupational Safety and Health AdministraUpn has also agreed to Inspect five llmt'~ more migrant housing next ycor M ore comprthcnsl\'e standards wtll al!lo be Issued. ( MAILBOX 1\11d~r•oH ('ritk To the Editor : ) ;\Ir J<•l•I. ,\nderson·s rnlunin ot July ::!O i:.l'l'ks lo dt'l',.l'tlit th1• • I.as 1\tnc ri cas-" houi.llll! 11r11 Jl'Cl. a11parently uhll\ 111ui-lo th1· fact Uwt this \\as one ''' the re• mark:iblc achie\ 1•nwn1:; oi the :li1caragua ~o\ l'rnmt•nt an lhe 1m· ml'diatc post·carlh<1ualo.l· !)\'nod Thl' SJ million cl11llars warm- heart('(lly l.:I\ en by till' U.S. i\gl.'nC') fur Inlt:'l'llat111nal l>t!velopment and tltl' American 1>eopll' hl'lpc1I m~ $:O \Crnmt·111 build no less than 11,1100 d"cll mgs in lht• record trmt.> of 00 eta) s to houst• 00.000 hc•nw li.>ss. Thi~ .S. Age ncy kno\\ s of the rorn•l·I tnvestment o( this sum <t" 1t hll" 1·<'rtificd that th<'M ' funds hJ\( b"cn prop(•rl y used This 1s 't'I'\ l'asy to ''l'rify. WITJI Tll E em<'rAency act111n r>eriod O\ er. Pre~11ll•nt Somow. again with lhC' J!(·n<'ro us a:- sistance of the IJ .S. A.r .n .• has <•lre3dy comnwnn'<I a lull·sr:tlt• program 111 ups.:rad(.' anti turn thl'Sl' ti" l'lhn)!s 111111 permanl'nl hom1·s "1th all t'• nn ·ntl'nrc,., 1«ms1stenl with I ht· 11r1..:rnal plun· 111 ng. Mr. I\ ncl<.'r s 1111 would al s o knm'. 1f la-rJrNi tn look into 1l, that my ~°' t•1·nmC'nl has. pro· uded h1111H':-to 1m.OOO intrnhi tanl!! or 1warly 50 pcr<:cnl of thl' prt'·cnrthquake population of the tapitnl city of ;\l ~lllaJ.!Ul.I. An aild1 · 11unal 20.()()0 housinJ.! 111111~ an· currentlv undl'r c1m-.lr11c-t1on a~ part of ·th• ,con 'rnm .. 11r~ r1111)· preh(.'nSl\l' pl :i n tn prll\irk further IH1u-;ps t111 th1• lo\.\t·~t mC'Ollll' s1•c-1 or!'! of tht· populacl' <illll.1.F.HMO SF.VII.I.A SAC1'\S/\ ' \ m bu11s111111r 11f N1<«11·a1ttt:1 Cha1Mlwr ('rpdff Tn tht• 1'~1111 or . In your 1•1lilonal ot .July 2l.S. \OlJr l'unH1wnts rdal1\1• to .. a o;;l'lf n •l 1 ant Ch n ml>l'r: · I n 111 proud thul Th<.• (harn~·r of Com· merce nf our w111lcl1•1I11I r1ly of ~ewpor1 "':•ch hns ulway:s <.'II dea\'Or<'d to l••' s('ll r('llant :inrl noldepe11dcnton1nflucnccs fr11m political or any prl\'lltl' !Wrtors Al I ht ~ t1 m e 11 w1•11l1f ht• pnrliculnrly approp1•1at l' t,• re. mcmtwr tlw wond<.'rful p<.•oplt· "ho b<.•itun this prnw1pl1· year.; ago Most prom1nC'nl amn11,c many otht'n. too nunu•rou~ lo menlion is l'aul A l'alnwr AT A ~n:t:TING 11\'I'( 15 ~t.1r' ulo(o. h<' called togcth<'r ~' n11mh1•r o( civil' ll•adcrs anti a furn! "as s1 arted to build a 1h•ht frl•1• <.;haml>C'r of Com ml'r<'c bwlch ni.:. \\hich building ha~"°"' l>l•l'onw ti reality. A large sum wa~ collect NJ at the first dinner meeting anll at his own t'Xpensc> s1•\'cral olhl•r dtnnC'r meetings \H·re ha•l1I to nuse add1t1onal funrls to rt'U('h U1c ~oal. Considering that thl' mon1•y eollecte<I l111s rlrawn compound interest, that sum J.!rl'W to a very sizable amount. I congratulate Paul Palml'r ror h1 i< unt1rinj! c tforts anll h1~ friends. whom I ih'I tw s made 1t possibl<'. in u ~r<'at part. for ~11u to stult• 1n 'our l'rlitorwl ··n · markahh llt1· Chambl'r is -.l'lf upportinJ.!. · <:EOIWE D. IWCCOl .• J\ PtJt1dle Pub To the Echtor This lell l'r t!' reg:irclini.t t hc at 11 de a bout Pookic the l'oodlt•. which appeared in your paper .July 15, written hy J\oneCoopl'r. The res1>0nse to l'oo!-i(•~ <lilem ma <a lost pooch who had ob' 11111~ ly recently gi"''" h1rth lo:t ltttc•ror pups by a C::aes:,irt':.Hl se<'tion 1 was overwhelming' :\I~ nr1J,!hhor.Su" Midrtlebrough. and I n •t't•1\eil ap prox1m:1lcly 50 pholll' l"<tllo: wllh Offers or food . ll('W homes for Pookie. us well :is monetary don<i lions to help pay for hl•r nec1let.l surgery. Wt: WISll to rntorm ynu and your re:iders that .\\ 1th lh1•1r hl'lp. w e w<'rc ablr l11 have the necessary su rJ!c•ry pl•rforml·1l • 'ery su cress fully Slw 1s rt .. t·uperatins: nirl'I~ Wl' abn hart t:'llOllAh m1111t•y ll'fl m•t·r ufll•r I Ill' :wrgery toh:ivc l'ol}kicspayl•tl \\'c hart 111lnrnlt·d th1• i\n1mul Assistanl'C 1.eaAu•• that 1f all\ mon<'y was lctt after the C)i.t "11:-. remo\'cd th u l it wo11lrf ht• <11111:1 h •ll lo their or.:ar1i zat1on. Tiwy told us lnRl<'ad to ui;c tlw rn11n1•v I 11 h:I\ t• her spny<'d. whic-h hni.lw.entlonc Thanks to neryonc who twl 1>etl rrsoln.: l'ookle's m:iny11rohlcmi; It turn<.•rl oul ~hl' had f•)UI' owners in tour wcic•ks lx:rorl• lurn tn~ up ut my horrw. l'ook1c now has a 1H•rmanc•nt homl' ht'n• with my family She wnn 'l lnC'k fo1 IO\'t' ancl at• t'nt ion 1n spite of tlw fart we huvl' lhr''''' \t•ry s in:ill ('hilt1rf'n :111<1 two othertlog" oor ,()It Jo:S SI IA" f'airt•it-Kl 1·rf.-ttd• To the Ed it or· In the July 23. 1ssut· of th1• O :>,ly 1'1lut . Mr. Uon Z ~tiller. or the Dept. of l kullh, was quotr'1 n" l'<.1y1ng, .. There has bc<>n con11 :c1l'rnhll' t•o11 troversy around Fnir\'H w. in· ,·olvlng two differcnl ~roups or parents.·· As JH1•sidcnt or F uir\'ll'W l''amilies and l'rll'nd!I. thC' 1.700-member orl'(anlzot1on ot pnrenls and friend~ of the Fairview clients. we are ccrlt11n· ly not u\\'are of any other hospital-wide "group of parents" at Fair view. and we feel that Mr. Miller 's statement. therefore. could lead to misconccplltm~. Jn addition. we are certainly no l aware that t~airv\ew Fa1111h1·~ anti Fnl•nd~ \\a~ a part of an~ · c 0111ru\1•1·i.~ aruuntl F;111'\ tt•\\. • untt·s~ ou1 !'>tncC'ft• amt n•p,·;11t•1I \ on·t·d :.up1Hirl ut' 1)1U' nll•<ltt·ul rl1n•1·t111 "a' C•ln· strut'll to ht• l'11nt r11' 1•r!->1:tl Frankl~. \\I' :tl't• unl(l·rrd aml r:atlwr hl'\\ 1l1l1·n•d 11, llw l>1·1wrt menl or ll1•:illh s ·"I 11in AS PARE='iTS \\l\•1 ha\l· had lhe pleO!'IUrc or \\Orl.111~ \\1th Ur Toto smn• tht! inrC'pt11111 nt 1111r or 1wniiation some l2 ~l·ar.; :igu. \\1• have found him lo hc· rnfl~l ~u11 Porli,·e or uur t•ffnrli: am1 c~ tremt'ly fair 1!1•J,!a11lini.: lw; mana,l!t•mcnt. "I.' •·1111sich·r tl11• 1>0siti vl· fr<'d h:H'k \H' hnw h:irt ()\'('( the Yl'Lll'S front Ille U\lt•f' whelmin~ majont.v 1>f nur mcm hl·rs to be s1.1m1f1p111 The chan~cs for till' J.tlXHI \11:i~ have oecurrerl at Fa11'\ lcw dur- 1111! Dr . Toto's ll'lllln' l'1111n11t h•• dt•nit•il. a nrl 111 1111r 11111ni1m I lu- st ;ill' h a~ foolt~hh p1 rm1lll-<l lll<' loss of an l"' t l'l' llldy l'apa)ih• me<iical d1n.•etor and lws 11hn\\ n 'little rt•i.:ard for rlw Fainil'W C'lt1'1ll~ hy I ht~ :al'l IOll. W1\HllEN ,, s~ow IAnr-c·md f ''""' To the F:d1tor · \\'1th fl)orl shortai.;cs lw<'ominA m ore s ,. r i o u s l'' e r v w h c r l' . C'Ouldn'l you do sonwlh1.11g to,,..,,. moll' th1.• manufat·ture and 1>111<' ol J1rnpcfru1l marmaladl'. muk1nl! use or tlw million" oi Ion:. ol grup<'fru1l hulls \\.hu·h arc nm\ Ill' 1111i thrown out lo r111 ·• They mak<' 11 111 1\rgcntma. they mllke it in b rnrl. hut I am sure no one mak(•s it 111 llm; roun try llfo:RI·: IS a pol<'nl1,1I n ·:.11ur<'1' a\'a1l11hh• frt1· ll11·1111i.:h11ul thl· Southw C'st and tn Murid<t. I pr't: fer the Arg1•n1 ir11• 1-!r:lllt'frurt marmalacl(' to tlw or;1ni.:" 111 11 1lut·t 1t has mor·1· 111 till' t.1111: ot lhC' S<'\•tlla• Ol'Ull).!l' prodtll'I, prt ll•rn'(f hy l·pi1'11r1·~ It may takl' a l1ttl" 111·11m<1l111n tu ).:<.'I tt 1>lJrl 1•tl h11I t·1111-.1tll·r how uttr;1(•t1 v1• llH• rt'l.111 p111·<' ~h11ultl he., with the low nt'll of till' 111 l(rcdi1•111~ • H Wl' "n11lrl lu1lk uro11nd 1111r c•ounlry \\ tlh .an m1111ir111~ ('YI'. I wai.:l'r we w<ruld l1nrl man~ vc·~c•tahl c pr11rl11t•I:<, now t·on Stdl•rc•tl worlhlt-i.s. which <'1111111 ht• 1'1111v1•rtl'rl 111 111 low c·nsl , noun:-.h111 J! 1111)11 Flli\:0-.K hLOC'K ORANGE COAST DAILY PILOT Uotwrl r.. IVl'•'ll 1•ulllt,h1•r Tfltlm(u K1•1•1l1/. /o:clllar /Jarboro Kr1'ihid1 1-:r1111mot f'Ov1· 1-:d1tnr Thr 1'1htur1~1I 111111" 1or lhl' 111111\ l'll11t sr\'k :-111 1nr11rrn 1111<1 !>ltmulnt1• rt>atlcr" I>~ prc~rnt1n11 un lhl!o JHllll' rlivt•nct• '°omm1•111.11·y on tupk~ ur tnt{'r{·llt hy 5)111lic'11t erl columni .. toe and cnluonl~h. IJ, provld·r" I" forum for r(':ull·r~· 'ie"-. ar •' t1, p• l sentlna lhl~ Ill!" 11011t•r " opin.on~ Qn•t 11t"a' 011 rurrc•n t U>J)ICli. 1'ht> «lltnnul opinions or the ffnlly Pilot 1.1111wur only in tht• ('Ctilurlul cul wnn 31 tlw lop or the IHl~C ()p1n1nn.'i l'lC prei.scd by thl! columnists ood c11rtoonl11ts ond leltrr •Titers 1.1rc tht>lr own rind no cntlo~<>mcnr of their YIC\\.lli hy lht> Uttll)' Pilot should he lnrcrri.'d Wednesday. Augu!>l 4. 1976 . Wednesday ,s Closing Prkes NYSE COMPOSITE TRANSACTIONS Wednesday. August 4 1976 N DAILY PILOT 89 Bydra-laeaded Is Teledyne Lonely at Top? By MD.TON MOSKOWITZ If you·rt" a conglomerute·wutcher. :1~ I um. the one to watch right now is lhe Los An..:t<lcs·based 1·ulcdyne Inc. You may never have heard of Teledyne. It doesn't have too much consumer busloc1111, and jt's • younJ; outfit. But 1t is• hydr•·hcullM corporation with a voracious appetite for other companies Jt'll aJre•dy bigger thitn such compunie u tteynolds Metals. Campbell Soup, Gillette and H J Helot And ll appeurs sun to be hun· gry Prior to 1960. there was no Teledyne It was rounded in that year by Money Tree Henry E. Singleton. who came from lhe granddaddy of con· glomerates. L1tton lndustr1es Smgleton 1s i>Ull chairman to· cloy UTl'ON PROVED WltAT SEEMS to be obvious that 11 ~ ou want to become b1~ quickly, buy a passel of companies. Whtie Singleton was there, Litton uN1ulred 20 comparuc!:i After he left. Litton bought 80 more Running his own show. Singleton demonstrated that he had learned this lt'sson well &>tween 1960 and 1968. Teledyne bought 125 compames By 1967 he was boasting that "tt took Litton 10 years to do what we did in six " · At first Teledyne concentrated its purchases in defense· oriented, high technology firms Then 1t branched out Into metals, steel. Insurance Among lhe companies lt bagged were Sprague Engtneerm~. Brown Engineering, Vasco, Clll Electric. Wah Chang. EJectromcs Microwave, Geotromcs, Firth Sterling. Phllbrlck Nexus, Ryan Aeronautical, Pack,ard Bell, Rodney Metals. United Insurance Company or America, Argonaut Insurance and Fireside Thrift MEANWHILE, SINGLETON WAS not the only one who henehtted from the L1tton learning experience In 1964, as Teledyne was abu1ldmg, another Litton executwe, Fred R Sullivan, left to JOll\ Walter Kidde & Co. tn the East And --xracre sul>sequ~ntly .scooped"l:r(11IO comp:.m1es:-among-thenr Globe Secunty, Lighting Corp. of Am erica and United States Lines With all these conglomerates hunting during the 1960s. it's a wonder there were any s mull companies left m the c:ountry The 1970s have been u d1rferent story Conglomerates round 1t wasn 't so easy to run so many companaes under one roof and they have been shed<hng uruts Ooe company, Los Angeles based Whittaker Corp . has divested itself of 81( companies stnce 1970 Litton, Kidde, Republic: and U.S. In· dustr1es have all lightened up on thC! c·ompanies they hold 1 · • I BUT HENRY SINGtETON was smartC!r. lie had lho foresight tQ buy insurance companies, which have funds lo invest tn compames and so the latest \urn an the con· glomerate screw ts that Teledyne has become the largest single stockholder in Litton Industries, owning 12 percent of the outstanding shares Nor 1s that all Teledyne had also acquired 10 percent of • the outstanding shares of Walter Kidde Jn the end we may • J not have to watch so many conglomerates There may be Justone Teledyne Division Renamed Irvine's Environmental Technology D1v1s1on or Dresser Industries, Inc • bas bee n renamed the Advanced Technology Cent er The center was responsible for the development or the Dresserator fuel inductor, a device designed to redu~e automob1leexhaustcm1ss1ons Stock Rally Slowed By Profit Taking f NEW YORK CAPJ -The stock market turned an an un- even showing today as Tuesday's rally bogged dowp m,.pro- fit taking Tradmg was moderate Prices advanced at the opemng amid some encourage~ ment over the market's showing Tuesday But then they began to level off in the race some t l'· s1stance from profit takers "There's still a lot of skept1c1sm among traders about the way the market has been acting," said Newton O. Zinder at E. F. Hutton & Co "ln the past few weeks. it hasn't been able to follow through one ralhes " The Dow Jones average ol 30 stocks gained 1 95 points to 992 28 Stock• In The Spot If ght f 8 J 0 DAILY PILOT Wednesday. August 4, 1978 Judge Favors Charles Briea.nt ~vf.d last April 's jury award to A.E. Hotchner-or Westport, Conn .. who charged in a fl.5-mlllion lawsuit that h e had been , maliciously maligned by the book "Hemingway in Spain." The book, by Jose Luis CUUUo- Pucbe or Madrid, was publlahed in 1974 by Doubreday. 'Papa' Autho~ Suit CUPPED WING Sl'IU SOUGHT NEW YORK (APJ -A federal Judi e who does not think mll(h of the late Erne8l Hemingway hu ordered the Doubleday & Co. publllhm, firm to_pay Sl25.000 to a bloarapher and confidant of liemlnaway's who claimed he was Ubeled by a book about Hem· ingwax. U.S. Dis tract Court J udge ... _j".:t . -. \ 22 oz. Gi ve s gr eater protectton ... more convel\Jent. too 1 ot8~~o 1.39 JOHNSON'S Baby Oil f:~ [ xcellent tor I "ii · du11ng & alter 1 19 e"'I the Sun. too! . ....,.._, ,, 10 oz. • Shower to Shower u..rant Body Powder with Baking Soda , Re&•lar cw 8 BC ltlrlul a oz. -"AYOS" Reducing Plan CANDY The easy. del1C1ous way to lose weight! Va11ety of flavors 1 S~~SPECIAL 5 QT. SIZE SAVEi SAVEi SAVEi ,., YOUR CHOICE 4 ROLL PAKS SQUID -llDAliRANor THERAGRAN-M IN U PHOLDING nu; award, Brieant ulled Hemingway a "rich libertine and a destroyer of wildllle" and said he was puuled by the continuing public interest in Hemingway 10 years after his death. • Hotcbner, who testified be was Heminpay's friend for many years, 11 the author of "PaSNI Hemingway." He has adapted many of Hemingway's books for movies and tel,vlslon and lee· tured extensively on t.he author 's life. BRIEANT SAID Doubleday publis hed "He mingway In Spain" with "reckless disregurd for truth or fa lsity" and belilUed HG4.ehntt's stat..a as an.milbority on Hemingway. Hot chner c laimed that the book typed him as a •·publicity hound end sponger" and "not a true friend o( I le mineway." Sa.Jes of the book. whk h sold for $10.95. totaled 3,453 cop1t' • court records s howed. while ··Papa H-;mingway" has sold 630,000 copies. • RECUUI •CRAY • ONSC£NTED VACATION TIME! -lii.ifuil SAN DIEGO (APl -A on · pound portion or fl wing nug which fell from an airliner over San Diego ls still being sought. The pl<'ce measuring r°"r feet by 10 lnch~s was lost Frld11y night as ttle Western Airlines Boeing 7208 from llonolulu was O\er downtown Balboa Park, I OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK 9:30 AM TD 9:30 PM_.,MON.-SAT. 10:00 AM TO 7:00 PM SUN. 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"lie wus reccivini; <'~· cell<'nl car<' from his own doc· tor ." By WILLIAM SCHREIBER 01 lllt 0•1ly Piiot Si.ti ' An Or ange County airline pilot who became 111 after n night h om Philade lphia late last month muy be California's fir ·t case or a mysterious disease that 'tlas killed 21 people in the past .week in the East. County and state health of- i'icials a r e examining blood $amples taken from the pilot. # . r whose identity and pJace or re· sidence are being withheld. Of· f1cials were notifi ed ol lhe ail· ment Tuesday by the man's - pnvate physician. "At this point, we are unable to say for certain if it is the ~ame disease as that back East," said Dr. Ja m es Cbin, state health director. "It may be a couple of days before we a re able to de· termine from the samples what is present in this case. "The samples were taken late in the pr<>1resslon of the illness so we may find it Impossible to isolate anything at this point." Chan said the pilot, who flies tor American Airlines. stayed at one of the hotels housing American Legionnaires attending a conven- tion in late July. Most of those who have died of the strange bu.I! attended the con· O•llY ~lot Sllttt ""°'• CLEMENTE BURGER STANO HAD UNSCHEDULED APPOINTMENT WITH WRECKING CREW 65-Ton Cra ne Trucking Rig Brings About a Premature Redevelopment I ' Food Stand Struck By Errant Crane By PHIL ROSMARIN 011~• 0.1ly ...... Sl•lf A 65·ton crane rig lumbered too rast off the San DielfO F'reeway 's El Camino Heal offramp in S<1n Clemente al 5: 40 a.m. todny ancl dcmohshcd a hamburger stanrl. No one was manning the fast foods restaurant and the drt vcr w as u nhurt -not even scratched-despite the fact that the collision peeled away lhe cab of the truck abo\•e and around him . It was the third time a vehicle slammed into the stand in recent years and lh<' fourth time it will have to be rebuilt. Once it was damaged by fire. Posts that had been laid in con. crete in front or Love Char- JJrollcd Burgers to guard 3J?ainst just s uch an accident were s mashed Crom their moorings. The truck, own<.'d by Dragg Cr ant> ~ervice of Long Beach. went straight on through the bar. rlers a nd halfway throul'?h the burger stand, :.il 1402 S . l'~I Camino Reul. The front, roof and sides of l,,ovt>'s were cuvcd in. The crane misSl'<I hlttini? thl' Red Lollipop l'rc-School by just u rew feel. There was no one then• at the time. Driver J a ime Kimel>, 22. or 17040 San Bruno, Founta111 Valley. blamed the crash on .brake failure Coas t We ather Firemen said the freeway of- framp may have been as much lo blame. They caUed the turnoff deceptive-a s hort. hard tu rn down a steep incline, with no in· <lication of the 90·degrec turn on· lo El Camino Real. AnRelo Hioureas. the owner of the hamburger dnve-thru, was. to say the least. dlscouraged. lie picked through some ol the rub- ble and r eOected on ~ HtUe restaurant's fate. (Sff DEMOLISH. P•ce AZ) Niguel Beach Park Opens To the Public Arter Orange County supervisors approved an agree· ment with Avco Coll\munity Developers, Inc .. this mornln~. Niguel Reach Park near Dana f'mnt was opened for public use ut noon today. The a1trcement ended a long series or delays that h ave i;tym1ed the 35-acre beach park's OJ><'nmit since 1973. Under terms of the agreement, the county will take title to the 1rnrk while the company· con· ttnucs to finish $15,000 worth of construction projects. Suspended for the time being is a quarrel over who will PltY the estimated $40,000 it will cost to connect the beach's restrooms with a sewer line . Cella Judge Challenged As Biased A motion seekine the removal ol Judge William C. Speirs from the Orange County Superior Court trial of Dr. Louis J. Cella Jr. and an associate is scheduled for a hearing next Monday. Judge Speirs will respond at that time to defense allegations that he hu d isplayed bias and prejudice in pretrl al 8Clions held. Uws far in bis courtroom. The thrust or lbe defense motion la that Judge Speirs has reported- ly been told by presldil\I Judge Claude M. Owen1 that, if the trial is moved out or Orange County, Judge Speirs will go with the l awyers and d efe ndants to whichever locaUon lsselected. Lawyers for Cella, SI , and former hospital administrator Stephen Robert Evans, 31,ofMis· sion Viejo argue that heavy pre- trial publicity has ruled out any ,hanceor a fair trial in this area. Cella, Evans, George Louis 01· Jendorf, 45, of Laguna Beach and Theodore Schlffm~. 53, of Santa Ana, were convicted in Los Angeles Feder al Courtlasl menth of multiple crim inal charges Ciled after they defrauded two county hospitals controlled by Cell a oC an estimated$2m1Uionlnlunds. Cella. drew a five-year federal prison term. Scbtrrman was sen· tenced to two and one half years and Evans and Ollendorf to one year each. Both Schurman and Ollendorf h.ve pleaded gullly in Orange County Superior Court pretrial action and will appear as wit• nesffS for the prosecution against Cella and Evans. vent ion. "This pilot started feeling ill shortly befor e leaving the East on his return flight and when he arrived In Orange County. he consulted his physician," Chin said. · ··when all the publicity came out about the deaths and lhe dis· ease in PennsyJvama, he and his doctor put two and two together and re ported to the County * * * HeaJth Departm~nt for tests." the stltte,offlcial added. "By ttiat lime, however. he was in his recovery phase and reeling better." Chin said. Or. Gerold Wagner. Orange County health services director. said the county man was never hospitaliied. despite press re- ports to the contrary. "By the lime he came to us, he was feeling much beller than he * * * Wagner said the pilot was ut home with his fom1I •. According to Chin. the fnmil) will be kept under obser vation to determ ine if thl're was any s pread of the fltt ·likc tllnl'ss. So far, he noted. "the rest of the ISt>e l\I ALAD'\', Page A2l * * * Doctors Bugged Mystery Shrouds 22 Deatfu HARRISBURG, Pa. CAPJ State health oCCicials said today they don't know when they will be able to identify the mystery "'legionnaire's diseas ·· thaLhas kiUed 22 people who attended an American Lt!gion convention two weeks ago. But some persorts who had the disease have recovered and lhat may aid researc hers in tracking down the Ou·like agent, state He alth Sec r e t ar y Leonard Bach man told a news con · rerence. Doctors also do not know how to treat the 122 persons still hospitaJi~t'd with svmptoms or high lever , congested lungs and chest pains. Bachman said. "Some are getting antibiotics and some aren "l and lhat hasn't had an effect one_.way_ or lhc. other ." he said. There are no signs lhat lhe out· break was abating. A 72-year-old Philadelphia woman died Tuesday night and a Pittsburgh mun died early today. bringing the death toll to 22. "The disease has not leveled off." said Bachman. "Apparent· ly both the number or deaths and the number or new cases have in· creased and ar e increasing." Mor e than 100 federal and state medical rcsem'C'hcrs have been mobilized lo Identify the disease. Al the reden1l Cl'nter ror DIS· ea e Control in Atlanta, re· sear chers planned today lo ex· amine the first cultures grown from tissue samples takt-n from victims or the illness. The cultures could provide u clue. "We are ruling out nothing," said Or. Walter OowcUe. <lircclor of virology at the center. "This could be anything from an infec- t ious disease to a toxm." All the known v1ct1ms of the tSff MYSTERY, Pagc A21 Coast Hire-for-kill Srhe1Ne \ Plot Shocks NB Womall- TELLS HER STORY Mre. Janice Roblneon By TOM BARLEY Of '"' O•llY Piiot SUtt A Newport Beach doctor's wife who spent four days on the run with a confessed ·•rut man" a rter he t old her over the luncheon table lhat he had been hired lo kill her spent a long day explalnlng her actions Tuesday in Orange County Superior Court. Defense attorney AJ Ramsey was J anice Robinson's iuter· r oeator and he asked her several times via difrerent questions lo explain why she ned with Anthony Scalise from her B ig C any on. Newport Beach, home Feb. 21. Scalise. 29, first took Mrs. Robinson, 38. to the Huntington Shores m otel in Huntington Beach after he showed her a garrote -a corded rope used in strangulation killings -which he said be was supposed to use on her. The sel(-confessed lifetime con m an. drive n by a young man identified in testimony as Gary, then took Mrs. Robinson in her car on a circuitous lour of three counties that was de· signed, the prosecution claims. to shake off any pursuit of Scalise or Mrs. Robinson. Mrs. Robinson explained that she was terrified of her esfran~cd husband , Or. Wayne Lester Robinson, 42, who Is now on trial in Judge J .E .T. '"Ned" Roller 's courtroom on charges or solicit- ing her murder. Scalise has explained that he was arraid of both Robinson and police officers who might question his Involvement in the Robinson affair stnce he is on parole fr o m a f e deral couutcrfeltlng cqnviction and a stale forgery conviction. "I was In a state of shock," Mrs. llobinson explained on sev- e ra l occasions. "I scootchcd down In the back or the car <See DOCTOR, Page.U) 0 ............. 11 ...... ACCUSED OF PL,OT Dr. Wayne Robinson Fair weather Thursday with low morning clouds. Co:ist temperatures should r each low t o m id 70s. Overnight lows down to low50s. When ordering the park opened today, supervisors asked the sheriff's department to increase &latrols tbere, ~measure taken to reduce vandalism. They also directed the county environment al a1ency'1 stair to prepare a plan for slafftq the park. including lifeguard service us well as required maintenance and cleanup ser vices. Police Battle-Demonstrators I NSIDIE TODA" The Cl A performed drvg er· perfmenC• °" unwitting In/or· manta.aM criminal nupecta. a cco rd i n g t o n ewly deciaaaifled documents. It alao WGlded to use drugi on rd.,,.,._ POWt. Stories on e.Af. Cl ... .. ... , .. .. , .. , Cl l 1 1-l ·~; .,, .. , A4 HE WOKE UP TO A SALE '"The first caller woke me up at 8:30 on Saturday morning and wanted to buy the bike. He paid the full price." That's the advertlslns aueceu story told by the Coeta lien mu who placed th1" clualfied ad: Blryctc. molebecane 10 i.J>el.'d, SiO. Day or Night n you nave wheels you WHl to move, caJrA2·5671. We mue it easy for you to put a rew wordl to won, in the Daily Ptlot. JOHANNESBURG. South Africa (AP) -Police opened fi re o n some 20,000 black d e· monstrators in Soweto t.ownabjp today and wltneuea said at least three people were kllled and 18 others injured. But police denied anyone was killed iD the clash and aaid a~t 12. people were lltjured. They claimed the se1re1•ted black 1.ow91bip wu calm and under eoatral. • . Tbe witllaHI Included a black Joum alllt who sakl be was urry- lng one of the Yictlms to • hospital when be d ied. It wu the ftrat major out..,_ ol violmce in Soweto stnce Ut• dent demoa1tutlon June JI toucWelf ... h ullllll= ...................... ~ ....... _ .... _ -1 Pret«ia in wbkh aleuU2,I people were killed arid more than 1.100 injured. All but two or lhc dead and most ol the injured were black. Witnesses reporte d the township, home lo more than one million blacks, wu lh chaos to- day u roving mobs set fire to shops and cars. A key railway signal block was burned. Com· muter trains were halted. Heavily •rmed police were re· ported touring the township. eight m iles south of Johan· nesburg, in armored personnel carriers and dispersing crowds with tear au. Police sealed off .U exits with roadblocks. The lar1eal confrontation wu ia Mrtheastern Soweto, where 1m estlaiated 20.000 blacks, ap- pareaUy tryaq to march on Jobannesbur1, were turned back by police. The marchers were protesting the detention or slu· dent leade r s and oth er grievances of South Africa 's biack major ity. T he protesters twice broke throu1h • police barricade head- ing for the New Canada railway Junction on lbe outskirts or Soweto before being stopped .nd dlsperaed with tear gas. Police officials said they were ltyin g t o avoid shooting whenever possible inquelJing the disturbances. Gen. Ger t Pr lnsloo. the police commiasioner, said he had no · knowled ae of any deaths ln Soweto. "T h e position Is that throughout the day there have been ftulffhes with post.era being brandI.hed •nd slogans shouted by youthful black~. "They ere s till in grou1>S In various places in Soweto und UlJ New Canada and Noordgeslit.I The situation is still slruinl'd butt In general t he situation ls under control," Prlnsloo saJd. Placards carried by students read," "Release our brothers," and "We are born free but ever· ywhere we a re in chains.'' Police efforts to control the rioters were handicapped by ~1 ljtrong wind that blew tear gn Alack toward police lines. " Newsmen at the outskirts of t he township s aid police ha4' l taken stringent m easures to keep journalists and photographer4 out ot the strife-torn township. There were several r eports ol photographers havlog the\• cameras confiscated . .. _ --- .. •2' OAILYPILOT SB ,,..•P•,,eA I MYSTERY •• df1ense -1n c lud1ng two hotpltallzcd an New Jersey and one ln New Yor k -attended or were In some way c~ed with a statt American Legion corwen· tion In Ph1lodclphia that ended J 1 da)'t ago. It was earlier reported a Con· nectlcut man also had the dis· ease. but Connecticut hulth o(. ~ials later 11ud he d~ oot have iL There has been no cooltrmed evidence or secondary spread of U.e disease, Bachman said, but added that It was still too early to discount the possibUHy that the 1 dlsease m ay IK' spread to others. , ln an interview early today, hOwever , a stale health depart· ment spokesman swd there were six unconfirmed reports or the disease among people in PhUudelphia who did not auend the convention. * * * f're• ra,,e A J MALADY. • • fJllmily Is in ~ood health." "The pilot is n ot Jn any. particular isolation because the dJsedSe is in a late. ceneraJly non-contagious s tage," Chin said. Wagner noted it appears the m alady that erupted in Philadelphi a "is a precisely lbnitecl thing to those who were actually a t the convention hotels ... He said it is "certainly a serious thing and we are aJl very concerned. But there are many researchers a nd l aborator ies working to find out what the dis· ease is and how lo hall it if nttessar)'. '' Chin said his agency is con· ducting IO\'estigations around the st ate into other airlrne employes who might have con· tracted similar ailments in r<'· cent weeks. Though some have been reported. he said none have been confirmed. Marine Pilot E scapes Jet Plane Crash A Laguna Hills Marine pilot ejected from his A4 Skyhawk J<'t berore It crashed in the desert near Needles Tuesday mornlni:t. The pilot, 1st Lieutenant Wade C. Straw. 28. of Laguna Hills. was on a routine training mission when the cras h occWTed. He was picked up followini:t the 8:30 a.m . crash by a r escue helicopter from George Air Force a;ise and transported to the Naval llospllal, Long Beach, where he is reported in stableconditfon. The A4 Skyhawk is a sinJtle·seat jet attack a ircraft used in support ol ground forces. The pilot is at· tac h ed to Marine Attack Squadron 214, the Black Sheep squadron at Marine Corps Air $ation. El Toro. The cause of the crash is under investigation. ·House Eyes 'Override Vote WASHINGTON (AP1 -House ~Democratic leaders are guarded· :1y optimistic about their chance :t.ooverrldc President Ford's veto :ot a bfll giving states bigger royalties on coal and other m inerals mined from federal land. "Close. but do·able:• s aid Rep. John J . Mt' Fall of California, the Democratic whip who heads the party organization to gel out the vote on critical issues. The House votes on tho override today. The &?note voted 75 to 18 Tues· day to overr ide. 13 more vote~ than the two·thlrds required. ORANGE COAST \ff DAILY PILOT Ja<k R.Cur~ .,. ... _..,.,,\.W)H\t~G.fll'liH .. ~ Thomas Keevll fOltOt Thomas A. Murptllne "'-"""'"° l'dllO< CNrlu H. t.oos Richard P. Nall '"'"'""' M<IMO"'<! E"'t~ SMdleNc9t Valley Office 7"°tl•P•711-MW<l0oetof'<- Offius c .. t•Mtw: 1Jt~"'"""­.,,...,_~M" ,,.IS!lo .... -~ .... ,., llM()lf_....tM-1 T1 .. •1ne(114)M2~ ClatsHIM Ad"'11 .... 2-J611 ~-It Y•lloy-Ofll(• 111~10 ••-Mft( .. _ 4t5-0UO O,,.ltH, m• °'-e...t ....,,w.oq ~ _,,, Plot "'"" ••-lllWt.,_ ,.., ....... f"•Utf' tr H•ttHU ff'trlH '-«f't:U't ,.,,, ft n,..-H\ltff wftAowt u»c••f ,.,mt~\teift •' c: ......... _ •• s.t~f "•" "'' ....... , 41 '"'' ~ .... c.oi.-. ~ ....... '"' ··-\11' -.....,,~,.,n.,....1•"··-""...., __ u.n-. Wednesday. -.ugusl .a 1978 Sniper Sought Suicide BERKELEY tAPJ -A man who fired dozens ot rlOe hots from a rooftop before dying in o 1tunfight with pobce had left a nott" uylng be did not have the coura.ce to commit suicide, of. ricers said today . ' No one else was h\jurcd in the shooting. which lasted nearly an hour Tuesday night. Police Identified the victim a11 Donald &I . Partrick Jr .. 29, and sald the note wu found in his npartment. Inspector Danlel M. Wolke said the note, written in 3 barely legible scrawl. was ad· dressed "Dear Father." "Tonicht I'm going to be shot t.o death.·• Wolke quoted from the note. "l don't have the courage to take my own life. l am stuck with the terrible res ponsibility oC opening fire on the police. I'm fir· ing an Italian Mauser. I have over 100 rounds or ammunition.·· Police said Partric k Sr .. publisher of the weekly Los Angeles Free Press. Wolke s aid Partrick had purchased the rifle the day before he cli mbed to the second· story roof of his apartment bu.ild· ing and started firing. The bu.ild· ing is in a mixed commercial and residential neig hborhood. The gunman held police at bay for 40 minutes before they opened fire. Then he vanished from sight and was found dead later. Nike Site Building Due Soon Irvine Company officials snid today they hope to begin work before the end or the year on the Garden Grove industrial complex following acquisition of the Nike base there in a land swap with the federal government. Edward P . Lee. \'ice president of land development for the com· pany. announced the $10 million swap Tuesday afternoon. He said It is one or the largest in Orange County history . The swap includes the 215·acre Ni kl' base in Garden Gro\'C, which the land company wants to de- ''cloo into a n industrial complex by 1986. The company also received a 17·a<'re site in the Islas Creek sec· tion or San Francisco. near llun· ter's Point. That site had four warehouses, which company spokes man Jerry Collins said already have been sold to th<• r.oodman Lumber Company of San Francisco for an undisclosed sum, The.land company also got a seven-acre tract near the Santa Ana Marine Corp helicopter sta· tion inthetrade. The U. S. Navy, whichnegotlal· ed the trade, received a total o(729 acres around the El Toro Marine Corps Air Station, which com· pany officials said the facility needed as a burrer acinst en· croachments into the air field's flight patterns. Th~ compa~y·s pla.n.c;lo~~velop the Nike s ite into an S86 mUhon in· dustrial area may meet with some r esistance by County Supervisor Laurence Schmit who has said he wants SO ~res of it for a regional park. A public hearing on the county acquisition of a park site will he held Aug.11. Irvine Company plans call for a complex developed on tho same principles as the one near tht" Orange County Airport. The Garden Grove complex. at iL'I peak could provide Jobs ror 7,200 ond annual tnx. revenues in exce11s of $2 million. company officials said. Police Probe Burglaries In El Toro Jewelry, a television set and radio equipment with a total value of $1,460 were stolen from an El Toro home by burgJan who removed the s creeen on the kitchen window to gain entry. Orange County sheriff's of. ricers said the theft was reported by Donald Charles Letro 39, ot 2S362 Gemini St. Thet said thieves ransacked the llYing room, master bedroom and a children's bedroom wbUe the family was away. Also under lnvesllgaUon ln t.he EJ Toro area is a breu-ln at the Aloha Hut, 226$\ Lambert St .. where Jewelry. stereo equipment a nd cJothJng were stolen by burglars wbo pried open the front door lock. Store operator Roee Marie Fashano, 22592 Costa Bella Drive, El Toro, valued the total Jou at $1,34S. Mystery S 11b111ari11e CUEA I Gets Nod For Talks Thl" Capistrano Unlflrd School Olstri(l S(hool board has formid Ir reco(:n1ied thl· Cuplstrano n Cied Educ¥Uon A"oclation <CUE/\) as the exclusive labor represent4'Uve of the district's 63-i lt.H.H~h(•rs. What was this unmarked submarine doing off the Oranl!e Con.st last week'! It flew an American Flag , but the U.S . Navy refused to identify the ves!>el. Jn fact. ofCtctaJ s at the U.S. Navy sub b<.1se in San Diego de· ni ed it s e xi s t e h ce. Co:ist Guard spokesmen said aJI they knew was that a Navy sub was in the area. They couldn't fxpl3in its lack o( markings. NewPort Beach police spotted the sub. bul said lhey were unsuccessful In determining who it belonged to, or why it was cruising orr their city. In a related action Mond•y, the board npprovtd a request by the district 's other teachers· union. the Capistrano UnJfled Federa· tlon ot Teach<'rs. to withdraw ll$ J'('tltion for exclus1n) rcprcstnlu· lion. The action will ellmJr)ntu a pro· poSed election among th~ district teaching s tfiff to determine \\ hlCh Of the l WO llnions would bt- u u th or i e d lo repr esent the teachers in sahH"\' talks Status A waited Of Laguna Family A Fountain Valley couple wait- ed anxiously tod ay for word from 11 relatives and frt<'ndi. who would have been in Colorado's Fro• Page A I DOCTOR ••• where no one could see me and all J ever saw from that posi· tlon was a lot of sky." Scalise had earlier explained from the witness stand that he had been promised two pay- ments of at least Sl0,000 each if he killed Mrs. Robins on and confirmed he r death for her husband. He has t e s tified tha t he changed his mind and d4"cided to help Mrs. Hoblnson after hl' invited her l o lunch at the Velvet Turtle r estaurant in Newport Beach under the as· sumed name or John F'oster, a l\evada realtor who w as in· ter ested in Mrs . Robinson's Ri\•erside properties. The jury has listened to tapes and telephone conversations in which n voice identified as that of the Irvine physician dis· cussed the suppost-d killing with &alise an a matter of fact man- ner. Mrs. Robins on, obviously tired after a long day on the witness stand, appeared to r e- sent Ramsey's probing inlo the value pf the couple's commw:li· ty property. She refused lo confirm If the p r oper ty Jointly owned by herseU and her husband was correctly valued at the figure listed by her divorce lawyer in November, 1975 -$2,114,183 in net worth. It was the only question or that type that Judge Ruller seemed prepared to accept and he practically told Ramsey that an a bearing held out.side the presence or the jury. Big Thompson River territory when dev:is tat1on struck last weekend. <Related story Page A3.) Eight are from Orance County and the fears were mounting, because one of the group on a cross·country trip failed lo call home Monday to arrange a plane trip home. · Earl Northrup of 1888 Acacia St .. Fountain Valley, said today the Red Cross staggered by ..82 bodies found to date -has not been able to clarify identities ol the victims. "An attorney from Greeley has offered to help, but we haven't re· ceived any more word from him,•' Mrs. Northrup added. Northrup said friends of the family Oew to Albuquerque and are expected to caJl with news Crom Loveland, Colo., sometime today or tonight. The missing group includes: Dennis and Barbara Schultz, of 31672 Scenic Drive, Laguna Beach; their children, Brian, 15, Steve, 12, and Rene, 10; a sister· in·law. Mar y MacAuley, of2J21h Eighth St.. Huntington Beach; the sons of Neal Schultz, of Needles -Michael, 16, and his brother Chris, 13; and Mall Baird. 12,ofYorba Linda. They ~·ere traveling together in two vehicles on the vacation trip and were scheduled to be in the disaster area when the Dood struck. DEMOLISH He had jus t rebuilt it last February. About eight months ago it had been pulverized by a dumo truck that came barreling· thro'!Jh lhe same offr~mp. Before that. a large sedan car s mashed into it. In between that was a fire. Hiureas said tbal had t he truck come by four hours aCter it did, four or five e mployes might. · have been buried in the rubble of bJsstand. Will he rebuild? "l don't know," be said. "That's a good question rlaht now." . Actually, he added, he's think· inc of relocating. .That 'Quake' FaheA.larm Did lhe earth move for you this momlng? ' Well, It wasn't an earthquake. A call to the Cal Tech Seismo- graphJc Laboratory in Pasadena confirmed that no earthquake was recorded on Cal Tech's sensitive equipment this morn· ing. "More than likely it was a sonic boom ," explained public relations r epresentative Chris Orlowski. Chilly Up North · SAN FRANCISCO (AP) Below normal temperatures will continue in Northern California due to a sprawling bunveak low pressure system camping ocr the coast. rn_n_nlin FURNITURE Thl' boar<i's move means all tcud1crs will p~1y u "scrvil·e fet-" to thl"' union whether or 11ol lhey are members. The ser vice fee could not be m ore than the CUEA mem· bership dues. currently $185 n year. The setting of th' rec Is to be negotiated between lhe board and the CU EA. The board's approval came quickly and with llttledisoussion. Following the action. board member William Thompson quipped: "The drinks ure on Tony," referring to Tony Leon. president of the CU EA. The Capiatrano Di~trlct will have about 16.4SO students next school year. It serves the com· munllies ot San Cle mente. L1lguna Nig"tJel , Dana Point. San Juan Capistrano, Capistrano Beach and a portion of Mission Viejo. In Its initial salary presenta· lion the CUEA has asked for wage increases of from 16 to 30 percent. Girl Facing Story Query HARRIS. Kan. IA P1 Authorities say they have ques. tions about a missing 16-year-old girl's story that s he was kid· napcd a fter her rather was shot to death at his rural home. Penny Blevins caJled her sister about 4 a .m. Tuesday to say her father, Ralph, 60, had been shot and she w as being held al gun· point, police said. A short lime later, Blevins' body was found al his home near this farming town 60 miles southwest of Kansas Ci· ty. He had been shot several times with a s mall caliber gun. "I don't wa nt to hear the domestic relations issue or Robinson ver s us Robinson argued in this courtroom," be told Ramsey. 'Tm not happy about this k ind of questioning because I think you might open a Pandora's box that is not con· nected with this criminal trial.'' Principality PtoW-cid M~erroneon ~ lnsPr• it.;, - co#eocrion of b.ct-oom fl#f'lf\A hom n-.os'lilo. Hl!fll, tolented de\iqne<s hove blended tho d>ert>!Nxl 17tli (enl"'f decciralN'lt fl'Olif 1 of tliled a oftvnen ttom the border areos of Italy. Ftonce ar-c:J Spain, In leepinq w;tf, tf,e COltlfy {~\ of the colectoon, pec~y peca1 v-1, oal \olid\ ond -ood pr~~ are o:7eft#./ M!lec1od ond bletded toqefhef to pro.Ode o qoon ''"""" oppopnote to the lllyle. Fa ~ delo.r,,og ...!h lcn•ong u1llflqlh. cenOof'I decora>ive poris ond carved elfect1 ou1 \JITIUloied wood. Hard •vbboN.:1 ond oihet 'lpll<tol ''"'~ tee~ oeoie o ,_ fno,h for PRINCIPALLY with 1Anua1 dority ond ~" t() •evMI 1ke dtorrotic beo.Ay of tho ""°°J cpon, Whethe< \e!IOCllod f,.,. the rrollfJI bcdoom 1Y guest •OOM. ~INCIPAUN olfer1 )'Oii tho pll'!WIY) r<M'l•y Meca!f"TOI'$.., ~ ard The bulk of the va luation figure on the Robinsons· com· munity property Is reported to be in a chain of pizza parlors jointly operated by the couple before their separation last July. Other elements or the valua· tion figure include Dr. Robinson's practice In Irvine and Mrs . Robinson's $300,000 home on Augusta Lane in Big Canyon. Ramsey appeared to press Mrs. Robinson hard late in lhl' day on the issue of the sleeping arrangements in the motels v1s1t· ed while the pair sought refuge in Huntington Beach and Los Angeles and Ventura counties. Questioning the attractive blonde witness on her statemenl t.hal all she took with her from her home was a sln~tc <'han~c of clothing, $5 in cash and no credit cards, he asked her If she ever made the statement tn an in· vestigator: • · /\ nd then we went to bed." "No," Mrs. Robin.'lOn replied. "I didn't and we didn't." "WeJI, did you ever make the statement lo an Orange County in· vestigator that 'we got up amt then called L ee la ramlly friend>?" Ramsey asked. "I don't remember that. I wus probably speaking ln vague terms,'' Mrs. Robinson replied. Mrs. Robinson told Ramsey that there were severa'I reasons for the flight from Newport Beach tor hersetr and Scalise; among them her fear of bcr husband, Scalise's fear of Robinson ana U'le police and the need to allow her family and friends to list her as a missing person. It was not until an Orange County lawyer came to Ventura and spent a day convincing Scalise that he would not be JaUed if he came back to Santa Ana and told his story that sho and Scalise were able to return. sbelold Ramsey. by or~. ¥ l. ~ :. • • tho Tlv""'11.;11$ quolty lflo• ~ loN de-.~" : :::· II n Ii ·'·.:· . . . I • 61" Dreuer, Verflcef Mlrrer, q.. .. Hn61ml-4Twi.M'91tSt9!h. ••arty 1949 11~1~' ~.~\ 1165 HARIOl ILVD. DOWNTOWN COSTA MESA PHONE 548·5131 Wedneactay. August 4, t976 DAIL v PILOT AS ~ £ase Restt~d . • I ID Pugil Df.~ath ·1 PASADENA <AP) -A balky robot arm on the VUU., .1 lander hu Junmed I« the aecoad lime, tiwartlq aclentiSts' efforts to make an or1aruc llUl)'lia of the bi1hly ective Marban soil that could det«mine ii lt bolds life. A d.ciaion on how to 'et the arm moving acaln wutxpeded today. theoriud that In order ror ure lo exiat on Mars the ~t·colored soil must eantain or•uic mole<"ules. The organic experiment that was temporulb' stymied by the stuck arm would help to deterrmne whethersuchcompoundsarepresent. MEANWtnU:. VIKING scientists said they now Mheve an unexpected abandance ol oxy1en r.roduced from lhe Mart.ian soil in another of Vik• n1'1 test cells probably was not the result ol lile forms. SAN DIEGO CAP>-Tbe covernmer&' has rest- ed iu case in the bearing lo determine h' Marine Capt. Cecil v. Taylor wUI be tried on cbarl"J.'S stem· mint from tile de.all\ of re<'ruit. , Maj. John Grant. defense counsel for '? aytor, was e~pected to <'ompl~e the defmse prese1u aUon today. , Vikl.nc olflclal1 ffPOl1,ed Tuesday niaht that the mechanical arm used tocoUect sotl for experiments In the lander's sophisticated automated laboratory had Qot completed Its pro,ramed mission after di&- gln1 into the Marti an surl ace. The researchers said Tuesday lhe unexplain~ 1eneralion or gas from a soil sample bad almoat ceased. llA.I. ERNST U.A. Sc-hultM, who has bffn ~l'On­ ducting the hearlng. will then recommend whet\ \er Ta)•lor will face a general coort·manlal on thar•es ol dereliction of duty in falhn(t to instruct a~d auperv~ porsooael u.odl'r hi• N>mmand. Taylor i$ former head of the S~-c1al Trainina! ... Branch. a unit ror problem rC'Crult~. at the Marine COl"PS Recruit Deoot. Euc.,eodS.w• Actor Clint Eastwood and seven other in· vestors in a Fiji plan· talion are suing a ninth for neglecting the Island pro perty. They want th e partnership dissolved and th e ca ttle , banana and pineap- ple plantations sold, plus damages from chocolate magnate Paul De Donenico. ONE OF THE laboratory lnslc:umenf.S, a gas <'hromatagraph mass spectrometer, "did not re- ceive a soil aample today," said Viking spokesman Larry Klng. The extension arm reached out 95 in· ches, du1 up some soil and retracted about six In· chea before It stopped. he said. Viking oCClclals met during the night to de· termine what might have caused the arm to jam. It had also jammed during preliminary testing, but scientists then found a way to dislodge a pin that blocked the arm from moving. FRANK BRISTOW, Viking news chief, said scientists believed the problem might be in a fail· sale mechanism of the lander designed to hall the arm in case of some related problem. The arm had previously delivered soil lo two other experiments using separate mechanical sequences. Bristow said that Viking scientists ha\'e "We are gravitating closer toward a non-....a..u_ O d biological explaoalion" ol the gas productioh. said P ...... twr ra Dr. Harold P . Klein, head of the Viking biolocy Lord Tho m son of team. ''But we are not 100 percent sure It's not Fleet, owne r of an biological." internatio nal chain THE STRANGE GM emission from the soil of newspapers in- sample probably resulted from a chemical process eluding a num~r in In which surface oxygen, released by sunlight. de-California. died in a composed a liquid food added lo the soil in the test London Hospital to- cell, scientists said. day . At first there had been speculation that the --------- emission was caused by some life form breaking down lhe nutrient. But Dr. Fred Brown, a biologist for TRW Systems. manufacturer of the life-seeking laboratory package, said the experimental data "have al moat zero chance of being a m essage about ure ..• He added that many or the scientists OD the of- ricial Viking biology team agree with him. 1V Medics Face Real Emergency PALOS VERDES IT WAS IN Taylor's unit whf'rf' Pvt. Lynn E. McClure. 20, of Lufkin. Tcx .. wus lnJu1ed Dec. 6 while being forced to undergo special pugll stick bouts. McClure remained in a coma unUJ his March 13 death in a H~ton hos pit id. Let'Q Go ~ailing ... IN llAUN'Ul ~ P'OtMT HAllOl RENT A SAILIOAT VICTORY 21 OMEGA l4 CottOMADO 21 4 TMa&L lOU'U MA• JOl&n ·Dry~ ..... Hoith ..... .__ ... tal DR. NORMAN HOROWITZ, head of the a chemical release experiment, which is looking for signs of photosynthesis by Martian organisms - among other things -said preliminary data have indicated only that Martian soil is quile dry. <AP) -The television EMBARCADERO crew for the Emergen-/. .. •: . .. .· Execs Transfusion Wrong Cops Nab Chino Slaying Suspect cy series faced a reaJ MARIHA emer gency while filrn-llmlMrc ..... "-• " LOS ANGELES CAPI -The death of Taft Schreiber. a director of MCA. Jnc., who died after transfusions of --the wrong t~·pe blood. was caused by clerical error. a UCLA Hospital of· ficiaJ reports. Dr. George S. Smith. director of clinical laboratories at the hospital. said a technician in a blood bank. who was typing two blood samples at the same time. wrote the wrong type on ~hreiber's chart. 1"he 68·year·old Schrei~r was ad- mitted to the hospital on June 3 for urolos:ic s urgery. I le died June 14. "Th<' technical work was a c - curate." Smith said in an inkn·1c\\ ··A human error foul ed up the system:· Cf11pf Slf ~ ol Sla11ln9 COMPTON <AP1 A 76-year-old South San Gabriel woman who visited the crypts or her late husband. daughter and son-in.law has been , bludgeoned and strangled lo death, · police say. [ State J The council -on a 104 vote as ked the s tate Department of Transportation to end the project restricting rush hour use or one lane to car pools and buses. Councilman Marvin Braude said the Diamond Lanes waste lil'Tle and energy and increase accidents. ·''o-laulc DI~• 1l9aln SACRAMENTO CAP > -The lust no-fault automobile insurance bill of the year is dead. Opposed by insurance companies and trial lawyer s. the bill would have required insurance companies to is· sue policies requiring_ payment of drjvers' costs in an accident. regard- less of who caused it. The troublesome question proved lo be the right to sue for additional losses. LOS ANGELES (AP> -Chino police arTested a man early today in con• nection with the murder last May of two Catholic church m•mbers who were iunned down as they patrolled the church to prevent vandalism. Loe Angeles Police ln- veslig a tor Jack Jung said Chino police accom- panied by LAPD officers arrested Gilbert Cordero. 23. at the Greyhound Bus terminal in Los Angeles. CORDERO WAS taken to Chino and booked for investigation of murder. ing at .,arineland Pier ._,...H.._.CA. ·, in PalOI Verdes. ~~ ..... ~~· ~17~14~1~4~9~M~17~7~~!!;~~~~~~ mother of three, died on lhe eve of her 30th birth· day and on her first night of patrol. She and Padilla, a 43- year·old maintenance man with six children, were talking with her husband when the shots rang out. A scuba diver on the crew was apparently s uffe ring from tbe bends. more tecbnka.11)' known as an air em- bolism . County fire de· partrnent crews rushed to lhe scene, and a U.S. Coast Guard helicopter new Nikki Amorosino, 2S, lo Santa Catalina Island for examination. Amoroslno was found to be out or danaer by doctors. SENIOR CITIZENS loat Off All m 7't Pare~• .. • • VC OH LL ,Ult H US IY BCCOMING A ~~"llElt o~ OUlt sfNtoa CITlllNS SAYINGS 'LAN AT HO COST TO YOU. ALL Pre-P.W IX Pro9r••• MHortd AENTA_LS a • ._....._.... A&&....r SIGN UP NOW SALES ._...._ vnw : College Pharmacy. • , I ", I , I ~ • ' i -I . . :._J ' ' . . ·' .. ... ·'' 'I Martha Edd1nJtlon's body was found in thl' mortuary after un anonymous telephone tip, a Co mpton •police spokesman s::ud. Ra~k Ban Ruling SoMflltC Manuella Cortez and lgnacio Padilla were killed in a fusillade of ri- fle fire May 17 as they stood in the yard at Our Lad y of Guadalupe Catholic Church. .~~~~::~::::===========~~~======;::::::::7:::;;;=~-~-------------- { She had gone to an alcove in the t WO· I story Indoor mausoleum on Sunday. Ola•ond" E•d A•k~d LOS ANGELES <AP> -Diamonds are foreve r. but the City Council is oping the same is not true of the com- uter Diamond Lane project on the anta Monica Freeway. LOS ANGELES <AP1 -A cily council committee voted to seek re· commendations aimed al controlling sidewalk newsracks after 500 persons attended a hearing on the matter. Most complained that the curbside racks were unsightly, dangerous and sold publications which contributed to juvenile crime. . The committee asked for recom- mendations in two weeks. Mansion's Sale Stalled in Vote SACRAMENTO IAP> -An attempt to put the vacant $1.3·mllllon governor's mani;lon up for sale has stalled in an Assembly committee, but its aulhor says he will try for passage again next week. The bill by Sen. Alfred Alquist. D-San Jose, was blocked on a 4.3 vote of the Assembly Governmental Organization Committee, one vote short of passage. THE MANSION, n project of former Gov. Ronald Reagan, sits unQCcupied on a bluff above the American River about 14 miles east or downtown Sacra mcnto. It has been a problem for the stale ever since Gov. Edmund Brown Jr. callrd it a "Taj Mah~I" and refused to live In It. BEFORE THE vote on the Senate-passed bill. Alquist amended It so the mansion and Its tl·acre site could be 11old or exchans.!ed. I le said Sacra men· to County might be Interested In such a deal. M RS. CO RTEZ, 2 Appointed SACRAMENTO CAP> -Thomas K . Beard of · Stockton and M lchael Gluer of Los Angeles have been appointed by Gov. Edmund Brown Jr. to the CaUlornia Water Commission. One or the "no" votes came from committee chairman Bob WlllOf'I. D·La Mesa. who said he did not think the state could recover anywhere near its expenses for the mansion. w.'pay15C alb. C8lh for Mllniuncans & other, CleM,houllhold ekmnum. 'Ra ~uarfer 2>ac 'JHE NEWEST IUT MOT JUST ANOTHER STEAK HOUSE You penonally Dick your own steak lrom our gourmet shoWc;ase. Choose the cut & lhlC!lness You desire lrom 04Jf Choice Eastern ~Fed Beef. Salad end potato aiwavs Included. GRAND OPENING SPECIAL! WIM A NH DIMHIA IF lOU UHS TMl llACl Sf1I l4NYTHIMG om ' OX.I OP TOUR STUI L9C~-ll.J:JO Mll!!HewD., 46 Oilit• D., 611 ilfl;'if.; ..... ___ ... __ ... ,, CMIH-&MOM. t:tlP.M.-l:JI A.M.. 2$311. Cast""'" ....,.rt .... 141-1177 • •• wl'l1on l11cludes aluml11um loll: pie pa111, lrote11 food •lld dl111111r traya.. dip, pudding and me•t c0t1t1lntt1. Cttrlein o•ll•r cle•n. 111. aluminum Items can t>e reoeeme<S. Call your Cenler for <111a11s. Iring It to Reynold• Alumlnum pr11nge RecycHng Plant, 210 E. Meat• Avenue Meats AYe. • KalellaAYe. Tuesday thru Saturday -9:00 Lm. -4:30 p.m. Phone 998-4271 for Information on Mobile Unit achedules In your areL • , ~ ........ •~l.lun.,._ ~~ ............ . ,, • . ~- \ .. Aa DAILY PILOT EDITORIAL P A G E I = School Tax Decision Tonight ·,s the ni~hl Irvine s c hool trustees adopt a bud~et anti. s<'l u tax ra lP for the coming year. n· fortunate!•_,.. whutcn~r ll1ey do, the taxpayer will face a heavit?r lo s. Evcr1 if the rate 1s reduced from S.5.27 to $5 per SlOO asSl~SSl'd \ nlu:ition. laxpa~·crs ''Ill s till puy u biJl· . gcr tax b ill this rcu1· IX'caust• ussesscd vuluc climberl 25. LJ t> e rcenl. S.everal tr us let•. ha' c mude tl pltun 10 recent weeh s that the~ (;nor u ln ~ dcd1nc in the tax ratc }'rank llunl pt·o1>0sed u 47-ccnt drop anti others h3\·e prr,poscd lowering Uu.• rate ut lea t to SS. Despite r eque!:>L'i from trustees to lower the rate. <1.istrict officit1Js Inst week proposed a scvCJHent hike 'Earlier . thl'y h ad lx.·t>n su~gesting a pe nny drop. Sint·c tl'u ·tees htl\ e nearl~ $700.000 in unexpected money fr om h1~her asses::,l-d values and more state aid -they should do •ver~·thmg thuy can to lower the r ate s ubst.antiully · Taxpayers conct.>rncd that the extru mone~· might be pu mpecl hark into the budget instead of bt>· ing returned to l~Lxpayers s hould attend tonight's public he;,iring a t Vcnad o Middle School. The school hoanl needs to know how taxpu~·crs ::want their mont·~ hl~nt. or not s pent Mutual Benefit The Mission VieJo Company has offer ed Orange. :County government a deal it s houldn 't refuse without !careful examination. • The company has drafted a park de\'elopment p rogram that utilizes a uni<1ue approach to Financing • <md Is pote ntia lly beneficial not only to the com pany ~but also to the tax1>aycr s w ho now Ii ,·e or will li ,.e in ~Mission Viejo. \·ide -public ro~d und park de' efopmenl monc~. for example. County o fficials ('Onccdc thtll :\t 1ss1o n \'i(•Jo I"<' cefres proporlionately le than other parts of the coonty but the~· ch1J m that 'h lx•cau!)c or th<' tot all.\ plunned na ture or the communit) the c·ompun.,\ a lready has done 1t all The com puny hui. propo <'d that the c:ount) I unncl m o rl' of the c tux rt-\imucs ba{·k into thf.' commumt' \"ia the ~un1e11n.1l i\tl\ t"ory Count'1I u le.gall~· c l c\ cd s:ovcrnment txxi). In r ctua·n . the eompony '' oultl match<."\ ery publJl' dollar with u <lollai· ol it 0" n mo nc) to be u t'<I for park construc tion. Naturally. thC'n' will be bend 1t to thl' com µ:rny in all of this . It will hint' the park~ to usl' as ~ellln~ poinb for new homes Hut tht• <:ount) in llw. casl' should consider ~l·µurating the• <'Omµany from the l"Omnmnlty of l UXJHl) l'I'~ who stand to ~uin lhc mo~t Second Chance Last m onth Hie SacJdlebuc:k L'nif1cd School Dis· trict. as requi red l>y luw. called a public he1mng to give res idents an opportunity to dis cuss district e mployes' sal ar y and benefit proposals. J\ handful of people s howed up. No one had any thing to say. It was over in four m inutes. On ~Jontlu y. the public will ha,·e a nother c ha ncl' to speak on the costs of running the district at a m eet ing scheduled ror 8 p.m. in Los Alisos Intermediate School. Alon g w ith the salary proposals, the O\erall budget and tax rate will be discussed . • The plan. now bcmg reviewed by county officials. :is predicated on the company's contention that Mis· :Sion Viejo property taxpayers ha,·en't been receiving :i commensurate s hare or l.he benefits their t axes pro· District trus tees need to be told how residents feel about the quality of education. how mue h money should be spe nt anti how that money s hould be aJ. locate d . Those w h o speak now will be better qualified to complain later '\\'ell, I don't care what you rhink you ~ee ... our <Jir force ju~t re/ea . ed tf r~porl di~cn1.wt inK tmident ifh)cl t1yi11;: o/JJect s!' SB . !igures A N at11ral T ro11qT1ili:er . Reveal . :Threat Gloo1nv . Let's Keep the Green Fields Oe..ar • I SYDNEY HARRIS ) Most people have nu notwn •>f what Sau\"y has call(°ii "'thl' lt·rr1 'ble power or tht' exponential Jr they recall the exponential :it all. 1l is only as a \·a~ue t(.•rm frorn lligh-school math Here is a simple 11lustrat1on ol 'whal is forgotten. if t'\'Cr knov. n .Suppose you .buy one tick.-t 'in a lottery wher e one.' milli on tickets are sold: obvious· t y yo ur :chance or wan :.ting Is one 1 n :am1lhon. . > : S uppOSt' ~here are two lolleraes, each sell· ing a million ticke.ts, and you buy one ticket in e ach. What ls your <'hance of winning both? Not one JD two million. or one in JO million. or o ne in 100 million. or ~ven one in a billion. It is one in 11 :.trillion -a million million to one . : THIS IS the terrible power of -the exponential. It was knov. n lo .antiquity; recall t~ mathemuh dan of legend, who rcquesl<'<I :.1 :Sultan lo repay him for u gr<'a't :favor by "merely" J:I\ mg ham u ,chessboard or corn grain : The sultan was to put one ~r tun 'or corn on the first square of thl' l>oard. two on the Sl'Cond. foo 1· on lhe third. and so forth. doulJ hng each squnre to th(' 64th .. or ~ourse. the sultan qmckly 1<':1 rn1'1I thol there wa!'I not ('nno.ih <'•J.rn on the whole earth to sall'ifV t'r.1s d1• "mand. What does all this rr. can in y raclical terms"! lt mc:1.ns \hat -fftOl.'Jl of us have little 1d•1·a o( tht:' 'strenJ?th of a gco~t·11 nc pro ·f?resaion. Thus. an :mni 1.nl rl!'I«' of :three percent in a 11opulution Modern Ori~ntal pro\'erb: rohllcian who proclaims "open government"' may find mouth is r ight size open mg for fool. 1'.11 G_, G"' • ..,,,.,..,. .. ••• , __ ..., ,..-·-••tMCMUl~rllfrtflMIW. ........ Ille --~--·· '--.... -.. 19 G..._, G~. D•ll~ ~lol se('mS a s m all figure yet the populati<Yn will ne arly double in a generalfon ut this rate. The s ame, of course. is true of infla· \Ion figures A TABLE s howing the increas· 111(:( l)O'pulation or the world gives u most dramalir example. Al the time or qmsl. there v.ere about 200 rn11Lio11 people living on tht• earth. It took one thousand years to,. a1se that fi gure to 350 million J>e''ple. ·rhen it took only 8)() years to a ild another 200 million by l~ or f..O. Then it took only 100 years to :add 200 million more people. Next. in the rentury between 1750 and 1850. some 450 million were added. And in the century from t850 to 1950. the world's popula· tion more than doubled, from 1,175 million to 2.510 million f'I NA l,l.V. I n th e quart er.century between 1950 and 1975, about 1.500 million people were added. bringing the total to 4,000 mmion. or four billion in· habitants . E\•en with our reduced birth rates today. this will doubll' again soon arter the turn nr the century I <1111 not sta rt out to write ahout population. but ;about lht> deccp- t i \ c <111alil) of a .. rale or growth ... FiJrnr<'s that seem, at first blus h. s mall an<! unimpor tnnt can bear lhe mo:;t ominous 1m1>llcations for the near future. The terrible power of th<' ex poncntial may threaten us mor<> than the IH>0mh. To the Editor : Our reeling about larmland amt field. in Southl'rn OranJ?l' Count~ b backed up b~ .crowmJ.! up on un or:m gc rant·h :ind 111.•mg l1ld11ni.: n•sidenl:. of this t•ount~ \\'hill• not opposetl to expan~1on or onlt·rh J!rowth or housl'" tw1n.c hu1lt. Wl' ('njoy seeing the gn•t•11 11<.'lds ot \"e.cctable~ or bcrnl'S Ill the Fnun lain \'alll·~ and Huntm~on Hc::irh area where we 11 \(.'. But how long can lhe hold·out:- on these farms keep from heinA gobbled upl>y builders? llow loni: l'<m they resist the l.>1J!doll11rs 1>aid by land compnnies" TH E GREEN fields spanninA lht' area next to our freeways gi\"es the feelin,:t or open space a!' well as lo\"ely J!rt'en \"ll'W of fields soon to be harve~ted 1'h1, l11('alh grown p rodUCl' und rrwt hct1>s to keer our cost of i!rt>Cl'ru.·~ down as wet ~s re\enue to the local form stands nearby the residential area. Where do we continue to J?Ct these supplies 1( all the land is sold for building, Other than \'UJlt'yS Ill central Californlra and lmpt•r1al County'? In a busy and h<'cllr schedule. 11 1s a welcome i:>i1?ht lo come upon a lush rield With p(.'Ople lllCking crops as we re turn from u husv work clay. It acts like u tran quillzer without the harmful side errerts and m ake:. us reel as if\\ c have th(• ht-sl of two worlds agriculture and thr llu!'lncs~ com munity CAN'T WE do somethmJ: as a ~roup of concerned c1t1 n•ns to keep lhe small proclucc :ffre~ of f:irmland 1n th<' Southern Or;1ngc• County area rand hl·lp <>11r ecological conll1tmn. our hi•alth anll continue to l'n111~ thr ahun danrc of fresh proctucr m our markt'l'i? ti; then' ;111\00f• t>l:.t• out therr who agrCl'S and f1•ds ;is "l' rlo uboul our few r1•nu.11nini: f1cl<!s anc!small larms"' tW IHo:HT J> nArtTOI. BAH HA HA /\. llAR1'01. The 11ureaucrats Collle First WASHINGTON-'fhcJ\mt'r1can taxpayers contri bl Ile Ftcn•rously ~on variety ol wor'fhy causes . nut lht-deprived und lhc depressed. the aged and th~ ailing. usually wind up merely with ancillary benefits. The r<t al beneficiaries, invariably, a re the bureaucraL'i who manage U-re programs. They pay t h ems1:J,·t. ~enerou:r; s a l arir s .. pro\'ld-.~ thtmsel v e .s fancy ofncM and surrou 1 \d l he m sel v· es w i l h 11 '! c: rel a r 11 e ~ and s ub ordin ates . The b u sy bureau.,c rals t hen f "rm committees, hold meetin1gs. conduct studies. write report:s and issue statements. Altl!r all this has been paid for. only ·a tiny fraction of the money ii le / l I« lhe pui'posc that was in· t.J.ed. We h ave taken up Utt' l)'f,t ewriter. for example. to cb,:ampion lbe migrant farm w trkers wbo toil under misera· (JACK ANDERSON) blc conditions to make America the best red nation In history. We sent our r eporter, Hal Bernt.on. to live and work with the m. lie found them Jiving in squalor. ex· ploiled by the planters, neglected by the government, Ignored by society. THE BUR EAUCRATS -."OOJd never let an opportunity like lhis go by. At the Labor Dept .. bureaut'rats wan gled sa> million from lhe taxpayers this year to help the migrant laborers out of the stream a nd to place them in career jobs. The bureaucrats sat at their desks and, witb a greal shufning or papers and clacking of typtwriters, drafted programs to rescue t he lowl y sloop laborers. Yet these bureaucrats had never even met a mtgrant worker. The results are now In for the first hel! or fiscal 1976. A stagger· lng s.10 millill>n. or course, went ror the care and com!ort of the bureaucrats Our columns i1bout r1•1)()rtcr Bern ton·s experiences amonit the migrant w o rkl•rs, meanwhile. brought down an avalanche or letters uvon tlw Labor Dept. The mall was :.o heavy. secretaries had lo usi' a form letter to res pond to all the inquiries. THIS HAS produced som e favor a b l e results. f.abor Secretary William J . Usery met wilh Agriculture Secretary Earl Butz to discuss what the Ad· ministration could do to help mi· grarfl workers . Our sources say Usery sincerely wanLc; to press tor collective bargainlng rights for farm workers. He also met with repr esentoUves of the Na· lional Assn. of Farmworker Organizations. a group that has been rebuffed by the Labor Dept. in the past. At. a direc t result of our col· umns. the Occupational Safety and Health Administration bas also agreed to inspect five times more migrant housing next. year. More comprehensive standards wm also be issued. ' ( MA ILBOX 1\11de r11011 ('rlf le• To the Editor ) Mr. Jack Andcrson's(011l11111not July 20 seeks to 1llsc·r£'d1t ltH· ""I.us Americas .. hous 1ni.: pru )l'ct . apparently obh\1ous tQ th\• tact that this v. :is onE' of thl' n· markable achievemcmt.11 of 1tw Nicaragua government in the 1m mcdtate post-earthquake> l><mod Th<' SJ million dollars ''arm hear tedl.\' Ah'l'n h~ lh(• l'.S Agency for l nt<'rnut1onal l>l•\•elopment and lhl' Aml•ru·an Pl'Ol>k helJ'>t'd m) J!O\"ernmcnt 1Jt11 ltl no I t•ss than 11.400 tlv. ell mgs m the record ti me of 00 d a~ s lo house 60.000 homeless. Thii. l'.S. AJ?ency knows of the cor rect tn\'estment or this sum as it hai; rcrtified 1hat these fund~ ha\"c bt~en prope rly used. This is vcr~ l'asy to verify WITll TllE emergency action period over. President Somor.a . again with the generous as· sistance or the U.S. A.LO .. ha!' already commenc<XI a full·scale program to upJ?rade and turn these dwdlin~s into permanent homes w 1th all rnnveniencc~. consistl'nt with the ori~inal plan- ning. Mr. Ander son wo uld also know, if he cart.'d to look into it. that m~ i.:overnm<'nt has pro. 'ided homes to 100.000 1nhab1 l:lnts or ne~1rly 50 percent or the pre-earthquukt' population of lh1' cop1tal cit~ of l\I anai;:ua·. An addi tional 20,000 houStnl? untl!J an· l·urrenlly under construr·tion u!' 1rnrl of thl' govc•rnmcnt's com 1>rehc ns l\"t' p I u n to provill1• further hOUS<'S for lhf' IOWf•<,I mromr Sl'rt or s of the nopul <H't' <ilJILLEllMO SF.VILLA SACA..:.A i\ m bassadoror NiC'araJ(uu Poodf,Pab To thr Editor· This letter i~ re~:ircllng the ort1 <'It:' ahllut J>ookic th<' Pt>0dlc. which u1111earcd lll your 1wpcr July 15, writtC'n by Anne Cooper. ·rhe res1,on'c to Pooklt''s d1lom ma <a lost 1>00ch whohud Ob\ I01t!4· ly r('f('Olfy izivcn hirlh to a llller Of pups by t.t Cacsarcun scctlon J wuic ov rwhelming! My ncl~hbor,Suc Mlddlebrough. and I rccelvt'CJ ftP· proximately 50 J)hone calls with offers of food. new homes for Pook1e. as well u11 monetary dona· Uons to help pay for her nceftcli surgery. WE WISH to inform you anll )Ollr readers that, with their help. we were able to have the necessary s urgery performed Quotes Rights JCUa ranteed under the U.S. Constitution "do not cncom· pass the rii:ht to bathe in the nude at the Cape Corl Sea.shore N:t· t1onal Pork:· Th Isl .S. Circuit. Cowrt 6f Appul8 In Boston. In upholding a Nation11l P:irk Sen·icc b.-n on skinny dip. pin It. \Cry succcsslully .• he 1s re cuperatlng n1cd y. We also h:ul enough money left O\'Cr alter t lw surJ:ery tohtt\ (' Pooki('spayl•ll \\"e had 1nform<'d the• 1\111mal :\sillstanrc l.l•:1guc lhat if un~ mon<'~ wa:. ll'ft after 1 h(• t"\ ~t \\a" rcmo\'<XI that 1t \I ould Ix• do11al\•1I lo thc1r orj?a11i1.<1tmn. The) told u" u1stc:1d to USl' thl' mone\' to h:n 'l' hc•r spayed. which hus ix.-"cndonc Thanks to everyone who helped resoh e Pookic"s manyJ>roblcm:. It turned out she had four ''" ner s in four weeks before lurn- 1111! up at my homl'. Pookie now lrn-. n permanent home here with m~ family. She won't lack for It>\ t• a nd attention In spitf> or tll<' 1m·t we have three very small rh1lllrcn and two other dogs. DOLORESSl~AY llftftra11! To the Ed11or Ht• Schoolmen clash over luses 7129. llooray for our school board. It is reassuring <indeed thrill· inFt I to sec you trying to keep our taxes down. /\nd for this we g ive our sin· cerr thanks. It is not so understnndable lhal the super intendent's staff resists this they are. afte r all. our employes. are they not? Based on me rit <their own criterion J the st arr he1s spenl much and nchievcd litUc. Perhaps reductions in their hefty salaries and lOO·plus num bers would be a log1cn.I place to begin savinRS. Again board, thnnks. Maybe we can afford to raise our children here after all. RICHARD LYON CL/\ HK L'r•11 .. h ed To the Editor: The required e nclosurn in Ins t week ·s San Oie~o Gais and Elcr t1·1r Company bill explaint"<I thal tlll' company wns again gomi: to the Public Uhl1lies Commission to seek rate inc reuses und adJust mcnts. This week's Daily Pilot "Tak· mg Stock" column (July 27J, not· cd a 450 percent gnln 111 profits by San Diego Gas & Elc.'<'tr1c ovt'r lh(• same quarter last ycur. 'fhls re· Ct>n t inrreu t' irt profit IS j)llr( or lht< trend which has sct·n their profits nearly dou blc 1n n yl'ar What about the continu111i: enl'rRY rrunch "? A'S wmal, the only ones being c runched an· the ron· somers. MAU.Cl A \VIJ.Ll /\MS f'alr.,1~.., Frlt-nd• To the Editor : In the J uly 23. issue of the Ouily Pilot. Mr. Do n 7.. Miller. or the Dept. of llealth. was quoted as i:;aying, "Thcrl' has been co n~iderable con· troversy l1found Fairview, in· volvlng two different groups of parenu.." As preside nt or F'airvi<•W Families a nd Friends, the l ,700·me mber organlutlon or parents a nd friendts or the Fairview client&, we RI\! certain· ly not aw&tre of any othe r hospital·w1de "J(roup or parents" al Fair view. a nd we feel that Mr. MUler's statement. therefore. could lead to misconceptions. In addition. we are certainly no l aware that F'nirview families and Friends was et part of an\ .. rontrcl\ c·rs\ around fair\'icw:· unh•~f. mir im1t•c.'n· and ri•pented voh't'll ~upport ol our nH•dwal 1llrN·tor \\:t~ t'On !'ol rUl'd to h,• 1·111H1'0\ l'r"1:1l Fninl..I~. w1• un· :1111-:1•1·1•tl .111J rnllwr lww1l1h•1 l•ll h~ tht l>1.•p;i1·1 n'\\•nt or I k:i Ith." :11·1 Ull\ AS PAR E~T~ \\ llll hll\\' hall lhl· pll'a!'un• of wnrkmg wi th ,.Or Toto l'llll"C lhl· llll.'l'pt1m\ or nur or J!.U011.at1on ·omc 12ycars ago, \\l' haw found him to ~ most sup portivt' of our t•fforts nnrt (')( treml'ly fair. Hcgarding h1-. manug l'ment. \H' ('Ons1dcr tht.> positive fcell h;.ick ''e haw hall over lhC' .re~1rs from th1• owr whelming majority of ovr mem· bers to be significant. The c hanges for lht• i:ood that havc ocrurrcd al ruin iew dur· in!! Or . Toto's knurc cannot be cll'nil'd . and 111 our opinion. the stall' hai:; fooltshl) pc:rm1ttr<1 tho loss 111 an <''tr('mt'I~· l'apahle medical direct or and hos shown litUe r egard for the Fnirview clients by this action WARREN/\. SNOW Low·c·•••• f'.,.,d To the Editor: With food shortag<•s bl.•comin~ mor e se rio u s C\'<'rywherc. couldn't you do someU1in1? to pro- mote the munufacture a nrl sale ol grapefruit m armalade. makinJt use or the millions of tons or grapefruilhulls which are now be· in~ thrown out to rot"? They m ake 1t 10 Ar~entina. they make it in Israel, but I am sure no one m e kes il in this coun· try. HERE IS a potentiaJ resource available free throuf.'(hout the Southwest and in t1oridu. I pre- fer the Argentine i::r apcfruit marmalade to the orani:e pro· duct -it has mon• of Lhe tang or the Seville orange product., pr<'· ferred by epicures . It m ay t~ke a litUc promotmn to J?et It s tarted. but c·on&1dt•r how attracti ve the r ct uil pric<' shouht be. with thl' low rn:.l or Uw In· i:trt'tlient.s ! It we would look urouncJ oor country w1Ul nn inquiring ('ye. I wager we would find m ony vei.!elable products. now con- ~hlered worthlc!'S. which c:ould be convNted into low.cost, nrn.arishini.t food. l"HANI KLOCK ORANGE COAST DAILY PILOT Robttl N. Wrl'd. f'llbll,hrr Thomas Kerull, ,.:d1tur fJMl)(lra Krt'1!.11('/I, ,.;d1/1Jrlot f'agr Ed110r The t'ditorlnl pate of thf• O:iUy rllot i.eeks to infor m and 11tlmutate rc>uders by pn•st'fltlllA on this pal(e diverse commentary on top1c11 of interest by syndical· l'd columnists and cartoonist.&, by vmvidin.1t a forum tor readcn' view!' und by presenting thl11 newsp:iper'11 opinion!' 1md ideas on currC'nt tovics. The editorial opinions ot the Daily Pilot appear only 1n the edilortal column at the top or the page. Opini,ms ex· prnsed by the columnists and cartoonists and letter writrrs rare lheir own and no end or&ement o( their vie"'s by lhc Oitlly Pih'!l 11ho11ld be inferred. Wednesday, August4. 1976'