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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1977-05-25 - Orange Coast Pilot.. • $337 .4 MilliOn Truek Carrying Irvine ··C•Dlpany .. $300,000 Found; Sale A roved Guards • DAILY PILOT a una I s * * * 10< * * * WEDNESDAY AFTERNOON, MAY 25, 1977 VOL 70, HO 10 4 SECTIONS, 4t ~AGES 0 e an AlltMls .... '81 GETTING HER MESSAGE ACROSS, FRONT AND B ACK Sun Brtnga T ·Shirt Weether to Celtfornl• Great Put '!'OD T-sldrts Blos,oming SACRAMENTO CAP ) -Some of the messages are rlsque, some are fUM y and a few are out· rageous or unprintable. But the warm spring sun has brought T·s hirt we ather to· California aaain, and thousands ot young women are blossoming u waJklngblllboards. Two Armore d Truck Guards, Cash Sought PHOENIX, Ariz. (AP) -An a\'mored truck which disap· peared on a bank run Tuesday with about $300,000 in cash was discovered abandoned early lo· day along Interstate 17 north ol Phoenix, but the whereabouts or the two guards were unknown. T he Department of Public Safety said one ol its helicopters spotted the abandoned truck about 6:30 a.m. near the 1-17 Bumble Bee exit, approximately SO miles north of Phoenix. A · spokesman said the vehicle could QOt be spotted from the nearby lntersi.te. The 1pokesman said the keys wua .atlll in th• truck, and a ,mall amount of money was in lbe vehicle, although be didn't bow bow mucb. H~ever, the two auards, both lonatlme Purolator employes, w):re misslng. (IM CASH, P••• Al) A state bank report says It quickly sold out Its promotional T -s hirts with the q_iessage, "When you're not UY~ biggest, you'd better be good .·· Women bought most of them, and reorders keep coming in, a bank official said. · That T-shirt follows the newest trend of putting part or the message on the front, and the punch line on the back. Other popular T-shirts have a v arlety of messages: -On the drought: "Conserve water. Shower with a friend." -For dieters: "Caution: Starvin& dieter. May bite if pro- voked." .....: A warning, on a tightly fit. ting, low--c?ut T-shirt: "Eat your heart out." -Advertising: ''Wanted: Single men. Generous with money and affectiort. Liberal bank account preferred. Stable occupation. No turkey, please. Inquir' within." -Another warning: "You toucha my body, I slappa you face." -And 1 boast: .. It 'a real." A Macy's department store clerk said two hot·aellen this year are T-shirts that say <See T .seurrs. Pa1e Al) ~/ 160 Face Deadline Of Death ASSEN. The Netherlands CAP) -Captive children chanted "We want to stay alive!" today as South Moluccan extremlit.s let one deadline for death pass but again threatened to start killing more than 160 hostages if the Dutch government did not meet their demands. Officials said "steady negotia· lions" were continuing with two eovernment ps yc hiatris ts as middlemen For two days, two bands of gunmen have held 105 children and six teachers at a village school In nearby Bovensmilde and al least SS hostages in a hi· jacked train stopped in the ·mid· die of open pastuteland 10 miles north oC here. Four of 21 South Moluccan prisoners whose freedom the ter- rorists have demanded were brought to the official "crisis center" here, officials said. "We're keeping them on ice," said an official. • Two hours before the deadline at 2 p.m. local lime (5 a.m. PDT). several children were brought to the windows of the school and cried out in unison, "We want to slay alive, Van Agt." Andries van Agt is the Dutch justke minister and the top gov- e rnment strategist in dealing with the gunmen. The Asian militants -six at the school and seven in the train -spoke with senior Dutch of· ficiaJs by telephone. This mofn· ing, they rejected a government appeal for release of the children and repeated their th re alt to shoot hostages. • But Dutch Premier Joop den Uyl wu cautiously hopeful. •'It looks as it tbe.-e is a certain (See TERROR, Page AZ) ROIL TOP DESK ROILED Wl1'H AD So, your brother-lo-law's de· cided ~ open an ornce and be wants to "borrow" your desk. Now'wbatdoyou•o? "I sold It wltb • cluslfied ad.'' He ... 's the ed lb at dld tb4t trick for thiS Coilta MMa man: Bubbles and Marbles Rep. Walte r Flowers <D-Ala.), has his gum bubble burst in his face while playing in the second annual Co ngressional Marbles Tournament Tuesday in Washington, D.C. Directors OK Sale Of Irvine Company BJ TOM BARLEY Ol tM 0a11, ll'll•t Sten Meeting in San Francisco late Tuesday, directors of the James Irvine Foundation authorized the sale or the Irvine Company ror $337 .4 million to a consortium that will rename the company Taubman-Allen-Irvine Inc. The action by a unanimous foundation board caO)e just four days after the TAI group outbid 'Mobil Cor.poratJ.on, the firm that was one~ on the verge of acqutr- ing the orange County land com· pany for $200 milllon. Irvine Company holdings in· elude 80,000 acres in Orange Co u nty, s.ooo acres in California's Imperial Valley and 101,000 acres known as the Flytnt D Ranch in Gallatin and Madison Counties between Bozeman and Butte. Montenmt. Poundatlqn directors noted that the tranafeP of title has been approved by Oranf e County Superi« CoUrt Jud1e·Jamea. F. Judse. He commented lasl Frf. day that he lhouatit $337.4 million repreMnted filr market value for the lrvlne Company. Foundation directors aald they eJ1pect to cloee the deal with TAI t withintbianextS>dQI. .... • The sale will then go lo Judge Judge for final approval. Irvine heiress Joan Irvine Smith, who filed the lawsuit that sparked a bidding battle for the company, wlll beoneofthedlrec· ton oC the new corporation. 'Min. Smith and nine other In- vestors provided the capllal to <See SALE. Page AZ, 'Guzzkr' Tax Said 'Burden' W ASHJNGTON <AP) -The naUon'• t hree l ar1e1t ~u to manufacturers pled gtcl to Conaress today to make every ef· fort to meet fuel.c:fftciency •tan· dards already required by law. But they said P r esldeot Car(er's proposed tax on 111· cuulers would be an un· necessary burden on low· and mlddle-lncome ramlLles. Tbe No~ 4 manufacturer. American Moton Corp.. wblcb apeclalius tn smaller can. tn· dorMd the tax as • nee~ re- mlftder to U.S. d riven OI UM n.Mll toconserueway. FBI S8ys No Clues In Heist - f'BI investigators have no leads to the identity or " whereabouts or a bold gunman who strode into a Laguna Hills bank Tuesday and made off with $50,000 that had just been de· livered by armored car. An FBI spokesman in Santa Ana said the heist had ''obvious· ly " been well planned and timed to take place immediately alter the cash shipment was taken into the bank. The bandit struck at about 10:30 a.m .. walking in the north door or the Bank of America branch in the Taj Mahal building at the comer or Paseo de Valen- cia and El Toro Road, near Laguna Hills Mall. He reportedly leaped over a four-foot barrier, into the area where the cash delivery had been taken. Witnesses told investigators the robber brandished a gun and told the 20 people in the bank to "remain calm and remain where you are." The FBI spOkesman said no shots were fired and the gunman left the bank after the money was put into a creen vinyl tote bag. Witnesses said the gunman sped away In a late-model, green (See BANK, Page A2) Coas t Weathe r Sligh t c h ance of sprinkles or llcbt showen tonight. Decreasing cloudi· ness Thursday morning. Lows tonight 52 to 57. Hi1hs Thur.iday 68 to 74.. INSIDE TODA~ B•IUI aa gatqr md mU1t ~ tM rlGIClft ~ hDo brothn• care fur 10,()()() of tM bnatt. Tha1 Olt4 UfHmg af fectton. And.a ~tutilc ~ ... S.• P,ooc AI. A '> O'"ILY PILOT S Wac!n•tld•y. u... "''"'. t,._ ,j. "" ,, ------~ -.,, ·Another Korea~War Possible-General WASHINGTON (AP) -The general whom President Caner reasslped for criticizing ad· ministration policy on Korea testified today that North Korea Is building up its might and he is convinced Cairter'1 plan to withdraw U.S. ground forces would lead to war. Maj. Gen. John K. Slqlaub. whom Carter fired as chief of staff of U.S. fOT<:es ln Kor6a for criticizing the withdrawal plan. told a House Armed Services subcommittee his fear of war is based on new int.eWae.nce of the North Korean buildup. U.S. intelligence discovered r Drug 'Phony' . FBI Hunts Ex tortwnUta RENO <AP> The FBI was searching for extor- tionists today who escaped with a $1.2 million ransom after fooling a bank executive and his wife into think ing they had been injected with a lethal drug. Jack Keith, special agent in charge of the FBI of- fice here. said Tuesday that Reno N. Fruzza and his wife, Polly, were taken hostage Monday evening in their fashionable home in suburban Rancho Circle. Fruzza is a vice president of the First National Bank of Nevada, the state's largest, and manages the bank's downtown Las Vegas office. At least two men were involved in the scheme, in· vestigators said. Keith said that the armed intruders forced their way into the Fruzza home and held the couple hostage for more than 12 hours. The Fruzzas were kept shackled to beds in 9eparate bedrooms, but were not mistreated, he said. Keith confirmed that the Fruzzas were given in· Jections Tuesday and were told they had been given a deadly drug and would die within eight hours if they did not follow instructions. Driver Booke d Clemente Police Sift Van Contents San Cl cmC'ntc police seized thousands of dollars of property believed to be stolen after a man s ped away from a service station Tuesday without paying for Sll in gasoline. Da rryl L Deluz. 30, of San Bernardino was booked on susp1- c ion of theft a nd possessing stolen property. Today police detectives sifted through a mound or stereo equip- ment. a telev1s1on, professional camera equipment, numerous watches and a large quantity of jewelry seized when Police Of- fi c<'r Da\'ld Hartman s topJ>('d a ,·an driven by OC'luz in San Juan Capistrano. Officer Hartman had pursued lhe vehicle after a report from Snyders Union. 2360 S. El Camino Real. th ut a petty theft of gasoline had occurred . A vehicle description wus S(iven by the at· tend ant Police Lt Ray Hartman, d<'· tectivc di~sion commander, said Dracula Too Scary,S~d OKLAHOMA CITY <AP 1 An $80,000 lawsuit has bet'n fil ed against "Dracula ... a resident of WKY-Radio's Haunted House, for allege dl y sc arin g hi s daughter into runnin1t into a wall and breakin(l her nose. Don Watson filed the suit Tues· day, claiming his daughter~ Kan- dy. ned from the monster dunng a vis it to the house Oct. J t, 1975. Watson claims the excitement combined with poor lighting caused the girl lo run into a solid wall. Na med in the a c tion are "Dracula." Cannon Productions Inc. and Gaylord Broadcasting. "The defendant, Dracula. is an unknown Individual," the suit states. OAANOI COAST DAILY PILOT T,.. Or-c. .. ,, Delly l>1J01 ""'" wM<lt I<""" biM-Clt._.Nt w-. ~,\\ f'OWtth~tnthe °'"'""' c.o.,, Pvbl""'"'9 Como.attv ~-••• .. t110M 4'' °'*" ...... d Mo'tdl Y l~OUitft ,_,.._. f.ftf' C.iet ... I• ...... _, ~ .... """'"'GIG'! &.ol<lt ... _ ,., .. V•ltty ft WfM s.-.. ...... 01 Y•ll•Y •NI ~n. .... Sovi~c .. ,, """9•~·-•<11 fl~ '' f)Ubll.,.,._d '•turct••' ~ ~~•rt T"'" D'm<IN I llUlll°'N"O DIAlll t\ .i )JO 'Wf\I ~. St••"'· ~I• M~•• C••llo•11ta"1°"' the police officer noticed the amount of property when he looked in the van to see 1f there were other occupants in the veh1 cle. Deluz told police he was mov mg lo Los Angeles Police noted a large quantity of Jewelry was wrapped up m a sock and other property was car ried in a pillow case. Lieutenant Hartman said the department will now have to try and trace the property and would be contacting other law enforce- m ent agencies. Deluz was held in city jail to- day in lieu or $2.500 ball Child Porno Jailing Ask e d WASHINGT01' r AP 1 Legislation providing for 1m prisonment up to 10 years for use of a child to produce porno- graphic material "u~ introduced in the Senate. The bill was cosponsored Tues day by Sens Charles M ath1as 1 I> Md. I. and John C Cuh·er ID Iowa>. who will conduct he annes on child pornography Friday m Ch1cagtl. ll would make 1l a federal crime to use or permit to be used. any ch.lid in the production of pornographic materials. Offen- ders \\Ould Ix• subJect to fine~ up to St0.000 or 1mpnsonml'nt up to 10 years or both . From P ag«-.~ I T-SHIRTS ••. "California girls have warmer bodies." and "I'm a virgin, but this is a very old T-shirt.·· "You wouldn't believe all the little old ladies who come in and buy that one." she said. Men's T-shirts have fewer written messages. The most popular men's seller is covered with a picture of a smiling, swimsuit-clad Farrah Fawcett-Majors. "But the shirt doesn't say anythine." a sales clerk said. "I guess it doesn't have to." she added. Ulla year that the North Koreans have increased their number of tanks from 500 to 2,000 the past four or five years, the general testlfied. The general, who i$ awaiting reusJPtnent by the Army, said that ln addition to the North Korean increase in combat ships and jet fipters that has already been publicly ret)Orted. Con-, tradicllng a Conaressional Budget Office study, Singlaub testified that North Korea's military power is superior to South Korea's now, even with the U.S. forces there. Rep. Samuel S. Stratton <D· N. Y. l, chairman of the subcom- mittee before which Singlaub testified. asked if he was saying U.S. and Korean military of- ficers overwhelmingly agree the U.S. withdrawal will ultimately lead to war. "That is absolutely correct," the general replied. Later, be was asked if he was saying it might lead to war or it will lead to war. Singlaub replied that Korean military officers "state fiat out, unequivocally that when U.S. forces are withdrawn North Kore.an President Kim JI Sung will attack and I said that from a military point of view 1 agree with that." Meanwhile. Carter 's two special envoy&, Philip C. Habib and Gen. George S. Brown, told President Park Chung Hee today of pla ns to withdraw 33.000 American troops from Korea in four to rive years. Park did not welcome the plan. which was announced earlier in Washington, but agreed to ac- cept it as America's "established policy... an aide s aid. He said Park asked for American help in strengthening South Korea's milita ry. Ha bib, underse c retary of state. and Brown. chairman of the J oint Chiefs of Staff, met with Park for three hours. Front Page A l TERROR ..• basis for convers ation develop- ing,·• he told reporters. A Ju s ti c e Mini s tr y spokeswoman said, "We are con- tinuing steady negotiations because we hope there is still a chance that the terrorists will surrender the children." The gunmen, members of an immigrant community from the former Dutch colony ottbe South Moluccan Islands, now part of In- donesia. were demanding re- lease of 21 jailed country men and a jumbo jet flight, with hostages. from Amsterdam to an un- disclosed destination. Some South Moluccans are serving terms in Dutch jails for using political violence. in the past in fruitless attempts to force the Dutch government to help them win indep~dence from Indonesia for their homeland. ·'If you dare not to meet our de- mands ... we will not hesitate or blutr lo shoot down a number of hostages for your pleasure," the terrorists said in a letter to Dutch authorities that was released Tuesday The government refused to dis- c u ss an y d eals unles s the schoolchildren were released ft ri.t Young Ends Mrica Tour KHARTOUM, Sudan (AP> Ambassador Andrew Young left Africa today arter a 20,000.mile tour or eight nations during which he vowed there would be a new era in U.S.-Alrican rela- tions. The black U.S. envoy to the United Nations traveled to Lon- don, where he planned to con/er' with British Foreign Secretary David Owen on the two-week tour. He was to retur n lo Washington Thursday. Young's personal popularity · was evident at almost every stop on his tour. He was received as a "friend" and "brother" in most lle .. riNW... p, .. , ... , .,,., Pul!li91ff ,.,-. , .... , v,.~ P't\•O...rtt •net a.-~~ ~"IQlflr fft9fft•l ···"·· Ldllor Ero• rag~ AJ BANK ••• ~ black African capitals 1lnd he was hailed as a "great man" by some white businessmen in South Africa. ,,.._,,.,.,........,. M•11ao1nq Edll<>r CM.1"M .... , -~ .. p IMM AO"l•nt ~ntOl ... l dlton Offlc.1 Co\1• ~'" ))0 W.>I S.y St""' l _ ... , ...... 0 • ......,...,,,.., w..,,,,,..,..,, .. t,. "'"""""...,..•••• ~-•vattey HIOll..a"91.._ ••~•D•_,, .. _ T ... pho11e {714)M.2-4:121 Cla..itled Ac:tv•rtfllng ... 2-M7t ~INtc-\leli.y ..... C)Mc• aa1..a10 .,.,_'--C•- 4~ l".-Mt>tllo.._ ,_,c-11 ... l40-1no =i:: ..,, °':t'. C.••·~ -~""" =r~ •. --:-1.::ri ..... ~~~~io::~ .... r i: =::..:lll•owt •M~I "l'lftl"'.., et --Cit\~ "" ............ C..•• -.. Cellf .. 111• \wltu •••ll•n w u rr•tr •) M :::::t!..,",) :~.:.:-_,,.,, """'"'? f • and white Oldsmobile, which was found abandoned about two blocks from the bank a few hours later, the FBI official said. The car had been stolen in Santa Ana earlier in lhe day. FBI investigators ipeculate that the bandit made 1ood his escape in another vehicle he had left parked wh re lhe getaway car wu abandoned. The ~an was described u t>.in1 about aix feet. tall with blond hair and a f.tr complexion. The FBl wu pl8Afllng to develop bant camera pictures ot the aua· peet toda)i' f'ro.Page AJ SALE ••• back an offering or M0.10 a share ror the Irvtne Company stock.. Mobil WU on ~ polnt of AC· quirinc the company for $24 a share wtten Mn. SmJtb took leaal action two yean qo. Other principals ln T Al Include Southern Cali!omir rnJ "atate devel•r Donald Bren~ ~t denlopft" Allred Taubman, Wall Street flnaucler Charla Allen and auto m.,.nate Hellr7 Ford U. ' ~h Ness Monster? No, it's just Del Rita, a seven-year-old elephant who likes to swim. Del Rita, one of the stars of Puck's Canadian Traveling Circus, takes her daily bath in Lake On· tario near Toronto, "guarded" by the vessel Haida. She likes to submerge and use her tr~ as a snorkel. Avalon Merchants Flay Water Cuts While Orange County officials ponder water shortages, just of- f c oas t at Ava lo n, Catalina Is land. shopkeepers and resi- dents are confronted today with drastic water rationing. Avalon water users have been ordered lo cut back water con- sumption by 50 percent. (Related story today Page A3 > Island storekeepers. about to e nter their big tourist s eason. see the one-half cut in allowable water use as a catastrophe. "We have only one industry here and that ·s tourism ,•· said Gregor W. Milne. pres ident or the Catalina Ishtnd Bus inessmen ·s Association. "I am one of 150 small bu~inessmen here who cannot make it a full year unless we have touris m ... The mandatory progra m is necessary. explain officials of the Southern California Edison Co., because the island's fresh water reservoir dropped below 190-acre-reet. Jess than a fifth or its capacity. Meantime. the Orange County Board of Supervisors appointed a Water Emergency Task Force consisting of farmers. builders. industrialists, colleee professors and water agency managers. The committee was asked to de· cide within three weeks on a voluntary water rationing pro. gram lo cut u,sage by 10 percent. The Los Angeles Metropolitan Water District announced Tues· day it is reactivating a small pumping plant in the San Fernando Valley to deliver Colorado River water to the valley, western Los Angeles Co,unty and southern Ventura County. 3 M USKETEERS RAID PIZZERIA. LA MESA (AP) -At the stroke of midnight, three men in fencing masks and waving long. bladed knives swung lustily into a pizza parlor on Lake Murray Boulevard. They made otr with $35 early today. Heritage captures a gTeat Western European tradition for today's interiors The sources? Designs by the thousands from the vast. gorgeously varied output ot Western European furniture makers. The translators ~ Famous Heritage3 craftsmen. The res ults'! Our Brittany TM occasional collection. Perfection in leafy-heart cherry. pecan and English brown oak burl veneers . with several exlr&ordinary finishes. The time to see It aU'1 This very week• ' SUMMER SALE F rom Page Al CASH ••• The FBI confirmed that the truck was located and that it was carrying about $300,000 when it left Phoenix Tuesda y, but declined further comment, say- ing Ule matter was under in· vestigation. The truck disappeared while en route to several banks in cen- tral and northern Arizona, of-ficials said. It was to have made its first stop at a Great Western Bank branch in Prescott Valley, about six miles south or Prescott, of- ficials said. Bank ofCicials notified the armored car com- pany about 1 p.m . that the truck failed to arrive. Mitchell said the employes in the truck were Cecil Newkirk, 53. and Russell Dempsey. 49, both of Phoenix. He said both were trust- ed employes who had been with the company more than 20 years each. Ban Extended NEW YORK CAP) -A ban on • the use of John F . Kennedy In- ternational Airport by the Anglo- French Concorde supersonic jet has been extended until June 1 by. the U.S. Court or Appeals. • , Heritage q, NOW IN PROGR~ PROFHSIONAl INTERIOR DESIGN WITHOUT OBLIGATION •COMFORTAllE "ARKING •CONVENIENT FINANCING 1514 NORTH MAIN • SANTA ANA •S.tJ-4391 Tutadty. Wtci~v. Tl'lu11d1y 11'd S•turday· 0:30 IO$ 30 Tbe Store of Famous Names ""°"°'~121ot•FM~t•1oo -. / t I .. O~ange Eoast- EDlTION VOL 70, NO. 145, 4 SECTIONS, 48 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALI FORNI A T oday's Clo I~ N.Y. S&oekf WEDNESDAY, MAY 25, 1977 TEN CENTSl T·Shirt Slogans Spieg Spring Put-on SACRAMENTO (AP> -Some of the messages are risque. some are funny and a few are out· rageous or unprintable. But the warm spring sun has brought T -shirt weather to California again, and thousands of young women are blossoming as walking billboards. t- A state bank report says it quickly sold out its promotional T-sbirts with the message,' "When you're not the biggest, you'd better be good." Women bought most of them, and reorders keep coming in, a bank official said. That T-shirt follows the newest 'Life Without Purpose' trend of putting part of the message on the front, and the punch line on the back. . Other popular T-shirts have a variety of messages: -On the drought: "Conserve water. Shower with a friend." -For dieters: "Caution: Starving dieter. May bite if pro- voked." -A warning, on a tightly fit. Ung, low-cut T-shirt: "Eat your heart out." · -Advertising: "Wanted: Single men. Generous· with money and aff eclion. Liberal bank account preferred. Stable <See T-SmRTS, Page A.%) Nixon: No Fair Trial APW\~ GETTING HER MESSAGE ACROSS, FRONT ANO BACK Sun Brings T-Shlrt Weather to Callfornla WASHINGTON (AP> ~ Former President Nixon says he would have preferred "the agony of a trial'' to accepting a pre- sidential pardon that he knew made him look guilty. But, be said, he was persuaded "there was no chance whatever I could get a fair trial." Resignations Demanded Parent Group Backs Ex-_Fairview Director By STEVE MITCHELL Ol lhe O•llY Pilot Sl•ll A small group of parents and community members are caJling for the resignation of top State Department of Health officials in the wake of the firing last week of Fairview State Hospital Director Michael Levine. The group of about two dozen members calling themselves the Parent Advocacy Committee also is demanding an investiga· tion of the department or health and the reinstatement of Levine as executive director or the 1,600-palient facillty in Costa ¥esa. Tber, say charges that Levine was ' brash and abrasive" are true, and they claim "that's the only way he could get his pro- grams instigated." Those charges ·were leveled against Levine by Matthew J. Guglielmo, president of the Fairview Families and Friends. Inc .• an organization whose ex- ecutive board supported the fir- ing. Guglielmo called the Parent Advocacy Committee .. a small oHshoot (of the FFT> making a lot of noise," and added that the group could not get along with his organization. But members of the advocacy group think of them1elve$ 8$ a watchdog organization trylnt to promote positive changes at the hospital for the mentally re· larded. Betty Lombardo of Anaheim. who has two sons al Fairview, said Levine achieved many con- structive improvements for the developmentally disabled during his eight month tenure as direc- tor. Kathy Boka. of Laguna Beach, whose child died at Fairview five years ago, said Levine ''looked into problems at the hospital without going through all the state red tape. He was after re· sults." The group, headed by Ruth Stiers of Costa Mesa, outlined pro- jects and goals that they claim were set by Dr. Levine, adding that they fear these projects might go by tbe wayside under the new administration "Or. Levine did more for the patients at Fairview in eight (Su LEVINE, Page AZ> And, Nixon said in a television interview to be shown tonight, he regarded former Vice President Spiro T. Agnew as .. an honest man ... a courageous man" wbo made mistakes. (Channels 11, 8 and29at7:30p.m .) The interview with David Frost, fourth in a series, reached Amin 'Finn' A.bout Vuit NAIROBI, Kenya <AP> -Ugandan President Idi Amin says he will definite- ly attend next month's Commonwealth con - ference in London ''whether they (the British) like it or not," Uganda radio reported today. British government sources said in London.on Thursday that Amin will not be allowed into Britain for the summit. British newspapers, members of Parliament and public figures de- manded Amin be barred from entering Britain because of alleged atrocities and human rights violations in his East Af rlcan nation. 160 Hostages Still Face Death ASSEN. Th<' N<'lhe rlands <A Pl -Captive ch1ldrC'n <'hantcd "We want to stay alivl'' .. today as South Moluccan C'xlremists let one deadline for death pass but again threatened to start killing more than 160 hostages 1( the · Dutch government did not meet their demands . OUiciaJs said .. stl'ady negoll a· Uons" were continu1ni: w 1th two government ps~c h 1atrists as middlemen. For two days, two bands or gunmen have held lOS children and six teachers at a vill age school in nea rby Bovens m1lde and at least SS hostages in ct hi · jocked train stopped in th<' mid- dle Of open pastureland 10 m1ll'S J\Orth of herl'. Four of 21 South Moluccan prisoners whose freedom the ter- ror is ts havl' demanded Wl're brought to the official "cris is center" here, offidals said. No Hazards Found STANFORD CAP> -Stanford University Hospital •'has no serious hazards" des olte a number of deficienccs. Co ast We ather Slight chance or sprinkles or light showers tonight. Decreasing cloudi- ness Thursday morning. Lows tonight 52 to 57: Hilhs Jbursday 68 to 74. INSIDE TODA~ Betuf in gator.aid nuut be • the reoaon why two brothers care for J0,000 of th#! brutei. That . anti Uf ~long . affection. Ando bultling turtle bu.rineu. S.1. P.aoe Al. "We're keeping them on ice." said an official. Two hours before the deadline at 2 pm. local time <S a.m. PDT >. several children were brought lo the windows or the S<'hool and cried out in unison. "We \\ant to stay alive, Van Agt .. A ndnes van Agt is the Dutch Justice minister and the lop gov ernment strategist in dealing with the gunmen The Asian militants -six at New N ame the school and seven in tbe train spoke with senior Dutch of- ficiaJs by telephone. This morn- ing, they rejetted a government appeal for release of the children and repealed their threat lo shoot hostages. But Dutch Premier Joop den Uyl was cautiously hopeful. "It looks as if there is a certain basis for conversation develop- ing," be told reporters. A Justice M{lstry Directors Suppolt Irvine Co. Sale By TOM BARLEY Of,,. 0•11• Pli.t Staff Meeting in San Francisco late Tuesday, directors or the James Irvine Foundation authorized the sale of the Irvine Company for $337 .4 million to a consortium that will rename the company Taubman-Allen-Irvine Inc. The action by a unanimous foundation board came just tour days alter the TAI group outbid Mobil Corporation, the firm that was once qg the verge ot acquJr- ing the Oribge County land com- pany for $3>0 million. Irvine Company holdings in· elude 80,000 acres lJ1 Orange County, 6,000 acres i n Callfomia's Imperial Valley and 101,000 acres known as the Flying D Ranch in Gallatin and Madison Counties between Bozeman and Butte, Montana. Foundation directors noted that the tran.sf er of title bas been a pp roved by Orange County Superior Court J udge James F. Judge. He commented last Fri· day that he thought $337 .. 4 tnllllon represented lair market valu for the Irvine Company. FoWldation dh-ec1on S&td Ule)' expect to dose the deal •Ith TAI wlthln tho next 60 dat•· Irvine heir ess Joan Irvine Smith, who filed the lawsuit that sparked a bidding battle for the company, will be one of the direc- tors of the new corporation. Mra. Smith and nine other in· vestors provided the capital lo back an offering of $40.10 a share for the Irvine Company stock. Mobil was on the point of ac- qujring the company for $24 a share when Mrs. Smith took legal action two years ago. Other principals in TAI include Southern California real e4tate developer Donald Bren, Detroit devel<>per Alfred Taubman, Wall Street financier Charles Allen and auto magnate Henry Ford ll. ROU TOP DESK ~?.E.:!..;4!!· clded to open an office and he wants to "bOrrow" your desk. Now Wbatdo ~dof "l IOldlt Wlthaclaulftcd ad.•• Here'• the ad that dld the trlck for this Ciosta Meaa man: spokeswoman said, "We are con· tinuing steady negotiations because we hope there is still a chance that the terrorists will surrender the children." The gunmen, members of an immigrant community from the former Dutch colony or the South M oluccan Islands. now part of In- ·donesi a, were demanding re- lease of 21 jailed countrymen and a jumbo jet flight. with hostages, from Amsterdam to an un- disclosed destination. Some South Moluccans are serving terms in Dutch jails for using political violence in the past In fruitless attempts to force the Dutch government to help them win independence from tndonesi a for their homeland. The aaJe will then go to Judge Judaa1«Do111,..ro.&L ~~~..:::::==:!:=:====;::=::;;;;;::;:::::::::::.:...~~~~~~...__:---_.__ its emotional high point when the discussion turned to Nixon leav- ing the White House in disgrace in August 1974. 1 "Resignation meant life without purpose as far as I was concerned," Nixon said. "No one in the world, and no one in our his· tory could know how I felt. No one can know how it feels to resign the presidency of the United States. "ls that punishment enough?" Nixon said with strong feeling. "Oh, probably noL" To the question, "Did you, in a sense, feel that resignation was worse than death?" Nixon said: "In some ways I didn't feel it in terms that the popular mythologists about this era, write; that. well, resignation is so terrible that l better go out and fall on a sword, or lake a gun and shoot myself ... I wasn't about to do that. 1 never think in those terms, suicidal terms, death wish and all that. That's all just, Cost: $150,000 just bunk." Without mentioning them by name, Nixon spoke bitterly about reporters Bob Woodward and Carl Bernstein, authors of the book, "The Final Days." . With tight-lipped anger, he called, their book "contemptible journalism," while admitting be had read only stories about the work rather than the book itself.· "'All I say ls Mrs. Nixon read it and her stroke came three days later," Nixon said. "I dic;ln't want her to read it because I knew the kind of trash it was and the kind of trash they are ... ''This doesn't indicate that that caused the stroke, because the doctors don't know what caused the stroke." the former president added, "but it sure didn't help." Nixon almost spat out: "I have nothing but utter contempt. And I will never forgive them. Never." In the book, the two authors (see NIXON, Page Ab d.., N-M Management ... Granted Pay Hike The 75 members or the Newport-Mesa Unified School District management team were granted pay raises totaling $150,000 Tuesday. Avalon Limits Water Supply While Orange County officials ponder water shortages, just of· fcoast at Avalon, Catalina Island, shopkeepers and resi- dents are confronted today with drastic water rationing. Avalon water users have been ordered to cut back water con· sumption by 50 percent. <Related story today PageAJ> · Island storekeepers, about to enter their big tourist season, see the one-half cut in allowable water use as a catastrophe. "We have only one industry here and that's tourism," said Gregor W. Milne, president or the (;atalina Island Businessmen's Association. Heading the list or raises granted by school trustees was district Superintendent Jobi) Nicoll whose $43,100 salary will go to $45,000 on July 1. Nlcoll and his deputy, Dr. Norman Loats were both granted four-year contr acts by the school board, with salaries to be negotiated each year. Loats and the other members of the management team, which includes school principals and assistant principals as well as districtwide department heads and employes, were given raises that will total five percent. That includes fringe benefits. District Administrative Assis- tant Jean Harmon explained the administrative pay package is identical to one that teachers will receive in the coming fiscal year. She said the district cost of maintaining existing fringe benefits such as health and den· tal care, is expected to increase by about one percent, which will make the actual pay increases about four percent. I - J DAILY PILOT I ~GeneralrCites ~ . . I Threat of war· WASlilNGTON (AP) -The told a House Armed Services Jenera! whom President Carter subcommittee .his f~ar of war is reassigned for critlcizint' ad~ based on new m~elhgence of the JDinistration policy on Korea North Korean buildup. testified today that North Korea U.S. intelligence discovered is building up its might and he is this y~ar that the N~rth Koreans convinced Cart er's plan to have mcreased their number or withdraw U.S. ground forces tanks from 500 to 2,000 the past would lead to war. four o.r five years. the general Maj. Gen. John K . Singlaub. testilied. . .. whom Carter fired as chief or T he general, who 1s awaiting ataff of U.S. forces in Korea for reassignment by the Army, swd triticizing the withdrawal plan that in addition to the North ' Korean increase in combat ships Missing Cash Truck Abandoned PHOENIX, Ariz. CAP) -An armored· tr uck which disap- peared on a bank run Tuesday with about $300,00Q.Ju...eash was discovered aband6ned ~arly to- day along Interstate 17 north or Phoenix, but the whereabouts of most of the money and the two · guards were unknown. The Department of Publi c Safety said one of its helicopters s potted the abandoned truck about 6:30 a.m. near the 1·17 Bumble Bee exit, approximately 50 miles north of Phoenix. A spokesman said the vehicle could not be spotted Crom the nearby interstate. . The spokesman sajd the keys were still in the truck, and a small amount of money was in the vehicle, a lthough he didn't know how much. However, the two guards, both lon gtime Purolator e mployes, were missing. The FBI confirmed that the truck was located and that it was ~arrying about $300,000 when it left Phoenix T u esday, but declined further comment, say- ing the matter was under in- vestigation. The truck disappeared while en route to several ba nks in cen tral and northern Arizona. of· fi'cials said. • It was to have made its first stop at a Great Western Bank branch in Prescott Valley. about six miles south of Prescott. of. ficials said. Ba nk officials notified the armored car com· pany about l p.m. that the truck failed to arrive. Mitchell s aid the employes in the truck were Cecil Newkirk, 53, and Russell Dempsey. 49, both of Phoenix. He said both were trust. cd cmployes who had been with the company mor e than 20 years each. f'ro• Page A I T-SHIRTS •.. occupation. No turkey, please lnquin' within." Another warning: "You toucha my body. I slappa you face." And a boast : ''It's real." A Macy's department store l'lerk said two hot-sellers this year are T -s hirts that say "California girls have war.mer bodies." and 'Tm a virgin. but this is a very old T-11hirt." and jet fighters that has already been publicly reported. Con· t r adicting a Con gressional Budget Office study, Singlaub testified that North Korea's military power is superior lo South Korea's now. even with the U.S. forces there. Rep. Samuel S. Stratton < D· N.Y.). chairman of the s ubcom- mittee before which Singlaub testified, asked if he was saying U.S. and Korean military of- ficers overwhelmipgly agree the U.S. withdrawal will ultimately lead to war. '"That is absolutely correct," the general replied. Later, he was asked if he wa.s saying it might lead to war or 1t will lead to war. Singlaub replied that Korean military officers "state flat out, unequivocally that when U.S. forces are withdrawn North Korean President Kim 11 Sung will attack and I said that from a military point of view I agree with that." · Mean while, Carter 's two special envoys, Philip C. Habib and Gen. George S. Brown, told President Park Chung Hee today o r plans to withdraw 33,000 American troops from Korea in four to five years. Park did not welcome the plan, which was announced earlier m Washington, but agreed to ac- cept it as America's· 'established policy," an aide said. He said Park asked for Am<.'rican help in str en gthening SoutH Kor ea's military. Habib. undersec r e t a ry of state, and Brown. chairman of the Joint Chi efs of Staff. met with Park for three hours. Mesa Botcher • Fined $1,000 For'Trimming' A Costa Mesa butcher has pleaded guilty to a charge of short weighting hi ~ custom ers in a consumer protection actwn fil ed by the Orange Count; Dis trict Attorney's Office Randell B Tra,·1s. operator of Randy's ButchC'r Shoppe . 270 E 17th St .. was fint:d St 000 m an a greed jud~ment bC't w1•1•11 himself and Deputy 1>1stnct /\t torney Jean Rheinhe 1mer The charge cla1m<·d Trav1!'. O\'crcharged for l'U ts of meat sold lo hts customers. but the butrh<'r :.aid he wus nut a wan_· hi s actions were illegal Miss Rheanheimer said Travis would weigh a customc-r·s meat, charge them for that weight. and then trim the rat from ll. "Weights and Measur<'1> nf f1cials fell he should not trim the meat. or that he should advise his customers beforehand that the custom t'r is payi n g for pre trimmed weight. .. she explaint'd. • . - Loch Ness Monster? AP Wl,..pllolo No, it's just Del Rita, a seven-year-old elephant who likes to swim. Del Rita, one of the stars of Puck's Canadian Traveling Circus. takes her daily bath in Lake On- tario near Toronto. "guarded" by the vessel Haida. She likes to submerge and use her trunk as a snorkel. Cozmty to Pay For Recovery Of Artifacts Orange County government will pay the bill for recovering artifacts found on construction sites in unincorporated areas . supervisors decided Tuesday. They also agreed to pass the government cost on to builders by increasing building permit fees. Supervisors. responding to a report on cultural and scientific rrsources in the county, s aid any artifacts or fossils found become the property of the county. And they decided lo hire a s pecialist in archeology to direct the fossil-findin~ effort. Board Chairman Tom Riley said the plan starts a process that will permit future generations ··to learn about our prehistoric p ast." Supervisor Ralph Clark said he believes it unfair for county general funds to pay for the pre· servation effort. Spreading the cost to builders would be more equitable. he suggested. Supervisor Phil Anthony cau- tioned against increasing build- ing fees saying county res idents <tlready face "runaway costs of housing.·· But George Osborne, director of the county Environmental Management A~ency. said his staff is studying a plan to reduce huilding permit fees. Adding in the cost o f archeological recovery. he said, will make the reduction less, but 1t still will be cut in the near future TONIGHT "EQUUS" -South Coast Repertory Theater, Tuesday- Sunday through June 11, 8 p.m. OCC LECTURE -"Assertion Training," Fine Arts 119, 7:30 p.m. Good Surfing Due To Fade Quickly Orange Coast surfers woke up to some nice waves this morning up and down the coastline. but weather forecasters say it won't last. The southwest swell is be ing generated by a storm about three days ago off South America. That storm has since blown out. and weather watchers see about 18 hours of good s urf along the Orange Coast. Los Angeles Weather Service forecaster Art Eichelberger said south facing beaches will benefit the most from t he South American gift. Newport Beach lifeguard Capt Charges Sought SAN DIEGO <AP1 · School Supt. Tom Goodm an is asking approvai of the Board of Educa- tion to file unfair labor practice charges against the San Diego Teachers Association, because it has staged a s ickout, work s lowdown and threatened to strike. Bud Belshe said a lot of wetsuit clad surfers were enjoying three to five foot waves at 48th Street this morning. lie said there are 17 seconds between sets. "which indicates lhe storm came from pretty far away." Bel she added that a light wind is keeping the waves semi· glassy. Huntington Beach lifeguards report surf in the three lo six foot range, but say the s urf is not that great. .. We've got long lines that are closing out." explained lifeguard Steve Davidson. Hl' said there were very few surfers out late this morning, adding that a strong side current, along with 63 degree water, is discouraging s wimmers. San Clemente lifeguard Rich Chew s aid surf in his area is ex· ccllent. with two to four foot sets from the pier to Trafalgar Street. Laguna Beach lifeguards said the southwest s well is not helping their south facing beaches, but added that the incoming tide this afternoon might help that situa- tion. .. Employ es Seek Pay Increase The Newport.Mesa chapter of tbe Calltornla State Employes AssoclaUoo 11 seeking a seven to 8.5 pertent pay raise for , 1.000 non-teachinl school personnel for the coming fiscal year . An liich thick contract proposfil went to trustees of the Newport- Mesa Unlrled School District Tu~sday. It wlll be available for peruaaJ by the publlo at district of(ices begiMing Thursday. Superintendent John Nicoll re- minded trustees that, under col· lective bargainlnf laws, the public is allowed to study the con- tract proposals. A public !)earing has been set for June 14 so that district residents can tell trustees what they think of the proposals. Highlights of the proposed con- tract include revisions lo the salary schedule and pay raises ranging ffom seven to 8.5 percent depending on the e mp!oye's place on the salary schedule. T h e 1,000 non -teaching employes who are represented by the CSEA also are asking for an agency shop, which would mean all school employes represented by the CSEA would have to join the 300-member or· ganization. The union also is ask· ing the district to supply and equip office space for the group. Another proposal includes use of binding arbitration lo settle contract disputes with the school board .. The proposed contract also seeks 14 paid holidays per year instead of the 11 now granted. Additional fringe benefits sought include district.paid vts· ion care. prescription drugs. ad· ditional life insurance coverage and a taxtSheltercd annuity plan. From Page Al NIXON .•. said Mrs. Nixon went to the ser- vants quarters in search of liquor dur ing the last days in the White House. "For them to .. take me on is one thing," Nixon s aid. "For them to take her on, in my view, that's below the belt. But the former president con· firmed one account In t he book - that the night before Nixon an· nounced his resignation, he and Secretary of Stale Henry A. Kiss- inger cried a nd knelt in silent prayer. "You wouldn't bclicvC' nil tht• li ttle old ladle~ who come in and buy that one," she said. Men's T -shir ts have fewer written messages. Fro•Pa~AI T he most popular men's seller is covered with a picture or u sm iling. swimsuit-clad Farrah Fawcett-Majors. ''But the s hirt doesn't say anything," a sales clerk said. "I guess it doesn't J\ave to," she added. OAANOIE COAST c DAILY PILOT ™ OUlll .. Ct.tit &ally Pttot .... "'""''"' lH-· 1>11\tf l9't Now'""'"'·" pub!IO\H It• ti. Or""'lll' CM•l '°""'h lllnq COl'lljl•ny ~••l•t<llllofl• ••• 11U9llWd Mot>dav tllro11011 Frtci.y '°' to•ta Mtw ... •P0'1 &.e~t. '1unti"910<' 8eatll'Fo"" r~·~:c .. ;~~~co~~~,,~~~ ~;~~. !.,;' 110'\ ll ...ofl<lled \•tur<N•• -\unGilv. T~ ,.,,,..,...,., Oilbll•lllllQ 1>••nt '' •• l:lll Wnt !My Sir Ht, CO.to~· Clllt~rnl• ftU. • ••MrlN.-f'rt\IOtftt alld Publt-r J•c-11.C:wley Vlt• ~••ldlnt alld 0.ntr .. MoMQiot '1'11-111< ... 11 £dtt ... T-tll.M ...... Ma11a91~ Edit« 0. .... M.i.-Ilk-I'. ... M 11\~"...,t Manttf"O E•tor• c .. u. Meaa Otftoe »0Wol 6aySt'"4 INlll"OA .. tU, ,. 0 8-, tttO • .,.,. Office a Uqvna• .. <I\· 11~0'-'•~""'' "~~:t.~:~~ •. !~W~"r."':' .. ':.::i"' •t Sen 01090 Fr..,...,y . ' LEVINE BACKED. • • months than had been done in all the years before." Mrs. Stiers said. "We'd just hate to see all those programs thrown out the window." They said Levine was trying to: -Place patients in homes on the hospital grounds to prepare them for the transition to the out- side world. -Drop the use of psychotropic drugs at .the hospital. "They're no longer pop· ping pills for behavior." Mrs. Stiers said. -Attem pt to implement a hospital aide program so • psychiatric technicians .could provide dutles othe r than custodial care. -Found an admissions , t ransfers and discharges com· mittee to discuss the status of Fairview patients. SC Plaza Shopper Loses 4 Hub Caps A sho-pper at South Coast ,Plaza Tuesday afternoon told Costa Mesa poUce someone stole four huh caps lrom her Cadillac: Seville in the parking Jot. Brynn Kelly, 223 Vlata Nata, Newport Beach, said ahe-wu OD· ly ~.for 30 minutes Tuesday when the the.It oceurrN. -Instigate a program where patients were taken to communi· ty hospitals or dental ofrices for medical care instead of al Fairview. -Implement several one·to· one programs with patients using a behavior modification team. -Was attempting to get more occupational and 'physical therapists at the hospital. Mrs. Stiers said there are only three rull-Ume and two half-tlme physical therapists currently al Fairview. Mesa Sport Club Hit by Burglary Operators of the Rampart Athletic Club in Costa Mesa said someone walked out of-the center weiehina more than when they walked in. That's because tJtey stole a caasette tape recorder, three hair dryers and two eigbt·foot Jong signs that said ''Racket Boll.·· Police said officials of the club, 25' Vtat.oria St., put the Ion at $400. Recorder Burgled Jnstructon ln Oranro eo.st Colle1et1 Mu.sic Department told Costa Mesa police Tueaday &c:>- mt0ne stole-a $.125 tape fecorder tn>m a music room. l • Heritage captures a great Western European tradition for today's Interiors The sources? Designs by the t housands from the va&t. gorgeously varied output or Western European furniture makers. The translators? Famo\Js Heritage3' craftsmen. The results? Our Brittany,.., i>ccasional collection. Perfection In leafy-heart cherry. pecan and · English brown oak burl veneers. with several extraordinary finishes. The time to see it all? This very week! SUMMER SALE NOWIN PROGRE$ PAOFESSIONAL INTERIOR DESIGN WITHOUT OlliOAftOlll •COMFORTABLE PAA I< ING • CONVE~IENT FINANCING 1514 NORTH MAlN •-SANTAANA~-'3~~ Tu"O•y. Wton•1oay. Tnurtcs1y ind Saluroay: 8.30 to s '30 ~onCl•y 12to 9 • Frld•Y t IO lot ,.. \. 'I - ... WednWSay. May 25. 19n DAILY PILOT ""' ;County Can't Ration W~teE .Use~~ O.tly Pllet Stall ,,,_.,. COUNTY PLANS TO RESTORE SUNSET WATER TOWER A $12,000 Change of Heart for 40-year-old Relic Water Tower Saved From Ignoble End The 40-year-old Sunset Beach water tower, doomed to almost certain dis mantling a year ago, was saved Tuesday by Orange County supervisors. Without comm enting, the board unanimously agreed to spehd about $12,000 in Sunset Tidelands funds to restore the ag- ing wooden tower on Anderson Street. The tower is part of the old Huntington Beach city water system. Now unused, 1t hes JUSt inside Seal Beach city hm1ts George Osborne. director of the count y Environmental . Management Ag ency, s aid in a ·written r<'port that Huntington : Reach City Council members ·have agreed to donate the tower to th<' City ofSf?al Beach. Once the cdunty has restored it. Osborne wrote, Seal Beach of- ficials will maintain it. Osborne was asked by supervisors to prepare an 11gree-- ment covering the project. He said the agreement would s pecify the "preservation of the tower as a historical structure is an appropriate coastline project for the benefit o! ail people of the state." His report said the State His- torical Landmark Commission has placed the tower on the state historical landmark list and re- commended it as a national landmark. A county EMA report last August challenged the County Historical Commission 's declaration that the water tower has historical significance . "Perhaps the s ignificant aspect of the tower is that it is constucted of wood. representing an era and technique of construe· lion no longer in common use.·· the report said then. 1t went on lo note the tower's • ag~ end deteriorating condition were the cause of safety concerns today. One Site Remains . . For ·Climps-Maybe If you were plaMing on begin· nin g the su mm e r watb a Memorial Day weekend campe>ut ·at Doheny or San Clemente state parks and you haven't got re· servalions. you're out of lu('k. But, you can get in line for the 290 new spaces at San Onofre State Park, providing it's :finished on time. · That's the word from Eugene 'June. chief ranger for the PeflMeton Arca parks. June noted that while ell of the camping spaces at San Clemente State Park 057 camp sites), ami Doheny State Park (119 campsites) are already re- served. both parks have ample day use parkine · ~ San Onofre State Park has been undergoing "tlev.elopment. New restroom facilities and, paved spaces ~ve been put In. The construction was due to be completed April 1, but was de- layed. . June said e~eryone is keeping his fingel"'S c'rossed hoping that the San Onofre P.ark will be re· ady by Friday. When it opens, camp spaces will be available on a first come. first served basis. he said. ' The San Onofre Park also has about 700 spaces for day use only. Co11nsel: Powers limited By KATHY CLANCY Of Ille o.lty l"llet Ii.ft Orange County government lacks the legal authority to im· pose mandatory water rationing programs countywide, sua>ervisors were told Tuesday. While supervisors can impose certain ordinances prohibiting water waste. according to an opi· • nion by Deputy County Counsel Charles Sevier, the ordinances wouJd apply only in unincorporat- ed areas. Sevier also said tbe Metropolitan Water District and other waler supply agencies would have legal authority to im· pose mandatory water conserva- tion programs. Supervisors agreed un- animously to form a 22-member water shortage planning com- mittee. The group, which will hold its first meeting next Tues- day in Fountain Valley, was asked to repc.rt back June 21 with a conservation program aimed at cutting water use by 10 per- cent. The committee also is to list actions which could be taken if \'OlUntary conservation e((orts by citizens don't materialize. County Administrative Officer Robert Thomas said in a written report. water rationing could be expected by August if citizens don't cut water use by 10 percent voluntarily. Thomas' report also painted a grimmer picture for the future. "The need for a lof!g-term water conservation effort is urgent and compelling," he wrote. He said Southern California will lose half its supply of impe>rt· ed Colorado River water in the· mid 1980's when an Arizona water project is completed. "If, 10 years from now we find ourselves going throuth a drought similar to this one," he said, "the loss of one-hal( of our Colorado River water could be catastrophic." Representatives of local water supply agencies were present at Tuesday's meeting and suppe>rt- ed the formation of the study group. County Backs River Open APWI.._• EVEN BARTENDERS CAN BE REPLACED, CHICAGO COMPUTER SHOWS This One Can Mix Up to 1,200 Different Drtnks In Three Seconds Computer Po1•rs Shots But Don't Pour Out Your Trouble• to It CIIlCAGO (AP> -It won't listen to your troubles or warble Irish ditties. But the computer bar can dispense one of 1,200 different drinks in less than three seconds, and It won't cheaLthe cash register . The bar, demonstrated at the National Restaurant Show, splashes, mixes and pours ingre- dients in the precise amount to fill the glass. The drinks also are priced, taxed and recorded, and a complete customer guest check is printed, all in the same operation. IT CAN POUR FROM one drop to 64 ounces. Liquids are drawn by a gravity-fed pump through separate lines, preventing any cross mixing and lights warn when a bottle is running low. The turn of a key controls price changes for special entertainment and happy hours. The names of various cocktails, glass size, and all types of liquors are on the drink buttons on the electronic keyboard. Joe ShaMon of Kent, Ohio, thought it up. He went from premedical and pre-law at John Carroll University in Cleveland into the juke box business. The jukes were in 17 bars he.even- tually bought. "THEN I FOUND I WAS losing 18 percent of gross receipts," said Shannon, 37. "ll was n't spillage or overpouring tbat was cutting profits. It was thievery or giveaways by clever barten· ders, bar managers and waitresses. Sol lhought up a computer bar that made all this impe>ss1· hie. Anyone working them has to be honest." Shannon said his computer bars now are in 200 locations or major beverage operators. The cost of a pe>uring station with optional equipment starts at-around $14,500. Alien Care Cost Mulled • • I•. Space Plan •The question .of who should care," he said. "But this is the earlier suggested supervisors . · pick up ll\e tab for an estimated one (acing us." quit picking up the tab fot illegal A 10-_)•ear, $45 !llilliop program $4 .4 million a year in medical Supervisor Ralph Clark who aliens starting next year. said to preserve open ·space and de-treatment for indigent illcg<JI Tuesday he feared the commit- velop parks along the Santa Ana. aliens was turned over to a 19· tee might be too large. Ri\'er and Santiago Creek was member committee by Orange Grm• dJe Plans "I am just scared that the com-a pp roved by Orange CoUlltY 'Cow.nty supervisor~oesday. ___ mittee wouJd be getting out in· supervisors Tuesday. Supervisors left open the vestlgating a lot of things that They asked olflclals of the possibility the group later could are notin our realm," he sajd. county Environmental Manage· ·study other problems of illegal Irvine Talk Clark said the $4.4 million in ment Agency CEMA) to work <1 liens. estimated medical costs each with clUes and the County Plan· But they asked that committee Shirley Grindle, former year translates to 6.6 cents per ning Commission to follow up on ·members first study what is now chairwoman of the Orange Coun. $100 of assessed valuation on recommendations of lbe Santa county government's estimated ty Planning Commission, wlll county property tax rates. He Ana River-Sanlia9o Creek $4.4 million medical bill for tbeir speak on scandal and corruption said that is his roncern. OteenbeltCommission. ·, treatment at UCl Medical in Orange County politics Thurs· The committee 1s to mclude The commissicrrt. was dis-. Center. day at UC Irvine. representatives of organized banded tr\ January aftf'r releas-"I think we must point out that labor, both political parties, the rttg a plan odllinitrg the gTeenbelt the taxpayers of this county are Mrs. Grindle will begin her county Human Relations Com- program. rt. calls for developlrig being saddled with a tremendous talk at 1:30 p.m. in Room 220 of mission, Grand Jury Associa- pa<ks, horse and bike tratls along bill," said Supervisor Ralph the social science tower in cam-tion, civic groups, along with a with parking areas for trail Di~drich . who suggested the pus. Her talk. "Orange County UCI Medical Center physician. users. . . .-committee. Supervisors: Scandal and Cor-persons a pp 0 int e d by E ,MA 0 ff t c i a 1 s· are i 0 "I realize there arc many is-ruption?" is sponsored by the UCI supervisors, county officials and coordinate dev!:)opment efforts sues that go beyond medical Committee on Lectures. a Cal State Fullerton professor. and prepare annual progress re-,_ _______________________________________ _ ports for 'planning commission revlewr 5,500 to Graduate 4' Degrees will be conferred on· .: 5,500 graduates of Cal State Long Beach in nine separate ceremonies beginning today and ending Friday. G em T alk Resentment Kills? By J.C. Hl'MPl/Rlf:S ¥. . t he"tender tou ch Police Probe Three 'Lookalike' Murden SANTA BARBARA CAP) -In-person the girls would have ac- vestigators theorize that the cepted a ride from," he said. but killer of three Isla Vista "look· he added it hasn't helped the in- allkes" may have acted out of re-vestigation at all. sentment for their independent A woman's body found in a re· behavior and demeanor. mole canyon near Los Alamos on One o! the victims was from Sunday was identified Tuesday Huntington Beach. as the last of the mucder victims, ·'The killer probably lives in Mary Ann Sarris. the rural part of our county," Miss Sarris, 19, of Santa Rosa, . sherlCf~ Sgt. Mike Kf rkm an said, who worked in the campus com- adding that many rural residents munityollsla Vista nearUCSan- own guns and "it's not by chance ta Barbara, had been missing that you find the bodies in these alnce Dec. 6. canyon areas like Refugio afld She died of a 1unshot wound in Drum. There are people who the head probably the aame day •have Uved her~ for 20 years that she disappeared, Kirkman said. don't even know those roads ex-Her b~ly decomposed body. ist." found by two bikers Suqday ln He said the Sheriff's Dep.art· Drum Canyon, was identmed by .mentbad received a a~ulaUYe the Santa Barbara COUllly enr· profile •'from back ea.'lt that aaid oner's office, usl111 dental rerds. the klUer was a tln1le white Two other women, both 21, died male. probablY a Jon r and pro· under similar circumstances bably wtthauualprobl ma." about the same time as Miss The rationale for tbe profile Sarria. The bodies of JacqueUnc waa that "that's the Clll\J tlnclol -Root, a UC Santa Barbara coed. .. and Patricia Laney of Hunt- ington Beach, a former coed, were found in Refugio Canyon above Santa Barbara in January. Ballistics have shown that the same tun killed all three women, Kirkman said. He declined to give the caliber ol the weapon but aatd it might have been either a platolor a rille. The threG all wore their halr long and aU'ai.lbt, bad about the same buUd and taste in clothes and all were frequent hi tcbhlkers, resulUna in the- . · look-allke" label. lnveatlgaton t.alked to more than 1,200 people ID the course ol the half .year lnveatlaation, Kirkman said. but there are no leads and no wt'tnas~. Tho death.I prompted a cam· pus ~ampalgn to e11Dllnat6 bltchhlldng, provide nlfhl bus service to Isla Vlsta and campus escorts !or stria who needed to 10 QU( •rnlPL . OTHER STARS 1hlM prettilJI, too What colors come to mind when· you think of gemstones? To most people, red means ruby, green is emerald, blue is sapphire, and so forth. These are, of course. the most precious and bttlllant of stones in those colors. But. there is a lso a whole rainbow of colors available ln other stones than can be cut to brilliantly renect light in the·. "star" pattern. Their attracUveness. and brilliance are unusual, but their prices are generally quite modest. The garnet, for example, ls a red beauty that finds great favor. If you pref er Veen. there ls dJopside. Rose quart.I 1s a delicate pink. Others include th violet or red almandlne 1arnet, the black or dark brown beryl, the black or blue-grey spinet, milky white quartz. pale ereen kornenrplne, or the brownlsh-rreen ~nstatlU. The asterism of these stona • ln othel' worda, the1r ablllty to reflect D1ht ln a star-Uk pattern • adds excltemenl to ownin1 them. And th•y're very affordable • Valuable and dHlred gold coins are adding 11 new and tender toucl'I In to· day's faahiona. Framed in finely crafted 14 karat.gold, tl'leH colna set In jewelry, are pop- ular acceuorlea to dress. Wideband gold coin jewelry makes great and laallng gifts. 1823 NEWPORT BLVD . COSTA M&SA CONVENIENT TEAMS BanJcAmorfc.d-M -. ....... 30 YEARS IN TME SAME LOCATION PHONE~ ...... -v-v \ ,,. DAILY PILOT Jost Coasting & '\@ w ith Tom arphine • NAME -DROPPI NG : H all · goes according to the script, it appears that they 'II sell the ranch along toward the end of July . The ranch in question here 1s Irvine Ranch More properly, the Jtem up for sale is the Irvine 'Company. which has vast hold· ings here in Orange a'd\hU,y that are legend. along with acreage in Montana and elsewhere. In event you have absented yourself from the globe o\ler the past several months, you should be informed that there has been a ·t)idding war going on over the ranch. All of th1~ came about through a piece of legislation known as the federal Tax Reform Act of 1969 ~ Wedneaday. May 25. 1an ' -8-Perish ~-- In Sauna &th Fire NEW YORK <AP > Fire raged through a sauna bath and rooming house in mid town Manhattan today, killing at least eight persons, the city ftre com missioner said. At least 12 others were ad milted to a hospital, three of them in critical condition. F IRE COMMISSIONER John T O'Hagan. at the scene. said he d 1dn 't kno w whether more persons we re trapped inside by t h e four-al:Jrm blaze. whose cause was not immediate!) known "We no .... havt' thl' JOb of searching 100 cubicle:-. ht• said Tbe fire broke out 111 th1· Everard Baths on 28th Strec.•t between Sixth Avt'OUI:' and Broadway about 7 a m FIVE PERSONS ..., eann~ onh two towels were assisted from the bathhouse. which an employ1· said catered to homo~exuals \ End of Sale ......... _...._ Navy Tas k Foree U.S. Cruises Indian Ocean WASHINGTON (AP> A four·ship U.S. Navy task group headed by a guided missile cruiser has entered tho Indian ocean. an area President Carter says should be "completely demilitarized.•· Pentagon sources said the While House was aware of the voyaee o( the c ruiser Sterett. the destroyer Morton, the frigate Bradley and the oiler Mispi111an. THE TASK GROUP ente red the Indian Ocean 11 days ago without any announctment. The Navy acknowledged the operation only when asked about reports lhat it was under way Most Navy warships bound for the Indian Ocean have passed th rough the ~a.its of Malacca and generally have been seen from Singapore This time, the task group chose a course through the re· mote Lombok Straits. PENTAGON OFFICIALS denied any intention to hide the mov· ement of the cruiser-led gf'oup into the Indian Ocean. They said the Lombok Straits route was taken because it was the most direct route to the Australian ports of Fremantle and Bunbury The new Navy cruise in the Indian Ocean is the first since an all nuclear powered fQrce led by the C'arrier Enterprise left those waters in early March ON MARCH 9, Carter told a news conference that "we've pro· posed lo the Russians that the Indian Ocean be completely de· m11ttanzcd WHEN ADOPTED, 1t meant that the Irvine Foundation . which was esta blished to do good works with profits from the ranch. must dump its 54.5 per- cent controlling interests. c astmg about ror buyers. the foundation came up with Mobil Corpor ation. most noted for dig· grng up 011 ralht·r th:.in digging :.i~parai;:u!> <'rOp!> or housing trach The fire began in lhe upp1·r floors of the building. and por lions of the top l wo l1•vels col lapsed The comm issione r said the· Oper ators of the buthhOUSl' had been ordered last August to 111 stall a sprinkler system 111 the bu tiding hut had fmled to dn "" Real estate ctgents were about to close a sale on Billie Woodbeck·s ho me in Li\'onia. Michigan, when a sm all problem developed . The prospect was about to sign on the dotted line when a sudden thunderstorm toppled a h ickory trl'e onto the roof. The prospective buyers ran for their cur saying they had reconsidered The home dOC!:i have a fireplace and a stack of wood goes with the Asked ..., h.y 1t deployed wa rships into the Indian Ocean after Carter raised the dem1lit arizatlon issue. the Navy indicated it will continue to do so until the Russians agree to keep their warships out .. Any substantial changes in our periodic deployment policy would have to occur within a context of mutual U.S.-U.S S.R. military restraint in the reg10n." the Navy said Impasse Resolved deal 1f another buyer appear!:i · lL1nt•h ht'll l':-.~ .J11.in I rvine Sm 1th ho..., t·n·r "'a!>n 't loo pl<'U!>t'<I \\Ith th(' notion of her family spread gmng to Mobil So tht• ...,.holl' affair ~t·nt to court and lht• ranch "'a:. put UJ.1 for lh<' ht~hl·:-.t b1ddt•1 )1 r:. Smith t•\ cnluall) casl her tut m "'th a l'onsort1um known as TLtubman All('n Irvine llnd the •bidding war !>tarted Mobil would l)Jd S('\'<'~ mtlhon Taubman Allt•n ln'tnl' ...,ould :.e(' their mllltons and rat:o.t• lh<.'m <• fev. ·mon• million F1nalh. whl•n Taubman t\llt·n· '1rv1m• t;ppcd tlw anti· to $337 ·1 mtll1011. ~ohll nung tt:-. c ards on tht• t:iblt• and cltd an El Foldo So nm'. soml'11mt• 10 .... ard tht· l·nd of .Jul\ T.1uuman Allen· Ir' 1m• 1 ah•-, 11\ l'r tht· r:.inch und ht>gin.., pl11w111g fot prof1h ., ALL THIS ~i\ \' tw ...,t·ll and good, but 11 m;I\ ll':J\ l' ui. or d1nar\\l'lllll'll" of Or;111gt· C'ount) 111 :.omt'\\hat of .1 dtl .. mma __,-m<•an .111 lht•..,t• H·ar-. "'<.' \l' Ol't'n c<1lhn)! lht• plat·t· tht• In tot· Ranch run b\ tht.' In 1n1· ('om pan\ Wh\ \OU 1·.111 'tt.11dl) turn .1r11und \\1lh1111t f1nd1ng MlmNh1n~ th:1t hai. h•·l·n n•mt'(I in honor of lht• Ir' till' ltt•11tagt· tn th1-. .1rt•.1 \\ 1• h,t\ t' ..,lrl•t-l:- ,p.irki.. l;1k1•i. and 1•\ 1·11 J Cit). 1111 hearing lht> f<lmou.., .ind historic· In inl' n<tmt• .,., r!>l. you h:I\ l' to wonr1N 1f tht.• Ill'" ownt•rs an• g111n1? to chung<' .tht' name ul tht• company 0Htc1al h Will 1t 1111" twc11m1· the T&ub :man Alll'n lrv1nt• Compan )" That ·s go1n):( to h<' a touch d1f ftl'ult fitting 111111 a rww!-.pap(•r ht·aclhnc· Should lht• spn•ucl nf J('rt•agt• aho ht' l'hC1ng1•d to ht·C'nmt-thl' Taubman Allt•n In In<' HanC'h ., •\:"O Wlli\T i\HOl'T tht• c.·1t~ of trvin1· 1l-.1'1f" Tht· ('1t} ('nuncil of ln int· n111ld nt•\ t•r .1j!rt•t• to c-han~<' tht' n.11rw On tht• '"ll° tht.·~ <I "Pitt l lo 2 \\1th om• .a~ l .t tn I 111! \rl• ...,,. g111n~ In ... 1.1rl t.illtn~ \hl· I .imnu~ houl<'\ .1rf1 through ;\t•..., port BN1<·h jnd C'ost.l MC'sa lH th<• 1wmt• T.iubmun Allen (rv1m· J\\ <•nu1• • T'hen• 1:-. gm.,,,. ciuubl they'll t'\ t•r <'hilllJ.!l' lht• naml· or l rv1nr L.1k1· But 1•v1•n 1( lh1•y clo. Wl' ('Un t11k€' solact• 111 lht• ·fact that tl could hav1• bl't'11 wnrw It could h.1 v(' bec·ome Moh1I l.uk1• A ntl th al o;ounds sort of -.t11·k' Tiny Sub to Begin Search for Bodies LEBANON. NJ (AP 1 A thrct'·mim !.ubmar1ne. normalh used to explore for 011. has taken on the gnmmer task of st·arch~ng for bodies ma treachl'rous man made lakl' The tiny Mermaid II was lifted by crant• into the Hound Vallt'y Reservoir her(' Tuesda) and will b('g1n looktn~ today for six f1 ~h er men and canoeists believed lo ha Vl'd rown('d :.mcc· 1973 "God. I !>urc· appr('c:tatl' what lht•> ·rl· trying to di>.' :-.aid Warren Stier of Ewmg. whost• son Craig disappt·arcd wh1ll· canoeing la~t March 12 "(hope thi') f111d him \Vt• know ht•'-. thf:rc: They found h1-. lwdroll I d11n 't th1nk hl' l'' l'I' madt· 11 THE RESERVOIR ...,a:-scuopcd out from farmland 1n th~ tOOO!> after a prolonged drought. but has n('\'l'r been c:onneC'tcd to a water supply syslt'm l'sed instead for recn•ut1on. 11 has proven dangC'rou!> when strong "'ind:. <'Ul through th1• "urruund1ng mounlllins and t•hurn uplht·..., all'!' The reseno1r hJ" l'rtl\ 1•<1 too l'h<.1llt•ng1ng for '\(•\\ Jcr~l') -.t<itt• police diver~. "''ho gavt• up tht• searC'h for bod1e-. lh1i. y('ar when the) found 185-foot depths and near fr<'e11n~empcrnture!> 1nhosp1tablt· THE VICTIMS dtsaJ.llH'JI ('(I 10 thrt·t· 1nc·1denh bt•l\\l•(•n 1!173 .inn last March Relatives of tht• m1-.:-.1n~ mt·n turnt•d t•1 GO\ Hn·ndan lh rn1-. "'h11 reportOOl.) "'as turned down wh(:n he asked the ~.i\') for help Then • the) talkl'C1 to Rep Ed..., ard Patten 10 '\ .I "'ho contill·tt•ci ·\111!11 · C alerne J,1n·:.1dc•nt of I ntt·rnat1011:.1I l'Rrtc>r"' alf·r Cont ra<·I ors In< of \ie\\ YnrkC1h GALERNt:. a form<.'r JSsoc1att· of oc('ano~raphcr J acque-. Cousteau, donated the submarine and thl1 <,<.•rv1ces of the ere"' Tht• "late of New Jersl'Y .c:aH· S15.000 to pa) for hous111g the· submannt• s crev. 1n a nt.'arb) motel Thl• st lit(• pohct• v. 111 cover other costs Galern<' "":-. 1111 hc1nd Tu1•sd<I\ and"' ;.trnf'd thttt lhr-sl'arch would bt• difficult l'SING .\ )1 .\P, ht• f>t•tnlt•d to th1• dt·t'fH'SI part of the lakt' and sa1<1 Look .\OU ha\l' almo!>I J \t•rtt(•al dtff hc·ri• and lherl' an• trees un derwatt!r up to 2.'i feet tall · The 2l.l-foot -.ubmarine ha" undt·r" .111•r 11 ,::'hls 'tdt•o lapin~ l'qu1p mt•nt a nd a t'l<tv. that <·nuld pu. k up .1 hod~ Jnd earr) 11 to thl' !>Ur (Ii l'l' RN·auM• of van tnli! tht•rmJI C'ur rc·nt., 111 tht• l11kf'. 1t" not kno"' n "'hat cond1t1on'tht-bod1e' would tw 10 Hoth (;<tll·rnc· and Stale Pollet• "up('rmtendent Col Clinton Pai::an11 stre.,..,t><1 th<it tht'rP an· no ~uarante~· that an~ bodws would ht· lor:i1ed Bl'T GALER SE .\ODED. \\t• II clo tht• best "'c can \\ c re pro fess1onals \.\'('don't rush ·He -.u1c1 The• tpc;t went .ih-.olutcly fine E\'erythmg I'\ ..... ork111i:: f1rc;t clas!. The sub. jS'ilSled b~ u -;mall not1ll11 c1f ... urface vessels ..... ill spend ,1bout 10 days on the Utkl-. 1·onl:entratin~ on a 11, square-mile area in th<' middle nr lht> four ..,quarf' mill· lakt· tht· part the police could not reach "WE HAVE .a genc.•ral 1Cfra of where tht• bod11's Hre not Thal gives us an idea of...., here th<'y will b<.," Pa$:ano said 'You hu\'<' something hC'rt· like ••ftl'r \'1C'ln<1m ... he :Hided "No one really 1s s11llsfisct until rt•ma1ni. <trl' found · Rainfall Widespread West Gets Badl,y Neetkd Precipitatipn ~lb.tf'IV • • .. Al'bu'<1W 0 ,. A,,,artlt'1 llO ... .. flt1f'fA '>II .. A lrrn1nQP\o111'Y\ ~' "' lf\i\mt\H~ •1 ~\ Bo•\P " .., o• 80\lon 'Ill •• Ru01tto _, ., t"•'l\ln$ c "' " 01 C"•rl\tftW V-. 1111 •• (tuc&oo ~ "' <'•f"IC1nn.,t1 "\ ... tl•••lend ~\ \8 ..i ~1w1.., -· "' Q.fo."""' "' \II 01'1\ M 01N't. 0 "' , b!'lroll ~· bl , M~ll'fl8 bl " •Honotuht •1 ,. • Hou,lon "I )0 ., ., M 8S ,, 1""'8Pllh• ~8 • 111t, ... u1~ Al "7 M!'mp"I\ ,.. Mleml n• Mllw~ut-" OJ St P ~~ S• ~hO'Wf'r\ ar\0 t'otAtl't1 tnlJt\ ""'"O'"'' -·· ..r:•ll>'rN lrorn Mori ll!M 1(1 .. ,,,~ .-ncf l"u"(ll>r\howf"\ ..... ,., "<ftYtt O¥et llJft't"'" ColorAd\) A'Uf "~'U'""•'' NtJW M,..~l((J R•I" •• , .., .. ,,,,, tor ""1(1) Of '"" "°''""''" """ c-n1 ral PK11tc Co.t•I l"' V!'q8\ .. , •• , t•ltltAnc~ ., .. lf>ut\v"t" ~~ " .,....,, .... w._, ...... '"' ~ll'(·ffoOey II Y"" dO not ~.,.. "'°"' -tJv !l ~0 11 "' rllH "'°"'"" 1 o"' and vc>-t' rf\t'v ..,,11 t"' ,,.,,,"" .. .,.. ~lut&IY •n..J S.Utwttf If .,..~, ~"' N t t9Cf1'f¥9 VOii' ~· 0... ,. iii "' "" t.ftw• tC. •"' .t'td Y•V "'°" .... --"" c.,....._,...,.,_. "'°'I 0.a"Oe C:O..ftl ... IV•r M1·011 ~I lit1ftlo"91C»1 ftot- -Wl•l""fttlr< .... ,..,. ~" 0.-..1" Cl&MI·-Ao """ ~Ju•" CIO•\h~t DAl\f Poo<>t So.Ith,_..,. L ... 1~1 N'9vP4 tt~H N"w Ortflltit"' ~ia• Yo" Ollle Cil• Omef\111 Ori•"'*° Phlleo·.,,.,. """"I• •1n1bu,..;. P'll•l>CI ~ P "•"" Ou SI Lout\ <,t PT- S..lllet• 5.1,, ,.,.., S..elll• "~ Ill! 8• ~I 81 •> 81 " ll ., u •1 " •t ,. •• M ~1 ~· •I ~7 •• •S 60 ., u '1 " " ... ~, •• El'rly TUl'\fj~y "'a"' lllUft u Cll'r\lorm• "'°"«! l"'OUO" °"'" nl w••I••" Nortll O•~n11t On• "" 1o Wlttru.,.., N 0 ••Ill wl-Urenq 07 l'f'OuQlll0~1,...,or>w., TIM•• .,.,. \lorm• '" I'll' l!a\I H lll w•ll 1111• mor"l"Cl Tiit mo.i ftU""fn)u\ 4tNI N111v1 •tt ••t~ ''Of"li\ v1.-.1,,.etoOtMo•• J (_ \1111 •110111_, -"•• OI 111.,,, O.•"'-'"'"""" IO<M•Oovu 'IOVll••"" l.OYl\l- WA•"lf1910fl )t 90 " M114 ~tut~ mouly "' ,,.. "'°'•I'd ro.. _ ..... "'""' tt>-pl ,,,. ,,,, ... 4 11#\llC (O<>\I Tll• W••ll111<1 '°' v.s. s m••rw , A \IOW•rno.1119 COIO ,,.._, .,., Jlitt oro•ldt"'I -" o• tn. Wttt """"!IHI., .....ot• ~.i111a11 lllh lft0ft1l110 ""° ••"' ••iM<IHl<tt ... llt!wt•IOf'-l'Mw?• "Ouf\ """ ~ w•lll """'' 10\ lft t"-h<O""' ~•tV4'1•~ Ovttll•Q"I 1-mO#•At11r,.\ ran .. 11 trom 1• i" <Ctv W•\t ,.,. to 17 lft fly ..... c.atonda r1f)Uft,v•f'cD'"'(l"'dtorno1o1~b<1'1t n "',. t,oul"•*'" (.14l1forn ... ,1i._,,., ,.,,.. O~I ~l)tfll<"1.t,.•\ ""' Thurut,.v morn1nQ .,,., H '"ml1n ctood-y but tf'tf'I "".'""°"' du• tor rNl'\ttv \u""V o ·r' ~~ l•Qf'\tty w lfrTWl" t,.~rMuf"•\ 4 cf'l.-ncJll' ~ hqtlt rAfn '' lore<.8t.t tl\l\1qht •or mount~•"' tn s'"' .. R'rb.lrA "'""' V-'"tur8 c.ountt .. \ O"\.flltt ~ .. ,., .. {t!ft PtP"(.I <N!f'•ttblf' "'1nh "°"°' ,.nd '«a• qv.,~v w•"'*\ ,.., I~• ~ft""f'O"'t"4. And f'y_.."1nq\ 0Aytl~ tf'llo~r,,.tur .. , .. ._~,td Oftc4tlt v·ttv"rf JI) Ait t~ LO\ "n<I"''" C•vtr r""'"" Coastal lt'eadaer Mo\lly '""' T ..... rWl!ty l lof"lt ••r1f1b1~ w •nd' "'9"' And mo<l\l<tq "°"" M11111-. Tllur\d•V In I ... 6()' (011\tel t!"'Yl.,,.,.leutfl'\ Wt9' '~"qi' l>•tw••n H •nd U l"l•nll l•m ~'•"'•e• w111 ••noe 1>1~11 st a11c1 ~ Tllo w•t~ l•~talur8wlll bf' 60 W•e»tnbAT SfCOl\ll lliqrl )•41 pm 4 0 S.CO'ICI IOW 9 )0 I> m t • THUlllSOAY F'lr\l hlQ!I 1 u a m J ' ~lr•llow • 1'• m II I S.COl\d "4Qlh f 2t 0 m ~ 4 S.cOf'd-10 Oo m 1, 5.Mnr1te...l.,........_..,, •-u ..... Moo"" '°' 11 n" m Surfllq•rt 1 Htmllfll1"WI f"° Nf wOort llHUlff W•vo 1,,,... to""" !Hf wit" 'Ollll•or 1¥ \Wffl\ C.-Oloft• - New Grass Has Court In Uproar WILKfo:SfWRO .• ~ C tA P 1 W1fkc!) Count} de put1es harve!>lcd 131 m<1n JUana plants all growing under their noM•i. on thl• courthous(• l:iwn Grant Sl•b:.1:-.t1an. rourthoust• Janitor, noticed lhl' plant:-sprou ting among nower!> and shruh twry nt•ar a mt•morial. 'If somt•om· I!> trying to lt'JI US SOffit'thtng. lht.•) !)hould bt· in tOuC'h with th ei r lc~1slator!>. · suid Greg Radcliff. a IO('al St<itt• Burt•au of In\ cst1gat1on agent · Wt n· onl) here lo l'nforcl• tht.• la"'"· not mak(.' thl'm Prisoner Lockup Ended by Judge WALLA WAL i.A Wa-.h ( A p ) -w a s h I n J? t 0 n s I a I I' Penitentiary offtc1als s:.11d tod<t\ that an 1mpasM' \\1th gutird~ ovC'·, end111g a 46-day lock up of 1.372 in mates had been resol\'C'd and th1· prisoners would be allo ..... ed oul of their C'ells All C'Orrl'('t111nal off1n·r-. :-.ch ('duled tor thl' h a m ... h1f1 rt' ported lu work . ~aid Supt I! J Rha) ThC'y had thrC':Jt('nt•d a walkout. exprl'~Stng ll'ar that lh(• maximum ·:.ecu rit\ 1nmatl'" might murder them if lht· lot'k up ended PLANS CALLED for mm<tl(':-. 111 be let out of their celb to takl· exercise and "'<itch a mont'. Hha) said The impa~st' had d<.•\ eloped ...., hen offlc1ab announced plan-. to t•nd tht• lotjrnp for fear of a not but guard~ refused to let in mat es out of their cells for fear of rt>prt!>als Two dt•c1s 1ons 1s;ued Tuesd<1y 111 Thurston Coun ty Super ior Court in Olympia cleared the ..., a~· for :1 n•soluliun Jl'DGE GERRY Alt•x<indl'r re· fust•d to grant a guard ·sought or - dt'r to rl'qu1n' that the lockup be 1·11n11nut•cl Ill' also denied a m o· t 1011 from lhl· tnm<1lt•s that the l11C' k up he ended immediately Rh:.iy orct('rcd th(' lockup April 1U aftl.'r hundrt'ds of tnmlltes set l1n•s and loot<.>d the prison stor e. Tht.•y were reacting lo 11 search 111 th<• pm.on that turned up bar n·I-. of {'Onlrahand drugs and homc•mad<• \\<'apons. officials :-aid A high-fiber cereal that actually stays crisp in milk. ~c" h1~h l1ht'r Rr;111 Ch'-'' "'"~" ..,11 lrl"'P 111 mi1i,. and la\lt'' "o !!reat. ~rn1 \\nn't hdll'\l.' 11\ ;1 hran 1.:c rcal. And -w11h l.'vc~ thing ~11u vc hecn hcann~ about the 11nportancc of fine r. you' II be glall 10 !..nm.a. )OU.re gelling (ill tht: high-finer ~ood nc'' \Oll wan t in a bran cereal Try new Bran Chcx cereal It'~ nol JU!\( go<x.I fo r \<lU It \ good. To prove it, we'll buy your fi~st bowl. I I .. o_uE .... E~N~1e _______ av_P.,h_i1_1n_t_.,_1a_nd.,..i Bg Slaip Owners I\: '\I \ ., I \It I 1:\1 \101111: lltt\ll . 1 1:.,\l Ill lfli I tCll ltl \'Ill IC Mayaquez Crew Claims Settled ,~, ''"' 111 .... ~;; '1 '" 1,;~; I .. 1 ••• • ··1·m watching one of those game shows where the winner is the one who jumps the highest and geta the moet excited without havinJl a heart attack." In Hearst Case SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -The owners of the merchant ship Mayaguei, whose seizure by Cambodia in 197S trlg1ered an interna· tional incident, will pay six former crew members $258,000 ln claims. it was disclosed today. Francis L. Tetreault, attorney for Sea-Land Services Inc., an· nounced that a setUement was reached in the chambers of Superior Court Judge Victor M. Campilongo. Campus BreWBan Bill Dies "WE SE"ITLED TO avoid a long and difficult trial which.· would have resulted in a lengthy and irrelevant presentation or the entire political history of Southeast Asia,'' be said. "The peripheral issues involved would have made sticking to the rele- vant evidence of the case im· possible.'' The former crew members had filed suit seeking $10 million in damages, contending that the seizure of the ship could be traced to negligence on the part 'of the vessel's owner. Commentator ,. To Resign Spot on CBS ~1000 HEU.\TE ~~~ L..\~C:I : \ "" 1 I q1fol' 111 Ml" I • I, d ' " ' , 111 j,. '' • I' 'I I •I I 1 • 1 • • II ... I 1lt111 1110111 111 It• I 11• 'I 11 lol I 11 ,,t' ,,,,! 10 I tl1 \I t ~ I 111• I """ ,, I f I "II "' I I • I • " "' ''11 I .... "'. . . . IYJr.: NOW OPEN And awaiting the pleasure Younger Won't Blast Action SACRAMENTO CAP) -A pro- posal to ban new liquor licenses on public college campuses, op· posed by the colleges and student groups, died in an Assembly committee Tuesday. Assemblyman Floyd Mori CD· Pleasanton), said his measure would help combat alcoholism, "one of the largest problems we have." A FEDERAL COURT suit against tbe government, alleging' negligence in failing to warn the ship of hostilities in the Gulf or Thailand, is pending. The Cambodians seized the ship and its Ja.crew members on May 12, 1975. LOS ANGELES (AP) -Eric Sevareid, CBS News' granite- faced pundit-in-residence, will soon hang up his thinking cap and reach for his fishing rod. of your business. We're featuring a unique wine bar in addition But no member of the As· sembly Governmental Organiza. tion Committee would second a motion to approve the bill. Never one who would be mis· taken for a standup comedian, Sev areid nevertheless revealed a wryly humorous side Tuesday in a farewell talk before a meeting of owners and officials of CBS. TV affiliates. to regular cocktails. Entrees include our ever-good steak, lobster, and crab. SACRAMENTO CAP> -Atty. Gen. Evelle Younger says he won't criticize Patricia Hearst's release without a jail sentence alter her conviction for armed robbery and assault with a deadly weaoon. ., "Having been a judge for 11 years. I can tell you it doesn·t take any amount of guts or brains to give a penruless unknown a break. It tak~s a lot of guts to give a Patty Hearst the same consideration," the Republican contender for -------- governor said Tuesday ( J ''If there 1s a double STATE standard, I think it works the reverse of what most ----- people believe," Younger added in an appearance before the Central California chapter of the Sigma Delta Chi pro· fessional journaHstic society. Miss Hearst was found guilty by Superior Court Judge E. Talbot Callister after entering a no contest plea to cr.trges that she fired an automatic weapon during the May 16, 1974 robbery of a Los Angeles sporting goods store by the Symbionese Liberation Army. ONE STUDENT spokesman and a legislator said a campus pub or faculty lounge was a good place for students and teachers to get together in a relaxed at- mosphere and talk about their studies. Faculty clubs at most college campuses now hold liquor licenses, ahd student unions at twQ Uhiversity or California campuses and about a half dozen state college campuses sell beer. In a_ddition, student group.s sometimes get temporary h - quor licenses for parties on cam· pus. • MORl'S BILL wouldn•t have revoked existmg licenses. but Tra11••exual f'ound Guilt fl would h1lve banned new licenses, transfers of current licenses to AUBURN (AP) A transsexual was convicted new concessionaires, a nd tern· or first-degree murder Tuesday m the shooting porary licenses on campus. death of a man who picked up her and her boyfriend UC spokesman Steve Arditti as hitchhikers described the measure as "a According to trial testimony, Nikki Lee solution in search of a problem." Nude Rith ~ns~op EL SOBRANTE, Calli. (APl-As policeman Michael DeOrian recalled it, it was a pretty boring patrol until the naked cou- ple on a motorcycle drove by at4 a .m . ''What gives here?" he asked, after pulling the pair over to the side of the road on Monday. "It's our sixth wedding anniversary," was the response. DeOrian said that since neither appeared drunk and since it was unlikely anyone would be around at that hour to be shocked by their appearance, he dl cided not to ruin the celebration. The policeman thus escorted the couple to their San Pablo home -after ticketing the man for failure to have a driver's Looking about the huge circus tent CBS had erected for a luncheon, he said, ·'As we walked in here my good· friend, CBS News executive Bill Small, said, '( a lways knew you'd end up a clown'." Sevareid will deliver the last of his pithy commentaries on the CBS Evening News on Nov. 30 when be reaches mandatory re· tirement age of 65. Sevareid was born in Velva, N.D .. on Nov. 26, 1912. ' 1660 Dove St. ,t ' Newport Beach 'i. ''fi 752-2538 [.~ • ~fi4'. "SOMEONE ASKED me what (Near Orange County Airport. 'Take MacArthur I'd do after 4S years of daily de· D N M c JI d · ) adlines." he said . "I have two ~B;l;v;:d;. ;::to=B~irc~h=to=;:;o;:ve~.~e=x=t=t=o=a~n~·e~;a~e~n~e;r::s~ contrasting temptations. One is E to sit in a rocking chair for two weeks, after which I will slowly begin rocking. .. The other is to go fishing. .. ·---license in his possession. Diamond, 26. of Hollywood lured the victim, Robert He noted that Mori himself ad· Thompson. 52, of Daly City into the woods at Cisco milted oo disruptions have oc· Grove near Lake Tahoe las t June curred because of current liquor Her boyfriend. Gerald Miller, came by and sales on campus. Sound waves travel one mile in approximately five seconds. robbed Thompson Miller told Thompson that Miss _____ ..:__ ______________________________________ .1...-_____________ ..._. Charlie Brown may say that hap- piness is a warm puppy, but I can tell you that happiness is a cold trout." Diamond had h a d a sex change operation. Thompson broke out laughing, and Miller shot him three times in the head. testimony revealed. ASH & CARRY Phone Call A id• Propo•al 'Vote SACRAMENTO <AP> ·A proposal to ask the voters whether California should ha\ e· a state lot· tery stayed alive Tuesday when an absent legislator ·gave his support by telephone from 583 miies away. B THE UNISTORE The author. Assemblyman Robert Cline, R- Northridgo. reached Alisemblyman Ken M~d~y by phone in El Centro. w"llerc Maddy was giving a speech. Maddy. R-Fresno. said he would have voted for the measure. Hi.5 statement led an opponent. As· semblyman Mike Cullen, D·Lon~ Beach , to casl a "courtes:v vote" that sent the ml·ar1ure lo the As· sembly iloor on a 5 3 vote of the Governmental MASTtR CHARGE 8Al\l(AME!UO.R.D llOWtl\ '"'""co .• .. ' ·····• .•... FOOD SHVJCE rtlOOUCTS f'ArB600DS a1110M JAMITOltlAL ~ES TAPE . MllCMAMDJSI IAGS Organization Committee SHl"'9MG CAITOMS GIFrlOXES Carpeteler Sla11l•fl S '"~"' SACRAMENTO <AP > .\n unemployed carpenter led officers Tuesday to the body of a S- year·old f\rl who had been mis..-.ing all night, the Sacramento County sheriff's department reported. Department spokesman B1U Miller said William Ernest Burley, 29, was booked for kidnap- ing. sex perversion and murder in connection wlth the death of Sabrina Dawn Gatewood PICNIC SUPPLIES Pla&es • C.JNI IUllv~ • Ferb • 8.-• Napkhls BLOWER PAPER COMPANY I 525 E. EDIMCHI, SANTA AMA The girl was la:-t 5.N 'n about 6 p.m Monday in the courtyard of the family apartment in an eastern _ .. , __ .,.. , ..... _ ..... .......,..-.. ., suburbnearF~som Boul.:e~v=ar~d~o=n~d~W~a~tt~A~v~e~n~u~e~. --------~-----~-----~ Purpose Singular LOS ANvELES CAP> -A psychiatrist testified Tuesday that Leslie Van Houten had only one purpose in life when she lived with the Charles Manson cult - .. only to serve the will of Manson." Dr. Keith Ditman said under prosecution cross· examination that in 1969 Miss Van Houten·s only sense or duty wa!'i to Manson-not to the low. "In view Of her altered value system and belief in Manson, h~ duty WH in that direction and not in the law," Ditman said~ . The Antique Guild Grand Opening in Orange County Newport Fwy. a11d Dyer Rd. Eut S.turda~, May 28 A new Antique Guild. In Orange County One and a half acres scrumptiously filled to the ceiling wtth all but today. Antiques. Yesterday. In all shapes, sizes and eras. Invitingly yours. So, join us. Saturday. For another Antique Gutld. As old as ever. , . - ;. I .. What is computerized help? CASCO, the computerized alarm systems company, answers that question with the development of a fully computerized 3 in 1 alarm system. This subscription service is now available for Newport Beach residents. It provides computerized alarm signals for police, fire and medical emergencies which are monitored by the police department. Fo~ more information please call 714/631·3220 or send in completed coupon. ..... r,················, CA.sc:O 833 Dover Drtve, Suite 6, Newport Beach, C&l1forn1a. 92660 • A Computerized Alarm Systems COmpa.ny • • NAME • .--------------------~-------------------· · STREET l cITY STATE ZIP A Comi>utertzed Ale.rm Systems Company 833 Dover Drive. Suite 6, Newport Bea.ch, C&11forn1a. 92660 I • I A8 DAIL D R ORIAL PAGE Save a E ittle Dirt It looks as if Costa Mesa is going to get a facclift- lng project at Te Winkle Park after all. The massive, 11 acre landscaping project was p~ced in jeopardy lost week when the council turned d~wn a low bid of $1.3 million for the job. 1 Facing a June 12 deadline to get a spade in the ei:frth, the council had all but given up a $550,000 feperal grant for the project. t But, with some fast scrambling at federal offices c~· y officials were able to get the feds to accept a re- v· ed -less expensive -plan for the park site sur-. r uncling a dirt hill. l A new set of architects hired by the city council tttis week is working on those pla11s, cutting out some ptojects, reducing others in an effort to come in with a c4st under $850,000. 1 While they're at it, they might strongly consider leaving some or all of that •·unsightly" dirt for kids to continue to romp around in. After all, Costa Mesa cfiildren have been playing King of the Mountain and soldier for years on that hill. And it didn't cost the city a cent. Growth Concerns A s pecific plan approved last week by the city council for 78 acres of land in north Costa Mesa will m~an homes a nd apartments where there now are beanfields. The plan is getting a close s crutiny from nervous north Costa Mesa homeowners, who fear high density apartments springing up around them will mean added traffic con~cstion, increased crime and less open s pace for their children. But the city appe ars lo be laking all these pro- blcm'sinlo consideration in approving the plan by at- taching a planned development zoning ordinance to four of the five parcels located between Sunflower A venue and the San Diego Freeway. The ordinance gives city officials a chance to s ec that specific plans are compatible with existing re- sidential areas as well as providing developers with a Jillie flexibility in their building plans. Homeowners1appear happy with the go-slow, pro- gram to date. But they should follow up future meet- ings over development of the properties to off er their comments. Grant 'Windfall' Coast Community College District trustees are trying to get the most mileage out of a $915,000 federal grant by keeping a Sll7,000 ··surplus." The college district was awarded the grant to con- struct an addition to a gymnasium at Golden West College. After firm contr~cts for construction of the 13,000-square-f oot facility were approved, it was dis- covered the two-story building will only cost $798,000 to construct. That leaves $117,000 that district trustees don't want to let go. So, instead of lauding themselves for coming in well under the grant amount and sending the surplus back to the feds, trustees would like to keep the cash. They want to use it to pay for about a third of a planned student health center on the Golden West campus. The remainder of the financing for the $303 ,000 health center would be paid for with health fees from Golden West students . If the proposed fund shuffle is approved, district taxpayers will save $117,000 -less of course the por- tion which came from their federal tax pocket. 19'0 1910 c T h o ughts o n Respo nsibility The Young Need to &Heard Dear Gloomy Gus Do You Really Love Yo ur Dog? (SYDNEY HARRIS J A reader asks : "Could you please write a column on the atrocious use of the phrase 'you know.' or 'you know what I mean'? I can't conceive where this abomination came from, but 1 find it the most irksome 'rape' of the English language." Actually. this phrase -which is more of a verbal tic than a language fault has l1llle to do with literacy or good ex pression. ll is atj emotional s ymptom , nQt an an lelleclual flaw. People who interpolate their conversations with 'you know' are suffering from a sense of inadequacy m communicating with others They are not sure they are mak- ing themselves clear. or getting through, and the reiterated "you know" is a way or asking for re assurance that the listener 1s still with them. I SUSPECT thst such people grew up in an atmosphere where nobody listened very much, or m a family where the ctuldren were ignored. It is a mark of inferiori- ty feeling in the realm of speech lo engage in such repeated verbal tugs at the hs tener's lapels. "You know what l mean" as an even more obvious plea for atten· tion, saying, in effect. "l don't put it well enough to command your interest, but I hope ~ou ap· preciate that what l 'm saying ls true and truly fell.'' The writer who didn'l like gettini:? a citation for not going with the "flow" of traffic <Gus, May 17 l might try movmg over lo a slower lane instead of try- ing to be a one-man en- forcer of the law. BC. Gloomy Gu\ comm•"h .ar• subf'Nftf'd by rt~dtf\ .ano oo not ne<•s,•ritr rf'tliKt ow ._ .... , ot the-new\1>4ptr S.ftd your oet -"• toG•oomt Gui O.ttlf Pilot What accounts for the pre- valence of this verbal tac, I am sure, is the fact that many parents do not listen to their young <'hildren, or discourage their attempts at communica- tion. Children who grow up in a home where there is lHtle con- versation -only directions. ex- hortations and admonitions to be quiet -rarely grow up confident that they are being listened to, or really understood YOUNG PEOPLE who have dropped out or conventional society tend to speak in an el - liptical fashion, which they im- agine is "cool ," but which in re- ahty discloses not so much their poverty of language (many are quite well educated> as their sus- picion of speech. Neither their pa,ents nor teachers. in most cases. listened very intently to what they were trym1 to express, and so they just gave up the ef- fort. The turn toward music as a ~ommunicative medium among yoon1 people indicates how m"ucb more at hoft'lc they feel with melodic expression. The music knows what they mean, and they know what the music means. If the family had tried listening a little better, there might not be so many millions of headphones in American homes today. To the Editor: How would you feel about put- ting a gun to your dog's head and blowing his brains out? "Oh my God! ! Who would do such a thing?''. you might ex- claim. Well people. you might as well do just that thing when you turn hjm out to run loose, day or night. Dogs don't know about cars and traffic lights like people do. All they know is that they are out and unrestrained and there is no one to tell them what to do. so they do as they please. "My dog won't go far: he just has to run ; they need exercise don't they?" Yes, they do need exercise. but s upervised and away from any possible contact with vehicles. and if there is absolutely no way that you can exercise him in that manner then he should be on a Jeash and you should run with him. Would you turn your three year old child out in the str eet to play by himself? Then why would you do the same thing to your dog? "Oh. I won't get caught; the dog catcher gets off early.·· Oh. real- ly? Then you've obviously never called one In the middle of the night to come and care for a dog that has Just been hit by a car. IF YOU had ever seen a beautiful. once healthy dog lying in the middle of the road ; screamjng and writhing with pain bttause of a crushed and severed backbone or a fractured femur; you might think twice about letting" your dog run loose . Ir you were the ohe who had to watch and hold that crying animal while a veterinarian tried desperately to ease its pain and save it, then you might just take ;i ljttle more responsibility for the pet you claim to love so much. Think about your dog lying in a road somewhere; injured and in pain with strangers around •him and possibly not even an l.D. ( MAILBOX ) Ltlle .. l•o.., r .. dtr\ are Wet(omt Tiie n9lll IO C-llU ltlltr• to Ill SPiHt Of' th ml II.tit llbel '' r~ •~ftd Le11•r• ot JOO word• Of' ltu will be ci1 .. ., .............. All lelltr• mu•I IMlude tl ..... h .... "'d m.alll119 .addreu b\1111.amn may be willllMld 011 ,._ q..-.t it Sllfflcltlll rt ... 011 I\ .tPIWrtfll ...,_try wlll "°'be pUblls,..d tag on his collar so that you could be notified; think about your dog dying in a road somewhere next time you let him out because you're too lazy to walk him yourself. Think about it if you reallyloveh1m. Please .. S McMJLLION l~ot •A('tlvi#C To the Editor: Good journalism is factual journalism, not hearsay or ex- pressed opinion. Everyone cer - tainly has a right to their opinion about any s ubj ect matter, however, when the media is used, facts should be correct. If opinions are expressed and harm is done.to any individual, no good purpose is served. I refer to your editorial of Thursday, May 12. entitled, Jail Death Probes. First and foremost, I am not, 'You can't ,,,. m•, I quit/' Look Closer at State 'Surplus' There is more than one way to look at the rosy predictions of a $2 billion surplus in the state's spending money. That is the amount Assembly Ways and Mean s Chairman Dan Boatwright estima~ wlll be left in the till after approval of the 1977-78 budget. On the surface it would appear the state is rolllng in dough. Similarly, any individual whese nt>t income was $17,000 with total ex· penses of only $15,000 would be considered a good credit risk. But, if that person owed $SS,OOO his balance sheet would need a0me ex· plaining. And, if it wera shown that ~rson was respo11Sible for a $62,000 debt of hls elderly parents, his friendly finance COJ1UlaI\Y wouldn't Joan lllm a dime. Then, if It were dis· c:o•ered be &110 had minor children with ob1J1attona of $9'7 ,000 for which be was responsible bis creditors would Jutve him In bankruptcy quicker ( EARL WATERS ) than a Wink. While an analogy between an individual and government may not exactly fit the situation. the fact is California isn't as rich as it might seem by the surplus pre· dieted. For the state already is in hock to the tune or more than $5.S billion in bonds With another $2 bilUon authorized but not yet sold. And that isn't all Its citizens are responsib1efor. TRE CITIES bad bonded ln· debtedness of $3.~ billla. at the close of the 1976 fiscal y(ar while the special dlstdets had ~6 billion in outstanding bondl at the end of 1~.s. 'the counu~. whether tbrou&h prudence or however. emerse as w~ of flnandal"'m.anqcmcnt wlth bOnd debt.I bf Jess than $1321X1Ulton; ft ean be aT1ued that Callf ornia ls no more rttPo:nslblc !or the huge federal debt than it Js tor local •ovemment obliaa· lions and maybe e'ttn l , but I ciU'Zeus colleqtively are and Calfifomia, 1-ving one tenth or the country's population, can ex- pect its citizens will bear that part of the nation's $620 billion debt. ONE OF THE arguments in favor of Ion(: term financing of public projects Is that it spreads the burden to those future generations which will reap it.$ benefit$. The contention is that today's taxpayers should not have to ~IY tbe full coat or schools, parJr.1, and public build· inga which will be used by others 50 •nd 100 years from now. Then is merit to that but in the meantime Jt appears the politi· clans are willinj to tax today's citizens tor all '1be traffic' will ~aranyway. Pbr. In the face or the projected surpluses m945t of the elf orts lD the admini1tratlon and the Lealslatutt lffm to be in finding 111'8YI to spend it, ancl increase tans for nen mOTe Qllldll'\I... Maj'or bl.ll4 now under consJdcra- • Hoo WOUid provlde more state money to rcld'lburse loc:al a-ov- ernmmts for pToperty tax nllef but only tor the ren~ and low lneoma t peytta. "'Reuer ror \ middle income groups is little or none while the top income earners would be taxed even more. The citizen suddenly realiz- ing an unanticipated balance ln the bank after current expenses would probably use it to pay orr some of his mortgage or car debt. California, with a $2 billion sur· plus could retire nearly a th1rd or its total bonded debt which is now costing it more than a half billion a year in bond service payments. It could in fact pay off all of its outstanding general obUgatlon bonds, leaving only the revenue bonds of $2.8 billion and some of the l>arttally self-liquidating school bonds which tot&! more than $1 billion. UNLESS THESE debts are re. tired the amount of money which the state aod Joval aovetnnteo~ pay in interest on their debtl will only contlnuetosrow. Asitstands taxpayers are now forktni over near S1 billion annualb' to money lenders ln Interest plus another $1 bllllonindcbt service. Walk into a bank with the state 'a balance abed as shown In the analoo and see bow fut t.he banker ·~ "Wbat IU?pl 1" repeat, not "a jail activist.'" I am a concerned citizen and cx- conv~ct wiU1 an idea of prison re form. 1 Your r~ferral to the tale I spun is probably the result of your in- complete and rather slanted ac- cum ulation of the facts. 1Im- mediately following my recent testimony before the slate J\s- sem bly (as I attested to there and at the March 1977 speech for the Human Rights section of the Orange County Bar Association), the facts that I gathered as a re- sult of the investigation of the Orange COunly Jail incidents , i.e., names, dates and places ·- were submitted to Assemblyman Richard Alatorres' committee. r am sure you have the knowledge that it is only ethically proper that legislators disclose said facts at their discretion. J AGREE, however, lo some type of double-check system to investigate any mishaps that might occur in any of our jail and prison systems. The fact still re- mains that a death did occur and that jail inmates are under the responsibility of the Sheriff's Department and therefore any charge, whether fact or opinion, does not seem to be too ir- responsible. I noticed that you didn't print that the death, even a suicide at- tempt, might never happen if the personnel in charge were responsible human beings capa- ble of carrying out their job in a pTOfl!ssional manner. As the result or your editorial, s hould there be a lawsuit for de· famation or character? No. A possible reprint of apology? l doubt it. Good investigative journalism to help prevent wrongful incidents in our jail systems and the protection of the human rights or those citizens that have been incarcerated? Please! TOM MILLER B elplrtfl Ha nd• To the F.d.itor: Th~ ev~ of April 27 our dog got out of the yard and was struck by a c~ on frvihe anCl'Jlr<>adway. I could not ~liev~ it was our dog when Officer Sutton phoned and told me; however, the descr1p· tion fit and I was sure when he told me the dog's name. My son, Michael and I went right over and our poor Corky was bleeding from a wound in his bead. People wer~ there taking care of him and were ao helpful. At the time I didn't think to get their names: all I could think was get Corky to the vet. Mrs. Fletcher who lives on the corner got a blanket and two men lifted Corky on ii l\lld carried hJm to my car. I CAME back Jater to Mrs. Fletcher 10 let her know about CorkJ .and &bl tdld mo one of the me,n waa the man who hlt him and how bad he felt. She 6· plained he a;n1\dn't avoid hlllin.e htm and I wou'ld Ute blm to khOw I don't blame him and J1m IO grateful that u stopped and helped. The otbcr man wH walk· ing his dog and ran out into the ~tteet and picked Corty up and saved b1m ~ beiDI hJl aaaln and run over and rlskfng his own llfe as traffic was very heavy. · Corty bad three fractur ln h1I h ad but ls bom now and do- ing buuillully. He is callna wtU and playing normally again with Barney, our Airedale. and \he family We are all so very grateful lo all the wonderful people who helped and to the wonderful vets and staff of the Newport Harbor Animal Hospital. . MRS. M. LECZKOWSKI Let Par k Alone To the Editor: I've been in Costa Mesa many years. I was at the dedication or TeWinkle Park and know how proucJ Mrs. TeWinkle was that 'day. - The dirt m ound was left purposely for the youngsters to fly their kites from ~nd other things they like a little hill for. The park is used a lot and I think is well liked as it is. l believe the council is wise in ~j letting it tllone. There are trees ? and lots of nice lawn to use, places to eat, and places to play games. MARYE. BENNETT Modena .lung le • To the Editor: Heaven forbid that our legislature should vote in favor or the death penalty for murder. These poor benighted beasts should be aJJowed to enjoy the pleasure of being the guests or the people of California for a term of years, and then, "re- formed," released to go scot-free and probably murder someone •1 else. After all, California is over-! crowded anyway -one good murder deserves another our bleeding hearts scream, in ef· feet. Remember Janet Stallcup, the 20-year-old Garden Grove stu- dent nurse on the way to a Christmas party, who was kid· , naped, sexually abused and her : neck broken and found dead in ' her own car? Well, there is still f no clue or trace of the animal l who dld this, and when and lf he I is ever apprehended, let's not do to him what he did to Janet. Just lock him up for a few years at ' tremendou.1 cost to California I taxpayers and then release him l to repeat his infamy. In the meanwhile we can keep our daughters and wives locked up in J our homes to protect Ulem in this l modem jungle. FRANK KLOCK ORANGE COAS1' DAILY PILOT R•rtN. Weed. PublWurr f'h"'"4• Keccfl. Editor Barbaro KreH,lth. Editorial Pag• &ditOf' The editorial pafe of tb t)t1Uy Pilot seek• to lnrorm aod stlmul1lo readtta by ~nl on this page dlve.ne commentary on topics ol Interest by s)'n(IJtll· ed columJ\l.sts and cart«ln1¥s. by provldtnC a rorum for readers' vlev.s 1aed by prtstotin.( t.his new P1Ptr·1 opinions and Ideas on current toptca. The editorial -op1nl0tts of thcr Dell)' Pilot apptar ' only in lbe.cdltortal column at the top or the pal•· Oplnkm U · pressed by tb1 coham.W'8 and c rtoon •L~ and ltttcr ,.ntera att. t.h~lr own and no tndOCHm.erlt al th II' vi I by the Da1lY Pll<lt shoUld be tnrernd. Wednesday. May25, 1971 I l • ' I • I • I I J l ,) • • _ ..... _,.,_l*ld-.~•x ......... M_.•x"-'25;;.;..f..,., 1"""e_11 ______ _,o .... A .... 11.: ... v_P1 .... L..,.o_r_..4......_7i Two OC Residents ·cited for Cost·eatting Ideas By K ATHY CLANCY Of tM O~ly f>li.t SUH Two Orange Coast residents were among three c ounty gove rnment e mployes receiving cash awards from supervisors TueSday for their sugges· lions t.o cut government costs. new Jury service program at the Harbor Court whlchn!duced the weekly jury service.ralland.in· creased the telephone standby option. suing ldeas, Clark sold. Parker'recolllDlended th.at igniters be.in.st.a.Ued on 521 furnaces heater, boilers and dryen to replace gas pilot Ughts, res ulting in an ~xpected an· nual saving in natural gas consumption of 5.5 mWlan cubic feet and a dollar savings of $6, 725. or hot water in county buUdJnp be lowered from HO to 100 ~trees, ~tUng heatine COfttumptJon by 20 percent and producing a $4,158 yearly Hvlngs. As a result, fewer jurors are waiting around idly, Clark said, and the program should save $19,068 in its first year. Under terms of t he employe suggestion pro· gram, workers can earn 10 percent of the fint- year's savtn11 generated by their ldeas up lo a $1,500 maximum. . Deputy Sheriff Thomas Ga~er of Laguna Niguel and Carol Nazario of Irvine, a jury clerk al Harber Murucipal Court, each recei~ed checks for $1,500, the maximum granted throu~h the county's employesugges u on award program. Parker's award was the result of two energy. Parker also recommended that temperatures In addition, Tustin resident Don Parker, a crafts foreman in the county General Services Agency, received $1 ,095 for his suggestion. Gamer's proposal was to install flow reduction d evices on showers in county adult and juvenile cor· r ectional facilities, said Super visor Ralph Clark who presented the a ward. The s uggestion will cut water use in the s howers an half saving 30 million gallons of water annuall v Clark .,aid thl' install ation also will s a ve $37,740 annua lly including SlS,240 m water and another $22,500 m fuel Mrs. Nazario was credited with developing a Commercial Air Travelers Increase Orange County Airport statistics s how the number of com merc1:tl air travelers using the a irport in· creased 13 6 pt·rcrnt in the first four months of 19.77. According to figures compiled by the county's Gener<.11 Services Agency, 626,798 passengers climbed on and off com- mercial pl anes at t he.• airport from January through Aprit' In thC' ~•irne pN1od a \ 1·.1r agn, th1· numht•r of , • •, in 111 t • 1 1· 1 a I a 1 r 11 ,1 H•lt•I' \\ h11 tltl\\ t•d in 111d 1,1 111 lh1· .11rport \\ •• 1l1 .! .... \\ ltil1 th•· pa~~··ng1•r h,1111!11 lilt I i'.l.,t0cf 111 lht• ' I p 11 I I I ll i: I". I 111 d • l h l' CSA ~ 11~11111•' '"""' tht·n• \\l'rt' ft•\\! I 111mm1•r<·1.d f11.(!hts 111 .ind 11ul uf the airport GS,\'~ FIGl R F:S show R.HOI 111mm1•rn.tl n1~cra· tron.., .ii tll•· .111p11rt in th1• f11 .... 1 f(1111 1no11th -. of l!lii l n l't~t. I h~ 1 11111p.ir .c h It• {I~ 111" \\ .a •, ! I :1 II I 111t·;111111i.; .1 I 'I p1•11 Pill dt•t°IJflt• Ill l'tlllllllt"I 1·1,if 11p1·1 .1t10ll~ .II 11111 .111 p ort llJI., \I ,11 \1 PI •' JI .I '1• II~ 1• I ~ c · 11 1 q d • · d \t 1 t It I r· '' 1 • r 'tlt;'Jtl, llldlt ,1J1• ti 11c11111 11\•"l •"l.tl .11111111 ..... \\ ,., ... I" o1 I I ,\ I II l' p.t .. St'llJ.!1'1' Ill 11 I >' In t erms o ( tower operauons <takeoff and landings of alt kinds of aircraft) Orange County Airport was r ated the second busiest airport in the nation last year , ac- cord 1 n g to air po rt ~I a n Jl g e r R o b e r t Bresnahan. CHICAGO'S O'HARE was rated by fed e r a l aviation officials as the nation·s busiest airport. According to GSA 's figures, there is only a slight gain in 1977 on frt.>tght hauled at the airport. a gain frotn 715 tons in 1976 to 716.9 tons tn 1977. But thC' n umbc·r o f \'C'h iclt's parked at the 1 ounty aJJ"port increased I 5 percent in the first four months of this year. <;SA 's figures show Hi, 179 autos parked a t tht• ;urport in this year·s t l'porting period. A year 1•.irlier. the number of p.1rlo.ed rars "as 92.960. Death 1~otires P•TTERSON Deaths Elseitihere I .. ~ ... A PA,T rEq').t)N '"'S•d""'' of 1 • '1 ''°' t •..i 1' f tihll'J~"' t ..,~ .. c-.M ,.,_ 1.,-Mt\¥ ~ 9'11 S..,,'""''Y'°l'f by PU\ 1•• r\t\ Y.r ... Mr._ JOMA P•Hf'r«An ' B L 0 o \t I' I E I. l> ~ '.':':' ~.,.:;"",;~: ~;·"~ ~~:''!;'..'::! 1.S, \l1t•h I \I' I f •"" " I M O"'-"• PMlt Cd (;or dun, ftcl ,, ho~t· v "',,""'''_,-,-,.,,.,.. c•a+"' R11,-v ot !Ml" ,..~. f"lll -'I Q11 ,,...,. "'""~'"! ...... "' l•f •I' .t I 01\11 {I\ t '(!--1 ;tl '~I MAiy ',n ~ 00 PM ~,.,.,.. (hCU)flt l 1111\ 11\t llJ .1101 111 1 ,tel Ill () r ">••I •IU''., Hotl\MO•lu1'y M•\\ I "' r ,..,, '1.,n Aur1..,1 Thur. Mttv )• .tilt ll'Jt•\ 1~11111 <,p,111111'11 t"I lll1•M <,1 EtlwMO\(•t"°l•r(llur<". :?O \ l'otrs. d11·d \lo11d.I\ (I"'. ,.,,, .. , C• , .. , .... .,_,,, ~I • \ ., ", ••rn-''"f'1' 0 (on,....f L.Jaun'1 Plt08 ST Clll(' \(,() r \ r I /YORIHPR08ST ""°""'Ot(OtO'W J h i• M.i.r C4'1 tmn1• Pl.f\'V'd •••Y M •y o II ~1.1\on. hi \11"1' '""•""-'-ol'~v .. ••H•"•'" prt·~1d 1•11t 111 I h1· t\t 1 • ••1 b•" ,..., W~•lll T Proll\I ' t t I r ,.,..,.,..,, ,. .. , ,,,,,.~,. ,.,,uq"' ... ,. r "'• n~ 1tut1· n ( lll .1~0 or {•-''""' .,..., ~ ..... , , r~ ...... 1·11llert1011' .111d 1·\h1h1 .,.,,. ~ .. .,. .... P· ••··~'"'"'"'•'""" lions. l'holo.1·1! to df'<tlh .,..,-1 •'~"'..,..of Mr w.,.,., P•oo•• tw" tw,a.•" 1 .. PAA •"<' \ O'IPM 1)1\ ~'' Tuesday ni~ht \\hill• rat ....... l' F» • c v••• ""°''u"'• d•.-.c· ing d1nn1'r ,11 a f'h1ragu ''' hllSIOt""""llH°ll '> l'[11Ji P'ACIFIC YlfW MfMORIAl P'••K Comr•1 .. ,,,. M ,,,,•IV ( h.in1• ~OAl.E M&A .•Rfl f l l&BETH MON ('Al, E ,. •°'"1'1' "If A••l>O• (••··~"~ J • ,..,. Hlll1i ~"t ,, 1917 •I ... o.Q t• 1\0•til 11'\ N~•f ~¥"° .. ,.,.A lw•f ,..,.,, .W.t ·vf'd w ,,. Of L 0 Mond•t• ·• '\A•"'" (t't <<'I Mr' ,.,,.,., •• _. Wrl a • '"~' "' "'""' ,.....,,.,__.,, 1flt ,,_,. ()f".tf'Qlll' 11~1v •• ,. f~ "°'..,., fW'4tf\ S,.....w H e ""'"".,,., ,, tN> Ebtfl Ct1ii10. Newport n •. • " •rw-.. '°'-""' ~ror•t1 •ltd the r .... ,,.,-. ~'., Longer Bus Buys Delayed The five-month -old Orang e C ounty Transportation Com . mission, which has veto power over local transit and road building pro· jects, has started flexing its muscles. In separa te a ctions Mo n day , co m · m issioners: -Voted 3·1 to hold up the Orange C ounty Transit District's plan to purchase 10 longer-than· normal buses until June 13 and asked OCTD s taff members for data jusli· fy ing the purchase. -Agreed unanimous· ly to ask OCTD officials t o plan t heir 1978-79 budget so it will reach commission hands by June l next year wilh al lea st a tentative a.p · proval from OCTD direc- tors. As it is this year . the budget will not arrive i n tim e f or co m - missi oner~ to g ive 1t much study. -VOTED unanimous- ly to consider revising the way state b icycle trail-builrung funds are. divided between county government and cities a nd review aJI trails lhat have been built and thos e that ar e yet lo be com· pleted. Th e bulk of com · mission discussion ce n- te red upon the proposed OCTD bus purchase. Co mmission~ Ralph Clark. who alsdlllerves as chairman of the OCTD board. said he was con- vinced the bus purchase was justified, adding tha t putting off approval untiJ June 13 could jeopardize OCTD's $193.000 price per bus. M1$Sl()l'j CO°"MUNI TY HOSPITAL Aonl7 1•n Mr •"'1d ~r\ Kfl'1.,Pth \tpr r .. U. Muf\I "'QI°"' 8'-¥ "I bi1 t Mr "'"" M" O•v1d qu·l El Toro. t>ov ·~"·· "" A.Ar <1Nf Mr'\ J0\1f AtJAm\ Mt\\tDn V•••o hov M• "nd M•\ \Arrv K•lclldm. M•\ \•Ol"t °V•f'10 q1rl M• """ Mrs. (Htlord Smit rt. EI l'>tO boy Ap<il It, lU7 M• ar.d Mr\ AnQO'IO "iumm•. Et l'"" Q•rt 'IA• •"" M" R•lofl H"?•n. M1J\...., v •10 ooy "'' 4nd Mf'~ St.-•n SUpe. S- C ""'-"'" 91,.i Mr •"'1 M,.,_ J•m•s Bro,.,.,, Ml\• ''°" V•"'tO q.rt •..-H 11 ttn Mr ~tW1 """" ~~ ( Oi-8AC• Ml'\• ,,....,, """'"" bOit Mr •ncl M<i OonillCI S!t•w. M1>\.en V•,.tO qirt Mr •nd Mr\ Tllom •~ Adil.,, l•'lll"•Hllh bo¥ ..... It 1t17 ,,,.,, A"'1 M'° J•tnto\ ~l'l"H''f'\lfJt. '-"*""' ~v -'° q,.,. "'• •ncl M" Ak •v (;¥-. El TO"" Q·r1 ,..,.,,, "" Mr .and Mo. C:.rt , .. ~\tr•. Miio \•""' v •io 11<>• .... llf 1'77 Mr 8'!d Mn. Miiton Cunnl,..."'· Ml\\lll'I Vi.le. 9'"1 Mr <tM lllln. JM\n Ol~lcl\, El l l)•O olrl 3500 P.JI 1fu V11 .,., Dr1.,,1• NPwp >rl (..1111111 t11.1 RASKIN ""' •nd ~ Jolln v.11 ... , Ml\\lon 644 ,1 /IJ() McCO•MtCIC MOITUARIU Laquna 8<'cJCh 494 941 5 Laq11na H111., lfi8·0933 San Juan Capistrano ... 95 1776 ULn·IH~lltOM fUMHALHOMI Corona det Mar 873·9450 Costa Mesa 6 46·242,.. HU.HOADWAY MOITVAU 110 Broadway Costa Mesa 642·91 50 SMrTM TV1l4'U UMI WISTCllff CHAP'l:l. 427 E 17th St Costa Mesa • 646·4888 Santa Ana Chapel 5 18 N. Broadway Santa Ana • 547·4131 f'ltltCI .. OTHERS SMITHS' MOlTVARY 627 Mai n St. Huntington Beacn 536-6539 PlllC FAWIL Y eOLOHIAL AIHIUL HOMI 7801 Bolta Av• Wtatm nater 8~525 D . Neptune Soelety O.IMATIOH aulltAL.AUllA 646-7431 ....,_ .. , _ _, .... ...... -.~-, ........ ~ CAii fer~~ .. Mlln. • ~tar.' la.llAl' L£[ A•"it(IN rP\10.nt of Vtf'IO,lll<W Hunlin'JIM 8'>.o<I\ C.lll.,...,I• P•\-M r •ftd "'" ("rlsl~r llersln. •ww M~• 71 t•n Surv•ll'l!d by "'' M•i••on111 .. ,n "''' CM""" ""' & M" J~ 0 AH llln, Aiwlru ltn '1vnlt"q'"" S•"c". C.t, brotl\us M • .,.., M•\ OevlCI HenllM. M IJ• VOrn., R.,.,., (Olt• ~l•. c ... Mid \10<> V•t10 boy • AH tqr(f 0 A°'••n, ,..,.,.\0\"9 V.t , APf'll 11.1'77 m11t••n•I Q••f'ldmottl•• Ca•olln• Mr •nd M•'I. M•cno1 Giii. Tontln, ,,..,., Hununqton 8<1•~". C.t Sn"''.. bov w•tt ~""'"on T""''. M•v ~. 10.00 ... M Mr efld Mrs ~r•ld Cl#'reft, Mlt• "' P~• '"~ v•-CNoel tnlt •mtf'll at ''°" VltolO. bov P11clfl( Ill-Memofl•I P•"'· P.cllk Mr •rid iltVI. l(...,,.lfl 5"'111', Mlt.• lllt w Mor'IU..-Vd•r«IOf'S. ''°" Vlt10. bov WEDNESDAY SPECIAL SPAGHEI 11. DINNER ~eeJ~aster Includes-: gr9'n sa(cld •• gartlc bnad and aglas1 ofwlt'9 s29s s.-...t S:l0te 7:JO SUNDAY ONLY - 5 to 7 p.m,. SENIOR CITIZENS' SPECIAL · CHOICI Of TMI& amt11S • Rtd Snapper with lemon flutter • Comilli Hin wtth ... IGICe • 7 oi. Top Slrloift wtth onion r1ng s39s 3010 HAUORILVD. COSTA MESA 549-0319 •• SH.ARP MICROWAVE OVEN • Microwave Cooking is so-0·0 fast ... SAVES energy • SAVES for the en· vironment & for the cook • With Carousel & Browning element ... #R8200 •CROWN is Corona del Mar's Microwave Headquarters. JR. SALAD SPINNEtl • SAVE time drying the lettuce (to g o with the BBQ'd meat!> • Spins out the water in seconds for C·R·I·S.P greens • Works exactly like a child's spin· ning top SON OF HllACHI • Double Portable BBQ • SAVES because the coals are r e u s abl e. • Sel f- extinguis hing .•• self- cleaning • Folds to carry 44988 ... 1488 -----~--~----~---~--------~---------------~..L---------~------- GLIDDEN HOUSI PAINT • Use your energy .. . SA VE some bucksSS • Glidden•-s Best Flat Latex house paint R~gtflar 12.99 7" that's a SAVING • Glidden's Bes t Latex Gloss House & Trim paint R egula r 13.99 • SAVE a bundle ... Paint up a storm! !WBbBP • Wonderful Weber Kettles use charcoal • No gas . . • no elec- tricity ... no oven mess either! • Am erica's favorite outdoor cooker. • Colors galore! ••• porcelain inside & out. 12" SMOKEY JOE •••••• s 19sa .... IL.ACK •••••••••••• $ 3 988 , ... COLORS •••••••••• s44ss 23" IL.ACK ••••.•.••••• s4 4 SB 23" COLORS •••••••••• $ 5 4 SS -.,__..... ---~---~--~----------+----------------------~----~------' PUT A BRIC IN YOUR TANK CHARCOAL I DELTA KITCHEN FAUCET I • Got a leak? SAVE water . . . Replace your faucet with ours • #100 single throw 1888 t_ I I I I I ·I r I I I I I I I This unit installs easily in most closet tanks a nd saves approximately two g allons of water each and every flush. THE BRIC!!! Pays For Itself In Just A Few Months. I ... 28 I · .I .o ... • Premium quality •. CROWN bas it! -------------------r---------------------------'-~---------- HOT WATER FAUCET I WATER HEATEI CAULl<IN(i COMPOUNDS REPAIR ITEMS: I INSULATIMG JACKET • Washers .•. stems ... every· thing to fix your faucett ... CROWN has it all • Those drips waste loads of water •.. fix 'em. J PIP! INSULATION for water & heater pipes • Wrap these up too! •Easy to do ... SAVES! I I I • Easy to wrap around your water heater • Keeps heat in .... SAVES ftlt!l. ...... " .............. . ( 'I -----------~.,. . . ~ ·, - Visiting Con Escapes Doe for March Parole, He Wouldn't Wait From AP Dlapatcbes A convict scheduled for parole next March escaped from a minimum security building where he WN spendina the night with his wile outside the walls oCSan Quentin, the prison reported. Loula Eaaeae S&epbeos, 34, and his wife Janet left through the window or tt family visit apartment they were occupying and walked over a bill toward Califomla 17, a San Quentin spokesman said. It was the 17th family visit for Stephens, who was serving a 5-year·to.ure sentence for a 1915 first· de&ree robbery in San Mateo County. • Charles Bates , the FBI agent who led the 19· month search for Patricia Hearst announced his and is resigning as Miss Mira Mesa. "I entered the contest because I didn't think I l had a chance to win and 1 don't think it's fair to hold a title whlch I didn't really seek,'' the former Madison Hl&h homecomin& queen said in San Diego. . The beauty contest was staeed last month as a ~ preliminary to picking the "Fairest of the F~t to t reign at the Southern California Expos1Uon opening 'i June 21 in Del Mar. HEW Secretary Joa:pb A. Califano Jr. said ! American hospitals are wasting billions or dollars a ' year and ''instead of having five pieces of chocolate cream pie for dessert, they should hold it to one." ALLIGATORS NUMBER 10,000 ON BROTHERS' FARM IN LOUISIANA A Scaly Reatdent Chomp• Chicken Dinner In One of Several S.ampa retirement and said he was join· ing a security firm that once guarded the famous heiress. Bates, 57, said his decision to leave the FBI on June 17 was not due lo a recent heart attack. He was hospitalized for a month after being stricken in his office Feb. 4, and returned to work The health, education and welfare cblef was testifying before the Senate health subcommittee in defense of the administration's proposal to put a cap on hospital fee increases. Reptiles Galore • A retired treasurer or the Quaker Oats Co. bas been named trustee for $8.4 million in subordi.Dated debentures issued by Westgate-California Corp. in 1964 and due in 1979. May2. Turtles, Alligators Hob~b The veteran agent said he had accepted a corporate posi· a.us tion with Burns International Security Service and would work out of its Pacific region headquarters in Oakland. WWiam Ball of Rancho Santa Fe replaces the Valley NatJonal Bank of Phoenix, Ariz., wbJcb asked to resign because possible conflict of in- terests. By JULES LOH WADESBORO, La. (AP> When Harvey Kliebert and his brother Bob were adventurous boys, there was nothing they liked better than to go fi shing and frogging and trapping mink in nearby Manchac Swamp. Occas ionally, they came across a baby alligator, took it home and tossed it in the pond behind their house. They Liked aJ. ligators . They still like al· ligators. It's a good thing. NOW, ABOUT 30 years later, they have 10,000 alligators. They have dug three more big ponds for them. one of them a 4~·acre swamp crawling with the beasL'i They have built big concrete pens for alligators and are build- ing more pens because they don't know what to do with all the aJ- ligaiors they have. THEV ARE UP lo their hip pockets in alligators. "The government," Harvey Kliebert said ruefully. "closed down the hide business for so long there's not much else you can do with alligators except raise them. It's no longer a good business. "I don't know what we're going to do. Just keep building more ponds and pens. I guess " WALKING AROUND THE Kliebert alligator haven -on the other Side Of the fence, that IS, ONE MAN WOMAN? Farrah Fawcett-Major• Farrah Fact Difficult To Face, Guys DALLAS (APl rorgcl it. fellows Farrah Fawcett Majors is a one-man woman. Or so says Bruce Vaughan. a specialist in personology, the science of determining personal characteristics by a person's race. DON'T LAUGH. VAUGHAN says personology was conceived by a Calilprnia attorney who wanted a better way lo choose people to serve on juries. The arch of an eyebrow, the shape of the nose and the fullness of lips are a few or the traits that reveal a person's personality, he said. "The biggest keys 11_re the eyes," he said al a seminar on human awareness here. ''If the white abowa at the top or the p\fpil, the person could be very shaky. He might have a Charles Manson-type personality. "BVTmE OOllPOSITE is not complete unW all reatures are analyzed. A slender (ace in· dleates a lack of telf·confidence, and nit eyebrow• show a need for. u.nlty. Uthe eyes are glued or 1toay, aloGa wltb theff other Indicators, tbe person could be a pt7cbo wboae strlni might snap at any m.ment." How about Farrah Fawcett? "The aquare face and narrow noH 1how her dependerice and a need for security,•• he aald. "She ls a one-man woman and cwca are she'll 1tay with the one ab.ail.'' ( ( AMERICA J a nd jumping nonetheless at ever-y strange noise -walking with the Klieberts, listening lo Harvey and his son Mike talking fondly about those menacing creatures, watching them pick up a baby gator and stroke its belly, you get the impression they really don't want to get rid of many alligators alter all. Their main business is raising turtles, so the alligators are a s ideline anyhow. Turtles are fascinating enough. ·'Turtles are laying now. They start in April and will go about three month!. We 'll get between 600.000 and 700.000 eggs and hatch about 90 percent or them or more. "WE'RE WORKING ABOUT 10 or 11 hours a day digging turtle eggs. They have to be washed. chemicall y treated to remove any disease. incubated. There's a lot that goes into producing that little pet you buy at the dime store." Digging turtle eggs? ·'The turtle digs a hole in the ground with her tail, lays the eggs in the hole and covers it up. You're standing on a turtle nest. There's a noth e r . There's another. There's another. Nothing, absolutely nothing, on the dry bank of the pond indicat· ed a turtle had buried eggs there. HARVEY KLIEBERT TOOK up a pick and with each thrust in the hard·packed dirt unerringly' uncovered a nest. He did not break a single egg. Why not let them batch in the ground? "Lose too many or the babies. Other turtles eat them up." . How do you teach somebody where to dig? "Can't teach an adult. You have lo grow up just knowing." GETTING EGGS OUT or an alligator's nest, now that's another matter. The Klieberts in- cubate alligator eggs too, for the same reason, cleaning about 1.25 nests of about 50 eggs each. It is done by armed robbery. ··A couple or guys beat the mother away with poles and a ' * The first 2,000 miles of Lance Grabo~skl's trip should be easy. But then he'll struggle across another 1,000 miles retracing on horseback the explorations of mountain man Jededlab Smith more than 100 years ago. Grabowski loaded his van at Hudson, N.Y. with a muzzle· loading gun, homemade knives , and other frontier gear and set out for Utah's Great Salt Lake. There be leaves the van and joins two other modern "moun- tain men," Jon Judd of Castle G1tuows1e1 Dale, Utah. and Tom Llsak of Pittsburgh, Pa. for a trek to California. He said he hopes the tough two·month trip. billed as "The Second Crossing of the Mojave Desert." will dra w attention to Western explorers such as Smith. third guy runs up and snatches • the eggs. Female alligators pro-Movie producer Samuel Goldwyn Jr. has been tecting a nest are not friendly." fined $62S and placed on 12 months probation in Los Over the years, Harvey Angeles alter he was convicted of soliciting an un- Kliebert has made less obvious dercover policewoman for prostitution. observations about alligators. Goldwyn, 50, the son"" ONE IS: "YOU can't tell the ( of movie pioneer Sam ( alli T ) Goldwyn, was convicted sex o an gator. hey can." PEOPLE by a seven-woman, five- Another is: "We were always _ man Municipal Court told alLi gators came to where -~---------jury alter two days or de· egrets roosted in the swamp. AJ . Ii ligators eat egrets, so that made berations. sense. See all those egrets?.. Goldwyn was arrested Jan. 22 along with 22 The moss-hung cypress and men during a vice sweep in Hollywood. pines above the Kliebert swamp a re alive with the while birds. "The egrets followed the al· ligators here. Just the opposite. Egrets follow alligators, but God knows why. unless they like be· mg eaten." * A pair or Sevres porcelain milk pails with which Marie Antoinette played dairymaid before the French Revolution topped the bidding at $178,500 - almost four times the estimate -in the Mentmore Towers sale in England. Cyele Brakes Probed Sotheby's auctioneers said one or the 19-inch· · high buckets, painted lo look like wood, was bought for $102,000 -a world record auction price fbr Sevres and for a single piece of European porcelain. Both went to an English private collector. The sale broUght to nearly $10.5 million the total for the record-smashing Rothschild collection sale. with five days logo. Regulations Change * . Yvonne Simpson says she "saw the disappoint· ment on the faces" or the young women who lost The founder of Westgate, C. Arnholt Smith. de- faulted on 1.oans from Valley National. Once a billion.dollar conglomerate, Westgate is being re· organized under the Bankruptcy Ac.t. • • New York Sen. Daniel Patrick Moyniban's younger brother has a $15,000 assignment as press agent for this week's visit to r _,,.~;"~.-. Washington or Saudi Arabian , . ,fJ leaders. i "I would never ask Pat's ad-~ vice on taking an account like this," Michael Moynlban said. "But I let him know what I'm do- ing." The senator's brother said ' his public relations firm sought the assignment last Ma rch when it submitted a two-page outline to Saudi authorities. DAN•Et. MOYNIHAN * President Carter wall make his first voyage on a n~~lear submarine s ince leaving the Navy when he v1s1ts Cape Canaveral, Fla .. on Friday. The President served on submarines after graduating from the Naval Academy, but said that be had not returned to sea on a nuclear submarine since bis retirement from the service in 19S3 " Bad Effects Property Owners Poetic GRETNA. La. (AP ) -One taxpayer who returned a form to help parish tax assessors re-evaluate property listed under the "adverse influences" section his neighbor's "ugly wife." enclosed a photo as proof. Another told Jefferson Parish Assessor Lawrence Chehardy he bad "rotten neighbors." Chebardy said the winner so far out of the 133,000 forms he had mailed was returned by a taxpayer who described, in essay form, the colorful - dead leaves that settle on the 1t'ater and bobble like tiny ships. The trouble was, they were from his neighbor's trees and fell into his swimming pool. The form also asks for a recent photograph to give the assessor a view that can be used to better judge a property's value. One owner attached a color photo or himselt smiling in his den. · On Student GI Pay WASHINGTON (AP> -Students planning to attend school this fall under veterans' benefit programs will have to apply a.bead o( time for advance payment under rules taking effect June 1. • Advances used to be automatic, but a n application now must be made at least a month ahead, through the school. "-" '"" 11 ,( '"-" I(\ WARll I VISIT TiiE OPTICAL DEPARTMENT I The Veterans Administration says students planning to start classes in September should apply for the advance in July. Contact the nearest VA omce for de· ( tails J Reminder: There will be NEWS TO USE no June 1 payment to students under the GI bill because of a ('hange in payment schedule The June payment will be made July 1 instead of at the start of the month, as had been the case previously. CYCLE PROBLEMS The government is investigating possi- ble brake problems on some Honda motorcycles. The National Hi&hway Trame Safety Administration said the brakes on 1975 and 1976 Honda models GL 1000 and CB750F may Cail "'bile beinR operated in the rain. No injuires have been reported. but the agency said Honda has received 183 complaints from consumen. Only cycles equipped with both front and rear disc brakes are aHc cted, officials said. The agency urged cycle owners who have experienced problems to have brakes checked. Brake failures should be reported to the Of. nee of Consumer Services N40-41. National Highway Traffic Safety Administration, 400 Seventh St. SW, Washington, D.C. 20500. ORV'S ON ARMY LAND-Deadline for comment on planned· rules for use of recreational veh!cleson Army land is Saturday. The rules would allow some areas to be off limits aJ)d rees might be imposed in some cases. Send comments to HQDA-DAEN·FEB·N, Washington, D.C. 20314. AIR BAGS -Should air bags be required on new cars? The gov· ernment wants to hear ftom you on the controversial subject. Air bags inflate on Impact and cushion a car's occupants in the case or a crash. Officials say they may save 9,000 lives a 9ear, but would add $100 to $150 to the cost or every auto. U you want to express your opinion on whether the bags should be made mandatory, write by Friday to the National Highway Traffic Safety Adminiatration, Docket No. 74-14, Room 5108 Nassif Buildlng, 400SeventbSt.SW, Washingtoo,D.C.20580. . NEW SAFETY. EFFORT -The Occupational Safety _,,d ~th Administration will put more empha.sls on worker safety and wi do less nitpicking. That's the word from Labor Secretary Ray nh~l • Anyone lnter.ested In details of OSHA's program and how to comp)¥ with it can obtain the booklet "OSHA Handbook for Small Businesses." There is no charge. Write the U.S. Department of Labor, Occupational Safety and Health Administration, Room N·3641, 3rd and ConstJtution Avenues NW, Washington, D.C., 20210. Attn: Office ot Public and Consumer Allain. Note: OSHA'a strict emeraency standard to limit worker ex- posure to benzene toot e~t Saturday. Benzene la used In several industries tncludlna reflnlna. production of detercent.s and pesticides and rubber matin1. · -BXPLOQVes WATCll .!...'lbe Treuury Department ts seeklna public help ln ill effort to ke.pexpl08lves away from crtmlnab. Many CTfmlnals UH st.oleo uplosfv• and the doartment hr uked paw 1.11~ these ltema leiallY to keep cloee tract oft.be a.nd report al\)' theft.I. For more details and to report atoJen explosives call the nearest office ol tbe Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearm.a lilted ln th telephone boQk under U.S. Govemmcnt,..Trn1uJ')' Departmeut. Start.i.na July 1, a toU·free number wlU be avallable for these caU1. 'l"t.number l .. OCMM·NJO .. ' • Theres more to soft contacts than meets the .eye. You can tell just by looking at a soft contact lens that it is designed t:o be comfortable on the delicate surface of the eye. It's flexible and soft, just as its name implies. But the difference between regular contacts and soft contact lenses goes even deeper than that. Soft .oontacts actually absorb fluid to become even softA!r and more comfortable while you're wearing them. Chances are the Optical Department at Wards can fit you with a pair of soft contacts. Wards has the latest in fitting equipment and contact lenses including bifocal oontacts. So, if you're thinking about oont.acts, think about the Optical Department at Montgomery Ward. ' SllMCl D' .... 011($ onu. a.MT ll(CISmlO ~l'TDMll Costa MeaaLHungtington Beach 714·549-9400/714-892-6611 • I DAILY PILOT At SJC Student Gets Top Hospital· Auxiliary Award Wednesday. May 25. 1977 w· mgs .. Awarded Judith Begga or San Juan presented 27 south Orange County Capistrano was presented with the s l u dents w i t h S 1 3 • 2 0 0 i n $1,000 Janet Erb award as the Mis scholarships sion Community Hospital auxiliary Ann Weatherford. scholarship ...:.-<.~ •'This Is the place lo bf. seen-the trouble is nobody's looking!" ~ .. iC ~ , __ * * * *'* * ** * MULTI-POSITION CASUAL LOUNGER BB 23173" SAYE OYEI 5.00 ~~=~~~~~ S.,.-c.ftmWI, trttntetiu ... wltk ..... , ..., ""' ,,... , •. ,.,.. wittl lfrOtlt, hlMler •iilyl ii ,.,., c.lon . Allju1t1 frM m-te-dlllr-t1-dledt inat111tly. il chairman, said the scholarships were presented to students purs,u· ang medfoal careers, from funds generated by the auxiliary-staffed hospital gift shop and St>ffial fund· rai.sini events. MBS. BEGGS, A WIDOW, start· ed working at Mission Community Hospital as a nurse's aide and was promoted toward clerk. She has been studying nursing at Saddleback: Collete and plans to continue her studies at Cal State Long Beach. She said her goal is to become an operating room scrub nurse. Mrs. Beggs has two daughters. Vickie. 18, and Kim. 16, both stu- dents at Dana Hills High School. THE AUXILIARY AWARDED 16 scholarships to eraduating seniors from the following area high schools -MINlou Vl~o Web ScJtool: Shannon Hendricks, Timothy Grant, Kim Richard.son, Charles Rieb, Susan Weaver , Carolyn Croskrey, Amy Crawford and Lisa Sauter. -E l Toro H igh School: Catherine Arroyo. Leab Blood, Patti Tyler, Julie Halber and Ann Alb right.. -Su Clemente Hlgb ~bool: Victoria Ramirez, Regina Zuleeg -~~ , ··~., b "' , "' ( \ -· ----'= ~-/SHASTA ~~I -son DRINKS ·~-......-~ REGULAR OR DIET and Rhonda Otterbein. VICl'ORIA KJSS, a Saddleback College nursing student, also re- ceived an award. Nine additional scbolars b1ps were awarded to previous winner' from the Saddleback area. They are Lloyd Nattkemper, UC Irvine; Julie Rose, UCLA; Nicholas Yoe· ca, Harvard Unlv,ersity; Arnold Klein, UCLA; Michael Busby, Massachusetts Institute of Technology; Eva Pospisil, Sad· die back College; Eric Luc ha, California Institute of Technology: Rebecca McCulloch. Cal State Long Beach; and Loreen Kettels, • University of the Pacific. Air National Guard Second Lt. Steven M. Wede, son of Mr. and Mrs. Warner Wede of 27931 Paseo Nicole, San Juan Capistrano. has graduated from Air Force pilot training at Vance AFB, Okla., and been awarded silver wlnss. He received the Air Trainine Command com. mander's trophy as the outstanding graduate of his class. . The lieutenant is re· ' turning to the California ANG unit at Ontario. 8-DIGIT I SUPIRTHtNf .. CALCULATOR * WITH MEMORY*· 97* COMPLEX lf ST·lO * --------* * \ ~~r::-:1 [=~I ~~....._~:~=-,!"#/ ~~·:-: IMA"·,'·'~HING .~~ •< ~ • -~~ ~~Jt~ '; ~--- • •Diet .... Olerry •Diet~ u.. ·~ u.. •Dlett ...... , ..... ..., •OMtCtle •Ctle •Greeti fhHlre1e.,.t Dii,t.y •flllt Mtt11ory •AiWt, wll· * '*"· DM4t1, M.ttlpllts •Uthtweigltt & Easy to Uae • "'' for % -' Square l oot •letttry ltdlerflf \ ir* * * * * * * * * * * * * * .. if .. . • • • REG. 12. 99 8'' • ~- 'ezsiiii::i::a:=si== IGLOO PLAYMATE ICE CHEST , ....................... -·· ~. WiWt. s......,. . ., .......... " -"' .._,,,,., .... "' ....... , ... , lf RIG. 99c REG. 8'' .. 1.33 12.99 ~ ~ NO. 126 CAMPMAmR """ COLOR PRINT FILM 3 LB. SUEP IAG 7-0UNafOAM HOT I COlD CUPS '""' .. ,..., ' ....... lfC. I U , .. "'"NUS . 7tt * """"'' .. --·· .,,.. ..... ... t 'Ill, ,. ... 11,,.,, 2 lie ''~· ---~--..--+-----.. 4' ~ • i' ~ * . 3'' 12 IN. KEROSENE LANTERN / REG. 111 REG. , 69 1.33 2.49 ALOHA CHAICOAl AIMOIAU BRIQUm PRORaANT ..... tit a.4 ,., _,._, ... ...,.. ............. '-tillet ,,.,.. ............... ~~~~~---~~~--~----~~ ~ ' Costa Mesa u oo.....,.•WIMA sAVl oVUl KAlf\ Santa Ano l U5 MtW .e M«A,... . P'ri(e iftd . sc tff ... .-.1. BATH SOAP ----=,,...__ tl~ -01 J 2 FH 39' CUNIYAL PRETZELS ~ ~= "Alf GAUON ~ s,.cw~ ICECIUM • . \ "' EARLY CALIFORNIA PITIED OLIVES 29~ FAMOUSKRAn BA--B-Q SAUCE NichryS-.14 tf l ..... ROLA IDS ANTACID MINTS CWce "' ,.... ' ..... Mt flenrt. lwy -1 aom1 J44 Of 200 BAYER ASMIM TAllm ,., .... ,. ....... ........... _. EN FAM IL INFANT FORMULA ltlllyte..tPw.ttwltll ..... C-ttlittll .... ,. I OUNCI 229 YOUIOIOIQ COPPERTONE TIOPICAl IUMO -...e11.~ ... 1rn t luk'•t ••••I LAYORIS MOUTHWASH Stl•el1ll•t H tritlfUI ~-....... ·-·229 SOLAICAINE AllOSOl SNAY '"" .. "' ....... .... ........ "'"""""· DRAMAMINE TAllm ft·--.-. ..... -. ..... 1 ............. . , I I 1. ~ I I '-... . ..... _ -. Tonight's TV Chorale Keeping Busy Higbli41fi...a Tim is t.hetime of year when-maken and-lovers e-A-.o or music tend to think mo.re of vacations than Verdi K'ITV a. 7: 30 _ Nixon-Frost Jn-and allow Bacb to take second place to the beach -"' at least for a month or two. terviews. The former president discusses Not so with our Irvine Mast.er Chorale who are his "final days., in the White House and finding in these late days of May that director John how his empire crumbled in this fourth . Alexander is waving a very busy bat.4>n in their special telecast. direction. KTLA 0 8:00 -"The Secret Life of And with good reason: Alexander wants his Walter Mitty." Danny Kaye is at bis best group in their traditional superb voice for concerts in this 1947 comedy about a shy young June 3 and 4 that will, in effect, be previews for us of man who dreams of high adventure. I . the concerts to be delivered during IMC'a European Virginia Mayo and Boris Karloff are ' tourthissummer. featured. · ~ . TID8 WRITER CAN TIDNK of no more ideal ,-·.c&;r.1:r.i:~=P 1 • musical ambusadors for our Orange Coast in thf'' alile . .ta~=s.~~...: auditoriums or Switzerland, Italy and Austria. \ (TV DAILY LOG] I WEDNESDAY,. I EV~NINQ 1· "Hant T1mes'' Part 3 EXXON Make no mistake, the tone and quality of our IMC will make a big impression on European au- diences who know top Clight choral music when they hear it and who reward it with an enthusiasm that is rarely seen in our part of the world. On paper, AlexMder seems to have cbo&en well. European music will dominate the firat ball or the program and then after the intermission he will turn to the American offerings that always prove to be popular with European audiences. choir will ofler us polychorat works in which the singers will surround the audience. Then Zoltan .Kodaly's "MlAa Brevis" will take us up to the in· termlsslon. Post-intermission offerings will include Leonard Bernstein's "The Lark," the series of French and LaUn choruses based on Jean Anouilh's "Joan of Arc. ALEXANDER WELL KNOWS that European audiences regard themselves as cheated if an American choral group omits the traditional American folk songs and spirituals that are always warmly received ac~s the Atlantic. Thus we shall have the likes ot "I Got Shoes'• and "Every Time I Think About Jesus" as vital seg. ments of what seems to be a most imaginaUve and entertaining program. The Irvine Master Chorale deserves Europe. And Europe deserves the Irvine Master Chorale. 6:00 fl) Gml Perltratncn: Har~ Times Bounderby's bank 1s robbed and Stephen Bllclpool i.s suiotGted. Hartllouse tries to abdllCt Louw. ~ut she nets instead to her rat~er·s home. Bur WE SHALL BE able to judge for ourselves when Alexander and his 135-member choir take over the very lovely auditorium o( the First Baptist Church in Santa Ana on June 3 and 4 for two 8:30 • They will get along very well together. 0 CV QQl ( 1.ll a.,) News 0 IU l (()(Jal Q .... D ( zt> (()) llns 0 Star Tr .. < § J Comer l'ylt 0 GllllSll!Olle CD '•rtrid&e famllr Q)Ad1•12 fD Eltdrlc Compiny E!> Or1r111tic S.rics <!ii Miu 1>o1111a -6:30- 0 DiMh! Guesls Include F'urah Fawcett·Majors, Jtm hwcelt, Wayne Rogers, Dina Merrill, Cliff Robertson, Mt~e Connors. Lucie A1naz, Ceolf Ellwards, Edg11 Bereen, frances Bergtn and Denncs Van Dermerr. Cl' Andy &riffrth 11Q, Mm Gnffin Show CD ramify Affair (•U i r31) Gunsmolt fD l.oolll ( .liJ (.{)) lcwittltcd 7 :00 . - u ~ CD lll m m News • l.Ja11 Clutl I t MJ Three Sons a 1 To Ttl t!tt Tflltll 0 Conctnt11hon CD I lO'#t Liiey Q) The Fii fl) Korean u n1u111 'roimns ID M1dl1il/l1hrer Re,.n (2' t)) Tht P1(tridc1 f'111lly ll Cross-Wits -7:30- CJ Em Name Tllat Tune O Love American Style r 6 1 Tht Odd Couplt D M1tth G.ttne 1 8 S 121,000 Question O The Jobi's Wild , 10' Wild World ol Animals m NIXON'S FINAL DAYS * Nixon Tells The World How It Came To An End CD ( 2t\ (J ) N11on1rrost Inter· •-N1lon s Final D1ys" ( JT 3 ) ~Gou tlle Country •231 6 Ctlebnty SWMpstllts fD thlnntl 21 To1uatit 39 L1111 Club 8 :00 0 C 111 (3 ) a Good Ti1n11 CR) f lorod 1 itls a b•i surprise 11hen f.r~ndp~ Evans. lhe ldm1lys lhank5 rrv•~i! ~Ut~I. brin&s a &uest OI h1S 0 10 J3\ 11 (D GrtUIJ Adams 1 hq 1Rl D11111nal pilot about 1 lur t• 1ppPr who. arrusrd nl d rnmt h, r1rd nnl ~ommrl vtnlures into lh• wHlfrn mountain w1ld"ntn, f1nn •n~ ~nlare 1n ~ I.ft IM ~way hnm • 1v11•1.1t1on and 1.omp~n1on~h1p w11~ wild .wrmals that had nevtr snn • man br'lo!f 0 Movit: r C) (ZIH) "The Semt life of Watter Mitty'' lcnmi I/ !ldnnv Kaye, V11ein11 M.ivo 6 TutlmonJ of Two Men Part 111 rRJ U 1t Tht Stldy lun<h Hour 0 M~it: 1C (2hr) ''Wlllrt H's At" td•I) 6q David Jlnss,n. ~ •vmirv Forsyth Robtrt Driv~\ "''" 11 'l•tcaro. Unn Rock It~ W All That Gltttus Dan rrll\ fl11·\' 1 lhey '.Muld ull oll lh.,, .r~t "Jup and llr•l lri" hrs < k 1n A' \IO&lt~ bll ffi Noo lhr longutS of llltn" ID Chim~ Wral~n& -8:30- 0 ( 11 en (l rtlOT. R-...lt l T rum111 The ptflect rtcOtd Cl 1111 Hoo·,,vrll and Truman Bail Bond end rcu11ty Guard Attncy "We N11t I m W, 8111 'Em·•· 1s on the hne .,.htn one ol its ch~nts 1umps b•rl l ,,n more d1w,1rous, the ba11,, rt; .apprars on tht evr of lhe form ~ .1rltpl1nte of lht Colden Handcull Award in recogn111on ol 11\ perf,(I •rr.ord, and the lou ol lhe bail ninnev spells bankruptc~ lor lhr .1iPnry·\ two rounR parlnc1s. Ari har.~ and Ph1h~ Mrchael ThomAs \IM Q} PtrrJ M11on 0 :00 U lJll CD) Cl) CIS w ....... , Mo.it: ~ (2111) "IW Su11" <•ts) /I Charlts 8ronso11. Ursula Andre~. 1 oslliro Mitu11e, Abin Oetoa. Capucine, Sltoshl N1.,mou11. T.o oullaws. link (8ro11S011) and Gffcllt <Delon), rob a train t1rry1nc the Japane~Ambusador to the U S.Jlld mah on With a bejtwtltd sword munt as a 11tt to the U S l'!Hldtnt. Double crossed bJ Caudle and Ifft f0t dud, l111k is uffd by KurtdO. t Samun adln1 es Ille AmbassadOf's bodyeuard. Thoutll thtJ m1• llkt 0tl and watrr. link and tht Jll)lnese wamor 10 after t~e niord-ont lo uve the hollOf of his country, tilt otl\er te ewence his putHr's lttac_hery. When link and Kurtdo lonally ca tell ult? with Gattllt. they put ~ae lllllt 41'1fttences to flrht lor .. SUlvln l U11nst an attack by a Com.lncht 'h1alng party. 8 (6 ())) Of! larttta (R) As Tony rides t cro(s country bus lollow1ne • dan191ous criminal, he 1s followed by en qina ~t•r thief Diil for m1nce. CD flltrY Crlfftll SIMI-. Em GREAT PWO.llMCU • Tht ....,. .. Dkltlll • -9:30- Q) Mod Squad m u Crilda 11ta Cladl 10:00 D @ Cl) <IA) CID Oun lhrtl" R01st (R) Jackie Gleuon is the roastee. Celebnties include fames Stewart. tile late Jack Benny, Phyllis Diller, Ronald Reaaan and Howard Cosell . ... ,. .. Cl) lllatn/fr0$l lntertiew D (121 (Ii) QI) CMrlie's An1els (R) "The Vegas C()nnection" What ap pears to be case 1nvolv1n1 a woman with a eambhng problem, develops into an expose of a black· m1din& sdltme involving proslltu· lion. The action takes the Angels to las Ve1as. m lstMI T odiy EID Tiit ,eoplt ws. Inez '-cil This documentary·drama IS ltased on actual court transcripts from the highly oubltciied t111I that made Carcia 1 U ll$t ulebre for both lem1· rusts and latrnos. The special stars Robtrt loeg1a as defense attorney • Charles Carry, and Sdvana Gallardo as Inez Garcia. the rape vichm Iha! sub~quenlly killed her attachr. The program addresses itself to questions on a 'WOl!lan's rrghl to self-deltnse .. and lhe possibihly of a lair tual lor lhe ethnic poor m £J Bitll Amado -10:30- CD mm News 1 1:00 0 0 €13 !l_i1 News a (i}I) ClJ) Love Ameriun Style D lll ill ®I lllWS ClJ Ironside •CD M11J H1rt1U11, Mary Hartman Q) Tiit lfooe'"*""n ( f 1 rD) The bndl sno. fl) Cln1it Tllutrt l'reMW Pl.y boy ol tht Western World .. -11:30- 0 (Ill (t) (()CBS late Movie: C 1 Columbo · Pl.lyback · u .aJ.J ~ m....., c.r. I f) lilo>flr. "Bndiclt" (wtS) Si- llobttt Mitchum. G1lbtrt Roland 0 (11l (L) 39 Tllt ltookitS/ Mystery ol Ille Week CD Nns CE Sat lr"o 1 2 :00 O Best of CrCKKllo CD Matle. C "Tycoon" (dra) 4/-John W~1"' Laraine Dav. Sor Ctd11r. Hardw1rk• CD Croa-Wlb Q) MO'fit : (Cl .. ,,,i, Models'' ldr~) ·~7-Madeltne Robinson, Misch~ Au" fD ABC htnff11 lkt1$ CapMned loi t~P huring 1mparred -12:30- • All NIP' SM: "Ad ti ~ ... "GUM Doll't Atpe." "S«<rtts of tllt Cllatu11" CD Mtwle: "Tiit Last HMrr1ll" (d•a) \.~ ~Pfnc.tr TrKY lttfrtt H11nttr, J4mh Gltaon, Ricardo Cor1u 1:00 0 to @ Ttll*row 2:00 D MOTtt O..Mtfutm: "The last Ill tilt Cttbt," "ft hke Alt Kinds" -2:05-u MGM: lC1 ·1-at Tibia Rttk" (wes) 'S&-R1Cl11rrl (la11 • Dorothy ~lone. C.meron M1tcheU. 3100 CD All.Nie!.!.~: "8th111d lht Mull," "S ti Boot Hiii" MAY2' ........ ,.. .... !Kt,llttile .,~ . t:lO O -a.,atra.. (dra) '34- Cleudeltt Colbert, Henry W1lcolio11, Warreri W1lllams, Joseph Sd!Udkr au1. 11 :00 CJ "Stice Del(' (COlll) 'J 7- Kat ha 11 ne Htpbur11, G1n1er Roaeri. luclllt Ban, Eve Alden, Andrta lttds, Adolph Menjou, J~ Carson. 11:00 CD "1\ttt fw ta. S•" (l'NIS) ·~-Bttty Gnblt, JKt lefllmf)j\, ~rae ' Cowtr Cllam PIOll, Myro11 McCocmlCl, Paul ~.,. 1:00 e '11lt IU4f Dtcflf" (m11) '41-Basll R1tllbollt, Dien thew, John Howard. 2:00 e CC> "M.tra *Ult...,.. 11m" (edv) '6S-Albm West, Denver Pyle. Uoda Sau~dtrJ, Tllto Marwae, Sun McCtury. J:OO 0 CC) "MMaftlt l .. (dra) '66-l1n1 Turner, Johll Forsythe. Rurdo Monl1lbfn. Ktlr Dullea, Co11staRce 8e11nttt. Burrus Meredith. l:JO D (CJ "Tonr .._,. (dfa) '67-F11nk S1na1ta, Jill St. Joh"· Rich.lrd Conte, Gena R,o#lands, Stl!IOll Oa~nd. p .m. concerts. Backed by Marvel Jensen at the organ. the 'Ihird 'Godfather' ; .Movie Scheduled LOS ANGELES (AP) volved in illegal doings. -Now there will be a Jacobs' previous film "Godfather Ill." credits include "The Paramount Pictures, French Connection II " which· made m illions "Enemy of the Peopl~" with the fir s t two and "Point Blank." versions of Mario Puzo's -----------Mafia movies , an - nounced that Alexander Jacobs will write the script for a third one. The new film will take place in today's un- derworld, with the sons or Michael Corleone in· She was onJya little girl She lived in a great big house ... all alone. Where i-. her mother? Where IS her father? Where are all the people who went to visit her? What is her unspeakable secret? ....wi.t -lll'•..-AIW--.~ Alt6"'11tAlllfl~TUW.MUASl JODIE FOSTER · MARTIN SHEEN ·ALEXIS SMITH: .. - MORT SHUMAN · SCOTT JACOBY .. ~ ~HE UTTl£ OIRL WHO LIVES DOWN THE LANE" ~ NOMINEE I BEST FOREIGN FILM BEST ACTRESS MARIE.QfRISTINE BARRAULT BEST ORIGINAL SCREENPLAY Al.UrO 9CHWAflTl • l!.Hll J flOUHtMAl, "'INNT' WED-THUR-7:15-9:15 FRIDAY-7:10..10:50 HOLIDAY MATINEES SAT-SUN·MON-1:3o..5:20-9:10 CINEMA CENTER .(R) HAAIORATADAMS. cosr A MISA MISA VERDICEMl'll 97994141 _ "DAY OF THE ANIMALS" "GATOR" IPGI . "NETWORK" "~NCI IS "OT ENOUGH• IRI "NASTY HABITS" IPGJ 0 1NFRA MAM"CPGI "WIZARDS .. 'Stickup! For F alk LOS ANQELES (AP> -Peter Falk is the first star to sign on for "Big Stickup at Brln.ks," the !ilm based on the $2.8 mUHon heist 1n Boston on Jan.17, 1950. Dino De Laurentiis is , produdn& the film for Columbia Pictures, with John Frankenbelmer as director. The script is based on the book by Noel Behn. Falk, on the right side or the law in TV's .. Columbo," will play the brains behind the tobbers. ntEATRES-ORANGE cou~ MANN'S SAM PICIUMPAH FfLM SO. COAST PWA "'ClOSS-oF IROM• lRJ CtsU 11tU w-...n .. 14T/91/A/NOM ~ Mii 1111111 1'LUCIY LUCIAMO-S.S.Zlll MOM'S SO. COAST PLAZA MSSHflt• ' ~J,JlS! MANN'S CINEMAUMO 1414 St llat'9c Auk•• l lS-IVI WM& GOLDIN &Oil AWAID ... ocw ,,.. w ... •n11~1 UTl1Ult/WOM l•J~-"4~1t:ll "It.ACK SUMDA vM CRJ 'W91>AU 1:M U.T /WM/MOlll >.tS.l':tl ··caoss OF IROM11 MANN'S "'THE CAR .. IPGJ CIMEMAUNO wtlOAU ,_,~ .,,.,,_,..._ l.ll•4'U·1:SI MM s..... "THE unu GIRL WHO Auk!• LIVES DOWH THIUME" mnet WMIDA'flt:48 IAT/WM/MOfl J::IM:l->I ""'** MMIS teCKIN !NI CAl tN I ""' OONI IN 60 SKOHDS tNJ ,,.. U\TIMAn rAMAIYI m 1DHS IAHD lllOJ ~ "'°' '"NOW rra nme fUtHr• DAT Of THI ANIMALS(NI l'LUI • OllllLYfNI "HOW IT't fMtll TUIHI DAY Of tMI ~ CPOI f\UI O«IWY lllOI Tiii UU'IMAfl PAHT.UYI C"IZIHI IAND INI ~ WHrTI LINI HVD f'OI -•u~ THI OllATllT tl'OI l'lUt MAID TIMH lllOJ J • • . ' < i • I . ~ • •' .• • 1 ' I ~ . . Wedneeday. May 25. 1 m DAIL v PILOT Al I -"~-~Kid Stars: How Does Tatu1n Bate 'em? ~ 0 : Al die paretlU .i • Hoyeu4N dn~r. we'reauie9 • .,.., wlaa•~ el Ille TUia 0 Neal .. lea41a1 ... Mar. Abo, wut are ... ., ...... ol cW...,. of.._ putf Altj w•wrt -L('.olllu, Taba,OldL 'Glad You Asked That' .. A: Yes. Tatum ia quite outspoken about other cblld stars. "Of my buocb ol favorites. Margaret and Uaen ukl, .. How's that!" a boy or a Jlrlf - O'Brien ia one. Shirley Temple? She wun•t very Mn • .JolmGerrteta,Emporta.Kam. not st\atfed. "The difference,·~ lle made perfectly clear. ••is when an animal is mounted, a fibe11glass replica is molded, and the skin stretched over the fiberglass li&ure. When l di~" the veteran cowboy quipped. •11 told my wlle Dale, jwst atutr me and put me on top of Trieger." Q: Wbat'1 tills about Burt Reynolds blrlal a de- corator to do Ills aew boue all ha red and black'! - Mrs. 8'u Munt&, Pboealx Ana. good. She was only good when abe wu 6 or 7. Dld A: 1be sponsor tells us it's a boy, Andy Lam- ' you ever notice she couldn't act when abe was l•? bros. who was 4 years old when the commercial was Sbeaurewupretty.lhoqb.". fllmed.1be kid lives with his parents In the Los A: Burt•s changed his mind. "I a m wor king wlth a decorator," be says. ''But I'm over my red- and-black period. That was my first bOUM. This one's going to be In eartby·colors-belg~browns, etc." TATUM AND RYAN O'NEAL Title Fight Scores Kayo in Ratings ' :t NEW YORK (AP) -Tile heavyweight cbam- ) pionship fight was last week's top show among 56 rated programs, according to A.C. Nielsen figures made available Tuesday. In the thir d "sweep" week of the month, when next year 's advertising r ates are determined, ABC clobbered the other networks. NBC had won the first two weeks. The national prime-time averages for the week . ending May 22 gave ABC a 17.l rating, representing 12.2 million households. CBS had a 14.4 rating, for 10.3 million homes, and NBC had 13.3, or 9.5 million. Jn order, the week's top 10 shows were : 8owinq. ABC. a 2• 9 rating. or 17 7 million holtS&l>old'I; "M AS H .• " CBS, 21 ~ or 1U mllllon. "Lucan" dnd .. GOOd AQalll\I &11ell." ABC'sSUnOey movle doubl• leatur~ 11 8. or IS S m1lll011. "CN1rl14t'' Angels," ti, or 14.• mllllon; ~ L•v•rn .. aoO Shlrttv "ABC. 20 9,or U.9 mllllon; "One Day at a Time." C&S. 20 s or,. &m1lhon H•PC>V 0.JYS." ABC. 70 Of'U.2 mllllon; ...... .,Miiier:· ABC. 18, or 12 a m llhon "Cold Turkey." CBS' -.V moYfe. 17.t. or 12.7 mlllfe>n and"Ben Hur .. ces·s Suno.tv movie. 17 2.or12 2mllllon. TM ~•t 10 snow\ w..,~ ''Wh•t's HdOCM"nlnq" ABC "liO Nlff'IUles." CBS; "C••ol 8um@tl ·• CBS 'Harvpy l(orman Show " ABC: "'P.lnte\I <ir•ce." NBC "WPlco""' Bliek. IColler " ABC "All tn '"" Family;· CBS; at'ICI "'"'-0.,adly l'r•anQI~." NOC. "Streets ot San F r,.,c1\co ··ABC • .tnd "0.lla County USA." ABC's Frnlay movie. PLUS (A) "EXIT THE DRAGON" 'MAS TY ~ (R) HABITS'' 'ANNIE (PG) edwards aatSTOl CINOO HALLm '!~ (PO: JI{ DTIMES How does Tatum see herself? .. Some people Aneeles area and bas made such a deep Impression think because I've been to parties and because I even a few Andy fan clubs have been for med -and s tay up late and wear fancy clothes that I'm not a that'aoob-o-1-o-g-n-a! child and tbat I'm going through llfe too fut," she Q : Yoa once printed an Item aaytnc Roy says. "But l consider myself a cblld because lam a Rosen' old t-one Trigger wu matted and stand.a In Send your questions to lly GardMr,·"Glad You Asked child." tbe cowboy's de:a at Ute aoren ranch. I• thll lnle! That," care of tl&U MWIJ>Oper, P.O. Bor 1560, Costa Mesa She says her relaUOU:~ with her dad is ex--M. lleaderaoa, MJaneapoUs. 92626. MarllJ/f& and H11Gardnerwill~08 many qMea· tremely precious. "Me. my Dad -it bas A: Not 100 percent. Roy only recently con-tions 08 they can in iMtr column, but the volume o/ moil nothing to do with sex. It's not perverse. Some peo.. firmed bis famous golden palomino ls mounted -makes personal replie1impossible. plethinkliketbat becausewe'reaoclose.•• ---------------------· ----------------- At one point Tatum told her clusmat.es she • un •t returning to school the next ye·ar -and they applauded. "At 91 was a brat," she admits. "At to. I start· ed growing up a UWe bit, but not really. At the age of 111 was pretty good, and now I've grown up some more but it hasn't blouomed yet. I'm just a bud. At 40, my blossoms will be open. At 70, they'll be bend- ing back and then I'll die. It's a pretty good way of looking at it, don't you think?" (Footnote: Pop Ryan O'Neal sums up his feel- ings about Tatum. "I love this little girl •.• she's really somethlng special!'') Q : Is that adorable cbUd who sings the merits of Oscar Mayer's b-o·l·o·g·n·• ln a TV ~ommerdal Litl.Bogd· Most Printed Sentence J,f J Argument continues over which is the. most widely printed se ntence in the English language. A client insists it's "In God We Trust." But that's not right. Another four- word sentence actually merits that distinc- tion. It was coined in 1896 by one Henry C. Traute, the fellow who moved the striking bar from the inside to the outside of match books. His creation: "Close cover before striking." How can you call yourself a biblical scholar if you can't identify the last word in the King James version? Don't bother to look it up. You already know. It means "so be it." . Seven out of 1-0 people who wear hearing aids have never been to rp edical specialists about their ear troubles. It's illegal to gargle in that North Carolina town of China Grove. / I LOVE AND WAR' It was the belief or Karl Jung, that Swiss scholar or the mind, that a man tends to com· mit infidelities on purpose even though his innermost inclinations are to r~main true to one woman while a woman tends to remain true to one man on purpose even though her Innermost inclinations are to commit infidelities. Our Love and War m an is studying the matter. Stand by. What. you've never heard of Isaac Van Amburgh, the great 19th century animal trainer? Amazing! Van Am burgh was the first person in recorded history to put his head in a hon's mouth In 1877. the football players at Princeton wore orange and black striped stockings. This prompted some unknown party to nickname them "Tigers " Thus it became the first col- lege football team to have a nickname. Addreu mail to L.M. Boyd. P.O. Bo:r: 1560, Coda Meta, CA 92626. HOW lOHG l4A~ IT om• SK( YOO\IE S([NA~lAlLY GOOOMOVl(1 s.nc. you '"'1y " ontov• wtd\ 01)1{11>1•. SIN:• you fo-901 you • w ... II\ 0 theoc•• ond tN>vght yew -• h totlWone tM , llf•. ,.,~ '°°'°"'-... ·i~sln The~ __ _,,__ George c. Scott A FPOflklln J. SchaffNf f1lm "Islands In the Stream" -... --A lott/Pol9vlky~ Dovtd Henmlngs Gllb9ri Roland and Ootre Bloom PLUS {PO) . ; "THEPINK PAMnlalSDUKES AGAIN.. . 0 tkANDI IN nt& STREAM" STMTI FRIDAY AT THE NIWPOllT ~ WITH co-Hrr '-ntl LA,. ' · WHILE HOLDING ATltUNT1NGTON _,, ,.,_, ......... _. ,.., __ .._...~ I AU~U--~MAJS. I •vtn-'Tll 1--...·nu SAD~~~~~~. ~7,LAZA . ··-· .,....... . ... -·-__ .... MOW OPEN1 Your dinin~ pleasure io; ours. Phone reservations accepted (714) 833-9185. '"-r~ T!P~ Yoo Will n:~~ Jn MacArthur Square between Birch St. and MacArthur Blvd. 6A•llRDAW .... --.... ______ ...,...,..--____,,___ FLIP WILSON PAULA KELLY (IN THEATRE 111 "'A ROARINGLY NOAGEMENT FUNNY SEX COMEDY" "Cl NDERELLA" IS NOT JUST ANOTHER FILM IT'S AN EVENT! STARTS FRIDAY MAY Z7 "MR. BILLION" TERENCE HILL VALERIE PERRINE PLUS {PG) ''THE LATE SHOW" RATEDX NOW PLAYING WED & TI1URS ,---.mr.:~ol';'--"DOMINO PRINCIPLE" 0 K SEE ST A" CHERYl. SMITH IN PERSON FRIDAY NIQHT ·-- WIS.,_1'11, ... __,, OAIDl:ICGllO\'t ' SJO.U OI ..-. llBBUT lOM •au UlllY ·l!llMO msntJ ·LEa.£J.m ... _., ..,_1lll.l&IG rnm·-tir IOIY IMIDI -• • -----TUllTADAMS·,..1111· ... ..,TlllllJOIB GENE W11.DEA JIU ClAY8URGH ~PRYOR -II! ftUK WAl.OIMll • 8W[ fDWUOS ~-..,a ........ -""SIJIER~.~"'1""""'9 ..... n taM .;;.a..---All.TRICK Mc:GOOHAN-.....,..,...._.,""""' EQW.,.... ...._..,....:::::;;:..-::.-=::::-... ::-___........... r._. • PWllSDl~m..M ._Ill.alt ~"!'!e~ -----·-rA\. ,,.,., ...... =-="""'-~.----....... ,.,.. ....... "'.,...~,.ttlllA!'.i:J SILVER 8"'1!.Ak IN VIA UDO PUZA ~!I-~-~--~--~ T ~~ PINK PANTHER Weekdap.-.:50 edwards UDO CINEMA Weekdays-7:00.l0:4s SAT-SUN·MON SAT-SUN-MON HOLIDAY MATINEES MIWPOIT ILVD. AT YtA LIDO HOLIDAY MATINEES ; 0-t:OS H!WPORT llACH 673-8350 3:1S-7:10-11:00 ---.. • ... - • AJ 2 DAILY PILOT Badie al Kind 1 -~eport~Bib .... J7 J ' Maste~tonri es -, 11 • WASlUNGTON (AP) -Radical mutectomies' •. "Jaave become an accepted way of treatlna breuti ... cancer without any proof of their effec:Uveness,· H)'I a major study of surgery. · · A 0 radical mastectOmy is so ~enUy tile' ·' 1 treatment of choice that tt would almo.t seem that a • 1 i,aditiOO' baa been eaatabllsbed without a clear~t •. . iustification," the report by an agency of Harvard ,1 • Vnivenity aaya... : THE REPORT SAYS A RADICAL mastectol'l)Y. ., "is no more effective than simple surgery in terms· . pf survival experience, and the chance of local or a .distant recurrence. • :i "It does, however, cost more in dollars and '· hospital stay and does induce more morbidity, more mutilation, and more traumatic· psychological adjustment as well as carrying a great risk of surgical death.'• · THE FINDING6 ON BSEABTCANC~a. based on an analysis of clinical trials in several countries, are contained in a report the "Costa, Risks and Benefits of Surgery,'' compiled by \he office of health policy information at the Harvard School of Public Health. A radical mastectomy involves surgically re- l moving the tumor, the breast. the auxiliary nodes under the arm and the pectoral muscle. In a simple mastectomy, only the breast itself is removed. 1 The study found that for those women whose ~ 1 cancer has not spread to the nodes under the arm, ~ simple removal of the tumor appears to be as effec- ' tive when radiation ia also used as a radical mastec· 11 itomy. · B i kers ltlar rg The couple tha t bikes together stays together, says Dennis Lehto and his new bride, the former J anice Tucker . The cou- ple recently were married on bikes, follow- Granite £heek . -Ruel P-a ym-ent. Al'WI....,.,_ ing a church ceremony. Lehto and most of the wedcUng _party began riding together in Wisconsin, continuing the friendship' and riding when they all moved to Phoenix. . StOne Cold NORFOLK, va: <AP> -James McBrlde•a memories of last winter's fuel bills wlll be etched 1n his mind for some time. Bat they'll be etched even tonier in a check be used to pay a $106.46 fuel bW. The check ls made ol franlte. McBRIDE. U·YEAR·OLD OWNBa of Seaboard Memorials, aaid the document -a 12· inch cemetery marker -represents a protest P•Y· ment to Gunter OU Co. McBride, who said be bas been a customer of the company more than 20 years, said the firm let him run out of fuel twice in freezing weather. blam· ing it on the computer on one occasion. Although McBride said be was on the nrm•s automatic delivery plan. a Gunter spokesman de· nied it. A BUS~ESSMAN FOR u YE.US. McBride said thecompany•s fOmpUtel'$ are bis real gripe. "You're now a number .•. All the personaliza· lion has gone from business ... After he was contacted by the fuel oil dealer•s attorney, McBride decided on the grarute check. which cost him about $50. James Kelly, manager of Gunter OU, said that even if things were as McBride said, "He &till got the oil and used it. so he's got to pay up ... -~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~--~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-- ··Lesbian ~ .. , ;·~. To App eal :. Kids Rule OAKLAND (AP ) - Lesbian mother Jeanne Jullion says she will ap- ' peal a Superior Court de· 1 , (:ision that her two sons s hould b e i n their 1 f atber's custody. ,, . She charged after t.Qe .,1 decision that the proba- ' iaon report in favor of the ---lathes=-was "fill~ with- , disguised prejudice against gays." , ALAMEDA COJJNTV • ~uperior Court Judge Gordon Minder ordered 3-year·old Johnny Cec- e arelli returned to tbe custody of his father, T aolo Ceccar e lli, a • , teacher who already has . custody of the other son, . ' • J,.uca, 8. Johnny had been living :with hie m oth e r and Sheri' Fried, along with M s . F r i e d ' s f o u r. children. MINDER BANNED the 'public from the c o urtroom durin g a .,. / llearlng on the matter, saying it would be in the b est interests of children. ' .. . l' .. He said he didn't want the custody fight to become a ''battleground for the testing of the validity or nonvalidity of a pa r ticular socio. political or sex ual persuasion." The custody ruling, which provides for vis- ita lion r ights for the mother, will be in effect until pendtng divorce proceedings a re r e- solved. Area Duo H onored Linda Chui, Irvine, and Gary Friedly, El Toro, were among 18 e mploy es at UC1 Medical Cente r to re- ~eive outstanding performance awards at a ceremony at the hospital. Ms . Chui was r e - cognized for her ap- proacb and "standards of expertise" contribut· inf to the pharmacology ro e in patient care. Friedly has been responsible for lntroduc- ing advanced procedures in the microbiology 1ec- tion of the laboratory. ·. This is who we are and what we do at General Motors. "Oar cilstomers need to have cars that are mOre fael·efficient!' Fred Port.ei; Assisiant Staff Engineer, Vehicle Systems Engineering 'Tm responsible for optimizing the fuel economy of a car targeted for the l.980's. We're redesigning our cars because our customers need to have cars that are more fuel-efficient. Right now, we're working on a f~mily--sized car\ which will yield better fuel efficiency by approxi- mately 30% than the car it replaces, without sacrificing passenger comfort. "Tile first thIDg you have to do when you want to optimize the fuel economy of a car is to examine where the fuel is actually being used. And what youtll find is that fuel is primarily used to push the air aside, to roll the tires and to move all the compo- nents, like the fan and so on . What we have done in this program is to take those components and analyze how much fuel is being used by each one. Primarily, we have ooncemed ourselves with weight reduction, the engine, aerodynamics, tires, . . gears and component efficiency, pretty much in that order. "The problem is that you have to identify the trade-offs that you're making. A tire that consumes less power, and as a consequence consumes less fuel, may be very desirable. But it also has to ride properly. The challenge is to make a car efficient and still comfortable. .. There is no reason why an efficient component must always cost more than an inefficient one. We have to optimize our vehicle from a fuel usage standpoint without causing the ro;t of the compo- nents to drive the price of a car beyond what the general public is willing to pay. "It's very satisfying to be able to work on something that's important to the company and to the world as well. There aren't many programs that come along in an engineer's lifetime where he has virtually total freedom to exercise his skills. This is one of those projects, and it's very exciting. "Our top management is very responsive to the problems of society, and they're responsive to the employe, too. GM has a very large commitment to improve the fuel consumption of its cars, and that commitment should yield technological progress at a very rapid pace." General Motors People building transportation to serve people 1 I t •. ·1 i f s~ OD CBJ±pet: ,Siieeer Scholarships to\.S~ers LOS ANGELES <AP) -Con. troversy has arisen over soccer schoJar.sbips granted by the University o! Southern California lo three high school swlmmlng stars. The school says all is legal and the three will actually play SOC· cer although admittedl y they were sought as swimmers br the school, winner of four national ~ollegl_ate swim c hampionships 1n as JQany years. "It is true that use has signed three very fine swimmers on soc· cer scholarships,.. said athletic director Richard Perry. ·~ • "",_. .... .. However, in our opinion, this has been done in complete t0m· pltance with the rules or the NCAA and Pacific-8 conference. ''Representatives of USC have been in constant contact with the NCAA office to assure that t0m· pliance. The three swimmers ln· volved will be acUve particlpanta in our fall intercollegiate soccer program." Wiles Hancock, Pac-8 com- missioner, said his office is in- vestigating the matter and USC will not use that method of grant: ing scholarships until a ruling is issued. Soc<:er is relatively new al use, while its s wimming pro- srram ts traditionally strong. The Trojans have won nme NCAA swim mini titles including the last four. There were reports that some of the conlerence swimming ~oaches were upset over tbe USC move. Under the NCAA rules, un- ivenltles are limited to 80 scbolanb.lps ln addition to those for football and basketball. But theTe are stipulations as to how many can be assigned each Sp()rt. Swimmlng is allowed 11, NOLAN RYAN GOT HIS 100TH WIN TUESDAY WITH A THREE-HITTER. Good Old Days? Golf Didn't Always Have Big Payoffs By HOWARD L. HANDY Ol I,. O•lly l'llol Slaff ··r·vc played golf with every- body on the tour and Sam Snead is the greatest golfer ever to sw- ing a golf club. If he had n putting touch hke Arnold Palmer once had and Jack Nicklaus has now, he 'd have won a milhnn tourna-m ents·· That's tht• op1n 1on of Al Besselink , h1mS<'lf one of the top pros of another era, who w1 II join with others in the> ~.H) .ind ovrr age brackC't to play an the $100.000 Sam Snead Open ~H'naor golf champ10nships al Yorba Lan<l..1 Country Club The 54·hole pro tournt•) .... ,11 be held Friday through Sun<IJ y "•th a two-day pro-am preced1nJ.! the event today and Thursdav ··1 played a round with Snead Monday and he hat the hall just ai. good as he ever h1L 1t. Bc.ssehnk says. Snead will celebrate has 65lh birthday Friday when the pro tournament begin!> Snead, the winner of 84 PGA tour events, the most by any player in the his- tory of the' f(a mc, as rated the best by Bessclink. Wh at is the bi~ d1ff('rence. other than the purses being won these days, between the time Besselink was play ing and today's lour? "We paid our own way and didn't have any sponsors ... the golf director at a Nevada resort hotel course says. "If we didn't win any money, we had to pick oranges and grapefruit ore the trees in ol"der lo eat. Today. If they shoot 100, they still get a thousand dollars a week from a sponsor.'' Beaselink was one or the originatbrs of the loul'}lament at Yorba Linda this week. "We re- alize that the people partitipat- ing in this tournament have won more nat~al championships than all the play~rs on \be tour to- day. , ~ t ''Nearly •U of the players in. this tournament wm be playing for more money than they did as professionals on the tour. When I won the lllst Q'ollrnamcnt of Chaniplons ·ln 1953, I received $10,000, probably the biggest purse ever to that time." 8~1* $1ld Babe Zaharias' once team, to win the World chm~ • ~Slic ba •more guts than anyb6dy araund and that's what macSe her q champion," Be....uhk~. •1st.JD' bu th desire lo prae. lice and win auu. ll doe n't mat- ter tf he's playlna (or SlO or s10.ooo. be'~ bunt. to be a cham· pion andlr)'towln." How does the Yorba Linda course play for lhe older pros? "ll'a a very hard one to get low scores on,'' be conc~es. "My orilinal idea JVOS to hove ttte Al &ESSELINK players shoot low scores but I don't think they .can do it on this golf course because it is too dif· ficul\. . "The gTass is real plush and there is no roll on lhe ball when it hits. The first and second sho~ are all carry.•· How much ditf erent is this than when his group was playing on the tour? .. We used to play it wherever it landed on public courses. We never had a good course to play on like they have these days. "As a result. when there was trouble, we had to maneuver the ball and keep it safe and in play. Now they n y it way up in the air and let it go. "Golf courses todpy are in such m agnificent shape. The course is worked on the whole year to gel it ready for a tournament. There is never a bad lie io the fairway and &.he traps a re all rakeil and smooth, something we never had." Besselink isn •t complaining because e\ierybody faced the same problems ln his heyday. lNDtANAPOLIS <AP) -Bill Puterbaugh wu reinstated oo Tuesday as driver of car No. 16 for Suoday's IndianapoUs 500, after Salt Wal~stepped uide. Walther's fath~r George and brother Jeff purchased tho Eaale on Monday that Puterbaugh qualified lut Sunday in 28th P<>tl· lion rrom Lee Elkins, an aUlns sporuman who said he was no tonier physically capable of "running the team rt1bl." The Walthers then aMounced tb•t Salt, who was bumped from . . ---. Martinez Hides All Valuables LOS ANGELES <AP>-Teddy Ma rlinez. the Los Angeles Dodgers' utility infielder, has a weird superstition. Instead of• pulling his valuables in a locker for safekeeping, he rolls up his money, stuffs it into a stocking and places it in his pocket. He went through this ritual before Tuesd ay night's game against the Houston Aslros, and after sliding home with what pro· ved to ~ the winning run in the fifth inning of the Dodgers' 4·2 \'ictory, he said his money still was sale "H 's not that J don't trust anybody, .. said the 29-year-0ld Domm1can "It's Just that it br· mis me good luck. I trust every. body. Especially when I have my money m my ow n pocket.·· Martinez and Ron Cey doubled in th~ firth inning. producing the third and decrsive run as Rich Rhoden posted his seventh vie· tory in eighl decisions, most on the Dod(lers' staff a nd making him one of two seven-game win· ners in the Na\ional League. RhQd,cn ~blanked the Astros through rive innings, gave up s\ngl~ runs in the sixth and seventh, then Cha,rlic Hough took over and preserved the victory with h~.12th save or the season. MOUtrC* 1..0$ AHGl!LH •rt1"4 aar11~ J GO•utl•tU 4 I 1 0 1..-\?I> 1 0 I 0 CeblllJll • o 2 O Martlnerll> 2 I 2 O CtOeflO Cf • • 0 0 1 lluH~ll '' 4 0 O O C .lo'""..," 4 0 O O Smlll'lrf 2 O O I FtrQU\Of\C 4 0 1 0 C.vll> ~I) I I • J Cruuf • 0 1 O Ganr~v lb 4 1 1 o W•I-II> :t 1 1 0 Mo!WMy(I 4 I l 1 How•rd 114 0 0 0 0 llal\er If 2 o 1 I "°"" 1" 1 0 0 0 Halt II 0 0 0 0 lloiwell21> 2 0 0 O Oel•H lo 1 o 1....._i1oo t oo O Hov9no 1 o o o Cr•wfOrdoll I 0 I 1 llbodell p 2 0 0 O Gtr.,..rpl 0 0 0 0 v .. 99r( O IO O l'tllltD 0 0 0 0 Stmt>llop O O O 0 I. Robtr1SOll 1 0 0 0 Totet\ JS 2 I 2 . Toi•" lO 4 11 4 HouSICWI 000 001 'OCl-1 Lo•""""'" cno 010 '°"~ OP 11ou\IOll, 1..08-+f~ICWI 1.1..os Anc)el*S 1. 11-Moncs.v. Ma<t'tlMJ, ~v. WllhOft S8-J Cl'\U 1 W1Uon.C..bf>ll $-81k•r SP-Sm1111. Ltm0119ttlo (I., I f>I Pe11u S1mbl10 Rllodtn (W,7 11 Hough SIVt -Houqll 1111 T ·~ " • •11 •• so 10 3 3 ' ' ') I I I 1 0 I~ 0 0 0 ' 2 ,.,,,,,, 2•1 t 0 0 0 i , 3' " 29,a... the field as too slow in bis own car and unable to qualify a backup macbJ.ne eiUter, would rep la~ .Puterb&Up. Tbe reuoa ilven •ts business consldei"atlons. The sponsors ot Walther'• oristnal two-car entl')' traufffed their interest to l.M new car. "I had nothing to do with Lbe whole thing," uld Salt In 1 telephone interview Tuesday evcnlnf'. ''I appreclalc the thouehtlul~ of my fa~ber pd .. the same number permitted for soccer. A school is allowed by NCAA rules to have 19 swimmers (or national competition. Perry said the Trojans are me rely trying lo stay com- petitive in s wimming with schools where tuition costs are not so high and therefore the out- lay for scholarshlps is less. ''What has nol been pointed out is that these 11 swimming scholarships are not body counts, as they are in football and basketball. but are based on equivalence," the athletic direc· tor said. ··nm sU1gests you could have as many as 22 swimmers, ror ex· ample, each on bal~scholars~p. as long as the total Ciollar expbn· diture didn 't exceed the equivalent cost of educating 11 people." A half-scholarship at USC would leave a student athlete with a large balance that he would have to pay, so that athlete might "\'fill decide to att4'nd a school where the cost would be less. "The particular problem for use with this rule is that for sl.x Strikes Out 12 Ryan RapS SeH, Gets lOOth Win DETROIT CAP) -Nolan Ryan says he was pitchin g "im - properly.'' For his "deficient" e fforts Tuesday rug ht he: -Won his lOOth American League game. -Set an AL record for most games striking out 10 or more batters. -Pitched a three·hitler for his ninth complete game m 11 starts Ryan·~ performance outshone A11ge& Slat~ All G-H"" ICMl'C Rtdle (1101 M•y 1S Calol0<n•• •I ~lr~11 • SS D m M11v 17(•11torn11 4' Toronto • 1\am M•y ?8 CdlllO<ll•• di TO<CW\10 10 1S. m a brilliant effort by J ohn Hiller and raised his season record to 7-4, helping the California Angels to a 2·1 victory over the De~oit Tigers. C'. It was the 10th triumph in 14ae· cisions for Ryan in his career against Detroit, including ~ no- hitter. The Tigers have managed only 76 hits in 457 at-bats against him for a .166 average. Despite Rya n 's triumph, Detroit manager Ralph Houk believes Hiller outpilched him. Hiller. the veteran reliever making ouly his second start of the season, gave up two runs in the second inning. He was brilliant thereafter. retiring 16 consecutive batters at one point. He rcx:eived a huge ovation when he walked ore the field after finishing the ninth inning. Hiller doffed his cap to the Tige r Stadium crowd of 14, 194 . R yan got no such applause. The crowd seemed as dazed as the Detroit batters. especially in the ninth when Ryan finished with a nourish striking out Milt May, Mickey Stanley and Fish Bonanza pinch bitter Ron LeFlore. Ryan also struck out the side in the fi rst inning. After giving up a leadoff single to Phil Mankowski, he fanned Tito Fuentes, Rusty Staub and Steve Kemp. He struck out Fuentes, Staub and Stanley twice each and got rookie Kemp on strikes three times. Ryan finished with 12 strikeouts, ~iving him 75 games of 10 or more strikeouts in the AL. He had shared the old mark of 74 with former Cleveland star Sam McDowell. "No,'' Ryan said tersely, when asked if the record meant anything to him. "l didn't even know I was close to it until the ninth inning." Including time he spent in the National League, Ryan has struc~ out 10 or more batters in 89 games. The major league re· cord of 97 is held by Hall or Farner Sandy Kourax. "I don't worry about the pitches as much as the de livery," said Ryan, who labored in the fourth inning due to wildness. "I threw t fl> pitches because I was throwing improperly. By the fifth inning my bicep was aching. I corrected it later, but I don't know how. My complete rhythm and timing were off." OETllOIT CAL.,OtlHIA MltwSltl, 311 Funt~ 2b Sraut>,dn ICf'mP. If TmMn,tb Crcrfl rf MM.av C M5tnlv c-f .... ,,,,,. \\ Lellle DI\ TotaJ\ Cat•fo,.nia Oelrolt •11 r II Iii all r 11111 3 0 I o FlorP\ cf • 0 I 0 • 0 0 0 R~my 11> • 0 0 0 • O 0 0 Cl>allt. ll> 4 0 I 0 3 0 0 0 Rud• 11 3 I I 0 2 t I 0 Bond\ '1 3 I I 0 3 0 1 O eavior.dh 3 0 0 O J 0 0 1 RoJlt\n. lb J 0 t I 3 0 0 0 G•lc 11 \\ 2 0 0 1 1 0 0 0 HmDllY C J 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 ~I 3 1 Tol•ls 2' 1 51 010 000 000-1 000 100 000-1 11' H II l!R 18 SO Rva11 IW.7·0 'I l 1 1 7 11 ~lltpr 11.,1.s1 'I S 1 2 3 S WP-Ryan1 T ·2:31 A •14,1•• Yellowtail season has arrived out of San Diego where 821 anglers have landed 3,393 yellows (an average of four apiece) the past two days near· the Coronado Islands. Jigs and Uve squid are bagging the fish. In tbe 63-degree waters. ltow long wm lt last? 1'Th_at's. n~e pre· dieting how lQng it'll rain," says one landing operator .• brotber to pu.rtbau the Elkins carforcne. 11But I t.bouaht about It all last lil(bt. Tl I took the ride away from Blll, I Jtould lose respect for myHll.1 can't bf proud about lt. IO I fil"rid the only f1ir t.hlng to clD•u to tum the car over to Bill iad heJp him In any way I can to make our car auccesaful In the 500." Howev r, Salt said be con· aldered the reellngs of Pulert>augb and the moraUty ol the issue and derfdcd that other univeralUes in the Pac.a - excluding Stanford -tuition for ln·atat.e residents ranges f~ a minimum of $564 a year to a maximum of $639 per year. "USC's annual tuition is $3,944. "So. for tj(ample. a half· scholanhip at other untversjtles ranges from $282 a ytiat 'to $319.50. At USC it is $972." Perry did not divulge bow many swimming scholarships would be availvable for this till, bul It was believed to be only one or two. NEW YORK CAP>-Turmoil continues to stalk the New York Yankees.· The ir clubhouse sometimes resembles a time bomb, tic king toward Wb11t · seems to be an inevitable ex- . plosion. Except for a spurt that pro- duced 14 victories in 16 games following a 2·8 start, the Ya~ees have been less tm.n scintillating on the fietd. Oft it, however, tbey have been fascinating. The latest fireworks involve rigJtt fielder Reggie Jackson. who homered Monday night but then dispensed with the tradi- tional handshaking with bis teammates. He dellberately avoided the corner or the dugout where they had gathered to greet him. Jackson, benched in three or the previous six games because of a slump, has r efused to talk with write r s r ecently and shrugged off the handshake ibci· dent, claiming, "J had a bad hand." WON'T BUY EXCUSE His teammates didn't buy that excuse. The most vocal was catcher Thurman Munson, who said , "He hurt his hand? He's a liar. How's that for a quote?" Munson was angry over a magazine article which ap- peared thls week in which J ackson was quoted regarding his relationship with the Yankee catcher during spring training. "1 talk to him all the time, .. J ackson was quoted as saying about Munson. "But he ia so jealous and nervous and re- sentful that be can't stand it. I( I wanted to, I could just snap him. Just wait until I gel hot and bit a few out. and the reporters start coming around and I have New York eating out of the palm of my hand ... he won't be able to stand it." Jackson and Munson were cool toward each other during spring trMning but appeared to have overcome the barrier early in the season. Now, that barrier seems to have been erected again. MUNSON IRATE "For a man to think Thurman Munson is jealous of anyone, that guy has to be ignorant a nd an im- becile." said Munson after read· ing the article. The handshake snub had other Yankees more upset. "It wasn't called for," said center fielder Paul Blair . "It didn't help at all. We're tryin g to get things together and you hate to see this.'' •· "I'd. call il unsportsmanlike conduct," ..Sat<I Jim Wynn, one~ Jackson's closest friends on the club and often his apokesm• when Reggie refuses to talk with the l>ress. "I think he's got to re· alize the guys are rooting tor blm and wanted to congratulate him." Manager Billy Martin was lrkM by Jackson's action d said he would talk to his $2.9- million slugger and the rest of the teatn before tonight's gaml! against Boston. Martin. who had• history of problems with fros¢ offices when he rqanaged in Mln· nesota. Detroit and Texas, • been at oddt with the New Yotk brass over a variety of subjects. He w11• particularly irked becaUM the club resisted hls.,. quest to promot.e veteran catcber Elrod Hendricks from Syracuse of th~ lnt.ematio.,al Leque to serye ~a thlrd·atrio,.catcher. Freneii Opell ~ '• .. • • • JIZ OAJL Y PILOT Wednftday. May 25. 1977 C~ Rips Beverly Hi1ls; .. Seeks Net Title Friday 87 ROGER CARLSON 0t111eo.11,~1eesta" BEVERLY HILLS-Corona del Mar High 's Sea Kings quallfled for a shot at a third straliht ClF .. A tennis cbam- ~omhlP Tuesday as host Bever. Hills lngh wilted under Corona el Mar's talent and depth, 24-4 •• Billed as a semifinals (matcbup, Tuesday's play at Benrly lDJ.1a proved little more ithan a warmup for coach Dennis :Trout's Sea Kings toward defend· :ing theirCIFcrown Friday. ' Sunny lnlls High of Fullerton, ~e only team to beat Cd.M in • . three years, was also im· pressive, rolling at Santa Barbara, 20-8. Beverly HUI& entered with a 20-2 record, but it was apparent very early that the necesalUes to st.Ay with Corona del Mar simply were not tbel'e. When Corona del Mar's No. 8 player-Greg Washer, took apart Beverly Hills' No. 1 sln1les player-Jim Acate at the outset, wbat faint hopes the host Normans had of an upset quickly disappeared. In doubles play, where Trout said he'd be happy with 7'1\ points out of a pcxssible dozen, it petsReeord ; Stealing Is Easy For Chepkauskas He trained for baseball by run· ~g tbe mile and cross country ~ high school where baseball ~u a forgotten sport and this season. while playing center field Jor Southern California College ol Costa Mesa, Dan Cbepkauskas established an NAIA District Ill ·base stealing record of 57 during 0the regular season. · Cbepkauskas comes from 'Oklahoma and never had a ~hance to play baseball in high .school. He began hls"~areer three years ago in American Legion Junior baseball. "I've done a lot of reading about base stealing," be says. "Lou Brock ha.a all the science down and you can't go wrong if you pattern after a guy like that." How does a diat.ance runner become a base stealer? "Through quickness," he ex· plains. "A lot of guys that are fast can't steal bases too well. I can reach top speed in about two steps and that quickness helps me. "Another lblng you have to do is waU:b the opposing pitcher. They all have a flaw in their mo- tion and if you can pick it up, you can steal oo anybody." waa Ute same story as .Jim Curley and Craig Thomas and Jordan Otterbein and Danny Saltz blltud the opposition, 12.0. Curley and Thomas, combln· fl'lg quick moves with aggressive play, quickly disposed of the Normans' No. 1 duo, 6·1, 6-0, wblle Otterbein and Saltz were easing past their opponents, 6·3, M. Wltb their superiority estabUshed, Corona del Mar quickly put away the rest of the doqbles on the Beverly Hills caiDpus. Meanwhile, at nearby Roxbury Parlt where singles action was taking place, only Agate and St.Acy Margolin were able to play at a .500 pace. tbe rest of the Normans bowing in steady fashion. Margolin, a left.bander and second to Lea Antonopolis of Glendora High in girls circles, was really the only bright spot for Beverly Hllls. She stopped Washer and Mike Fedderly with 6-4 scores, os the latter went after bis opponent too ag. gressi vely, kicking away the match. Lance Good. Corona del Mar's ace in singles, breezed without any difficulty and Forbes, although nicked by Agate when the latter responded from bis 64 loss to Washer, recorded three triumphs. C.eM IMI 141 ~ NillJ Sl .. lft Wnher (CdMI def ~le ~; Jost to ~"90''" • •. oet Fourll•IM .. 1, oef Gu•11er •·?· Fort...\ l(OMI 10\I 1-4; WOt'I •·? IH. 1·S F~r1y ICOMI lo~I C>-4 .... won6-l 6°1: ~ CCdMI W0'16-l M . M> ... l. Ooutlfe. 011...-1 ... S.lll ICdMldel l(rolfl·Ge..-4-3 ~· del Aomrn-.Jonft 6-1, 6·l . Curley·ThOm~ IC.OMI won .. 2.•2; wat14-1,1o.O. Area Duo Inks ~!"=:r-..;:;J Upstart '"'-''"'""E'.· ..... Menaces l,agaJDa Around the Santa Barbara area, San MartGB Hl&h's volleyball teaai II regarded as an upstart-. young •hip· pen napper that baan 't quite learned Its man· nerayet. To eam that reputa· lion, unheralded San Marcos rose from the dept.bs ol mediocrity thl& aeaaoo and compiled a lS.1 r«Ord. showine no reapect for the establlsbed power ol the area, Santa Barbara Jli&b. ADcl DOW the upstart team bu a shot at Its flnt CIF dwnpiocshlp • Lacuna Beacb takes on San Karcos !or tbtt CIP' crown Friday at UC lrvlne. tentative starting time 1 :30 p .m. Tbe mat.ch will be preceded at T by a duel for WM place tn CIF between semifinal losers Mlaalon Viejo and Santa Barbara. San Marcos' only de· feat lhil aeason came at the bands of Santa Barbara, but It avenged the loss by ui::•ng Sao-ta Barbara the return mat.ch. Having never won a In Action Fridag • o.itw...,..,.... ~ °"""' ..,_ league UUe or received an invitatlon to the playoffs, San Marcos Julie Green of Fountain Valley· High bas the second leading throw of the nine entries at Friday night's CIF state qualifying track meet at Cerritos College. Norwalk. Above she is seen winning the 4-A gold medal at Camarillo with a 39·8~ heave. Below, freshman Mari Gibbs of Marina (Huntington Beach) leads the pack at the halfway point of the 4-A 2·mile finals. She wound up third in 11:25 and was also third in the mile (5: 14.5). She will be in action Friday at Cerritos. was accustomed t:o watching nearby Santa Barbara Hlgb take all the glory. But now Santa Barbara is out of the playoffs, a four-game loser to Laguna Beach clast Friday. San Marcos, a convincing winner over Dinner Due For Pickens Cbepkausku is one of three players who switched from Pacific Christian College in Fullerton to SoCal this year. PCC gave up its baseball program and Fred Keener recruited the players for SoCal. Pro Contracts ~· ~~-11]1 Mission Viejo in the semifmals, is still very mucballve. Coach Tom Shogl Ze· o» allies his San Marcos I A banquet honoring retiring ·Orange Coast College athletic director Wendell Pickens will be held Thursday night, June 2 at the Costa Mesa Country Club. DiMer reservations are $10 and checks should be mailed to the OCC accounting office. 2701 Fairview Rd., Costa Mesa, 92926. Reservations will be held at the door, so names of each person attend· lng should be included with eacbcbeck. A no·host cocktaU hour from 6:30-7:30 will begin the night's activity with dinner being served al 8 . A testimonial will run from 9-10 and will include many of Pickens' former players. along with friends. fellow coaches and athletic direc· tors. Is be oo his own in stealing bases? "No, ln fact, the only time l bad the green light to go was in the last game o! the season against Chapman when I had a chance to break the district re· cord." His accomplishment is all the more amazing because he was slowed by blood poisoning in bis legs during the season. "I bad to adopt a new way of sliding because of the poison- ing," he says. "I've always done the popup slide where you don't hesitate. J had to change to a bead ftrSt slide and I don't like it at all. "You have to use a stutter step in the head first slide and it makes the play a lot closer." He got the poisoning at Grand Canyon College in Arizona early in the season. He had a "strawberry" on his hip and It became infected and blood poisoning set in. Two coast area JC. baseball standouts -Dave Huppert and Daryl Sconiers -have signed lucrative contracts with pro- fessional teams, the Daily Pilot has learned. Huppert, who earned most valuable player honors in the Southern California Conference as Golden West College's catcher, signed a pro pact with the Baltimore Orioles. And Sconiers, Orange Coast College's first baseman this past sprfog, inked with the California: Angels. Sconiers signed for a reported $30,000 while Huppert 's bonus was well into five figures, ac- cording to GWC coach Fred Hoover. Huppert, who prepped al Ken- nedy High In La Palma, played at Cypress College last season. He batted .467 this year and was selected on the All -Southern Cal JC team last week. He's a 6-0, 200·pounder. Sconiers, a 6·3. 185-pounder, graduated from Fontana High School. He was a freshman at ., team ls going into the match as an underdog. "Laguna Beach has to be favored. They're an outstanding team, they've got experience in the playoffs and they've got super players in Jamie Plummer and Kip Engen," Shogi says. ··Plummer is the kind of bitter who can de· moralize a whole team, which is exactly what he did against Santa Barbara. And Engen 's setting ls unbelievable," Sbogisays. San Marcos• top players are Joerg Lor.scheider, a 6·3 bitter, and Ruben Nieves, a S·lO setter. Those speaking include Clare VanHoorebeke, Floyd "Scrappy" Rhea. Harold Sheflin, Ken Moats. Ray Rosso, John Arrambide, John McDonough, Miles Eaton, Vern Wilkinson, Dr. Ben Mason, E.Y. Johnson. Chuck Lewis and Al Rebotn. In American Legion baseball he bit .400 and .383 on successive years and at Bacone Junior College in Oklahoma, be bit .342 u a college freshman. His flrat sea.son at sec. be bit .302 and this year, as a junior, be was told to get oa base and not worry Orange Coas~ batting .355 this ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~.,----.~~~~~~~~~~~- "We'll have to press especially hard for points when Plummer gets ln the back row, because when he~s up front we're just not going to stop him. He's too good to shut off com· pletely,' • Shogl says. Pickens has served as OCC athletic director srnce the scboolopenedlnl948 about bis average. · past season. He failed to make the coaches All·South Coast Con- ference fll'Stor second team. For information about the • dinner, telephone 556-5725 or 556·5892.. His goal is to play prof esalooal bueball and be feels be bas coa· Quered bis bigge.t weakness. Huppert has not been assigned a ml.nor Jeague team as yet while Sconiers will report to tbe Angela' Idaho Falls Rookie League club June 17. COSTA MESA AMC & JEEP . • • .. • . ~ \ I. \ \ l ~ t . 1W7 JEEP CJ5 ·~·· .......... s4999 A7A83AAOes214 :: I JEEP DEALER IN C ALIFO RNIA HUGE INVENTORY 1W7 GREMLIN · ··~··· bucket ..... &~ s2999· . A7MC87E221e20 Major League Standings NAftONAL LEAGUE East Dtvlaloa W L Pct. GB Pitlsbw'gh 28 12 .684 Chicago 23 14 .622 2'1\ St. Louis 23 16 .590 3~ Philadelphia 19 18 .514 8~ Montreal 15 21 .417 10 New York 15 24 .385 11~ West DtYlsloa Dodgers 31 10 .7!6 Cincinnati 18 20 .474 11~ San Francisco 16 23 .410 1' San Diego 18 26 .409 14~ Houston 16 24 .400 14~ Atlanta 1$ 71 .351 16'1\ ~·sc­MOi\lt .. IS.~4. tJ ....... P11t1.,.,,..S.~Y9'1I? s. l.oulsl. ""1-.......s s. .. 019914 4ti.itea Lot A"91'ft4, Ho\6'8lltt ()my ~-$tci..dulad T.,..._.•,o.ntn MolltrNI IW~ Ml alClllc~ !8"""'MI f'tMladal""'a IC.ltoll S.J) at SI. 1.0lllS (,..k_ 1-41." Aller1ta 1'--''f.tlets..tO\etelll .......... IMl. II . Cl11clnMll •NM111t11 S.JI It S... llranclsc:o IMcGloOwnNl,f\ • .. OU\l'Oft IMduJar ).)) •1 los AnQlt$ I Rau~)." Only V-K'MdVled ~0-.. Phlladal!Jfola at St. L.ovls Montl"t'•l at O.lcaqo AllM\ta .t Serl~ Houston at LO\A,.IH C:l11Clr1NU ets.n f<•9"Chco ()ftly Ol"'t$SChadllltd .. AMERICAN LEAGUE Ea.at Dlvlllou Baltimore Bolton · NewYort Milwaukee Detroit Cleveland Toronto W L Pct. GB 22 lS .595 21 17 .553 l~ 22 18 .550 1~ 21 22 .488 4 17 21 .'47 5~ 15 21 .417 6'1\ 17 24 .415 7 WestDlriltoa Minnesota 2S H .6'.l Chicago 22 lS .595 2 Texas 19 16 .543 4 Angels 20 21 .488 6 Oakland 19 21 .41S 6~ Kansas City 18 20 .474 8~ Seattle 16 29 .351 12 ,.....,. ......... Cl-1••'1.SHttlaS a..11 ....... i. Mltwwll• 1 N._ Yot1l 6, 9o\toll S Celllonllt 2. °"""' t Otlly..-s~ .... T ..... 't0-S it-. Cltr (Col-.. ~ Mtd Se41ttorft Ml et aa1tt~ IOl'l""99Y 4-2 MIS O. flr\ert\M r1•1l.1 Tues (,..,,..,~~ 111~ 4-41 at"""' Yen C"al..,_O.t et1C1 TOfftl S.21. 2 Ml~ IGo1t1 t-J and T?oon110d.,a Ml et 86\t°" ($411'11..,l.otne ..... °"°"°'·, Oalli.ntl (~h).ll atToninlo IOarvl116-tl,ft Seattla 1Mo11t..,. S.Jl et c;Mvtlalld lleQnloy ~)l,n C"'<llto llC1W1POS.OetMl""t11kH IH1n).tl.ft C..11t0tftla rr-•l·O al 0.lf'Oll ISIObtrtlS·SI. 1'114tnNY'S 0.l'llU Clll("9M Mllwaullet °"''-"""...,..., Area Girls Stand Out Swimmers Sparkle in CIF Prelims EASf LOS ANGELES 100 ,,... -t. ~ m T-> M '~·i· va· jo's Lisa t :s1.n 1c11<nwn11: i. Kr-!Mh· -...,.. on e , .... Y .... I t:St.St; l. A •• ,_ Hil~er and Nicole 1c-na-. ,_., 1:M.11: •· c.41111 K ramer along With (11tatt(lal 1:M .tt: S. Ketterman • I Bua11al ,:SS .U ; 6. Wolford El Tor 0. s Debbie (Mlrelest.>I l 'SS.42. Ottiars: 7. M. Pyykko established CIF Browna ICor'or>a dltl MMl 1:sus: '· ' L.. Gllba<1 IK11111. Betel>! 1'.S6.7t: IL meet records Tuesday Fr1..tmer11Sono-te11:s1.n. night in girl& Swimmlng ?00 Incl. Medin -I. John!011 • IWelnutl ,:OtAS; L Gfty IMlnlelt prehminaries at East v11i.1 i :t0.n: l. a1ro 1M•r .. ttta1 Los &-"eles College 1:H .tt: •· Godd3rd 15"""" Hlnt1 "&Iii • l :U .H ; s. lle01ard (VIII• Pitrll) Hilger posted 8 59.64 in 1:13.67; 6. UIUlftllft !Indio! 1:1J .... the 100 backstroke· 0tMrs:1.Dat11<u"1_.,ity12:14.,.; ' 11. HHC)ff IMIMIOI\ lllalol 2: 1S.4'. Kramer had a 4:54.19 in so'"" -, scm•• <HH w11'°"1 the soo freestyle· and U .14 ICIF .-di; ?. Ott ITuttlft) ' 14.00: J, Hinder.._.., lllldlol 24. It; •· Pyykko swam l :Sl.72 in e11rooy11• 1a 1a11d•••I u .u : 1. posting the ~ mark m ... ~ 1a1 T-1 tua: •· J91\at\· !IW'f ~ Marco91t•16. o.twn: J. the 3)0freesty e. Oaht IUfll~nltyltOl. Estancia's Tracey 100 11., -1. MccetMty CM1u1e111 Cook also bettered the YMl•I ff.ta: 2. RtynoldS IFoothlll) · tt.n:a.~1••WM.1e>t:•.'11 existing CIF standard in • •IMfl,., 1c..11,.,.,.., 1:00 .... , s. tbe 100 freestyle but o.-<M1r...-.1 •ito.74: '· a1atld INawtlQry Paf11l t :OO t . otflers· 12. J. placed second to Olym-••ow11a 1c.or-dll~r1 1 ·ou1. plan Jill Sterkel of 1001 ... -t.SWt<et1W11tanHHI Wilson High (Hacienda 50 •s icu• 'K'Wdl; a. c.-cam. clal Jt.O; S. a-lier Ill Terol SJ.SI; 4, wi-11ey tAvllllOnl \.t 11 S. l(att<?r,.... 1e.-.1 ~· o , 6. Rolltr1u1 1ve11..,. 0ir1111.,1S411. 500 lrM -1, Kr-IMlulo!I Yi. .. l 4:M." ICU•,_,.,. J. ,.,..,11110 (Cj Tfftl 4:1-4 ... ; >. A. artw11e CCaf'Ofta tlel M.wl 4:SUt; 4. Solc~r l!ounn~ Hlll\l S~ n ; S Bl&elt 'Alla Lon'IAI S:O:J.2'; 6. Brlll t>4lll1ltro JH!ol S:CM.oe. °'""'": •. ~y (Min ion Vi• IOI S:OS ••• 100 Dtcll -1. M119"' IMl•loll Yltltl ,.,M !Cl'° *"II 1. M. aro-CC•n11a 01 Marl 1:00 ti ; J, o•e11wald latttMltl 1:01.11 ; 4. .... ..._ IMIWcM Ylaltl l ·Ot.ll; S. Bauer I Buena I 1 :01.41: 6. Bird IMlralatlel I :01.0,. Other51 12 . Etlcll'°" IMIMlorl Vie lot I 04 It 100 Wtail -1. Hlndlra~~, C111C1lol 110t.oe; t. Jotomon !Walnut! 1·0t U : ). 811\by IReOoftdol 1'0' H ; • S.Yllrum 1°'*1t Hllll I Ot .0; S. Xeram~ IMl•l911 Yleltl I:"·"; 6. •r• ..... (Mlnltfl Vl•l•I l:lt.'7. Ot ... ,..: '· Wl'd IUnl,..t'\ltvl 1:11 .0. <IOO ''" rater -1, Mtui.. Yltlt '1'7.•: 1. si T-J:O.•; J. L8 Wiiton J •d ti; 4. I.Gt AHO\ l '4' tl: '· T"W~M Oall' J·41.U ; • T1nt111 J:47.7t, ()ther11 II. San Cle"'911tt J:50.». Heights). Sterkel bad another meet standard in the SO free. BB Gains Finals ''Of course. Laguna ls going to have to stop us, too," Sbogi adds. "We•ve been very hot lo the playof!a." " IO.mile Run Set Saturday The first annual Around the Bay ln May 10-mUe running race will take place this Saturdayi beginning at Corona de Mar Hlgh School. The event ls open to anyone from the ninth grade up and features 12 dlCf erent age brackets. Trophies wlll be awarded to the top three fioisher1 in each division. ReJl,straUon ls set f« 7 :30 Saturday momin1 at Corona del Mar Web with the race Ht to bello at 9. Approxlmat.ety 400 numen are expected to take part. · CdM will al.lo bold a Mb&loa vtejo's strong Dlablo. placed 13 swim· men ln Thursday nlcbt's finals here with Corona del Mar gettln.l six spots • E1tancia and El Toro each ~alned five with University grabbing four. summer run program 0 f every Tuesday nl1ht. beginning June 7 a& 8:80. Randy Weaver and Rowland High Randy Griest paced the RowlandHetght.s. Huntington Beach High ..... a.c11 n.u1 <Mu1 M1niu11 School boys gymnaatica v111111,..-1. or1eu <HI •.1: 1. a., .......... ,... *'""'"""" _,.Ml ..... 'V'-1• ,;fl a : I. llldlt l1Sl.'4; I. ••llMM l:•U1: 4. .... ~lllO 1·'6.57; S LI WllMn 1:S6 "; 6. 81Nfle l :S7.0l. oo.."' e. a.-.. Mar 11n•: 11. Untwnltr 1.at6.. Oilers, IF Wtewf CHlt.AS;J. Rundell IMlt .IS. team Into the C team "'-nH'dta-t.w.aver IHl t .tt; finals next Ulesday with t .Ht!*IMIMIU:3..0rlt•t IHIUS. • ..& "°'"met tion.e-1. Tl'IOrnton IH> a 143.7·141.6 victory over 1.1.s: t.Carholl IM\6.4:,. Hlrtc:ll <Ml Long' Beach Mlllikan s.es. HI h b ln e ' Herll'lllUl W -1. Wffwr IHI .... : 1 on t e w n rs 1.HanlM>us:i.Hop111'"1M1M. homo 60«1\aelday. Pw••• ..,,_.., er-11H 1 • ": t. Tb " l blp W...CH)U;1.Clrtl0fl (Ml7a. • CPamp ODS .. , ........ Hutlletty IMI 1.7'/ I. finals "'11 be a trl-meet ....., CHlt.AS: s. TMrl'lofl 1H111s. ltb ton.---.aed Lon5 •u~. w..awr CH> ... ..,,.., "II r ~ &. ....... (Ml 1 .. 1 a. CM1ton IMI Beach Wilson an ,..,. Edlson 'Gaiit • Ldnne Karaalk won two event.I •~ L1ari Wrl&bt placed li1 all four a.a the HWltlnitoo Beach Oilers atrls umnutJca t.eam advanced to the CIF tea"'-1emlfina11 Tuelday ni&ht with a IOT.OS.US.95 vtctQty owr visiting Su.bny Hllls H1£b ol Fullertoc. Tum actlon wUl continue Thurad&J aft.ern0_~ wt\h ~ Beach fad.Da Tbouand -.. f!dtaoo IOlll aiainst La H1bra'11>ooon. Edi.Ion .nu be theblamotearq ln Ill ma~ . CIFTenni1 Semis. ... • • • • • w • • ... ' I • .. ._, Wednesdc1y May 25, 1977 CAIL Y PILOT 83 UCI Enter Net Tourney Checking Out Area in Golf Soccer Tilt Set Tonight Bike Race on Tap ·' Three days of long dis lance bicycle r acing, featuring some or the top rid ers in the country, will take place over the Memorial Day weekend (May 28-30) at three locations io the area. The nnal day's com- petition wifi be a fouf-i man team time trialJ 20·mile race with the r oute passing through Santiago Canyon to El Toro. That begins at 7:30 um. ATHENS, Ga .-Curt Stalder. Je(f Williams. Mike EdJes and Ron McNamara will represent UC Irvine in the NCAA (Division 1) tennis championships this week, here. Acllon begins Thursday Stalder and Wifhams will play singles and also team to compete In the doubles tourney The quartet he lped UCI and coach Myron McNamara to the NCAA (Division Il ) cham. pionship last week at UC San Diego. MEIMOOU' uou"A•••CN Low Net T-1 •t Coti. M.w Goll C-,., A f'U811l-L FrH.11. Ouelh Ot.14-441; 1. 0 1 Miiier llt U-.c>I; >. ClltrlH K•uhn•tt 113 1s--.e1 a Fllgl'fl-1 ltt•I Wllll•"' WrlOl\f , ... 11_.,I -W•ll Pvtll IM-11-71; J Jolwl ....,.." lt~11-I; 4 o .. Tllorne (IM ..... I C Fllolll-1 ltltl Fred Rotll 114 20-661 Md Ho-#trd Huene~rdt 117·21-661; S. W•ll Sc11um•c11er <• 2t-71;'-Ol<k"-l'°'tt -111 O FllQllt-1 Ch••••• Rl<h.ardson 1•·1~1; 2. Al H•llv (91·7'-471. 3 lllt 1 Merlin llum.,,.1 19l·2• _.91, Wltllam a.llty lt4·2J-4tl .,.d Julien Ooblt "H.._..1. II. /'llQ!lt-1. IUtl 8yron l(lnsrnen 191·27-441 and Ruu l rel•nd 1'7·2'_..,I; 3. 010 ~ ltM9_..I; J WHiie"' LDlw'f l,._tt-101 WOMI! N'S GOLi' COSTAMl!SAGC (lu() Cllarno-•hlP: CtwlmPIOflllllP 1"119111 lli<oM I I F rtnll le Ollf\I ,,. 1 Hel..-si.1me ,... INtll I Merv :z1....,,....,..., D- Elu.l F119M 10-1-1 VI thel ... ,,. INt0-1 C.cMTft PffftWr t tt, l Fall~ 8roolls. tte- Second Fll9'11 IG••H J I NOttM C.redt. 2'0. (Neel-1 Clet.a Ot~. 110 , l"lty111, 9.,,,.,, 211 '"''o l'll9ftt IOroul-1 S•ncltt M<l'tfle11d, 301; 2. llltl J .. ~ Ped9e1t. VtY(M Gormley, ,.,01 Rou lOt Fourth 1'119111 IOroul-1 Cltlr" 8row,.1no. lO• (1011 1 N•n• D•nlel•on. 1U Ma leh "' Per Tourltt mtnl A Fhoht 1 Nsnn Tero.Ire, 1-11p 2 Htlen S111ma ewn, 1 l!lteen Wilton 1 Gown 4 Miry Zlmmtrman, 2 clOwn 8 FllONI I Fran Grol-li., 1 CIOwn! 2 CMo!yn ICllrMr, :J.de>wn, J Wano t Al\def'M>n, S.00...,. C FllQ,,1-1 l!llM SllOH, 1-clOWft 2 Jun Pt1rlck, 4-dOwn; 3. Vh1ltl\ Gorrnlev.~ o FllQlll-t Frlble CIWlomt11. 1. t down :J Clalre8'-n1r>0 4'-dl>111n e ... n Hein To1Hn•m•n• ... Fho,,1-1 ~v 0-Vev. '91~; I M•rv z,,,.,__ .... ). UleJ Ftan1L1e 0111\I F,_.L-li.u 8 Fll9fll-I N.,,..,,. Grildy, l6 l I' •1lyf1 8r-•. '.It'"' C Fh9"1-l. PM it.le. ~ '>. J Vt v••n Gotmlt\I. """· S J .. n P•t-•<• 412'' 0 Ft191>1 1 8e!fy Zt~l<K. •$ lllANCMOUN JOAOUIN GC Clul> C"'1mo40fl,Np CPl•mPlon\htp FlltM <Groul-1 J~••e Kroll, 111 INftl-1 ~E-\.2'1 Flr\I Fl•QM IGro\\J 1. E1l•en Yrectl>llr11. 1" Se<ond Fllont IOrou 1-t lou Wllltv. JOI INe0-1. Aow AotunM>n. 2,.. Tlllrd Fli91tt IGrou1-1. M•rvel 8rl9M, lit; INtl~I, Connie 8•1natt. , .. llllVtNE COAST CC E ••fl Hdltl To11rn•mel\t · A FllOflt-1. Ao!ot Slt191ot. :»; 2. Helen COSTA MESA llll~lty,JWr;l.~llV COfVI '.It' 8 flllQtlt-1 llltttv H•,,..r~ ,,., ) ltlel Jeri M lrlem• 8tfnl<• Moe<k.,.ti;• JNno·s~•e ~ C FllQ!tl-1 AM ()liOf\ 'I'' 7 H•len APCitl )}II> l J••n f eylor ""' D fltlQflt -1 """'"' Ste~n\ U•.., 7 l.,11 .. ~. », l. Marllyn Crel\ oon.n Nlnt 811""9 HOltS Taou....,,.•n• "' Fll911t-l £11Ubelll HOO',..,, )S 1 Dottle Fl•r. UV.; 1 Helen Al\lf'V »ll'i . 4 Ill-$191thl, U " Cl\Arl•,,.. HOllO•H'( l1\l'i 8 Fllgllt-1 (llel Merlyn Muth M•r<ll .. ~. ,., 3 Chrl\ Wlnto" .11ov,; 4. Marve Scllw1r1r, ~'"· ~ ErnnliN VelO.i, •· C FllQM-1. OVls Vt,.,,.,,,, JS, 7 Ill• I Jffft T•vlof'. Gtor9'• HUI'(, )tV.; .a. ttle) ... ttAIWllfl. Heltll ,,.._ °''·"""· 0 FllQlll-t. 8N l'rttbel'fl. )4. 2 Slllr1o Mr,9r, »: 3 Marv 8urtre. •· • Heten Mundy, :it'h; s Ml•llvn Cr•ndon. 39. FULLERTON The Phoenix Soccer Club of Anaheim will host a team rt-om Hanover, Germany in a match at Foun~in Valley Mlle Square Park tonight at 6 with the public invited to witness the action. Calendar ""'"°O (~y HI Gymnaillti-<IF llldiv1dual U" ""'' •1 HllftllriQIOn Beecll HIQ'I II pm I. Tt nnl\-UC lrvlrw at NCAA di U11l~r1llyof GMfgle C.lrl19'r-llc1-<:l l'Wt1!lltnal\ Glrlt 1wlrnmlr>Q-CI F finals •I Ed>! Lo\ AllQCtltt Colteoe 17 pm I Gins tcfll>all-CIP Playoffs ltirst -di. The first day's action 1s set for lrvme Park tn Orange is a m ) and features a 45·m1le racu with team!> of four nderi,. figuring m the overall scoring. A total or 100 cyclists will compete. A 62-mile road race «1l UC Irvine will be the t>ve nt the second day (May 29), beginning at 8 a.m. Award£ for the three· duy event will be held Monday morning <May 30 > at El Toro High at 10 :30. Top riders competin,!(. include Ron Skarin a(, Van Nuys and Joh~ Howard of Texas, both members or the u.s~ Olympic cycling team. SANTA ANA WESTMINSTER· SPECIAL.VALUES FOR TODAY THRU SUNDAY '2946 BRISTOL ST. 1530 S. HARBOR BLVD. 120 E. FIRST ST. AT CYPRESS PHONE: 547·7477 15221 BEACH BLVD. - PHONE: 893·8544 Se hob/a Espanol COMPARE AND SAVE AT PEP BOYS ••• TIRE SALE A78·13 'lUS Sl.72 P.E.T. '71·1' MIUH IUOCWAU 27 MONTH LIMITED WARRANTY*-;•-~~-+-E~~~rl $ WHITEWALLS SLIGHTLY HIGHER 160 IJ 'LUS i1 IS , ( ' RAISED WHITE LETTERS JIG WIDE -TUBELESS 30 MONTH LIMITED WARRANTY" •IJOCI LIMJTl!D ROAD HAZAftD ~ftRANTV• 11(011\M 6 llADIAl 'fYK INNUTUUS '°''~tWS& SO. OF SAN DIEGO FWY. PHONE: 870-0700 PHONE: 549·1533 OPEN MON. THRU FRI. 8 A.M.-9 P.M ./SAT. 8 A.M.-6 P.M./SUN. 9 A.M.·5 P.M. llS8T I lUCX TAPI llfO SlOT mlllDFW.at IAIMO DW. ~.e .. 1no • ST(HO INOICATOI • ~ IOOST 84'' • 'USH IUlTON IOCAl·DISTANCf SWITCH ._ • ADJUSl.Ul( SH.Ans • flTS MOST CAllS -- COAXIAL STEREO SPEAKERS . ::..;·=" 1_u8.sc.,8tctll•O ..... _... .. _ eJ\IO"WOOftt ·rc:.:r=~ ... ""'' • ..,. .. _&_ii oU for fo\t rn..,lh. Coty ondoc-ol ·::.L 98( EASY TO USE REF RIGERAIJ "12" I.AMMETER· Al HRNA !OR 2.0ll Plt£SSUllE 24aa 3.WATU TEMPEltATUltE ' POI ll80$T AMDICAM & FOIEION PMSENOflt CAltS. ALSO CA.WtltS, STATION WAOONS, UGHT TltUO:S ANO TltAllEltS. IOS KIT llCLllll llSTAUA TION :AVAIAlll 38!! PRESTONE WINDSHIELD WASHER :,:~:.~·p::.~~~:-~~~e.: 4 9c •ofe ••••bil1ty ,,. oll lund• of weother. QT, LOOK AT THESE GREAI ~ ENGINE CARE PRODUCT.Sa THE RACERS EDGE OIL TREATMENT mum protection llMIT • 97c •~aw91 97 vClfnlr,h & gum ( • Eosy to Use! • 13 OZ. SIZE : . ... . . ... ~ . Alainitos Golden West Athletes $11nset League Champions . · "l<'mhers of the Newport Ha rbor High SC'hool IC'nn1s t0am arc: f ront row (from IC'ft l : Ch11t·k Blc1ker. K evin Buckler . En·rl'I t C1·t'. Ted Dempsey and Mike I Gracia. Back row: Phil Dowty, Chris DeMott. Paul Hood, Jon Swedlund, Jeff Kuhn and Eric Smith. Deep Sea Fishing Rated Fair Laver ·Paces Win; Richar~ Drops UCLA Netters Edge Texas Racing Entries "'"' ""17:4h.I'!\. u EH<ta "l"t Ren. IS WUdllt •lfl, fltl elld fll\ II IOS "'"IT ltACW -3SO varch. 2 vH• old\. c 1.,,.,,.,.,., Puri~ \2000. Claiming price UOOO Frl•r 8 00 !Hartl JeU Pltl«n\ IWardl Flcl!el SOI• !Cterlss.t Gate Tripper 18'ook> I Went A CM"<• nc,.19'11 I }tebel Lynn CCarctoal ~bl~ Sour IWat~) Saucv Suerv !Adair) Elmer Go !Frtvl Give Em Time !Oelom~l 112 122 ttt tn in lit lit Sil COHO ltACI -110 v•rd\. 3 ve.r 01<1s & "°· C••lmlng. Pur" snoo. Clelm lf19 price 0500 snort Rocket lll""-m> 'Tl& To"9fl (Mvtn > Glddy's Rocket IClerlsw> TrU•lOfl Snip •Hut) Jolin'\ Rockot \Alllwnl Mortal Loo !Rou911) Mr, T19er R<ICl!et !Wiltsonl THI RD RACW -3SO yards 1 va.r old mal<lefls. Clalm1"9. Purse S1000. Cl•imln9 prict ssooo Wee M in Wiid fWard) Go Sullfeme IAd•1rl Joe Oette !Han l F•l<Ofl Jet (C"'.t91!rl A(e Hombre tKn191'oll Marv K1thrlne 10.lombal Fest Dee IMvoetl 119 '" 11• 122 122 11' "' Tint• Rocket ITrH sure I 1" G.• WMI A Culle <Dom1nvueL 1 119 Tidy Tors !Paullnel 11' FOUltTH RACE -400v•rds Jvtar olds. Flllleo.. c1atm lt19. Pu•u nsoo. c111m11'Q orlte s 10.000. Oa11.e °" IRouqfl) Born O•t1ter !KnlcJlll I Lelltbtme l~rdota> Bunny's 8unroy ITrH\ure ) Swl119 OnC..I IW•tsonl T•ll• a-11.1P11•m> C.o Wi.oom •Hi rt l SwHt Re1rut 10..lomtMI "'"™ llACl -JSO vard• ? vear oldt. C1a1ml119-Purse S2200. Cl1lmin9 Clf'lte SSOOO Libby's Nl9nt ;let40aVM IL1pn•m l \.011e To Go IAdalrl G,one AC>lrlito~ •Treasure! lo Oldue rwardl B•ave B'ow" Flasl\ IMy•et) Fovv F•ilto 1Wa1..onl Fast Repr•nt IC.Ill 111 112 121 119 112 112 112 SIXTH RACE -3SO yaros. l yta• olds & ue>. Cl•1mlt19. Purse U!OO. Clai ml119 l)r'•t• \4!00 Plead To Ruter IWardl !.unset ~11.-it Jet ICre..,erl Coo.1t1ty Umlt •Mllcl\ell) Charqe A Lot <Treasure I Ature One •Cteriss.I eavou Booql• •Her11 121 t?l "' 122 111 1n I 1' Boast Decisive Edge If there was a trophy for the best overall sports progra m between arch rivals Orange Coas t and Golden West colleges-GWC would have won i1 hands down this past school year. The two Coast Community College District schools met 14 times in 1916·11,in sports ranging from football to golf-and Golden West came away with a 10.3·1 record. The Rustlers toppled the Pirates three times each in water polo and baseball (with one tie > and also won the lone football and basketball meet· ings. The golf teams split a p air of CRAIG SHEFF matches, as did the volleyball teams. OCC woo the tennis match. ·So what does all this mean? To Golden West athletic director Fred Owens it means a greatdeaJ. "We've spent 11 years trying to establish our own image and this is in- dicative that we've finally turned the corner on Orange Coast. We won't be taking a back seat to them in any sport. I feel great about it," says Owens. • Owens is probably Golden West's biggest fan. "When we play Orange Coast. I don't care if it's badminton. I'm going to see it. It's always a bigger game when we play Coast , no matter what the sport. We're always concerned how we're going to do against Coast- and the r est of the staff feels the same way," says Owens. Since 1972 Golden Wes( has a 27·13·2 record in one·on·one battles with OCC. Before that the Pirates defeated GWC with regularity and still hold a 64·52·3 overall mark. But the way Golden West is going, don't look for that lead to last much longer. BUI Mulligan, who coached Sad· dleback College to the Ml~sloa Coo· fereace basketball title last season, could bave an even better dub ln 1977·78--wbat with a pair or Un1vent· ty or Idaho transfers. Craig Stahl (6· 1> and BUI McCam· mon (f·5) are Mulllgan•s latest recruits. Stahl was a starter much of the season ror the Vandals. Both starred at Palm Springs High two senonsago. MulUgan wl11 also welcome back three starters-guards Tim Shaw and Rich McElratb and forward Tim Knight. And guard Tlm Dunham (6·3) rrom San Clemente)aild center Ben Bacoq <t·6) from Laguna Beach figure promlnenUy In Saddleback's plans. And Rodney Mlller, a 5·9 guard who prepped al Cerri&os High, la awitddiig to Saddlebac~ from Cal State < Fullerton). Golden West baseball coach Fred Hoover has been signed as a scout for the Baltimore Orioles. He will be as- signed the Orange County area. "My job will be to work primarily as a recommending scout and I'll also have some special assignments. I plan on coaching at Golden West for a long time, but I want to be prepared when I finish coaching," says Hoover. Hoover happened to sign with Baltimore the same day his star catcher Dave Huppert did. It was not a coincidence since seven clubs were in the biddln~ for Huppert. SKIPPIN' AROUND: Willie Alexander, a 6-1 guard from Roosevelt High in Fresno who will play basketball for UC Irvine next fa ll, has long jumped 23-7% and triple jumped 47-11 .•. Vince Bfenek. an outfielder for Golden West, has signed a le tter of intent to attend Oral Roberts U. irf Tulsa. Fishing along the Or a nge Coa:-.l r<>moms fair to grod .. 1ccordsng to the lhrt'l' <t1 t·;1 l;indmg o pcratorl'I with ba~:-.. bonito ;ind -.11nH· h;ir. racuda reporll'd in thl' daily catch. PHOENIX -Corona de! Ma r resident Rod Laver d efeated Butc h Walts in men 's singles and teamed with Geoff Mas ters fo r a doubles nctory. leadin g San Diego to a 29-27 victor y o \ er Phoenix in World Tl' a m T t' n n is act i on Tuesday night. ported shaken up b y hos"pllal officials · ATHENS, Ga. -Top· seeded UCLA edged Tex- as 5-4 Tuesday to join three other teams ad· vancing to the semifinals of the NCAA team tennis c ha mpions hips at the Un iversity of Georgia. T •m•to Go 18rooksl NtwWorld llfpltaml Golet l~rdo1a1 Nlqlll SOfe<I IAdalrl '"-lliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii 1n 11• "We :.lurt1·d 1·.1te hmg s u m e v t' 1 I n \\ I .i 1 I c1 t Cataltn;; 1·;:irl~· in r\pnl lhi-.) 1·.11 .ind 1t has bN•n a long 11nw -.1nt'l' th:.i t h a ~ h a p p e n l' d , :1 spok1· ... m.m for D :1\, \ .., Lockl'f s~ud "W1· cnuld havl' a n·al good y1•ar 1f lh1:-. I) pt> nf fo,hmg kn•p:, lip .. But th1· hulk rd I 111• ca tchl·s on thl' h.tlt d.1\ hoats 01JC'ratmg d;nly ,,,j, of Davey·!',, Art·:-Land 1n g and D.inJ Wharf Sportfis hing. ha\'l' twen bass and bonito Occasional halibut m the 20-30-pound 1·..itt•gory arl' ;ilso being l.ik1 ·n with a 29-poundt•r 1-.1ughl off San Onofr,, lh1-.. \\ 1·<'k nn a boat oul o f D:1nJ Wharf All thr<'c· l:tnrl111g-. :in· Opl'rating dJtl,\' hJI! d .1) boats "1th .tll d.n :1nrl thrt•1• qu1.1rl\'r d..i) h11JL'> o p l' r a t 1 n g \\ 11 .-n pass<.·ngl'r lnJd!'i ..1r1· .rn1 pie. SANTA MONICA "n<) • h~ftt)Ut 'tl<1f"r ,,.. H1 I ) , Vt h .. ~AN 01£(;0 IMun1<10AI P•vr1 '1'1•1l 1•r• 1 ;' l , + ~· 1 : ~ ' . r ~ 1t'.1 J I fq' • '" 1' "t I r r1 I l l .... , lJ•• MUlt"A DEL RE Y 11•) r i. i J'°' 'I '"" tMPf RI Al 8(AC:H 10t1•H1'f!f1td 1'>1 ·1f\ s •M PEDRO •Po•h ,,, 0 ( •• 4n'llttr• 1 d 1 n t><1 \ t 1 1 t f(J Ii ~ f'\j' D4NA WHl>IH' b.-\ t 1r...-1n IA l h ,1 n111 '-E OOHOO t~ ''"'111•' '1 """In 1rdltr1'M-...,, ,,,,..,. .• cf'l~f SEAL 8 E4C>i Ill ·••U')+• '' M\f"• rru "' . ,,; 1 r ,.,.,,, 'K.I .a (. . .Hl(.0 0·" 'd"I\ hit l h ll+h11t Nl WPORT IO•••V \lO<k••I l• .tnf11tr' lbdrr-.uuttA 11b11 . .tnf()fli ( ,~,., LONG llEACH IOv.,.n'\ Wh•rfl 18 41'\Qler' ll r .1!lfn h 1 \ I'"·'' tJ11I 4 rod( coo l• Dlu~ tl.-l' Lavl'r defeated Walts 7-fl. and combined with ~l aslers to beat Walts and Ross Case 6-4 in doubles lli€'1aard• &ut P-:\R f S -R e n ee R1l'hards. who played in the l' S. cha mpions hips as a man, has withdrawn from the women's draw 1n the French Open ten- ni~ tournam ent afte r re- cen 1ng the results of a sex test administered by the Fre nch Oly mp ic team physician. .Hom Die• DEN \' ER The mother of heavyweight boxer Ron Lyle died ei.lr Iv todav after the fam1 lv ear 'Aas bro(\dsided b)· .mother vetucle \;ell1e Lylt>. ~8. died of multiple trnuma, said a " p o k t' s p e r s o n f o r a Oen v<·r hospital. Wilham Lyle, 63, the boxN s fathe r. and three 1)thN pass<>n~ers inC'l ud- 1ng L) le s sister were rt" Girls Softball T""rtcS<ty'\ G•l'llH CI F ~l•yolh 11'1"1110\l,.d) 4 A A '""P A"""" Cl)'ll,, •• •t ~'''"14 H .1~• f\~·vh 't ' ' ·~ "" f\ MAf,., On 1\.-'\h 4"4 J l A Nf'tf l 1 M1rttd• •t \..tn C.'•'"•"''" •) A"•""' l'T't"t U!"l1V.r\lt~ lrv1..,_.1 'l ? • H 11'\f "\l'"" VAltflV (I"!,.'' tn ,.,., wp,,rf AtMcn \ ttWalnut l ~ l'oung to SC DraU Young, an assis· t a nt coach a t O ra l Roberts University for the past thr.e<' years. will joi n So uth e rn California"s basketball staff. In Tuesday's other rain·pla gued quarte r · final play. Stanford de· fe ate d Cal. 5·1. SMU trounced Miami 5·0 and Trinity s que aked by use. s-4. SEVENTH llACE -uo y1rds. 3 vu r olos & ue> AllOW•nce Purse \1000 The Ronmoor Woman's Club Savanna~., IOomonquetl 114 °"'''•"Go 111artl 1 111 C.o Oeo•r Go •Watwn l 114 Jet CaPt~tn •L•lll'oaml t14 tC lot v'\ Orum 'Knoqlll I 11> Tn•ee He.ii• •Ot<•on'll:>dl 111 HI JC>nnnv tTreasu,e• 1n IE IGHTH RACE AOO vard\ j yur Los Al Results old\ (t l+m1,,_., Pw'"\C" \7100 Ctafminq or1te U OOO Tnt; C•ol:>dro Ski Club. llunnv\ Bar Bid IWal\0<11 '" 117 Rtsolvts R11<1uest IOe•omDal Joltl11' JM rwardl Stre~I n Straw rcarclou I Hut1break o<•d ITrea\ure) Sht(!ow'\ Suoreme •B•o<>kfl•ld I 112 112 Ul l'orTu~dn Cl-v. Tr~(~ l'••t l'IRST RACE -HO v6'0' J vt•' old'.\ uo ('d•"''"'q Pur\l•\1c;oo f,u Cuo•d 1Wa1...,...1 ~\ 00 o bO • •O DHRunn•nq >iot •"16nl 2 •0 1b0 1\0., C.o Fly1.,· •M•tci..111 T mt I~ "1 !'ii),,,..,,.....,.\ U Eu<I• -).Tr11 C111>ld & DM ·- ~·Run"'"'I Hot, N •d U S oo U E,.<I• J -Tru CU9•d & DH 7-h leGo l'IY•ft', N od "1 40. Tirn""-19" Nn ~ r•tc'°"'~ THIRD RACE -)IO Yard• ) vur 011, J. uo (.la1m•nq Pu,.,~ \11(1() ~Ir'\ j h \t qovqf'\l I 00 I 10 1 <() (ar,•er(ct\t'I 18roott\I 180 210 Jo 8urrf'\\ 1Wdrdi 1 IO T tTIJi 11 tt \rr•tc"«'d Otrnc• FOURTH RACE -400vard, lvur OICJ\ \VO (ltt1m1nq Pu~· uooo O~! Nt41 8ar f(4r00t4) Mr £ tl..lbo ._.&rt' El J.Ho fre•\urei r m• -10 10 No \rr.tt(i.\ 6 00 )61) 2110 JBO 2IO HO l'll'TM llACI -•00 yard\ l vhr <>Id\ & up Cl•lmln<J For llll•H attd "'•'"' Pur\f \.)lt'W) N•••• N aoc""'J r ()f)mlroqU" t l C"~"Q'" Fr"" fH•rtl Tim• -10 36 No \l r•lt ,.,.\ ~'° \00 )o() A 60 3 10 )61) SIXTH RACI -Wl ,,.,.,, 3 •it•r old\ All-•nc.• Pu"~ 51900 8IQ<tr>009" 10.lom~ P•I s Mr Jft -· •Ca<1to1•I J•I E<1u"01 'MvloU TIM•-" 11 H OO 11AO S6<l •. oo J 90 ''° !Kral~ -OyiKv l'•v•. Too f l..,! I08Ut U fuct•-IO·llcte"OWtll & •· lt•l't Mr Jt1 Meofe, tt•lflUM.00 SEVENTH RACE -350 v~rd• ' vtar o•d' A uo C•.t-UIOed altowanc fl Pu••e ~o!>OO Tfl~ Amb.t\wdo• MV•t\ I '' 60 B Ml •.20 A.dvanc., Solution 'L•oharn \ Ur\o'\GoGo •Adair I T1m1• 17 8.) No \trcttCt\f\ 6 •O • 20 ] 10 E t<;HTH llACE -870 urd\ l v~ar Old\ & UP Cla1mw1 Pu·•~ \1800 Z•o'\ No •Wat'°" l N 1 NTH RACIE -lSO y•rd•. 3 V•ar o•d• , ....... 1nq "''"'' nooo v 'all So., •TreHUro l I 1>0 A •0 J.6() C••bb\ Doubl~ Bio 1Wdl\on•) •O 1 l>O Crrma BM\ •.t.daorl l .90 T•me -te 11 Scrdt<hNI -Jeram•d Jon•s Cute 8ul Pun(l'oV lOtH Oeootlts U E ucta -•·G••" So" -<. Cl•ltO• 0-lllt 81•. paldUl.00 t.llend•nt• -s 932. Lee Marl• I Ad•'" I'm Nol Na1>1>1n9 •Lionaml Joh nny Mear-A1t1-.on l The Wlrard Of Id Cre.o9er) 111 111 Ill 11? 121 HIHTH ll&CE -AOO VMds 3 vur olds c1a1m1nq PurwS?IOO. C11lmln9 e>rice S'OOO S1,-ak•nqMoon IBrooll•I JeramlaJ~ tCalll Bound To~ 'W•honl OM Bo•dOuestlon 1c1er•swl Babn H""rvetta IMylts \ Tinv·s Olamo<Jlf rwardl Cute 8 ut Pun<hl• IOomln9ue11 Surqln Oe"'rao •Hartl Ce• CH Cristi IC•u~rl A••mltos Bob •Carcloral tt7 112 tit 111 I 11 111 Gaucho of Year Barbara Lem berg was selected Gaucho of the Year and Deana Carlson was chosen most im· proved player at a recent banquet honoring the S addleback College women's tennis team. CIF Badipinton ,,....,,-_., CM~lllP' !At~Cell•I 14 .... • !"l"l aeuHI Walsl'o tEdlsonl lost to Urquiru (Alla LOm•) .. 11 '" le<ond llout\d Ctt• !Mis.ion Vlelol def Ldnlhel 18rn> tf.1, 11·4 Rot>ertton (Laqun• 8HCPI\ Cltl S.l•s (Troy) ?·O. ti·?; v erv •s IS•nt e Monie•) d ef Mc Allltl•• !Munt 8••chl. W•ll •Etl•ncl•I def CArlnl IUplandl 12·10. " , Tlli ... ltoullCI C••• fMlsalOn Vl4!10l def Tef'.Dv• 19....,. Perk! lt·I, 11·1; aot>trtw n IL•9un• 8HClll def H•rt•es• 10..f· ,.,,, 11·1 11.J. var .. s ISenta Monica) def Well IE\lln<:i•) 11·1.1 1·1. '**" 11'1"1 llouotell 'OHtt·Grlmm !l'OUf\l~ln Velltyl def Stel,,·'l'Mlloflafl II.• Me br•l IS·'· 1st S.C:•ll~ Pool·deAnoelo IEslan(laJ def l.ubeOl·Hoore IAll1 t..omel IS·1, U·l : Oetn·OtllT!m IFttt. VlllfY I dH ARellt-Llttle (8aldwlt1 Perlll 15-7. U ·IO; ~otltrlson·T•v•or <1.•oun• Beecll) def Dye-Orall•m !Tro't'I 15-1, IS-10; Oevr~·~Pat'd <Mission v i .. lo) Clef Adltr·Cl'ou CSante Monie•) 1S·9, IS.2; Oot\e9ah·R.t11pp !Fount1lt1 Valley) dtf Olcklnson-Wlebold (IC•ll· nedv) 15-5. IS.7. Tiii rd "'""" P oo•·d•Anoe•o IEstanctal d•f Oun·Orlmm <Ftn. vatt~yl 1s.1. 15·4: ltoC>ertsoP\-Taytor IL"9. IHctol del Soto·Wllllams (Hoover> lt·IS, ''·H· OtVr1ts,Sllec>etd !Minion Vlt lol <lei CMOMAn·W•lt0t1 fMuir) IS·l1, ll·IS. U-0; 81Yan·Plf\Otl ILol AllO\l del 0oneoan-~eu111> !l'tn. Vall,v> 11·15. 1S.S. tS.11. / /'· ./ els t' ---gOu · Special Limited Edition Ford Granada California's best-selling car gets even better. New Limited Edition models are specially priced and specially equipped witnextras llke ••. • Flight benc;h seat • White 1Jdewelf tires • Vinyl roof ' More, much more • AM/FM 1tereo · J spec?allv priced Cadifomia'1 best-selling car. .SOuthem Califomia FordDealen .._ \ .. ) ,. FOOTBALL SIGN-UPS Jr. All American Youth Football Boys' Ages 8 thru 13 Years Old 18 BY DEC. 2. 1977) • FULL EQUIPMENT, TACKLE FOOTBALL EVERY BOY PLAYS IN EVERY GAME C.l.F. REFEREES FOR EVERY GAME BOYS LEARN THE BASIC FUNDAMENTALS OF THE PROPER WAY TO PLAY FOOTBALL • FOR INFORMATION ON SIGNING UP CALL THESE NUMIERS IN YOUR AREA: COSTA MESA -751~2855 FOUNTAIN VALLEY -531-7233 NEWPORT BEACH -675-1161/644-1210 SOUTH HUNT~ BEACH ~ 968-3051/536-0423 SOUTH COAST -&61-0758 . . - • r I Deadline for Intrepid ' SAN DIEGO (AP) -lntr~ptd twice captured the America's Cup and perhaps could do it again ir sbe can wln the race to gain financing for this sum- mer'atrialB. "This weekend is the deadline. Or. the latest would be the middle ot next week," said Gerry Driscoll, skipper of Intrepid. · Driscoll said Monday he has prevailed' on the owner of the 12-meter sloop, New York Maritime Academy, to postpone scratching Intrepid from the U.S. trialaofCNewport, R .I. "IT LOOKED GRIM, BUT we're still alive." said Driscoll, who has swune into high gear pn try- ing to locate a backer for Intrepid. Intrepid was languishing in a marioa in Hawaii when backers of another America's Cup contender, Ent~rprts~.'i acquired Intrepid as a stablemate to use m tesllRg Enterprise. With a raw crew and little more than surface repairs, Intrepid, was able to whip the sleek, new aluminum·hulled Enterprise in seven or 31 tuning races orr San Diego's Point Loma. * * * * * DRISCOLL, HOWEVER, ESl'IMATESil would coat $468,000 to modify Intrepid to meet present 12· meter rules. The biggest expense would be moving her winches from her hold to above decks. '"There are enough thmgs cooking that if we just had half a break , we'd pull it off," said Driscoll, who has meetings set up for later thls week with possible financial backers Intrepid s uccessfully defended the cup for the United States an 1967, her first year. and again in 1970. She nearly was the U.S. entrant in the 1974 trials, but l~l to Courageous 1n the last race on the final day. DRISCOLL BELIEVES INTREPID could show well this year, despite her wooden hull. but admits time 1s run01ng out. Modifications, if they are un· dertaken, will take five weeks. The U.S. boats will begin mformal trials in a few weeks. "The earlies t we can be there is July 1." said Driscoll, who noted that the tnals officially begin July 16. ''But we are very close. l'm optimistic," be said . * * * 'Lock Up Your Mothers' Aussie 'Oldsters' in America's Cup Race The America's Cup competition off Newport. R .l.. every three or four years is reputed to be a young man's game with the oldsters bemg relegated to the cockpit .. after guard" or financing the design, building and campaigning the 12· meter yachts. But a crew of Aussies plan on changing all that this year, according to an Associated Press dis· patch out of Sydney, Australia. A middle-aged crew of Aussies with a second hand yacht and the motto "Daughters of the American Revolution, lock up your mothers" emblazoned on their T shirts. are out to take the 1977 Cup challenge, accord mg to the report "WE'VE GOT THE BEST chance any Australian yacht has had in five challenges,'· said Gordon Ingate. 51, skipper or the Gretel ti Nicknamed ''Dad's Navy" after a British television series about a genatnc army u01t, Ingate and his agmg crew will be flying to the U.S. next month to race against the Swedes, the French and another Australian boat in the elimination series to pick a challenger . Their boat, s even.year old Gretel II and a new Australian challenger christened Australia, left aboard an American freighter for Newport, R.l., this week. ''PEOPLE MAKE JOKES ~BOUT the age of our crew, but we couldn't care less,'' said Jngate, one of Aus tralia's top ocean racing yachtsmen "The avt'ragc age 1s 39.7 and the oldest member 1s 54, but anyone· who underestimates us is in for a big surprise. We wouldn"t be going if we didn't have a good chance · · Australian challengers have only won two races from the Americans s ince the country's first challenge in 1962. One of these was Gretel II in 1970 against Bill Ficker in Intrepid. "SHE SHOULD HAVE WON three races. but wa!> disqualified once and one race was canceled due to fog when she was leading," said Jngate. "Bear in mind that s ince the challenge was started in 1851 the Americans have lost only seven out of about 140 races ... he added. The Gretel tr challenge, put together by a syn. d1cate of busmr~~men, yachts men and public funds raised by a rarnr of a $30.000 gold bar, will cost an {•stimatcd Sfi60 ,000 This 1s about half the cost of the other Australian challenge lwm~ mounted hy Western Australia real estate ma_gnatl' Alan Bond, who was humiliated 4·0 in his pn•\·1ous challenge with Southern Cross m 1974 . - AUSTRALIA, LIKE GRETEL II. wus designed for IJ~ht airs :ind 1s s:ud lo be extremely fast off the wind Bond. a pugn.1C'1ous former '\IJ;?n painter. '\l1ll claims he was rohbcd m 1974 · Courng1~ou:-.. the suc<'e!>sful dC'fC'nder in 1974 "'as drf1n11l'l y under\\ t11J!ht whc•n '>ht• bt·at us . anti as f:lr as rm ron1·1·rnl'd. lht• ,\merll·an'> are nnlv thf' caret akcrs of t h1• C'up, ··hf' -.aid Austral1i1 \\Ill be skippered by :\ol'I Robm~. Sprint Race Set Another da;. or sprin~ boat racing Wiii be held Monday al the Long Beach Manne Stadium. as th.- Southern Cahfnrnaa Speedboat Club 101ns forces with the Belmont Shore Lion~ of Long Beach for the "Club of Champions " ral'<' Hydroplam•.,, Jets, Crackerb<l'CC'\ and Flatbot toms compris<· lhP vur1ous cla5ses of boat racing which wlll vie for the honor of ~in~ No 1inthe29th annual Memori al Day Regatta. The fllstcst boats of the day will enter into the Grand Prix race lmmC'diately following the firs t heat of the day which will start at lO a.m. It's the most versatile vehlcle you'll ever own talion wagon. motort'lome. economy car. And, since f's mounted on a Toyota chassis the operating costs Niii be 1 fraction of what you might expect! ASLOWAS CHINOOK. s 12252 ,tr ....... t 1900 "°""" _........ "" ?2 _... Ot1llrred orlce (II ,.,, " ~ ll1>1nc;e c~ ID a i._ /\Piii 1i I 7' fl/ IOI• 1*11 D'!Oa 17&50 94 IMI-. .. & Pc OAC 9llt 16'16&et 111"'1806&811 Australian national Soling champion . He was crip· pied after a severe road smash but overcame the ~ifficulty so that he now walks with only a s light limp. THE YACHT WAS DESIGNED by Bob Miller and John Valentjin, both of whom formerly worked with American designers ' Both Australian ~yndicates are confident of beat· ing the Swedes and the French an the challenger elimination series which starts in August. The lc..1dcr'> of both syndicates believe the eliminations \\111 provide the pre·challenge com· pet1t1on that will allow the !>Ucccssful yacht to start on even terms .... 1th the Amencan defender . I Sears I Thi• Pa(lt· l .(f .. ,•11 ... Tliru ~t.y 28 FREE CHECK -UP Our Ir tttu 1·t "''"' h•n•t' "'tll 1n-.pr f't tu•"'"'· '"'"' lrunl rntf ,., ... ,.,, .. al ,,..,,,.tu ''h••U•I .. , ....... l jllld I ..... ,.,. ..... , ... ,. nt Thr\ ·11 If\ IU IAtf"h lh1)'f' lllM.111 fHnhl~n1' bf'te1(r thtt\ h· f"nnu• tu1 nu, .. t\,.,.p \nur, .,, rt•unrn1 •nlnoth hr.na ,, In ,,..,, ....... , ! f ... n ....... "''""" .. UO•I Prrf nrm .. 11r1• f,1•1 \ "'l"11r• 'lolor Tunt>·up , .. ,... ,, ... , """'"' l '''""'"'' n '"""'.""' n 1 tl1tul,., ?1t •1•1 _ ..... ,., , .... 34 C)t) W e on!ollll po1n 1 ~ rotor c o ndenser < t1amp1 Jn '-Patk pt , 1, "'''' dwell an<I 11m111g C )il /filh•r chan~t'. lu~~ ..... 11.?. t 69<) Wheel alignment lndud,.. ,,.111111 rr••l#t I R#~· fl l •1; r •mh#f .• n'd ln4' frnut rnd al1•nmr n1 and ''"" ""' ·~ .. '"'"' .uho•trnf'nt 897 " \hen r .,,, .. r rut llHt•I \"Jt",ff .,. ftt•tfr I.,. Last :l cla'\e-lo l'iH\'C on ~ upcr~ide XSS-70 lfl 111.,-ft ,.,.,,,, " ~ti fr •I df' \oo, 1• II l t' I f1 rlfti.: ,;il1l• .. h11ld , ... ,h f1111,. '·•·'" """'.'"'· ""•rn,. ~ Mr' I U IV • ~ t 11 • t ·hn"'r1 ~'rtpt HO ,,.,..,f .,,..rnu• "'•'· r111nt' .... ..... ... .... . ' ti.All ''"' au JI 1111 2 ",JI ll 111 :.a 2.'IO :IUIA 211.'i 1jM 100 :111H %.01 1'110 2.•11 4011'1 2..96 "·"' :1.11 1:1111 :I 01 .. \ ;,; :I.Sii rnAJI car radials 111.C~IO nul• '"'"'' "••rllut "arrenty. ~ ""' h•lt• 1•lu• •••li•I dnip. t=. ...... ........ ~-e.': ··~ • • -.:. A~k About Sun ConYf.nW-t\t Cttdlt Ptan" '~ • BOATING w.dnwfay, M!x 25, 1 en DAIL V PILOT •I Potcer Boat ~oMpetltioa Cook Maintains Lead Betty Cook, Newport Bacardi was Joe Ippolil-0 Beach's contributJon to of Hollywood, Fla .• drlv· offshore power boat rac-ing a ~oot. Cigarette ing, maintained her lead. hull. Fairview Park, Ohio. mlssed a checkpoint ore Bimini. Bad weather almost caused a race cancella- tion, but it was gotten away after a series ot postponements. Wood Hull Race Set Off Coast in the North American Championship points race despite having to abandon the Bacardi Trophy race out of Miami last Saturday with water pump pro- blems in her 38-foot Kaama. But Cook proved she has the stuff of which champions are made when she took her closest rival 's boat , Joel Halpern's Beep Beep in tow art er it had blown an engine in the rough water race. The two boats arrived back in Miami at 9 p.m ., about eight hours after the race start. THIRD PLACE went to Bob NoDdskog, Van Nuys, Jn his turbocharged 39-toot Cigarette, Powerboat M agailne Special. Nordskog took over third arter Sandy .s.atulla, Three of the boats declined to 6lart in the sloppy going and elgh\ f ai~d to finish. ·-e * Liodb<>rg * Rac<tlJef Clt1b Owners of wooden bulJ auxiliary saJlboutl will start from two widely separated locations on the coast June 4 and con· verage on a single finish line orr Sh.ip Rock at the Catalina Isthmus. The event is a fifth an· nual W ooden Hull Owners Association (WHOA> Ship Rock Race Cruise, open to all wooden hull yachts whether or not they are affiliated with yacht clubs. The El Segundo Buoy has been elected as the starting point for boats coming from the Santa Barbara to Marina del Rey and King Harbor WINNER OF the Bacardi race was Preston Henn, Hillsboro Beach, Fla., steering bis 38 foot Bertram 49er over the 194·mile course in three hours and three minutes for an average speed of 64.01 mph. Henn 's boat spun out about 10 times during the c rossing of the turbulent Gulf Stream. . . . in HUNTINGTON BEACH lb llC.H fEO TENNIS COURTS .. ~ INDOOR AACOUIET IAU. C OUHTS • S£PAAATI:: fACILlllUfOA MEN & WOMEN INC.:lUOES • E •UfC':IUI At>VIH • J.....,ultt •2·S1ury<..lubHou c '• 1'10 !>l'lop • Aripj1e1 Staop •I oci. .. ra • s .. uud • 4 .,rKhcc Lanes • Lounuu V1ew11111 Deck • He.tllh El.tr • Slll\ken Cen111t Court Wiit• ~u.a11ng Capac11y For~ • Jun101 Oevtlopment Progr..m . Call About Our Inexpensive Transferrable Memberships! ~ FDR INfORMAllON ~ ..... _.c, .. areas. · His victory pulled him Fo llowm~ the race ·within 17 points of Cook there will be a trophy who is leading the cam· presentation and party paign with 847 . CAU -0-• on the beach at Isthmus Co,·e (714) 8t.l-?7t.l Runner·UP rn th e ... 1-t •.-ar ~•«-1'?' dr-h .-r •tat1..d whh ~ !-if'ar. Olf'tlarA.. In (ad, •'"""' 19":0 m Qtt Ind• drhf'r' h••• •l•rt•d '"Ith Oidlud th•n "Ith uthcr i...11«7· . • . . •! J, Maintenance-free battery ... you never need to add water " .._._ .,,.._ :-;{ off Uca')'· dut~· ~hof'ks 4?.? .. Fth mn-.t Am~r;t"an • me.it tar", p1t Lupt. ~3 off StudyRidu •hMk ab&orbrn :IT~ 999 .. • 1t• mo•f A rnrri~•n • m11dt tat". pttl.up .. 15 off B00t•.r ~hock• .......... 2399pr f tU mon Arn.rit an • The Oitlfard-~.,.. ~ l>•llery Ir• e•rMd a r~u· talion for ~ptnd1ble •larling and lonit lift. Ch~ • ywn ln r11 tidt • ., top ltnnina!... ::iiu. for moot -\metl• <•n·m•M uno. o;..Herd b111eriff al#.o nailable ftt Volktwa~na. lllanne ~. OlhH ,..,. IZ·•oh ba11uir.o (m•i•leaat1ee·frer, t°" llt •tr add "•Irr) tl•rl H low·~ 19.99 with trad~·•ll SAVE '50! Standard Air Conditioners :;~~~~5 21995 "llmlinr U'f' laLo up little room. :S· •pttd (an. Atrur11r lhtnnottat. •...-onomy /\tr CA>ndi1io10',... Speed Control 7499 llold• ,.., al • •lracl7 paet on lr•rl ro•d or hlll~. ?:t·~ SAVE '1! 3-Way Crease Cun 599 fnr b11lk. dl•prr,.er or tarln~ o~ralloa. 11 .29 f..anrid1r_91k Aatomoll"t' N••,.d& i\IMI Availabll' At Srar11 Santa Ana And Upland on this 40,000 mile double steel belted radial in sets or' 4 ~.,.~ on einglr 1ire11 ind p•lrt, too! 1t11runted Cot •10.000 milf*. 2 tt~f'I belta 1nd 2 pol~ttter radii I plitt h"11• d1wip1le ho• and kee111ht •~•II E111 1i:ain•I thl' roatl for rf'>f'°"'lve h•n· dlrn1t anti long lir,. mal,.aae. Ttkf' ~d· .. anta~e of th~~ h1,; •n 1ng1d ·-_ .. -. t. "· ,. ... .... • . .. .. .. J ... a.-"""~ ~II •11 ~"'It llOt ~ •• rtetuttd 01 1 Cjle("I .... f~11U1, II •I tt its f'llVI_, Pl'lO /\ -.eie1 pW!CheM l'*'tll !lot rtd~ld '' Ill tataPllOll.tl ¥11W • I ! t DAILY PILOT WedneSday, May 25. 1977 Transit lbsk: Getting Message Aeross 1 ByTbeA~oclated Prna Memo to Secretary of Transportation Brock Adams from President Carter. "I sus~l'l that many of the t apid traru;at systems are grossly over-designed. We should insist on: A off-slr('et parking, U one AP Wl,..pholo .~1tSA Nominee I >1· H.olwrt A. Frosch. as- :-.oc 1<1lc <iirt•dor for applied o<'t'anogrnphy at the Woods 1 lole Otcano~raphic lnstitu· tion, Cape Cod, has beef\ no min CJ lNI b ~· President ('ar tcr lo hecome ad- minblralor of lh<' Nationa l \cronautic:~ and Space Ad- m an 1str.1t ion THE QUIET way streets., C. special bus lane:., 0 . surface rad-bus as preferable alternatives lo subways. In some urban areas, no (rail> construc- tion at all would be needed 1f A, B and C are required.·' IF PRESIDENT Carter's energy conservation program 1:. going to work. people in lhe larger cities are gomg to have lo b e en.ticed out or their automobiles and onto some form of mass transit. But Carter's energy message last rnonth stressed only the urgency of the urban problem: 1t offered no specific solutions. Adams is just beginnmg lo work Mo ver F rau d Probe S la t ed WASfUNGTON <AP> The Interstate Commerce Com mission is cracking down on some moving comp~nies sus- pected of overcharging American families by $20 million a year through fraudulent prac tices. ICC Chairman Dan O'Neal said many families moving from one state to another lose as much as $500 a trip because of "rip-off'' practices aimed at making the customer pay for a heavier load than he actually shipped. The ICC r egulates the rates charged by interstate shippers, and the biggest consideration 1s weight, although there are other charges for special packing on mass transu proposals to be presented to Congress next year. The only clue to the President·:. thinkmg 1s the memo above. <1 brief handwritten note to Adams dated March 21 IN IUS 1-;NEBG \' address. Carter said the nation must not continue to drift ulong, with three-quarters of its cars carry- ing only the driver, ··while our public transportation system continues to decline." He expressed confidence there will be a substantial shift toward public transportation as the price ol gasoline goei> up. He proposed a standby punitive tax that could raise the price of a gallon of gas by SO cents by the middle of the next decade if the public fails to heed his plt!a for energy con- :.ervat1on Even 1f Congress approves the t•onlrovers1al legis lation . Americans will need a Jot of con- vincing to curb automobile use They currently make 85 percent of their trips between cities by . car Only 11 percent of their trips are by air Buses. trains and ships account for less than 3 per cent SO~n: 53 PERC'F.NT of com muters in metropolitan area ~ drive to work in their cars; 21 percent are passengers. and only about 8 percent use buses, street- cars or subways. It will be up to Adams to pro- mote more effi cient mass transportation by making it an attractive alternative to the automob1l<' LINCOLN VERSAILLES HAS ARRIVED! Seldom has a new car been so warmly praised at its debut. Or enjoyed such enthusiastic press Engineering made ii happen And 1t couldn't have L.Ome at a better moment tor Californians and the sunbelt lifestyle We 1fiv1 te you to see nnd test-drive thP most 1noroughly e quipped. car I >canng the proud Lincoln name- plate. It 1s here now - riwaiting your pleasure' The new American luxury car in the trim, international size. An investment in engiheering. BUY OR LEASE AT THE SIGN OF THE CAT! i . Parrot Get• F a ce L i f t Remodeling has begun in the Blue Parrot lounge in South Coast Plaza Hotel, Costa Mesa, ac- cording lo Tom Hosea, general manager. Estimated cost for redecorating, enlarging the room and instaUing a disco unit is $65,000. The re- opening is scheduled for June 10. The lounge derives its name and theme from Humphrey Bogart's film "Casablanca," and the new design is intended to intensify the motif. The l~~~e will open at 11 :00 a .m: with disco operation~ 4:30 p .m. to 1:30 a.m . daily. A llergan List ed on Nt'SE Allefgan Pbarmaceuticafs. Inc .. Irvine, is now listed on the New York Stock Exchange. The company 1s a domestic and international corporation engaged m the development. manufac lure and sale of spec1ahzcd ophthalmic and dermatologic products Previously traded on the Over-the-Counter market Allergan has hsll'd 2.787.822 shares or com mon ~tock on lh<' big board lo O<.' lr:tded under th<.' ticker !'I~ mbol AGN In 1976, Allergan had !>ale!. of $43.9 million. compared \\1th $33 I million in 1975. Net income from continuing operation!. totaled $5.8 million. or S2 15 a sharC'. on 2.699.000 average shares, up from SJ m1ll1on, or Sl.17. on 2,502.000 average s hares the llrt'<'t>clin~ .\ t•ar S •l tla Paf111 D h,id"'d Smith lnternaltonal , Inc., directors have c1eclared a quarterly chvidend of 18 cents a common share. payable May 31 to shareholders of record May 16 It 1s a 38 percent increase over the previous quarterly d1v1dend of l3 cents a share. The Newport Beach company has reported re- venues from continuing operations for the first quarter of 1977 of $78,087,000, compared with $79.338,000 in 1976. Income from continuine opera- tions for the ftrst quarter of 1977 was $7,804,000. compared wtth '9,769,000 m 1976. Earnings per share from continuing operations for the first quarter of 1977 were 81 cents, compared with $1.14 '" 1976, and were based on increased shares out· standing compared to the 1976 period as a result of l ,083.8..'iO shares of common stock sold at the end of March 1976 ·"-~ord Pay• D lridfttd Directors of Amcord. Inc., have approved a re· gular quarterly cash dividend of 15 cents a share, payable July 1 to stockholders of record at the close ol business June 6 The Board also declared regular quarterly dividends of 37\i'J cents a share on the cumulative preferred stock and a dividend of $1.0125 a share on the preference stock series A. These are payable Aug. 1 lo shareholcfor~ of record :it the close of business June 6. T raw-I Ser11lc~ Opnu Baron Travel Service. has o~ned at 17962 Skypark Circle. Irvine. The service specializes in providing travel packages customized to meet the needs and budgets of business firms. groups and families. . Baron also provides around-the-clock ticket de· livery service to home or office and slide show orientation presentations to local businesses to familiarize travelers with customs in countries they will visit. Safari Reports Loan Extension Lion Country Stlfarl, Inc. Irvine, bu announced receipt of M extension of a previously reported agreement to extinguish It_, total indebtedness to principal bankers. T he amusement park was granted until May 31 to pay a balance of ll:i0,000. Lion Country paid $500.000 to the banks Jan. 14. in accordance wJth the agreement, and had until April 30 to pay a $200,000 balonce. or that amount, the company re- cently paid $50,000 plus an extension fee of $2,000. The .Patk Cs exploring alternatives to raise the rema1111U ~.000, b'fl there ls no assurance the debt WilJ. be exttnaulsbed by the new May 31 dead· line, a1pokwm~uld. t.Ai a retUlt of the cxten.,lon, the company has moved back the date of it.a annual meetlng uoUJ late July. A spttLnc dat.-wlll be ftMQwlctd. [ __ EN_E_RG_Y_J Adams :.ay:. Americans must begin preparing for the day when "the gas runs out" and they no longer ean freely drive their cars "IN THE NEXT four to eight years we have to basically bulld into the United States the idea of the alternative systems that arc more energy efficient, that will be evolving into the system we will have when oil and gas if they haven't run out completely wall not be cheap fuels that you can use with one person in Ont! automobile driving to work." he said. Adams said that 1n formulating an urban transit program, he is laking a broad look at where the nation's transportation systems will be 10, 20 and 30 years from now. In developing mass transit systems based on buses, sub- ways or commuter trains, he said. plans must be tailored "lo the various generution of cities we have ." FOR EXAMPLE, Los Angeles, which he called "a terrible pro- b I em," is d o min a ted by highways and automobiles. Adams said his department will test various people movers: automated cars on a fixed guideway that work something like a horizontal elevator "We want to see 1( they are light t•nough and effective enough that they can scatter ovt>r a broad .1rea 'We also wall see 1f we have to ~ct aside medians in the highway system for some type of very light and less expensive rail system," Adams said. DESPITE ~IASSIVE amounts t • t• of money pumped into m.i:.!\ transit systems in recent years, it has not put an end to mas:.1ve rush-hour traffic congestion. The num~r of mass transit riders has declined. In 1945, almost 19 hlll1on passengers rode puld1t.• transportation of one form or another. By 1970 that number had fallen lo 5.9 billion. a drop of about S percent a year In 1973, ridership rose for the first umc since the war. but only 1.4 Pt"r· cent. and transit ridership fell as a percentage of total trip::.. Most experts blame the decline on the automobile. BUT THE 14 million people• who ride public transportation t>very day give other reasons er rat1c and infrequent schedule::., old and dirty equipment a couldn't-care-less attitude of many clerks. conductors. dn\·er:-. and transit executives. Transportation expert::. :-.a~ at will take considerable federal mortey, combined with local funds. and clean. comfortable. efficient equipment to match tht• much higher s tandards enjoyed by commuters in Japan and many parts of EuropE' 'I AMC Pr('#ident Gerald C l\lt!ycrs. 49. has bc<'n clccLcd president and C'htl'f exccul1\'(' officer of American ~lolors Corp .. suc- C l1ed 1 n g William V . J .unc burg. who wsll res ign Ttu.•gday Economist: Housing Boom Due to Fade NEW YORK CA P> America':-. :-.ingle-fam1ly housing boom will begin to wane within the next two ycur'> as other t) pcs of construction begin to expand, a national bankers· convention has been told. Housing, and especially single family hous ing. 1s a notorious!)' cyclical building market" which "l~ p1 cally begin:. to fade once the rest of the economy heats up." said George A. Christie, chief economist of McGraw-Hill Jn formation Systems Company The National Association of Home Builders is forecasting 1 4 million single-family housin~ starts this year. up from 1.16 million in 1976 and surpassing th<' .. record of l 3 million starts in thf' prcrecession year of 1972 But Chnst1r, whose company 1!. a leading <.·ompiler of data on the construction business, said he <.'xpects the total to be only about 1.3 million this year. with a 100.000 to 200,000-unit drop irl 1978 O ver 1~h e Counlf\r MASO l istinq' 13 IJ~ Pa Ent~ \fa n, PnrlOG 1S IS>. P~trsn H 201 .. 20'9 P~lrollt 1•. 1''t P@tt•l>On 27• > 73'1. Pil'dmt A 1>.. a•. Pln-rtn "' 1•1 Pon H18 .C'• ...... Pl~tfhn qto 10·, Po\s•\ CP ~ rr· ~~nr~c 16'1) 1••·1 P 6 @n,.,.t •·~ •~\ Pu10 C..o IS'o 16'. 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PS i.J?d 1) t lAo-~ ;:;::.'-t:: I tft ftt;-~ e: t • Jtt isv. .... · wwos't 1 i4 20 -v. \~ J Gt £-~ w,. • r. • ~ :~ · '~ i5·ra'.IS i ·: [:: ·-~ :nq .. u:· ~ ~ .... ~!.="'~··· 1 ~14 IO ttt ~ W-MV!' .20 ate • Yt lit .. '° m t Yt WMl'I" U•.. Id t -14 \i.:i?J. ·'n; r~,~f! ·~·1,;,1· ~ ~i 1fl ' '"'l.L ..... ,,. ;ti; f7 tt • ~ '°' ll ,,,,_ .. .,,. uo 11 ~ ~ , .: .• ' n.,.:::~ =~'-= ... i ·~=:: :: ' ti i,~" ==~ J:1' .:-r.m-~ ~'.' 2, J:';!: =~". ., 1 ~"' , ~1" ft"';~ as..,,,.. ·; ; \::::: . .. I '* .. s, ... ~ .. ~ l "' 4 .. • .. ~ I I ' ~ ,,., U ~r--· .. ';u 'D ·::~ : •:n:• ~ ~E: , 1/N DAILY PILOT •l Sales on Sldds Vodka, Wines Dunk Whiskey By MILTON MOSKOWITZ Whisky drinking ls golng out of style 111 lhe Uhlled States. Thal trend, in motion for a number of years, accelerat· ed sharply during 1976. Figures compiled by the wine and spirit.a new&letter, Impact, show that whisky shipments ..dropped 7.5 percent 1 aat year, adding up to the worst y~ to-year loss ln the modern history of alcoholic beveragea. THE SIGNIFICANT DEVELOPMENT OF 1978 wu that all whlskr types -bourbons, Scotches, Canadians and blends -are an full retreat before the advances of what the industry calls "white goods:" vodka, rum, white wine. · Domestic blended whiskies -Imperial, Schenley Reserve, Corby's Reserve, Calvert Extra -have been declining in popularity since the end or World War 11. So their 9 percent decrease last year was not surprising. Sea· gram's 7 Crown still holds flrst place ln the ~ brand-by-brand stand-r i ngs, but Smirnoff .1 . ~ Money Tree vodka will pass it before the end of the decade. Bourbon sales had been holding up well un· til last year. Then they were clobbered. with shipments down 12 percent. Vodka ls far ahead of bourbon as the leader of the alcoholic parade. Impact estimates vodka's share of the distilled spirits market at 20 percent; bourbons have 15 percent. THE BOURBONS BUCKING THE TREND are. in- terestingly enough, the high-priced pr"mium brands - Wild Turkey and Jack Daniels <although Jack Daniels is technically not a bourbon but a Tennessee sour mash whisky). Sales of Jack Daniels were up 19 percent last year. Old Crow, once a top·selling brand, has lost a quarter of its sales over the past three years. First place in the bourbon segment still belongs to Jim Beam. Scotch sales, which soared during the 1950s and 1960s, have gone into reYerse. Shipments were down 5 percent last year. Here, too, the high-priced brands are doing well. Sales of Chivas Regal were up 21 percent. Meanwhile, shipments of bulk Sci>tch for botUing here declined 12 percent. The leader of the Scotch category continues to be J&B, closely followed by Cutty Sark and Dewar's -all premium-priced brands. Further proof, if any was needed, that whisky is on the skids came in the halt to the rising sales of Canadian whiskies. which are blends. They made up one of lhe strongest categories in the liquor market,. their sales having expanded by nearly 50 percent between 1970 nnd 1975. Last year shipments of Canadian whiskies were down 2 percent. The two leaders. Seagram VO and Canadian Club, were both down more than that. MORI AND MORE AMERICANS ARE ordering white wine instead of a martini as a cocktail. That's why gin ls not sharing in the gains made by other "white goods.'' Gin ship· rnenls werf down 4 percent last year. Vodka is outselling gin 2-to-1. And who orders a Manhattan any more? That's a cocktail with a lethal dose of whisky. The most buoyant or alcoholic beverages, from the sales standpoint, is rum. Its sales have more than doubled in the past decade and shipments were up 17 percent last year . Rum sales are half of gin's. The great beneficiary of the swing to rum is the Bacardi brand, selling more than 4 million cases a year and ranking No. 3 in the liquor industry behind 7 Crown and Smirnoff. Rally Bid Falters; Swcks Drop Again NEW YORK CAP> -Prices tumbled again in the stock market today after an early rally attempt failed to halt the sl.lde of the past four sessions. The Dow Jones average of 30 industrial stocks, up about two points in early trading, lost9.16 points to903.24. Losers outnumbered gainers by more than a 2·1 margin among New York Stock Exchange-listed issues. The Dow had fallen 29.51 points in four trading days, closing Tuesday at a 16·month low. Analysts said the market remained depressed by con- cern over inflation and rising interest rates. St~lalnT­ SpotUglat NEW YORI( IAPI. S..ltt. ' om. Of'IC" ana Ml c>w~ ol Ille IJflr~n most ecll,,. N~., vori. 'iloc~ E•cllanqc •~w~•. i;:~''Jf,,~'.'ona'.1~ al "']l~ ~n /ri."' + ·~ Sony Corp . . . 19'1,tOO .~ .. -,,.. Uni h i .. .. .. ••• . ttt . .00 t9't1 -\lo K m•rt .. . • 181.700 n v. -•;, P•lrlcll Pett.. .. 111.tOO IJ~ -2'4 ClevEllll . ... ••• 111.100 ll1'e ..... S11ew•v Sir...... 161.IOO .. ~ -"' Co"I 011.......... IU.700 33'• -1"e Oow Ch . ---·.. 1S4.800 JS -'l'I Am Homt.. ..... 1$4100 2S~ -IV. Fec!Hll Mtq...... 1Jl,'°° 1S--'I• r .. ~o Inc....... tSO.too "'"" -'I\ 1111 P•Dtt" .... ... • 14',800 Slllt -I'"" W•l't'ttl~r • • . • • .. 1'6,300 ""' -1'1 Ge11 Molon..... ll'l.500 .. lo\ -"" Due to late transmlsston today's llstlng wltl not appear Jn the Dally Piiot. NEW YOAIC (API· s.a~. 4 p.m. prke end ntt CllMQe of tM ten m<KI 4<11._. Amerlt.tn Stock E•tll4"99 Is~. 1r1dlt>CJ ,...lonotll'I' •I more 11\en 11. HouOllM ..... .,, t1MIO 4t~ -1"• Gl8M P't't .. , ., '6,800 IV. -'•• K lnAr11 (.!).. SJ, 100 2•1t • ''e A.ntr•I Oh ... .. '1MIO ""'° -'• Co11m•n .. • cl,200 Ulf• -'" ltUO•ll"'I ,., ••.• 41,000 IS~ -.,, Drewer Ltd...... •.JOO ll'Ai • 2 C.114mp Ho....... Jl.)00 ?14 -'Ito K-•-In..... tt,.00 nv. .. , , LAeltOftlf'IC • • • • • 21.900 u • v. What S•o~b Did NEW YORI( CAPI Prev. Today day '13 Cl\ ton 1ou 41' '" H U Hie IS 11 •s " Wt4AT AMSX 010 NEW YORK (API DowJones~ "erag~• NteJr(API FIMI Oow-.JoMt -.... ST H '--C ow' '° tlld .,r.r: ~ '°'·· S.~:= t .ti 20 Trft tAU't DU7 uo:i•-tM o ut1 11u1 m . lt0.14 110 . .io-o.t• 65 Stll JIO.tl ,12.J:t 1117.M JOl.34-U I ,,...,,., • ·········-············· 1,540,100 Tr• ••·••••••••••••••••••••• J11,. Ullts • • .. • .. • .. .. .. .. .. • • .. .. M6.200 6S St-......... ,. • • .. .. • • • • .. . • • 2 • .U.>06 .. 5~9! SPECIAL "LAVORIS" "SHASTA" DRINKS REG. & DIET Asstrte• nnon ~i:tBn.oo ...... 1================;~~* PLASTIC STRIPS or SHEER STRIPS OPEN 9:00 AM TO 9:30 PM MON. THRU SAT. 9:00 AM TO 7:00 PM SUNDAY MIHT ., UMON/OUNGE Relieves acid indigestion. 100 TABLETS or 50 URGE or 30 All WIDE 6 FT. STEEL WALL WADING POOL INTIRMATIC 12 oz. UQUID 119 U. • Unit11ed construction One continuous piece of "TIME-ALL" !~~~~~~~ Dura· Vinyl coping. #615 THfRAPIVTIC , -r ' With 11" BORE Rugged & O u rabl~ pla stic 10.88 Cordless, plugs directly into wall outlet. KERI LOTION FOR (!1J\ DRY SKIN CARE Helps restore natural beauty & softness to your body. I ~ii:ml •======================• • * hose. lle1. & Smted 3 49 13 oz. • El r1 ·. ·· 1 : r n 0 i· , ,,.,., I 'I ..., ,..J • I C..AAt • I PJ6260 2.99 BOAT WITH WATER GUN ~ Two air chambers with salety valves -•416 the Soap FACTORY by Down "LILT" STYLE KIT JjHA«' The home ~ permanent for r 6.88 MA200·64 5.99 U pen~u ol hou1d btJuly aid'). Hold:; up to 16oz 2 99 •310104 • AlMH FOLDING ,~~:~~ Camp Cot Made ol heavy vinyl. 24x 72" , , #2~ ........... ~ :=======: Beach Chair 14.88 ADJUSTABLE WROUGHT IRON 71/2 fT. UMBRELLA Vinyl cover with Plant Stand :T· H r:h . f1h b l•R" 111t .,,,, 2.99 ~~--. , . . . .... fl l1 Count Vasya n VODKA . GIL 6.89 lj Foster Creek BOURBON WHISKEY 6 YR. OlD ~ t, GAL. 8.29 MacKinnon's SCOTC~,Cll 8_59 ~ _______ 11 Samuel E. Webster n 4 A I x l S 1 r .1 I 1" 1 t h 5.88 ~E~~ss & SANDALS c lir1t11 S lavPr ~ole w1'h .10¥1 strap lint>d .... 1111 S•J~dPd. Sll!"i S- M lL ~l CONTAC 12-HOUR COlO CAPSUlES WHISKEY 39 r ,-~ I. GAL 7. u \!) -; ..... C-an-a-di-an-Re-s-er-ve-n CONTAC WHISKY u 1 1 ~Al. 8 • 6 9 ~ _ -::::;: ~IN Alll° Of f'\'POQlll.toPHlCAl ll'lllOll Ml-~ C::::. =::r::::;;.tolll;;:;T;::lllA=OIE:Pllt=ICl=S =Wll=I. l=E ='" ="':::(C=T ;; • • _/::;j .,..,.. ........ (: I ~> GIRlS & lADl£S ~Swim Caps • ... > Ao;sorlmenl of llor.tl trrmmf!'d tJPS 1n var1ou~ des1gnc; & color-; 1.49u. REYNOl.DS BROWN-IN-BAG 3-PIEa BAR-B-O 'sn lay FOLEY ~J/!111. Fork, 1 uroer 1J1!1t1J & Tongs with , , fong WOOd handles for safer barbecuing. 1141 3.29 Great combo lor outdoor activ1ties . lightweight 22 88 & rustprool. #7711/8506 • -THERMOS f~~~\, 1 Gal. JUG with mil SHOULDER POURING SPOUT ~ Steel-piastre cased. Keeps ~ ;::.. l beverages cold all day long. 3 9 9 __ ;.._....; # 1143 • Swim Ring 74" Woody Woodpecker 11226 20" Swim Ring or 24" Vinyl Beach Ball 0 sac 79~. fl) Is~~ SPECIAL a Rqlsterd P~naclst ls 11 htf te sem ,. 1 dlJ$ I wttl. '~ SAV-ON Pbanudsts Are: . ' • COUITtOIS • IHICATO -'--·• •AC~T£ CRUEX a...,, ..... {i1 For jock lldl .!-.J.19 color treated hJir "LMrr P~~ button or 1 g 9 " " Milk wm. 'IL----FOLDING • CA. Camp Chair :======;: INSUlATID lb10x6" Thermo Bag ARRID XX . EXTRA DRY ROU-ON ANTI- • PERSPrRANT. . I.So~ age "PRELL" s..AMPoos Concentrate 5 or. or l1qu1d 11 oz. -~~SPECIAL CHRIS' & PITTS BAR-B-0 Sauce KODAK "TRIMLITE" lnstamatic 18 CAMEU OUTR1' Easy 4rop·io lo:tdin1. accepts ~ ftipftash. By BARBARA GIUS.BOWEN Of lM o.i1r ...... SIMI As ir cherry vanilla, strawberry, chocolate fudge, lemon chj(fon, caramel pecan and even prune flavors weren't enough, the dairy industry has round another way lo make a yogurt fan out or you. Just in time for summer's slurpers comes the soft.frozen yogurt dessert, aerated for dis- pensing through soft-serve ice cream machines. The machines are cropping up everywhere -ln ref'taurants, delis, markets and bakeries - even in ice cream parlours, where it competes for acoops with product.IS 10 times as caloric. Armin Wittenbere. president of Yogurt MarkeUne CoiP. of Los Angeles, a company that distributes and licenses tabletop soft-serve dis· pensers, says more th30 400 machines have been put into operation in Southern Cautomia by his firm alone, "and y;e're backloggeCi on another 81()() ••• Why all the enterprising hullabaloo? Well, as one taster quipped, "Somebody's finally found a way to sin that docsn 't show." LOCAL UCENSEES claim frozen yogurt to be the nutntionally conscientious man's answer t.o the old Frosti·Freeze soflie. And it very well could be, or a nulritior1al fraud. Wittenberg admits, "I don't think anybody but the dairies really knows what's in the stuff. T he truth is there aren't any standards because the industry's too young. "All I know is that they (brand names) aJt contain sugar and if lhey say they don 't, they're lying." Taste-wise, say new fans, frozen yogurt is a little like ice cream, and sometimes, it's a Jittle like sherbet, varying in flavor and the degree of yogurty tartness according to manufacturer. As a dessert, it isn't particularly neW' to the country, just to California. In 1972, a Boston health food store called upon a local dairy to pro- duce a dessert that would appeal to its college. age clienlele. The result was frozen yogurt and students are reportedly still going to Harvard Square for more of it. Regular flavored and non.flavored yogurt has been big out here. Some yogurt eaters say they were content with it as a dessert before soft· frozen appeared on the scene. Last year, according to the California Dairy Council, Californians spooned up more than 13,454,000 million gallons of the non-frozen varie- ty. clearly indicating a marketable enthusiasm for the new stuff. In 1970, Knudsen's introduced fruit-flavored yogurt "pushups" to supermarket frozen food displays and last year, yogurt "sundaes." Although the consistency of these products falls somewhere between sort ice cream and a gelatinous sherbet, they are considered by the dairy industry lo be ''hard-frozen " yogurt desserts. "Soft-frozen" yogurt has only been around since January. That was when a state law gov- erning the sale of frozen milk products was amended to allow dairies lo sell soft-frozen yogurt mix to licensed soft.serve operators. THE LAW simply states that an ingredient list and nutritional breakdown be "conspicuous- ly displayed" where the dessert is served. Mav licensees have found the easiest way to do that is through informational brochures. The breakdown of most shows dietetic terror only where carbohydrates are concerned, specifically the result of the sugar content Wit· tenbers pointed out. Soft-frozen yogurt desserts are sweeter than fl avored frwt yogurt cups. So, in order lo get from soft·serve the nutrients a normal 8-ounce serving of regular yogurt would provide. you'd have to consume about 60 grams of carbohydrates. Eight ounces of regular, low.fat, flavo red yogurt contains about 250 calories. 7 grams of protein. 5 fat ~rams and 25 carbohydrate grams (These are approxi m at1ons Nutrient equivalents will varyaccordmgtomanufacturer. I turer.) BEA ANDERSON, Editor BARBARA GIUS.BOWEN, Food Edffor Wedneeday, May 25, 1m C1 Eight ounces of soft-frozen yogurt would provide essentially the same amounts of protean and fat; about 50 more calories and more than twice the carbohydrate grams. So, cup for cup, it remains a "dessert.,. The fact that the frozen yogurt dessert con· tains 1 /10th the amount or calories as ice cream 1s because it is made from nonfat, and some low· fat milk, so that the end product contains not more than 2 percent butler fat. Ice cream speaks for itself. "There are a Jot of people out there who like ice cream but don't want the calories of ice cream," says Rich Sigrist, owner or the Great Pacific Yogurt Co. on Bal boa Island, one of three "yogurt par Jou rs" he plans to open in the county by summer. Sigrist's chain sells a sort-serve formula that Johnston's, the manufacturer, bills as "the ice cream alternative." Flavors offered at the present time include chocolate, strawberry, vanilla and lemon. Hard· Jy 31. But a Jot more promising in taste than something made from cultured skim milk ought to be. The mixture contains two, and sometimes three, sets of "friendly" bacteria: lactobacillus acidophillus, bulgaricus and streptococcus thermophilus. YOGURT is actually one of the oldest dairy products going, developed 5,000 years ago by • ~ . ---... -.. ~·------~-- people hVlng in the humid Middle East who fermented milk as a means of preserving it. Modern commercial yogurt is made from non-fat and low.fat cow's milk with added milk solids. It is pasteurized and homogenized; a yogurt culture 1s added and the milk is held at 112-115 degrees F. to allow the culture to grow and convert the milk sugar to lactic acid. This re- sults in the thickened, custard-like mixture we know as yogurt or cultured milk. Flavors are added prior to packaging, as is sweetening, whether it be sucrose, fructose or honey. There is no commercial brand of yogurt made with an artificial sweetener, according to CDC. Cup for cup, plain yogurt has the exact same nutrients as milk. Both rank among the most im· portant sources for protein, calcium and riboflavin (82). Added flavoring adds calories, but protein and fat levels r emain the same. Yogurt lovers who make their own at home have reported making frozen yogurt desserts as well, with varying degrees of success. You can make frozen yogurt yourself: however it will be of a different consistency than either the soft-frozen kind or the packaged yogurt desserts found in supermarkets. You need a Dairy Queen-type of dispenser to aerate the yogurt lo a soft-frozen consistency. A suitable substitute might be a flavored, homemade yogurt frozen in ic~ cube trays. re· whipped in a blender or food processor. then re· frozen for a short time before serviog. Fancy this: A cone filled with yogurt, swirled Dairy-Queen style, that's clearly as fun to slurp as ice cream. Just ask Nicole Sigrist, S. a convert to this summer's newest 'better than junk' food. Some soft-frozen yogurt dispensers, like the one shown in the bottom photo, feature marbled. mixed flavors. Yogurt also comes frozen in a variety of other ways, such as in popsicles, sundaes and pushups, available in supermarkets. At Taste Laboratory, Guests Paid to Gripe ........... By CHARLF.s CHAMBERLAIN ClllCAGO CAP> -Roy Roberts served coffee at his place and paid people $2 a cup to drink it. And he threw a French try party for 400 kids and their parents. paying each family $12 for coming. When Roberts wants to invite people to bis Home Arts Guild Research Center be selects specific groups from a file of 5,000 families. They may eat new and unusual kinds of food , use all dif- ferent kinds of products from car wax to bubble gum, and select the most attractive packages from the shelves of a miniature supermarket. All Roberts asks in return are their ratings of the products, reasons and suggestions. He sellJ their .answers to the manufac- turers. Cllfl'Yinl on a f amlly business started 50 years ago, Roberts, 49, runs a testlng ground on · the 29th noor of a Chicago skyscraper, where there are secret rooms with one-way windows, a big kitchen, a television room showing only commercials, and a battery of researehen keeping tabs on react.ions. Roberts bu, about 300 projects a year. The tests are performed and tabulated by the research company's own staff with a report i.lsued to the client. COFFEE DJUNDaS are tasting two brands a coffee com- pany ls~ to bave evaluated. Tbe French fry eaters are judg· Ing whether a new -1Woduct is as &ood as the bJneat liPeller of a fa.al-food chath. One larae agency used Roberta' TV theater to test children's reacUon.s to commercials for a mulUmlUion-dollar account.. ) gasoline cans. And a group choosing the most attractive of ball a dozen styles of a new portable TV set yet to be produced. ·'One or our big breaks in consumer research came through a blind taste test for a margarine producer 10 years ago," recalled Roberts. "He knew he had hit it good when they couldn't tell his product from butter.'' Roberts said one of bls most humorous surveys was the test· ing done for a mattress manufacturer. He put the mattresses on 10 beds and bad people jump up and down on them. .. Among things that went over with a thud were a bulky home vacuum cleaner that made its qwn bags, a grooved spoon for twisting spaghetti to bite size, and a convertJble bra with dif. fttent detachable front coverings,•• he said. ..111EN THERE was a popcorn company that was disap. pointed in the reaction or several hundred kids and their parents to garlic flavoring "he added. "In one of our better surveys 18.st summer. interviewers were sent to tennis courts and clubs all over the Cblcago area.•• Roberts said. "We wanted to see what percentage of people could not open tennis ball cans. Each player was handed a can and told be or sbe could keep it if they could open It. More than 2,000 won free tennis ' balls that way. Those that could nol be opened were sent back lb the laboratoey for examination, with results passed on to the manufacturer." Roberta said his father handled the tesUng on what probably was the worst product the firm hH ever evaluated. Bill Howard, 12, was one of 400 kids who taste tested trench fries in Chicago product test lab. Reee:ntly. a dozen women aat at a table eating a new self· baali.q turkey routed in Roberts' kitchen. Account executives watched the women throuJb a one-way window and listened as hidden microphones picked up their discussion about the turkey. "A group came in to l@slsome new soup," ho said. "lt'Was so bad that no one ate. My father had n lot left, so he informed a source on lkld row lo bring ln a bunch of hungry bums to eat it. They threw the bowls of soup down the stairs. The 50-year old research center reports consumer reactions to food manufacturers. There also have beea panels ot docton and nunea reacttna to .new holpltalequlpment. And 100 kids trytn1 to removo UPI from "My father's report to the manufacturer was: 1Your soup ls so bad even bu ma woo 'teat U. • .. • .. .... j OAILYPILOT Wednesday. May 25. 1977 Leaving Bad Taste in Mouth (Ann Landers ~ . . .. • ~· DEAR ANN: Oh Yuck ! Not only do you de~ fend the practice of ask ing for a "taste" from the plate o! a fellow d iner, you make those of us who do not agree sound Uke anti-social creeps. I wrote this poem for you : ODE TO THE EPPIE-CUREAN There's a habit that I hate : Swiping m orsels off the plate By friendly folks who only want to share Their streptococci, m y eclair. "Glmmeataste ,gimmealick." Those gregarious people sure are quick ! I've barely t ime to thank the Lord - My lunch becomes their smorgasbord, . If t.hetre so happy. so well adjusted, The kind of people to be trusted, How come they always seem to feel T here's something special about m y meal? -TAKE THE WHOLE THING IN COLORADO DEAR TAXE: Your meter ls a UttJe off, but the Jdea ls what counts. I confess I r eceived a Jot more Oak on this subject than I expected. Here's another ooe : Weddings ~ and Engagements To avoid disappointment. prospect i,·e hr1de-; are re minded to have their "edding ll tories \\1th black a nd white glossy photoJ!ra ph'> to thf' Daily Pi lot People De pa rtment one "eek before the "cdding. P1 c11111·-; n ·<·P1\1•cl .ift.'1 th.it t1mt• "111 not lw ll'Pd hu 1•11g.tJ.!l'ml•nt .ennounu mf'nh 11 1 ... 1rnp1·r.1t1\I• th:il th,· ... ton ""'" aC'com p.Jlla•d ll\ .• hl.11'1.. JIHI \\ httf' ..:Jo ..... ) Pl< tun·. lw '.'.1thm1111·d '" "'"'''"' or morl' IH"fo1 « th1· \U•dd1ng cliilt•. othf'r\\ l'>t' 1t "111 11111 l>l' puhh'>h<'d Tn ht•lp fill n•qwr«mt•nt.., on :!••th \.\t'd- dini.: anrl ('rlJ!agemcnt '.'.tone~. form" Jre .1\ ailahlc m all Daily Pilot offices. Fur- lh<'r qut•lllions will be ans wered by People IX>parlm<'nl staff mem ber~ at 642·4321. White's LA-Z-BOY HCUHDS • SONTTIS •WALL H CUHBS HUNDRED TO CHOOSE FROM IMMEDIATE FREE DBJVERY • ·Sale Ends May31 , 19n .....__-=----~ COSTA.MESA . MISSION VIEJO foff4...-yfltryl tMtt ---""· tw.lllodr ...... 9f Mft.._ ... P!11t ..... . .,.., 495-5902 .Mon. tl\Ur .... 10-6, l69 1.17th .... .• ...,..,....., ...,_ T-6 111el It I 4 __ • ..., •• _..., 642-1657 . Mon.• Thu'9. 1 o.t Frt. 10.7 let. 10.S ,--------------------------------------' DEAR ANN LAN DE RS: So you think it's a sign of affecllon to ask for a taste of someone's food ? You further believe 1t 's a sign of generosity to give a taste. Well, 1 resent being asked and I know why. When I was a very young child I had no rights whatsoever . I came from a large family and physical s pace and personal privacy were not available to me. Only when I left ho me did I enjoy having space and objects that were my very o~~· These privileges mean a great deal lo me. Thts 1s why I resent it when someone asks for a taste. 1 feel they are encroaching on my property. 1 wouldn't dream of asking for a taste of food from someone else's p late. I am aware that they mav have had to tiRht for their "verv own oiate.' · the way I had to fight for mine. -DILLY DOLLY OF DAYTON DEAR DOLLY: Little dJd I realize that this tasting business was going to end up with poetry and case histories. But I thank you ALL for writ· ing. DEAR ANN LANDERS: I don't know quite how to say this but 1 hope you will reword the language and make it fit for the paper. A friend of mine who:.e husband owns a health food s tore told m e that sex is good for a person if he or she wants to lose weight. She s aid e very sex act burns up 100 calories. True or false? -COULD LOSE TEN POUNDS. DEAR COULD: Any physical activity that r~ulrn exertion burns up calories. I wouldn't put a number on it, since some people are less energetic than otbera. But there Is some truth in the st ate ment. CONFIDENTlAL to Must Know if It's Worth $12.50 : Yes, the book "You Can Fight Cancer and Win," by Jane Brody, is we ll worth the money - written in language everyone can understand. It w HI s ave many Ii ves. Maybe yours. Confused about w hat's right and what's w_rong in today's "new morality"? You're not .l alone . If you want honest, down-to-earth in-- formallon on your sex questions. read Ann Lan- ders' new booklet. "Hig h School Sex and How to Deal With It A Guide for Teens and Their Parents.'' Send 50 cents in coin plus a Ion~. stamoed. self-addressed e nvelope to Ann Landers, P .O. Box 11995, Chica.l(o. lli. 606.u. Cinderella Hits Jackpot Co upo n r-------~~--, WICKER By JU DITH OLSON Of the O•oly Ptl~ SIMI ··win a S500 wardrobe free , .. t h<' adver tise· said. A nl'w boutique was opening in port Beach and wa nted to call attention to I S . F iv<' hundred dollars worth of clothes. Any wom a n could go for tha t But when Nancy Donal, 22, of Huntington Beach. got the call saying she had won she didn't believe 1t. Whe n ~· reporter called her shortly after to set up an interview she said. "I don't know 1f th<'y'rc <th<' stor e personnel> real and I don't kno\\ 1f ~ou ·re real." · T \.\o days later . as s he was standing in the store sur \'eying the ml'rchandise. she admitted shl' still \\asn l con\'1 nccd it was true. Even as ~he tried on oulf1t aflt'r outfit, she muttered, "I haven ·t "a lkcd out the door with the clothes \et .. · But by th<• following day, with part of her S500 "spent ... Miss Donal finally was convin ced the ~1vt'away was not a joke. 'the salesclerks and store owner, Jack Ryan, had been specul ating for d ays as to what kind of person would win, and when Miss Donal was Nancy Donal gets help choosing outfits from Anne Milecki at new boutique. Miss Donal won $500 worth of garments in the store 's grand opeping contest. She lives in Huntington Beach. OLD-l'ASlllOXZD GIFTS OP I oaais TASTZ FOR DAii ON FATHER'S DAY. JUNE 19th. GIVE A FOOO GIFT PAK FROM fi ickory fcanns Df tHt/O• Texal lprad UM the Lone Star St.ttt Cf\lo fll1 lo bit IA.,,.., Md •ltoftcllcle. o.dl "'1fh lw-ll'Wt •pptlll• Md ditcr1nMal ...... wtll 111)oy: I I\. IEEF STICK Sumnm s._.., foflld M ... t ~. ~ lty llu. Colldo, klW Fltvr. U.m Seidl 1114 S'"'"'°"'Y llotlllom. SIS.ff __ .,_ MANY MOM FAllER'S DAY OFT 'AQ ON DlSPUY AT ff icko'1 r•ms 5oufh roast ?Ian OF <Htl0 8 , . sum moned. they agreed 1t was a real "Cin· derella story." Miss Donal. from Long Beach originally, graduated from Millikan High School and has been on her present job as a secretary less tha n a month. She has been accustomed to weari ng blue jeans and says she has virtually no clothes for work in her closet. "This is a mira cle that this happened ." she said a.a she ad mired a two-piece yellow pantsuit suggested by the store m anager, Anne Milecki Fumiture & Decorator Items! % OFF CWfTH COUPOHI "I don't know about c lothes. I'm an amateur. rm trying to gel more c lass. I a m going to have to be more conser vative Cin dress> now. I don't have-a color scheme and r need help with it." Mias Donal, who li ves with roommates in Huntington Beach and 1s learning to cook , said she had had "trouble with jobs" because of her clothes but she 1s confident now that s he will h ave a well-coordinated businesswoma n's look. on ANY PURCHASE -WICKER, etc. Her mother , Nami Donal, drove down from Glendale to get in on the first big splurge and was enjoying the e vening as much as the salesclerks and.her daughter . n 7552 WARNER AVE., i_ .... ~ HUNTINGTON BEACH , ..... _..._. ......... • "'°"~ 84 7-4840 -HOUIS:M-...fri. IM "It couldn't h ave ha ppened to ~better person," Ryan obser ved. He said he hacf(hought of having the drawing even before the lease· for the store was signed. He and his fam ily own another J ean Ryan store in Anaheim. ............ , • Sot. & S-. I 2·5 L -011~• e•D"~ June I 1917 .J ------------... --------- fQANCI8 -Q QQ fine stationery corona del mar· To eA > For You. . ,f \ The T earn: Linda Blue, Doug Bulley and Jack Barnes in Newport; D on Herzog and Cort Kloke in Laguna Hills; a nd Bernie Brown in San Diego . And they all have the same thing in mind: Arranging an F.quity Loan for you . Here's an example of a Newport Equity Funds-arranged Equity Loan: Borrow $10,000for10 years ., ' a t 10o/o simple annual interest. You'll have 120 monthly payments of only $83.33 (interest-only) and a final principal repayment of $10,<XX> The Annual Pe rcentage Rate is 11.7 %. Call the Team at Newport Equity Funds. They work together-to help you get the mon~y you need. Newyort Equity Tunilslnc. -., 1<1 .. ~10•-·" LAGUNA HILLS 830-5700 NEWPORT BEACH 644-8824 SA N DIEGO 297-7100 • Fantasy Flowers Putting fun in fund-raising are members of the San Clemente General Hospital Auxiliary who will present their annual Spring .Fantasy Ball Saturday, June 4, in the El Adobe restaurant. Funds will be given in scholarships to deserving students in re- lated medical fields. Tickets may be reserved by phoning Mrs. Robert Zeagl er. Gathering blossoms for de- corations are Mrs. Melvin Heywood (left) and .Mrs. Leon Insley. Telling It Like It Is ATLANTA <APJ Susie LaBord hves in a housing project -when she's in town. Most or her lime she spends telling lawmak ers in Washington how it feels to be poor. "If you haven't bC'cn poor. never lived in a house where thC'rC' was never no water. no toilet. no not.tung . then how can you set up then• and tell those men how it is '1 " said Mrs. LaBord, who stands about S·foot-4 and says she is agc>d "fiO ll .1 something.'' So several times a year, Mrs . LaBord, who .,, worked on an Alabama sharecropper's farm un- AP W o,.pftOIO Susie LaBord til s he was 16, travels to the nation 's capital at her own c~pcn~~ to tes tify before l ~ Sen a ti' and Housc rom At a hearing last fall on th,· full employment bill :\trs LaRord sav' s h l' t <1111 I a '' m a k er~ Thi~ v.elfarf' plaJ?u<' is ht•n• in Atlanta and 1l s all over the country. .. We got able bodied women that is not work- ing. There are hllle girls who don't care nothing about having a baby every year , because they know they can go on welfare ... she s aid. "If you put these young women . . . lo work and cut welfare out. they v. ouldn 'l have no more.babies." Responding to chargc>s that welfare recipients would rather collec t their checks and not work, Mrs . LaBord said. "That's plain a lot of bunk . You get them jobs and cut out welfare and they'll hav e to v.ork Mrs LaBord. who 1s a board member of the Na 11onal A~soc1ation of Com mun1ty Develop ment. a lobbying group Honors Well Earned v1so ry C'nmmittee for Orange County Transit for underprivileged neighborhoods, not only travels to Washington ; she also goes around the country speaking to the yo un g, the old, the wealthy and the poor. Her trips are paid for by either the group r e- questing her to speak or anonymous donors. Presidents Johnson and Nixon were among the recipients of her let- ters. After Johnson s igned the equal opportunity bill in 1964. she wrote to tell him of the bad conditions at the housing project where she lives. "I told him what bad shape our nursery was in and that we didn't have no beds or chairs for'the children." s h e said . ·'Two weeks a flcr I wrote that letter Johnson answered me back and said he'd send some ladies to look at 1t. W.e got the money.·· Of Nixon. s he said . "Nixon. as bad as they say he 1s. gave me a nutritional program and a drug program." But Mrs . LaBord says Wednesday. May 25. 19n DAILY PILOT di Cancer: Be Thorough THURSDAY,MAYZ6, BySYDNEYOMARR ARIES (March 21-April 19): You make the most of assets by letting others see your wares. Don't hide. Shove aside any feelings of inferiority. Accentservice, communication. TAVRUS (April 20-May 20): Diversify. Give run play to creative skills, intellectual curiosity. Aak questions, imprint s tyle. Socialize -go places, meet people. GEMINI (May 21-June 20): Go slow; check fine print, details, Be aware of regulations, necessary licenses, rights and permissions. Review safety measures at home or on property. SAGITfARIUS <No v. 22-Dec. 21): Make new starts. stress origtnahty and independence. lhghtight actions that "come from the heart." CAPRICORN <Dec. 22-Jan. 19): Lunar ·aspects portend travel, publishing, long-range communications. Collect and analyze data. Relauvebas been ''keeping a secret." AQUARIUS (Jan 20-Feb. 18 >: Dig deep for in- formation. You can make •·money discoveries." Know it and proceed accordingly. PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): Emphasis on legalities, value judgments, ability to cooperate with one whose beliefs are ''unpopular." Maturity is put to test. Be patient. CANCER (June 21-July 22 ): Be thorough.------------------- Take nothing for granted. Active associate may be impatient. Written message could change course of your activities. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): Accent on costs, n~'sslty for remodeling, change of home sur- rofidings. Pull in reins where budget is con· ceroed. Be a comparison shopper. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): Define terms. be positive concerning quotations. See as is. not as you wish things could be. Avoid self-deception. Cycle such that a long-desired situation comes to pass. LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22): You gain insights where dreams, films, illusions are concerned. You are capable now of organization, or bringing priorities into order, of capitalizing on imagina- tion, creative surges, of exploiting talent in a con- structive manner. SCORPIO <Oct. 23-Nov. 21): Finish rather than begin -be wary of those who s moke and o' ~~~ ~ ... ~ 20°/ ~~·S ~~ ~\,()\ /0 OH '~ ~ ALL OF OUR FtME ~' LEATHER GOODS• ACCES~ltJES ... DOM LOPH-IOMMIE CASHIM-T AMO FUD SALBMO HAMDIAGS.TRAYEl TOTES.WGGAGE WALLETS 369 E. 17th Sf •• costo Mna fWntport SqlMnJ 646-5533 OPEN MOH.-SAT. I 0.6 carelessly discard cigarettes. Plainly, this is no ---------t~-t-:----------i timefor youtoJ:!l ~ywithfire.Emphasisondesire, ruzze a romance,creativ1ty. ~ 4 Be rnard -./ Individual Hair Design MEMORIAL JOIN OUR BEEF STICK® CLUB Buy 12 Sticks Within One Year and Get 13th FREE fl~~~©r11f~~m~. WESTCLIFF PLAZA I 7111 & lllVIMfoHEWf'OltT llACH•,HOHE •42~972 MOM..HI 'TlL t SAT. 'Tll • SUM. 'T1L 5 • MARINER'S VILLAGE, DANA POINT. s-.n-.. .... ,HONE 49~2670 ,.,, •Mi.,..'. The Ultimate ••. 1n a full set vice Beauty Salon presents ... a very sensitive approach to the individual ELLEN VINOGRAD has bc•c•n numf'd Club\.\om<in of the· yc .. 11 by thl' Junll)r \\um • .111 ' Club of Laguna Rt-.11·h th1•1r communit~ scrnce and \\ork in .Juniors as < 'l uh'v\oman -of-tht' 'E'.tr P .\ T K R 0 :"J £ o f :\('"'port Beac h "as h 11 n11 r t•<i h v I' .1 c 1 fH' Tdq1hom· fnr t o mpkt llH! :!) \ l ,1 r-. \\ 11 h I ht· ut 1l1 t ~ C' 0 N S l ' M E R ECO!'IO~l('S in:-.t ruclor Del' Co'l r<-turns to the Orangl' County Fair this ~um mer for the 10th year a s -.upl'rv1sor o f t hE' llnme f.n;ng and Design he r favorite subject is -------- talking to students who i\~ 197fi 77 second VI•'" p r (' s i cl <' n t . I Nit• r a t 11111 a n d m l' m h 1• r ' h 1 p ch.11rwnman slw ""' k•·d on many proJN'I ~ 111- cluding llol111w. Parenh Anonymous, th<' March of Uimt"o; dnvr. th" men tul health t 11mm1t11•1' S he alc;n wa.., ch air v. 0 man (I r l h •. Thanksi::1v1ng ba,kf'l e1nd the cortvcnlinn 1>art" \1 ., t-.1 n11l' -.tJrtcd her 1 .. l1·phrn11 1 areer in 1951 ,1 ' .1 n 1 11 f o rm a t i on op t r.1t ur in Compton ~ h 1• 1 u r r C' n l 1 ~ 1 i:. c 11s t o m1·r op1'rat1o ns mJn 1i.:t•r 1n Santa Ana Amemhc'rofthrgrnup \ctn t"' 1n rommunit\ for four an<f a half\ t',ll '-, aff J 11 ~ . ._he Sl'I'\ C'S J S .,he also v. J.., honon•d at .I u 1110 r \c h 1t ' emf' n I tht• Juniors d1slrtl't C'On · C'n mpanv adv1snr. direr- ' l'nt1on, along with 11 \(Ir of the Zonta Cluh of nthc-r cl uh t•nt rH•-; for In Inf' :md l'1t11f'n'-1\d r N••d transportation ! ¢ l(F s. f or Cl:i.ssifi~ Acl ACTIO~ (o:I A Doily Piiot Ad-visor 642-5678 STATE FARM A INSURANCE @ ... lh'p:.irtmt•nt Pas t d"plays or- g,1n11c>rl hv t h e Win· ter s hur J.! 111,gh School teacher include a bake ttunk they want to quit school. . "l tell them there's u lot of s wift people jump- 1 n g out a nd doing thin~s ." she said. "But 1t 's not the swiftest and the fastest one who gets there. it's the one who holds out the longest.·· shop. ruhn.uy arts show, ----------rl C'~1J?n ... howroom and de- mons t rat 1ons by top c hefs and expc>rls in other field~ The fair will h1·helrlJuh 15t112 1 SOUTH COAST ACTORS C'O·OP I• , • .,, h l"'J In-Ml""tl~I .\ -• CW"'' fltl"IC ,.,, t ''*'"' IP'lt,._r.,.,t,.rt 1n f•I>,.,, TV '"'l• Anl'l rnn1 rn•rl' .._,,, A U a'l"' f >;pt>\ (714) 957-0282 HEARING PROBLEM? I srECIAUZI IM HERVE Ou.FHESS CASIS MAJOR MAl'WFACTUlrHS REf'RISIMTID TBt YEARS IM COltOHA Oll MAit HAL AEBISOtER HEARING AIDS ALLYN BLACK'S Hair Fashions Ladles Full Service Salon -640-9494- Mm:' Hair St11lm9 By Apoointment Z Manicurists To Serve \'ou Juliette Wraps or 2111 Sen Mlguel Or. N .. port Beed!, CA. 3409 l . Cocnt Hwf. ---~~ C-dtl Mar -675-llll HAMS '"So Good •.• It Wll '"-t' You 'tit It's~ .. hwy Dlllf •loys • HOMIY IAKED HAMI _,.. hh11 M~ fllvorl .. ...t •his 0.., .-. It OIDllMOW1 . FOR INSURANCE CALL 'DENNIS ROSENE <41 o West Coast Hwy. NewPOrt Beach MS-&t70 ) ~.,.,, • Ready to Serve wlthHooQy'n Spice Gla%e • Spltal Sflced From Top to Bollom • We Pack-oe and Ship from Coast to Coast • Full Service Oelloat..-n • Imported Cheeses U.apd....,._, S..Alrmil .... SI.-'-"*"~~ ~Oita&. ~-.. llll!lolt ........ c ........ HANCE T-..-• ..... 141tNo.T ...... An 4) 997-9960 ,,..~~~.~ 1ms. l .. lalUI C714l 635-2451 COIOMA Ill MAI J700 L C..t Hwy. (714) 17MHO Stock up on extra convenience. Save 15¢ on any , Kellogg~· Assortment Pack.·: Now you can enjoy your favorite Kellogg cereal i selectidn and save a little money. Have variety in convenient servings .•. at handy savings. .• . . . . . .. . . . .,, • DAILY PILOT Wednesday. May 25, 1977 ..... ) r Coffee 'Villain' Commodity By WILLIAM GLA.SGALL A,.9-MnWrltw NEW YORK (AP> - Once again, coffee 1s the villain. The government re· ported Utls past week that consumer prices rose eight-tenths of 1 per· <'ent in April, a 9.6 per· cent annual rate.. A major component of t he consumer price in- crease was coffee, whicn rose 13.1 percent l ast month. Codee now sells for S,,.SO a pe>and and up retail, although posted wholesale prices surpass $4. But retatlers and the govenunent agree that consumers ore getting serious about the amount or coffee they drink. Cofree prices ha•e tripled since a 1975 frost in Brazil cut supplies. Other factors in the In- crease included earth· quakes in Cent ra I America, drought in Colombia and civil war in Angola. perceat crop loss would be res>eated. But fina l estimates or damage to the 1978-79 crop were yet to be made and coffee futures prices rose in president and economist for Supermarkets General Corp ... Tho in- erease~ could come at any time.'' New York as traders an-SUPPLIES of' graln- ticipated some s upply fed beef have been shortage. decrusing for the past If the current villain is 18 month.~ as cattlemen coffee, beef may be lurk· hquidated their stock •• ing in the shadows. Two said WWtderle. "They';e reports this past week in-drying up the supply ... dicated the price of beef According to the trad may be on the way up. •. e Saccharin Deadline Nears GROCERY STORES in the New York area bad been report.inf a lS percent drop in coffee sales between April 1976 and last month. Now the Agriculture Department says Americans drank nearly 17 percent less coffee in the first quarter than they did a year ago. Bad weather in Brain was back ln the news this past week. Reports from the coffee-growing state of Parana said low tern· peratures and high winds bad killed young coffee plants Monday, raising fears of a new shortage in the world's biggest coffee-producing country. The American Na· group, ~ca~e of pro- tlonal Cattlemen's As-longed financial losses. · ti c:attlemen have been soc1a on. a trade .group, forced to cut back or li· said beef was selling for quidate their bast an average of Sl.47 ~ herds, and this is bring~ poun~ at supermarkets ang reduced beef sup· m m1d·!-tay, ~P 10 cents plies and somewhat from ~d·Apnl. Both the higher prices .. WAS!DNGTON <AP) -The federal govern- ment Wlll Jook at keeping saccharin-sweetened diet soft dnnks on the market for diabetics, but admits the chances are s lam "'Lots of folks would like to find a way to do that," FDA commissioner Donald Kennedy says. but "the difficulty 1s how to make it available to those people without spreading the risk of cancer throughout the country.'' Kennedy dearly was impressed by the parade of diab<'llcs, parenl8 of diabetics and doc- tors who told two days or hearings of the plight of diabetics under the FDA's saccharin ban, which will officially lake effect in July. "We're going to look al it," the com· m iss1oner said as he left the hearings on the ban of saccharin from foods, beverages, drugs and cosmeties but permit its sale as a single - ingredient, over· the-counter drug. "The drug and toothpaste issues are fairly easy to deal with," said one FDA official. "But how do you say you'll pe rmit a dangerous food additive on the market for diabetics but not let other people have it? Jt just wouldn't stand up." Diabetics must severely restrict their intake of s ugar and carbohydrates to avoid a condition known as akctoac1dosis. which can lead to such complications as kidney disease, heart failure, stroke, bhndness and gangrene The toothpaste industry and dentists joined the fight agmni.t the ban, ~aying that the tiny .imounts of sacC'aharm ingested as people brush I heir teeth are insignificant Banning the s ugar '>U hst1t11tt• "ould increase tooth decay because Jo:milia Wayne Holmt•n of Newport Beach has plaC'cd second in th~ California Cowbe lles s ponsort•d area Bet'f Cookoff. The recipe that won her $50 h on o r .., ·features a top round steak bakl'd m <'at..,up onion Jnd lt'mon The re«1pe ranked JUsl be hind • Raked ffrel Bundles," a recipe «om bining ground beef and packaged stuffing ml\ that was e oncocted h\ Helen Novak of Fontana Mrs. Novak will compclt• with winnC'rs in e ight other areas for the i;tate <'Ookoff t1tlt' .IUnt' 11 , at Davis Tht' contest st rt'S~NI ' budget cuts of h1·l·f T lw w1nn1ng t <'C'1p1 •.., .1r o• fe.1t11rt-.O b<•lm' UAKEU Kt·. Et Rt' NOi.ES '.! I" II P" I' <It" k .1 L! t•d "C'<tsnnNI '-luffing rnt'< '' 1munrlc:, J,!rounrl h<••·I I l'll\1'lnp1• cirv 11n11Hl sou p ml\ • I C'llll cl.111 \ "lllJI ('fl'.tm 2 t h"P «h11p1wd Pl mtentos I I L'>P Pl'Pll\"I I can 110 111 trE'<im of lllt1..,h111om snuo 'JCupc:ll!mp 1 :.1 cup milk 2 tea s poon ... Worr~tershirE' sa11<·1· 1 cup shrcddrd pro <'E'ss c hedda r or 1\ mencanchcf\s..- Paorika Parsley sprigs Prt>pare stuffing TT1t\ !H'c•ordin~ to packag<.• '1irE'cllons. St•t aside Jn a bowl, comhm1.• lh<' , next 5 ingrt><11ents until •well mixed; d1v1de into 8 1 portions On waxed • paper, pat into 6-inch circles. Place 14 cup stuffing in center or each patUe and draw meat EMILJAHOLMEN'S BAKED STEAK 3 pounds top round ~teak .t tablespoons butter or m Mgarine I large lemon. sliced th in I ~rcen pl•ppe r . c·hopped thin I large on1un. shct'd It up catsup 2 tablespoons water Sall and pepper Plac€.' steak io hghtly greased baking dis h. Spread thickly with but· ter or margarine. Season with salt apd pepper to taste. Cover with layer of lemon s lices. Add layer t)f <" hoppt..>d green pepper. tht'n !aver o f o ni on "hn•!' Mix watE'r with l'Jbup and pour o\'er all < 'ovt•r Ha kt• ~I hour" ,1t ·121 F &·n ,., ti Nodding Nagged You c11n make great things from prunes in 'ou r blender , d you plump the prunes first Simmer them cov· t:>rt.>d. 10-15 minutes in JUSt enough waler to cov· t.>r . Season with a squirt of lemon juice amd 3-4 whole cloves. Lto't the prunes sit m lht'1r cooking water. pre· rerrably overnight, in the refrigerator Pit them and chop up for use in blender drinks or a breakfast "salad'' com- bining the snippets with cut·up orange sections and rottage cheese. Save the Juice. Pour h cup into blender con· people wouldn't brush if their toothpaste didn'l taste good, the witnesses said. Some 600 prescription drugs also contain s acch!1Jin to make them more palatable, and th<' drug mdustry wants its products to be exempt from the ban. An Agricultur e Department economist said the decline in con- sumption definitely is tied to prices, and "with continuing hlgh prices. coffee consumption will hkely be further reduced during the remainder oC 1977." EARLY REPORTS said as much as 20 per· cent o( the plants bad been killed. The reports were -<lenied by the Brazilian government, and rising temperatures later in the week further eased fears that 1975's 80 association and a · supermarket economist Reasons cited by the The FDA can make exceptions for drugs and <·os metics if 1t decides the benefits outweight the risks. But no such legal option exists for food ad· d1llves, where products must be safe and free of cancer-causing ingredients to be marketed. warned that prices are association for reducing likely to keep nsing. herds were ••dry "Beef bas been expect· weather, poor pasture ed to come into s hort conditions and high-cost supply for a year," said roughage in some Robert Wunderle, a \ice areas." YILLO.MIAT PEACHES SPRING FRUIT SALE PRODUCE 15 OUR SPECIAL TY VALENCIA ORANGES HONIYDIW MELONS RIPE.BING CHERRIES JUICY-1 ST OF SEASON \ ' . ~ NIEWCSROP c .. ~2llCATEFlA9VOR c 7 LB. ~ '.: .· LB. 59! ~SWEET-JUICY ,~39~ •8 1 .49 So.,. • ., '"' Ch..c~ Clod STEAK or ROAST CHUCK STEAK II .87 BARMHAMS ll 2.69 0 -BONI ROAIT BEEF CHUCK La.97C ~.I R,b lo•Qit f nd 8 1.37 ROAST or STEAK W 1ttori Mo1ttrpte<c l8 2.89 BONELESS HAMS Hor.,..!Curo 81 l8 2.49 BONELESS HAMS . Coo~• II 1.49 ITALIAN SAUSAGE IPINCIR STEAK BONELESS BEEF RIB LS~[ffirf PACIFIC RED SNAPPER L:.'i ':&a f la1h f101 ~~'"1.,. / :'\.. Ill 1 59 .. ', ) sou ......... ll . • locol Aoocfy 10 fa• ~· ~ ; -SMO KED 'C ~. TUH ......... ll.1 e 9 5 u .s.D.A. 5 9 C GRADE 'A' LB. H""""'~' Fro>h VS DA. G<odo 'A' 9 HEN TURKEYS....... .. u1 • 7 °"'"' Mo.,.. 199 or 11.<C~ I lb 1 5 9 SLICED BACON P(Ci • O.CorMoy.,Wofe<Th·• 1701 1 59 SLICED BACON ..... PKG , OK0t Mo~ l•ftlo ,,,.., 17 or. PORK SAUS. LINKS l'!CG. l . 19 FARMER JOHI HAM SHANK PORTION-FULLY COOKED HUNT'S SPRINGFIELD ORCHID PORK & CHARCOAL PAPER BEANS ~ BRIQUETS NAPKINS ~4jc i£;' 1:'09 J'3u9c ''"""YO.on 17 or P.,.. SAUSAGE ROLLS PKc. l .09 J1""""Y D•on 1? 01 Po,\ SAUSAGE LINKS .. PKG.1.19 Zipp• S.oMI 10 or BURRITOS .. . .. PltG •• 45 FARMER JOHI HAM BUTT PORTION ~~gKED LB. 8 9c HUGHES WAS FIRST TO REDUCE COFFIE PRICES Crolt Ovort •--MAYONNAISE ,,,,,_...., BAGGIES .w.•o 7ot PLASTIC CUPS HAWAIIAN PUNCH .......... c.-•-.J"IM , ••• LEMONADE MIX .79 . 99 1.09 1.49 1.29 EXTRA LARGE RIPE OLIVES SAN FERNANDO '9TTEO 45c 300 CAN 1..,...., 11 o• Qo.jjc.-.,, WINE VINEGAR .... 39 K-.~f-TlftyO.U~t. DEL MONTE Pl~ES .......• 69 (. ... ~ ~ ,,, .... 01 •... .J .... fH.<• ... , BBQ SAUCE .... . IT AUAN DRESSING l'"""t'••- SEASONED SALT .55 ... 79 .79 UCllY LAGI BEER 11 OZ. NON RETURN BOTTLE ~-2.09 ICE CHllT 6 PA.IC JO,OT. ICI CHIST ......... 1.09 AMI.SI-49 IOllll• ......................... . f'oc,flc I .5 •• ''""' 59 COCOA 8UITlll .... _,,. COPPDTONI l~4 oz. l.67 fNo>dl'12•oL MUSTARD ....................... 57 0....-11 ... OATMEAL COOKIE MIX ..• 7 9 ~100 ....... PAPER PLATES ................... 99 AUl .. , ...... i.o. TEA BAGS .......................• 89 Woldl'1he /~fr .. '7•1 <M 6 PK. SEVEN UP . .. 1 .1 9 ALUMINUM FOIL REYNOLDS HEAVY DUTY 69C MO.At" &wt..to4"'· TOILET TISSUE .....•............• 75 & lb loo GOLD MEDAL FLOUR ......... 75 10 or ~t.1fl~h1rt• HI HO CRACKERS .......•....•• 63 At!'NNI, 01 VIENNA SAUSAGE' ............ 39 .... 79 loll ...... , ... /0.p lo·~ loo NATURAL CHIPS PAPER TOWELS JUMBO llOll HI ORI 49c 'over stuffing, seal in I( edges. tainer. Add a few pieces ~---------------------------------------------------------~ of chopped prunes, too, if ,....,m!! __________________ ....,., ', Arn i,e patties io a 9 x 13 inch ungreased pan. ' Bake, uncovered. in a 350° F oven for 20 ) minutes. Jn the mean· :time, combine soup . • cahup. milk and ~ Worceaterahire sauce :·until blended. Pour over , •partially baked patties. t Spread with shredded Pcheese; sprinkle lightly ~with paprika. Return to ioven for additional 25 lo • 30 minutes. · Garniah wilh parsley 'sprigs. Serve with cooked kvegetables and salad. ~erve remaining sauce in :a separate bowl. Makes 6·8 servinJ(s. (If .Prepared Jn advance: Cover be-et bundles with foll and rtCrigerate. Remove foil ; bake 5 to 7 ~ minutes lonaer durln~ I> 1 the first baking period.> desired; ~cup yogurt, 1 tea;;pooo honey, and egg. Whir and pour into g lasses. New Hogs Pork Out Impro\temeots in feed- ing and breeding havlf br<>uaht about changes in pork production in die: last lS years. The average bog today yields 14Ma pounds more of lean meat -about the weight ol aa extra bam -than the averai_~QI 1S I"e@S_ aio. But thetofil weight dtrterence betweel) today 's hog and ytsterday's is less than 2 pounds. MINUTIMAID ORANGI .IUICI -.... \ l:~--3'--:s 1 l!!f" CAN ~ #Ao ~Al Vw, 1' ea. 79 en.A.Ill fllS ............. ,,,_,,,.. .• ~·-· 49 ~TO,,..G ......... . 1.M'\.,,..,..... 59 '"IOl..LS ........................... . cw.,e... 59 CUUC: IBAD---· • lt ..... ..,,t .... i..,t._.a.. 1 .... IGCIUll .. -····-··--.UY CLAUlllN KOIHI• PICllUI :~ ~93 MH VIA tJOO NIWJOIT llAcR l'lltal MICfM ' DA.ft n4UIS • .,.., , • ....., ..... JUNI '· ,..,,. .. IN CHICKEN COOKOFF Teriyaki a Winner Winning recipes have been an· nounced in the state competitioo for the National Cooking Contest. They include the first-place en· try, .. De ep-Cried Chicken Teriyaki," which features a c rispy coating and a sherry and ginge r-flavored sauce. One recipe that especially dre w our attention was Chicken A La Lime Surprise. The sur· prise is in the blending of chili powder and lime peel for n avor with lrue Southwestern appeal. This dish is baked to crispy done· ness, and can be served with rice and a tangy Caesar salad. DEEP-FRIED CHICKEN TERIYAKI t teaspoon salt l tecc.poon flavor enhancer 1 2 teaspoon black pepper 1 i teaspoon paprika 2 whole cut up fryers 1 cup nour 3 cups corn 011 Ted yaka sauce Spnnkle salt. navor enhancer, pepper and paprika on chicken. Coat with nour. lfe at corn oil in d ec;p fryer o r 6-quart heavy sa\4cepan over medium heat lo 375•. Carefully lower chicken, a few pieces at a lime, into hot corn 0 11. Fry until well browned. Drain on paper towels and place jn large shallow baking pan. P our on teriyaki sauce, adding <'nough to cover chicken well. Bake in 375' oven, uncovered, about~ minutes or uoUl fork can be. inserted in chicken with ease. Makes 8 servings. Teriyakl Sauce Jn a saucepan mix together 1 cup sugar, 1 cup soy sauce, 2 cups water, l tablespoon g r ated ginger root and l/• cup cooking sherry. Bring to boll over medium beat and boil l minute. Reduce heat and simmer about 20 minutes or until sauce has thickened: Extra sauce may be refrigerated for future use. CURRIED CHICKEN DEUTE (~It Bt .. n, M .. IYWMCll 2 tablespooJcurry powder l teaspoon flavor enhancer 1 teaspoon salt 1.'l teaspoon white pepper •,2 teaspoon poultry s~ason­ ing 4 boneless fillet breasts skinned and cut into 1-inch pieces •,,. cup corn oil 1 clove chopped garlic '4 cup minced green onion 1,4 cup sliced mus hrooms 1 12 cups chicken s tock, divided 1,4 cup cooking sherry 2 tablespoons flour I container (8 oz.) plain yogurt I tablespoon chopped parsley 1,2 cup slivered almonds In a bowl mix together curry powder, flavor enhancer, salt, papper and poultry seasoning. Add chicken and coat. Heat corn oil in large fry pan ove r medium heat. Add cblcken and saule slowly until lightly browned. Add 1arllc, Oftlon and mushrooms. Pour in 1 ~ cups of the chicken a tock and sherry. Bring to boil; reduce heat and simmer about 20 minutes or until fork can be inserted in chicken with ease. Mix flour with remain- ing I/, cup chicken stock. Add to chicken, stirring constantly. Add yogurt and continue s tirring and cooking slowly until thickened. Sprinkle with parsley and almonds. Makes 4 servings. CHICKEN A LA LIME SURPRISE CUniN Dll.Metl19,Gl-•lt) 1 whole cut-up fryer 1 ·1 cup lime juice 1 .. cup corn oil 1.a cup flour I teaspoon flavor enhancer 1 2 teaspoon salt 1 2 teaspoon chili powder 1,2 teaspoon grated lime peel Brush chicken thoroughly with" lime juice. Place in shallow bak· ing pan. Cover and refrigerate 1 hour. Brush thoroughly with corn oil. Jn a plastic bag mix together flour. flavor enhancer, salt, chili po wder and lime peel. Add chicken, a few pieces at a time. Shake to coat. Return to shallow baking pan in single layer, skin side up. Bake in 375 oven. uncovered , about 1 hour or until fork can be inserted an chicken "'ith ease. Makes 4 servings. Classes Set Cl asses start .June l at Culinary Capers in El T oro for four weeks, foc using on "The French W ay·· o f cook in g. ~ess1ons will be held on co n sec uti ve We d - nesdays, beginning at 7 J> m. 0 n .J u n c 2 I • t h c cookware ~hop \\-Ill offcr a da~s on ba~1<· ~.iucing. Featured "111 h(' de mons trations or basic white sauces. Bcrnaise , Bordelaise and dessert sauces. "Cutting up with Your But c her " a nd the ''Mar ve l s o f Microwave" will be the topics of two upcoming courses. F urthe r in - fo rmation c;.a n be o b- tained from either Tillie or Carol, 837·2545. Best Idea .Since I ii: f'>li' Shopping Carts ;~ L_ .. Now you can do a week's shopping 'Ii ' t~~ without forgetting a single item! Use pre-printed Two-yHr supply (10C H1t1) fuml1h9d In convenient tHr~pad for just S1 .50 (postage prepaid) r.-----------Flll In thl• coupon, I tn1U with $1 .so to: : PUot Printing Shopping Ult I P.O. Box 1560 330 W. Bey St. I Costa Meaa, Callf. 92628 I I I ISTREET-------------1' 1Ct1"t---------ZIP._ ___ ....J shopping lists prepared for you by PILOT PRINTING. 140 Mperete printed ttem1, plu1 addltk>nel spec•• you can 1111 In your1eH. )6 St•P4•• 21 VegetablH 14 Fruits & Bakery ltema s Bever•o•• 19 MHt end flah entrfH 11 Dairy lt•m• 20 Mlece41aneou• DAILY PILOT L. • • • • • • • • •• • • "'--------------..-.. f:UlllmmilO :;;) . STfMULATES young minds A great place for kid•. Saturd•y• DAILY PILOT In the Chicken A La Lime Surprise is as appealing to look at as it is to taste. It ranked among the winners in statewide chicken cookoff. OAJL Y Ptt.OT £'4 Sea Waste Studie While we dine on filet of sole, livestock may aomeday be eating the rest of the fish. as well as several thousand tons o( other fish parts we don'b see that is disposed of an· nually by California's seafood processors. Make YourseH a Bero The first batch or .. silage," a sea!ood waste product prepared by scie ntists at UC Davis, is being fed to mink at Oregon State University where it will be analayzed for its nutritional benefits to livestock and other animals that require costly foodstuffs. The res ults or the cooperative study will be determind by bow the mink develops on the ground waste diet. A v ege table h e ro sandwich? Why not? For non-vegetarians , add slices of salami and Provolone cheese: foil - bake and serve with tall fruit coolers. Makes a hearty noon meal -and an easy evening one. Good to make ahead or time to pack on a boat. VEGETABLE HEROES l' :i cups each. fresh. washed cauhnower and broccoli clusters l lO·ounce package frozen Brussels sprout:; •/.a cup softened but· ler 2 teaspoons Dijon mustard 2-3 st alks finely chopped green onion 6 sweet French rolls, split in half 24 slices of Salami 12 s l ices of Provolone 12 thinly s liced tomatoes Salt Prepare Bru ssel s s prouts according to pac kage directions; drain and cool while you s team vegetables 5-7 minutes in salted water. CThis may all be done ahead of serving time ; then vegetables can -be kept cool in the refrigtlrator.) Beat together sort but- ter and mus tard and spread on rolls. Fill with vegetables, green onion, s alami, tomato slices and cheese. Wrap each sandwich in foil, sel on shallow bak· ing pan. Bake at 350 degrees for 25 minutes. Serves 6. Silage is prepared by grinding it into a mulch. then fermenting it. Ac- cording to researchers. the resulting ••Jiquid s lurry" is odorless and contains Crom 12-15 per- cent protein with storage capability for up to one year. Call 642-5678. Put a few words to work for ou. Not when it comes to the food I serve at home. That's why I buy Weber's. Weber's is made with 1000.ic> vegetable oil-not animal lard like some other breads. Don't you take a chance. Buy Weber's for better flavor and sound nutrition. You won't be taking any chances. '\' MAYONNAISE 39c Briquets 1olluc ••• s1°9 Springfield charcoal ... hard' Lucky Lager ••• s2o 9 Carton uf 12 11 O.G NH bottle's · Baked Beans. . • &9e B & M New England i.tyle! 28 oz BURGER 33 BUNS::\ c Ol llOT DOC Springfield for value Heinz Ketchup . . 59c The i.low one .. lurg<' W ol ht le . Pickles -1• ••••• &9e Ku;.hc·r. Poh-.h. \;., <;url11'1 '.!I 111 Aluminum Foil .. 33e Sa\{' ltllnvcr ... with :--pnni:field' :,!'; It Hegulur nr Sui.:nr j ct·' l :! oz can-. T.d s439 I e DETIRQXT • • • • • • F11m11\· ~11e O\'er JO lb-. (40t off) Joy Liquid •••••• 79e A mr<' reflect aon' 2:? en (I Oc tff) B-B-Q Sauce . . . 49e ('hrt<> & l11tl's-:i vari<'taes-J l 01 SALAD 69c Oil Kidney Beans . . 33e :-... <" \\ • pl11mp, rr<I' \.'.o .11n c ,m Dressing wistlOMt ••• 49e l1al1a11 "' JIMHI 1.l.11111' ~ .... · Potato Chips urs • 69e H1 ·i.: , II I\ l) ••r H•1ll • ' I ,, n p.u k Triscuits . . . . . . . 79e .. It's a_, specW *1-• ,..,. ., .-.1m11i1C te .. it•• more ........... ltt,... plMS hCla at 0 ._.._._. .. Ill (lltil, al Ill-. tlilt tlOlt M w lltlemef. lt IM beldl •la the~ yn -JW1 lie &ta' It • ..,_ at D lllldlt CHUCK 79e STEAK • Center cut! U.S.D.A. Choice beef 7 Bone Roast .• 89\ Chuck cut U.S.D.A. Choice heef 0 Bone Roast •• 99\ Chuck cut l l.S.D.A. Choice beet WE Will BE a.OSED MON. MAY 30 IN OISERYMCl Of MEMORIAL DAY 80N£1.ESS :OA$1 5 1 5 ~ Chuck cut shoulder clod! Choice! Beef Rib Bones • • 69~ Meaty! Choice! Bake or barbecue Ground Beef ~~s1 1i Lean! Not t11 exceed 22'0 fat TiJp Sirloin Steak ... ~2.ll Your party plans are sure t o be a success if you feature thii> superb J(lin cut of U.S.D.A. Choice beef! Center cut ... tor value Top Sirloin ~r •• s25t Loin cul of .~. D. A. Choil t lx>l'I ~M\~-~~ GAME S 129 HENS 2•oz. "· Checkerboard Farm" (,rade .. A · --------- Sliced Bacon ••• s l 1t El Rancho·s thicker ··ranch style" SPARE S 129 RIBS ... Fresh! Meat~! lean Eastern pork fresh Turke gs ~E~~e. :·~:· ........... Ill! El Hant ho\ nw11 IO t11 14 Jb. averngt• .. and plump and tender! Delightful mu in course any tame of year! El Rancho's $149 Bratwurst • Made with pork, veal. genlle sea!'Oning El Rancho Ham s 1°t Butt portion-old fosh1oned rurC' Ham Slices .•.• s21t Cure 81 Ham •• s25t Hormel boneless-whole or half We feature milk-fed Veal TlfE MAL T1fllC ••• TO ll SURl! II lancha Ha•~~:~ .............. II! < 'urNI e<.l)('raallv lor 11-1 ••• th<' old fashioned way ••• to he tendl'r nncl rlelt<'1011-;fy :-mokr\" CANNED s4s9 HAM lll. Sill Marhoefer " .. oonele&e, fully coo!<ecl .. J Delicatessen Delights .... Braun-39 Schweiger c Farmer John ••• 8 ounce chub Longhorn 9 9e Cheddar Lemke's Wisconsin G r. A 9 oz .... . . If Sea{ ood Specials FRESH 69c .. TROUT from Idaho! l\1 m. net wt ti "' ea. Snapper,aicROI •• s1 9t Fn•,h la\urifC' ... fre~h fdlt•h' Ocean Perch ... s 14t , Mahi-Mahi .•..•. s 12t Hushed here tl'()m H awulllm waters L t. s299 angos 1no ••••• Extra fancy quality ... 12 oz package Sand Dabs •••.. s24t Fresh! fine lor skillet rookery CRAB LEGS Delicious! Meaty! Alaskan Crab:; Liquor Dep 't. REOOCED 81¢ EL RANCHO'S $gas GIN Fur valu<'' ~) Prool'-1.'i.j liter Scotch a RANCHO'S • • • s& 99 Bottled in ~cotland --for you' Quart Seagram's V.O. s699 Save 5lt on Canadian whh,ke~ ! fifth LORD $599 CALVERT Canadian whiskey reduced 90c 'luart Calvert's Extra. 5999 Blended whiskey-save 2.50 half.gal. Gilbey's Vodka • $888 Save l.l l on the 1.75 liter si2e Almaden-all vnnetaes ... magnum 1+1cc" in r/{1•rl Thur<:, Mn · :!fi throuJ:h U'1•d. Juni> :.! Open. d<11/.v 9 to Y Sunday JO to 7 No :..a{r, to dealers WE WU BE O.OSED IDOltlAl DAY ORCHID 35 NAPKINS c frank1FARMERJO'rlf ....... ~~~ lmtAY MAY 30 ,,...- f.'or your purl v pl1111i.' pk~ C'f l 1)() Frozen Food I CE ::~~-s 119 CREAM · Royal Host Prem mm Po ck' All l18Vof"' lemonade. • • • • • 39c 0 Minute Maid-Reg. or Pink-I:? oz Pie Shells ••••• 45c Pet Ritz ••• pkg of tw<>-9 inch Layer cakes • • • ggc Pepperidge FarmR-all vRrieties-11 'h ot ·Celeste Pizza... 79c .1' !»epperoni (I~ IZ) Sausa10 (I Ol) Chicken. •usm. • • s 199 Morton's-two pounda of good.netlS Orange Juice ... • age Minute Maid't1 large 16 oz. can ~~~~~s .89C Toni'a-just add fain'al Pkg of 2 (;old Med~I winner-farnouR for its 11moky flavor! 1 lb pkg , .r· PARTY 39e DIPS Pen &. Quill 8 oz (AYOCMO ••• 49c) Super Fresh Produce .CHILLED 59c DRINKS Minute Maid party Jlavort1! 64 oz PiReapplBm~ ............. 11!. Sweet and juicy ••• with luacioua IOO(i1uia that only come &om maturity fnlit from Hawaii! --------CUCUMBERS AVOCADOS 19~ 39~ ARCADIA PASADENA SOUTH PASADENA HUNTINGTON BEACH NEWPORT BEACH -EASTBLUFF IRVINE C.,uri\1•1 ·''td ••unftr'Q' '" 1 .. i1 .-" ol;"l'.u.k> H Jl-1 • ···••'-\.HI',,,._, ti,,,,,,,\q'• 1 \1• 1rn1• I ,, ...... 111 q11 •. ····wi•''' fUv(I .".'-,' F.l\1!)411'' r.. '"'""r .. ,t, \rl(1 t,11\_ru· .... , .. t O,n,h•·'••llf' ~ .,1(1•11v1,'G.1,.._..,. 'w-1111'•"''' ,,,., ••,•1 <" l'vPtt.thfl\'•'A t.,)l~ult Vill,,~f•1'1·• '•°' •1'~ • 1' COTTON SWUS ••••••••••••••• 69C ADllSM wmm .......... 89c lllSAL 111 llMCIRll ••••••••• 59c INSTANT YllAN ••••••••••••• $3.99 LlllADE ••••••••••••••••••••••• Z1o .1'1• fll'QOWI "Q.'flpA" , •. J)flcllllft o( 170 Curad Reiultr, Tr•mparent-boic ot 80 For healtb-HoU)'WOOCl S.fflo-.T! l lb ft'e worth" IW'C(!Dd cup! 8 oa jar Minute Maid-eo mn.hin1! Ftotfn 6 ~ 11.DRDfS ASPllN ......•••.. 39c BUY SIWl»OO ••••••••••••• $1.29 MARSllal.1.0WS •••••••••••••• 49C LEIClll .DCI ••••••••••••.••.•. 49C MIUTE MAI) JUICl ••••••••••• 33~ i '1o &.o be eure! pk1. of 36 So pntle-Johntoa and JohnlOn't-7 oz Krall'• JtufTy Jet-.Pulred! 10 oz pkf Mlnatt Maid-JJW9 Ctoien j1.tkt! 7' a o" • Pineapple or .Piot pplo.Oranpl 6 a& -·---1 Kidstuff: Sandwiches The end or the school ;year means it's Ume to ponder ways to feed bunches of kids last. This ts where the 1andwlch comes in. All the cook bas to do ls warm up the-•• insides," put oui the lixln&S. and let the kids stack them up t.bems~lves. These recipes incorporate packaged sloppy joe mix and a variety of mea&s. They ep be em· bellished with condiments of your choice on English muffins, in Pita bread pockets, on onion rolls or hambureer buns. POLISH PITA POCKETS 1 h pounds polish sausage, cut in l ·inch pieces l onion, s hced 2 green peppers, cut in strips l 1h cups sliced mus hrooms J tablespoon pure vegetable oil 1 <271 2 oz.) can sandwich sauce for sloppy jocs 1 c 11 2 Ol. >envelope spaghetti sauce mix 8 :,,mall rounds pita bread 8 shces Amencan cheese, cut in half In a lO·inch skillet, saute polish sa4sage, onion, green pepper and mushrooms in oil until vegetables are crisp tender. drain fat. Stir tn sandwich sauce and s paghetti sauce mix. Sim· mer 10 to 15 minutes, s tirring ()('casionally. Cut bread rounds sn hair crosswise. Fill pocket in each bread half with equal portions of meat mixture and 1 cheese s trip. Makes 8 sen mgs ClllLI HAPPENING 11:: pounds ground beer 1 J cup bread crumbs or wheat germ Ole·Burgers arc a savory mix of ground l>ccf. canned refried beans, choppt·d onion and gn•t•n pepper. The addition of canned hot tomato s:.1Uce gives the burgers a feisty Mexican flavor OLE·BURGERS 1 pound lean ground beef salt and pepper to taste 1 cm sloppy joe sauce 1 can chili con came Va cup chopped sweet onion 1 cup shredded Cheddar cheese 4 English muffins. split and toasted Combine beef, bread crumbs or wheat germ and seasonings with 1 2 cup of sloppy joe sauce and form into 8 round patties. Cook under broiler until deslred doneness In small saucepan, combine remaining sloppy joe sauce with chill; simmer 10 minutes. To serve, place hamburgers on muffin halves. Spoon chili mixture over and let eaters help themselves to cheese a nd onion for topping. Serves8. FRANKLVCONEYWICHES 8·10 frankfurters 1 ~ cup sweet pickle relish 1 can sloppy joe sauce Grill Feast Mixed 1 teaspoon Worcestershire sauce 2 teaspoons prepared mustard 8·10 frankfurther buns, opened and toasted 1 cup shredded Cheddar cheese Simmer frankfurters about 5 minutes in boil· ing water and drain. Stir together sloppy joe sauce. pickle relis h , mus tard and Worcestershire sauce in saucepan and arrange frankfurters in mixture. Cover and simmer another 10 minutes, turning franks occasionally. Place franks on buns to serve; top with sloppy joe mixture and shredded cheese. Serves 8·10. Sippers Ahoy! It's called Ship 'n S hore Soup, but wherever you eat it, this o n e will rate high marks: Combine one can of cond ensed c ream of chicken soup with a can of condensed cream of mushroom soup <both in lO :V.. ·Oz. size) and add one.fourth teaspoon of curry powder, then two and t\.\o-thirds cups milk. H ea t , stirring oc - casionally. and serve Yield : 5cups. All OUR Chicken and fish team for a friend feast -from broiler or grill. CaJ1co Slaw 1s a colorful ac· companime nt with a snappy mustard dressing MIXED GRILL 2 tablespoons butler, melted 1 chicken bouillon cube \2 cup water 1 t cup catsup 3 tablespoons Worcester- sh1rc sauce 1 tablespoon le mon ju l<'C Generous dash of lemon pep· per P'2 pounds fish fllll.'lo; <had- dol'k, whitefis h, snapper, troutl 1 fryer, CUt·UP Combine m elted bu.lter . bou11lon cube, \Hiler. cats up, Worcestershire , a nd lc•mon JUtl'e for barbec ue sauce Cut fish fillets into serving.size piece!:> Grill chicken pieces over hot coals or in broiler for 30 minute!:> Brush with barbecue sauce anc; turn frequently. On another section of the gn II STORES JOIN Ill THE ran or broiler pan. arrange fish pieces on foil and brush with sauce. Grill or broil fish and con- tinue cooking chicken, brushing with sauce and turning frequent· ly 15 minutes or until fis h is done a nd chicken lender. Makes 8 servings. CAUCOSLAW 1 package no.ounces > frOl('n peas and carrots ~:i cup dairy sour cn•am 3 tables p oons French's Prepared Yellow Mustard 2 tablespoons finely minced onion 1 teaspoon salt 3 cups s hredded r ed cabbage 5 cups shredded Chinese or regular cabbage J cup diced Swiss cheese Cook peas and carrots accord· mg to package directions; drain and chtll. Combine sour cream, mustard. onion, and salt for dressing. toss gently with peas. carrots and remaining mgre· d1ents. Make 8 servines. All STORES ~OPEN OAIL v PILOT CZ Fruit 'n Rice Tossed This is an elegant of· fering with lamb, solo, or complemented by a hearty baked vegetable casserole. RICE CECELIA \4 cup dried currants or raisins 6-8 dried apricots, cut irito ~·inch pieces 1 cup raw rice llh cups chicken broth iy .. cup orange juice 1 ounce Cointreau or Triple Sec 2 tablespoons butter 2 t a b I e s p o o n :. minced onion 1h teaspoon sail 1/.a cup sliverec a lmond s or fres,I pinenuts In small saucepan. melt butler. stir in oni<>1 and rice and cook unU' both are golden. Stir ii remaining ingredient· except nuts and bring ti boil; cover and simme 25·30 minutes or unti rice is done. Toss in nut just before serving. To place your message before the reading public, phone Daily Pilot Classlfted, 642·5678 AU CMl&llTITT 11*"1 llSDY10. llO SAii TO DIAUIS OI IQI tuAU OI COIUUllO&l llSI. en1 MEMORIAL DAY •1 ~ cup Refried Beans 1::? c1,1p chopped onion 1 :! cup Hot Tomato Sauce 2 tablespoons chopped green pepper 1 egg, beaten 1:: teaspoon salt 6 slices Monterey J ack cheesl' 6 hambur~cr buns Avocado sht·cl't. optional Mix tO~<'lher ground beef. refried beano;, u111on. hot tom a lo "·Ill<'<' ~n·1'n pepper. egg and "l:llt . :-h.1pt• into ..,,n pJll11•.., Broil. grill or fr;. on both s ides until clom•. Tnp each \.\Ith cheese shC'e . con· tinue cooking nnlv until t•hee:.e 1s melted Pl<.t cl' prttll<'" on bun bottoms Top \\Ith avocado "hl't'"· 1f <ll'sin•d St•n•t.•'1 Ii Dumpl ings Dilly . The~<' dumplings arc J flavorful ('Ompu n1on lf> PODl'ht•d ('Od nr \\ h1te fish St•n1· them topp<'d °" 11 h ... 11ur cr<',tm 0 1 !\ailed ..., atcr or brot h. Holl uncovered for <ibout I hour halls will n"e to lop Or;iin ~1 akes about 2 don•n ,..,., H O•t"'tl \'\ la IRREVER ENT In the DAILY PILOT C'ook and serve th<'m in a -------------------- clear f1~h nr <'h1 e kf'n Lock • f sh fruit broth Malla 1s ,I\ Jl!Jhll· In •e--. in most supermarkt!h • ,_, __ DILLDUl\1PU!'oJGS flavor' cator. 2 lari.:t· cgl(s . ..,light h ht• :I ll'll 1 ~cup mal1a mt•JI Sall 2 tablt•:.poons buttN or m;irgnrine. ml•ltcd 2 tablel'>poons cold v.;.itl'r 2 table :,,p oo n s minced Dill weed (about 1 ~teaspoon) Stir together ull lhc in· grl'.'dients. adding 1 teas poon salt. unlil smooth. ro,·er lightl y and frcct.N·Chill, s t1rrinJ! several times, until firm cnouf?h to shape usual· ly 45·00 minutes CK prep¥lng ~fresh fruit u.lad, A·C-M U ded leas Eve,..fresti preserves and enhances that Just-picked look 1nd t»te. smg a roun · d , ,..,__ '4' bottle poon for each. shape into An Its economic.al, too. VfMI 2-ounce proteas ba1ls. as you do so drop over 65 pounds of fruit. So look for A·C·M Ever-fl"e$h 1 n l 0 ' a 4 . 0 r . 5 . q' u a rt In the canning section of your nwi<et. . saucepot of simmering HCP Foods, Inc., P.O. Boa l6ll, Anahe.im, CA 91101 --~~i==Q=::.~ -;;;i ~;;: ~ -~-~ CHOPPING . BLOCK~ I 160 S\l""-OWB. COSTA MISA SUMA.OWU AT FAllVllW 545 0637 DAILY IO AJol·7P.M. • USOA C HOICI SIDE OF BEEF 400.100 &IS. 8 8 c DTW41tOAST SICTIOM U. • WHOUTOP 'SIRLOIN I0.14 in. . s I " . CUT a............. u. RID~~ (ii5 WHOLE WATERMELON ~ f~r t••r Wll .. l AAIUI UIKU <O&H l•H •• IP-\ PLASTIC CUTLERY f•ll WU• •u•UIAll er ....... AY U -· ... ROMAINE LETTUCE • ........ ,... •\ii•<•••• •••••• , , .... -Ml PA(KAW ••t 1Aat1n COUNTRY <LUI CHIPPED MEATS ••n wn• •uar•A11 ••••we••<••••••• tt •• ..... , .. , WILKINSON RAZOR BLADES ••t1 •11• •v•<••ll •• ••• ••• a' •• .., l<~•t•A,•au ~•1•••1•• ro•1t•1•r o• c•••• .. ~ ORBIT SUGAR FR!E GUM ••II WU• •••C••91 e1 e•I ••• a t •I Oii• t el P&Ut•ll Mtlllt l&IU f Mt•l t Wl\f \ll(t IOe\ II IWUt PRETZELS .... WffM ... , •••• or O•I ., ...... . Mt 1•cou"' ,,,.,., MARKET BASKET BOOK MA TC HES 1•11 •n• •v•<•AH or ow1 ~•• ,., 11 ... ... ····~ .... ...... .. ...... .... ............. _...... . ... , .. •••U rl I I •; • ........ • ••••• ...... • • • It 'f•' "" •f .. o ,.-----·-··· ·-------··· ""·SOll'I CM1 I Millln 1AS1n I <••tH «• I <AAICUl I I "' CAJl•D llAM I I .. , HIQ9DS I 11 ~'t-: s $69J9 •' • .'Si\vi; 10 79c • I 12 so u I : 39c ;:. I I __ ,.._,.':_ ... ,_ ... _,I I r.:tia.u~w--=rr:! L -·-;-~;,~" •• .! !.::-~;;. •· • ..s -~=-.----........... . • ..... r.m'l'r' • ,... j ....... u I ... RA•S ll I I i.1 ......... I /.. I illf frtKS I I Ulf MlOlllA ~·r. ' I ~H 3 C I I ~H· 89C ' : 20< ·::.· : : 20< ::: : I · ~~~ I I r:;':".'J:;-7:-~a"Sa' I Nl~n ... t':tt~ .. , •mt •• 81 .. A COUPOll ••tiilmiiil•• al .. I , ..... •• Q DAIL V PILOT Wednesday. May 25, 19n .La1nb Steaks out Square. Meal , ... Many Jamb loven are not familiar wltb ruu. s q uare-cut shoulder meat. 1bll la particular. ly euy to serve for a din· ner party of four lo six if you have t'OUr butcher saw through the bone to form steak-size slices,. then tie the s houlder back together with str· jag. you dOD1tbave to be part--lemoopeel otlhemesa! l lull lamb sq'1are- 0 81EN7AL cul shoulder SQUABE·CVT Salt, pepper to taste OllLDEB•OAST ~ po\and fres h ~ mushrooms. sliced ~ cup cooJclnr all ~cup vinegar ~ tablespoons soy Sil~ 1~ teaspoons sugar I/• tea1poon dry mustard 1.4 teaspoon ground gineer 1 ·teaspoon grated 1 cup 1llced celery 1 c:an water chestnuts. dr«lned 1 package frozen. IDOW~ CO~J?ine •A cup cook· ing Otl, vinegar, soy sauce, 1 teaspoon sugar, mustard, ginger and lemon peel in large bowl. Ad.4 lamb-~-Wm-untU coated with marinade; then refrigerate 24 hours, turning roast oc- casionally. About 10 minute-s before lamb is done, pre- p a re vegetable dish. Heat remaining ~ cup oil in skillet; then add mushrooms, celery and Spria.kle lamb with' water chestnuts. Stir un- salt anw"Pepper. Place on til mushroom s are rack in shallow roasting tender. Add snow peas. pan. Roast in 32S degree. (slow) oven 25 to 30 1~ teaspoons salt, dash minutes per pound, or pepper and remaining '1\ until meat thermometer teaspoon sugar. Cook, registers 140 degrees for stirring constantly about rare dooeness. Baste oc--2 minutes lonser, or untll ca s ion a 11 y wit b peas are lender. Serve marinade. with lamb "steaks. Precarving, in· the ease of the recipe follow- ing,' allows the Oriental flavor of the marinade to permeat e the meat beforeroastlng. ~~~----------------~--...;;_~~~------------------~--------~----~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~.....;_~~___.;.~__.;;.;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~.....;...-- Another trick to make turning easy while marinating: Use an ex· tra-sturdy cellophane bag or see-tbru oven roasting bag; pour the i n gredients of th e marinade in it, then add tied roasL Tie the bag securely and set the whole thing in a shallow baking pan. This way when you want lo turn it, MAHI MAHI: Exotic Venture Easy Mahi Mahi is an ex. otic, mildJy.flavored fi sh associated in gourmet origin to Hawaii and the South Pacific. However, oddl y enough, Hawaii is not and never has been a major supplier of Mahi· Mahi. About 95% or all Mahi-Mahi is caught commercially off Taiwan and E cuador. This catch enables us to enjoy Mahi-Mahi, and that is exactly what we're doing based on the familiar and r ecurring appearance of this s pecie s in our s upermarke t s a nd restaurants. ( MAHl·MAHI T EMPURA STYLE 2 pounds Mahi-Mahi fillets or steaks or other fi s h fillets , fresh or frozen 1 cup all-purpose flour oil 2 egg yolks, beaten 3-.. cup beer 1 tablespoon cooking l tablespoon soy sauce 1 cup all-purpose flour 1 t easpoon dry mustard 2 egg whites, beaten until stiff Fat for fry mg Soy sauce Hot mustard Cats up Thaw fish if frozen. Cut fish into strips about 21-2 inches Jong and :i .. inch wide. Dredge fish strips. in 1 c up (lour. shake off excess flour. Combine egg yolks. beer. cooking oil, and soy sauce. Sift together 1 cup flour and dry mustard. Combine the liquid a nd flour mixtures to m ake a s mooth batter. Fold egg whiles into the mixture. Dip fish strips into batter and place in a single layer in fry basket. f'ry in deep fat, 35<>°F., for 2 to 3 minutes or until fish is browned and flakes easily when tested with a fork. Drain on absorbent paper. Serve with a mix- ture of soy sauce. hot m ustard and catsup. Makes 8 entree servings OJ' 18 appetizer servings. What Causes ~? R usset s pots on l tte be r g l ettuce are ~. The tendency to develop this condlUon • 19> vlrtually undetectable al shipping point. but hippem.oo the way to m a r ket o r d Lll':ln i storage. l t occurs most often ln ••vier, harder, "cwer- a$ature" beads and the cD ndltl9n ca n be .aha.aced if tbe beads .,.. atcnil wltb bananas md apples which exude "'7leoeges. ·- • Groceries ® ~~~·~~~.~.~~ ...... •149 ® ~~~~~-~~ .......... •111 @ =! ~~ 1~!u~L~ ........ 55c @ ~!n:!':0~1~~ .......... 79c 6 Pack 12 Oz. Cans RefreshJng COCA COLA ggc @ MEAT OR BEEF ~~~!.o. ....... : .... ~ 67c @ ~!!~0c!J!~.~ ............ SSC ~ Sprlngfleld Dips 41\c '& An«tea v.,._ e Oz. . u- Q Miid Cheddar Cheese Hel'llege HOON 9 Oz. Ptlg.., •. ~ Franks \& Htlt>feW NatiOIUll 12 Ot. Pie~ • • • 0 Sliced American r:-s 1 G Hefll•ge House lndv. WratJ 18 Oz , • , @ PORK& ~~~c!No.2*can ........ 42C Groceries ® ~.~~~~.~~ ....... 55c ® ~~~~.~~~!~~~-.!.~~·-····· s1ss ® ~:>~!~ ~~!~~ ...... •139 FLEETWOOD ®~~~:~rJ;~!.~~···· 99c 0 0 @ 0 0 r .. ~!:9!'2:;'!o ~"'~ .......... 4~ ~·L~.9!!~~~.~-~-~.~~~! ..... $14S ~!!~~·3~~~~.~-~ ......... 55c As1t. Beverages 6 age Herli.Qe House R9gular 12 Oz... For ~~~!,!l~Y!r!~~~-6 For 7gc Heritage House ., ® FRESH SLICED BUNS Hot Dog or 35c Hamburger Regular Only 8 Pack ...ii -and that includes Alpha Beta, Lucky, Market Basket, Ralphs, Safeway, and Vons ••• basket for basket. Produce r Tender Golden Ears ., ® SWEET CORN Loose 9~. Ea re Only \. ~ 0 ~~~~:-:-......... 4 Fot•1 o 2=r* ~':.?!~ .... : ........... asc For Your Memorial Day Outing ®~~~~~.~.~~ ................. SSC Save with Faz.Io's Low, Low Prtces ~Tomatoes 33c 0 Styrofoam Ice Chest 99c '& Seled 11ze .. • • • • .................. U>. e Pa................................ Q Cucumbers ~ 0 Beach Towels = ~ ~ Hot~ ......................... Ea.£.:1- 100% couonMlt.. Prtnt•32:xecr., .... ~ ,-~" 'l5J ~bo Gr.,.,Nlt a '1 O 2'h rt Pih:Jttr ~~~ ~ Wlllttca::..rar·~ ........ ~., .. ~ 3 Poemon ............ : ................ ~¥ '· ' " @Red Rtldlsh.. . 2 \ 25c Q Decorated PllybaU• 77 ~ Crtlp • • • · · • •••••• ........ ,.., A~• -~....................... o ®Green Onions 2 2Sc . . .Wi .. and Spirits , . 7._=~-~-·~tlg:e , · · ®.. A ... ~.~~~~1sun'6-/ ·@A.._ Pia~., . .• M • ~ Tequtla t4MD i 1 ~·: ......... tr·n·:·:·· .... ea. 4 ·~·&b ~~h ........... mh;~111--Hatlth'&·B@f#yAlds \lY ...... OerlNft Wpoft ............ Fifth ~ .. Roll~" =·.. . •1• 4\ K ... let ..... ..-., •411 f ,,....._ Cllil-. ~ "'*' 2 0t. •••• •• \& SMoodt• .................... ,Ith 0 Coppedone •1• ~Gold Award Rum · ,,,,_ lolon •a.•oa.1ott1t ............. . \lY $1\oerorMlbef .................... flfttl ~--0 Mfl•nta Anbfcld ,, •1ss 0 H9rltaae House Beer •. *1 :17 • 100,._.or12 oz. Uqul4 ........... . I ...... fa .. AlUmW.111'1 °"*··,A... • I • • / Rain Chedtt . @ Star-Buy We tty our ~ Oett. bu1 fft ~ 9'«1t -rvn OU1 of Th.-are 1lam1 •-~ltlty feduGN ~ • J M acMr*cl ltll'I\ 'tOlf lt<IM ~ .. eoia'tltOua· price d\19 to 111a~f~=.:~Ml'1ontl ly ~ 10'! • ,...,ICfld IO yo11 may plclt-up tM tltm lllloWWIOt « by en u ~ .. Ult °"' .... prtoe •t .... ~ Food Stamp 8hoppera Welcome 0 l!vendft Low Prtcee T1*e l)ftcM ., • .n.c!M Wtdne9day, May 25 lhrv nie. ft ... low pn.,.o htlnt )'OU'I find TllMdllf. MJ1¥ 31, 1-977. Wt teNnte Ult l'IQflt '°limit etwoughout IM_..~-Of IN...._ qusitllltt and ,..,.. .... to dMler'I or wt>c111....., ~ ~ Mr. Faso ""'-to ------w---------. -. • r Frozen Foods @ ~~=~~t!~~~~ ......... 54c ~ Qlno'a Cheese Pina $102 '& 1110% ............................... .. , Heritage House ., 0 FROZEN LEMONADE 12 Oz. Cans Reg•l•• 3 ~$1 or Pink R "' .... .. , ,,,, ·d .... , .,, ., 1'1eats , ® ~a;::.~~~.~ .. ~~~~ ... lb, 98C / I ~Boneless Hams ~ •158 \&-•--or&.!,..._, eo...t • '·IJ ______ ...__LI>. ® ~~~~~~.~ ............... l~.1189 ® ~~!~.~.~.~~nSh~~~k>nlb. sac /h 0 Cut-Up Quartered FAYING CHICKENS '• U.S.O.A. 49c · 11 Inspected • •{ Farm Fresh Lb. . ·:· 0 Fryln~ hlcken Oil-:...,"':.....:..°'::"'-sfte ... ~ ...... -~ ................. u.. "fl- ® ~~!'!.~.~ ... ~-~.~.~ ... lb. 7gc New York ®.BONELESS~ . , • (l .1 • 1t CHUCK ROASTS . ·.n ... 1 •1 .~~ 'I,' •~~~~~~~~~~--~~~~~_.~~~~..,....~~~~~~~~~~--~~~~--~~~~~~~~~~~~~~--~ Spending 'lbriftily? 87 Sn»A POllTER * Look on the bottom shelves of your supermarket next tlme you shop. 'Ibe people who s tock the aopermarket. s helves are just like the rest of us. They would nther not bend to reprice Items more than necessary. As a re· s uit, you m ay find som e won· d erful baraains pn ced below cur· rent levels. * Keep a sha rp eye on the Money's Worth c heck.out ca:;h r egister, for that's where many unin'tentional m istakes are m ade * Talk to others in the market who are looking a t the new pro- ducts you 're considering. They a lready may have tried the item, and you can benefit from their experience and advice. * Store your leftovers in glass conta iners which you h ave emptied and washed. Glass re· tains the flavor of food longet than other containers and keeps leftovers looking more appetiz- ing. Even without a crop faihire or other disaster which would slash our food supplies and send prices soaring higher market ing costs aJone will push up food prices virtually across the board But you can save up to 20 percent on your bills m erely by following a few simple r ules from pro· ressional food shoppers (above a re three not well known hints 1 In fact, you can do better than that in the areas of meat, poultry and fish. says Lewis 0 . Davis, m aster chef. food economist, and oper ator of the Penny Gourmet Cooking School in New York. MEAT, POULTRY and fish alone account for almost one- third of your family's food spend- ing dollar. To continue with tips used by successful food purchas Gi g agents and nutritionists and based on kitchen management principles: • Befor e y our n ext supennar"et trip, list the food Items you normally purchase on a piece of paper. When shopping, com pare these item s by siie, price and grade with other items on the s helf to see whether you' re getting the best buy. *On the way homt:. buy. a set or 3·by·5 inch index ca rds a nd a file box. As you put the groceries away, record the cost of each purchase on a separate card. The index cards will quickly become a key reference file, Davis points out. By checking the r ecorded p rices against a d vertised specials and newspaper discount cou pons, you easily can de termine tf a "special" is a ~av ing. * BECOME A LABEL reader and note on the product's label the net weight. descnpt1on of contents, nutritional value, in ~redient listing in order of quan tlty. Use the dating system on the label to be sure the product 1s fresh. • Learn when fresh fruit~ and vegetables arc at their peak, for merely knowing what foods arc• in season can help you cul your food bill immediately and help you lower it in t he future by can ning seasonal specialties for off season use. • Buy, learn how lo use and carry with you on all food shop. ping tri ps a small, inexpensive, hand·held calculator. The pocket calculator will allow you to keep track of your expenditures a~ you go through the store, CJ nd as • And by all means. master the unit pricing system 1 Although unit pricing is mandatory in several locations, millions of you simply do not know how to use 1t for your own benefit. • For more information on the advantages or using glass con tainers for food storage, wnte for a free brochure, "Smart Shop per," Glass Packagmg Institute. 1800 K. St., N.W .. Washington. D.C. 20006. Budget Break: Round Steak Here are two tasty but economical ways to use round steak. In skillet braising. brown beef pieces firs t. then add seasonings and a small amount of hqu1d Cover and simmer or bake . BRAJSEDSTEAK WITH SOUR CREAM 1 1'2 pounds beef round steak 3 tablespoons flour 3 tablespoons cook mg oil :•4 teaspoon salt 1"8 teaspoon pepper •4 c u p fin e l y chopped onion 2 t easpoons soy sauce 1 '~ teaspoons pre pared mustard 1 teaspoon vinegar • 1 cup hot water 1 cup dairy sour cream Cut beef into 4 serving pieces. Coat with flour. Brown slowly in oil. Frozens Sou per Combine remaining in- gredients ~ .. except sour c ream a nd pour O\'er steak. Cover and simmer gently . tu rning oc- casionally, about 1 1-z hours or until tender Push beef to one side of skillet Add sour cream to pan drippings, stirring to blend thoroughly . Taste a n d correct seasonings if desired. Mak cs 4 servings. TATER ·B EE t' CASSEROLE 3 • pound beef round steak J li tablespoon :. cooking ml 34 cup chopped onions l''l tablespoons flour J 1 lablespoon paprika 3 beef bouillon cubes 1 'h cups water 1 •teaspoon salt J_. cup lhm carrot strips ·'• cup dairy sour cream I pacl..age Ctn ounces > froLeo potato nuggets 150 CUPS ' ..... #" • -...,....,.--·--· M.-Grott1 Jtf't t l•t •II •tlltfft ,._,, toi.IOit I~ !It l•lt o t111t st•\ I •t Cf .. , '°' ..... ! ... '''"'''' •tW ••fl II• IUl .. t ,.,..., I eil• UtM\ hiltf l f·O• lt••• .... , ,.,,..... fO .. . ., .... ,. ...... ''"". :111\11 .. tt ,., ... '''°'''' ..... " ''"'' ~·· t• 11tff#lfl It (It.. t••t•(t \.• ltt .. hl t.. f•'P.tU '~"'••' '• '~" , .. , .. •ttu•n c..,, .. "'fl "' tt •n '"'' .. ttt#Sh:"'' , .. , •• "' • _.,,. o•• ~ •. ,.. .,... • .... (lfl tr •• •• 11 rtf1841rut • ,...,.., ., "•• , ........ :JI , •.•• \ l•t ~"' \lltiif 10Coff JENO~ n z 0 Cl. ::> 0 l) w er 0 t- (/) ............ , "'\I\• ,.,, ., t\ ll• ...... lift ••• 1111w·• "'•" tt u·• , • .c-... i<l''t ... fhiWlt• ""'' 1 ,, ·~ ·~ , " ... .,.. •4 •. 11i Ill+•" ~~Ml' I ... " .... ,.. .... ••U.•t• Pizza Rolls Sausage Pepperoni Shrimp ~""''l.""'~'t,,.1r "'0 ,,.,,.,,.,~ "'/~/.~,~~,.., ~,. I ,j'll ' I I fl 0 ~I, /?1,P,7f..'/• '//ftA //ft•/,///,/// ,'0 I I /.~J, ~: I 1 hi/If t 1 b'/I I 1 II I !/,/./ 111 1li'/~ 150 CUPS This soup includes all ,the 'Vegetable's i Ol to Of· fer -you use the liquid it's cooked in as well as the pulp from the leaves. Serve It for lunch with a crackers and an egg salad spread or for din- ner with a hot sandwich o r s imply, frui t a nd cheese. Cut beef in thin strips. 111 inch ttuck and about 2 inches long. Heat oil in skillet. and brown beef cm both sides. Add onions and saute lightly . Stir in flour and paprika . Dis· solve bouillon cubes in water , and stir into the mixture. Cook, s tirring, until mixture re~ches a boil. Add salt an<f carrot strips, and si mrltt.r a m inute. Remove from h eat and stir in sour cream . 1. ONE 10-0Z. JAR OF NESCAFE" INSTANT COFFEE MAKES 150 GREAT cuPs a COFFEE THAT'S AS MANY CUPS· AS 2~ U3S. OF GPOUND POASI* SPINACH SOUP lO·ounce p ackage frozen leaf spin'ach Pinch of nutmeg 2 tablespoons butter 1 small onion, finely grated (pulp and juice> 1 ~ tablespoons nour 2 chicken bouillon cubes dissolved in 1 cup boiling water 1 '1l cups milk Salt lftd pepper to taste Cook the spinach ac- cording t.o package directions using ~ cup water and the nutmeg; do not drain; puree. In a medium saucepan m elt. the butter; add the onion a nd cook g e ntly for several minutes; atlr in the flour; remove from heat; gradually stir in the bouillon, keeping smooth, and lhe milk. Cook over modera te beat, •tirrine constantly, until lliehtly lb.lckened. Stir in the s pinach and the salt and pepper and reheat. Makes 4 serv- Jn1s. Turn into s hallow medium size baking dish (8 inches round, 2 inches deep). Arrange frozen potatoes on top. Bake in a '400 degree oven for about 40 minutes, until potatoes are thoroughly heated and crisp. Makes 5 to 6 servings. Bagels Boiled Bagels res emble doughnuts in appearance but are made from a low 1 fat, low sU,ar dough with high gluten flour. They are formed wit.b strips of dough wbl~h are rolled 1 and twisted into .rings · rather than cut as dou1bnuta ve. Bagels are placed ln boJUng water for a few minutes then bated. Another Oour fact. ~ • To label a bread wbole wheat. t.be loaf must con· tain 100 percent. whole wbeatnour. AND NESCAFE COSTS Sl(jNIFICANTLY LESS! I DECAFFEINATED DRINKERS- GET THE SAMiE KIND OF GREAT FLAVOR AND GREAT SAVINGS WITH GREEN LAl3EL NESCAFE DECAFFEINATED, TOO. ..,. J _____ .. ...__ _..,. _,.. .. .. -..... _ I - -.... -.. -~ .... <» , I' •• ., l .. ' I J .. • t .. • • • • ' • • .. • • .. .. • • • .. .. . ~ " & ....... . ---------' I ------------------. I I I I I I I I I Now ••• Safeway will give you : twice the savings offered on any : manufacturers' coupon when : you purchase the product at : Safeway.. · · ·-· --, 1 ~s~.~!!!~ c!!J,~~ott..~b1 ZI f !!~!.~,~L~~~~lb. Pkg. $1 99 Premium Ground Beef .... 1b. 5129 DOii Not Exceed 22firt Flt f A d Pork Spareribs ~::::s1e':i .... tb. sl' 9 . k S 1111111 McCoy 8-oz. Lan ausage '"' P1ig. 39c C little orn Dogs Boy Blue . ..lb. age Zippe Burritos i~~,s~~!~. '~.;:~·39c CRAG MONT POP @ Regular or Diet Flavors • • . I Serving Suggestion !.!t~~sr!~~-~~.3a;:;:$100 ~!~~.~ .. ~'2~o!?!',a•ve 99c SI. d S I . or l ologna 1·1b. 51,, ICe 3 aml S1tew1y ... l'llg. • Safeway Laver Sausage tin The 1u1k1 ... 1b. 79c C d H S1teway or 6-lb. SS H 3RR8 amS Dubuque ..... Can (8-lb. Can '14.3S) M Tom Turkeys H::! .... 11-22.1b1. 53e Safeway Ham Patties .~g~~z.'1 59 The "Experts" at Safeway are offering Double Coupon Value savings to you. Bring In your manufacturers' cents-off coupons and Safeway wlll add 1000/o to their value through May 28, 1877 when you buy the Item. One coupon per Item and one Item per coupon unless specified otherwise. Not to include "'retailer" or ''free" cou- pons or exceed the value of the Item. Otter effective May 28·29, 1977. -----·EXAMPL"·~~----·---------..---, I ~ rrmrmr»mllfftrllflTJTI 1:: 1hn1111M1111m111i1N1111 ;1 ~ 3oc OFF ~ AD~TIONAL i 6 0 c ~ MANUFACTURERS ; 30 OFF I= . a COUPON ~ SAFEWAY ADDS 100°/o : TOTAL -~ OneCouponPerltemandOneltemPer ~I OF THE VALUE FOR I SAVINGS I ~ Coupon Unless Specified Otherwise. ~ A TOTAL OF... ,, ~ t¢?t.!£rJ/llll!!Plf!f!1'1!J!~ EXAMPLE f,fjjljj/j/ff}.!.'!!.!!.l/J!.!!~ I - - - ---• -- -'//:. USDA Choice Beef Chuck . . .. Skinless Meat or Beef Art ichokes M~~~~ed ¢ .. Cara Mia ......................... 6-oz. jar 69 1-lb. Pkg. !!!!.~~~.~.~~~~~ l·lb. rkg. 99° smok-A-Roma S Fully Cooked (Water Added) lb. 14-oz. Plcg. BOSTON FERNS Assortld .fana•na.$399 6-lnch Pots CREAM PIES ~~~!?~ .?..~_i?.~.~ ....... lb. 19¢ ~s~~~t.?.~~ ................... lb.15¢ ~ ~:re~~!~~~~ . .. .... lb. 19 ¢ Be~~n~~~.~~ ... ?.~ .. 2 Bunches 29' .. POTATO CHIPS ,.,;-----2 CANNED ·ICE CREAM SlloW IW, '*'' D....t ~---------------'· Plf1J Prtdl .. ~ .. 0 lNl"lllpiwt• .. Maw,_t.._. • 6MMe..c...e.._;4,&....-.._. . • J ll ~ naa.c.e.w... . . ...__. ~~ ' . SPAM ~I Meat Product c Friend Feed ·ArO.natie · Tbere·a nothing like the aroma t a pork roast to ereet friends and neighbors at holiday time, ·especially when lbe roast is piced with fruit preserves, nuts and cloves. To go along walh 1l for an easy- lo-set buffet t wo other Southern ideas Plantatio n Medley vegetable salad and Dix- \. ie Delight. a fresh strawberry frozen dessert. l' SOurHERN-SPICED PORK .~ 1 jar cherry preserves 1/4 cup red wine vinegar 14 teaspoon cinnamon 14 teaspoon nutmeg 14 teaspoon ground cloves 11~ cup slivered almonds, . toasted 1 3-lb. boneless pork loin roast Salt and pepper Combine preserves, vinegar and spices in saucepan; bring to a boil. Cook 2 minutes over low beat. Stir in almonds. Season roast with sail and pepper. Place roast on rack in baking pan. Bake al 325 degrees, 30 minutes. Brush with preserves mixture. Continue roastmg 1 hour and 15 minutes or until dope, brushing frequently with preserves mix- ture . Serve remaining sauce warm with pork. Garnish with crabapples, if desired. Serves 8. PLANTATION MEDLEY 1 2 cup vinegar •.2 cup sugar 1/4 cup oil l 1h teaspoons celery seed 11_, teaspoons salt 11 2 cups peas, cooked and drained 1 cup cut g r een beans, cooked and drained 1 cup celery slices 1 ~ce can mushroom , drained 't'J cup chopped green pepper v. cup chopped OD.ion 1 2-ounce jar chopped pimen· to, drained Combine vinegar, sugar, oil a nd seasonints; beat until thoroughly blended. Pour over combined vegetables; mix light· ly. Cover; marinate in dre5$ing in refrigerator several hours or overnight. Drain. Serves 8. DIXIE DEIJGHT 1 teaspoon unflavored gelatin 1h cup cold water Z% cup sugar lfz cup unsweetened pineap . ple juice Dash of salt I tablespoon lemon juice 1 quart s trawberries. crushed l 7-ounce jar marshmallow topping (optional) Soften gelatin in h cup cold water. Combine softened gelatin, sugar, pineapple juice and salt in saucepan; cook over low beat un- til gelatin and sugar are dis- solved. Remove from beat; stir in lemon juice. Cool: fold in strawberries. Pour into 10 x 6-inch baking dish; partially freeze. Spoon strawberry mixture into bowl; beat until smooth. Pour into 10 x 6·incb baking dish. Wrap secure· ly in moisture-vaporproo( wrap; freeze. Place in refrige rator 20 minutes before serving. To serve, spoon into chilled sherbet glasses; top with marshmallow topping. Garnish with additional strawberries and mint, if de· sired. Makes 8 servings. L e ntils, Chilies Make A Week e nd Fun-do . To keep Memorial weekend Jn,lests happy: a hearty lentil· chili dip that doubles as a mam· dish f1llmg for flour tortillas. To cook lentils for this recipe. 1wash a pound and place in a heavy kt•ttle wath 5 cups cold water. 2 ll'.ISpoons -.alt , I ba} leaf, a c;m.ill clOH' of i:arhc. peeled and minced. and 1 • cup .c hopped onion nnn~ to j boil. cover and rt•duc<' to s1mmt:'r cook 40 mmut<•-. Use 11 -i. cuµ ... of cooked lent1b io make lentil ch1l1 dip; storer<' plainder in covered casserole '\Vith liquid and w1c it to make ~up: Simply add 1 2 pound of cooked ham or bacon, cut in strips. 2 large carrots. sltced, 2 stalks celery. sliced, and season· Ing to lastf'. Simmer, covered for an hour and serve hot. ( Lcnti Is will keep . cove r ed. an refrigerator for a week.) LENTIL·C'HJU DIP 11'l cups solid-packed tomatoes or fresh . peeled. drained I 4-ounce can green chilies 1 '"J cups lentils, cooked and drained l-z cup chopped onion 1 large clove garlic, minced 1 teaspoon salt 1 "l teaspoon crushed basal 4 lablespoons butter, div1ded 2 tablespoons nour • 2 pound Monterey Jack cheese 1 cup evaporated milk or light cream In heavy skillet. cook onion and garltc m 2 tablespoons of butter until tender: stir in tomatoe!., sail and basal. Simmer over low untal thickened . about 20 minutes. Rinse, seed and de·m·embrane chilies: chop and add to sauce along with cooked lentils. <Cau- tion : always wash hands with soap an<1 water after handling chilies. The pepper, rubbed ln the eyes. can be very painful.) Meanwhile, in heavy saucepan, melt butter. Stir In flour. cook over low heat for several minutes, remove from heat and stir in milk or cream. Cook, stirring, until thickened. Add to chili mixture, then stir in cheese. Serve from fondue pot with warm tortillas as main dish or com chip dippers. ROM Fash ion Islan d Newport Beach .. ' -· • Wectneeday. May 25. 1011 CAIL Y PILOT CJ J Squas h Bake Nummy lle~ir • nummy-way to enjoy fresh, baked ve•etables •. HEBBEDVEGETABLEBAKB 3 thinly sliced iuccbini 3 carrots, thinly sllced 1 cup cherry tomatoes l cup seasoned croutons l h cups cold milk (low-fat· may be used) 1 "'2 tablespoons cornstarch 3 tablespoons butter ~r m argarine ~teaspoons salt 14 teaspoon white pepper ~teaspoon nutmeg ~ teaspoon crushed tar- raeon In saucepan, sradually whisk together mUk and cornstarch; add margarine, salt and pepper, nutme& and tarragon. Stirring constantly, bring to boil over m edium name. Continue to cook unUI thickened. Toss vegetables and croutons into sauce; tum into a 2-quart. casserole and bake at 3:i0°F. 30 minutes. May be garnished with bread crumb topping or fresh, snipped parsley. Take a big bite out of life and fun. coupon Tasce the i;oliJ plc.isurl or the Great Amtrican H ot Dog. (},l.1 r M.1rer wieners and beef franks. Made from mildly scasoncJ, solid cuts of meat. So you gee dcliciou" me.it fl.1\·or al l chc way through. Every bite will cell you wh y ch{..y'rc America's N o. I. Savor the flavor of America's No.1 today ••• and save. • cul unbrolten line for25~ coupon .. JT~ • .. .. . . . . . . . . . .. .. .. . . . . . . . ... ~J2 DAIL V ~LOT WedM5d.!y, >My 25. 1977 Basting Way to Bulgeless Barbecue The By BUBA al\. GIBBONS Memorial Day is the official opening of the "cookout season" ... - time lo unfold the lawn chairs, set up the picnic table and clean out the barbecue. That's good news for would·be SUM GOURMETS because barbecued foods can be among the l eanest, tastiest foods around. With salad for side dis· bes and fresh fruit for dessert, summer is the time for good eating without unwanted weight. But did you know that · many barbecue sauces -homemade or bottled -can ca lori cally sabotage even the slim- mest steaks and leanest chickens? Most conven- tional mixtures are 400 calories a c upful or more, due to unneeded fat and sugar. Fat (oil> is the biggest offender at 125 calories a tab l espoo n (2,000 calories a cup). Oil adds no fl avor, no tender- ness, just calories. The tenderizing ingre· dients in marinades are the acid liquids: tomato, lemon or vinegar, acid fruit juices like pineap- ple or orange. Or, the acids in dry wine (the a lcoh ol calo ri es evaporate in the cook- ing). The natural fruit sugar found in juices and wines can add a touch of s weetness without re- fined sugar. The spices and season- ings in barbecue bastes .ire the real fl avor - makers, and they add no calories to speak or. For the most flavorful re- s u 1 ts, meat. fi s h or pou ltry s h ould be marinated in barbecue sauce mixtures an hour or more beforehand, to soak up navors and in· crease tenderness. The r eserved marinad e s hould be brus hed on while the food cooks. On rainy days, food ('an be baked in the oven an barbecue sauce . . fo r cookout flavor whatever the weather Her e arc so m e flavorful combinations. without the usual hu~e amounts of 011 or sugar Add a generous dash of liquid smoke sea~onsng to any of these mixtures. 1f you hke. NO-SUGAR-ADDED JAPANESE BARBECUE BA TE (From ·'The Sit m Gourmet Cookbook ... $12 95. Harper and Row > 5 tablespoons soy saucc 1 2 cup sake or ~hcrry wine 1 ~ cup wat('r 1 teaspoon fre~hl y grated ginger Slim Idea Spicy Sene chicken thighs and pasta Slim Gourm<'t· style. nus dinner for four takes about 35 minutes to fix. Your eager eaters can nibble from a chilled antipasto plate whlle the chicken simmers. ) ITAUAN CIUCKENTIUGHS 8 chicken thighs 6-oWlce can tomato paste 10 and one-hall ounce can rat·skimmed Chicken broth 2 tablespoons dry red wine 2 l arge onions. chopped 1 clove garlic, minced 2 stalks celery. diced 1 teaspoon dried oregano One-half teaspoon mixed.poultry seasoning 1 ounce s hredded part·akim mozzarella cheese 4 cups tender-cooked spaghetti Brown the. chicken thighs under the broiler unUI crisp and well ren- dered of rat. Combine thiahs with tomato pute, broth, wlne, onlona. garlic. celery, Ol'C!llDO and podltry seUCJl1lnl ln a covered sklllet or saucepan. Cover and simmer until chleken and veaetables are tendeT. about25 minutes. Uncover and continue to llm.mer unW Huce is thlck. Meanwblle, pre- pare~. To serve, spoon aauc. and chicken o•er 1paahettt and aprlnkte with cb'eue. Serve1 four, 375 ealories each • I c love g arlic, crushed 1 t easpoon corn- starch Combine all iogre- d i en t s and mix thoroughly. Bring to a boil. Use warm, as a marinade for meat or poultry: use also as a baste while broiling. On· ly 10 calories per tables· poon. SUGARLESS BARBECUE BASTE An WlUSual combina· tion to try with chicken, steak or lean pork chops. l cup tomato puree 1 ~cups orange juice 1 tablespoon pre- pared mustard 1 teaspoon celery salt Simmer uoco•e r e d five minutes. Spoon over meat while it broils or barbecues. About seven calories per tablespoon. NO-SUGAR· ADDED APPLE.SAUCE BASTE ~ cup soy sauce llllOOUOMI 694 COOKED HAM )-Ol .... • ... U . \ii cup white wine ~CUP$ unsweetened applesauce ~ teaspoon garlic powder Combine ingredients and use as a marinade or barbecue baste ... particularly good with pork, lamb or chicken. About six calories per tablespoon. Here's a favorite de- veloped by my daughter and h er col l ege apartment-mates: SVE'SCIDCKEN BBQ&\STE ~cup vinegar 2 tablespoons lemon juice ~cup catsup 1 teaspoon Worcestershire sauce IA tea.spoon Tabasco 'h teaspoon dry mustard (or 2 teaspoons prepared> 2 tablespoons instant m in'cedonion •,•teaspoon instant gatlic ~ teaspoon salt Combine lngredients and mix well. Use as a baste for broilina or barbecueing. Or, pour o ver chicken and stir lo coat well. Allow t o marinate one hour •t room temperature or several hours in the refrigerator before cook- ing chicken pieces. Baste c hicken with reserved marinade while it cooks. About 13 calories per tablespoon. Slim Gourmet c EA. OSCAR•A•(ll • l VAll 73 C SLICED BOLOGNA • 01 1% I ... "-...--- SLICED BACON TABLE BRAND ' 1·LB. PKG. LUNCHEON MEATS ST ATER BROS. It 110/ P•I. 1.0 99c OSCAR•AY(R•WIU•EAS014 $119 BEEF FRANKS Hi P•Ci • (A I QAllO s 119 SLICED SALAMI ~l 1>11c; ... u . wiANGlER WIENERS ;~~:.,._$) 3 9 ltllL-f $) 49 ' SMOIED'SAUSAG£..... . ... l• SWW1'S SIZZLUN BACON ~~gz .... H()l'l'Y I SLICEb BACON ' ll. •KG OSCAll •.t.YER SLICED BACON , l ll ••u (A $129 u . $ J 29 l A $1 59 OSCAR MAYU. • WA•fll-THIN < •. $1 5 9 SLICED BACON n-01 .. c ·~ "'s491 , ~-. ASST. VARIETIES• 8-0Z. PKG. --._ HAH•••os. MONIY •AC• GUA•ANTU ON QUALITY MIATS tYH Y JIN'CI Of MfAf ti UNc:OfifOfflQflitAU• CU£eAHfHD fO ~tAH YOU ot YOUI MOH«f W9ll It CJ+tt•tUlt' 10\MOfO K• ··~ _53~ LB. ROU•SDAK $119 811f • 80NILISS ..... Le. ~ 1£D'•CHUClt 99c FUSlf•SlJCEO 69c l((J•SMAllfHOSI Ul8 $139 "~ 7·80NI ROAST .. ll. • ••• LIVIR ............ ti . RI• STIAK \:~~£ .... l8 I ~ IEEF•ROUHO •IOHE·IH $I 07 IUF•a4UCl(•l'OT 95c tlUF•ROUHO•IONflfS5 $169 _____ __,;=:; •UMP ROAST t• AW ROAS~.... ta. TIP.STIAK .. u 494 HEf•SMAllENOSI st $119 IUF'•IOHfUSS • 1 •• IHf •lOIH $205 ~-f~ESH fROZlH te_ •18 •OAST ~:~oc LI STIW-AT .. , 11. T•80 .. STIAK. · 1e ' $) 09 IUf•CHUCK •IOHEtUS $149 HU•CMICll•IOHIUU $159 IU,-•lOIH•SHAK $209 u . SHOULD•• .... ,. ll SHOULDIR STU• ll POllftRHOUSI u $ 2 2 9 I([,. ROUHO • IO•mus • 1 59 '"' . • 1 •• 1£11 • lOIH. SHAI(. IOHCHS~ $ 21 • l l _ TIP •OAST l l CU••• STIAK ...... ll TOP •••LOIN .. .. LB WHITING Fiil 11H ,llOZlN TURBOT FlllET POTATOES HEW CAOP • U.S. NO. 1 • WHITE ROSE ' AYIS YAlllTY SC•CKUZM ~~ .! s21• G.OSl-IP TOOlllPASIE ~~~-!89c - ..., r Wodne!d!y. Max 25. 1en DAIL v PILOT CJ I ·CECILY BROWNST· .Row). ·.Pearse.was respomible ~omplex." ~a.pollveoraa!ad notnmny.Servehot. ONE It is a collection of for "lnltiating a won· · Wbat atruct me, u I oil When the dish la p~ ... ,,._wiMlll.._............. · aeaaonal and veaetarian derCul now of recipes l'ead them, was how ~ eup seedless pared in the above wat. Good cooking in recipes. through correspondence well-seasoned they raisins the cheese melta conk !Jlonuterfes hu been go-··The book was born in and personal visits to aeem.ed -...even includ-Salt pletely and ~es irt· Monastic; llll oa lor centwiea. '!o tbe kttcben or our Lady m l I i N th · .quote a culinary bas-of the Resurrection on as er es 0 or 1ng some curried dishes. Soak the beans over-visible. lf you prefer to t ria.a.. •• ~ ld America, France and When we tried one of ni1bt in cold water, have the chunks melt but 0 • • • <? en Prloey in Cold Sprlngs, Italy." these, Beans Bengal, in drain and parboll in remain intact, add the m 0 n k • 8 n d ,Ir ia r 5 N · Y ··" Mrs. Boulding Except for a few in-our own kitchen, we. tr .. •h w' a•-r (wt"th 1 teas-obeese during the last 15 performed considerable notes. -""" f ,,lfe Brews NeW Recipes. s~rvlce ln preserving an-About 50 ~the recipes stances, there as only one found it a happy two-way poon salt> for one hour or minutes of baking time. ~lent recipes and !?vent-in the book are those of recipe on each of the. dish: as excellent as a until semisoft Drain the This dish can also be tog new formulas. Brother Victor Avt" la. c 0 0 kb 0 0 k 's P 8 g es main-dish salad as it is· beans, but sa~e the cook· adapted as a cold salad. Tod be beca~e, as, Mrs. Bou Id -baked and served hot. . .Ing water. Cook the beans in water ay some mem . rs spiritual director and ~ng wntes. · Each recipe BENGAL BE_ ANS Combine the beans until they are completely of the cler~ ~e keepana cook at Our Lady or the f ed b II c l d d ed b b up the trad1boo. One or Resurrection. He 15 a ts ram Y 8 co age 0 poun n a Y with all other Lnaredieots done. Drain and mix the interesting new. . ~uotalions and art that is lima beans · <except water) plus one with all ingredients . kbook.s . native of Paraguay who intended to reflect the 'Al pound sharp ched-teaspoon salt Mix well CpluJDp the raisins in ~oo is ''.From .~ joined the Benedictines nearly two-thousand-dar cheese, broken up or and put Into a bakinc pan water fll"lt>, increasing Chili Buffs By CECILY BROWNSTONE A~ .. r9Ul"Mll E91- A while ago al Greater Cincinnati's. airport, we bought a copy or "In the Begin- ning," a cookbook com- piled by members or Cincinnati's Rockdale Sisterhood. The cookbook's re- cipe for Cincinnati Chili grabbed our attention first. What makes Cincin- nati chill different from all o~hers? Its offbeat flavorings. Also, it is served several wa,ys. By itself. With beans. Over spaghetti with or without one or all of these top- pings -cheese, onfon. beans! CI NCINNATI CHILI 1 quart water 2 medium onions, finely grated Two 8-ounce cans tomato sauce 5 whole allspice ~ teaspoon red pep- per 1 teaspoon ground cumin seed 4 tablespoons chili powder 1h ounce un - sweetened chocolale 2 pounds ground beef 4 cloves garlic 2 tables poon s vinegar 1 large bay le af, whole 5 whole cloves 2 t e a s po o n s Worcestershire sauce 112 leaspoons salt l teaspoon cinnamon Add ground beef to waler in 4-quart pot, stir until beef separates lo a fine texture. Boil slowly for half an hour. Add all other ingredients. Stir to blend. bringing to a boil; reduce heat and simmer uncovered for about 3 hours. Last hour, pot may be covered after desired consistency is reached Chili should h e refrigerated Qvernight so that fat can be lifted from lop before reheat-ing. Serves 8. Fritters ·Tasty This is a tasty way to 'fry eggplant. The fritters serve up pretty layered with fried tomatoes and rice steamed In chicken broth with butter and fresh parsley. EGGPLANT FRITIERS 1 large eggplant 1 egg, slight beaten 2 tablespoons Parmesan cheese 2 tablespoons flour 2 teaspoons baking powder 'A teaspoon salt Generous dash around pepper 2 tablespoons butter or olive oil or 1 tables- poon eacb 1 small clove garlic, peeled and split Melt butler or oil in saucepan and saute split garlic until soft: remove g arlic and remove rat from heat. Peel and slice eggplant very thin ; steam over salted water about 10 minutes then turn into b lender to mash or puree. There should be a bout 1 cup <or more) pulp. . Sttr egg into egaplant and add other ln1re-· dlents; drop by tables-poon into reheated oil or ll'Jtler and fry unUl well· brownecton bottom, then fli p to brown other side. Keep warm on platter until an fritters •re fTled. Makes 8·10 as m aindbb. onastery Kitchen. ·in France and learned to year-old experience of grated or dish. Bake at 300 the oil and adding a litUe compiled by Elise Bould-cook in French and· monastic life as an ar-3 teaspoons curry degrees for 2 hours. Stir -w!"egar until the_ ingre- ·:gwlth th~ assistance!>f Spanish monasteries tirmation of wholeness, powder occasionally and add daentsarecoatedlightly. ~ther Victor .Antonio before he came to the simplicityandjoy.Some 'h cupmincedonion enoueb bean' water to · Chillandserve.Ser'ves Avlla and Sister Jean-United States. · · of the recipes in the book 112 cup minced green Marie Pearse (Harper & Sister Jean· Marie. are simple, some rather pepper 'keep the beans moist but '6 to 8. Lower Prices Overall . ke great holiday cookouts. Blada Cut ~~~~!F -~·,~~8 68 ° ! ~~:.:'~;~~;S ·-· LB198 -~ .. ~ ~ eoNOEOBEEF ··-~-~~~w ' ~4 • Ground Beef ... 55c Blade Cut Chuck Roast l• 59c Fresh Roasting Chicken ... u 79c l 6t..'" IA•M• AVG: Wl ~-llS I p,.G OA! ._.vlll IO"otOI U• Boneless Ham II 11a Cross Rib Roast 1 28 Hillshire Farms S1usaga .... ·-ll. 1" fU<l V C()()t(fOWAIUI ADOEO"""°'-l OfO "'"-' &O'<lllU IO••t'CO ME• C'1UC• l '"UHOPOlS.CA OAWOI l""'' Hormel Cura 81 Ham Halves l8 239 Large End Rib Roast u 138 Boneless Round Steak ......... ,. ... LB. 12a "°"EltS5 ~utl'f(;()Of(EO llONO(Ol£H IONotOl ll• -. Wilson Masterpiece Ham LI 218 Boneless Rump Roast Top Round Steak ...... "-· ·-·. Lii 158 llOt;llUS W"OU 3+L8 AvC l'fl•l>ll tH tt 1Ht.,Qi#lt(IJf 60"llt$S I ONDlO OU• large End RllJ Steak BONOeo BEEF ..................... LB.138 Ground Beef P1ttlea • JU 8 4C. 221 n P411tlS Extra Lean Ground Beef LB. 121 tNOI IODDU.0121HAl l ~!~!o~Y~!. !,1~~-~ _Ba~n"'-• ~o 141 Hoffy Sliced Bacon I L8 Pl(G.119 .. U•··•• "" .... , ""''"' ,.,.._ ALL LUCKY STORES WILL BE Van Camp's Pork & -~~.°47t; OPEN MEMORIAL DAY MONDAY, MAY 30 10 A.M. to 7 P.M. Ice !SQUARES> Produce Honeydew Melons LB zgc Iceberg Lettuce REGULAR SIZE Fresh EACH 19c Mushrooms gee (COUNTRY ST ANO 8-0l . PKG. 59•) LB ~~!!~~ Sweet Rad Onions .. 29c ~.!~!~ng Nepthytis ••c .. 3a . II~ 4MT' NOf AVAf\Al ll fllllOlllUtOV~A 01 W HUtfTf•010M Ofll WMtHllA•UrM I WMlrTt-•fl e&.VO Health & Beaut~ Aids ~ty,l~~1~ .. ~!!,~ ~~~ , ... H, m 93c Prell Shampoo II OZ LIQVIOOOl~l 1111' Lilt Special V05 Hair Spny -•UIOSOl llfGULAA u~~cr .. no ::4~ ggc Packaged & Canned Niblats Corn u.oz'(" 2ac ~~v~s~~.!ring Potatoes 1~z~" 590 Dry Roast Virginia Peanuts "" 990 lAO'fltl .. . •.. --· .. ·-·-·· l2°0Z JAii ~~!~~~~k~~s ~~ 99c ~!!o'!J:!lifor~la _~livea ~~N 49c French's Mustard ...t:,_ 590 PockogecJ <~ (~--' ned Lady Lee Fruit Punch Base <(. 1 09 ~~d! ~~~(~BO Sauce ~, 59c Bubble Up Beverage • h' Green Giant Peas Kraft Marshmallows 'l"lJ"f0 Harvest Day Tomatoes ~ gge .~N 33c .. ,f:.~ 53c ~O~N 45c ~!~~.ut Butter Cookies "oz~o 79c Harvest Day Salad Maca~~~!:(39c Harvest Day Kidney Bea~S01~ .. 4 70 ~~u~~~~., Day Potato Chip~ Ol eAG 7 4 c !~~hbone Salad Dressinq oz~ 53c Hormel Vienna Sausage , 0 '!:,. .. 35c ~!~l~!~ Rice Mix l-Olo;:. 35c ~~~ein Salad Dressing._0~L 73c Lady Lea Tomato Juice .,0~ .. 4 7c Dinty Moore Beef Stew ~.01:." 97c .. __ ,.......,__~··­ ............ ..,,. .. ,_, ... II Ifft Del 1cotessen Xlnt Potato Salad 10 0~ .. ggc Oak Sliced Cooked Ham a Olc(li 119 lady L~e. ~~r~dded Chee~~-~ ggc ~~~r~~ .~~~.i~nal Sausage. '(,, 139 Swift Ham ,,, c; ... a11 ~~~1, ~ee Dips •ol~ .. 39c HouserokJ & Pet Lady Lea Plastic Wrap ..... 10(),~ 59c ~~J~~ld's Aluminum Fo~5·S•~l 55e Orchid Paper Napkins JfO.Cf:KO 1°8 Villa Paper Plates ·~P:G ggc: Villa Styrofoam Cups ~· ,,~G 49c Purex Liquid Bleach Hi Class Dog Food Lady Lea Brlquats ll·Ol CAN 1&c • 10.LI I~ 132 ~ ""., 1 ....... u .............. flt•••......,nttfl~lf"'.._~..,_ 1-.... -.... c-,..a,.,.. •AMAHllM 08Ca..NT Sl.PERMARKETS t10 W. LA 'ALMA AWNUll •ANAHlllll 110 ao. aTATI cO"-l!oa ei.vo. PU LLllrTOfil m NO. IUCUO Alll. · "UNTlNOTON l lACH •LAGUNA HILL.I , .... MOOIOtU"IT IT"CIT mn CH OT "°"°AT LA ,~ ·~ MlltADA •O..A..ol • IANU ANA LA Mt9tAOA IMO"'NQ CINU9t tuO L CHAPMAN AVINUI »JS 10. t•taTOL ITMIT •'ULLl"TON UO HO, MTOMOHO • a .uiorM 01110v1 umMAONOLIAAVL ITO .. H O,EN DAILY I A.M. Frozen & Dair~ Sunny Delight Citrus Pun~"°~~ 73c ~!~~!~lA~aid Lemonade ·~ Ol C•H 49c Party Time lea Cubes •l J oz ll•G 2 4 c ~!9.~L~.§i .Y!i~~ ~ Lucky Baar . 12/11-0Z BTLS. 2°9 ~H~~i.en~ Age Bourbon ·.G:t:IL. 110 Smirnoff Vodka . .a..~L 11•0 IO·PllOO• .... .. Discount Center Triple Top Pitcher 2'i·OUART CAPACITY PLASTIC ASSORTED COLORS TO 0100SE FROM . ggc J .. . . ' . . . . . . . . ~ . . ... -,. .. . ~ ~ .. . . . . CJ4 ON1. y PtLOT W!dn!!dly. M1125, 1177 BOOMER INSIDE WOODY ALLEN l t>0CT0R WIU. ---· S£E '1(X.l ~' MR.AU.EN. ~. ZUCKE~ 0 FUNKY WIMKERBEAN TANK McNAMARA NANCY COULD YOU -LOAN ME A DOLLAR ?2 ......... LOAN YOU??? WHEN COULD YOU PAY ME BACK'? cc - by Wa F. hwa cmd Mel ~a-. JUST AS SOON AS I GET MY INCOME TAX REFUND GORDO by Tom Batiuk -me AIGTitUNG To GO IS 1HE AKr5 !! ~ , I #/ ! by Ernie l•shmiller !~' ... ~c. .. .. .. -~ -.... 0 ' l LOST IT IN 1'ME SUN !~ OIP rr 60?0IO'IOU SEE rT?. MoTLEY·s CREW QUU! \~ HERE! WE ro<JND A RADICAL !! DOOLEY'S WORLD DR. S~OCK NO N E:E:P FOR IPSNi'IFICATtON, MR. CONROY.' YOUR FACE: IS YOUR CRC:Pl-r .' MOON MULLINS Lf>.DY P, .ARE You DOING ,A.N'/THIN~ 11-115 EVENING? TODAY'S CBOSSWDBD PUZZLE &!AUT.' ~E.5..\'4S IF· IF by Gus Arriola ACROSS us brt1d UNITED Feature Syndicate I M1ke a 46 Footwear 48 R11ilro1d :u11n employee 5 G1ther up 50 Hum1n1 T ueldey Punl• Solved 10Bird1ound1 51 Run ewiy 14 Eng oper1 63 Outrigeoue ~~~ "" compo1ir 5 7 L~e lorw.i« 15 Of tlf'lltlH 61 Ukraine ~.a.:..+'~ 1 6 Negt1c1 metroooha 11 Actor's 62 Not open to ~+a+.: miheu '1 tr1na11 words 84 Sic11i1n I 9 U S govl resort i gcy 65 European 20 F11tM nver 21 Moved 86 Sh1de ot VIOientiy green 23 Ltll 67 Wise guy 1~11nt 88 Br11d ot 11air L.;;.'=~ i..:~~ =~ 25 Guido's 69 Improved nole oos1Uon 11 E tndtan nurse 39 Dawdled 26 Neg1llve DOWN t 2 Prudent 40 Marries ohr111e 2 13 Dutch town 43 Russi1n words 1 Winoow 18 Mr. M1rltn he1tlng 29 P11ce of frame 22 With the device wealth. 2 2 Malayan voice 45 Abbot words sailbOat 24 Free 4 7 Join a cause J "Have 26 Court or. "9 ChQOees .34 Caused 3 mercy.. dera 52 Interest ear· t>eilto sound !" 27 Hebrew high ners JUDGE PARKER HIS AAME ISCJIAAL.E5 HE MAY BE PLANNING A CAPER.~ KASPER' HE~ A RECORD /16 A JEWEL LIEU-CHECK DISCREETLY! I DOH'T Tl41EF~ HE'S REGISTERED IN ROOM 604 AT TfNANT! WAtlT HIM TO KNOW WE 'RE THE BlAl<ELV ! SEE WHETHER VOtl CAN FIND INTERESTED IN HIM! OUT WHAT HE'S DOING HERE IN TOWN! ._,.._", .___, "U~~~ :····--· ....... .... . ... ...... ... by Rodger Bradfield MAYSE ~f BEU>N6S lZ> 1J.16 CLfl\N MTE CJ.J.18 HE: Sti.YS :t'i,i... GST t-r e>ACK AS SOON AS 1"'HE: CHECK CL..eARS .' by Ferd and Tom JohnsOJ! THE GIRLS 35 La lemme 4 Living under priest 53 Hawaiian 1n 3 7 Not canvas 28 Kind of atruments illuminated 5 Agreeable drum Informal 1 ''l 'm.al.ways telling ~yself I'm going to mak~ ~Y life more cxcit"'4' • but 1tJU•t ends up wnh my rcarranama thc tivtng room furniture." person 30 Period 54 IX 38 Dubhn-6 39 37 before 55 Hereditary baaed org inches E11te< untt 39 Ornstd uP 7 Sweetaop 31 Apportion 5fl Mythical 4 t Dead ling 8 Hangs 32 G1rl'1 name giant '42 Unlln1ahed loo11ty 33 AQuatlc 58 Laid·UP things 9 Turned mammal 59 Smelter -4" Head abOul V11. 38 Lew-: refute coverings 10 Mild Comedi11\ 60 Far: Prelti1 '45Soulhem impreealiol'I ofOld 63~-· l 4 '' 17 ._ ..... f I Nlf UP. HERE, PEPU1¥, J IN 1lU! FONP HOPE! OF t FINPtN& A ume SOurtJP!~ • ~ by Tom K. Ryon IF YOU KIN C11MME A ~IP'TlON, l'U. l"E GLA'7 -r· PIJi OUI A A.P.f'-! by Mell 1 EVEN fCSMIM~lt "PiCIF'ICAU.V WHAT IT WA~-If WA-S. AMUT HOW MUCH S .-iATrl VOL(/ l f jP=arfyfime: ·Sippers, N 'iDDlers , For 8Princ and sum-2 ti;tblespoom liqllid to a rolling boil, then re-Remove from beat. Let v. tuspoon crushed mu sipper& and nib-crab boll d.uca heat to simmer. stand for one-half-hour. tarragon blers: One easy·to·lix· l \4 . cup chopped Cook for three hours (or Reheat slightly if de-Paprika r SOUJ> and cracker combo green oruons 7 hours on low in crock. aired. Serve six to eight. Cream together but· and one elegant offering mea1 pounds lump crab· pot.). SW~BU'M'ERED t e r, mus tard, Swiss ••that requires some In a tbree·q u a r I FRENCH ROUNDS cheese, parsley, paprika ti added attention. 1 cup cream saucepan, saute onions 10.12 li F b and tarraaon Spread " .Chicken Cup OrientaJ 2 ~ablespoons flour 8 ces reoc mixture on bre~d slices. 'with Sesame Curry Nib-Pmchofthyme ~ddb~~a:;~~a;~;~ bread · Facing buttered sides _biers or Clam and Corn 11 teaspoon powdered and cook until flour b :':e cup grated Swiss together stack bread Bisque with Swiss But-gar •c begins to ti k to c e b together' in aluminum "lered French Rounds 1 teaspoon cayenne dd s c d pan. ~ _cup utter or foll and beat tbrouah 25 •both make wonderful 2 cups or fresh corn ~er ~~:~:~.!u:s. ~~d marganne,softened minutes in 350-d:gree first courses to party (about4ears) . 2 tablespoons fr.esh ec1·•· h t I · corn and s immer 15 sn1ppedparsley ovenoroverm Jum· o • spreads;_ or accompany Jn a heavy saucepan, minutes more. Add \.'.a teaspoon French· coa.l.J on grill. Serves 5·6 ! thalemdswith C!'15P green bring first S ingredients cream slowly and stir. style mustard people twice. main dishes for lunch or I 5 a and eQJoy them as dinner. CJDCKENCUP ORIENTAL Vt cup chopped · green pepper Mt teaspoon growid 'ginger .. 2 tablespoons butter or margarine 3 cans (10th ounces> condensed cream or chicken soup 2 soupcans water 1 soup can milk Switch to Ralphs, fora SuperHol~cla umber One Cookout . 1 can (13~ ounces J crushed pineapple, drained Toasted cocorffi\ · Chopped green onion · In saucepan. cook pep- • per with ginger in butter !until tender. Stir in re· maining in"gredients ex· cept coconut. Heat ; stir now and then. Garnish 'with toasted coconut and 'chopped green onion. ,Serves 6-8. SESAMECURRV MBBLERS 1 teaspoon curry powder 1 tablespoon butter or margarine 1 package (8 ounces) refrigerated crescent dinner r olls Toasted sesame seed In saucepan, cook curry in butter a few {Tlinutes. Meanwhile, un· roll dough; seal perfora· tions between triangles. Brush with butter. With 2-inch cookie cutter , cut dough into d esired $hapes. Fans or "snails" complement an Oriental theme and are available ~t gourmet cookware stores. Place on cookie sheet. Sprinkle with sesame seed. Bake at 375 degrees F. Cor 10-12 minutes. Makes 21".i dozen appetizers to ac· tompany soup. C R AB AND CORN BISQUE 6 medium h ard shelled crabs 1 'h quarts wat('r 2 medium yellow onions, quartered 6 celery stalks. coarsely chopped Brandy 'n .Fruit Dandy Brandy is a dandy w3y lo jaiz up the flavor of fresh fruit particul arly peaches. nectarines or apricots. Tbe small amount or alcohol m thi!; recipe acts d a sort of an a nti freeze, keeping the mtx· lure from freezing solid. BRANDIED FRUIT SHERBET 3 tablespoons apricot or peach brandy l e nvelope plain gelatin 16-ounce can juic<' packed p eaches or apricots 1 te aspoon Jemon juice 1 teaspoon grated lemon peel or orange pee) (or a pinch or bottled peel) Pinch ol salt Put brandy in blender container. Sprinkle on gelaUn cranules and al- low to soften. Drain fruit and measure Jui ce. Add ~ater to make one and c>ne·balf cups. Heat the .i\lice and water to boil· ing. Pour into blender. Cover and blend, unW all •elatin granules are dis· •olved. Add peaches, iover and puree smooth. dd remaining ingre· ients and blend smooth. I Pour mixture into !OJaUow metal trlJ' and freeze until slushy. ~eak up into mixing wl quietly and beat tU fluffy. Return to eztt and freeze firm. $often briefly before s rvinc. Kakn ei1ht a rvlngs, 41 calories ch, with peac ; 44 calorl•• ••ob witb apricots. "' \ \ Beef Blade Cut Chuck Steak per lb. Beef· Small Size Rib Steak II per lb. ' -- 48' per II lb. per II lb. per lb. II Alfpht-Hot Dog Of Pi.Jn" HClllburgfl' Buns '· gal. btl. II Pantry Fillers " .. ;..-.43 ~·.45 2~t. .59 t~t. .59 ·l>k ... 79 14 0L ll btL Fr.ah Coachella SWllllCom each Super Produce n u ................... ..... ~Potatoes ~Sai::JTomatoes ~ .... ~ ~Fresh Cabbage ~COIOlltryS._. ~Mustrooms Super Deli -:: .15 ~.33 ~.10 ~.59 USDA Choice Beet-Golden Premium Meats ~BeefChucll .89 ~~uR0ast 7 Bone Roast pw lb .69 p .. lb. ·::-.95 . ~ • w-• ... ~ .89 D ~cheese ,.,_ 79 ..-... '::. 1 11 ;~ 119 115 o ··••v ... ~~ Baupartc Franks u~eul ChV<k .99 ~ POfk Shou~r r • • 10• ~~English Beef Ribs po• Boneless Pork Roast !:. lb US.DA Bui lo•~ 8011•i•u , .... 1 99 '"~Tri Tip Roast If), USDA lun Cub•.• ~·· 1 39 c•o1c1 Stewing Beef ,, ~BftfC~·B-leu 1'9 Family Steak p¥ lb ~lffl l-~• 1 21 ,~ Steak Tails -It> ~ , ... ,,...,,._.,, St !CI ) lrl "*'-• 1 31 Pastrami .... "' Wine. & Spirits ~ ~;;d~· Vodka •so 2•9 "" D A;p;' Gold Beer ~~ .99 D LIMltM T--s. .... to 4 99 Canadian Mist Whisky ~~ o r:~;~~~~wr,; .. 199 1 . ht•t Health & Beauty ~ SpecW..25 off peek Sure Anti Perspirant I N . 99 Ml. • ~ E,:,e.;t Tablets •ct. 139 ,,..,. ~N;Drops ]/JOI 1 21 1>11 Pricel Eflective May 26 through June 1, 1977 We rtS•r•• the right to limit Of refuse talH lo comrnerci•I dealera or wholu•l•rs. ~ ft;i phs Bacon • , lb. 1 1~ ..-.. ~ w~·F;y;-1.egs P•• 99 lb •• ~ S~;; Pork Chops 1•• p« lb. D C~ed SIYimp 2 39 .,., lb. ~ P~~ Red Snapper ':.' 1'' Frozen Foods ~t=,;~~ 1!:,,L .45 o~,.-.....i Ice Cream :! .89 ~ AstO<IM V1<i.tiet Banquet Entrees Sor. 29 plig •• ~ c.ino-11....,, or OllKlllllOle Avocado Dips hL 69 ,-g. • Home ·N Leisure ~ P-~ie cuiterv 100ct. 79 ..... DB;h'r~;;. lr•W 2 77 .. L. ~Pa.;~~~ 100ct. 99 llllt· I !;?]~Ketchup ~s~c>n;;s !;?] ~iO:POpcom ~ Ra~Cleanser rA c---.. ~Tomato Sauce ["A ltflltttM-.... ~ Salad Dressing Super floral ~s~ks 0 COlofful M«g_.. ~Daisies O BO'uquets D 'tttllCwt Carnations O'rtMCut Gladiolas D ~ ..... Mum Plants Switch 10 Number One* ••• Swltch lo r • -'~fl"••., r • •r«D•• -,r-. ,~M· ·-, .... ...l I I a.w.Jt.wic...-11 ........ c..-I ......... n ... c..-I 6pk 79 ctn. • '!~ .79 buncft 111 ~ 321 I ----~ 39 11 ~ '19 II;;... 99 I I Dips ~ • 11 Mann . ~ • t I 11 llltqufls '::". • I ~=-=:~~..,.~c.,,..., I ~o.. ........ o.c..-,.,c..w. 11 U.OM-•O.C...-... ~· 11 &HIO..lllilll .. O.~-~-, .....__ .... ., .. C....llildllll_21 .... NM1,"'7 C.,... ...... .., ......... 1,ff/11 0....-.... .., ......... \,m'f, :::::·-·---=-= L RIGHT PRICE COUPON .IL RIGHT PRICE COUPON . IL RIGHT PRICE COUPON ~· ~'":..""'=!' ----------------· ---------MSM-.~ Dc~·M~ ~~Sab.i 301. 43 pk9. • rJI Mlflvf• Mild-Pin OCJ Orange Juice WW.C..,1 • ... ..... ,1 11111 --........ ... 1.aoo.212. 1600 • E 17tt. St., COSTA MBA- 2'1f/ wro • v~ &-.ms. l lMW.Mlll. .... OITlrWa& Mmml. .... " tlOt W&VD.,IUnllGalUOt Mil IM ST., TUSlll ~ CX>STAW .01 N. LOMA, MAIDA 6N2 WAM8, IUITICTOM IUOf • ,. .. . • ·; --.. .. . ,. .. .. .. .. .. . . . . , . . . ,. What makes this spinach salad sizzle? ... or this pasta platter slimmer? :p;irty Planning? Roast a Canadian A Canadian bacon roast? Sure, why not. It actually ranks with beef and lnmb in terms of nutritious output. Yet, it has less than half the fat content that regular bacon has, and a boneless, smoky flavor akin to ham. Dress a "roast" in herbs for a popular buffet course. Serve it with warm French bread rounds and a cool selec· lion of salads. A Canadian roast goes especially well with fruit and the time is now for a platter of tropical favorites . Leftovers can be combined in the recipes following. Try Slim Spaghetti Carbonara, lightly seasoned, and less fatten- ing than a pasta dressed with ground beef or sausage. Or, use Canadian bacon to dress your favorite stove-top salad - a gourmet's spinach treat that sizzles in cognac. HERBEDGOURMETCANADIAN 4·1b. Canadian-style bacon roast 1 2 cup herb and garlic salad dressing 1 teaspoon each rosemary, thyme, sage 1 onion, coarsely chopped 1 cup white wine Brush the roast with salad dressing, using a pastry brush. Sprinkle with mixture of rosemary, thyme, and sage. Place fat side up in shallow roasting pan. Place coarsely chopped onion pieces a round meat. Pour ·~ cup of wine around meat a nd bake at 325' until an internal temperature of 170 ts reached or the roast is heated through. Baste fre- q uenlly during baking period with remainder of wine and snlad dressing Serves 8. SPINACH GREEN 2 bunches fresh spinach, stems removed 2 ounces oh ve oil or vegetable oil 1 cup Canadian-style bacon, cubed 1 :i teaspoon dry mustard 4 tablespoons Worcestershire sauce 5 tablespoons brown sugar 1-1 cup cognac, optional 2 garlic cloves. chopped 1 pinch fi nes herbes 2 dashes Tabasco Sauce 1'3 cup malt vinegar Wash spinach leaves. Pat dry with toweling and place in large salad bowl. Place Canadian Style B~on in sauce pan with oil garlic, mustard, Worcestershire Sauce, Tabasco Sauce: sugar and vinegar. Heat over medium heat until mixture re· aches bolling point while stlrrlog rapidly. Remove from heat. Immediately pour contents of pan over spinach leav~ and toss. Place spinach on warm salad plates. Add fresh ground pepper and salt to taste. For a flourish. heat cognac in pan until cognac r eaches boiling point. Ignite and pour over spinach when flames begin to die down. QUICHE CANADIAN 9 inch unbaked piecrust 2 teaspoons chives or green onions, chopped 1 cup Canadian-style bacon, diced 1 tablespoon vegetable oil :i:. cup Swiss cheese, diced small 4 eggs, lighUy beaten lcupmUk 1 cup heavy cream 1 teaspoon salt ~ teaspoon white pepper lpmcbnutmeg · Line a 9 Inch pie dish with piecrust. In a small, heavy saucepan saute Canadian Style Bacon and green onions in vegetable oil for 1-2 minutes. Cover piecrust with sauteed bacon and onions. Sprinkle ~ cup diced Swiss cheese into pie dish. In mixing bowl, combine remaining ingredients mixing well and pour lnto pie dish. Bake at 450° for 10 minutes. Reduce heat to 3509 and bakefor 30 minutes or until custard is firm. Serves 4·6. SUMSPAGBE'ITI CA&BONA.U 3 cups spiabetti 1 lb. Canadlan·style bacon 2eggs 4 tablespoons skim milk 5 tablespoons Romaao cheese, grated 2~ tablespoons parsley, fresh, minced 1 tablespoon orerano or Italian seasoning Pepper, coanely ground Salt Cook 1p~etU ID bolllng salted water unW tender. · MeanwNle, dice Canadian Style Bacon and lightly broWQ the bacon cubes ln a non-stick lklllet with no fat added. When the apaghetU la cook~1 drain it. Beal the egca and milk toaether and atir Into uie hot spaghetti. Sdi ln the bacon cubes, crated cheese and 1euontna1. Heat until buba .bly aodaorveimmed!~teJJ. Senes4. · • · BONELESS RIB EYE SPEICER STEAK m2.69LB. IAR M .BONELESS TAVERN HAM ., . ..... . tore ours: 9 to 9 Dailv -Sunday 9 to 1 Prfc .. Effecttn Thurs., May 26 thru Wed., June I Pric.-~ .. Steclt .. .._. We Glocly Accept Food St-.s We ReH"• The R.icJht t;o Umff Quantities And RefuH SQfe To Deden And WholelCllen. Foskrfum.s FOSTER FARMS fftsh.. OR ZACKY FARMS FRYING ~=-.=.... CHICKEN LEIS & THIGHS WHOLE2 3t H'!~F • LB. ··L~. FRESH GROUND 59c BEEF 49c BEEF LI. ShortRIBS LB. FRY I MG C FOSTER OR ZACKY FARM59 CHICKEN LI. ' osciNiiS .. HF 99! iACONED 1.39LI. Wiiiias 89! .............................. 7.gp:r.~:1 6 PA~ CANS UNTS PRIMA COOKING SAUCES I 5.5 OL JAR .1 AR·T·PAK 5 s 1 l!'!~o~P ; 303 CAN CHRIS and PITTS •. 9 c SPRINGFIELD MEDIUM B.B.Q. SPICES p~ OLIVES ALL R.A.VORS 14 0%. BOTTLE . 6 0%. CAN SPRINGFIELD ALUMINUM FOIL SPRINGFIELD 5 s 1 CpoRK &·~~!!! ; .'SALAD OIL 69c · 9 . 24 0%. BOTTLE , • I WllllllllG PRICES WILL MAKI US ~----~N=EW~'7~7~FO~R•D .. .:.. ... - 4 LTD 11 S f SerectsMt ~~RID H41Dror rower steering, steel b811~ front disc brakes actory air cond1t1onlng A~llf tires. V-8 engine'· ~~A";~~~~:6t~.nd more. St~i~.O~n~~d c~~~ Reduced front $6205 To $5344 Discount $86 J ... MEW '76 F.l 00 l l 7" CUSTOM R.ARESIOE PlCKUPes cru1soma11c. ckage amP & oil gaug . ec1al paint & V-8 engine. Range~e~abrakes tinted glass. plu~1~~ed mags. TA pawer stee~n~nr'chrome rear steP bum:r·d~ing llghtS snack stnoes roo v hrome brush guar · . 60 RWl. tires stack\~k ;H37 ser ;;002151 $8023 tray. tonneau cover RedlKed ff'om To $5595 Discount $2428 DAILYP1LOT THE:Y'RE HERE! MUSTANG I T-TOPS! IMMEDIATE. DELIVERY ON A CHOICE OF COLORS CLOSED MEMORIAL DAY $300,000 WORTH OF USED CARS! 1976 PLYMOUTH SS>AH 4 DR. V-8. auto. trans .. factory air conditioning. PoWf steering oower disc brakes. radio. heater whitewall tires. vinyl roof. tinted glass. wheel covers. low lfl1les. (040PAB) Stcx:k #868 s3999 LTD 4 Dll H.T. V·8. auto tran' factory air power steering power brakes radio. heater. wh1tew11ll tire'! vinyl roof tinted glass wheel covnrc; Nice Car (706GAM) Stock :t2790 s1799, 1974 ~ORD IUH V-8. auto. trans .• factory air conditioning. oower steering, OOW9f' disc brakes. radio. heater, whitewall tires. vinyl roof. tinted glass. wheel covers. (708M0M) Stock 12909 s2799 •UHAIOUT 1974 AUDI IOOlS 4 cyl auto trans . factory air cond1honing, AM-FM radio, heater. tinted glass. wheel covers. sunroof. ( 130LIG) Stock #217 $3699 4 c 11 auto tran5 radio heater $ wh11ewa11 '"P'> 576RSDl Srock •2928 CASH-OR TRADE DOWN s3999 V-8 ' c;oeed oower steering radio httater spPC1at tire'! & wheals. low m1leage(Ser #52155)Slk #28Yff $6995 ON APPROVED CREDIT ON ANY NEW OR ·USED CAR IN OUR HUGE INVENTORY I 2 MO./ 12,000 MILE LIMITED POWER TRAIN WARRANTY . FREE ~ ON DESIGNATED USED CARS BARGAIN CORNER SPECIAL 1970 FORD LTD 2 DR. V-8. auto. trans . factory air cond1tion1ng oower steering. oower brakes. AM/FM stereo radio. heater. vinyl roof Lie No. 738ABO Stock #1076 1975 FORD GIAHADA 4 DI. V-8 . auto. trans .. factory air conditioning. oower steering. oower disc brakes. radio. heater. whitewall tires. tinted glass. wheel covers. (356MEU) Stock f2908 s3499 1976 FORD SHORTIE ,.U. 6 cyl auto trans . power steering. heater. custom paint & chrome rims, side pipes sun roof ( 1065834) Stock it2664 s4599 1973 FORD f'tMTO SEDAM 4 cyl . 4 speed. radio. heater. vinyl roof (898HYC) Stock #1011 s1799 c.,., 4 cyl . 4 speed, AM-FM radio. tape ' heater. (198JSF) • Stock #921 s2599 ........... ts ............ celed ~Blast FORT LAU· DJ!:RDALE . Fla . <AP>-'lbe main office Ol Mackey International Airlines. a charter com- pany which recently ~ean Rying to Cuba WU heavUy damaged by a bomb today. The lirm '• owner-said he wu call· ta1 oft all flights to the Communbt-ruled island. .. We will not fly to @1NSHORT J C u b a u n d e r a n y· drcumstances," said J.oe Mackey. "I hate to 1tve up, but too many UYes are involved. 1 am mot going to risk one of my employes' lives." Spokesmen for the Broward County Fire Department said the 12:15 a.m. explosion blew away the front p( tbe one-story building, which houses sever a l other businesses related to the airline or operated bl the same owners. <:.rterHlt WASHINGTON (AP) -Former President Gerald R. Ford says President Carter is mak- ing a terrible mistake by suggesting the use of general tax funds to keep the financially ailing Social Security system afloat. In the harshest attack yet on his s uccessor . Ford told a Capitol Hill luncheon Tuesday that the President's plan is "one of the most dangerous and short- sighted policies I can im- agine.'' Carter recently sent a m essage to Congress suggesting the feasibility of us ing general re- venues to bolster the ~ial Security system ought to be seriously con- sidered. IJ.aletlSued ~EW YORK <AP) •lex Haley. Pulltzer f'lrfte-winning aathor of ''Roots," the best-seller '1>out his s lave an· ~ors. has ben sued t"Or plagiarism rc.r the second lime in a mooth. Harold Courlandtr of Bethesda. Md., cha-ged in a suit filed Tuesd9( in U.S. District Court in Manhattan that "Roo\\" was "copied largel)'' from Courlander 's 19t7 novel. "The ACri cnn ... Trfnu Due WASHINGTON (AP) -A Senate-passed bill containing subsidles for farmers probably will h_-ve to be whittled down by the House to avold a veto by President Carter. Before passing the blll 6' to 18 Tuesday. th& ~nate rejected a rgu- ments that it should trim the price tag on the m,eJaure to conform to lbe budget resolution passed by Congress only 10 days earlier. Begin 'Flt, TEL AVIV, Israel (AP ) ·-Menahem Begin's doctor said to· day the chief of the LUcud bloc, which won last week's general eletllon, l1 flt and capable of tak· t'he on tbe Job of prtme rplnlater. Betin was hospitalized Monday with what Dr. Shlomo Laniado diagnosed as pericardltls, a mild in· ~maUon o( the mem· 6taue surf()Und1ns the llf•rt tbat cau1e1 fever and chat pains. The doc· tor uld it was an after effect of a heart attack B•gln IUf.fered ln March. UIN! ......... . Wednesd'Y. M-r 2S. U'ln Punch Europe Tour 2 Punk Views: Scenic, Siwek BY LISA ROBINSON lri.tll........,. SJMlc,a .. What happens when an American punk rock band tours Europe for the first time? I followed the Ramones from the Bowery club CBGB all the way to Paris, France, and lived to tell the tale. There ls a strong cult of European rock fans, especJ.Uy in France, who are enamored of what they perceive as the "New York underground:" Lou Reed, Patti Smith (they caU her "Patti Smeez">. Television, the Ramones, Iggy Pop, New York Dolls, John Cale. (I EVEN BEARD WAYNE COUNTY'S single "Max's Kansas City," over the sound system in de: signer Kemo's fabulous Place de la Victolre bouli· que.) However, the Ramones weren't exactly enamon!d with Europe. The two month, 40-city tour was burdened with electrical problems from the start. ---------., In Zurich, their amps x busted. The Ramones ~-Tops in Pops drove two days to get to _______ _._t(;# Marseilles, only to dis· cover that the club didn't have a stage or enough power to light up their amps. In Geneva, the customs and the telephone company were on strike. IN LYONS, EVERYTHING WAS BROKEN, and bassist Dee Dee Ramone had to borrow a tiny Japanese amp from Talking Heads' bassist Tina Weymouth. Periguex, near Bordeaux, was, according to Johnny Ramone, "so far away that we couldn't even get there." The audience nearly riot- ed for the band in Le Havre, but the musicians got electric shocks onstage. Perhaps worst of all, in Holland, Johnny's trademark leather jacket was stolen from the stage, and manager Danny Fields had to mall him another from New York's Hudson's Army/Navy Store. As for the cultural exchange, the contrast was great between the Ramones -four leather-clad boys from Queens, New York, who went to bed ear· ly, wanted to watch TV and bemoaned the lack or lasaina -and the Talkblg Heads -the art. schooled rock quartet who opened the show and traveled with the Ramones on a bus throughout Europe. . "WE'RE HAVING A GREAT TIME," said T_ma We~th. "Lots of kids foUow us from each city. and we ve been playing pinball with the local punks. It's really encouraging· for us everyone seems to like us." ' '·n·s Uke a vacation for me," added Heads' leader David Byrne. "Everything is so scenic." · The Ramones weren't quite so enthusiastic. ''I have mixed feelin1s." said Johnny. "Nobody alks English. It's not like America. I miss home, a \hone call the other day cost me $100. We can't find li.aagna or ravtoli, and I m..,s mHk. All the milk ti.-e bas stuff noatmg on top or it.·· "EVEN THE COCA-COLA TASTES weird ·• adted lead singer Joey Ramone. • <lut Tommy Ramone's only comment was that he _tc>ught Europe was "beautiful and histonc," whtlq>e.e Dee said he'd like to find an apartment in Pari!tn a "crooked old building." ~ Ramones show at the Bataclan Club <usuart a tango palace but also the site of the le1end~ 1972 Lou Reed/Nico/John CaJe concert> was we eceived by the henna-haired, leather clad audienc (It's funny to be ltt Paris and see Iggy Pop but~ and New York Doll$ T-abJ.rts.) AN EXPECTED RIGRLIGBT OF the Ramones wu the on1ta1e appearance of a local drag q ho stripped before the band went on then cootln to lay at Dee Dee's feet. smoklni Gltanes and g adorin11Y. As the ones themselves sine, "Today your love. tomorro be world." 'OTTAWA, Canada CAP> -Candidatet or l'iime YSnllter Pierre .mou Trudeau'• Uberal ·~Y won flve of six .,.s•ral parliamentary Qata ln by .. lectlont .'lulda,. ~ Polltlcal ob1enera ilil.d tbe UberaJs' abow· 9ijl '"eauld load Trudea\l 9a:caUforearly general ~ thll tall. The E lnlat.ef had aaid campalp b.la would be oSNn ta 4ue1tlon ff lb• ·==·bldlt ln the .. OCC Paper 0rrn1 e Co a • t Colleae's Recycling Ce-nter will bold Its an· nual sprtnc paper d.riv• JuneS8Dd•. Newapapers and tna&adnes ..m&7 be de- llnred to the center. located oo KoDlior w.,. . .. . "' . Weight May Be Problent HE FAMILY CIRCUS • "18UC NOTICE .PVBUC NOTICB NOTIC9 ~ .-uauc H•A• INO ,ICTITIOU' •USINHt. ~OSTA #tM tlU•VtL.OPlldltT N~UilTtMtNT ' ~MCY Tiit M1*'4,.. __ ._.,4191 ... ...._ A PUaLIC Hf!!AltlHO wlll be ... Id i.y ""' H tlMCollaMeulleoe ... 1-ntA~ftCY RAM SALES, "5 UftlWnlty °'·· Oii WM..-Y. J-I. lt11,lft llW Clty •L·l.Cftla~CA$U tt Ctil• MtU C:--Cll Ch4111'1be•\, )1 Mic ..... J 04"(11110. JU UnTllOf'SHY ""' Dfl•, CMu Mew, Ctlllo<nl• et Or •• Ct>la Mtu.. CA m11 >:oo • "'" ., -. -'""'"'"''a' ••• ......., Hott. ,. ... ,"' a ., "'""•·to -ldtl a~lt to Coron•.CA•l1''20 lM , ..................... II. Tllo lfftl Tl\lt MnlMU I• COl\dilCIM i.y e ~ llf lllo ,.....,.~t DI'~ -ro1~$1111L By. D&. STEJNCllOHN · loct ar•a Ht. I, Oii flit Ill tM afflC• llf ~... Ml<.i-t J. Olr.ol 110 CltYCltf11oftMClfYofQltel!MM,ero '"'' 't••-t •at llled w1t11 "--Dear Dr. &emcrohn: · • t;-' ••ta~ ff ..i. bo1111· CoufttyCi.t1a•0r.,.c-ntyo11M11Y .. y ........ _ ...... a me my , ~-lll\t .. Oreneec-.. ttn. Pa "'"""-~'° 1r It~. Tllo PHIPOWct erne"4t• ...,1111 heart ll all rtcbt. 1 have a ,_" ~ ,, ......... ., '"' "" ""bl'"*' 0r._ eo.,1 o.11, P111t. bard time believing hlm ::~:=.:::, ~"~~ M•Y•1.11.u.J-1.1tn altbou~ 1 bave con· -....:-..-.... 1•tt.t'"'11•-•t-....cy.llllf'dl, '' 1 "" him tllrttet,..tfltc""'°"'..,_" Dllll -'"-----------tidence • Ille. r••···....,_.. .. llM CO<'lflkti _,. PVBUC NOTICE I am 53 and have had a 1elmoni .. ._.._..11noot,•ws1Qo.----~~------111tctt-I heart murmur since IJ w1LLtAM1.. ou1eN c""'°" hikt N h d ••1111 01 --~nca t0cn0t10t1t was a c . ever a __ w ntw._..~.,, .. ·-•i--··y- b ti f r v•lltllecl Ore119t CMlt o.lly "11ot .... r., _ _..,. .....- f euma c ever or A4ay11,1e.ts.,.n 1•11 T"•nanof!u&.•P'Ofl•oa110• · an ..... , .... Uke that, so the neaeouNTYo•oaAM01 IW-. ....... ..,., doctol' says I haven't got PUBLIC NOTICE '"•1• et JAMH ~•No-wau1 rheumaticbeartdisease.\ ... ~.~ ~i~::i.e~vo1vaN•t,. .-... fllCT1T\OUllUStNaU ltwt• "'° ...... tMlmM 4'1<~ RE BAS watched me NAMUTAftMaNT 'all ....... ._.,.. clthM .... Mt for years. My heart "We have beoutifuf ~tars in our neighbor· ~.,~..,..,. .... ,,_.....,... ._~:..,_~-=:.,..,.....,~'~ bun 't enlarged and the h ,, L.100 INSUlllAHC• SALIS. ,. efflc. .... Ci.11 Clll IM ........ -murmur hasn't chAnaed,· V\e L .. ,Slllto-.NowoertlNctl,CA Uod~«•-'IMftl,wlllll'--~ ~ .... Ul\lllllft!QMd he says. _,... ·~ NOTICE · •-btt ·s .... w1 Holdlr. cAt o •· lA1s. .......,..., at L l I I b b lf"T,J.D D,v,1.rE9'R ..-"'-e..na'nCA•» .t100N.Molt\1t,..wtot100.s-a e y ave eeo ~ ~. Tiiis ....... ~ ,, ... .,.. a AM. CA111om1t 9'10t, 'WNdl ,, t11o com plaining of shortness 'tCn"OUS•UMNUS ........ •., M1Mtt., ""_._..,_ 1 .. of breath -especially ~STAYaa"8MT \r.•11n-l!wl~ 11 IM11 .. per1a1111~ lhl est.at•°' when I climb stain.Isn't SENTENCED ,.!!"..~~wo.,.tiusl· ~11~~'.:."::.;:~Y*!",.,:,": ~==.U::'~w.,::~aiw that a symptom ol heart GOOOIU f'ROM LAGUNA •• ltn. 0.ttd~IJ,ltn trouble? My doctor says SAN JOSE <AP) -A HACH, u21 Nieto war. &.•1111"• ....... ,.~ 0r "1U11 ~:~:":tNO,.w1110, Santa Clara County 9Mcll CAfl'JI ~""' .._. 1119 Coett Dolly Piiot. it's due to the fact that I .1MNt.w.&.-arci.»21Hi.>way. Mty•.u.11.u.1m the~clKodetrt stubbornly refuse to take Superior Court Judge has ..,.._'9odl.CA~• 11SM7 :: .. 4!t~~~~-t.s.itte• off about 40 extra pounds ~entenrJ: 'a 35-year-o)d ~.._::,~.:,vetllrd e.. 11tu ... eat11on11atn1 in weight I carry around. upe man to three "''' ._...., " cOllductod b¥ • PUBUC NOTICE CJ~:!::'e..ct1tt11 Have I any reason to~ years in Jail, 25 ~art on ea-a•~... Publ1$ohed 0r.,. c..st 0.11,. Pll.t. be alarmed? lsn'lit like· I probation and ordered c1])..• .. __._flied*'"' tllt "'~~:!:~:.·:::' y11,is.-sJ-1.e.1m ly the trouble is in my the repayment of as yo.nt110r.,..c:einvOftAPn• no...._. .... .,_.,,dolnolMI· .,.,, heart? -Mr. H. much as $200,000 netted •.mi. ...,.., nH•,~·~HE CAT CATCHERS n THE 1-----------by Wegal car dealings. NMltMct 0re111111 c.oect o.t•v P•tot. CAT TRAPPERS.,. wA1.L ANIMAL PUBl.JC NOTICE COMMENT: It's not Judge Joseph P. Kelly Mrt4.u.tt.is.tm 11»-n cucHERs ., SMALi. A1e1MA1.i--~=------- ) sentenced David Alan prwrnuc NOTICE T1taPP&M. ••a e111• A,..n.,. •D. "'cr1nousauMN•ss ikely but it's possible. u.u Hullt~ ..... Kll.c.tlltom••~ NAMUTATbll!MT Only your own doctor McCabe, a former car M1c .... 1 M. Alto"· 1112 e111s Tllo to11ow1"11 Otnof\ Is dolltg bUlf. after Complete heart•: dealer on two counts of f'1crn1ousaus1Ne91 Av'"u• •D. Hu111111oton auc11. ""us: . d th ft d NAMESTATl!M•NT (.llt~a'1M6 -VNS ENTERPRISES 2700 DOCTOR IN THE HOUSE ~ gr an e. an one n.toi1ow•"ll--.s.wedoltt0tfUtl-Mero.,•••· ""°"· "" eu" PflttWn Ploc:• "°· 11~ c.os~ Mesa. COUnt of ml8approprtat• lle'u': A ... nu• • O. Hu11t111gton 8Hch. CA '761'1 ing funds LISCO. llO I!'.. Main S4rwt. Tllltln CaHtotNtt'M46 V•nt• J. Buccl~I. ?100 Pete.-son · c;a111or~~ • Tiiis ~111en Is conducted lllY a Piece. No. t7A. emu Mft41. c.oua L18E111TY INDUSTlttAL SUPPLY ..-•1-1nenlllo '"'' illullNH ,, uwlducted .,., ~ .... COMPANY INCORPORAT ED MlcNclM.A,_ dlvldutl-Plan N• ed t10Eu1Ma1nSlree1 T1nt1" c:au1om1.· Tl\ls •-~ w•• ruec1 wttfl ttM Venc:•J.&wxl~t evaluation, can make the IX This bu\~'" c~.d w a cor. C-ty Oet1ta10r...,c-.ivonAPr1• n.11 st........,.. -filed w11" tlW SAN F RA NCI SCO P01a11on 1c.111om1a1 ._ m1 C:O....'t'oert!lllOrMOitc.untv°"~' decision. The reason I M'<hM4A.~10 ""'* ""n. say it i 'l Ilk 1 i <AP> -A federal judge ""*'ldMt PuMIWd°"*'Oe eoe.t o.i1y P11tt, ..,me sn e Y s bas found a program de-n.1, ~wt-1 was ftt111 wtt11 1:11e Me't•. tt. "-JS. ttn •~n ~·--o...,.. Cout Dolly Piiot because I have to take s'g ed t . 1 f ' c°""1vc:ierca10r-.Coun1von.._., .. y11.11.u.,,...t.m1 111~n bl s word f or t b e ' D o UlVO ve 1rms 12. mr diagnosis. Therefore, I o~ned: by members of Pu1>1l"'9d ar.,... Cf»jt 0 .. ..,n,=: PVBUC NOTICE PUBUC NOTICE can't give you a definite ~monty groups in build-M•vt1.u.MCt»M1.a.1m ·i-----------1-----------answer. mg projects at the San io.n PKT1T1ounu11NH1 •1cnT\ounus1Nass F ls U NNoqSTAT9MllNT NAM•STATl:MENT But it may make you ranc co nified School T11ttono.1111....--•re1101no.,.._ tw to11ow1no ...,_. ,, Ool"V """- reel bet•-t k th t Distrtctillegal. PUBLIC NOTICE .. u .. : .. ""r \CT 0 now a t-----------1------------HUA111AY FOA HAIR, IOS 21'1 MA•ICiOl.O.•Ut Deavvlllt,HUl'lt· in my experience, I have c14714 Plact.N~B .. cl\,CA.tt..O '""'°"8Ndl,Ctlllor"'•'1M4 found that about three PUBUC NOTICE ICOTlaTOCREDITO•s Mlcl\ul M. FernanClu. IS7S JUMt "'"'"" Bommarito. no t f SUP£•10ttCOURTOFTHI! Orenge A\19., Apt. C, Cotto MHt, CA Ooauvllle. H1111t1n9ton Buell. OU 0 every four patients NOTIG•TOClltOITORS STATl!Of'CAllFORHIAl"O•TH• 91611 C•lltor11la'264 who think they h ave SUNltlO.COUllTOFTHI COUNTYOf'OllANOll JUCIY M. F9'Mllder. tSrS OrtllQll TllhtlutlMW.ltcondu<ted b'I•"""' h t di d STAT· Ho. •ttttt Ave .. Apl c CMla M~•. CA '1621 Cllvldual. ear Sease 0 not have c O~CALlf'OlllNIA Tl\ls bu\l~\S Is conC111tled by A J~-L.8--•rlto i 'O• THI: c:cKINTV OF 0111 ANOI Ett•ltOI WILLI AM B111YAN COMBS, _,, .. _ t. For example here is ..._•-•mo Deun tct. 91M••• iiartrier\l\lo. T111, \ta1-1 w•H 111eis w1111 111e One man WhOSe short· E\tale of FRANI( E. STONER. NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN to Ille JIJdvM. Ferl'ltlldel Cou"IY Cl~1tcl0r.,geCountyo11"'°'ll f b b . o.cu\ed credllors al.,,.·~ "8mtd cM<~I Tllls \lat-I WH llled wltl'I ,.,. 11. 1'17. neSS 0 reat (hke NOTICEISHErUYGIVllClot'-11111 •II oer,ons l\avl"9 CountvCler1talOr1t199CollfllY011Ae>rtt "14m be i d ..... JI. t'77. Publtv.c:I Or ... CO.st O.lly Piiot. yours, may ) I Ue to crtdltorsOlll'le~nt"'"docedotlt ctalmsaoalnSttt1ualdde(tdentMOr• "1Aa Ma\111,U,MdJ-1,l.lffl ttOWJ eXCeSS Weight and not ,,.., 111 ~'°"5 ... "1"9 cle4ms ~1"'' Quired '°Ille ttwm. wltll ttw -wry Pvlllllhld °"*'09 C.O..t Dolly Pl!Oi. tr.e u ld dtc-..t are reciu1roc1., 11i. ..ou<IWn.lll .. ottlceOftMci..11Clll1"' ... _4 , • .._ •• 1.,, u .. n due to a failJng heart. lliem. wllll ti.. llK.SMlrY vouchers. In above ...ClllM ~. ~ to -..nt _..,. ' " ..., ·Here ls 8 woman who 111a 0111ee o1 .,,. ci ... •.,. ""•bo,.. ..,. them. wtt11,,. '*8MrV -"-"· tot----------- PUBLIC NOTICE h lltltClcourt.orlOpt'eWntlhem.•111\1 .. IN""~ to Its TNSt OoMn-PUBLIC NOTICE aS SC&ry heart Skips, IWCt\WryYOllCherio tolhtulleltrS~ IMftt, IOI*"" Mel" Strwt. s.nt. and whose heart seems al the office OI 8UATON. GAUi.DiN, ""'· C:.llfol'Nt 97101, .... ,, .. ,, the ·---.-,-CT1-Tl_out_•_US_IN-.-,-,-- '1CTtT10USIUMNHI HAMii! STAT1EMl:NT t ., ,, THOMSOH & Hf!!t..SON. AUO~~ at Dlaa al..,,.._ Clll b Wldo.BiQrltd In o nm away for a few Low. 1474 s. Paint ... aw .. Wt11111er, CA an ""'., -1Alllll<IO to ttM fttat•., MAMtlTAT•M•MT minutes -yet examlna-~nu> Ml-049•. Wflle11 1, ,,,. Olac• \aldM<tdtf'lt.wl"'411'--u.at• ,,.~--arodel,..Ml- Tllo followl"(I ..-vodolftO ...... -SMl THE ALCOVE HAIR STUOtO. llOt.2 Brootillur\t St •• a 20). HunUn;ton tl h ' Mltie\s of lhe Utldef'S'9neCI '" ... .... 11<'4 .-.k.etloll ti tllls llOtlu. D«· .. " .. •!: ... TV .. -.. 1( •JOO c On proves er heart .is mall~' oeo1thwnQ to lhe ttttle 01 wld ed May IO. "17. ....... "' """'"' · am. normal. Premature con-"'•"'·""'"""'-tnoftl1ts•1tffthe BAHl(OFAME1111CA fM~uW0201,,..__1Buc".cA 8ffcll,CA.,._ • M tr tt>a Marie Soc.or. 1 J7 St Mc-Ma IM. Gtt'den Ciro,.., CA f24.M t . d 11~1 oul>llutkwloftllhlM>tlU. MATlOHAt. TRUST 'VfO nwo raCllOnS an parOX· Dtttd l'MY ll."17 SAVINGSASSOCIATION Sefotuerd l11v011Mtnts, lftC. y s m a 1 a u r l cu a 1 GOWING. STONf!!lll By: Ocwl~. TrustOlflctr <C.llf. Olrp.I GOO campu, Dt., r.ui-. Alcl\atd ~ Socor, t31S1 Mc.-Mat11,. Gtnten ~.CA~• h AAYMOHOO STONEll EllKVIOrof-Wtllof tot , .. ~9eadl,CA'7..0 tac ycardla (skipping E1tt<Vlonoti .. wiu ,,......,. Nlf'Mddteodtflt Tllls tllUSIM1S ts COlllNcttct by• cw· heart and fast heart) ottMHOvsll.tfftt<ldtcadtnt THOMAS1..L01to ooroUan. Tl\11 tlu\l"9H ts conducted by e ~rat Nrtiwnlllo. Martha 5.Kor · IUltTOff GAUi.DiN Sulletl> Seft9uerdl""'°"'"*'tt,tllC. may occur in a healthy THOMSON &Nn.soN i.uu ,._.v • ._1• A.e.w.k~.Protldtftt Ttllt itatemenl wtS ftl«I wltft tN County Cl«1t al Ot-. Ooullt't Oii May person. Alt..--..,s.ot·LI• 1.ttvlla HIHJ, Ca. ttUl Tiiis s\otement wn flltd wltll tM 16?0. Ptl~ AVt. 171'1 S11·Dlil County Cl~OI Or1n91 CoulltYOflAofil '" ttn. fl'P611t Publtslled 0r""1t Coost Otllr Piiot. Wlllttlff ca-a1-1wll!secut-tt. ttn. MtYlS.alldJvnet.1. u.tm U A2'11 HERE lS A child or 12111'*-1-~~· -PU* Publl\hed <>•noe Coa\I Dally Piiot, Publl$11ed 0r.,. co.at°'""' PllOt.. older person with a Att-n••-...,.. May11.u,and JUM1.t.1m 201 .. n May •,11.1e.u,1'n PUBl.JCNOTICE Y Pvtllltl\td o.--. C6aSt OlllY 'ltot murmur. et. s tudy MaY1t.nandJU'lt1.e.m1 · "'°"" -----------proves it's onl y tune· 20a-11 PUBl.JC NOTICE -----------' "CT1nou11us1Nsss tional and unimportant PUBl.JC NOTICE • ·~ PUBUC NOTICE NAMUTAHMl'.MT ( ....,_.. -----------I Tiit fOlla<Nl119 POf'ton I& Clolflt Mi-as your own doctor·-----------NOTICETOCRll!OITORS lltUU: sayyourmurmuris ). M•.A .. 1109 ~CT1T10UUUl1NHS t. OOl.ORIS co .• 221 8roedlway. l'ICTITIOUSaUSINeSS SUPe•10ttCOU•TOltTH8 .. AMltST'"T........ Cc>itaM.so.CA '76?7 Likewise, I have found HAM•sTaT•M•MT .. ... ... The lollowl"Q °'"°" It doing 00,,. s T "Tl! OF CALI fl&OltNIA •o• TM fouowl1'9 perMlf'IS a,..dol,.. buSI· Dolor!, Eltrel>eth Hotdoft, U7 normal hearts in pa-n~\H\: THECOUNTYOf'OllAHO• l\Hta': 8road••Y.Cosl•~.CA9U2'1 t i e n t S W b O W e r e KO ENTERPRISES, tu. St" Joe. 111 lhe Melt ... of ti.. E'gteof En.Et. CAMPBELL ASSOCIATE9 II,1UO This llulnu Is conducted by aft In- f QUI" Hlllt ROOCI, ~-· at1cll, c• MAE BLACK. elto --" n ETHl!'.L l!ut l"ourll'I StrHI, S.nle Alie. Ohtldutl. righlened because of 916u .. M BLACK.Oecllhld. c:a111on11amos Oo1or1,E.Hot<te" ,·abs of pain in the left KeflMtll ....__ ... , •300 Nolle~ is het9by 94Wll to crodltors at rt<"•' Pacific. • o•11tril This statement was filed "''"' tile s.t-M c,..-';j;,. ""c1,. • '" "••111<1 cltlll'll •Inst the Hl4 di<• P01tn.ri1110. 2tl0 EHi Fourltt Street C°""ty o.t1t0f0ttn0t County on AC>f11 chest. And in those with This Minus 1, ,_:ic'"., 1 e1t"110 "'• wld c•ettM '" tM offk• ot SeMaAn1.Cetttoml•'110S • 21.1•11. a nkles swollen due to dlv1e111a1 Y eft "· tiw cier11 d.,. eforftald court or 1o ltoben "'-~*"· 1u1 vista "15* A;.... iceMttll 0 Sor r oruent ~lo h ""°'rsl~d at 1"' Ornecl•. ~ 8toc:I\. c;a111ornle Pub.lblled Orenoe Coest Dell'( Piiot, stan\AU'6 for hours dur-This ~t WM~-wllll tM office Of HEHAY c. lt0t4A, AOHA ~ Tl\11 bvs!MH Is conClucltd bY • M•y •. 11, ll.U, ttn Ing bot weather. CountvOff"ltolOrtnOtCounfYOft~I BLANCK. ATTO•NEYSAT LAW. 4SO .,._,.,~SlllO __________ 1_1,_1._n I 2I 19n SOUTH SPRING STllEE'T. Sl.llTE tot• Roe.tM.Camllbell am not suggesting · · nun '" '"' c11y of Los All9tles. '" 111e ™' 111t-1 •• , 111eis w11h t'-PUBl.JC NOTICE that you ells regard your Publl\lltd Or ... Cofit Dally Piiot ••or•'-lld c.unty. wflkll tMtw ottko ls Cowlty ~ o10r .. o-County on Mo ----------- h l r.\o• 11 ie.u im • t11te>loc:eol~sofhllftdtnloned t.ltn ear symptoms. But · · · •11tllmatt ... sp..-te111tnotoso1cut1ete. 1'7st4t '1CT1T1ousaus1MESS keep remembering that t1Jt.7' Suell clalmt Willi tl\e nt<estary PublltNd Ortnot C:O.\t Dally Pilot. NAMl'.$TAT•M£1CT You mGV have them and p•rw.uc NOTICE voucl\enMIHtlltflledortWHeftttd .. Moytt.2S,..SJuntl.t.1'n ~17 Tiit fo110Wlfll llffSOll h dolf\O btKI· -., U .U aloreutd wlttlfll tour months el tw l"9 MH a'! still not have heart dis-___________ 111rstoubl1CetlQ11ott111s"°t1ct. PUBUC N&l'ICE SECOND six. 3.1122 Sevme. D•M ease. WMD Dattd--.. '" 'm Point, ce111~•'141' NOT'ICtTOCllaDITOlll LAYIANEl!il(lUND Wllllam T. GrHlls, i.ll22 Sovltlo, Don't continue to be ..., ..,.. Adt'llll'lktretr1.01"" l1M °'"e Point. CA m?t frl .. htened. Don't crawl SU,..lt109'CIOUllTOP'Tl4• 15.tatoot saldcleeeclerrt •tCTITIOUS•U"NHS Tl\ts Mlnetl ,, c.oncNcttd by..,'"' e STATSOl'CAl.ll"OltlCIAl'O• ltOMlt&a&.AICCI( NAM•STAT•MtNT dlvtoual through tif e rather than TH•C:OUMTYOPOttANH Attw11t•,wH.e• Tiie fot1ow11111111eoons eredolno lllltl· wrn. T. °'""' skip through It. If you in tl'I• 1111,11"' 01 1118 lht•to 01 •ses.v1u~r•119st.,tw1tn12• Mtuu "''' '"'-t wn nted Wllll "'- d bt WILLIAMl.lllYAUOHN alto k-l.MA ..... A,C.UG01' FRANl(LINAOAMSPAHS,t•tst CoulltyO..l"ltf/110.-lllOOCoulltY~M•Y OU your doctor's find-asWILLIAMLVAUGHN OecHMCI llUl617.... Mllllk•n Avenue, '"''"'· C.alllor11ta It ,,.,, in gs, ask for consulta· Nollet ,, 11erew 01...,; to cndll;,,.. Publllllod Or•llOI eoeu Dally Piiot, nm 11'1"'1 tlon. Learn the true l\lvl1>qd•lmuo•l~tt11tsalddo<Htnt ,,..., 1a,U.andJur1e1.1.1 t11 1. &.oofn, INC inc. ~ C.llflW"le Publl&Md Or"'4t CoHt Oall'( Plklt. lo me said ct•'"'' 1,. '"' ottleo of tllo 20lt.77 COfllOl'atlolll. t..St Mllltllen t-ve"ve· May U,MCIJ1111t 1.t, tS, tf71 verdict. <l•rlc ol 11\taforftllld-rtorto-t lrvlllt.Ctlllomla•771' 21t1.n IN MA.NY cu-, the '"'"'lo Ille~ •t tllt "11<• Of PlJBUC NOTICE Tl\lt lluSlness Is c.otldUCttd l>Y • cor-PUBUCNO'nCE ""0 MURCHISON & DAVIS. ATTORNIYS 00tatl0n s uspected heart is not AT LAW, Wltell0, .. $4 Wllthl,.. 81Vll.. I.OGAN, INC. g Ht y h '" 1"9 CJIV "" ...,.,,y Hlllt, Ill the Mone• TO Clt8DITOH J•U H. L~n. Pretlcleftt "CTIT10UI •ustN•U U Y · OUf ea rt may etcw.,ald County, -let! l•ller ofllc• I• SUfltltl°" C:OUlttM fHI Tflls stot-t wo flied *'"' tllt NAMSITATilMl{JtT be •lronger than .YOU ., .. 1ec:eof.,.,.._ ...... ~"'*' ITAH~CAllf'OllNIA c-tyCIMIOIOrenotc.-tYOftAIH'll ni. fe41Gwl'll --.. dOlllO """' think. ~':!1~~~~.~~::::::~ ,OlllTH•~:r..::00 .. 05 ti. lt17 "'"" .... :~CHAIOl.OOICAl. ... vouc:"9rsmwUellled ~oretefllHas ltlettof ALIXANOltlAPATllll(IA ,_.tlflldOr.,_(MttOeltyPllot, ~!ATES 10219'VlctorteSt Cott atorestld wtltltn l'IUr "'*"llltft'tf' tlle CA• AT 1£ N UTO , ell a AL ICE Mey ll,U,-~1,l, 1•17 Mest,CA .... U " • MEDICALE'ITES FOR ML T.: Wb.y alp youffflf "Peeved"? It's u1ually the other way around. Non1motera complain more of tbe non1enllUvity or amoters to those around them who may ·~•r from tobacco smoke. In your own bome you cerWnly have the right to smoke ll nobody ob· Ject1~But in public: there art to conslaer .. La 1 have notf c!ed an lncreuinl rebelllon of nonsmpkera. It hu become a •ucceas in many places-: No· 1moldnl alp appear in boapltal room.a; )n ele•atore; In 1om• rutauranll; tn moffe bOUMI and plan.ea and tralu; In aupermmeta. PeeNbnesl by tba1e sen•itlve to tobacco 1mob Heml to be P•Y· Ln1 olf. Tbe bottom l~e ls tbatanokera have the riaht Cud prf '11.,e> to s moke: and that noa· amolm'a hne t.M ~ <and prtvUe;•> tQ pro- ttcUoa. -· r 11,.,t Pub11C.ikwlt1tH111Stlce1 CA R AT l HUT 0 , • k e AL. I C 1l 20tA-f1 Oavld 1\1\kheof "°" H-. tOU a JANETM. YAU°"N A•IASZIEWtl(I. ~ Vlctcwl• SC.. Cotta MeM. CA • .,.,, Mmlllf•tretrlsof NOTICE 1$ 1411t•IY OIVl.N tot,. PUBUC NO'J'JCE Tl\ls !Ml...,• Is CO'lducltd by oa ti.. IMbttltotselddlc•rit c.-.10na1 ttw..,.-'"~ ~ dMduel. MU•CM1totit60AVll tllat alt.,.,_,. lloVMt <ltflM eoa!Mt NOTIC9otl PUaUCAUCTlotl O.~li\. YMHont Att_.,.....~ IM Mid dtCMlftl •• rtCIUlf'M lo mo ,,_ s.ft ANifltlM •-as • Tlllt SI•-wa• '°" wltfl tlle '4MWll ..... IN'M.,s.ttt• 11\tM, Wltll .. llK•lffY wqtMn. 111 f'VI L.IC SALaef~I ~y to Ctu11IY Cltt110f0r ... c.ur.tye<1Mav' IW<roftyltlfls.CA•U ... olflo ..... '""al !tie tboft -.... """"'lll4llltl',., CM for unoeld It. lt17. ... ~y"'11""'",s ..2.-::!!,c.., im' C>ally """· ~·.,~-or~o11nt1ot,.tt1e111~~~ •t ... ~._........,., .luM u. "77. al P ... , Or ...,.,.. -• ·--.... • · ... , -• .... ..w.,..._ IO!OO e.M. et .. MIMH IOGtllon Of u.,. shed .... (Mtt Otllr Pllet, ioa•n at ttle office of HILL,, .......... tu•· JTOll& SAN .. "" bst Wlllt• star Mey tsMCIJ-1 • IS "11 - __________ _,RILL. av lllOalltT ... o•Y041N. At· . . . .. ... ....,.._81, _ ..... -~·· ~ ... .., AVf., AlleMIM, C:.lllor"la. vnltH ,10).,, p•"•••cNOTI~ ·· ....... -• .,.r..,..... ............. c1atMed11y-...tortot11tMl•o.tt UDIA \.iD "'-·'-"~CA toon. wfllcll •• .., .. ..,...,.111...,1.,~to-.d _,_UC NOTICE ----~------.Jt"° OlacetlMMsaoftM~•ltl*l . .. ruu C....., lntllltletlnWlelfllfltlOtMetlalHf ...... ~ lll't *-fl'\eli.O to '"1------------.. oncaTO~•Dt'nHla le4Cl~.wltlltl'lfo!W~•fW4' --· lls• i.r.tn. "'° fOl-11'4 ~ 111 ...... COUlll'f Ott"'' Ille f lftt Nlllc.etltl'lef tflttMllff ""°"' ........ Cl rtllt at lolto,lf• -~ NOTICS Ofl MtAltlNOOI' STATCWCAUPOlttll~...,. &AlllAllAJ. OllAPIUN '"~=~.:.~..,.,ur11r111,.. NTITION l'O• ~MICOl*TYO,_..... hKWl•Oftl1t'#n1 O . Af'POIJf'{MalfTOfl,..UITH ..._ A-t1"9 41ftllt....,._,,.CIKfdtllt "lltf'l • ....,t Hu111er, IOf •~ . tOfllU.VA~ lttatt ol Wlt.l.IAM MAIN•V MU.l..,H•l•aau•lllU. ~C::.-~:'1' . • .... l~OWN .... WILLIAM H1 e•OWM, ltOHltTa.JllVOllhf 0ttte1•Mrf;4,ttn IMnlttul' .. t~cdu...,.M Oefflttd. • ........ c..w i I! ,. 'fMI ITATaOPCA&.JPOllNIA Na. NOTICa IJ HalllHY OIVIM ........... , ........ Mii f'tltr TOii SAP'&AN~HEI"' 1'ttlCOWfTVO'otiMe9 <tMltonoftlll--MIMOK...,. W ........ C..r1 ....... .:.:.':9'.:.:'~1':t:ttot. llt lht Mlitttf Of tllli ltt•te of ttlat ....... ~· .............. amw • ..,"'_.,.., .. ..., ~"" OIOttOIW. eltYANt. • .,. ........... "~ ll '"' .....,... 1 •• • ~ .... '" .. """" 91wft1Mt .... .. ttlll'll, wit! tM _.,-'*" 111 "°'*'"'" ar-.. (Mtt 0811¥ ,..._ "°" of ,A.Y ft. 91tYAN't,... ... ... e.o1tko•t•clftot .. _.._ llMY1t.U.wJWMu.1m ..s.n .,,.UCNql'ICB ~t....,. ot aa .. IC o, AMllllCA. tilled ~w .. .,,........,, ....... ,T. t. S..A. • lMt.t .. c.,.,.,tld"" _....,_.._, ......... .,.... PVBIJC NO'l'I-Jimflou.11mNtu •., tl\t ••• wlll ti &eM tlclthH. M1r77~~"9111MIMcll. '-'Sil NAMalTAHM•WT 1owtlld1'9fff't~l1 .... ~fw QI"°'""' _.. It .. .._.ti ......, n. ~ .,..._ .,. Cl9lllt ...._ """"' •n1Q.tr-. .tttt ._ .....,,, ~ Mtt ...... _,,, It ...... ,......,.. PI01ftDU19UllNUI MtUtr t:90t'Cllktl1-""•°"JuNt M7•e. .. ,.,, .... t•• ........ MW~ _,..STAT•MIMT OUAt\lV MOTOttCYC\.I ctW4-.. o.,ett;;.;.\ .J"' llM -.t ..... .._ ..... .._ .. '1ne Tilit ................... .,.,,., Sll!lt'l1ct.'9W. lrtfl. U'll"M,o..ta s.tfletc-ttl .. Stelelfeel ....... ' "'*leettlll"tlltt.-._ -Ht Me't.~A~ -.-lotfle~ofOr .. ,O~ela.. O.Mt...., t1. ""· '"'PLANT aus.• Atl...... ltt«I... . .. w . ...., • L. Al\e. AU..DtO.MOWtfll'f ~ ....... .._fl.CA.,.. C..ttMeM.CA t7 ' Ot,..Ml'f t1.tm V'N'IHHllAOl._owtt .... It~ C. ..,..._, 4t1 Atltllt• "'"'°'"' I. OOvtfae. ~ W WIU.IAMt.ST~ ~ .. "'9Wlll ' .............. ldl.CA~ ................ t(tl,,CA~ ' COIMt't~Mf wfltlt-.tftlfl'IM~ ~-~MISll~~yettlft. 'tflll liMlMH It <tllMltf '' e • Cl•hftllt""'"'°'c..t au.I.............. -"""-''*'"'"'lilt fllr .. SM!oef~ "'"" ...... .,......... .....c.~ ....... ~. ... ... C*Ml ... Or ...... tlf'1........... t1i!tt .....,_.. -flltd ...._ IN 1'\lt ....._... .... fll• .ill! tM lllO't'-1,ATWtU.~~ ~--.~ .. ~Oft8'0r ... Cilllltrafl~I C......trO..elOf-~tna.tll Afttf11trt•O •9".tl .... '"4••mr ...... a. tm mtoUTMtua.1••va. ..PPt.. 1'111tt ,, ..... NIAHM.CAUflOtHffA ... .............. ~ Dtltr...... ~Or .... ~t Otlty Plltit, ""'41 .... Or-.Qfll Ott,.,, ... , ,,..,....._,...._ ,..., -. .,.,,.~ 1, .. "" *'eT .. '" "'u."" Mav 4. 1t,.., H. "n ~....-0r-. er.ta Dlltr Piiie. ~ 1164.71 11»-n ~' .. "·ts."". 9'1t1I D Ja oAJLv PfLor PUBUC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE WJSZI tU"ltlO. COUltT OPTNI! STAT& Ol'CALll'OIUtlA l'Olt THI! C:OUHTYOl'OltANOI! ... A .. IH4 NOTICI' M lll!A•INO M l'tTITION ·l'O• "lt09ATI! 01' WILL AHO 1'011 Ll!TTEltS Tl!STAMl!NTAltY ANO AUTlfOlttlATION TO AOMINISTlll UNOt• THI! INOll'INOl!NT AO. MINltTltATION~ISTATl!S ACT. Est•l•ol IEOITM BAKER SHAW,.U EOITH B SHAW10..:e~ "IOTICE IS HEREBY GIVE N ti..t EOWARO B SHAW~ filed herein• oellllM fw Pr-te of Wiii •no '°' h· W...C:f! of Let~ Tttt-ter,1 Mtd Aut~lt.tlotl to 4dm1Nsttr Uft~ the •ndeoe ....... Admlnl\lr•tlonof l!IAIM Act refer-ence I• wtlkh ,, mede for lurtl>er oertkul.,1, alld tlWI IM llmt end ol•cr ol hf!arlnq ,,_. ~ h•I llf't" 1oet for J~ 1, 1911. •t 10:00 •.m , In ll>e courtr00fl1 of Oeoerlmenl No 3 of Wld cour1 et 100 Civic Cent~ Drive West, 1n tht! City ol s.tlt• AM, Cetuornl•, O•ttd Mbv ra. 1'17 WILLIAM I!. St JOHN. eoumv Ctkerll MICHAEL 9. MAOLOl'I' 20ttCt:NTUltY PAltK EAST. •tllll'LOOll LOS ANGl!LES, CA '°"1 •tt-Vtolor: Pelltlontr Publl~ 0.9n91 Co•st OdllY Piiot. MayH,1}.Jl.ttn uoo.n PVBUC NOTICE ·I PUBLIC NOTICE PUBUC NOTICE r 6 4 2 • • 5 6 7 8 D A I L. y The 8igest Marbtplace on the ~Coast. DAILY PILOT~ClASSIF-IED AD You Can' SeU tt. rind It , ( 642 •5878] Trade It wtth a Want Ad Rtal htote •..•••.• 1000.2999 Amounct "*"s· Ptnonalss.. Metchondiae •.•••• Lost & found ...••• SOSO.>it99 loots & Marww Rtntola . • • • . . • • • . J000..4699 S.VicH & Repairs 600M099 fqulpfMrit :-•• ~ •••• 900(). ltulfnns. lnveatment & Finondal •••••••••• S000..50ot9 Employment & Automobilfl & othef' ..__.,.,Ion ...... 7000-71 99 Tron ot6on .... 9100.. 1--------1Houwt For S. Haun Fors• a For Sde ., .....•....•...•...... ············································~" EIROIS: Ad....tleen Gt .. , al I 002 G-.rol I 002 GeMt'OI I ~ -L-...1...1 -L.--L ......__._ .. ••••••••••••••••••••••• eeeee ••e ee•e•e .. eeee eee ••••••••••••······~·ete> ...,...~...,...... ~--....~ LAGUMA •:/\ claity _. repot't .,... WISTCUFF EASTSIDE VIEWLOT " -.Gq '°" ._ ... ely.,.. DUPLEX !Ill.A D•ny PILO.. COLONIAL-ex.du1tve Fanta.stic. forev~r orm -., •-• new llatini-on t be Well located Orange und c1ly light view f lcMty fw tM ffnt a.. 1areat lot-almost ~ Coif:tY property· Both this top of the world l coned •utt.....,. acrel Tru1,y a bome of iUDJng. rareooml 1:t:h°:1n d~: t!OO nat buildmg pad.1_, distinction with 7 c.bed Pn cd t timeolfered$81,500.C~· l·---------1 bed 1 mily ta garaao. c a ~ , . 1 ,.. ...... Notice: All real estate advertised m this newspaper ls sub- Ject to the Federal Fair Housin1 Act of 1968 which makes lt illegal to advertise "any pre· ference, lhnltatioa, or discrimination hued OD race. color, reli.poo, sex. or oatiooal origm, or an iolenlion to make any such preference, limila· tioo, or discrimination." This nel\'Spaper will oot knowingly accept any .. rms, • room, a low $49 900 CALL """'''19 •11-sruNro"""'rl' "" ~fa~~"~~:~J C:~E:L~~ 1~~~1m~:1iul wiJ:ldo!~~0Yir~f::~ T' PROPERT IES : 'O' ~ Jifj f Ji; (wttb gas). Abundant 1----------matched -mahogany paneling. Parquet floor- ing. Complete bltn kitchen. Large trees, badminton and basket.- ball court. Too muc b to tell all. Call for special showing. $385,000. l£TE BARREIT -REALTY- 642·5~0 SHANGRl-'.A Your own 9 whole goU crse. Spectacular view, furn home for only $15,000. Gala Properties M.argerate Dubois. • 673-1068 PAMORAMI~'~ OCEAN VIEW~ From this spacious cstYl6I vie residence.be advertising for rea1i.--.._.._. .......... ....,_....._.,,,. estate which ls i.n viola-1----------- tiooofthelaw. "· SOLD OUT!! We need listings! ! Let us show you wbal we can do for you!! 1sougbtafter are a '9t N e wport BeaelJ . Tremendous amt ol Bdl cabinet, wardrobq _.~ s torage space. H'.Ql{?\ walk·in closet«. Workshop area for \-~' ho.bby eotbusi'&H.J Private beach availabh1 Brand n e w on tttiJD market. 646-77ll l! c• ·, ••••••••••••••••••••••• G.ntc al -I 002 ......................... • OURLOWEST . PRICE IM EAS'DLUFF Extra large 2 story fa mi· ly home oo a quiet cul-de. sac in Eastbluf'f. 20 foot family room with massive rock fareplace. Formal dining room • $152,000. Call for eEclusive viewing. 67J.8SSO Ol'IN ltl O • rN f\}N f08f NICE• CANYON CREST 646-3827. eves673-4577 Lovely CdM. Condo. 2 Bedroom, 2~ bat4._ Cami· ly room, dining r6dm & 1 SUPER VIEW. Up ·,~~~~~~~~ RealEstate . .,. .... graded carpets & drapes1: ___ .....;.._:.._...;..__; .. 11.,..;.A_ & prof laodscaJ)ed out- Lachenmyer Rt:.il tor c.?J Walker & le e doot-~64o.9900 -S-@-~~otl-~~-~!'1~t-~tr-s-· ...... ~ $1.&2 per DAY That's all you pay for a 30 day ad in the tliat lntrig11ing Word Game with a Chud:l~q ......, ~f C&AT .. P0UAH ,1tt.i ..I.. ._..,.. i.n.r. of it.. • t.J i U lour tcr01'11bled -d• ti.. ~ 10 f.,,., fwr ~ _,dt. ~ G 0 N S 0 A L I' I I* I [~lfilll p ARE MOUNT.AIM Y.i+ acre CUSTOM 3br, , DAILY PILOT SERVICE DIRECTORY DOITNOW!, 642-5678 I NOYOL I ~ I I I I I K 0 N N W I o Political commercials prow. h I 2ba, din rm, f'rplc, brdwd firs. All upgraded. Ready DOW . 0/H Sat/SWl, 1490 Avocado, L Oceanside. 433-4807, 498-0788 ...... /Ofc lulldhMJ Prime . Near 0 Harbor /Baker Center: I! ofc's, tge reception, 12 park'g, A/C. $1.53,950. Woddwide Props Ltd T (714)644-0910: Eves & wknds, 673-5995. c L A s s I F I E D 6 4 2 • 5 ~ 6 7 8 SELL idle items with a Dally PLlot Classified Ad. GARAGE SALE ads in the Dally Pilot bring hap- py results. To place your drawing card. phone 642·5678 today. Ont)-Ule D.uy Pltot ,.."' '*'• '°" ...... -In'°"' local CO!Mluntty ... ~ ._, l 1fll'jijh1ll Gt Mral 1002 •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• HARBOR VIEW Popular tri-level home with 4 bdrms., professionally landscaped and highly upgraded with nice view. Offered at $211,000 -submit. L US K'-R EALTY a 10'111 /J . /.11 \k & S1JI/ ('o. macnab I Irvine realty MOUNT.AIM & LAKE VflW A really smashing "Woodside•• home in Arbor Lake. Near boat house, therapeutic pool & lake. 3 BRs. family room. dining galleria & den complete a lovely home in a special location. $149,500. Bill Hutchings 752-1414. <V·S9) '42·123S 644-6200 90t Oowr Ori~ Herbor Vltw Ginter Irvine et Cempus Velley Center 752·1414 .SlllC & FINlt SOILS SVCAOEllW O STTRElIL C O DHQJEU L IREMFT L C L TE 1BL VBN PO ENA B UKKFP XY OBGOIESSUIMA L OAY A ~C PKDLAB U GRL~O LR C A VMS HAYMV M S~Ot IDEEV LA YG KETDUOYOCHOARTMCUGH DAHHDNAACUTOSI USANO A M 0 U U X L G L S H N E L N R Y U I RITLAYCPULIIANCEW WN ~ICTITADNMSARAYTSMA SAIHTNNDCSBCTCHTINA ZHHkNTIOHTAOHXHORBC CWYAOLHTEZRLOQ AP £0L SRZPACC8EXCYRLAOAKA Clay D\lst LOllll Sand Adobe C1unci\ Gueo H1111a1s T OlllOrrow: kaol1,,1i. ~ 'ulltr's Earth j Chin. Clay t. Potter's Cley Plains 4 j l' j j ~ne thing: that 30 1eC0ncls is , . . • • • . plenty of time f°' most c..ndr::• " ---------date$ to tell -they -!iio I T I H IT W I s~ i.,-,-..-,-..a,,.-.,-.... ,--1 8 ~ ltte chuc\la ~· n • by 11111"9 I" the mlllir>q word. •1 '--..... _ ........... _..._ ........... VoV ..... lop '""" .,_, No. 3 below. • • e ~~~~~~~~~f~mm I' r r r r I' I' 1·.'.~ ( :;:::::::::::::::::::::=::;:::;:::;:~~==::::=:=:::;::~~~,........ • ~~EfO•I I I I TI4EY I I I I J .0 ,,,, SCRAM-LETS Answers in Classification 8080 f ........ ~, ~~~ 9#~'/#m:Ai -n~f · -<7. A oo.NENIENT SliOPf'INQ AND SEWINC GUIDE FOR THE GAL ON THE 00. The Total Look QiOOSE this ensemble for 1 smart TOTAL lOOk wheft !tit ~ bea1ns urly and ends late. Relaxed pellet ICCeflts $/llOOlla princm MllPI btnutil. Printed Petter" 9481: Mims' Sizes a. 10. 12. 14, 16. 18. Sile 12 (bllSt 34) dim 2 112 prds 45·1nch: jacMt l 718. s.fld $1.25 for uch pattern. Add 35' for nc:h Olttetn for fi11t<lm 1irm11I, handhnc. S..•: Terrific Tunic .1-----.L.. \l"•" •• -~ . "SUPER P .ALERMO-~wo story. 4 bedroom .. Palermo" model near the park and pool in Barbor View Homes. Thi! is a .. super tf..-lenno0 with new carpets, vinyls, ~ndscaplng and fixtures. It is vac~nt ~nd shows like a new home. It is a new listing at $172,500 (fee). U~l()UI: ~()Ml:§ REAL TORS~ 675-6000 2443 East Coast Highway, Corona del Mar "·' also in Mesa Verd<', Jt 546·5990 .... Glitnll 1002GeMf'of 1002 .............................................. IRVINE TERR.ACE .Nicely located 63x115 ft. lot with lan~e. attractive back yard complementing a s harp 3 bdrm., 2 bath home. $139,500 While it lasts. 673.4400 RE .l~LTY Division of Hart.-M•n~ Co. G,,_,. I 002 Gftteral I 0~2 .,~ .•...............•.. ···········~··········· ., ·BIG FAJllLY EAST • 450 NEWPORT CE NTER OAIVE 759·081 \ Gwral 1002fcaa•r., 1002 .............................................. #' # ~ TAYLOR CO. HEALT<H\~ ~111l t ' l ~Hl i . TRIPLEX -COIOMA D& Mil Great location! Community• pool! Miniview of ocean from bdrms.1Great ·rental record! 3 Popular "Towrihouse Type" units. Nice owner's unit with 2 BR, llr'I baths & frpl in LR + 2 units w /2 BR & 1 bath. Great buy. $175,000 2111 San Joaqllln tMs load NEWPORT CENTH. M.I. 644-4910 G1Mrol 1002,¢Htr.. 1002 •........•..........•.. ....................... . OFFICE BUILDING Fine Costa Mesa comer, 17 suites. zoned air-conditioning, reflective glass, hydr aulic elevator. newly • carpeted & draped. S325.000 I • • • DODGE n4E SEAGULLS $69,500 You know how much beach property is available at this price. Walk to the s and pools & s hopping from this 3 bedroom, l ~ bath s urf side townhouse. Upgraded carpet. brick patio, double garage, bltns. Hear the surf. s mell the seaweed. FRESH AS NEW HOME $67,500 Carpets & drapes like new. Bltn stove & dishwas her . Near schools & shop. ping. Close to beach. Lge yard, room for p00l. All new paint, floors, kitchen counters. Drive thru garage. Ex· cellent area. CHARMING DUTCH HAVEN $81,900 Warm & lovely 3 bdrm, 2 bath home. Step down living rm, recently painted, ready to move in. Mature landscaping in top Hunt. Beach location. Let your family enjoy life in this super home nr. schools, shopping & frwys. EXCEl'TIOMAU Y GRACIOUS ! S 132,500 Open the door to this fabulous home & be ready for a unique experience. 5 bedrm. Greenbrook Granada features prof. decorating, new Italian entry tile & new no-wax flooring. A Classic home in a classy neighborhood. 18055 Mognolla St. FountafnV~ 963-8311 ·~ .. HERITAGE • • REALTORS 1022 • •••••••••••••••••••••• BY OWNER Spyglass Hill, $275,000. s Br 3 Ba, View. Harbor View Hills, $189.500. 4 Br 2 Ba, View. 640-2981 <Qualified Buyers Only) SPY&LASS HILL Iyo.,.,. Decorators brig h t cheerful ram home, 7 lg bdnns, 4'hBa, din rm, 2 fam rms, 2 frplcs, view . $324 ,500. Quallried buye rs only. call for appt. 640-1388 OCH VU HIDEAWAY Bacbeioror artist's 2 BR, 2 BA w /old CdM charm, steps from Little Corona. Huge lot w /l"OOm to build view studio or ? Try $1.S,000 down. HALPIMCHIM REALTORS 67M392 1/J .. toOcem FORC:ST E OLSON ................. _ ... Y•1 LoYe .... 0.Cor or t bls bandaome 4 bedroom home. Lots or wallpaper and rich wood •·~-c-pa.nell.ni, no wax vlnyl ---------•ent ry and gourmet kitchen. Big bonus room for your pool table. $93,900. BKR, call ~1720 ....... eo.dltion" 2268COLGATE, Cflf Co1Je1e Park 3 BR & Patio. $74,500. ()pen Dai· lylZ-5. lobbe s.wu ... RDB.L . UNITED BROKE Rs 1 n MS-7414 ""'# I la Calfonllo .. POOL TIM! UPCraded 3 Br 2 Ba. cul GREEN VALLEY 4br. de sac, lge yard. Mesa 3ba, nr Playgrnd & park • Verde. Owner purchased Prln only· 968-9001 other home. $89,SOO. NEW CONDO EM Wl.ita/2 Br, 2'f.a Ba, beam cellg~ ceramic tile, 2 fplc's. Pool & spa. i---------$69 ,500. Prine onlY·t--------:--- 675-4912 Bkr. Hull gl• IHch I 040 $84.7!50. ,LARGE lri-level, ••••••••••••••••••••••• 3 BR .+ 3 ba + family S6:S Resale Specialists. 3, room, +3 car ga~age. 10 4 or 5 bdrm model& avail, Yn old, nice residential aome w /pools 968-4602 a r e a . C o u l d b-e Pennington Properties showplace w /some TLC. · PILOT REAL ESTATE, hcoraff~e Flalr 540-0555 or 581·59116. ---------• is evident In this inviting ~ this 5 bedri '· 2500 sq.ft. home in Eai.tbluff Cl clice locatio n, large yard with Ha waiian te~e. Just $157,000. ~~ for appointment to ' loy Mc Cardle ltealtor 181 0 M•wport Cotta Mffo 548-7729 SIDE GeMnll I OOZ 'GtMraf I 002 GeMr'GI I 002 Ci......... I 002 •••••••• • •• •••••••••••• • •••••••••••• ••••••••• • Completely remodeled on an oversized lot. A smashing 4 BR plus den plus formal dining plus huge family room with open beams, natural wood textures and ocean and jetty views (rom master suite & sundeck. Just steps to Ocean Blvd. ~.ooo. 3Br 2 Ba home. Decorat- ed by the artist-owner with many interesting details. Cracklin g fireplace, walls or mir· rors, enclosed patio & lush landscaping set this masterpiece apart from other homes .. Onl y $169,750. Call now won't last.. •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• Costa Mesa Colonial ________ , ________ _ Mansion on quiet cul-de· Military Trmsfer VILLA PARK sac near Newport's Back FORCES SALE CUSTOM HOMES ---------Bay! $139,500. Red Must sell this beautiful 3 r Carpet. 754·1202 bedroom, 2 bath Costa .. HIGH ATOP ~· SPYGWS Beautiful 4 bedroom S .. yglasa Hill home. tt..gniricent view. You Q-.s\ the land. New. ex- clusive hstinl(. .. 640-6161 . BAYSHORES ~ •UUTIRIL · 3 BR .. 2 ba .• completely OMTHEWATER remodeled Bayshores With loot Dode flardl'n home Gourmet $265 000 kitchen , over sized, ' • secluded patio: quiet Complthty NCMcorat-s treet in this guarded tcfln & out w J1oadt of community. $179,500 · l~~ ~= c src~rti.. Heh w flt'• own bath. REALTOtlS 640.0010 ,....... .... ""'lge f~ - - ~ "" & ur'd fMiilo. Pen YOltll' boat ........ door. - WAITRFRONT HOME REAL ESTATE 631-1400 cae: 0111 ILlllS ca. OVER SO YEARS OF SERVICE ILUFFS TOWNHOUSE WITH VIEW 'l)Avely End Unit Condo Like New. Hlg bly Upgraded, 2 Br. 3 Ba, Den, ca'·et Bar, All E lectric Kitchen, r ·o r m al Dining Room . Wood qp egged Floors. Entry Hall and lRlt..c he n , Large Plltio. Gated Courtyard Entry. $162.500. · ., 2021 PORT IRISTOL CIRCLE HAllOR VIEW HOMES llDUCID TO S llf,900 " OPIM RI I O.l PM \Charming ! Story "Portofino0 Kod e l In A n Executive Jlleighborhood Of PresUge Homes. s ·llilrge Br. 2Ma Ba, Family Room. eparate Dining Room. Large atio, Well Lruldscaped Pool-~lze -~ard. Ownfrs Have Purchased ~'not.her-Anxious! I DOYm DRIYI . 631-1• Mesa home. Gourmet kitchen, comp! w /butcher block counter tops, & continuous clean· ing oven. Sculptured shag crpts. Heavy shake root. Large Yard. Hurry priced only $79,000. Call 546-5880 ~~HERITAGE •.• REALTORS . 4 BIG ONES Bedrooms that is' Th ls rambling ranch style beauty has Just been l.L&l • ed. so be among the firat to preview it befor e mult1pl e listing. Beautifully upgraded In· Two prestige custom built homes in exclusiY area. in Acre Estate Lot. Single level, 5 Bdrm, Cam rm. lge game rm, 3 ba. covr'd patios. 3650 sg h . Num erous f eatures. $239,500. Sun 1-5 at 10721 Adams Qn:le. Ask for Nancy. 731-1522 Panoramic View Lot. single level 3 Bdrm & convert den, ram & din- ing rm Lush landscap'g w /yard fenced for pool. SMS.000 Shown by appt ooly 18822 Rldgev1ew Circle Ask for Mike. 731-1522 terior, sharp landacap· Western Pacific ing, lots or lush plants Properties and a shake roof. BUY IT --------FOR $79,900. 54'r-4141 ~ COATS& WALLACE REAL ESTATE INC 1002 ....................... . .................... .. 'lst:~~J!! MOTIWOITHY - HAUOll YllW HiJ.s T he whole fa m ily w i ll fi nd them&el\19S excited by this 4 BR fam. room. din. room home conve:. nlently located in,,one of Ne wport•a best neighbor~.S. Near school.s, shopping. beach. It feat\lres beamed· cathedral ceiPs, lovely yard, practlcal noor plan. $167,500 · fee. A~ IA.l«Bt CO. 644-1766 SPYGLASS HIU 28 Morro lay on .. New 4 br, family rm, 21r'I ba home. Magnificent view, city lights & hills. Deluxe carpeting & fixture~;. Complete landscaping & s prinkler system. Move in immediately to qualified buyer. OPEN HOUSE wed. n..s. Fri. 6-9 p.m. 640-6410 or 644-4614 caU 6"-7211 ~NIGEL 01\ILEY &. ASSl:JCIATES TOWHHOME . Spacious 3 BR, 2'f.a Ba. deeorator perfect, fenced patio, atrium, beamed celling. Best location in project. Close to ever· ythin&. 913.700. 759-0761 rs~· l ~846-5573 ---------!•--------UPGRADED Pacific Beautiful duplex, So. 1>r HAID TO FIHD Sands, 4 Br, 2 Ba, pool, hwy. Corner Joe. Ea. uftlt ~!ilar Mesa Verde fruit trees, corner lot. 2 BR, Jg. liv. rm. w/frpL With 3 ovusued $9S,OOO. 8172 Malloy Dr •• GeMral 1002,Gt9Cral 1002 $1.64.950 bdrm1,. family room, Open Sat& Sun. 1·5PM, ••• •••••• • •• ••••••••••• •• •••••••••••-•••••••• PAUL MARTIN larae den with wet bar. Agt. 645-9950 REAL ESTATE 644-7383 Big formal living room 1 BA YFRONT, pi<'r & float. lots $205,000 to S325.ooo. to build your own custom home. Several a rC'as to choose from . S,y'-• .a.ss wltb fireplace. Upgraded Must. Sell. 4br 3ba. RV ·-tbruout. HUJTY, priced at Prk g. ~ bch. 8441 In· NANTUCKET onl y $7 8 , 900. Ca 11 : dianapoli.s. 96S-OS9' 5 BR & bonus. 3 Frples, 540-Wl •• pool & jacuzzi. Done with thousaoda ol bricks. Agt. PRESTIGE waterfront homes with DM-0350. ·~~~HERITAGE ' • REALTORS Fantastic 4 Bedroom, 21h bath CAL Classic By The Sea, in best location, neaJt,beach, Meadowlark Golf Course & shopping. $lll,OOO. pier & float from $495,000 up. 'eosta·--Mno----, 0-2-4 -------· BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR 341 Bc1ys1dL· Ortvc. N. B. 675 · 6161 ....................... --------- 5 BEllOOM FIXER.UPPER MESA V E R DE Con - do/Pool 2 sty, 2 Br , 1 Ba, Din Rm, elec gar, elem & Jr. High across street. $58,500. 546-3653; 557-6959 cm 2 b~IJ!Ml~! Im· maculate thruout. One of a kind huge Jot, quiet area. Hurry. 983-5671. ~Walker & lee Broker - , I I Houtt Fol'. Sd.. Hom" For S. W9dMeday. May 2&, 1977 1c DAILY PILOT 8 If.wt Forr: ••••••••••••••••••••••• • ••• • • • • • • • • • •• •• ••• ••• w ............ ~ ....... ~.~~ ....... ~:.~~ ....... ~~.~~ ................. Gd 106t ,...... IOIO OttlefoRffll&tate 0tt.t-1 .. u...... . H111HU11fumflhi :'• lrwW I 044....... a..,... leeclt I 041 ~ leeclt I 04I •••••••••••••••••• ••••• •••••••••••••••• • • ••••• •••••••••• •• •• • • • •••• •• •••••• ••• •••• •••• • • •• •• • •••••••••••••••••~ ••••••••••••;•••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••!~.~~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••-••••••••••••••••• lM5'l Ope, "l Y1' beitut SA FIXl::H o..leXK/ a..I..... Misti 3 • ~~~ condo. POoa 41 tennis. 132.500 Unit,... 1100 Wtlllted 2900 ................... 9! .. :: · Newport Crt.t, 8·1.2 mo Rucll.9r bally •••••••••• ••••• • ••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• MIU VRD~ , .. • lse. S7SO. ~1751 642-4751 MEWPOltT HACH WUI trade 2 BR. 2 ba on butstncll.n1 4 bed,...., D"-X l.ido ll!le + cash for 3 3 batb, new carpets ORANGE TREE DELIGHT Super big 4 or 5 bedroom home with . soar.in.g high beams in living room & family room, red brick fireplace in living room and cutest little pot belly stove in family room . Enjoy the sweet tangy aroma of orange blossoms while you r elax in your 10xl2 foot spa: It's a bi g beautiful home in Irvine's prestigious Racquet Club. Call today. $129,000. CALL NOW 752-7315 DONALD M . BIRD Associates , Re altors EMERALD IA Y TERRACE -a bewtfful home wltft expesin •ltw of CrHent and !merald iaya. Private, b...tl,., 1-.cbc~ lot with Iron 4)Clte mMI ........... outside ..... hardwood ftoon. flnploc., Mp«rah CJUHt ..a a. side. n..... bftirOCMM, l baths $l4S,OOO. SOUTH LAGUNA 499·4551 497·2489 LACU"'A '-:IGUF.I. 495 17211 l>ASA POINT 493 8812 Laguna ~och I 048 Newport leach I 0'9 •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• IACX IAY IEAUT Lrg 3br, 2ba, 2 frplcs. nu crpt,wsbr/dtyr,wtrcon ditioner, eled aar door opener, heavy s hake rool, cvr'd patio. aprklr system fml &c rear 70xl20 cm.r lot. Room ror boat or camper & much more. Owner/Agt wlll f!Aance. Prin. only. $110.0QO firm. Drive by 2298 RedJonds Dr, then. call for apr>t to :jee. 642-0698 REDUCED steal this 4 Br. den. pool & jacuni home. Open House Sun. Ma.kc orfer ! 752.9023 STEPHEN & ASSOC NEWPORT SHORES Beautifully decor 3 bdrm .• lge. patio. Walk Mew Listinn to beach, pools & tenms. ~ S&l.500 ChJrm1ng Cliffha\ en CAYWOOD Rlifd.TY home. Sunken hvmg rm. with rock wall & hearth. __ •_5_4_8_· 1_2_9_0_• __ GOOD AREA FHA OR VA TERMS 28 1.i B 1 •. •. BR, 2 Ba, oo Udo Isle. drapes & diahwaaber r, 4 a, g. uv rm "' (213)~ $596 includes gardener mstr bdrm w /huge aun· CALL 751-3191. d~k. + lBr. 18a apt We need a duplex or 2 Cbo1c1: location, l blk to houses on l lot. Slnale MISA DB. MAt 4 bdrrns. 2 baths Btrl ocean. $134,950 house OK if under 40M. Sharp 3 bed.room a batb ctm 1m1c tile floors. en Island R.alty Pvt, P T.L. Ph646·3471 beautifully dec~ratcd try, kitchen & fmly rm. ol98PARKAVE. CALL Ha:. hur.:lur a la rm. BALBOA ISLI!: •4br house in good shape ~/mo. 566·2660. s m okt' dt'tt:('t()r , 41 673·l200 i n 0 l d C d M .• SELECT aaraat! door opener. This ---Sl60-Sl70,000. We bavo Al c as •1 Wt!ll cured for home Duplex to sell or trade. PROPERTIE ... & 1i. offered at only Income P'°'erty 2000 &t0-7268. 3Br 28a f b · t ti.'> 000 ~l5 9491 ••••••••• ••• • • • • •• • ••• • • • res pain • .,.~ · · · · Refttdt cpts. Mesa Verde avll ( jflJfif 'fl DUPLEX. Huntington ....................... now,$395mo.646·362'7 t ~~ _J,_:_jWl_lttZll :::h~o~t t~~e a1:~in': HouNt FumlWcl Your choice or 2·3Br, i a1 Broker rice or $79,000. $12,000 -••••••••••••••••••••• bomes in xJnt cond, ~I ----1 Sown. PILOT REAL •••rill 1102 located in nice rexidf.il SEW Shadow Run. plan I. ESTATE. S40-0555. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Ual C.1\1 . aren $HO te0 2 BR . 2 Ba. lge yrd. Rl!HTALS GALORE!! 673-4801 llayi.. tH0-8$7: $65,000 Sale or leabe op· ? We have the latest in eves ' Uon 842 8368 ___ Di1tress Prop1rty! DAIL y Rental lists in the -- Soutt. LOCJYftG I 086 We can find it for you. beach areas JOO's of MESA VERDE ••••••••••••••••••••••• Beach area. Probates, vacancies NOW! Sml Best area. super exec • 3 ARCH RAY bankruptcies. trustee fee/Free life time svc. 'Br. 2 ba. frplc. many ex sales, forced sales, under 645-4900 tras. AvaiJ 6 l. "'25/mo Qwet seclusion, 1:. acre. ..., market values We can * •ConsYnttn G_.. ~5-5726 whitewater view Pvt joint venture. Call World --- brh Sparious. beams. Wide Brokers, 673-4545. lcAoa Island l I 06 4 br. 2 ba. cpts. dtlll'" t4unHftgton .. ach I 040 Irvine 1044 Contractors fixer-upper Unobstructed ocean & canyon view l'" blks from ocean $100,000 as is. 714·375·2856 Beamed ceil in dining 1<r, dn. Lge Exec 5br Ca rm 3 Bdrms. l ''l baths, MARINER COVE 2b nyon 'u hme Picture copper plumbmg •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• St8S.000499·2896_' ___ ~~~~~~~~~!·•••••••••••••••••••••• bltns. frpl. grdnr inc:Jo fmtin I 090 DUPLEX. 2 BR. H'2 BA, 2 Winter. Llttl~ Is land. E $Ci0. 645·2978 • ••••••••••••••••••••••• dbl gar <2) to choose Bayfront w pter. Fully 3 br 2 ba crpts d.,i9l WT BLUFF Be h r WOODBRI OGE S&.S window:.. S169.500 Ownr CAI I <:) 64•·1 ~1 · ac Condo, $62,500. ......-...... 3 B F R • ~ CUSTOM HOME 3br \wiui .... , r am m , 897·3659.0penSun1·4 9!~~ Spacious 4 bdrm. single story home In most de· sirable area. Sparkling view of night lights. plush landscpaping with mjnimum upkeep yard and a absolute must to see Best hurry $145,000. By appt. on- ly-645-8424, Bkr. THE SUMMIT from. $72,500. 15"'" Down. ~~imso~P~i:h~ut u~!r bltn~. Crpl~. gard~ner in s Pe c t a cu I a r ca n -~ilr::1Je~ent. 540·0555. Sl.500/mo. 673·0'.!l 1. cl. $410. 645-2978 ·-z $79,900. Brookhurs l & ;;~,ll.,~· ownr. S87.90o. ~ AUanta. "'""'""""' WATER. WATER :\'./\I: n t1l evered. panoramic -CostoMffo 3124 3 Br 2 Ba condo. aviti' CUSTOM DUPLEX nea 4 BR• F I R • 0 I R ' EVERYWHERE "nr "'1opor1 Po•• Orrin Lake Park. $123,000. solarium, sgl sty de· That's the theme for th1:. R.E. PROFESSIONALS tached home . 2300 Sq. ft. fantastic 3 BDRM . SEP 963-8377 963-7~3 Lge lot. $118.500. 544.0684 GUF.ST ROOM . 3 HATH view in prestigious 40 S now.$39Smo.Pool&~• Cowan llcil:hls 3br, NIJ ••••••••••••••••••••••• rm.640-2981 d 6440220 RESIDENCE !l as BY OWNER ays,or eve . SWIM POOL, JACUZZI. Poolside condo 3 Br l'h e tc. & awe 1ns parang Ba. wsh/dr, inc. Prim COLLEGE PARK OCEAN VU IT'S COOL toe. Must sell, $57,000. 3 IDRM-OEH at 963-.fHi&; 962·7598 $169,000 MISSIOM REALTY 98SS. Cst Hwy, Laieuna Phone 494-073 I ---------• An S&S home designed in IM THE SHORES... the casual Calif. style of Nearthebeachlocallon! livi ng . The living 3 Bedrm plan. RalSed, quarters are distinctly rugh ceilings. brick Cplc separated from your ------ warms all livin~ are3s fam. rm. and formal en· EXECUTIVE HOME Glass & wood c he tertaining areas to Move in cond. 3Br. den, kitchen . Decorator floor· create a quiet 2.one for 2'11Ba, huge hv rm fam ing and draperies. Big early-to·bed children rm, formal dan , wlk an yard for garden and Located on pnme loca· closets. ocn \llt'W, ownr play! BKR 962·5511 lion near park & pool. S 13 6, 5 u O 4 !I 7 t 5 0 S. ---------• Priced to soil at $89,900 494-4967 2 HOUSES & POOL OWN YOUR OWH A 2 bdrm, 1 'h bath home • • .a..RTME..- that couJd be 3 bdrms & a """"' "' 1 bdrm home in the rear. Across from lle1sler Separate pool area forl ______ _.iliilimlil Park. Oceanvlew & hills your .swimming leisure. too~ 2 BR. 2 BA Adults Fantastic "live & rent'' only. near beach. Century 21 RARE AND ' ELENA APTS Surf Realty 484 Cliff Dr. Laguna 516-7542 979·1050 u nique 4 bedroom . 2 JAYW. YEATS --------.i story home w /a family REALTORS room & formal dining 499-2Zl7 room! Excellent location --------1042 ••••••••••••••••••••••• to the Colony's Com· munrty Park & pools & OH THE WATER lenrus courts! A super MAGNIFICENT ~~e at a super price. A lus h, foliage lined RED CARPET walkway draws you int an unparalleled 1nterior1-•a•""-°'-'•l•l•l-•l•l•l•0-1 ~=~:;;::=~~~ drenched in elegance., _________ , Family Home Both the massive 2 1tory hlgh living room with WAL.HUT sqttARE This 4 bdrm. 2 ba. & den open staircase and th Plan B. 3 Br or 2+dcn. 2 home. on a qwet street . stunning formal dining bath. olll rm Pvt patio. is close to elem & Jr ht room looks orr to the air cond . Upgr aded schools. New land.~cap SELLIMG REAL ESTATE Npt Bt•h /Costa Mesa . SINCI:: 1959 i bdrm 2 ba, fam rm. lrg rec rm. Cor lot, rm for boat, lovely st. S48-0355 3 1 ~ba . Full bar in den. $13Sutilpd! --------.-, wet bar in din rm. 2 COSTA MESA We cover ull la·ada 3 BR, 1 Ba. frplc. $395.: frpks. Customized in · areas! Many morl' uvail! RR, 1 Ba •. $345. 2 BR Apt tenor w t exquls ite $139,nnO Unt.Smallfcc.Lifetamc. $265. Kids-Pets walnut panelin~. Peol. "" 645-4900 548"8204or646·2316 ... S255.f00. Prin only. Call S h a r P · P r i d e o f * •COMUMtrs Guide for appt 544·7929 ownership units in super _ 3 Br 1 Ba, W /Side, rental coat location. No Mewpori Beach l 169 cul de sac. Kids OK.• 1---------•IWestminster I 098 dererred maintenance. ••••••••••••••••••••••• mo.1st, last. 644·698i• ---MrSEA'MSURF ••••••••••••••••••••••• Almos t carry . Call 4 Br Nwpt Crest Condo )) HARBOR VIEW Beaut. 3 br 2 ba. Vaulted BY OWNER $63.500 3br 962·TI88 for c_ost pro1ec· Sli()() yrl) Tennis. pool. t<MOU open beam ceilings. Pnv l 'iba hrdwd fir., nu lion Ownerw11ltrade ~0.1751 All tht-charms of a 1'-iew sundeck. H ideaway rrpt J.: Nu C'Ct Tc'I. l'Oal ~ K€Y EnJ?land country village. study. Pnv pool, tenoas '"~ Endoscd patio. son ~ ft€ALTOftS A $135, Util Pd! .,. an a location that ran't ~ cts $1.04,000 Call wt r unit Nr 'chs & " " At beach' We cover all FOR LEASE beat' View of the wooded 548-0066 shop'i.:. Quiet area No or beach a reas• Many more C~ l'anyon area 1s combined Warner & west n r TRIPLEX avail! Unt Sma·ll fee, PRIM E EASTSIDE • with proximity to luxury _S_U_R_FL_l_M_E_R_EA_L_T_Y Magnolia 8741 t:nl\erse Easts1deCosta ~tesa lifetime.645-4900 ~~r~~n~~PR~o~!~~ew rHn•at ion fa cil111es HARIOR VIEW 8.&2 8727 Pnn Onl> One 2 BR + den. two 2 --*-*_C_OM.WM ___ r_s_G_u_lde_, Yrly. Jease. $375/mo "rand n""w ., bdrm 2• bdrms ., 1 1 ~ bat h s. 011 Sl28,5oo.. · .~ PORTOFIMO MDL Othet-Real Estate Garages Pri,·atc patios. ~ for appt. Mary Of., Ownr selhng 1 or J kind ....................... Xlnt a rea! Easy terms. rlEGANT c""-~ F IUE'61DOJ') on lge pool s iied lot Mobile Homu Pnnc1pals onJy U: . ~ 0 " -nir "~ ~ 552·7000 w/lush gardens & paddle For ScH 1100 Pyramid Exchangors Big Canyon Condo for REALTORS ' tennis crt in popu lar 831-1761 le"~". $800 mo. 2 br,·frml. 675-55 II '; . ················~······ ~ THl: · · · neighborh ood n ear dirung rm., family rm, 4 ft' ''ILLA.C.,E. · ·· .· .. · Fashion Island &. lO Deluxe adult park an PRIDE OF OWNERSHIP mos. or more. lmmed. 2 Br. 2ba, gar, 2 enclos .. v min 's from bea<'h . Irvine 2 BH .. 2ba .• sun· GPLEX ocrupanry. patios, laund fac1 . REA L TORS Profess decorated 4br. porch. patio. New carp. BYTIIE OCEAN 640•6600 P>O/mo. 957-0261 ·2 - - -312 ba hme, featur<-s S29.500Agt.&16·24 ll Spanish style. 4 yrs old. S I':,\ vrnw . Dynamic tiv.rm w;f1re pit, form"' "n<'I oar. frpl"S, & 2 br. crpl.S, drps, st.o~ .._. SMALi. Mobile home for "' "' ~ -"II d E 1 g e>Cl'.IO hlt':. view Rrand din'g, sunny gourmet rent Si l~ or ~ale S2500. dshwshrs an all units. ~ ... ~ · nc · ar. n••w . c hoose rotors kitch, ram.rm. & many Senior Cill7cn Park. no Low maint. Asking only · S25,000. under mkt. cust xtras. adjoining pets. avail June l8. $23.5,000 for this scarce Neat Halecrest home. 3 S..'79,500 548·8614 J.V. Co. tiled breeze way & patio. 642 2627 rommodity. Call now! BR, FP, qt street. Easy ---------I INCLUDING a sep ap------McVAY INVESTMENT '=====·=~•:t:•-==~I walk schls & mrkls . t /re<' /bonus room Whale Wa ter View, 24x63 3 CORP. • Families. MOO/mo inclds Ha·H You Waited w I bdrm & b a for BR. 2 Ba. El Moro. Lag. ___ <_7_14_)_84_2_·7_48_1__ gardener. 3118 Dublin Sti) Too Lonq teenagers. guest or Bch. $45,000. 497-4030 BUILDERS R ·l Hunt· • ....._ Dave546-41U. -;tc' _ for this SOMERSET study.Open Ilse Sat/Sun· r-.1. .....___ 3178 HARBOR VIEW HOME ? /Mon 1 5 at 1718 Port Ac.reoCJe fOf' sale 1200 ington Bch. lot. Includes ._.,..I~ S24S 2 Br 2 Ba r d ,. b •••••••••• •••• • •• ••• ••• plans for 8 Units + exist· ••••••••••••••••••••••• Dsb. hr t 2' nc 1.-J,., 5 Bedrm. 2 bnck fplcs. Mar gate or y appt. d ws • pa, s~ v '""'•' largl• cozy family rm 644·51.28. $182,000 Mini Ranch ing 3 Unils . Owner. 2Br •• en, 2~a. ram rm, unt.Smallfee.645.:(900• i w wel bar. Covered 536-9801 new 76, view, new ap-••Co.1u • Gal patio. Prof. landscaped. S.CletniP..te 1076 Near new 3br. 2ba home ---------pliances. grnd piano, . ir> 3 car gar . !>ee to ap· ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~:ncledac ~~r~:r!:!i'i'i. TW04-PLEXES grdnr$495mo.496-2038 3 Br & Fam Rm,• prt>r iate" $174 ,950 . Large tri-le\'el.4Br,3Ba, Pncedbelowmarkel Huntington Beach. Will Housetllftfwftished Mesa Verde home.A 1>41 7Z70 Fam Rm·bea ut pool Broker , exchange. Call our office ••••••••••••••••••••••• June 4th. M2S mo. D. Prime area. Ocean view. i;n 5691 & 522_0530 for an appointment to see GaMral 3202 Feenstra, Inc. 549·31 Prine. only. $122.500. this Quail Place ex-493-6476 clusi\e. $137 ,500. ea. ••••••••••••••••••••••• $190, Nice home! Util FIVE ACRES 0penti119pm WAIT Ref+ more! Have ma11y: sweeping 54' dock and w /new c pt & paint. ing $129.000 pat\o. This CUl ·de·sar wallpaper. Beaut. cond. c t u.•"-·--s.· ... / home in HUNTINGTON Pool & Park. Nr. North US Om... -«4 11UUC PRESIDENTIAL South of CorOfto. CALL US F IRST ! more! SmJ fee. 64H90ehe HEIGHTS F<tntastic view 1£ Orange Co's largest •CommnersGuide To~HOME Full pric-£• $12,900 . "Quail ~ selection or Coastal ren· SllS.U&.tlpd .• • "" Broker . fi77 5691 & iii IPlac• • tals. Call today: Move " Nwpt llgts. new constr, 4 Luxurious single story 522·0530 Pra_..i•• t-0night. Unt. Try us, you'll likr Rr 212 B". all a menities. living ts yours in this de · "7s2-1no CAL RENTALS us. we have many more . $139.500. AW 645·9950 luxe pool side end unit THREE + ACRES ••OO ouAatn NIWPORT HACH 9_9 7 days 3 week avail now! 645·4900 .... ~~ Kl .... GS RO .a..D with 2 patios. cathedral Hemotc hoh'll' on 3 + 6 U.._.ITS 63l·l7l3 *•Consumers G11~ " A ceiling-<>nly 3 year~ olc1 acres Fcnrt•il. runtastic " ,.ff Exdu•.a\·t· Panoramir OnJy $65,950. By appoint va(•w F\111 pnre $37 ,000. E.a..STSIDE •-h Citi R__,,al $2lS. 2 Br. beam ceilfs. E.A -ac H """" ' Patio + lots more' UfitS HARBOUR has 2 wet Irvine High 561.200. Pnn designed + Catalina ~~~ bars, one an huge pool only. Call 551·604.2 aft 6 sun.sets & n ty hght=-. 3 room, 11 library tucked pmforappttosee. bdrms , 2l2 ba Portaf1na .:;:===R;EA;;l;;TO;;R;;S;::;=.I inlo a coiy step-down home. Tile entry pror 1ucove, family room, 4 LOW $70's la.ndscapm". ~pranklers baths -a masterpiece Good value for 8 starter 73·500 truJy worth vaewmg ! By home an lovely In me. 4 appointment only Bdrm . fam kit., Open 'Iii 9 P M. separat~ home. Fenced Im IQ H l yard. 1-·uLLY AIR CON· p:::. . l>ITlONEO Prap•rtie• 752•1920 14e0 QUAil if HIWll'Otlf Ht.CM o~:ean \ICw ovcrl'g all ment.Openlal9PM Broktir 67G 5717 & L ovely pride of LOCATORS has lOO'soC Smallfee.6454900 · ~~t:I• 1---------114 Newport Ra} See boat I IQuail ~ 522·20!!0 -ownership units, near beach c1t1cs rentals. All ••Con··-G··'~.A r J r c' Ch ra s t mas WestclifC. OCfered at sizes & pnces from $100 -·-" _...,... I OSO parild<'. 'unnsc• sunset. Plac• . 80 ACR f:S. Christm as $195.000. By appointment up Fee. Call 898·9891 VERY SHARP 3br, 2bt.\ ••••••••••••••••••••••• Walk to beach 3BR. 2ba, Prap..-ti•• Valley. Or(', $12,000 or only. Open til 9pm Locators Tm'"" $395 mo. Eastside cBfiq Jbr. 2ba Ill 22Sl2 ~fonto .. a flcn. \\Cl har. 2 frpkc; 2 752•1920 best l' IH h 0 fr. pp ('llr gar rpt g, <leek New .. 00 OUAILST NIWPOfl HACH '9-1·5191 • .....__I•'--' 3206 673-4801, 640-8572 ·vi. $73.500 1213l672 t731 & ---u:1 -~ DUME HOMES <213mo 2729 thru-0ut R~ owner Open GOLF COURSE Commercial a1e Quail ·~ ••••••••••-••••••••••• 4 bedroom, l 'hba. pati~ z. DEH +STUDIO house. 172t Kings Rd COLONIAL Prwrl1y 1600 Plac• , lBLKBch,cl06e toshops, car gar, bltns. $400_ .,. b 110 ~ y • M.5 2818 or 645·5746 · -r~· ..,..,. -,. a ulous Dc!an<' home 1 ~...... 1ew Ocean view home on San ••••••••••••••••••••••• Propltrti•• picturesque 2 Br 2 Ba . .....,..~ •••••••••••••••••••••• Irv 1 n e . S u per Im 't523 CAMa.1e ft...,fnvwE 2hr 2ha uJtra rustom11ed SEA VIEW Clemente Golf Course. 4 MARIMEa'S MILE 752-1920 Mlts. Yrly. 675·2578 i3--B-l_b_f_l __ E_Ui~ .. maculate Walden model r-v;iJlll "'"" l'Ondo w wood Cloor<1 . elegant bedr<!oms. 3 •ntMECOM...,.ERCl"'L ••OOOUA1UtN1WPOlfHACH r , a, rp c. as Larsest Cul-de-uc lol 1 !\hullers. wet bar & Port Royal Plan r. 4hr. balhs, den, family room ,,.."' ""' A CaroMdt4Mar 3222 Fncd yd, new cpt s. tract! Mex1cant1leentry IYOWMll more F1n1,.hed honu'I 3ba ram rm, 2718 ;,q rt &sunny lanai. Xlnt lease+ 2 BR apt. CORONA ••••••••••••••••••••••• $WO/mo.557·1.2SS. ~ - & kitchen. too Beam Openhou:se dailyll..fi area, l.500Sqrt $82.000 w panoramic· view from BERTHAHENRY SOx2lJ llurryonthisex· DELMAR Broadmoor Seaview.3br 2ba ram rm frp?:'i cat h e d ral cc1llni. 3792 Fern St College Broker8.'ll0460 <H'f'an to mountains . REALTORS clw.ivc . Nantucketmodel.New2 fn~'d.MesaVerd~.A~~ Formal dine M1crownv P:1rlt '"Cornell". 4 Br. 2'2 Ciuarded gate tennis 215Del Mar 492-4121 $195,000 The ultimate m duplex b~ w /d en & atri um. June JO. tA25mo. UJ1 oven. Glgant1<' maste ba, tam rm, dlninl( rm. I --M'-.....t I 052 cr1s. pool $259,000 C all hlstory. Owner's unit has Vte~'. Tennis & com· SS7-0345 'l suiteopen~to pn vut"•.pa ....__ m 0 lk' k ---r--,..,._. OwnrAl.(nt 5S2-lROO PRESIDENTIAL 0 two bdrms, two baths mun1ty """I. 1775 mo. 1 " .. " uuuUS r ver g par . ••••••• •• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • p L \J s d """' house. Huge secluded sch.I. Community pools. SEA Tfo'RRACF. Artist's Prt·m1urn !i1 ngle level ~ 0 ~ ~ HGO ~ET. ~ PRIVATE 4b~cK i ~P~ 640·8557, 64'1 ·8018 or 3 Br, 2 ba, lam rm, AtC"' den. 22' detached artist Sl l2.000. Ph559·0672 h 1' di '1b bb,I · Anit,·i l'l,1n·i·n th"" Bluffs. 83.1·3622 frplc, Jg encl yd. Frliil1 room. Profession ally Open House Sal/Sun/Mon tract lights. 3 BR. 2 UA, :l Rr. 2ba. rireplare. sun· & city view. Close to golf _. ' .. a fantastic cathedral 3 Br, 2 ba, plur; frplc . So. rces. · · studio! Separate 11torogt m. s u o w u c. " Bedroom, 2 bath, ocean ~ stairs. DOWNSTAIRS is t $425 6444-486 1a nd8 caped 1 J u 8 l 12-4. 2br, den. 2ba, on the lovely LR. country k11, k<•n LR , Camel carpeting course, swimming pool & -ceiling living room, din· of Hwy. $.SOO /mo. Call 2 Br, 1 ba, fam rm, t • SU2,000 ror thli1 beauty. lake. 63 Lakeview Arbor double-car gnr Gunrc1 , thruout r-:nd unit with jacuzti. $\07,000. c:Ji.tboa 1_1_nd D-·lty ing r oom . FAMILY 675-0681. yd. Westside. $31SUQ Call ror Prevl"W now. _Lake, 494.~ pool. tennis. SllS,000 lari.:e pa tao. Sl 12,500 ~ uo.i :HO nco ROOM. mammoth wet 557·12SS ;.~ 752 1700 "' IOND RE.ALTY r i r m 0 w n e r . AHCHOIAGE A\1161"7l!3'•""'9'f1'7"ocwOMv bar , fireplace & patio. Broadmoor model $800. _______ __. ~N ••1 o • tt s ruN rn1v M l, VllW + SPA t-:ves,wknds 551 -4038 IMVISTMEMTS • Built-in kilchens. Excep-Cbotce 3 & den, 2'1\ ba, Meu del Mar, 3 Br 2 [ I Spacious & warm 3 BR 831·9411 CondoMhllUMl/TOWft• tlonal landscaping· view. WalktoCdM schls. dbl gar, fncd. $425 "9Ct •·11~~·11·t Dean home in Univ.-----WANTEOinBluff's Plaza l714t49 .. 77tl '-----for1...a:... 1700 excellent urea! $215,000. ·Bkr.644-1790 ;644·2211. ue.Avallnow!S45-64'16-.· · ' • area. 2br lba or small ========:::::! -. - ... ;• j Park. f•eatures a fan· MuioftVleio 1067 3brti2ba.675.3220 ....................... Opentil9pm Dix 3Br. 2ba, pvt patio. 2 Exec ho me i n u "e'"' ~-~~~;::m~-~-~-~,11~111~·~!!!~~~ tasUc view & a cu.1tom ••••••••••••••••••••••• -----OCEANFRONT COftdo Speclalid bl.ks to bcb. Avail July Verde 5 Br lb1t WOODIRIDGI f:~~::Pi~~u:!~te~m LUXURY UVIHG ~P:!~~~~EsP:/~Yer ~~e~n~1~~1n~ ~ni~~~ H.B .• c .M .. F . Vty. fl jQua~I 9000/mo. Nopets675·2188 J a c u ,, z 1 .. ·c re a Steps to beach club. decorated & highly up-SAM CARLO Fam Rm. 2 fplc's, 2"2 CORNER Condo. Pvt Touc hstone Really• • Plac• 2 Br. bltns, encl gara1e, }\lelghborhood! Avail J Choose your own ln· graded. Call owner for MODELS & S Ba. pool size lot. 2214 steps to sandy beach. 963-fJ867 Praplll"ti•• $350 m o. 558·8484 or ly 1, fm. Ph 546-5120 terior. TbJs 4 BR & 2 BA appt. 551-68961124.~. Alta Vista 644 -1323 or Breathtaking view! Only ~Acres FcAr:ookT5l·1920 979.9744 btwn8-SPM Colteoe Park 3 bedr' h om e w /everyth1ng 325 $175 000 B w WOOOUAIUtNt 1'11.ACH b b" f 1 • ~ .. hse is ready for ~cup UHIVE:lsm PIK possible upgraded Has 644-l • · Y 0 ne r · CUSTOM FAM HOME 2 Be & den 3 Ba fplc at • P c. cpts, now 835-0211ext9582 7l4-498-!683;213·748-8301 "'I • • • bltn& dble dar l · · ; or vm.o.1 gorgeous pool w /d1v brd. Upgraded 4 Br 3~ ba 3br, den, 2'1\ba, 2 frplcs, JNDUSTn. AL BLDG. pool. tennis. 9650. Ro 'Mcea 9dl · R 41 _67_5-_3534 __ . ------1 Edinbura encl unit . lbr, JK'acuhziif&I gazebo fam rm. din r~. gam~ S-J.an 1900 sq n. Heat pump 12,000llQ1.ndfl. wltrith prime 714·1"'493-5888 s.lT129 r e 0 TIJRTI.EROCK-Beaullfu 2"'ba· ram rm. On green 1tc en m Y rm. un· rm. Portofmo HV home . ~ I 071 A/C. Brick patio, out· tenant. us al park designerhome,lacomer bellw/vlewofpool&ten· believably btrl w /oak $169,950 fee. Own er ••••••••••••••••••••••• st.anding view. Produc· location . In co m e 2 Br house. ocean aide, Verynlce 2br quietare lot on park, v\ew. 3Br, nis crts. Prof. decorated plank floors, frpl<', con· 644-4844 DellghtM lngavocados &ram fruit. S1200 /mo-trlple n et . flawless, S39Slse. Kldsok $27SSmfee fam rm. 1926 1 Sie rra w/many xtras. $94,SOO. venation pit bit-in BBQ. $129,SOO. 29% dwn. owe. Priced at $165,000. Owner 673-8617 Loe... 89 .. ;19 Gerona.833-3620 OIH Sat/Sun ll-4. 4302 Huge paoeled bonus rm Harbor View Carmel D"1..-.. ownrlbkr. 714/728-6510 will consider carrying Cott M 3224 --·-------~TH• Senlsa Wy, or a ppt. ~~~1.ll won 't last Fan.i::~iew D~ o.tens/ ~u!~~~l. only. •••••~ •• ~~•••••••••••• $210 for 2br home, fdc "" '" .~ DOLL HOUSE .... _. 1a.oo · · sits 1 + more• tt~f + yd, patio, run crpta' WATHAtOMT J~1JtM1 1o.m *n..1u0...L.ft• 2Br. 1Ba Condo will ....................... 2 BRMHSE+duplex Jllraal We cover the en· drp8.Sm .ree. NewaleveJCoodo,below l..oglmMllHch IOfl ljW ;tHl!J!ltl!f _...._, please you. 2 pools, lg HB Dupl~x (1 level ). 9'oodC.M.locat19n.Need ••-bch ...... a! PlxSmaU Locators 899· Us\, by owner. 70.n. ,,....,. •••••••••••••••••••••"• l b •-._ OOOd ft.....& I '"'"'" ... ... ......._, Broker of our 5 custom homes tn grass awn, nr ua .. Owners lge db lmmac -'• wn. rnnc. on y. Ufofee! 645-4900 3 Br. Fam Rm. eKec tf S48-01.22 IUILDA.IULOTS Newport lights. Thls 23oo downtownSanJuan.only unit. 3 Br 2 Ba, nu,cpts. YEAGERRE>tt.1'Y **COM-nW. home. Available "' THE WILLOWS Primo commercial loca· ..._....._..le h 1069 sq f\ home has 3 Bdrm&. isa.oootNTHUITf! dr(>!I , FA heat, blln11. 556-6171 $500 mo. Aalt fOl" Bf! t Uoo on Coast Mwy. at ~..-• ac bonus rm. tam rm. llv PO IT REALTY stereo. brglr nre alarm nTo, pool, refrtt. unt, '45-9161 · P 0 0 L ff OM E . By Victoria Beacb. 5 lot cor · ••••••••••••••••••••••• rm. dln r m. & room for 496-5600 systm. Adj lovely 2 Br small fee. We have many•-------- OWNER 3Br,2ba, frplc. ner. ocean view; three llGCAMYOM boat&camper. $141.000. unit, cpt.t, drp11, bltns.o.tofShlte more In all bch areas! MISADILM~l S74,500, call 752·7847 lv R·210la·$'0,000eacb; two 4 Br, 2~ ba, pool, Jacuul 3112 Broed St. Open CAPISTRANO patio, pvt yds, auto Proptrtr 2600 645-GOO " 3Br. 11116Ba. newly d ma1-C·l lots·$44,000 each; It view. Electric 1ates. bous S.t/SUn 1.s. Call apklra. 2 dbl aan••• & ....................... *•Com •ra Gt.We c:orat ed, 554-4311 6 CNlV. P~Uta-ut. larre R·l lot in Temple 644-8415,~7 Mlkt73H522 VALLIY ...._TOP driveways.+ ortSt. Pkc. Ptctumqi.e country.I mi .... HUii aree.$C7,SOO. BeauW\IJ. private road. for boat or tr on huge ~ul s. of Bandon, O...,gOft. otf r'lra~~ach:3! :08:~ MOllMS llALn Ocieuft _. W.-w.....,.. Podflc Rw'at ar ... l·A«&. OK duac Jot. sm,ooo. owe. ttwy tOL 8 rm .• 2ba, 2 * 4f4-IOS7 * We.st Newport. $225,000 P'rwrtMt for 4 horla.. • BedJ"OOmt. Open. must see to ap-wtll8 + 1 apriot. Apx 3 •/Xtn. lfe )'J'd. Comp. ---------• Principals only. Alt. -r-· larae fam:Uy room, lots JftC.Ml-OIS7S acres, mcloaes lge bldg ~.:~~~acl:rp~ CALLUS-MS-l.Wor'31.oo20 RVH Palermo ree rlxe.r of trees. 38 ' Pool. 10 auppl)'abop&wrubp + Sola.rt k upper. Drive by 171.S Port .Minutes to mar in a · area ror boll ttor~. ll· am lteb. t oor, For all tho lalesl multJ · HEWaUFfSCOMDO r .. 11 .... _ 11 ~,soo. What'a Your'J'rnde? .._ .. ,,_,,_•al• b"•\. formal din·rm. frplc .. r.:.=·• .. •• all bl •-Bl ..ur nf( uu:u ca ownr. 11-D ·-~..,,._.._.. .. -'ar "'· .... av a m oominl Ddorea 6'0o0008 R II -per ay neaa, & bomc. Coo• :.-~~~'°';ro:'rs Beacharu. ~~I, :Yoro~~:r~· ~~~ BY OWNER--~ rw911:gs rori!':'~nlt~e~~PUot CWTy RooCm.t. Good op ac. P11't. 2 •bo&>'I ct,.., 41 Pia.fa. sia,,.soo. 644·7901. 4 ar. lMl Mnn"''P 2018 a M~h a., '1'ia'u Servlc.-e Dl~ory ~~n ~~ cnu ~ ~':· Rboo1s. Call for •Pr ,,__ u--.. ~-L "· • .. n Lah _ __, _._. ... b -. -·"""' o.ii.. .. '-L ..... n . ~ V)OO'U ""'""' O>.m • ~ • Port Chels • Pl rinc. "1._,, _...., JOUr.,..,,, Waaaooer Rt 1. Box ~By OWDU'. c. 1 l • 8 P M • 0 w n e r only By appt.. ·aS3,SOO 4t .. 72 2 ll f.Oll6 ldtntlt~. F'()f' mor. In HU, Ba~on. Ortton. cml1. tul,500. w /coopera~ w /l'ff llon. &M-0107 Comataofl call 642-5678 f74ll. c714 ls.I 050i I I ~u'!t·fi)19 t':r cY:sr~!':sl Eaatside 3 Br, 1~ Ship to shore resuttsi wtr/Sdnr od. pso ... ,, 605611. 6/20. lit Ir Jut. 642.flT North O.ta Mesa boail. .-------BR.Clean&re•dr.M To Plac• yoo_r now t Uas n>, DW. "Fa.sl R ull" )'Ud •. Pamila. "'251.- Strviee Directory DlftMMMl ad •.• Call No 642·1671 lilt.DI ...... * Wednesday. May 25. 1977 ......_, u~ .• ,.. """•" u.lw'a. ,._ ...... h u.-.. ..................................................................... Ho.1e1Uwf•••d Ho.M1 U•~ Ntwpoe tleadl 3Z6t eo.t.Mes. lU~CostaMew Apala t.t1....,., ....._Mehll 4100 OfflceR ... d 4400 .............................................. •········•········•·••· .................................................................................................................. . C4iit. Mesa . 3224 Hllntingtott leach 3240 IJ"Yhtt 1244 Htr"1ol View "--• IWflqo. le~ 3840 SI.A LA•K MOT& WESTCUFF AHA =~·············1······· ······················· u······p·······ll········b·· Beaut . highly upgraded SMftSttfM(j/ ....................... 2274NewportBl,C.M. NEWPORT8£ACH ..._.,separate unl, frplr, Sl,Slll"f ruv ark Vi agell.3 r Portaltoo Model, 4 BR . • laAMDMIW! M&-7'4S. Weekly rate• 1400 Sq. rt . two pvt. oo kldl or peta, PS mo. or 2+den. 2ba lwnhme 2'· "'-tbs, famllv rm 1-2 & 3 Br apts. F'rom fromll!O. & up bath1. $400 per mo. avail JUDO 1, 254.5 .Ekten, G.ar, mce areal Kids OK, HiahlY up,raded, l blk to • iH ~ ~7 pix. :1mllU ree We hav~ hbruy, rec t·nlr, AC forrrwl din. rm · frplc Awlnnrng comblnotton S250 /per mo . U l l GuttU to.9 415 01_642..QZOO _______ _ ----------1 many more avail oow ! rdna $480. 640-814S conversation pit. Exlrn or odult oportmenr homes Delaware, RB Open 12'5 •••••••••••••••••••••••DESK •puce al 17875 2Br, HPU'fl~ wilt, oo kids 645-4900 lge proless. landscaped Dally. 1 Mlle to ocean. p t 1 h or .,.ts, -~s mo Avail C .r-..1........ lot Mlrumum 1 yr. lease With luxury appointments and 642,9802 A&t· 538-ll08 vt ·-!~sdJ, ov ~I ca00re, Be a c BI v d . , n e ar -.... **...._" __. o su.-.m recreotlon ot o premium baJIUftlU eta. nacepa · Talbert an Huntington .lo11e IS. 2S45 Elden, 11 WIHTBGlEEM wner pays water ' "'""' Larae new 3 br, frplc. 832·2'1fm: 771·3'99 Beach. $.'I(). per month. ........ ~ raan 2 Br l'"" Ba IA•• Upapaded 3 bd 2'"' aardener. Avail. for locotton Tennls •gym • merapy • _, .....,. . .,.., . ~ bath. rondo, ~mbix--..; move · In Ju o e 1 5 . spo • swtmmlng • t>11Uo1ds w/W c~, bltm. '1 miles S....r R..tah 4200 Brine own furniture. Our 2,.!Jl> $240. Kids OK <Sm r.:::i1"t.~,~~;",~':. s.1.1... e.1 • ....,...,.. ..... ,.0. One&TWo8edrooms.oneBorh ~ st~c:,d ~~<!rrwy & ••••••••••••••••••••••• Y':ptp~! ~~ Sl•r;:wf:e~ .._ &U-4900 • ...,.,.,....... ..._... Big Can.ion, View furn C _. • 111:..-•Ls ~ ~; •!J.O. P;ut&c Me~ Vllbc;. 1 month. Daily Pilot ol! ce. ,_ U""tA ••C--nGulcte Whether ownl!r or te \Al :;::,;;;; J -.. -..·.,.-2 ~21aths apt. 2lir, 28a, now thru 642-4321 ____ 631_·_17_13_ nanl, le l our r enta l .,., 1 1 1 C 1 M 791 ._. Deluxe ap\, frplc, Sept, adlls $700 mo.1----------0..PM 3226 l Br 2 Ba. Fam Rm, fplc , specialists Barbara or 5"" au ar no ,.vt .• °'a t ia ..,,_., enclosed gar, lndry tac, 640-5560 THE EmCIENJ :> prestige, new paint & carol help you --·-) ti all dult .A ••••••••••••••••••••••• r ts.847·11142or898-:M>OO . 4br 2"2ba. On canal, 1 bUt pa o, a •nope ..... SPACIOUS Oceanfront 4 SURF& SAIL P IAY & IEACH tobch. $72Smo. rt... b ,_.IMd Apwt ... fth ""'-"'-S28Smo.847·2622 Br 2 Ba completely furn ALJ£1NAJIV£ 3br "'· .. within walkln" Jbr, 2ba. near new hse, RIAi.TY 759·011 1 673-2253 ~" ....................... Bch pt ....... tes 2b bme. Fplc, wshr/dryr, '" "' .. I bch & bl ••••••••••••••••••••••• a • wuu ra • r, h Open a branch office or dJstan. or Manna & c 05~ ~ 1:SS --SPACIOUS cleaD 4 br, 3 M.wport leech 3769 Costa Mn a 38 24 balcooy, gar. Refr. $29:1 ~~iC:. j~'jy~at~t ~~ atart your own company State ~1fs'!5 mo mo. · u8ruv Pkb . Amh .. unl mdl. 3 ba l;JluHs condo, gar., ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• "'°· 536-2174 aft 6 lsth. Yrly rental avaU. for a fraction or \he cost. 1 ___ . eves_ 'Br 2 Sa. playhse, redec, . r, 2 a. cul-u·sar. pool, pool, nr. school , 1mmed. Beaut. new 2br, 2bu in 4· Location•Price-LuxurY, 644-95&2 Moolb to month rent. ln· • lBR,2 Ba,crpts,drapes, dbl gar. kub ok. $395. Jae, tennis. c ul·d-s a c o cc up y. $5 00 /mo . plex, patio. laundry, •2Bed ·S260• eludes: recpt. service., yard. Avail. Jmmed 536-1461or898-2487 :::;s1 mo. 752·7847 Iv. 644-4250 ,. bltns,$300.642·1603 BanburyCross•842-6604 Balboa Island S . personalized phone cov- S350. Taylor-Made Real· EXTREMELY nice 2 br, g. Whether owner or tenant, NICE 1 br, pool, adlta, no Bayfronl. 4 Br 3 Ba, Dan erage, conf. room, mail ty,499-2988 t~ ba. SJOO mo. 968-1317 lel our rental s pecialists pets. $240. ~-3798 art. 3 B~~~~!~do, 2 ~.t~~;·, :in~~r:t~: tervke. under1rouod Oceanvu plush twnhse, 3 Bkr Barbara or Carol help SPM or 548-4757 (pie's. patio, gar, pool, furn or uni. No pets. Pier pr~ llCunvE .• Bd. 3 Ba. pool. sauna. 3 bdrm 2 ba, wlk to bch, REAL TY COMPANY you.IAY & IEACH 2 BR, unf, <'lean, jac. sauna. upgrades. avail. TI4-675-052S SUITE $i00.541-4192 ; 493-6569 $450 mo. 536 ·1591 or Beautiful "San Joaqwn" REALTY 759-081 1 GREAT RECREATION · close to shops. 2'•! !~.2007m o . Bob • lbr w/sora-bed added. 567SANN1COLASDR. d · BBQ 67J.6288 mod 1 BR' b hs Swimming, s aunas, 2 645-8939 .._...,.,. • SUITE106 JBr, en, patio. ' -. e . 2 s, 2 al . --health clubs, billiards, Block to bay °' ocean. NEWPORT BEACH.CA neat. 2 s ty. $450 mo 48r, p , Ba. vacant & re· den & dining Lower GATH!!:R th~ family in a STUNNING lge 2 Br, 2 Ba. Irv• 3144 125(). weekly. 548-6173 640-5470 (96..1959, 499 3710 ady lo move into, walk lo level on golf course. Near cozy rountry k1lch. En· nig ht ·Ii ghted t e nnis garden apl. Pool $255. 710 ••••••••••••••••••••••• --- r........-..1.....L. va1•-y 321 .. W~tm1n1ster Mall. Call pool A \•a al abl~ Im · 1oyad1p1p lhe pool! 3 br, courts. Pro & pro shop, W.18thSt WOODBRIDGE Newport Oceanfront. Bsl •lMOFREERENT• ,,_.,_,.. ll'C' .. golf driving range party location. 2br. lba, sips 6, ••••••••••••••••••••••• nowtosec mediately. S525 Mo. "t sep 2tl'c,~ quartRerEs. • 8 wnhs bk PlNESAPTS Wee kly $32 5 /June , 1·2.JRm.dlx.offices.No Donna Godshall 64 &6200 0:-nlury I ... arten . room. 2 Br 11i a T e. r l, 2 & 3 bdrm units. $375/J 1 S4251A leasereq.Adj.Airporter LGE 2 BR Condo. full,y ~ M~.-JI-(V·60I t>W-5357 FUN ACTIVITIES : fplc,gar,lge pal10,adlts, D · d 11 ... I u y , Ufl. Hotel. Low rates, full rrpt'd, drps, 2 car gar. 2 ~.... ----Fullt' d' t r 1 ~" ,..47 Eld e signe .. e ear y SS9-4221or631-1826 ba, wshr/dryr book-up, Re.ttors GoHCours.& Oluffs bayrront, pool. Lg ime irec or. ree nope s.~· Cl't en California bungalows. serv.833-3223t.iJnoon ' bJtn stove & dshwsbr. 963-1164 Lab View 3 Br, 3'12 ba. Cam. rm. 3 Sunday brunch, BBQ's, Ave. 919·l6S8; 646.7027 F. r om $ 2 7 O. 11 5 Baysbores, pvt communl· 700 sq.ft. office s pace S325.mo.100SSSaoPablo Ranrho San Joaquin . patios$850Rltr644·Ul34 trips, parties, sport evs. ~t.one.Otchrs,9·5:30 ty. Nicely furn home.~ available. Pacific Cst Beautifully decorated 2 ----:-tBournE aAmenUtsT&ml oFreU! L BAY MEADOWS Dally. blk bch, 2Br, 2ba, slps 5. Hwy in Newport Bch. ct.F.V.Cl·2ll)J25.7020 $385/Mo. 3 Br, l~ ba, lge BR.+ den townhome A Co.unlry Lavini,:, nr OC b 552<MOO 548-2928 .., ~-per Sharp 3 Br Condo yd. gardener incl. Avail A p ART MEN Ts : Spac. 2br, l a apls. · CaURobbie,548-0751 """ J o view from every room. Airport, 2 Br 1 Ba, cpts, M any facll avail Encl I $375 Good u n c 1 . w n er d I f Sinotes, i•-" bedrooms. ·. · · Orangetree Lake Adlt S ... ...,,..EMlb...ITE COMPLETED.-·U , w/poo mo ( 27 K'></Mo. Lynne Rothell rps, sn. g gar. :.pace ,or ~.., "'"" gar Pvt patios Gas/wlr ~ -....,. ,..,. • . . 213>790· 0.5 ,_..,, RV Md 1 Cd Furn. •-unfurn. Models · . · condo, 1 Br+ mez, A/C, h d Loe. 541-8519, 962·7788. 644·6200 (V..{)1) . • 1 age r p pre . .,. pd No kids/pets From Beach omes, con os, servlct> deluJCe offices • . ---------1 SJOO. All 5, for appl. open daily 10 to 7. Room· · · rec facil. $315. 833-8274 and apts. Reserve now. ft ) rrv· 1 ~-hach 3240 $260 $260. AdJts. 646-0073 (175-651> sq. . me n-, _......,. N1're 2br, "Br. c•-o. k1'ds 557-8113 mate service avail. No 2 Br condo, tenrus· ' pool, BERTIIA HENRY dustrial complex, reeep-••••••••••••••••••••••• ,.. °' 1 ..... .__ •-h 1 248 ----d S N 0 W R E N T I N G REALTORS X ok. Plcx Avail. Fee. ........,..... _.ac 2 L IJR c d lease reqUU'e · orry, . • spa, gym. no kids/pets. tionist..secretary, erox, 2 br condo, 1 ba, comm ••••••••••••••••••••••• g<.' on o, ex-adultsonly,nopets. beautiful new apts, .....,< + uu·J. llAM·llPM 21SDelMar 492·4121 blueprint, mail & cotree 1 t J 6684 Locators 898-9891 clu!\iVl' :.trl'U. Kids·Pels • ......, poo · carpor ----------13 Br, 2 ba. 2 blks to bch OK. ~95 ...spacious 1 Br s. great ~-4954 'OCEAN VIEW. Ste""' to service. Formal Con{ Arbor Cir. s;ioo Dys · Qwel area. 4br home. 2 1257 Catalina St /\va1la O a kwood closels. $265. Light & .... rm, lounge. Lea.seor mo. 893-6571. ext 210. t•ves ba, med yd for kids pets. ble June 5. $450 i mo CA.L REMTAL.S G ""rd en ciiry 2 Br's, w/pvt patio Hewpori leach 3869 be a c ~. 2 Br. r or to mo. 549-9022 714 · 8 2 7 0 6 <l 5 Mr . S3l5 mo Scrv. fee. 497.2920 631·1713 ~ or balcony, $295. Encl ••••••••••••••••••••••• memonal weekend. $150.1---------- Mohamed Locators 898-9891 ----& A partm ents gar's, Lndry Cacil. Come PARK NEWPORT Agt. 631-1400 For Rent·2Br, <l~11. out-2 BR New S375. Kid!'. bybtwnll:30&5:30any Bachel ors , 1 or zSan Juan Capiatrano. 2 2_Br 2 Ba, twnhse, pool,CONOO-lBr, 1Ba. bltns, standi.ng view. '2 blk to PetsOk <Smfecl M•wparthoch/~ day.324 V1ctona,orcall Bedtooms&Townhowies Br. compl furn. Condo Dehaeofficeinlegalsite J&r, sauna, walk to bch cpts immac close to heh. no pets. $450 mo CAL RENTALS AAO Irvine I at 17th ' Mullan Raealty • 6'6·3436 From $249.50 w /pool. $400/mo. 499-2756 in O.C Airport area. Coo- Sec, dbl gar. 898-2989 s h opping $235 m o 4~H2ll.494·7287 631-1713 645·0550 or~2960 Spectacular spa, total _...:__..;.-.__..;... ____ rerence room, library. IRVINE SUPER NICE! 963 1242 3 Br 2 Ba, coastline view. tMi Montcgo Model. 4 2 b ts d bit recreation program, Balboa, furn . 2 Br, S1SC xerox, recep tionist •• 3 Br 2tn Ba condo, 2 r , cp • rps. ns. wk June only Bact\elor available. 833-3522 f 1 , t" 1 fplc, refng, wshr & dryr br . 2 ba, F /R. :-Jear Hewport htKIVSOllttl .KJdsOK. $225. social program. 8pools,8 sioo' w" all 'a um mer ~~~~~~~~~ Pc s, pa 10, gar, poo ·~on ~75. 545.6364 srhool & romm. pool 1700 16th St 64.>2978 tennis courts. At Fashion • · r.: jac, sauna, upgraded . HarbOur 1242 9>5C> 840.lHleves <Dover at 16th! Island. Jamboree & Sao _593-__ 124_3_.._____ Mesa-Primeatore S 4 7 S m o B o b 2 Br Woods Cove. Walk t 642·8170 $285 2 br 1 ba E Side Joa9uin Hills Road. V•mtlotl R..tal1 4250 213-869·2007 · '••••••••••••••••••••••• beach. $HS. INH 5 Br, Fam Rm. 2 tnplcx. Enc. gar bale 1714,64.._1900 ••••••••••••••••••••••• with Newport Blvd fron-2 Br+2ba Twnhme. Super 494.9302 fplr's, g;25 lse. 552·0443; Nr new 642 1603 tage. 1300 to 3800 sq.ft. Brand new 3 bedrm LAN· plus h . Wet bar . 2 759-52660 552 5183 DESERT CONDO. 2br, Agt675-6900 DING home. 1900 sq rt. balconies. Frml Din rm. Laguna Hills 3250 r . STEPSTOIEACH •E.l.stside, 2 Br lwnbse NEWPOITMARIMA beautifully fora oo gou1........;::__ _______ ·~ with formal d1n1og, Tennis. Pool. Jacuzzi. ••••••••••••••••••••••• lBR,2 bahouse 5600 lge patio. lndry hkup. 9191aysideDr. crse. tennis, pools, lrvinell•d owner wants l yr lse & $\2.5/mo.CallMr.Nelson 3 Bdrm . study & 2 ba lh San.C lemente 3276 2 BR.lba .. furn S37S $280.548-<4_971 673-8414 Jacuzzi, Sunrise C.C. Twin Ofc bld'g& 8730 $550 per mo. an cldg 898·2636 v1ewhomeJustabovcthc ••••••••••••••••••••••• NEW2br&2br+den Rancho Marage, $275. sq.ft. avail 1,om 3aO , gardene r 13th Month new Moulton Parkway 4 BIL 2 ba Sporeclifr. Wehavesummerre nlals '*****•********** luxurywaterfronlapts. wk! (714 )673·4850, sq.ft . to 2100 sq.ft. Al· free.848·1688Bkr. 3~r wtfrplc. Pvt y rd. Plaza. Afrconditionc<i. 2 Frpl, bcath rl\Jb. Lecise *2 BR APT •Built-ins (714)324·2688. tractive rental rate . Close to bkrh r S400R. No car garage fireplace ssso. mo. 498 1165 •Trash Compactor a__..._._ to cr.L.- 4100 Prestige area near 2 l7Yr old 3 Br1 1 ~ea.w l2 pets. /\s or on , b ·u · & · h & -*$265 •WetBar _...... _.. fwy's. car gar. lgc rn cd bar k 963-8961 or 768-1225 aft d~y~i~ S~;~t""~~ne[h OCEANVIEW3br,21,Aaba. •Fireplace ....................... AJJoa.IOft yard. New r hor brwn 6pm FREE rent lo June 1 Pool. 2 rar gar . rondo. *Pooh/lacuni/dw •Privatebeach Rmmat.e wanted to share r-rate Realty cpts, new drps, kids OK cau owner at S42 OlJS. $425 mo. 498·2168 *FGllily Ir Acluft •PlexigJusencl. patios lge 2 Br bse in E-Side m~ 5 Sl-l70 I :r~~~4s wtr /grdnr ln-iM 1244 Laguna Miguef 1252 3 Br. 2 ba Seascape. Ten/· Sunflower 557-4800 •Smoke detectors ~~· ~e::~d~o~i!~°!'~ i---------.- ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• pool ma1nl paid $425 Steps to bch, If!! 2br. view. 2511Sunflower •SlipsAdaulvail.toteoat.snts OCC •-bch. Call Don COIOMADELMAI Lo 1 3 ......... 2 b th h d mo Ava'1l 6 t. 496-56l3, Winter $300. Students ok. •**************-** ts,n.ope °' ve Y ucurm a R~nr .~ J 2 fir+ en, on View from 4 Hr, 2 811, encl 546 "180 (714 )52S-5601 ------"-----1 6344780 bef 5; S-48-8203 Detwce 450 sq. ft. office, home. ~lg. drps. 2 car Golf Cour~e w,pnme Vu, gar lge yard S650 mo .., :;.~~ -. _ Lrg nearly new E-sule 2 S..C•..s to beach. 4 Br2 Ba, evs. Coast Hwy. $17SMo. gar.: nice neighborhood ~ 547.7044 Grdnrmd 331 1695 ....,._ ... --~ br, 1 ba. Closed gar. $27S fi:· • cpts, drpg, $600 yrtyl---------.-ReaJonomicsCorp Avail 1mmed. $375/mo ___ _ _ San Juan Unfurnished Last mo's + $200 depos. lSt >42·3443 2 Youn~ men s«)&J"Chmg 675-6700 ~ Agt. no fee The Raoeh, 4 br. l"• ba, Exee 3 br 3 ba ~pll lev C--'strano 1278 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 640-7114 --for2youngladles toshr a i----------pool frplc. ~hurl lease h j . I • , ..,.. OC .AN VIEW yrly 2 Br l beaut SBr apt in N B. flee space avail, ceo- 'lharp 4 bedrm. 2 blH h ~04Wor 64-I 114 15 xt~~~ 8~~t ~~ · ~ ~~r9 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1•2.3 Bdrms. Never J.aved 2 Br. 1 ba duple~. encl. & dplx, gar. $400 mo. Tennis, health spa, etc. trally located in C.M. 39C home. Crptd thruoul -Wood-b-.-d--P--1-~-·_;_,2br. 1•2ba . lg condo. rn. l mi to beach . garage, crpts. drps. No 644 '780or642-3639 We are looking forward per sq.ft. Cont act Newly pain.led. drps. 2 N~w n ge-op ar Fun Vacation Li \ 1111( Avail. now $3lS Sm ree pets $295 642 0583 -. to a nice summer, we Corporate Realty, (714) car gar. Children & pets f I an La ndscape d . 365 days a ~car T" 0 ne" Lex-a to~ SAA 9891 S250/up. Open 12·5 daily. -· · ---2br '>a. or Lido shops & also own 3 yacht. Call SS8·l701 OK. $375. 963·4567 Agt. no draped. 3 br. 2 ba. $475 never lned in del uxe 1411 Delaware . Hunt· Near New 28r, all xtras, Ubcth1_1.pd$37.~!!.:. monthly. btwn?-Upm.&44-8020. --------- ree. mo ~I 5294 homes. Loccile<i clo!>e tol Santa Ana 3280 mgton Beach. 642·9601 no pets. 121 Lisa Lane, u•~ MiftHI Rtfttal 4450 [ '' I R I M6-t826orAgt C.M.644·1800 Yng career girl , non ••••••••••••••••••••••• Br 2•,2 Ba fplr. vaulted RENTALS .a~una .•IJlue eg1ona ••••••••••••••••••••••• Beat;on Bay l Br, gar, smoker wanted to share 4 DB.UXEOFC'S ~il'gs, dbl c ar gar w :? BR. 2 ba . . . $425 525 Park Public ht lennis For YotMC) Familin --------Deluxe lge 2 br duplex, pat1.o. $300 mo. yrly. 2 Bl' 2 Ba furn apt. Steps t 1t 1por, near new. 848-0800 2 BR. 21, ba . . . sn s <'rt:. & fishin~ 4 Br, Jo'am Greal JBr. 1''2ba. fncd 3802 fn cd yd, AIC. gar. Cen· Avail 6/1. 4.94-8939. to bch. $175. 673-3981 Confpaneied~~~~:'hs~n :e. ''ail June 1, 3 Br 2 Ba. nr ?each, t'am rm, fplc, 3atto, fncd hack yd. lse. ;wo_ 675·1501 2 Art Ba. lik~new Downtown ar(•a ' S300 mo 53fi ®lO nodo /\dlt Com m la , ne w <'Pb. ·lbh.~c. 9fi8 JfiHO \vail June 6. $330 ~J Rr 'I pool urt 5 Br preslll(tOW'S&S l'Jrk luntmgtoo Cul 11<' •1.H' oral1o n . FJm Rm ~ rfpk. l yr lse $495 mo '.all 968-4602, Pt-nnlngt.on 1 »roperu.!~_ _ rper Sharp' .'.lllr :?ba, rplc. nr ~olf c-ro;f' •3.S/mo ind I( i,:.1rdnl'r 46-6457 r Twnhllt'. 1mmar Nr '1l v llall s:rno mn \ <t \11 t :. , 1 n f ,1 n t '' k •40·8114 1r 2ba Seaberry Hcar h ome. $450 + !\erurlty. 1ove In. 536·8514 or 30-1418, 496-7086 ---1 3or2 BR. +D. 2 ba S425 Rm. wet bar. comm pool. vd. Just paanled. dbl gar. ••••••••••••••••••••••• tralloc. $315.642-6612 M T Wed 3 BR,2 Ba $425,550 2<XXl sq rt lwnhse. S495 nr schls $340 536.2797 THINK Nwpt Shores area, l lf.i on, ues, eYe. ar.lor2yr.lease.Lake J BR.21~04 •n5500 mo AN0 3 Br.FamRm. 1c•v546-2Jl3d .. , , d Adult2Dedroom,beam, blksocean,2br,lbadplx.WillshareJBr,2 baNB Forest area. Kent OH ·•B ~,15 dt.?n. wetbar. 2000 sq ft · lall us to .ay-move m C'eiling, no pets. $210. 568 Yrlylse. 714·870-9203 Twnhse w /l person. Harkins. '1 '" a... ' . . Sangle fam1l) hme i-:x Wn tminshr 329 8 tom~ht lOO s of apt. on W Wilson. lnq Apt B 714·581·9393 I HR. 2• 2 ba.. S5l5 550 clus1\e Lake Pi1rk tic• hand. <9-97days a week) -Allract.ive 2 br, l~ ba Pref. female. SlOO /mo. •---------- ., liR~ 3 Ru · S515 ••••••••••••••••••••••• CA.L R1:1JT •LS 2 UNITS ·1 L· t ·d 2 lwnhs N H g Hosp 1 642·1950 DESK space at 17875 THE BLU!"l''S ~ Plop ml.'nl $59_s _,,n10 'E'H'l' hnw. 1 R1 3 Ha. fpk, '"" A ava1 i:.as sa e e. r. oa . Bea ch Blvd., near 1 • ~95 l t07 100 19 1 or b 631-1713 Br $295 & 2 Br-$305. car gar. Mat. adults on· .._. __ .... R 7 •lfHt,3 Ba S85<I ' ' . ·-· wet .ir. Parl. !'Ian·. c:A"l720 ..,., nC'llnlA oommat. Talbert i'n Huntington ioo Jfi l8 .,A7 ., 2 """ COJ"-"" ..,...,. ly, no pets. _..s. mo. ,... ,,M ilr °"" """'' ~ach Citifl Retdals --------548-2005 To Professionally Find Beach. $50 per month. Miasion Vteto 126 7 :rnr Condo. 212 Ba film LOCATORS has lOO's of 2Br. 2Ba. llv rm w /frplc, ---------1 ~T RIGllT PERSON Bring own furniture. Our •••••••••••••••,••••••• rm, 2 car gci rarJee. paol & beach cities rentals. All fulJ kitchen. wshr /dryr, Santo Ana 3880 I{ousE ffiAru 'UNlJMITtD receptionist will answer \'ery sharp 3 tK-drm. 2 lcnrus. rer required, Call sizes & prices from $100 dshwsbr. gar:ige. short ••••••••••••••••••••••• -your phone for $10 per balhhomecomplw rpk,I Kay963~1or 968-9952 up.Fee.Call898-9891 wlktostorcs.646-3650 2br, tba, dishwasher. Uk -iCC~CJN~k month.DailyPilotoffice, OW 2 car 1:ar crrt' ----• --aton T'll 9 Near So. Coast Plaza. 0.> ~ h..x.4oi...q 642-4321 d r. p ' I o v l' I ) Dup HH Unfwt, 1600 .._.. I pm Spacious 3 Br Nr So. Csl 644·9259 83:Ml.34Since 1971 neighbo rhood S375 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Corona~Mar 3122 Plaza. Bllns. cpts, drps, 120Virginia Pl. C.M.1659 ......... ~ ..... N r 2 Br l u . 900 q fl 0 r ••••••••••••••••••••••• encl gar. $360. 540-1901 South LOCJlllNI 3886 Resp M-iimk.r 21·30, •hare Sq. ft. Out.side storage ~_'_ "~ ~--°"· !'. . ,.a . •••••••••••••••-•••••• 3 bd 1 ba w /gar, Rmhsc, 387 sq. rt. $330. mo. Me wnnrt leoc.h 32 69 i.ml yard. Eastsade. S2751•--------•1New Townlme Apt, 2 br. 2 Lge, quiet, luxurious. ex· yrd. $150/mo + 1'2 utal. 64&-1.322 •••• :;;-•••••••••••••••• mo 838-4540en~s -ba. bltns, a /c, adults. ec. 2 br, 2 ba apt. CM.645-1180aft 5. ~.:....:.:..:..:. _____ _ BLCF FSC'O:-.IDOS (SI .... ~-Mgr. 645-5106. 1919 Elevator to scenic priv. M/F roommate wanted. hdldrialRlftfal 4500 Uni v l'"rk Terrace 3br • • Aparinwnb fu,,..shed ''" 11~r~~-Anaheim Ave. MgrApt5. bch p rt & ...................... . :?h,i. highly upJ:r:Hlf'd t.e,,aseh!>A11tarttl~~ .. ull.,.,sisu •••••••••••••••••••••••! "" ~~~-. a Y _gameroom. D e pendable. n o n · INDUSTRfAL UNITS ... 9."' m<• 7"1 2"00 o r1_ on( _i:c~ .,.... 1,,., ,.~-........... Mor 3722 2 Br house w/yard. gar, t~t.al secunty. Perfect smoker, 20-25. $170 + '1"J ...., " ' " " -~ _, new cprts paint Mar livmgorwknd retreat for utilities. 96()..1911. Hunt· w tore. Woodworker's 640 1270 _ __ •·1 :\U f'r Bch 2 Ur. drn. l 1 •••••••••••••••••••••••1 CORONA DEL MAH ned only. i child & poss: the adventurous adult. ingtonBeach. OK. Leasing ore. open l NI \! t•i.. 'ferr 3 br 2 ba li.i . pool S Ja1 2 r ar l l'ER IA Uarh w ,.,up.-r 2 Br Townhouse, frplc. sml pct. 35l A Avocado. Starting at $515/mo.1-.;;:._________ 9-5. Mon-Fri. 711W.17th lrpl, wC'l hnr $440 2· br. i i: a r_ S 195 bi' 5 U7 IS. I~ k1trh & bath Malurc· 1 Pool. tenrus. Some orean ~5. mo. 642·0857 an 5pm 499-283.5 Room for rent Newport St, CM or call: 642-4463 bu. t•oiintrv kilch. new _5S2·107'1 non !.m ~r $230 m o & Catalina views. Close ---•~..tafunlflMd Beach. Young single . ....... • •c? """". 551·1"2.._A E .. ".fBL''L'L' b'75-S205,ti73·4841 to shopping & fine beach. Lge2 Br, katch, liv rm, apt ......-!!"! 9 $130 /mo plus util u,....HewHt .;r>C» •"'-" '"''° U< l '-7 Va· r 644•2611 10 4 pleX, locked gar. Of' Unfurnished l 00 675-3410 • tnclmtrfaf ,.,. Brand new Turtlerock EXEC Hme, 4 Rr. iu•p Cotta MeM 3724 ---------• adlts. no pets. Xlnt loc. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ---------731 thru 9600 sq. ft. Glenn Grdns. 3 Br 2 Ba . dinlng/ family rm . sofl ••••••••••••••••••••••• E.Slde.839-~ TT:EEXCITING NptB,2stralghtprofmen spaces now leaafng. mslr slc w /bole. Fam water. Nr schools. shop $40.00 W!EIC & U' Cm.y2br, frplc, verynlcc.•----------1 PA..MMESAAnS. seek 3rd to share lg lux 965·1881 days. 989·222' llm, brkfst bar, lndry rm ping, tenmi1 clb. S795imo •Studio& 1 BR Apts $175 for gingle. $400 cou· 3 BR. $280. Kids OK MJNUTESTONPT vu hme. S23S Incl utll, Evenings. works hop, xlnl view. lncldg grdnr 645·22'10, •TV&MaidServAvall ple.640-7030 CALRENTALS BCH. mald&grdnr.644-0484or Br. 2 ba bltins. n /W, 642 2627 640..s775 *Phone Serv, Htd pool 631-1713 Ba b l&2 BR 6404790 5000 Sq. ft. lncld modem ·pie. Nr West minlllor -~-::--::-~=---=-~-=-::-!.---------2376 Newport Blvd, CM Large, attr. 2 BR, frpl, ---------fro! fllO. & up. ______ _...___ deluxe offices, alr conct., l•IJ. Call 892-9907 Ranch() s .J. Twnhme 2br. f .__ 548 9755 or 645•3967 patio. $385 Mo/Yearly BR, S250. Kids OK. Adults. No Pets CiwCll)lt ~•so very lge yard apace. 2302 ---1 Lr&t · SJ,SOOcunronlnvme on AGENT 644·7383 CALREMTALS fot-•...t ... ~ s Susa SA 8'6-7512 I YR TWMHSE LSE• vu, poo 'nr go enn1s. lease, 3 Br Lr b t ct I 3 1561 Mesa Dr. ••••••••••••••••••••••• . o, . • ~/mo. 644-6537 ~ 3 Br. 2 bu. ~alk lo hg l brl. a Ira ,·· le eadn. Dix, ocean vu. 2 SR .. 2 ____ 63_1_-1_n__ ts Blks East of Newport Br+ den, 2Ba. spacious -------~ sNoapeg.ts.lS235ns, ~ ~a!~n . ba .. den. Avail. now! Blvd.) Double. ~. Xtra tall 1'4 1000 Sq.Ft. Unite. Prime ttractive. pvt palms. 2 Lovely hous e, lovely bch, !}, lennas _,.....,.,., EASTSIDE door. 724 w. James, CM . Costa Mesa loc. Fwy ar gar B~ACH WALX neighborhood. 3 BR. 2 «-en 2 r. arrosa from l!SO. Agt. 675-5930 546-9860 67 .. .,..,..., cloee. 1175 mo . ..,._1411 """"" -Vac.t-N•w Apts. .r1101 .,, .... r e a p o o I ., . BA borne, crptd lhruout. ocean SJ.JO for bach pud. Near 2 & 3 Br apt.s io choice Takin& application!! ~ ;1cuni /uunai. tenn111 drps, patio, 2 car gar. $1100/mo. Bayrront con bus & shoJ)8. Sm ree Cd14 locations. $325-$4:!0 2444 Eldeo Ave. .# Double garaee ~. djtnmitobch$475mo. Eas y H ce ss $375. do2+den.v1ew Locatort 191-9191 675·23ULlnda lmmedlateOccupanry __..elf,~ CoetaMesa tmanbodyahop torent Jave Baron 5.J6-3701or Iv 9634567. Ail .. ooree. SBS03Brwilh boMtdock 2 II at $325 '-TllBll\.IHl1HO'l'ON ____ M5-4336 ______ , or lae. Reasonabl e . 'tB&e846-1371 WATERFRONTHOMES Dana,oW 3 726 SUMMBIENTAL •t""" ~~_:rm,'".~""' --Offlce•......a....1 .. 400 828·2715 or IU·llOI HOWAmHG ••••••••••••••••••••••• SEAVlEW&DAHL.IA 311at$400./MO. -~~ -.. DISON Hi. 3 br, 2 ba, 28Rcondo S340/mo . ._ __ ca_1•163_1•·1•400 ___ ,10cean view 1 Br. patio, Lae 1 br,2nd level. 1 blk OOYLE..CENTURY21 ••••••••••••••••••••••• _Pra __ ioo __ or_J_obn ____ _ am rm, upgraded, Park 2 BRcondoA/C $350 gar, new cpts, adlt.s, no CdM beach. Refrlg, 548-1188 60-PBSQFT C.M.lndutttt&J 1400aq.ft~ WANTED!! i:sc:e i:a~.A;:{i1· :::~ ~ ::. romm. pool = ~~,:YY~.~~!ir.f~{e~: f::.· ~ ::. ~et~o! range, oven, crpu; dlr.. E/Side 2 Br 1~ Ba, fple, 5 Be~:ptS240p1:!.~all. __ l!_61_1_~_G_T_._s._1L_-k_"_:_·N_s_ =i:,. ~~pb "B'" A&-J.52S; 536-6912 ask fo 3 BR $415 $500. 548-0290; 644· 7901 ble. 493-2517 c~nt'i:_';~i:fs . pool, twnhse style. Kids Cum or uo/um. &cb, l -----'------~ lay 3 BR $'2.S Laguna hach 3741 .,.""/mo. June l·Sept 1 OK. $290. M8--09l6 br 2 "-1 ba • 2 b 2 I SO I Westclff Dr. Sta. 991' 45SO • 3BR""'mm Westcllfr. 5 BR. 3ba.,1°". -"' ... • ui, • r, ... w •"' 676-0..m 678-e552 n 6 baths Be ed U = Financial Ctr ••••••• •••••••• .. •••• ••• EAlITHME, 3 Br2 Ba, park/pool . $440 home. 1 Yr. lease. S850 ••••••••••••••••••••••• : a parkllng 2 Br. D /W, . am v rms, 0 T 0 R R 0 M £ ·=.'Zl~~l~~g, S395. 3BRWoodbrldge S4SO Mo. Agt .548·5527 Huge Uv.rm, bdrtn. ba, $32:5. Cheery 2 BR, 1 ba, frplc • ~d& pa tlo. :1:'i'f o8!~88(s !t~r=~e: Callon =S~:~· ~TORAO E IN DOOR, ,3 Bedroom, 2 bath ownbome near H\lot· ofton Harbour. Pt>Ol, acuut, tennis, encl. dou· lie farage. s.11115/mo. d Bedroom, 2 bath. Prime arM. 2000 Sq. ft.. ilee muter bedroom. "50/rDtO.. •GoU course view. 3 9edloom. 2 bath, lamlly ooro.. $S50/mo. 3BRA/C $475 raotasU<' ocean view, pool. :?carports. No pets. $265/mo 1 landscaped grounds, (71C)642-Sl llext2'& Corona, full service. 4 RR $475 3 Br 2 Ba, newly decor, older couple_pref'd. Will Sl50Deposit.833<8080 &Toro 313~ II "'ted · 1·717·"""-fplc Mtio walk to beach ed h • cov. P!.kg· Su · lenma, _, 4 DR $500 • ,,_ • r uce rent in exc ange ••••••••••••••••••••• • • v o 11 e Y b n 11 . 2 a t Y D&UXI OFACIS 'I 4 BR 3 comm pools $525 or comm pools & tenllis. for cleanlng. Must have 2br, lbe, gar, paUo. bltna, N 2 8 2 Ba 4 1 cl ubbouae, bll U nds, C.2atorage unit, 460 sq n, , 4 llR Woodbrid«e $800 SS75mo. ~3370 aft 6PM refs. Call 494·899'7 bet shutters. No pet.a. Rer. ::C sfa d • b':tex, swimming pool. pine CommJ "lndnl •xace1, Newp,>rt ti Falrvlcn•. , For lnormaUon on any or 3br.2ba Bch hsc for lse. 8am & Uam. W-5 mo. 87'5-3446 enct'g:r. nO pe':.M.sf:.7 pong, hydrC>-lipa, l)'ftl. :': 11~.11~a:N11~!f% 675-5300, S.S -~bcse.or any other leases fplc, gar. pooJ , tennis. 1Br1 Sa, whitewater vu CotfaMna, 3'24 Sorry,nopeta. Mhttlon Viejo areH. Wtl'fbOulelloffketpace. • mlrvine.C 'L 6'2·2282 wsbr/dryr, outdoor grtU ....................... lkatla4'0111eoch 3140 SouthweetComer Handy to S.D. Frwy. rrvtne.t12SmQ. 1 A... $396.a-lS28afte ntllAY•••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• Ednger/Newland Oall:131·H80 ~ I H.arborvtewnome~ ~ lllCITOllACH MOOF.d.lftl"u,K.8 . ··carmel''3Br, ram1m. 2 $l.50. for nice bacb. Near 2Bdnn, water pd. cno. 4 b b r I (714)847'9606 HCd.M db J nn 1uite, Wtlllhd 4600 .... bath, children OK. abopptng. &nfee. 8!!,~ ~~ new ds:w~r.\:t . ~·ar~!: OPEN~SDAJLY uUI pd, A/C. tmp~ Oki. •••••••, ............... .. llOO/mo. 980-527? Locators 198-9111 a,...,,..""'• r.••J>aw09. 1 d N do 1703 ---------$155. mo to mo. ns..ao. •l.Br Ol' bacb, Bal tslud.. •• AdWt.a.'oopeta. enc · Y · 0 p . looms 4000 Self-employ l1l1nd $235 21r M.wportleach 3 769 329Avoc:ado,C.M. Alabama, 536-3465 or ....................... 1noe>r._,.,CM Mdyman.m..8747•. 1~ Ba. Close to bcb! We ••••••••••••••••••••••• 646-0883 536-l7ll ROOMS szs wit up wilb 500 ~-n. Bathroom, + cover all bch areu! 1~ br, fur/unfur, ad.lb. O.luxe pool side xtra lge kttttien. $31.50 wlc up nn w/alnk, ~c rerf RAHCH llAL TY Many more avail now! no pets, i&t, last ~2.S fo•bw V....,. 2br. 2ba. bitns dabwhr apt.• S48·9'7SS for photojuaphy atudlo, 55 1·2000 Unt.SmaUfe..64$--4900 aw E 16th St Nu-ClW.WlltOot4&-2010 N bch. Adul •• or medic•I ol~. $22$. -------f • •c-n G.licte t46-180i ' ,..,,s. FURN OR UNFUll.N .Ii:,/mo. ~no peY> Bel Isle. Qui.et, worltlr>1 548.-.e UNIV Park.a Br2 Ba Fam ·2bc'~ew/rrpl mm.SbankiUalNlth• Rm.-,._ blk to b , abops, EASTBLUFl"HOUSE WaterfrOftl. YI w: 1·ll •l4epa.UOmLuc. P"*I• Condo. 2br, 1ba, pool 1V rma. Sl.Ufmo. toJu.b ClaulllN Ad~ Hll blt1 home/not condo. 1 sty, 4Br2Ba.sroomo. Sl.200mo.28R. Sl500mo ·~ lUco"cr dole to tbop'I ., r~ lit. July to Sept I itfau, amoll llems or lM.55HOISlor•414 6'5-78 Aseotl'fMlll <&nallPitOk aas.m.1193 $UO~t7WOJ •!l11tem.84Z·$f78. Uc Balboa lslan4 l· • dent handyman wanu to 1'9nt am •pt or hse on the Island by June ~ 5 ~ Yn •lJl. mcmt erp.1teta. 1va.ll. n.u. up~ of re ·prem can be I/ ~8TM1tr. . . -----· -----I""' -, I I Wed~ay. May 25. 1917 * DAIL y PILOT D5 -~ Add it ... Build it ... Diaper it ... Hammer it ... Carpet it ... Cement it... Wire it ... Hoe tt ... Ctean it ... Move lt ... Press it...Paint IL.Nail lt ... Pfaster it ... Fix it ... SERVICE DIRECTORY Plumb it. .. Patch it ... Pipe 1t ... Remodel It ... , Roof it...Landscape lt...Tile it. .. Trlm it ... Sew it ... Haul it ... Add It... Plant it ... Alter It. .. Learn It ... AnlllKtw.. C..,eMer c....tJ'Coftcnte '9Mtwe Gaw: d Ser¥1ces ...................... ...••...•..••......•.•. ••••................... ..............•........ . •...............•..... Hou:sed.anlng PainffncJ/PatMrincJ fltastw /R.. T••IMow Repolr ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• Build'' l>e•lro• 'EDI· carpentry•Cablnet.1. Omlefttworkofallkindl. THESTRIPPERS WEDOITALL!"""ett. Hou.w&windowclearunic. Knowles Palntln&. VERYNEATPATCH CANOPYTVSERVlCE !:a_• Cocwt.•. New or Expertwork Reasonable Reaarates·Freeesta f)arn u"!°mishera. quat. Concrete. ealnt'g, Good rates & refs. A.bk lnt /Kxt, commer cial JO~"TEXTURE lstRATESERVlCE Rel, Com. St Uc f CallTom ·~1995 7~ 7SCMi625 st rip e on r • n e plumb'g, carpenter, for "Bag Lynn" 531H711 apts & r estdentlal. Free Eat. 893·1'39 Al f''airPrlces96CH633 381154. P .D.l Corp. •--Cum/metal. Let us take roct•g, glus, tl«trkal. 838-IUO --840-7020 c.,.t S...-B " D Concrete. All the hrs ol work from you tree removal earbage Xlnt housccleanane done HOMES.ADDmONS •- w ._1 d i ._••••••••••-• 1 • 11 •la•••••••• phaaesconcrete,block& ata pnceyoucanafford. disp .• mar-lhe. tile, byladyw/expr. Depen· PAINTING . Xlnl Restucco over block ••••••••••••••• .. •••••• ora DI raw 011 .. carpet Man w y you.n brick work. Free ests. e&l-06$5. 34252 Sant.a Fe carptg. acreem "beat· dable, own trans 847·3637 craftsman. Knowledgea· walls, free eat. tow rata CERAMJC TLLE. New or pe-rnlt.t.Exptdlncustm or mine. R epairs & Lic.flbonded67S.9720 Ave.CapistranoBch. ing .. serv'gOr~naeCty. Jr you DESERVE the ~·_.,!:!:ee est. Bond/Uc. 586-4892 rew .. modlcomeel.!,t;«;.~~sam,:l~b!i homes,remdls,addillons cleaning tool Guar work 22"'""' n4 ·--Cir Ul.rM>Vf --..J.w. "' ................. " 6commerc:lals64.S-5889 at bluer savinaa. Free One man crew. 5 yrs H · CiciuflMlg ~·v· ,......--betU Call Immaculate ,._.,, egt,646-3846 perience pouring & ••••••••••••••••••••••• Housesitting aouaht by 2 Co"-pleNOW'!!6737776 ••••lnlr/txtr. Average ••••••••••••••••••••••• l•yslttlRt finishing. Set your own Rehable Expr Japanese male UCl Slude.OlAS. Will ---room S'S. Good local DRAJNSCLY.AKED TrN Service ••••••••••••••••••••••• WeCareCarpetCleaners forms. sav~ money. Gardener. Reasonable provide secutlt". pet Housecleaning wonted refs' rree est. Ask for From $4.25. Main lines ••••••••••••••••••••••• Babysitting, Mon ... rl. Steamcleanorshampoo 494·1485 prices.1''ree est. 6'.5·5230 care, water plants, etc. ReliablE Own transp BrianM2·3194sass from $14.25, water Re movals, trlmmlni.t. atartinr June 8. Mac ai.o~tery·•" work eo.trodcw Mike ln excban&e fdr liv'g in 548·0431 ves Briahten up the House! heaters from $54.25. prunina. free est. Llc'd Artbur/Coast Hwy. Teri guar. a/MC, free est. your house. Lve message Masonry Norm's Paperhanging. Garbage d1spouls In· F\ally lnaured. 642·26?A 875-3780atlS. ReaaRata6'5-3'716 •••••••••••••••••••••••Don's Lawn Svs. Mow for Bruce 752•1067 or ••••••••••••••••••••••• All ki-.. -. free eat. State stalled fr om $44.25. Specializina·8ulldln1 edae,cleanups. Reas.de· Milt 752 9006 JN3 Plumbing rcpalrs, 7 Chuck's Tree Sva. Palms, C•h If Malclltig mpoo & steam clean. Arch Desian Plans for pendable, Cree eats. e · · Fireplaces-Planters lie 330986. 835·3705 or days, anyllme/anyplace. olives trimmed. thinned. ••••••••-••••••••••••• Color brlghtners; wht Add. residence apt. Xlnt ~ BrickCoocretePal!o 67S-641fo Free esls 751 ·6942 or pruned . removed Formica fr Gen'l carpen· cpta 10 mlo bleach. Clean refs. N.8. 646-1573 . ~cl~~t.a. s!~its PAPER • PAJNT 20 yrs 751..-S 5"46-9229 aft S o-y. Finlsbing. Avail liv rm, din rm, hall $15. ---------•Expert 1ar dener. yrd .,,.~ 1 d d truck Sa _ k •kuds, fr esta. Mark Avg rm $1.50, couch SlO, LEE M. JARVlS · cleao·ups, prunine/tnm. ""'haPulin?a er, um!!. d. Fr v-t. Bl kw 11 eFxpr. ve ... wor qu~r. Rl'mOCW & R~ 1304 Chr -G ...... eu-•--t .. Addit's RmdJ'g h-85 F"' ....... ,,.,.t."-""-"""lPedro g,treewo .... 1ra · ee ~. oc a s, r ee est. oo wait .••••••••••••••••••••••• 751· ,SS7·9'2'72 -· ~ uu...... • • "' · .,..,.. .... ....,....., ing,demo,etc. l51·3930 s lumpstone . brick. 642-1950 i d t t pet odor. Cpt repair. 15 Ph 962·3200. L1c 317856 R .... /Comm. Reas, h<'/· Accoust c an ex ure, C.-peMtr y r s eapr . t>o wor" 8ectri d Comm 'l & Residential u-.&&-.. -F a I k •---JI bond . Bob 750-9354, Commercial & Residen· new or respray. ree The Bluest Mltbtplace on ti. 0rqe Coast ••••••••••••••••••••••• m~l:f. Refs 531..0101 C awn care. tree wor · ••••••••••••••••••••••• ·al N · b b. estimates S"'-0 6091 or c tr s n j b ••••••••••••••••••••••• Compl clean· up 548·2049 642·91-« ta . o JO too 1g or too • -· DAILY PILOT CLASSIFIED ADS :!:i'in/..doo~abang~: Cat•'-J ELECTRICAL SERVICE Mlke Hauling. moving. cleanup ~ small. 20 yrs ex pr. _55_1·_3936 ______ _ Lie cootr esL 54S·Zll9 ...... •••••••••••u•n• CALLS SlS hr, & SMALL ,._ _,~-I rT /up. Treework. Reas, p__,,~,tf'aperiiMJ Rooms $15/up. F\llly in· c--' 0 0<' -nerU1 ~" c•s fast. tree est 842·4597 ....................... srd & lie. Odd jobs too .• T.::•••••••••• •••••••• Aft. 5 Any occasion or just din· J o.3s.2-8Z33 PETERS PAINTING .,..., """"' -----------i ••••••• •••••• ••••••• •• • .;.,.,....,"" ITN. V AU..EY SP AS L..&....t ....._ a-..a nCAerTEfRINor G2 .. IC.Ac:,~~~NA FefteilMJ HANDYMAN·Homei. & HAULING. Odd Jobs. Expr 'd. Reas Rates .._ , • ._.._ '5,.-r •------~----••••••••••••••••••••••• Apts. Conscientious ~w student needs work. Free Est. Call Gene WORK GUARANTEED Factory Author1 zed You tan Sell II. f"lnd II, Trode It With a Wont Ad Carpenl~y. plumbin1, CeilRgl, Acomffc ARMOR FENCE CO. craft.aman. Pb: 645-0302 Jlm494·5854 ssz-0458 lntenor /Extr. Free Dealer for Gerico Spas. ceramic tile. 5'().5560 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Cb . L _ ... •-G C ...___. ___ 1_ a-est. ZS yrs expr. 642-0295 962-0960 (642-5878 ) am b"'°' ates, ree ~~-.. .., EXCLNTPAlNTING ---------Co 11 e g e St ud e nt Economy Acoustics. Qual estimates. 493--0320 Clasc;1fied ads. st>ll ln~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• Jntr & Extr. Reas. Uon't ga"e up the ship! II.ave something you want Carp e n t e r. A LL ceilings, new or re· at em:.. s mall 11 ems or Want a REALLY CLEAN Free est. 548.27()6 FRED "List" tt in classified. to sell? Class1f1ed ads do PHASES. Refs, free est spray, repairs, free est. Have something to sell ? any stem. Jus t call HOUSE? Call Gingham Ship to sbore results! 1t well -Call NOW, One Cal Service Fent v~t Approval 673-3658 SJS.1800 Classified ads do 1t we ll. 642·5678. Girl. Freeests, 645-5123 Want Ads Call 642·5618 642·5678. 642·5678. Penonols · 5350 H.-,W•ted 7100 HelpW•tecl 7100 HefpWMtecl 7100 Help Wanted 7100 HelpW•ted 7100 HetpWantecl 7100 ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• WANTED Assembly Workers want· . ed day & nste sb1fts. app. YouareSomew t&Fo.d 5300 ** Special * * UND blk Toy Poodle, lf you have 1200to1500 sq female vtc of Ward & f\ of retatl space avalla· McFadden. PH: 839-0194 ble in Newport Beach. A respons1bl~ woman lo ly an person. 17932 G. sha~e condom San Juen Skypark Cr .• Irvine Capistrano with same. -- Will split rent & utilities. Assemblers for light mf'g. Call after 7 pm. at (714) F'ull time only. No. East 661·2072. C.M. 979-8600 Must have foot traffic & Found, Cat. blk, white frontage. I will assume paws. fem. w /4 kittens. lease. Call Contessa "M" Vsc. Walnut St. CM. at 962-0?A.2 Ot' 5'6-0202 642·5570 ---~~----_________ 11Found: Key Ring w /keys. ----------•Parker's Pets. NB. Artistic lady & sml resp. 640-0090 'dog need room or bach --------- flat in Newport or Found: Puppy. male. A~· Balboa. Chris 963-0065 prox 4 m<?S. Long blk hair ----------• with white cb~t. Well behaved . Nd s good Misc.UC...OU. home. 846-7634 Rental• 4650 Lost Ma ltese, sm long Drinlung problem! Call AJcobol Helplme 24 hrs a day 835-3830 LEARN PIANO TUNING New low rales on begm ner courses. 837·0733 WANTED: Women who have a lot of love and a litUe xtra lime lo be Bi~ Sisters. 834·1116 for more info. Big Sisters of Orange Coun~y Personal Set-YicH 5360 ·•••••••••••••••••••••, haired whl dog, answers t; N 1 Q U E R ET A J L to Bud. Thurs eve nr ••••••••••••••••••• •••• STt;DIOS FOR HENT. Bch(falbert. Any info We need SO people who arc S.'iO to S.IOO mo. Util incl. call 842·7082/960·4088/ a t least 10 lbs. over lnq. at "Tht• Factory" 433-4664. weight. Call Miss Stoot' 425 F:. 30th St. Newr>ort 1''0UND : Obg , vie . at (714)751-9175. We can Brach or C'all ,;75.fltRI or Sberbeck Ln. •-Shanon tell you how to lose lbs & 673 1271 .,. earn money at the samt' ·· Dr, Huntington Beach. time. .. ~n•nt I B1r1·8805 Trani -5450 •••••••••••••••••••••••Lost male cat. named ••••••••••••••••••••••• ......., Junmy. Orange & while Leavmg for Boston from ~..i... SOOS Nr Temple Hill &t H B mid July Good -w-•-•1 Bluebird Canyon area, d F f'd ••••••••••••••••••••••• LB.'4S4-84.54 raver. cm pre IEElt TA VEltH 840-3365 S7SOODN PAYMENT found !"ale whl poodle, Eit!loymtM. ii Help run, nets $1000. mo. old. Skin cond. Cataracs. PreparatiOri Spotless 54C>-0583 _ _ •••••••••••••••• ••••• •• Associate Rep ATIEHTIOM Hi9' School Grocts & Collef)a TralMd If you're new to Orange Co .. temporarily discon· tsnwng your education, recently discharged from the service or for any reason seeking tern· porary or career employ· menl, consider this uni· que oppor. You can earn $196 PER WEEK Based on your produc· tivitY . Comm + incentives & extra profit shanng bonus. On the JOb training. Tremendous potential to r each supervasory & manage· ment positions. Must be personable & ambitious. For appointment only C'aJl 539·1113 9 JOAM-2PM TIME 7~ Schools& t\Ulo ltESTAUliKf Found male 1:at w/Naval lnsin.:tiOft 7005 Body shop m etalman. Asr Station. Greenbay. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Xln t work g cond. OMTHEWATfR WIS t.ag.548·'1281 MEN WOMEN Permanent. Busy shop. Long leas~!~~ terms. LOST: Seal Point fem TRAIM FOR Larry Hunt, >t9'·3J22 BUSlNESSSALES Siamese cat, 10th St. & IARTEHDIMG Automol1\•e 751-1400 Balboa Perun. Reward'. TWO WEEK CLASS New Delatl Shop needs "Tao''. 673-0879 NATlON WIDE JOB help. Foreign Auto Repairs & -----PLACEMENT Top wages paid. F.ngme Body Work. vw·s & LOST: Parakeet. green & ASSISTANCE Steamer... ,•ng painters, Porscheslowpnce.Good yellow ID 2 181\C GOODJOU huffrrs & polisher..,, up c M. loc A~nt. 549·951 l. Balboa Blvd & Coronado. OPPORTUNITII::S holiolery shampooer-;, Bal Penso. bi3-8m8 AMERICA... l'hl'<'k out. pick up & de . T~Y WORLD LOST-4-Br~ puppu.·:1 IART~DERS h'w' Applv at D1s lr1 butor wanted, Cocker 1L<Ab 5 22 SCHOOL 20S9H.!~~~l,CM ~la Mesa ~~urrNu~d· Rl'w ~1 rrt , "1c Santa lll>-'F. 17thSt S \ 1Fn\. are1as. ·1 ., B .;· lsabel10ran11:e.541Hl892_ _ if.3...196o ·• llabysuter. mature. non . .. rv.. ,ag c ----mole ho 1 Over 75 Nat'l brand toys LOST Min Schnauier. Schools Coa5t To Coast ~ er, my me, >~n Walt Dl ~ney . Mattel. red pnnt collar, "Toby" Jobs w~ --7075 tr,:~~11.t·~· Ft;J() Tonka, Fisher·Price No V1C' San Juan Capo ••••••••••••••••••••••• a m w n 5 _ selling ~volved. Sm In urea.il9J 12Uor493-7888 0 . Good Babysitter for 2 boys. vest req d . Gey Burnett -----Companion-n'er a s 6 & 12 New t <714)821-8602 rollect. Found Pr Pttscription pla.sn rook. Beach are.1 C~t ;:irea N.eeded ':fd glast.e!>, very strong. ~ve~u~.~~g _ Jtme 64S-E92l6 Massage Spa. $8.SOO cash Dltanc1a Dr. nr Adam~. Pn Du N ---Wrile Dr. Vincent. 6773 CM Found 5 22 ~atber r~ateri ty .,uM~ jRabvs1tter over 20 own W l · t w t 92683 ,, •• 7....... V"C"• .at <'S pre errn.o · • • es mans er, ea . cue _.,. v•-6'5· 1219 C3 ll an 2PM t~an.c; 7 t? 4PM Newport Approx 3 acres prime REWARD $100 ror lost ---Crt'Sl. !6'> wk. S48·W40 prop. 1llneaa forces aale femall' Wh1l\' Samoyed Http W..t.d 7100 cvi. f 8 2b h ••••••••••••••••••••••• o rm.. a, ome 1 ~2 yrs, no collar, t3too Babvs1tter. Newport Bch. w /wells, income prop lower ~tomach 1714) car neC'e-.s ary 2·5PM, Bldgs, ample urdcn & 532 2176 call C'ollt>l'l •ACCOUMTIHG wkdY'• a.1.'1·3150 a sk for Crull trees. $65.000 Con ptca!le Degree. 2 Yrs manuf Judy tact L.R. Waaaoner. Rt 1 -expenence. Sl4.400 yr. Box 1415, Uandon . Lolll Ch1ldrens glas~es an EmployersPayAJIFees O r egon 9 7 4 l l or beige case. Vic. 19th & l..lz Reinders Agency (714)548-0502 2.3rd. CM 64&-6939 4020 Birch St, Ste 104 ~-.-1-SlSO Newport Beach 8J3.8UIO EUROPEAN CAR P....--. Call for Appl/Es tab '65 REPAIR. ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1----------San Clement• area. PREGNANT'! 492·5882 ask for Chris. C arl n i c onrtdentl al Babysitter needed for boy 3~ yr 8·5·30. J Days. C.M. 557·1957 /64(J.1245 BAKER/PASTRY E11p'd for Continental ratauranl. CalJJor appt. 494-9470 Restaurant 15% interest in Newport Beach. Lido Village Shopping Ctr. 675-1900 counsellnl & referral. Abortion. adoption & keeping. ACCOUMTS/PAY Construct EDP exper re· q 'd. 8-S H.B. Increase 1-B•ANKJ--N•G ____ _ your presenl sal ary Interior Decorating Studio. will tram. Small invest. No inven. 631-0060 APCARE 547·2563 UMDA A VICKI ~Mw1191 ,.. .... ,_of It! Serving all Oranie Co. Help yourseU by joining• 835-7313 MS-0020. --------~ Aide. Live 1n for active young handicapped woman. Room /board & good salary 960·1479 ESCROW LOAM '9tOCESSOR UNITED CAl.IFORMIA IAMK select group ol people in•----------•Apartment manager, 16 ureer opportunJty. Set RELAXING MASSAGE units. No pets. 834·9393 your own goaJs. Direct BobJames· _Ext __ .m __ . ------• your own life. Cal\ Mn. Lie. Masseur Apt ag i r 17 01·ts eo.tod MdJty Tylet- 3029 Harbor ll•d Cot.i9Meso BOAT MFG. ERICSON YACHTS Has The Following F /time Openings For Exper'd Help Wages Depending On Experience •Finish Line Carpenters •Cabinet Shop Assemblrs •Fiberglass Molders •Fiberglass Touchup •Fiberglass Bonders •Hardware JnstaUers .,, Engine lnstaUers Teamster Union Shop, Good Starting Wages & FuU Benefits. Men&Women Apply At Security Ofc 1931 Deere.A••· SA CLERICS Dental Assist. cbairside, Dishwasher part time af· F\tll or Pit generaJ office ACCOUHTIMG Ftr. at least 6 mo's exp. ternoons '&. evenings. help. Laguna Niguel, We wlll train. Must be Some Sat. H.B. S46·3S4~ ~7~52:-·:=2s:;::38:-=---::-:-:--:--~•83•1•-059411iiiiiiiiiiliiiiilliiiiiiiiiiiiiil very good w/numben •. Dental Recept. i!:xper. DISTRIBUTOR, p/timc. 642·6830 xlnt oppor for qualified Earn up to $1425 per mo. COCICT AIL person. 638·5930 bet 9 & _M_a_t_ur_e_. 639 __ ·6_1ZJ_. ___ 1 WAITRESS _l2_._M_rs_._Lee _____ Domestic/sec'y for young Learn m 40 hrs the most Dental Recept. /Ass1st. bacb. exec.utive. Llve m. exciting, &lamourous. Endodontic. Mon· Fri. Must care for Lag. home. hig.hlypa.idprofess.Day Exper. req'd. Non performp/tsec'ysklll & or eve sessions Place· smoker. H.B. Call mix a good mar,tan1 rnent ass.JSl. Good job op· 644~. 955-1550 por. ----------Call 714f 51·9 I 94 DENTAL ASST DRAPERY Manufactur· so. Cali . Cock tail Orth~, hairside exper ang Workroom trainee. Waitresses. Jnc .• 1792 only. reC 'd RDA. 4•12 Apply 1835 Wh1ll1er Ave, Sky Park Bl, Ste ppay.642·2626 B7,C.M.or call642·1843 lrv1oe, Ca 92714. ---- COOi DENTAL DRIVERS 2 Drivers. Interviewing between 1·4 p.m. Com· pany benefits. Full hme; 5 day week. Apply in General OFRCE TRAIMEES Our many prestigious client companies are seeking enthusiastic people for exciting & promotable positions . * Acdng Clerk •CCllhl.r •Fu.Cleril •RKeptto.ist *Pent.Up f1.c1Yotlt * LA9GI Receptionist * luslMsa Mgr Tme Call Dennis & Dennis Personnel Ser\fice of Irvine, 2082 Michelson Drive 833·2700 Breakfast Shirt. Good pity & beneCit:.. Apply. Jolly Roger 400 S. Coast Hwy Laguna Beach RECEPTIONlST Modern orthodontic ore. mis dynamic, iolelhgent recept. Exper pref, non· smoker, 41.2 days per wk. Mus t be pleasant, cheerful & like people. 979·1400 DENTAL SECY JIKPR person at Roy Carver --------- Rolls·Royce. BMW.· 1540 e neral Office he lp Jamboree Rd., Newport F /time. Some gen'I ex· Beach. See Darrell pet. & knowledge of ad· Sickle. ding mach. helpful. ~ t::OOK, b~akfast & Mature. exper'd, & broiler e~per. Apply , highly motivated. 4 Day Rigger Res taurant. _w_k_._5"46-__ JOOO __ • ----- betwi:t 9 & 11 & 3 & 5, 16 Dental Assistant p/time. Fashion Island, N.B Hrs flex. Salary nego. ----------· 642-4800. DRIVER ....,._-------~~ Bkkpr /Co6ting to $1ISO Manuf' Manager to $26K Acctng Clerks to $800 ExecSecys to~SO Recept/PBX to $725 Irvine Personnel Agency 488 E 17th Costa Mesa Swte224 642·1470 Bookkeeper /Restaurant In house, some exper necessary. 673-4700 BOOKKEEPER· <:ook COC.OMY KITCHEM Now acceplmg applica lions for day cooks. Full & P /Tame available. Good starting salary & company benefits. Apply m person. J211 Harbor Blvd.CM ***** COOK, Dinner & Saute. Phone 499·2271 ask for Cher. COOK CPA FIRM Rapidly growing Nwpt Bch Certified Public Ac rounting Firm has im· med need for career oriented person to h1mcllc bookkeepin~ thru fman c1al statement for a number of our clients. pnor exper w1CPA firm Exper'd In lrg establish· A MUST. Xlnt benefits meot for prepanng qua.n· I d d · lily meals. 1 n <' u 1 n g Pc r 1 0 1 c Lido Conv. Center bonuses. S alary com mens urale w /ex per. 1.5S5Superior Ave, NB 631·3733 or eves 494-8403 Dental Assistant F /time. Exper'd. X·Ray certificate. 545-0453. Experienced w / household furn. Local & somedisLant. Good start· ing pay. 841·7278 for appt. GE:HERAl OFFICE Ans. phones, must type, use 10 key adder. Juice Tree, 15621 Industry Ln • H.B. lm-8015. DRIVER WANTED-GENERALOFFICE Seml·retired gentleman Clerk· re ce ptio n is l · to drive me.my car · typist. Salary. S600·S850 Newport Beach area to to start. Need sharp girl DENTAT.ASSlSTANT Anaheim daily. Call w/accurate typing & be Endodontic assastant, ex· 772.0740 days. 640.2078 able to learn variety of per'd, full time needed duties. Call for appt. for busy group practice. _e_v_es_. _______ 5'9-9811 top pay for right person. DRIVER --------Non-smoker, 644.0595 ~ General Office. Must like DENTAL ASSIST. Non· s mkr. No exp. nee. Call:Donna 71Hl93·1356, 7907 Westminster Ave., Westminster Man w /compact car .or to type & file. Good s, ~arl y A.M. home d«!· comfortable s mall ofc. hvery .of ~.A. TIMES. Npt Bch/C.M. area. Call Must livo 111 HB .or Ftn Mr Kane bet 3& Spm. Valley ore a only. Call 645:2640 • 893·2706 anytime. •---------- Growing housecleanin~ Dental ore mgr wanted for I>!'ug Cle~k full or part service needs ambitious growing p r actice in ts.me, cosmetic exp re· English speaking girl fuJl Irvine. Must be bright, q d. 540·8911· or part time. Top$ + car self·motivated, capable ic.. -·.aati expenses. 640-7825 Assisting exp. helpful uwca,--Oft Salary open. Hrs 7·3. MachiM O,.rator 752-7556 Operate 2 Pc. Gelatin Ca 11646· 7764 Please send resume lo: Dent a I Rec e pt & Coleman. D<lm & Grant, COOK TRAINEES. So. Chairs1de asst. Exper 1201 Dove St. Suite 520, L.ag, NB & CM P /lime & necessary. Costa Mesa. Newport Beach. Ca. f/Ume. Coffee shop exp 5.57·9681 Vitamin Encaps. Mach. Prefer exper. Wall train qualified applicant. Must be neat. No known al· lerg1e s. Appl y, 8:30·J0:30am, Linwilco Labs. 2148 Ne-wport Blvd. C.M. GUARDS MHDB> IMMED. Join a progressive, rast growing co. w /unlimited advancement. Must be mature & resp. 8 Hrs paid training if you qualify + other benefits. 92660 Refs please. Charlie's ----------~ ChiUOlc. (714)549-0351. DentaJRccept,fullorpart IUSIOY lmmed. open1n1t for bus CORRESPOMDEHCE boy position. Apply dally SECRET ARY 5pm Mi Casa, 296 t::. 17th, Excellent oppor. for m· C M. div. wishing to advanc time. exl benefits. No Sat. 832-6377 & 644·2119 DENTAL-Girl Friday for Orthodontic Office. good typist. full lime 548-2291 Busy dental pr act l<'e into word processing. Dental receptionist needs sharp, energetic Type 65 wpm, ha ndl w /exp. Busy office. girl Friday. F'ull lame. l r ans c rip ti on Salary open. 642-8814 k statistical typing. Good - EHGIMEERIMG • • DRAFTSMA... {;l OOS'S.o Exper'd Street plans. tJ_. ~:.i Design. Tent. Maps. AP· • TIIw IL ply in person w /work Security & Industrial samples. Robert. Bein, Services William Frost & Assoc. 1424 S. Grand, S.A. 1401 Quail St, NU. 558·9027 non·smo er.f\44-0595 communication skills in DENTAL ASSISTANT CAR WASH HELP eluding grammar, spell· Newport Center. Rover Executive Secretary - Over 18. GOO<! hours Ing, editing & punctua bet wee~ front. desk & scveraJ days per week or 4320 Campus Ste 130, NB 549-8071 Apply, Metro Car Wash tion. Will tr ain to opcrat chalrside. Man: exp. F/l'. Must have good lop" ________ _ mod e r n • h I g h I Y okay. X-ray certificate. skills for President or co. Lie. No. C62177 __ 29SO_H_ar_bo_r __ e_1_._c_.M_._, sophlslicated equlpment. Muslbesharp.640·0300 Resume to: Plaza, 2082 GUARDS Cdl644-3389 Michelaon, No .212, Cashier. Exp'd. Com- . puter cash reaister . F fr. Also assist. dut1e1 in· volved. Apply in person. ask for Mrs . Lopes. ~e's, 260 We11tmlnster Mall OF.SK CLERK Exper'd. Irvine, DZ71.S. 752.0234 Coeta Mesa & Cerritos 9AM 'lll NOON on NCR. San Clemente Permanent. Full & Part· THE IRVIME CO. IMkCall 49i-6103 ask for r--------Ume. Phone & transp re· SSONewportClrDr Ri c Elliott. FACTORYWORKERS q'd. Retired welcome. Newport. Reech ---------• Fem a 1 e m a c h i n e Call 546·0274. ofc hrs 10·2. EqualOppor Employer DictaphoM operators. No exper. CIOl'led Wednesdays. Typist, necess. Will train. Xlnt •--------- 0 r ~+ wpm, start at rroo. company benettta. GUARDS CHILDCARE. CdM. Cp/t~ND~~R& ~:!~·Ap~~: growing Newport Firm. Call54S-0403 N.8. facility. Per m. Full Moo·Fri. 7:30to6:30PM. St 8 899 W l!>t w /very pleasant sur · & p/tlme. Uniforms (um. Refs. 875,.117 ax urgers. roundlngs must be well Teleph & car req'd. CLEANING Retired cpl. _St_._Coe_ta_M_es_a·----t groomed. Call 752-5301 File Clerk Retired ok. Call 833-4893. Howle & ok cleanin1. Counter Help "1 Sandwlich Dining Room Captian In ra!:': !~=offers ~r' Sam & 3pm for d r i vi n g , er rand s • Dell very· X nl P /t m Supervisor needed full i--~-· -------job nooo 5pm 645-0145 good advancement to gardeniJli, P(f. Bobbi. • · • time, at JocaJ Country eager lndJv. Call Vi ckie, HOSTISS ~2223 COUNTERGIRL Club.CaU644-5'04 848·1288. Dennis & Den· Lela u re W or 1 d Ski at <714 )'7S1·9175. __ Ou_tc_a_1_11_9-_9_494_-_s_:u_1_ Co6~~es4:: Mat~ cpl ......,fol.om 5025 Splll .... leedlr orreUred.642-5848 Clerical FeesPaid ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1815 So. El Camino Real ARE YOU Equal Opportunity hclmlTe Spots .., , .. , 558-5904 F\al1 Ume, ma ture. Apply 1 Of iw.--1-. nis Personnel Service or Clubhouse. Recreation & In person French's Dr. ·-~ Huntlngton Beach, 18168 social activities back· Pastry, 1170 W. Baker For .SNF. Contacl _Ad· Beach81vd,Stel2l. ground helpful. P /\ime c M mlnistrator. Garlleld pos. 1>20 Hts /wk. Wknd ht,Zad&lrdT.D.'1 SanClemente.F\lllyllc. Looking for extra tn-·--•E•m•p•l•oy•e•r--• Joint.hestalfolpro- LOANS AV AlLABLE For appt. '92·'7296 come? We need 3 mature ---------minent O.C. firms Cftdlt not important men &/or women full or Banking seeking dependable 673-4883 Broker *SUZI'S• p /t. For interview appt. Tokai Bank In Newport ~orlnteresti:g. Home refinancing, 83 Outeall Munge call 644-5391 Beach has an immediate • .~Fee JS700 10AM·2AM ?'81·5'48 ·--------i opening for an exper'd "CCI m; -.. VA, 8W~ FHA, 9w ;;, N o te T e ller, xlnt a.teetTrM' to$650 CONV. Noa owner OC· EXOTIC ffllLS l~l'nllM mt' benefits. Please call Ga, Ofc $750 ~loans,&~% FHA. M •·Mod Un ~DI.IA~ 646-1121 C sa,ooo max loan. IO yr usage • e l\g .... ,...... .ta 111 r Sertfce bl OutcaJ1542-3ltt~3250 •-"..-; loaD.a, assuma e. Q01----------• 1..one & ~hort term U· Be auticians wanted : s.cnt.ytoVP ~.6'9-1• MASSA•I •ignmenta. tlollday & Newport Hills Center. Denntdtbennb ... .._ •-~ v a c a t I o n p a y . Work rOf' aomeoae wbo PCl"lriOllDel Service of ..,Z'" ·~ sou FKMlll.1 ~s Bospitallaation plan cares. 540-9494 1rvtoe,211mM1cbelson _ ... --' .... .._.... ISCOITS available. BKKR, F IC. thru Balance l•™-ve---·Call-•m4'7--•00 lOAIG9% ~~~~Y ~~~l3~~o, rcf'1. VOLT C&.RICAI. WOMAM with 110m• bale math abDity. l :J0\05, a 10 hr. MloWTD&..... Falrtlt Terms ~ lNt Altnrttve intemaent lady s.fliii ..... C.. 25·40, non-amok er " '4~2171 145-06.. :-~to a~~~t! Hil Medlterra.no&O/· Caribbean/So. Pacific --. a • SWAN Sloop. Slant npwes. • 9441. 'I "'•-U.•1 W• #lot I" • I .. I IOOIUIPH m.1• AUTOMOTIYl CLE.RIC tu11 /pltt Umt. or D.N.V con.tract cter•. P.dnUQl.of",e., u.,. HlUa, a ltlrl olc. call Wanda cnr. Moulton ptwy & &45-STOO Lake Forest Dr •• 8:30-5PM . . Conv. Hosp .• 7781 FREE RENT. Mobile &Evea.ApplyPeraonnel DBJGl•L Garfield A ve, HB homeforparttlme work, ore, M -~· 9·4. Ad· Call 646-f676 Eve11. 84NNl'71. CAPABLE lady. tr19-42S6 ministration Bldg, 23522 ---------Paaeo d e Valencia, DB.I HELP Help W•tecl 7100 Http W...ted 7100 Lnituna mus. Manager & Jtclp, 35 or•••••••••••• ........... •••••••••••••••••••••••1-...-.-------- over. 40 hr wk. Avail eve bra & wlmda. 960-2828 Delivey ot Dally Pilot. Larae route In So. Lacuna Buch. SW&abl tar a IQb tthool or col· tece 1tuaent. Must bavc a dependable car with iood" drivtna record. Cub bond r equired F.amtngs approximately MSG mo. Phone 642-4321. ask for CirculaUoo leav lM n&mf' end pbonr ---- THE CITY OF HUNTINGTON BEACH 11.,a.,www11 Ir-T•• ... Aj ' .......... h tl!ffotlhlt applJcattons ror the (ollowinl{ posltiona: ,Glee Citric -$671 , .. -a.tc/St.o -S7JO ,_. - Gr...ts Worbr -S711 ,.,. MO Store......,._,, ...... - Theff-ar~ CETA funded postUQm -11d f"• quirt-llunllngton ~nch re'lidt>nC'y k 30 dayi1 prior un ·mpJoymenL Appllcallons Will be ac. cept.ed at The Employ ment & Tra1nln1f Center. S38 Main St • Hunt. Bch. untU 3PJil June lit. IJ8 DAILY PILOT H.tpW~ 71 ··~ ................. . ..,,.._.. ... . . . . I * Wedn-.d!)'. M.y 25. am ~!~ ..... ?!.~! ~~~ ..... !!.~~ ~-~-~~ ..... ?! .. t. HlfftW.tH MelpW-.4 7l00 .......,., I009r Hetp W..t.d 7t 00 Hetp W • d 71 ooi------------------1•-!!!!!1--~.--~ •••••••••••••-••• •••. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••. --.... -.............. ···-··· •• ............. PUl&JC IM'S SECIOAIY s l d k w . ..i_.,._... . ·-.... n ........ s * s~·-.a.•y '* mall odepen col m t °"""" unu HOUSIC1 m&ulUA LOS!NG THE BUDGET CWflee Gari w/bkkpa& & Rsa.A "'" ~~·-needs r•llable, exper'd -~" "9 R.ACJ!:• t.et Amway help pa)'t'Oll exper. tn guest F 1 r m o r d e r . Night nunes 11 7. FUii It NB olc needs persona-IUCH dli Crocery Mal\. S Days in Of Anti~s! Women wanted to work youW\n.Call5S7-021S. home. Hu 9·C. C.111 . Dernonstratln1t new line ~e. A!ao. CCU RN't.. ble. resp. indlv. for Youn1 executives seek clud. Sunday. Salary HUGE warcboiu~ for Janu:e's Raigedy ~UI. tot top camera co. Paid nefrts fort lrnt Con challen&lng po1ition re-qualified sect'y. to m open. Apply in person, no cramrnt'd with over 500 Ann housecleaning LUMIHSA.LESMAH •---------orientation. Wiii start tact Miss Jeni.en. Costa porting lo top exec of responsible position. S pbone calls. 508 W. music boxes. nlckelo-- servlce. Start $2.SO hr Needed immediately fice Help: woman to H · ammed. 4-8 Hour atuf\s. ~~-27m!r. lal Ho:.pat al. rapidly erowing co. Sh & necess. Xlnt salary, Balboa Blvd, Balboa. deoo pianos. circus 0 ,.. 8AM to 3, Tues thru Fri. Lacuna Beach Lumber sis t · N ° n · 5 m 0 k er · A1J areas. ..-'" occur. typing essential. benefits & working con C 1a 0 s. w a 11 c 10 ck s. 67~ 4!M·6538or540-82J67 Pleaaant conds. Call Joy Must be extremely well I_________ chtions CaJl675·6700 Stationery Store in dM drandralh""r clocks. -631-12.12. ed h 1 & • ' needs saleslady, (/time. • ' Housekeeper for night MAJD Needed. Depeoda----------croom 'ent us astic S""LIS .. -..Qtvf; 5day1. XJnt worklJ\.g con· rasclnatincanUques. Shl"t 11·7 1n gu""'t homa, ble for weekdays •. Otrice Poslllon avail enJO)' dealing W/the " ~u~ w~ SECRnARY ... -0... I II f' li OverSl.000.000Worth 1 "" " .. ful ln t t public. su-11!.a. .. ~ · Y... ' '' Small sal-•-mkte afcy ~· 1;.a~ • Y me c en· Amen' can lntemaUon-• 'C ... ""'"·6716. weekends. Seacliff w/succesB ves men rT~~· ...... "' tele b· Francis Orr .. •u ~ t t I We're looking for people · • ' Galleries; 1802-T Ketter. ---------Motel,494-4892. managmen irm o to work thru the Sum· YOURIMCOME TempouryServleea needs highly s ll ed 875-1010forappt. T 1 ---------•Ir vine Industrial $$$$$$$$ C S person for Import ant•------=~---Ing St., Irvine. e . HOUSHEEPERS MAJD. part Ume to work Comrlex. Must enjoy mer. 4320 ampus te 130 multi-function pstn Stock Boy-Driver 754-1777. Open Wed Uuv F1tlme,perm.po11Uona. mornings lncld. wknds. wortigw/numbers &be ApplyNow PA.lTTIMI l~S~~a~aAee Must possess xlnt sec 18orover. Sal.9AMloCPM.Vialt!• Day shirt. Will rotate casa Laguna Motel. Call accurate. Xlnt oppor for MANPOWER. IMC. TB.EPHOHE WORk Santa Ana M8-9026 skills & have payroll,1 ____ 4_9C_4m7 ____ Furniture Stripped & some wknds. Prefer Uillan,494-2996 learning & advancing 448W.19thSt,C.M. HOUSEWIVES accts payable & gen of· ~lnished by Experts. prev hospital ex per Mail resume to Ad #875, 645-2043 COLI.ME STUDENTS ---------1 fice exper. Sales/ order ., d ..,,..... Must be. ambitious & ~l~~Se':i~a b{nn P~~~ DaHy Pilot, PO Bo" 1560, I•--------Guaranteed Hourly ---------1 desk bkgrnd bclptul. STOCI( CLH" 7~·:i059 ys,675-....... ev. llardwork.ing. Ma1·n-St,67S .. 7~" ' CostaMes a,Ca.92626 Wage Plus Bonus. 5.30 Starling salary com -FWtlllclGroodt Ant F land b . , UI Hospltal ..., """ Real Estate pm to 8"30 pm. Call Secretar1·es mensurate w/abilities. Perform almple a s· q. erns .s avan1 OCnJCG OFFICE G IRL for mirror copper pots ""'" A....,., or come to""" E. ""U for ; .. tervl.aw. J-.. -., .. -bly work ._ maintain • · 18792DelawareSt MAIDS. 2250 Newpo.rt Jewele ... u fg . "Day wk. ..._.......... """' ..... "" "' Vtu• ........ • Lalique bowl smalr C I .. , IU .., L. Bates . .,~ .... AAA fl'-1-.. _ ... aoods lnventol"V. • l Huntlkh 8'2·0611 Blvd, M. app Y an w/benefits. 1''orrestPond 17tbSt .. CostaMesa. .......,...... u.u.imQ.1• • ., wood radio (circa 11130), person. Ali Baba Motel J ewelers. 2904 E. Coast T •sts WESTMAR.k ASSOC. Someexper preJ'd. 67s.67SS. before 8:30am Housekeepe r , lave-in beach area. Room & brd + expensel> 75 1-7125 days 645 -4 628 eves/wknds. MAIDS WANTED Hwy,CdM ·644-8857 ~st.tMC1nOCJ9rs JPI Secretary-R.E. office ~~~~~~~~: oraft 5:30pm. Top wages paid! The Inn Off~t Pressman we Are Lookmg For (4) near O.C. airport. Room S49-3'Ml •SLOT Af A CH 1 N ES at Laguna. 211 N Coast Pa.rt time or &pllt sh.in, Moti,·ated People In Repro& Stat for advancement. Equal Oppor Employer From $69~. We also buy llwy .. Lag. Bch. Santa Ana C.M. area. HOW GOOD terested In F~shion 54.5-7119 ·&repair. PPSSl-1752 A Exper nee on Ali Dick & ARE YOU? Merchaod1:.10g Sale:. HOUSEKEEPER. Li ve MAID Wanted·Harbor in. waterfront hm. pvt Inn Mote l , 1800 W . rm/ba, adult family. Balboa. Newport Bch. Itek eqwp.Goodpayfor Need self starting ag-w/advancement into Clerks SECRnAJlY/lldlpr SUMMBWOllC ecu 1010 right man or woman To .......,.,1·ve agent. New fa' rm mgmt. Exper. m either , 1 ff' D . . FOR STUDENTS f II . r ... ~~ • I 1 gar 0 ice. ulles In· A be u time an a ew loolnng for qualified as-men s or wome n s elude payroll, payables, P(f SS.18 hr. take home. oo-Working Major P· Salary open. 675·2256 _67_5-_3463 ______ _ months.Call540-13SS soc aate. Extre mely clottung 1s nee. Call for receivables, lnvoiclng & Local job sites. 3 shUls. pllances & Power HOUSEKEEPER for elderly cpl. in gd. health. Need someone to drive, cook & lite hspkg. Live-in or P /time. 673-2991 MAMA.GER Parking Attendant. no ex-generous commissions. inl er vw for i mm ed typing. Metric Fab. 3032 Age 18+. (714) 634-1063. M owers wanted . Ga~ Gallary. Oppor for per necess F llme. Xlnt Xlnt working conditions em PI 0 >'m e n t TH E 'Enterprise St, CM. Ph. Reasonable. 646-5848 ownership. Exper. req'd. oppor. Call for interview pres ti g c 0 ff ice In ,_LOO __ K_._644_·6500 __ ._10_·_6·__ 545-llSS Tow Tn.ck Drinr 15 cubic reet. in merchandising. dis-673-9790 Newport Center. Sales 3148 CCIMpUS Drin Need (2) qualified tow Good shape. play & business control. ---------759-0761 CUSTOMER 546-4741 truck drivers. &xper'd 5454664 ---------I 67S-3(8}1-4pm. Patrol lakl' Retired law ---------RELATIONS (Across From SECY· EXEC, for Na· apply only, G&W Tow-S175.oo enforcement oHtccr. full SALES TRHE Orange Co. Airport) tional Sales Manager ing, 1000 Irvine, N.8 . estlnghouse Continental HOUSEWIVES/ STUDENTS No need to, dress up. Trainee assembly jobs now avail. Isl & 2nd Shifts. Never A Fee At Tempo. a~ TEMPORARY HELP 540-4455 Jo;qual Oppor Employer INTERIOR DESIGNER Needs p /llme help. Expr desired. 6<12·2255. ----lntenor Des1~ner A.S. l.D. or 5 yrs exp. 838-6153 or 494-0767 . --------- MANAGER time. CCR enforcement. I•--------Equal Oppor Employer typing & s horthand 11,._ ________ -t eye level elec range; Prefer mature woman SJ.SOhr.586·0860 lmmedtate position must. Apply in person •• gold, good cond $175. with retail experience. -----------REAL ESTATE available for personable, 751 -0635, 17932 G ' Telephone Sales 640-4734 aft 7PM All replies confidential. PBX AnswM" S..-Y. ambit i 0 u s· m 0 n e Y SECRET ARY Skypark Cr. Irv. A DDIUJ Reply Box 848, The Daily Exper. pref'd, but Wiii SALESPERSON motivated individuals to TO PRESIDENT runn Washers. dryers. Clean Pilot, P.O.Box 1560, C.M. train. Day. Eve. & Wknd Sdary+COINlt develop our professional Secy/Fin lo$14,40< Jllnlf' fat.e models. $100. l yr ~ shiftsavail.Call640...1110 lethrHomls customer relations-sales Shorthandandtypingre· TIACTILDR mna guar. Free delivery. · or640-0812 E.O. E. staff. Infield contact with quired. A variety posi· Seeks competent ffAllKlll'n Mstr Chg. WiU also buy. MANICURISTS Exper'd for posh sculptured nail salon. Call Janice. 642-6245 ---Laguna leach present business clients ti on with man Y ex· secretary who is familiar rruu.u 636-2840. 761-7315 as well as unlimite d ecutive. administrative w/all areas of tending. •--------- PERSONNEL growth potential in andsoc1alduties.Atcam Top oppor. Call Lisa ONTHEWAJ Kenmore Washer $85, PAYROLL establishing new ac-onented individual who 848·1288. Dennis & Den G. E. gas Dryer $65 counts. Must ha "e own II k es p e o p I e. Ca I 1 rus Personnel Service ol TO WOii Colds pot 12 cu rt SIS CLERK Receptionist for active re-transportation. Salary + 640-2500. mornings on-Huntington Beach. 161611 refrig w/icemaker. Like al estate ore. Must be at-bonus, all training pro-ly-8:30 to 9 30 and ask for Beach Blvd, Ste 121. I DIDN'l new. $475. Guar & del. PART-TIME tractive. enthusiastic, vided. Please contact Pam________ 540-8672,979-4734 l•--------•I We are seeking a con~-seUstarter.Lighttyping. KarenDrozda979-2333 ,.._ ________ SECRET""RY L~""L c1ent1ow. indl\. to pro· Apply in person only California Coping •• "" ~"" WANT TO 60 Fngidaire elec. 220 dryer. MATERIAL MANA.GER cess payroll & al>:.ist a Products Secretaries & Typists Sm business Litigation Pen. cond. $89. busy personnel omce Thurs & FTi bet lpm & ---LOOKING FOR Firm;., Newport Center 494-4378 Resp. for planning• Prefer adding machine & Spm. 22311 Brookhurst. Sales-Enjoy A Challenge? --'-? 04' If you.,_ not Schedull·ng procur e Hunt.Sch. Jnteresti'ng pos. 1·n fi'no T--wfKW seeks exper'd Legal Admiralfrostrreeupright I • llle typing skills. + abth· ' ·,··-r-E c·H-0 'osv Secretary or trainee. hav'-f'Yll f IJ t di ment. & control of all h J·ewelry salon. N .B • ...., reezer, exce en con · maten'als necess.tosup-ty tospeakSpanis . RECEPTIONIST w ""-T I Must have xlnt skills. w_.&....°'""'°"~ o:-n ..,"" "'•5""'19 I M F · Mature woman. 673·4734 • ~ 00. Call Linda at.,.,,"""'" ... -.... -... '""' · ~·"" ·'"""' port production opera-App Y 9am·noon on-ri GIRL FRIDAY "'""""""' __.... ~i D Personnel T Bring your s kills & .,.,--New Tappan Corning top tion. Familiar w /E P M"'RRIOTTHOTEL In Laguna Beach. Re-SALF.S /FULL-IME 1·t t ore· Secyto ... 00 FeePd CALLUSF R "" persona 1 Y o ace •• range, cont. cleaning systems & EOQ con-quires pl easant Specialty s hop. H.B. Overload. Choose your EXEC.OFRCE AN INTERVlEW oven.neverused.$250.or' cepts. Previous ex per. in 900 Newport Ctr Dr telephone manner & light Mature Woman. ex per. time, your area & your Awaits friendly indiv. IA.SE PAY+ best offer. 496-0817 .Janitoraal ·Wax & Floor s imilar position req'd. Newport Beach typing skills. Call Jo ...:p_r_e_f'd_._84_2·_423_4_. ___ jobs. We custom tailor who will be delighted COMM+ IOHUSES •---------man. nl rrht shift. ex per. For appl. Phone (714 > EquaJ Opp Emplyr m/f ~~1mNolan Real Estate SALESfoRG .a. us??? · bs t h d le N this · t R f · f .. """ JO o your sc e u . o w / PlCluresque se · Long Distance Lines e ng. reezer. copper, preferred. 5 Day wk.lm54.iiii9.;·~-11.·------1---:-::-=--:-=--Chargl'. ting. Call Angie, 848-1288. Casual. Fun tone. Xlnt cond. Man. Compan y benefits PERSONNEL An ouT'-OM Also Fee Jobs. Dennis & Atmosphere. defrost.$175.963·9066 ~~·6682or545·891l --MATURF. WOMAN COORDlu""TOR -· .. -~·EPT-•/f-Y•,•1S•T-•l We are looking ror ~Q~ off "ce • Dennis P e rsonnel FUN-TIME "" ~ several high energy level 1 Service of Huntington Kenmore elect. dryr. KITCHEHHELr p /time t o ~clcot~ Newport Ctr mortgage Immediate reqwrement mdividualsforand exc1l· 0 overload Beach,16168Beacb81vd. PA.RT-TIME Fairlynew.$110.646-9444 r iti me 1''ood prep & newcomers <'On ac ban.king firm needs in for someone who thrh·es ing career in the mus it Ste 121. J( you read well. like lo ,d...:y:....s..:.., 960-__ 5064 __ a_rt_4 __ _ mer<'hants. F1exible hrs. div. fam1'l1'0 r w/labor · t f .. 1·gn b · W th -talk on the phone •-want •-sandw1chl'S. Call Log I . " on a van e Y o as., . usmess. e are c 557-0061 <t< ID Inn 549-9446 btwn 9-11 Nee~ar, ite typing. code,employeebenefils. meat s including OrganExchange located ....,23 B. hStNB Sec'y.Youngbach.exec-toenjoyJourjob ... Call... CASlillPA k' 547'""""· afhrmallve action. In· telephone & lobby re· in ( 10) So. Ca hf. regional 1.__~_·_1r•c-··-·-· -live looking for live in For app ances, wor in4 MEDICAL div. should have at least cept. Will be tested for shopping malls. We oHer •·--domestic help. Must be TIMEAJfE ornot. 963-6541. am *Laborers* MANY NEEDED ~o Experience Necess. Medical Manager-front 5 yrs vaned personnel typing & 10 key skills. At· a prestigious career , xlnt I•--------able lo take care of Lag I ID•••(S INC. Lg sz. Hotpoint refrig, & back ore. screen pa-exper. Will be resp. for tractive surroundings & trainin g progr a m . Secretary home, perform p/t sec'y L8'llMI bottom door freezer. Gd •• S hould Ha ve Car & phone. uents, supervise & train all personnel input to many co. paid benefits. rug'ftest .romm /gu~rn. & MANUFACTURING dmautrtinii~s .~c~!~ a good e't~•IJ95 cond. $125. 546-:f118 med assistants. Approx payroll dept. Xlnt growth DUNCAN many fnnge bene~1ts. We ll!A..IGl..,.EERl.._.I!!... """'~ O.J'1'0 30 ... 1 pe r wk. Al•o, potential Salary com-2865 Fairview Rd req. professionalism m m;n " "• r Kenmore Washer. nrnew. IAI .. t ex per ( 111 & Serv:ice Sta. Help full or Equal Opp Emplyr m / $175, & Dryer sso. 218 A , Physic ians Assistant. mensura e w Costa Mesa 545-826! the art 0 se. ng_ a SECRETARY p/t1me. Apply, 990 E. PalmerSLC ..... ""'"'"""c. • Corpsman-Medic exper E.O E. Applications be· Equal Oppor Employer strong determination to 8 i.u '"""""°" Short & long term assign- ~nts All 3 shifts. or PA program. Approx ing taken betwn 9am & succeed. Some keyboard Opening exists for a Coast Hwy, N. • Tow Truck Driver needed1...:..95:...7....:-<YT_27 ______ _ 10 hrs per wk. Hunt-5pm ability is req'd. H you u e manufacturing engineer -Service Station Atten-exper. Call 646-9630 Mon· Sale or Trade for upright a ~ mgton Beach C-Ommuni-SuburbanCoas~al~orp RECEPTIONIST the one-call Daphne ing department dant, exper'd._Day & Fri.8-5. Freezer. K enmor~ ty Chnic. 506 Orange 660Newport tr r Opportumtyforadvance-Jett.586·7300· secretary. Must possess Eves.FuU&p/llme.Ap· 1 Washer&DryerorSears Ave. HB c:..., ..... ., ... Call or Ste 900 Newport Beach men t . p I ea s a nt at · . d . k .11 ply Shell Station 17th & Trave Agent f ......._....., · SAL"'~ t d RECEP goo t y ping s 1 s. • • Fer Pl coppertone 21 cu. t·. br1ng resume to clinic. mosphere. sharp fnend ""'onen e • . I l t I h 1· Irvine NB Away OCH R f . 557 4029 . M Pe rsonal Mgmt A"'cy ly personality for front T ION IST !or Photo-peasan eep onevoce, ' . Will seemlessdistant in e rig. . or attention Doug or arty. searching for talent for office pos1t1on. Phone ex· graphy Studio. 962-7877 excellent clerical and or-Service Sta. Attendant, this exciting pos. that of· 540-0646 Equal()ppor Employer fi lms/f\-' Stage Comm'· "'"'r, typ'in" nee .. aood ·--------• ganlzational s kills . 'd Full /l'me 1 f li ...:...:..:...:..=--------Is. All Agcs tlYPt!i> . .,.. "o "' Shorthand desirable. but exper · or P 1 • fers olso c entconlact. Matching K e nmor~ M4tdicalRKord 957-0282 w figures. wn transp. Salesperson not mandatory. Please Apply Arco Station, 17th Call Diane, 848-1288. Washer & Dryer. near· TlM .. O HAllY llfll-' 540-4455 Cieri& lrvinearea.979·3180. REAL ESTA.TE apply in person or con· &lrvine,C.M. Dennis &Dennis Person-new. Seldom used. Mov·• t.VN's. RN 's &Aides PHOHECLERK Recept Fast growing CAREER tart: Service Sta. Attendant, nelServiceofHuntington ing -l St $200. takes. Equal Oppor Employer l.~.uly. Wall paper sales. All Shifts Apply al. The Daily Pilot has an N R. Advertising agency Security. independance. Cull & p /lime. Hrly ~act 16168 Beach Blvd.,_552.:..:...:.....:.-0_188 ______ _ -.ome ofr Steady, purl Garfield Conv Hosp. opening for a telephone seeking sharp, persona top intome! One vacan-PCCIUSIHESS +comm.673-3320. ell. Allctfon 8015 uine Salnr" + 1·omm1:i1 7781 Garlicld Ave, HB service clerk. part time, ble girl t o answer cyforlicensee.schoolfor SYSTEMS TUXEDO SALES, part••••••••••••••••••••••• ~~ W 19th St C M bet to 847·9671______ e\•erungl>. No selling. For phonl's. light bookkeep unlicensl'd. Sec George 17021 Von Karman Sewing Moch Opn time. must be outgoing. Orange Co. Antique Guild &S Informatio n . pho n e ing. t)·pe 60wpm. xlnt Da vis. Red Carpel Santa Ana, Ca Exper. pref'd. Near O.C. For info. 540-3333 ext. 341 Preview night, benefits R ·. h 642-4321. ask for Ruth bent'fat s Salary Realtors. 32302 Camino (714)540-8340 Airport.540-3684. askforTerri S.CoastReperto...,,May· L•upp• auue• NOW ecrmtmg s arp. Lea,··1t t Equal Op ..,""'""""' c 11a•o2822 •J A" -"" ft _,.,,...,,..,,.,, a U"t Capistrano. San Juan EquaJ Opporturuty 27 7·30PM $12 so · re Exper'd w mgmt ,kill~ amb1t1ous man to stll portumty Employer C . t Ph E 1 M/F Shipper/Receiver. small T.VTECHMICIAM serv' a't·ions"~S-32S2. • rrofet"sional Out1<IJnd h;mtw.r.in·. tool:1 & shop ---RECEPTIONIST /fypist 83~-~ ra no. one· 1~~~m~p~oy~e~r~~~~ packaging co. Some exp Good pay. inside & oul·•------""-----,0~ oppnr \pply 111 t>qwpment to industrial Newport Beach Ad · _________ 1: helpful. Apply in person side . Wright's T.V. licycles 8020 ll('rson w r<':.Uml' Mr at·counlll "''I: S280 per 'ert1i.mg Agency nl'ed~ ---------Secretary jRecept. to: N.T.C. 2737 So. Crod· 646-1786 ••••••••••••••••••••··~ Fuentes. Robert. Bem. wk No e"<per nee Call DllftMr SALES reeepl typ1&t w general SALESPERSON R E Ofc lmmed. open-dy Way. Unit C. Santa . Men's Green lO·speed . Wilham 1'TO!ll & -''!i<><' .,_7~•1•9•134-------1 r~ o(c expr & xlnt typing d ( ti Ing Good t"'•>1sl. die Ana. Fri. only. TypJSt. Hpm to 9Pm & Excellent condition. rrorA ·1onal L·n,1ron '' Phi>nt! Salc~ peopll', skills. Ph644-90SO Mature. expr' or reta I h k~l·I 0 C Sat. when needed. 70 Odometer , Headlight, " .. "' f 1 16 a c bath shop Newport Hills ap one s 1 s. · · SH1P/REC CLK ood mental 1-;ng1nl•1•n & male or ema e. to""' Center.640·7234 /\irportarea.833-9099 +wpm. accurate, g Book rack, Water bottle. Planner:.. MOl (Jua1I St )'e.t.rsofage.Guaranteed ------------------Wanted. Exper helpful, spelling & 1rammar. all xtras. Asking $7~ N 8 Nl'RSF.S waaes or commifislons. RlCIEATIOH SECRETARY but not nee. Apply, Wood Call or sen resume: 646-3lllR · URGENT 250 East 17th Street. LUDD F /time. Pers onable. Lighting F~xture Co., Plaza, 2082 Michelson,---------Lef)Gll S.cretory Immediate ru11 tame RN Suite 0. t:Mla Mesa I lmmed opening for In SALES Strong typing & sh nee. 2031 S.E. Mam St, Irvine. No.212, Irvine. 92715. 8035' for s maU law offi ce in pos1t1on a violable on 11 7 betwH"n 5 00 & 8 JO P m div w 'day camp or team Apply in person, Robert. Shoe Sales. Full-p/t. Exp. _7...:.~-~---· ------•~ NU Some legal & book !1h1rt Full-t1ml' positions 64&-4223 exper. to work in large OPPORTUNITY Bein. William Fr?sl & pref'd. better grade ram. ute black kittens need a kee ping <'X IH req also for licensed person EquulOpportunity apt complex. Able to re· Assoc., 1401 Quail Sl, store. Xlnt benefits, W""ITRESSES home in exchange for 640-8900 Lind.1 nel 3-t 1 & 11·7 Excellent Employer late to all ages. Must be N e job N Su d "" Jots offuzzy love. I d k. Lookl-A ii:.--. . career . o n ays. OVER 21 """a .. ~., sa ary an wor mg con able tn work nl!hts , "'"JI~ M M It M c .....,..,.,...., C0e~nl N~e·wcrpo<•trotr~lrpom'lll~.?xn 837d1t1_~~ Call Pt>rsonnel weekends & holi ays MON Out Of SECRET ARY r~'. ~=. ~.B. r. ur-Gulllyer· 1 s Re~!auranht "-- 8040 ..-r r ""''" Full or p/lime. Lile lyp Life? Exec. To Controller Interview ng ... on t ru or-r l'ellent typlnJt, no :1hort BEVERLY MAMOR PHYSICIAN mg. Fash Isl R. E. Firm. Singer & Plano. Mature. Thurs betwn 3·5pm. Ex·••••••••••••••••••~•••• hand. Cull fur Appl CONVALESCENT Neededfor sm .Newport Call644·3389 AVON REPRESEN -Type70wpm.Sh9CHOO. Mount Resort.Salary& per'donly. F/timeDin· AKCPoodlePupp1es htwn ~lOAM & 12 noon HOSPITAL Office,pby1icalex;1ms.1 9AM 'tUNOON TATIVES meet people, Cu ll Ms. Tabata , quarters.338-1011 nershift. Teacup&Tin')'Toy 752 2518 t.aguna Hil111 day a week. Call Mr. THE llVIHE CO. earn good money. enjoy 640·0123. lM82 MacArthur, Irvine CaU 530-5649 •1 LEGAL s 1i;cR ET A RY Equal Opportunity Arnstein <714 ) 644' 1700 sso Newport Ctr Or their wortc. Learn how Is Your ProfesRion ---------10LD ENGLISH Sbeepdot Exper. able to handle l Employer Rm l9.1. Tue. Wed Newport Beach you can become an Avon Secretarial Service will-HOME REPAIRS? WAITRESS, part time pups. AKC. 11 wks. girl office. Call Mury.l~~-~~~~~~~I;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;. EqualOppor Employer Represent.alive. Call Ing to relocate, desired Did you know you can lunch. Good tips. The Shots. Gd. w/kid1, $12:>.• 714·644-4212 Hursn Aides• PLASTICS 540-7041 or Zenlth 7-1359. for newly established ex-place a classified ad In Log Inn, 549.9445 blwn~ ·--------- OLD' ... '-......... CHIMI! cecutlve suite office the Daily Pilot Service 9-U -l,IVE IN HOME ATTEN· Orderles M ".,.._ ------------------bulldlng. Desk space & Directory for 9 whole __ am----.---18JackLabPuppies,6wka. DANT S4SO per mo. Cook Exper'd. Xlnt Benefit.'!. OPIAATOIS RETAIL SALES REP equipment furni&bed at month for as little as WA.ITaE$SES AKC champion llneav (med presc dlet ). Serve. Bayview Conv. Hosp. Openings on swlni (3pm-Whal on opportunity! no coet 1n return for ~-$1.62 per day? For more WA.nlltS _~ __ l.2C6 ______ _ clean. wash & Iron, at-2055 Thurin Ave, CM llpm&tgraveyardllpm-CLERKS Outstandjng nat'I co. Ii a bl~ & efficient loformaUon,call Ov-r 1., San Clemente DOG OBEDIENC_,. tend to patient comfort & 642-3.'505. 7am) shifts for trainees needs sal~ oriented, ag-s er v Ices. 5 4 9 · 90 2 2, 642·5678 ... 0 L personal appearanco ----~----• &eirper'dmokllngmach gressive person In Org 549-9595 ---------Inn, 02-6103 see CLASSES atart Wed- Assist in transporting to MURS!S AIDES oprs. have been created UTOTIM Co. Top benefits. SI 1,640 •---------1 Roecmary aft. 4p.m. June 2 2. 7 : ~p c:..l OR"s appt. & treatment F /'lime.Day&eveshins. because or further ex· Cclrf.-..CeMarkeh +car+~-HtlpW..t.cl 7IOOHtlpW..t.d 7100 WOODA.SSEMILY Nwpt/lt'v anta Household shopping . Exper. pref'd, bul will pansion. Rapid advance-Positions open 1st, 2nd & Janey Wheaton 540-5001 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• F•' U k d SbirleyCoM.n •• need caur Dr. Lie. 3 yr1 train qualified person. ment assured for those 3rd shifts in San Snelllng&Snellingot rume. te wor san . ordon Setter Pup,' exper. Call 714-558-4544 Goodbenefils&sal.App· whohavetbebasicablll· Clemente & Laguna Newport~chAgency lng&flnlshlng.3201 W. WJ Ad pd by employer ly Park Lido Conv. ty & desire to move Beach. Other areas have __ 4340 __ C_a_m __ pus __ Dri_v_e__ MacArthur Bl, Sant a r=~~.A~ham>j C.enter, 466 Flagship Rd. ahead by our training & openings also. No exper . SEAMSTRESS WAREHOUSEMAN Ana Lo an C 1 o s ing -N.B.642-80C4. merit review pro· req'd. Apply at any of Supervisory capacity . ..,;_..:.... ______ _. cedures. Good pay Retail operation needs WANJE~ Must be ramlliar w /fund· HU.SIS AIDES +"''""'t shift bonus & xlnt our lllores. ...,.....,..n to do alteration · r1 hi I ,_.. 2588 Newport Blvd. _.-ing, ansu ng, s PP 01, a. ORDHUES fringe benents. Costa Meu 642•7702 worlc. Good poy, n.-x . FHA /VA & Conv-Will ai t t ted CJMCO hrs. Call Rebecca. C114) FNMA & GNMA. Salary ~~3dividuaira. D n eres 265 Briggs Ave, C.M. ~- eommensurate w /a bill· LldoConv. Center lrvine lndust'ICompleic ty. Resume to PO Box lSMSuperlorAveNB F.qual()pporEmployer 2400, C.M. 92626 or con-Call646-T764 tact David Connelly. -----,...-----1 549-8871 HUltSES Programers. lnstallert & telepbone girls wanttd LVN, eves. RN. relief. for Sbowlime. Call LOAM Xlnti>~~~ter 831·33U or stop by 27382 CQUMSILOI . 155SSuperlorA~NB Camino Ca.utrano Ste Req" rul at.tte oc C.)1645-7764 20&.Laauna"Nlguel ltftdlns ex.perience. Squ.al Oppor Employer. eou pma1"ed. wm . HUISIS AIDES p rr help wan~. Apply sollcll and proceu J.U 4c lM. Exper'd. 41 TatJ.1.30NewportCenttr routine sln&le family re· Beds. Good tal w /ln· Dr., N.B. MO-l'7IO sldeDet loeM. Typl.QI tt· creases. Country Club q..aNCL eontact Ronald Con•. uoap .• SA. P~~~z:, Rob1't'r 144·5300 SO.DJ. ,......_~ """ GLENDALE FSDEAAL -----IF_Y_O_U ___ , Manllam to approx 4pm SAVINGS & tpm to epprox lam. lOONewporiCentet Dr have a service tcrnHeor or TUea 5pm to approx um. Newport Beach. Ct aood.s to lit-II. rloce an od No ex-~r oec:aa. Will Equal =unity fn t he 0 a l y P l 1 o t train. Apply In pt'r'IOft, Etn Classl!l(od Scrtion P t o o >' • a v • t • t u O P~64! Sff&; A6ffftlt• A~e. C.M • ., I RETA.IL SALIS F /time. Retail eltper. re· q'd. Advancement op portunltles tor those who quality. Mon·Fri 2-4prn. Aaron Bros. Art Mart, 1714 Newport Blvd, C.M. ltM. IXPERllHCED In am.all Newport Ofnce, 2 to S wb tralnll\I tn SH- la Barbara requJ red Call Mr . Lo1an 114"6&4·1700 Rm 193 Tue. Wed. Shipping & R eceiving Department. Excellent oppor. w /young growing & active carpet mill. Forklift drivers & floormen . Exper. prefld. F /time positions all sblfts. __ .. .... -........... ·--___ .... ............_ .... ~......... . . -.. ........ -·· ............. -.-....... . - . I ....... Sall . .. to•• ,,...,.....,. TN'fltil "10 v.. tS7t W.dn!!dg, May IS. 1977 * DAILY PILOT at • ...... ~·~ .. e•eee .. eAee ....................... eeeeeeeeeeee eee•eeeee•• t ,........ •.....&..-' rt-~ t .. •--an..-. a-. . . ._...~ w...1.,11w Aallol. ,..a...... -s. mpo. -....._toYov 1041 Je••t · ano.-.-. ~..--v .. O 73 Catalina 2z w/ltlr, ll ~\>'Sportat411',19T4. Chevy••77 0,~,·••••••• .. ._. .......... •-••••u•••u••••• ..................... .. ••••••••••••••••••••••• .,••••••••••••••••••-• ••u••••••u••••••••••• xlnl cond. w/xtra1. Xlraleood.~.::17 199. Mo \11:8, auto, P/S, AHia-.o 9705 Rat 9725 KcrmannGhla 9735 4yrOW aJ1han do~. AKC GOOD PIACTICI $MOO/ofr.963-1SIO new. 38 Mo CEL. 54.262 -••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••• .. •••••••••• •P•Yed female. Nt:eda WANTED -rtAMO• Nap1u Sabot w /Und Traffen. Utf8ty 9110 + T ~~·total payment. 197' Alie Ronseo. Sptde:r, 1916 RAT 13 1 "72 Ghia. 33,000 mi. tp dk, O'OOmlna.•uee TOP CASH DOLLAR S3QO. 494-1733 dolley, xtra rlUlnP ai ••••••••••••••••••••••• $734 GENERAL xlnt cond. low miJM. 2 DOOR S!DAH radls Nds mtn~r bdy ~letteT,3)'l'oldltm. PAlD FOR YOUR c.oo.o1 1 D>O salLS27S.XJnteood.CaU Starcr4ft tent trailer AU'J'()LEA.c:;lNG $.\800. Call art~ pm, 5 ~~.radio. heater. wrkS2700 646-0016 Well trained. Loveable, JEWELRY. WATCHES, ~r.~':5 • 873-3728 Siar mailer IJ. ID ?'Int Since l&.s9 (213>8&9-2007 673-2891 radial tires-extra sharp Maida 9731 toveachlldren,968-11120 ART OBJECTS. GOLD. 9a507• w•~D: cond., spr tire inc. -Aa.tl 9707 looktn1 & ruQnlng. ••••••••••••••••••••••• SILVER SERVICE, . """" • ~-0519 i3 Dodge Sportsmen 8 -2 <079PHl> Mtllelrillts.ttw FINE FURN It AN· Gu L 8 RAN s EN e>c...V..wHoMt AlltoSenlc P..+t window van, V-8 , air, ••••••••••••••••••••••• ONLY $3395 64 .. lll7der5 TIQUES.~llOO UPRIGHT lntradefor lwcuriouaS7' &Acc"s!riea 9400 ~d~2op/s. p/b. ~-1~~~~eal;~~i ::!d: MARCl)UISTOYOTA ~Mo. old remale Cocker U -.&.....-L ~.CIUlpmtolpm. W«ld' Race/Cruise 1in· ••••••••••••••••••••••• Best offer 675-411'1 M1SSIONV1EJO miracle n,azda m ix t4 lovlni home, y...._. 1075 M&--0852 !8JD~!aSa~~~~t y:fi ~-iS 480 Ford Easlne. Nds 1962 Ford window Vao. , 73 AudJ '100 LS Good 811·2810 495.121 O N7-2032afUPM ••••••••••••••••••••••• GREAT PIANO BUYS M Call Bili reas&embling $350 Call S7SO. or 1.116Ii:.21st St., • ---------•n.ei M rcan mare broke 1 J wbl tr Value: sioa • afters pm ssi--872 · Costa Mesa. cond •. Must sell S249s. 74 Flat 128, 2 dr sednn. ,,. _ _.._ ..._. __ ,.._ 4 ._ 1700 Cute black kittens need a to 'ridoe •-drJve'. b llt rep s~vera • s. Gates (213) 923-8187 • New tires. A/C, AM/F.M xlnt cond .• $1950 /ofter. ---• ho t 4¥ • Youcan t dobetttr!Ruy , 2 NE W DODGE 1976FORD radio.675-8250a!Upm. --------me ln exchaoae or parade Morgan aeldtng, Smith511·1647 18 Venture Ca.t. new SPORTSMAN VAN . 498-1497or837·5022 '73 Muzda, n.ooo mi. ~ I , I , lot.solluzzylove. Ena. Weiitern (710 ._.... A--~ 1094 tramp, self.furhnl Jib. SEATS $l7S for both or EISGVAM 73 Audi 100 L.5. brown, ,72 Canary Yellow 124 17mpg, top cond, great 638·8833 Ja.1011 ~ •-broom vang, trlr w /3 5 09 VII. automatic, factory sunroof'. AM/FM 8 lta~k. Sport Coupe, Dual pipes. road car, goes anywhere. Tosoodbome,lOmos.old .. ••••••••••••••••••••• new tires + xtraa SlOOea.559· 1 aircond .. pwr. steering. lomi,S2e00.640-1308 Black leather lnterlor, Regret, must sell. $1.SOO. m a l e do". Vhsla MltceHwous IOI Jee hockey skates. size $800/0fr. 963·999S aft A.utosfOrSGii• radio, healer & tinted AM /FM stereo. Runs Ml.QIOS • •••••••••••••••••••••• 8 ~~. Bauer. o y Ion 6P&1. ••••••••••••••••••••••• glass. OCU957). 1970AUDI ..=:.:..::.:..:...:. _____ _ wJpapers. ft'8111 I~ supreme "92", bardJy G1Mral 9510 $5799 4 door Sedan, needs Very well. Asklng sz2oo. 1974 MAZDA '97·2595 ~~1'1 used, 14S or batJofr. Hobie 14 wit.railer, aaU ••••••••••••••••••••••• PHIL LONG FORD work. •99-2410 646-3118 RX4 WAGON haired Morris cat. ANSWERS MZ-2073 box, xlnt cond. MaQY Moped, new $275. '69 350 s.O Ftwl .. lrvtne IMW 9712 '72 Fiat 128. 30 mpg, Orig 4 speed. radlo, heater & 1 ~.a I l xtru. SDSO. 49'·53M ""'-·b' .... $14'"'' (P t' ) . d t d Lo I l ema e, spay.:u, ree o Need a wetsuit at a very ru"' •n• "" on 1ac · 768· 888 ••••••••••••••••••••••• owner, no acc1 en s . air con . w, ow nll e:.. goodbol'_!'e.559-5335 Slogan-Loony-good prace·t Men's & UDO 14. Xlnt cood, new 6'7~1878 radials. $1025/ofr. (8731\X.Z).Reduce<:lto Known -Nitwit -al'-T 1 •-675 l•""' o~LY $2115 Find what you want in ALLtbey KNOW women'a sw·nng dlvtng Ull:nan s .... r r ... cov-~/ · '""" " Daily Pilot Class1f1eds. Polit'i,.al "ommercials & water skung types er. 64"563, 646-2577 CJassica 9520 Autos Wanted 9590 MAR"'UIS TOYOTA " '-67C """-1!. •••••••••••••eeeee••••• 9727 't" 8050 prove one thing: that 30 ;..--,, HOBIE CAT 16. Older ••••••••••••••••••••••• Honda MISSION VIEJO ••••••••••••••••••••••• secoodsla plentyoftime Sw.. 1096 boat w/xtnt raclng re· SlFord 4drcustom good WIWILLIUY ••••••••••••••••••••••• 111·2880495·1210 "STOREWIDESALE New & used rurn, appl's, misc. Wilson's Bargain Nook. 545 & 814 W. 19th, CM. 542.7930 &548·3262 tor ln09l candidates to •••••••••••-•••••••••• cord. Xtra sails w /trlr. body. & up b o Is' t er y YQUR DATSUN ·COME IH & SEE Brand Hew •77 LI--~•--, 740 tellALLlheyKNOW. Will trade beautiful color s10001bat. ofr. Daya S!iS/Ofr.640-1090 PATDFORORNOT THEA.LL MEW HO...-DA Cars _...,.__.._.,..a TV ror body & paint work 8.lS-9318, eve1642-2991 Recreaffonal TOP DOLLAR 63 0CSi HOW! ...,. WANTED onvan.64H786 Package. 18' O'Day V9hfclfl 9530 FORTOPCARS MANY TOP CASH DOLLAR TV RCldio wJahore mooring al 4001 ••••••••••••••••••••••• IARWICK DATSUN COMPLm To Choose From! **I BUY** Good used Furniture & Appliances-QR 1 will ~ell or SELL for You. PArDL:vo~Aic~ HfR sh.-.. 8091 & River. $3450. Days. Sand Rail, Corvalr. SanJuanCapistrano IODYSHO.. UNIVERSITY Ji~OBJECTS GOLD. ••••••;•••••••••••••••• SS2·2301. Eves,675--t986 Crager rims & tires, 81 1·1375 493.3375 HOW OPEH ~tLVER SERVICE: COLOR TV'S FREESalllngLesaonaror ~~ C,lean! S900 . WE BUY ....°1~~ GMC MASTERS AUCTION ·646-8686 & 833-9625 FINE FURN. & AN· ALLMAJORBRANDS those interested ln buy---------SADDLHACK TIQUES. 645-2200 Recond. &Guaranteed Ing a boat. No obligation. 4 Wheel DriYff 9550 CUAH CARS Trucka Portables & Consoles Call for appt. 486-1707 or ••••••••••••••••••••••• & TRUCKS O~ Al ·LL20E4YOIM49P50.4R9T4S9 2850 Harbor Blvd. Bt.11 white mink finger tip $100 to $268 831·3255 AM~JEEP ~ Costa Mesa 540-9640 cd'at, cost $2,385, never li GRANDOPEHIHG womsell$1000.S48·7082 FREEsamedayde v. · CLASSIC1955 #1 a.Canf. CONNRL HONDACIVIC4 spd,Dan the F\arniture Connection WRIGHT TV CRAFT 22' runabout. WE OtITSELL ALL Gurney ma1?s, 13" tires, hlls a sister store-the SUPER I UY! 12 Ft S43A, W. l9th, CM Restored & newly over-JEEP DEALERS ·CHEVROLET headers, clean. $2395. Lamp Connection!! Mahoganyplanks,8tolS 646·l78I hauled. Plymouth Fury INTHESTATE &'ST 6 H OA.DWAY 962·8119 Outrageous d iscounts on Inches wide, 1to2 inches Midland CB. 23CH. base en~. Super e->nd. Lido HUGE INVENTORY 2828 Harbor Blvd. ------k . k 'wA-I' n SAMTA AMA i3 Honda C1v1c Fastbac . name brand lamps. thic ·--=per 10• • stallon with antennas & Vil age,675-8662 AllModelsNew&Used COSTA MESA Variety of colors and ___ 548·5735. regular. RG 8 ~x. Can Hobie 16_ •75 Banana. Lea.sing Available 546-1200 835'3171 Aut.o.Cle4~~:7695 slzes from S19.95-SSS F Sal N rt Be h be mobile too. Like new. . ped .1 1 t d Costa Mesa ----------1 THtuu1MATeONV1No111AcH1Nt 7.,c:1Heil Unit D, l.1.8 . or .e ewpo ac S150/bst r PP846-4760 stnp 581 s. x n ·con . WE PAY TOP DOLLAR •USED BMW's* ..., Tennis club mem-0 r. · $1850.548·9781 AMC Jeep 842-1244 Be 7 llPM 25UHARBORBLVD FORTOPUSEDCARS '743.0CpeS/R746LWB · Wed thru Sat 10·5 berstup. twn . · NEW E SS A MT 1 A · FOREIGN, DOMESTIC •7l l6004spd940MRJ 640-2.8.Sl. SPEAKERS. List s.t27 loah, Slips/ Costa Mesa S4D.SOZ3 or CLASSICS '74 2002 4spd 882NAD ~lust sell. Fine maple Whirlpool washer Pen-each, 1 pair only $259 Docb 9070 L975 Chevy Short bed V8, II your car ls extra clean . '6816004.spd VWH817 hutch. has leaves. seats ncresl dryer sso 'ea, so ea<.'h. Atlantic Music. 445 •••••-•••••••:··~··••• auto, air. Cheye'nne see us ftrst. Closed On Sundays 10. Also desk, bench, & yds ble/grn cpl $SO. E. 17th St. Costa Mesa. WANTED 36-40 shp _for equip'd. Stereo, mags, BAUER BUICK lotsam1sc.548·S303 8984155. loats&M..-. n early n ew Un1fhte. tanks,rollbar,642-4147 292SHarborBlvd. E-O:-..t N w P t B c h · P h : Costa Mesa 979-2500 llettulon couch, 1 yr old, 1 most new folding .....-r---714·684·3036 collect. i3Int'I Scout4 whl drive. earth tones Sl 2 5 · G·:····~··••••••••9••0•1•0• 675-8671 wknds. 6 c I, red/White, xlnt TOP Wookworks coffee table wheeled walker. Sut, -•Mr.. t> 1.,;y .,."9127aft6 PM sso. Patio awning sao. brakes.Barely used $80. ••••••••••••••••••••••• WANTED: Slip for 44 · cond .. '""" · · DOLLAR S45·4664 1..,;646-:..:...:...::..309:....:..._l .::..ev_es_. ----Boat 16' mahogany hull Hunter, tri cabin. bristol 1971 JEEP PAID acuum cleaner. almost w 140HP Johnson motor. l'OOd. Ref's. Nwpt area. 4 WHEEL DRIVE Sales·Service·Leasing ~autiful 9 root off white new, commercial type. trlrS375.492-57~ Eves. 714·675·8931 ; dys V8, automatic, factory FORCLEAN Roy Carver,lnc. ORANGE COUNTY'S $ '74 Honda Civic Htchbck . Only 30,000 ml, $1&50. 963· 102S or 962· 7787 ---197lHOMDA HATCHIACK 2 Door. • cyl.. 4 speed, r adio & heat.er. C738NDN>. $1999 PHIL LONG FORD S.D. Frwy,·1rvine 768-5811 9732 sofa. $0006.!6 85"5 $40. 18 Balboa Coves, Boats. Marine 213.325.7030 air cond., pwr. steering, Rolls ftoyce BMW --------ND,575·0798 Equipment 9030 Biochemist seeks slip, radio&heater. C78610H). 1540Jamboree JENSEN r.l11~l·~ing llC'reul?n !->o!a ~ Honda so. xlnt cond $150; ••••••••••••••••••••••• side tic or end lie for his $2999 Newport Beach 640-6444 Tomorrow's Classic To· ••••••••••••••••••••••• lo,escut S?SO. Coff('c ta tow bar used twice $8()' A'ITENTION YACHT OR 37'sail boat. 545.5445 PHIL LOHG FORD 74 3.0 CS. immac, lo mi, 4 day! Free 5 yr/~.000 mi. ble StO. Side table S!S range a'lmost nu pd $350• B 0 AT BU IL DER S loots ~.d & S.D. Frwy.-lrvine spd, all xtras. e x t . w a r r a n t Y 7 S!J·ll 98 sell fo~ $12S. 898·3058. • <RARE J H on duras Stet'..,... 9080 768·5888 673-1521 r=cJ1:.s;0:~r Nw~:. \to"ing Salc·Liv rm set. R-.-0 scrubberand l\Iahogany to sell .••••••••••••••••••••••• 9560 IMPORT CARS dows,air,AM/FMstereo d.Jn rm 6 chrc; game tbl egma oor . . rooghsawn. dry. new. . Cu GI 120 Trucks ALL MODELS '76 5301. Stk, AC, snrf, al· t 1 { d king br'set. &12:1634. ~5lls"~~r.05. G19ood condition. For details, mornings. l8 stom asspar. ••••••••••••••••••••••• _________ 1 loy whls, stereo, 12,000 casse le. vany roo an ~ .,..., -----• 492 7623 mere. 10. full covers, TRUCK SALE mi, Sll,800. 714-644_7509 more. !Ser. 30419). 27 · S3750/olr (213) 598..fi842, WE or644.7461 New Buy/Lease l?lans P R s LL' Sll verplate flatware. "IARINE ENGINES or430·5819 .... EED ..:..:....::...:..__.:..:..::.. _____ ,, available. 60 mo. financ· . SU E A c. Roger Chalice pattern. " 1974 MAZDA " •71 B!\1W2002 Ing available OAC. Call ••••••••••••••••••••••• MERCEDES BENZ Red/Parchment. (189LWF> $12,887 '74 450 SE Blue/Blue Sunrf. <469MDY> $12,995 7S450SE Met Silver /Blk Lthr <400MPT> $14,500 '75 450SE Mel Bge/Bamboo ts.lSMINl $14,687 •74 450 SEL Met Silver /Blk Lt hr (0212) $13,350 '74 450 SEL Met Bge/Leather(8325) SI 3,350 '74 450 SEL Met BgeC348KXX> Buy or Lease 48 Month BANK Financing Avail OAC 213/921-8588 714 /523-7250 HOUSE OF IMPORTS Antique Quecn Anne Complete 44 pc. service 1 Pr. 454 cu in. 350 h.p. '76 Tri-Hull with 75 hp CLl!"'ll..I °""""' tbl. Sl.l<l: Ant>· '°' R.$>l. New In gift box C , "' u d ., M a d n e Cbrysle< o.iboanl. M •">' PICKUP ..,." Sm1. <lean. "1SPKF> lo' ;~~u que blue breakfront .. so sets available. engines. (714>622·7100 or e'<tras incl'g trlr. SJSOO. 4 speed, radio & heater USED CARS 556-3934 • You don't need :a gun to <cherrywood ) !000; Anti 549-0109. 642·8845 623-7359 ~ 5953. 963-2373 <8199tX >.Reduced lo MOW Capri 9715 , , "'draw Cast" when ~ ou queMaho~anydropfronl POWERBOAT~tOLDS ONLY $2595 CAUPAPPY ••••••••••••••••••••••• place an ad in the Daily• • ~esk S32S ._ Antique tO'l>uftbarI>esl&o:rSofa. JO 'xl2'. Make orrer. Trcmnportatiot. 540-563 0 1971 CAPRI 80U RO 8RO PilotWantAds!Callnow !ttahogany china cahinet Good cond. Cos ~· 17Hl622-7100or623·73S9 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1976 CHEVY 1 speed trans. with new 1~~:;,.e::,:.in~i~",,.,,· -642 5678. $375; 6 Antique Queen Sellfor $JOO. Pb 830_:4__ 9040 ,.._ Sale/ 1;, TOH PICKUP paint. In excellent run· _..::......:.....::..:..-=...:.. ____ _ Anne chrs ~50· 4 white & od looh. Pow.r ._.. • .,..... •• 9120 d · · Autos, Mew 9100 A8los, Hew 9100 f"rench f,;.o, ;n~1jl chrs Dr3 a~,'I, vAavlaoncceasd o re I rs. ••••••. ••••••••••••••••• R~ With hea\'y duty wheels n i n ~ co n J t a o o . •••••••••••••••~••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ,. ••••••••••••••••••••••• & tires. Automatic . RBOR BLVD <580CQX>. SJOO : An liq uc whit c 120"x84". Swag TiHany . 30 Stephens Sedan 1977 Ood e Brougham. radio. heater. fal·tory air 2626 HA . OHL Y $1099 Secretary 54~ Antique hght rtxturo 150+ yds \ ·8 pwr. radio. sndr. OF ad k ~ond. & pwr. steer1n" ___ C_OSTA ME...,.S_A __ . . • nu pamt tuned sharp' 20·. $2100 wn . ta e over ' " Towne & C--'--~hihogany dc~k w piano AvocadoCpt.556·4396 __ S8500 • AYSMl-9000 pymts . 549-8705 or (79846N>. A nice truck CAR OUTLET AutoSales&i;°;~\~g lc~s $275. Shown by appt --~ · 962·7188 for qnly675.s407 MOVING-Must sell wht HA'ITERAS.~' FBMY ..:.::.:..__:.;;..:..______ Cash For Cars 2167 Harbor. Costa Mesa sculptured carpet. 12xl2 G :\l 8 \!Tl's .73 Motorc'f:..~s/ OML Y $3595 Paid For Or Not 961-3839 ----w 1heavy foam underlay L k · Load d Seoo 9150 21 t5 llARBOR BLVD. It AR E fl AW Al I AN $6S; Sofa S25 ; misc. <)w1n,,,erne. ,2w13· > 4;6.~.,.,0 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1976 CHEVY 76 Csp\i, VG, 4 spd, air, ~JONKEV POO TABLE 640-4277aft6PM --" -'---~ '&!SPORTSTER 'h TOHPICKUP (llarbor&Vicloria) AM /fl'M radio w/cass. TOP S3SU.~ 17116 ""' B tam conv top I f COSTA MESA S51-4978aft7:30 -------Antique walnut hexagon .;" er.r . . Elect start, ot s o Automatic, pwr steer 642 0653 CASll P \ID tbl , Lady Kenmore i'tcw l phol. 427 rMd rhrome. looks clean, ing, radio. heater & lnw ----·-----Datsun f"or good u'cd fuinitu1·e washer963·6541 t'llJ?. Berkley Jct run~ i:ood Must sell. miles. <GTY8J7 ). il63·ti."H 1 .\tnencan tandem trlr 1»2 2073 after Spm. Reduced lo ··------Blackmmkfingertipcoat ~·~2 -=----OMLYS4995 T'\Omus' 11le \l ed1t w white fox collar & -'72SUZUKITM400.desert Oresser, 2 n11e <1tands. 2 white fox around bottom. ;u· GRAND BA!'iKS ·n tank. Basslani pipe. SOS mirrors, king Sl lldhrd 1 Rrand new l SOOO ; Full Looks ltke brand new tn· ~7238 1977 FORD ~mall. bx sp(ls & frm. length mink S7SO; 10 spd side & out See 10 Nwpt 112 TOH PICKUP rr Tbl I Ch bk h d Bch 1970 Yamaha 125 f.ndurn \\''1th only 3000 mile!' e . oung(' r , racing ' e. ra~~ "!~· C:"iTED YACHT BKRS street legal. dean & rt> This rouat blue pickup is Sliffe! lamp. 218 A nevpr been uscu. -o1 . ,, .. 13133 built ........ or mak'"'offer J Palmer St. C M.64G ~s. Misc 1teml> 675 8407 °" Call ~n;;'s. 5'6·SOlO equipped with standard 957-0727 -3 Bell Boy 25. Asking shift. 6 cyl.. pwr. steer· Tmrus Club Membush1p 1 • • '7.t Honda CB 360. Mint i n g & a i r c o n d . WE PAY TOP DOLLAR FORMIFTY IMPORTS MARQUIS MOTORS 28802 Marguente Pkwy. MISSION VIEJO 831-2880 495·12 I 0 Fine antique mahogany foraale 512.500 1 Kit/\ (1Fl97e2) bdrm set, classic deMgn, ~;ve'I. 833-3256 982 8641or531·7938 condition. l2.000 m · _.,.,, · CORVETTE WANTED bra .... po t ee . In cl 67S3-IS9orS48-0500 ONLY $5395 ·53.·10.anycond1t1on 9720 • •••••••••••••••••••••• DRIVE A LITILE •.• SAVE A LOT SHOP&COMPARE BARWICK DATSUN San Juan Capistrano 831-1375 493.3375 NEWPORT DATSUN "" ' 1965 16' Dorselt, lOO"t 642 531 dresser. mirror. two 1."-hoolBlackBoard.Cull f1bergla11s. 1/0 , Mere '76RM250,veryfaatlrex· M•R"'UISMOTORS .4 ---• SPECIALS tidbrds. S500 640·8145 "". cruiser. Eng tops, OD & tr<'mely immaculate. ~ ,. 1976 710 2 Dr. Sedan -r----------i.ite SSO. 4 Captains OD steering fouled up. S&S<l 844-0714 MISSION~IEJO <~NXM)wasMt\95 BEAUTI 1'\J,1, • •-chair!' sis ea 8*-8903 Bottom nds pamt. See at :-. 83 I ·2880 495· I 2 I 0 ~ow $3295 F.l('J!ant velvet so Oft. 8 "' H S800 1 69 200cc Suzuki $300 " ?-.gold&bc1ge.TwoJ?ld Fund misers, picnic, 900E.Coast wy n-· · ••••••••••••••••••••••• 888DOVESTREET h 7S2 57ltt functions. Rent. cotton rt trlr. 644-2788 or Don. Good condlt ton. Call 1976 FOaD Near MacArthur /gm occ.: .. ~:-~ur~_. -<'andy machine. Plcue 644-4131 Mark or Kelly· 545·5974 1/1 TOH PICKUP luy•rs St•p Up! & Jamboree Roads l4Jt'Coffct'lablcw/hl'ovy 1.·al1Val647<Y734. 28, Di 8 Tug new '76HondaXL2SO, WithSHELL.6cyl .. stick Consider 3 Bentley ,ll-1300 l(las11 rrmovahle top & -----. . e ay h · xlnt cond. ~ shift. radio & heater. Mercla Roadster. We __ _,_ ______ _ wood b'lbt> MOO 548·6940 Twin bed. good cond1t1on. w h e e I o u s c Aft", 67" 8965 UA91661 ). l TO~ ,IUY.ER • · • • $20. 631·~ bfr 8AM or w/vamlshed T&O .• Jaun· "' .,.. S"''J a tar t with a Bent ey P' cvs. _,. PM t ood ea boat $4500 ~ Sedan, discard the body, See u~ first & last! Top Waterbed 5 mo s, Miw~c6•t•~~.. 2~3~22-l~or822.'4574 · 71 HUSQUAVARNA 250 PHILLOM f:ORD modify the chassis to dollarpaldforimports. .. ._.._. ...::..:.::..:.:=...::..-------• CR-MX, like new '1700. s.o. Frwy.-Jrvlne sport car standards with COSTA MESA ~~~~~~:7~~~~~~bsl Wanted 8081 loah,SaH 9060 873·193leves. 768-5811 every single part ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• '76 Kawasaki KZ400, lo chec"ed. repaired, re-DATSUN nerng, xlnl t'ond !85. Oak Wanted: Double deep '17 Westnil 32. Fully mJ .. xlnt cond .. must sell 1973 FORD machined, or replaced as 284Jl{arbor Blvd. twins drsr $125 Recliner laundry tub&. ressona-eqpd. $S4.SOO-May trade ~/ofr. 846-2733 aft 5PM COURIER la requJred. 800 man Costa Men $40.6410 SIS.Misc.642·5633 ble. Willunhook.493·9224 for 27 -32' S1lil. N.B. 4 cyl., radlo & heater. hours later• virtually -mooring avall-$60/mo. SUZUKJ SOCC newchassisletheresult, '12 1edan. 2·dr. 4-spd Gar• Sole 8055 Tilted Plnno bench & used 673-4220. New condJtlon. Gre't to OC42935). with •.Pre l~tlUe. stick. 2Smpg. Bluebook ••••••••••••••••••••••• plnno rolls. carry on your Motor S 1999 THEN an all aluminum $1650. Sell for St 350. Moving Sale May 25th & 646-5786 14" HOBIE CATAMARAN home or tnller. Call PHIL LONG FORD conch built Roadster SS2·1077 eves or wknd.'I ~th. F\am. appl, rubber ~ ... ·-le_. XJnt. cond. Many xtras after6pm orweekeods. S.O. Frwy •• Jrvine body la manufactured •72 sedan. 2.dr. 4.spd raft. etc. 2527 Andover ,_. • Beautiful boat. must see. 638-8684 768-5811 and l~talled. Trimming aticlt, 2Smpg. Bluebook eJ.C.M.549-2724 •• !~!=.~: ..... ~?~.! 1194-377Seves. iS Yamaha RD 350 with istoh1gheststandards.A $1850. Sell. for $1100. S"""r 4 family gara"e 27'Db1Ender.10hp back ...... •-r•"k. Xlnt 1976FORD gorgeousmachlne. SS2·1077evesorwknds -~ ,. Conn Min-0 -Matic elec. 11 I ·-• • -RAHCHERO nae prototype is in our_;.:;;;...:.;:..:...::..~...;......__; __ _ sale Sat 28th. 8969 N1~ht or~an. excellent condJ. aux. 3sa s. c ass1c. cond. $490. 499-4423 aft S. W lt b SHE l. L. V 8 • showroom. The second '72 • 510 Wgn, roof rack. ~~ai~1:i' G ~~i~ld!noha t1on, S600. p, P. S32· 12S9 MSOO. 675-9311 days. SUpet' clea~ '75 CR12S, automatic, factory air car ls In transit. 8 MOR AM /FM ra dio, radial &..1..-..... O Fendt:r Mustang bass. 8 ' Schock.Sabot $38S . '78 XR7S, $3SO. cond., pwr. steering & are 000tn prodJI ucliRonl .kPtolt tlres,'lJal-2848 after6PM "l'r..-1 8 60 x Int c.o n d w /case sailboat, good eond. '42·7357 aft I brakes, radio. Wt wheel, '37, • m c man ••••••••••••••••••••••• $250/ofr. Evestwknda rea<l)t toaall.613·S86S u-a-u--... _._ cruise control. heater, Motors, 2124 E. Colorado 240Z , •13. Sparkllnl -~ .....-/ 1 .... ...a 1 /s ire Bl. Pasaden a (213) Silver. Blklnt.Auto.etc. Saddle. beautiful Western 646-7941 George 11.' All fiberglass, new a...tjS.__,. f 160 tun..u g ass, w fW t a 795.2551 or locally call Find a cleaner one for ~~~~~~0~e:1~.e~o~ fl7GlbsonSG,Stereo Epoxy P~?t & ~ain~s ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~~e)& cover a . CarJos Carrion a.t 14250 & I 'll buy It. $t99.673·1933eYe 67w5_8f!!'!m0rb;,~..; • ., ~~ngs6.ai~co631•1234 · 2$'0PEN ROAD, ruJly p79' 762·78'7 644"6808,838·18'T3 ,_, ,.. • .,.._.... ~·Y· • • • aelf·cont. Reserve now PHILLOHGFORD :n2AOZ.4tpd,tape; ..a_. 8070 • 01 1 Cl• r I 1 foraummer. 644..8385 .11.... I 1 9701 t----' J,..,.,..' f or Sn1c: P . Bass 81. $4SO. 18 ymp c H ac n S.D. Frwy.·IS'Vine A.Ha ONO air, xln '-VUU. ••••••••••••••••••••••• 4001 Rick Bass $t7S. ES w/3 aalls, trlr & cover. tt74 Open Road Mini· 768.SUI ••••••••••••• .. •••••••• $0073 335 S460. S48·S27'7 days. Sl650. 841·3'45 Motorhom e, for sale, Alfa Romeo Giulietta , t..-f\ Repair Mounting• 963-3702 '72 PU Toyota. auper Sprint. Ex~lltnt, newly • st.at1YU waioa. uns, Qwna CasUng Genelnbarch F\.~te. xlnt '15 Hobl~ w /trlr. Dbl clean, many xtrn. x lnt 1 t d b ody a nd Otedl w ork. Goo a •. cond. 11~. 20292 Birch, trapei Super Tr•veler, . MOTORHOM!S d ., ..... 0 ...... t o fr pa n e ........... ., .. -.. l .. • t raruponaUoo. Qa&. Mc Tm. S.A. Ht8. 751•8303 ll800. Jol\n 151..s288 FOR RENT :~--' -. :r~~~~-~;" .;j ....;rt~a..:...1::...:415=------~ tK. ftets t017 a• l'Uppct. Good cond. P'rom SlOOWk .... n:t. "73 Datsun pickep. Xlnt 4·11Petd tnnnninton. batsun 24oz 'TL Yellow .... • a:soScottDr.N.B. ••••••••••••••••••••••• NewsaUs.$150 T6 •"'•11:'9 QU&•N 22 __ .,,.000 mu--~Tana Alao mby extrabloAlfka 1bl1ck int.,.• apd. air, " l 497-3$SC nA •Iii~. '"'"' ' .. vi .... -· u.;a. r-e:oo pvta lncl c , ~· wh1.. xlnL eond. ,. Alrlcan Gniv P·-' w/2 loaded w l•traa. Only dec.k. cust. int.~ Pvt ~ nk t • ...., ' 1•~30.t• ' .. '""" •t<NW>. 1 _, • ~ 1'"70 a, era , nna, e .. c. . 648-4X)14 alt 3PM 11 ..,. -caaes. healthy youaa ~tall canoe. canoe or wuuvm ., iun ... o;:uoy. " party. 963-7386c es WMn put toicthtt as la ...:.;.:..;...:..;,..,;._~------• IJJ.3064 pup. S750. 492"°70tves. uH w/Ull lttt fr paddles. mdl. -.SOO. 541·l~ ,14 ford~ tOft P iclt.ap wlll be a Sood looking. HOW IS THE TIM! .fw b old old • ,._.a Ow ~-1090 "100. ~ 1S Comm.arider l'l, 17K Parts, u-au.. "• etc. food ~Df car -or for job ~ff to c~k • e u:UVi!r" C ••••••••••••'•••••••••• SOL CAT 11. ualler, al1 ownerznlles. PP. 1175 wauaoe.-&ft, Woukt.dtflftitel1beworth Ul• t:>,11)' Piiot litlp .1J •• · Ston-Pt ANOS-For be«lnnen, ... _.. .... ~ f3MtlS tpmae\y. lnvHtln & U me and Wanted eJustllcaUo('. 11 .,lDCllAP -... - --lllOfM;)' for COl\lpJttlon ol t.bt job JOU w•nt l..t not re.uoa~ Pneotd anti· ae.3003 ~ Tmtll 9170 v-....toratlc.tofthlscla slc then:youn'lljhlconslder NEW: Ilanond Eniare· :;Jl\1m~:!suy SA.DOT. Raelq custom ;••••••••••••••-•••••• •••••••••••••··~ .. ··••• BorlOn• de.Ip. $1500. offeiinl your suvle • ' I . ' • . :; FIRE SALE!_ ELIVEN HOT IARGAINS AL&. CARI SUIJICT TO PalOll S.LI '72VW~IHtl• 4 tOMf, AM~fH) •••••••••• SI Sii •7 4 vw .,....... ••••••••••••••.• $2511 A"'o. rldlo. O"IV 2 I 000 .,,a. 1211 NA.I<) '72 VW ~ •••••••••••• Slttl 'tOMd ~W.4.ceUiM .. 1 '61 YW .................... $1211 flMlllll ..... I ..._, 11111191"' IYAT39tl •75 vw Sclrocco •••••••••••••• p411 • tllltf'd .-.MIF .. IW. I-~ wlllt rtMftWSI '6t T.,..e. C....... •••••••••••••. Stl8 tdt .. 4~ "'991 CVOCOUI '71 T...,...C••• ............ $1018 AIM, ;.tit( t.ii 9-. Ctl10..Cl '71 , .... "4 ..•......•.... $3611 • a •OM4. ... ,,.._ CM2CTVI '71 ......... ~ Veloc• •• $ZHI 4 tOMd. llldle, "'°"' ......._ (1 1)NXH) ment It Weddint Rtq. ANTIQUEPIANOS wOQd. Bllse pomp• 2 7l AutoMate. 21\o!i SC, "7tDODGKVW. 145·1108 arter I " '1lb u ad in tho J Exqu11lte. Cost. SlOOQ.. 7-09 MataSt.S.A. ~ cover Xlftl C<llul. &lnleolld~ l*O. J"l)I custom nu Xlnl weekend•, er teav• Wanted calqOf}'. Pbo'M ~ ... _.__ ........ .,__..._. ........... ___ _.. MU.ottet,f7M'Tl4 .. t:Mt nt· lll·A C!Ollll..C.U .......... , ... 1*U., ' -- ' 4 l ~ D8 DAILYPILOT Wedn!!!!y,M!r2S,1'71. • ~lrpairW ..._,nporW . .,._U... ~ . L & ja ........ • • i .=.;:;.....;:;;..;;.;;;..;..;~~----------------.. -··········-····· ····-·········· ....... -·--·········..... -. . . ..... -4"!1l ~. · l ' ~.::!.~ ...... ~-~~!~ ..... ~!'!~---.!?.S_! !!?!~ ...... !!?.~ AMC .......... ,!!!! ~!!-~.~:::'. ...... , .... ~~~ ........... . Men:edes letn 9740 MerCll••... 9740 #1 DEALER IN us A '61VW Bug ~&& Ra.mblel'. Nw paint. a....... H20 Dedge 9935 Mire.., 9950 •-••••••••••••••-•••• ·--·-·-•••••• • • • Cd cond. Sll.00. gen, a bocks, apbol, ••• _ .. ,, .. ,,,,,,,.,.. •• --·-• .. ••••••••••-• .................. _ .. Lease IMMACU' •ye ~ RCOAYRVER ~aftS. rach•tor. 10.000 on reblt 1971 .... ~ .. Dtn GT, RIB. air, lt7SMRCuaY • ~.w. u-~~ I.A 1972 vw eng. 6 cyl. 3 spd. ... --·I a utomallc traa. .... "IOICA'r • " ..... "ro-280SE, 1owner.orti ROLLS·ROYCE Eves497-3&«8 MOMTICAltLO otf« 88Wr10 _,..,... .,,;. OVEll I 00 everythiag, all pa,pers on 1S40J•mbone FASTBACK VS. automaUc factory • • ....,_Goa WA.O ..... eoa etc. ~-"2.a888 NewPClf't .. a<" 4 ~.radio & heater. 65~0:,b~. ~}!'~· air eond., pwr: steering '68 Dodie Moaeeo. l V6, automaUc. radl4' MERC!DlS all6PM · ..w.M4 Local owner: dnvenonly • 8 ry MIU plpe & brakes, stereo radio. ~· 53,000 ml, sU bltd heater, pwr. •teeltnG OM DISPL.A Y CLOSlO SUNDAYS 4 o, o o o m 1 Jes. Im · $125. 538--085'1 beater, vtayl root. Unted radials, nu brb. t850Jbrt lu11a1e ract~onJie '74 450SLC. PULLY mat'ulate tbruo11l! &lass, w/11• Urea clr.M'MSll 22.000miles. Runa 1 HoUMof lmporfs LOADED. Mint c:OQCll Toyota 9765 <928F.OJ>. ~!c<fo"!~,!: 1:!,1~· w /wheel c••er •. loebcreau (61 ). AUTHORIZtO (714)89C.a609 ·········-············ OHL y $2295 $1300 .• 5'8-5108... 086.MPR). "'15 Obarga SE. lllf. a.Ir. OHL y $3595 . ME~~a~~!~~.ER '59 MB 2205. Classic. '72Corona. 4dr. 39.ooo ms, MAR9UIS TOYOTA $4199 ~rf~s~v't~1 ~o!: MARQUIS TOYOTA;· Bu<'nn Park Completely restored. xlnl cood. PP, $1495· MlSSlONVlEJO l9?SAMCPACER PHILLOMCiFOltD $M00.536-0591or524-8939 MISSIONVIEJO :, 523-7250 Xtnt • mech. Bst. ofr. 6'4-638l 831-2880 495-1 210 lowm=p;oo· S.p. Frwy..trvt.oo 131·2180 49~1210~ On the Santa Ana Fwy. 49'7-3838 ·~r~°:3~~~~~~~t ,66 VW Conv. Heart of 768-5888 Foor'CI 9940 Mlllt.g Hll '67 MB 2SOSL tick 2 MG . 9742 ..,.... .,.. ... ,. G Id __ ... _ ·I t ·h t Mcie 9910 .... ,....__ N ••••••••••••••••••••••• ·············--·-. , 5 • •••••---•••••••••• 0 ,0"......., .. o . n~ c u c • rans -"""'"' Oft, wqon. 196' FORD LTO • tops, nice, $7595. PP. IUY ... ...; Tri_.. 9767 & body. $125. 6'13-3620 aft -•••••••••---••••• Good trans. car. New u. 1 f ct '8S HARDTOP v .. ~ ( 7 1 4 ) 8 7 1·4S1 ~ • -..,... 5. i6 Skylark. PS. PB, air, brakea..548-018.. $290. ..~ autom•t c, • ory air. ver; cln. Valve jeb; eves/wknds and Nam~ ll FREE. •••••••••••••• .. ••••••• AM/FM 8 track dlx int., 811' cood., pwr. steerlne $1.2SOtrade?41M·ll.llO ---------• Pet90Dal plates on ust •TR '74SPITFIRE iovw Bug. Sunrf. mais, vioyttop 54750 551.1739 1974 Malibu C l assic & windows , radio, '72 450 SL. Mint cond. Call today for cktatls on Xlnt 24000 au. gm $3195. Xlntsha~. Offer. • • wagon AM/FM stereo, heater, w /s/W tlres & '71 Fstbclt. Auto.AJC P1' Wire whls. Both tops. OUR exciting ne.w AM/FM, blk t.p. 496-6984or559-3931 '72 Riviera, loaded, t luggaae r•ck. Goo,d wbeelcovers.<RIS75S). frnt disc brks, pa.t.k. 70,000mi. Sll,700. Leue/Buy Plan. Semi-(213)532-"7927 owner, xlnt cond, $2SOO. cond. $799 $200P.631·15Sl 496·4102 ble Payments, parts 66 VW reblt 1500• new PP.640-4277aft6PM $2900 495-6'199 PHILLONGFORD Oldsmobile 9t&i is a good dav to advertise in the Daily Pilot Classified Section. Sunroof, ult xtras. P.P. sell.497-26'14 ext. velour int, All batt&wtrpump, PS, PB, "'J2 Olds Torooado. XJnl -.7-6-28_0_M_E_R_C_E_D_E_S_, ®?&f i ~~.r.~~n=::~·M~:. ~·.r,~,~~as. $85C '16 Buiok R ... 1. c.eam 1961Chevy4dr,aewtlros, S.D/,' ... "la•'r~ •••••••••••••••• .. •••••· Assume tse. 675·3121 . '70 VW Bug· good cond, goodies. Perfect cond. :ii r, $4 7 5. 14 a r t 7 , cond. $2500. can 5*.W '73 Sptlftre Convertible. cassette tape deck, $97!: $5600 incld'& Tax & lie. 89&-9131; 846-0358 1975 FORD days 645-7297 eves. 1976 450 SL Perfect in/out. $WOO. m-orotfer.848-0946 . 55'1·934'1 TORINO EUTE 1--'------- ExquiS'lte luxury w/less 1405ou1w8R£A80UUVAAO •eAEA vested. $?J650/best oiler. '71 VEGA Hatchback, vs. a utomatic. factory 12 Olds St~ Wgn. 9 PASSi than 2500 nu. Save $$$. 11~·11-1 960-3171 '69 'VYI Bug. Clean. Fan· '69 Buick Wildcat. 4dr, reblt. eng, stick shift, air cond., pwr. steering cust cruiser. Load~ 642-4468 1z MILE tastic cond. $1000. Cash Hr full pwr good cond. good cond. 548-0024 & brakes, radio, beater, w ,IXtl"as. $2250. 842-3203 642-5678 The fastest draw in the West. • .a Daily Pilot Classified Ad. 642-6678. Autos.Hew 9800 Autos, Mew 9100 -c A '67 Spitfire conv. Tonneau only. 751-4956 aft SPM S'lsO 673-&65' . . Call today for details on cvr, ncis rings. Mu11t sell, Vol 9772 · '76 caprice classic: sport VlllY1 /Wt root. f, hn,_~*teetglass, "760lds Omega Broagau., our exciting new 2,21: a bstofr.673-6884afl64 vo '71SBuickCenturyV-4iVm V-8,5yr/50,000m1warr, ws iresw,.., COY· Landautop.air,Ult w~ MlLE Program ;a.. ....................... t.op, a/cood, st~. Like excell. cond., l'l,000 ml, ·as. <2S9MGT). Pvt pty. Below ltk. • _.. ._. ;:j • • '68 GT6. Sharp. new. Lo mi's. 536-7313. car bas everything. Cost $4199 494-7865 See lo appreciate 1972 VOLVO new '8400 incl tx/lic, will PHIL LONG FORD , 646-3389afU P1800 COUPE '74 Buick Regal •. Xlnt sacrifice for $6'150. Call S.D. Frwy.-lrvioe '73 Custom Cruiser, ' Volks 9770 4 d I d . cood. ODIY 25M au. All ~aft'lpm. 7'8-5888 pass, AC, good util ear. . , wac.aen spee w over riv~, power. Call 848·0129 $2300.586-8343 140sour .. 1tREAllPIJlE1tARD•BREA ................ , ...... AM/FM s tereo. Tb~s before 6 pm. 892·2651 aft '69 fmpata 4dr. Gd eond. t..:...--------111•Yi•Rlll 714/990~·~·~0~1 'nBus, good shape. ~ard lo find s portscar rs 6/Wknds. $895 or m ake offer. 1976 FORDLTO Pinto 9957 • ''16 Midget. Spec pkg. $2200. immaculate; thruou~. 673-S5l4aft5 COUPE. VS, automatic, ••••••••• ............ _ New '77 Monte Carlo! - No. 464650/0744 NOW ONLY . s5395 at HOWARD Chnroletl at HOWARD ChewolaH ---~--~~~~--~-~------~ New '77 Nova! No. 129789/0660 ~~~ s4095 at HOWARD Chevralllt MOW ~ ~ ....... "U (jf New '77 Chevette! HOW ONLY Order yours now $2995 at HOWARD Chevrolatl ----~------.-a------..---- ~ New '77 Malibu! NOW ONLY No. '499093/0811 $5295 11.000 mi, under warr. 642-2364 aft. 4 (301ETV). Will sell th.is '71 Mt Riviera, vinyl top, fact~ air cond., pwr. '73 PINTO, au~ R&Jt Immac. 4~-37~ ,66 vw. Conv. Heart or weekend at • executive driven, full i& camaro LT. A/C. AM· ~tee~g & brakes, stereo 38,000 ml, super cle-. ONLY $4595 pwr, fully equipped, FM tape deck,~ win-rad~o. beater, ti!lted Sl6SO. 960-5176 631-2284 MGB 9744 Gold, en~ good, trans. MAAQUISVOLVO stereo deck, new dows, brks, steering, tit g l ass, w /s/vt hres • ••••••••••••••••••••••• odoubt.ful, body hopeless, MISSION VlEJO Mlcbellens, xlnt cond, wbl. 9000+ mi. Xlot W/Wheel covers, cruise '74 2300cc Runabout. dl5c:. '74MGBConvertible. $450 as is. 673·4545, 831 2880495-1210 $3000. 549·8&28 days, cond. $6300/bst ofr. control & tilt wbeel. radial,4-spd,'5.LS220l. I Xlnlcond. $3000 673-3620. • 644--003eve. '42·2862eves&wlmds (702NHS). Call~5914 cau493·6683. 1970 VW Bug, good cood. 1974 IUICK '64 Chevy wgn, V-8. PS, S4999 -'73-Pin_to_w_gn.--Gd-eond.-- '71 GT. Less than 57,000 Orig ownr. Sl600. Eves. ORANGE COUNTY RIVIERA PB, AC. Runs &ood. $WO. PHIL LOHG FORJ) $1800 or bst ofr. 83f«aU mi.Xlntcond. S2'150. 673-7012; 547·'1820 VOLVO vs, automatic, factory 536-lBTl S.D7r~l8~11°8 dys,53l-885leves 5594991 19'12 VW Adve nture EXCLUSIVELY VOLVO air cond., pwr. steeri~g Pvt.Piyneedsrea.sonable '13SquireSta.wgn.$1995. n-1 9746 camper. Al\l/FM, 8-Largest Volvo Dealer & brakes, stereo radio, t rtation car bef 1975 FORD Xlnt cond. 645-7950dQI. -.-k -·-d C··" n•Oraoge County.• beater. vinyl roof, tinted Frir~nspo G9 ....... ·DA 4 DOOR 67" ""llev-••••••••••••••••••••• •• t rac • .....ut con • a.u. • .... 893-37S. ~"' ,,....., ...... BUYorLEASE glass, W/S/W tir es.--·-------'73 OPEL WGN. 1 ownr, 493-2406 DlRECT (6128L). '74 NOVA Hatchback. V.8. automatic. fact~ry 12 Auto. A/C new brb. AC, auto, new radials '73 Sqiiareback AM /FM $2999 31,000 mi, Xlol trans, like ~U'b~~:s·,· ~~~o.s~~a~:!. Gd tires. Xlnt. ~000 ml. $15SO/Ofr. 552·3437 Russ radio, low mil~age, lug-~'Jij~· ~.[~-,fl!~.·~ PHIL LOMG FORD new. $2500. Pb S49-?.U3 tinted glass, w /s/W tires WOO. 549-3139 Pantera 9747 gage rack, new brakes. T T s.D. Frwy .. Jrvine ..... M ra I i P/B w /Wheel COY e r s. '7" R una bout. Supe- ••••••••••••••••••••••• Excellent condition. 76a 5888 u. onte ..... r o, a r, • RJW) "' • S2250 554 2536 -PIS, auto, AM/FM, v. (537 · sharp. Low m1. Auto '73 Pantera GTS. New -· · 2025 S. Manchester 1973 BUICK top. Im m ac. $2000. $3599 trans, See tbia one+ paint. c lean. 3l,OOO 1969 Volkswai:on Anaheim 750-2011 960-3646 PHILLONGFORD 644-0403 mtles.Callt-825-3394. !>quareback. FM/A M 8. ESTATEWAGOM r . 1-------- ...L-9750 track stereo, sunroof. Autos, Used VB, automatic, factory Chrysler 9925 S.D. Frwy .. rvme Plymoutft 9960 Pors11;ne d tee · •••••• •••••••••••••• ••• 7 68-5888 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• Beautiful condition. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ai.r con ., pwr. s nng $1300. 646·1.247 General 990 I & brakes, stereo radio, is Cordoba, full pwr, 14K uRnod914 1· ~~OOOM S3mi1•00 35,mpg. ---------••••••••••••••••••••••• pwr. wmdows & seats. mi, xlnt cond. Must sell. a ta s. r . · ' i.rm. "71 VW Bug, auto stick, heater, tinted glass, SS,150./ofr545-0193 49<i·2130 very clean, lo mt , vmyl anterior, w/s/w 0 66 ~12• Completely Sll)50/0fr. 494-4038 days, * $499 & up* tires w 1wheel covers. '76 Cordoba. Fully rcstort'd. $.5.000/bst. ofr. <l!M-8327 eve. (48911SX>. equipped. leather intr. lo --$2699 mi. Pvt. ply ~ & or trade. 493-2561 or '73 VW 412, xlnt running PHIL LO~ FORD 752_·_8300 ______ _ 957-1071 cond. Gd tires, gd p,unt. "~ '76Porsche912E.Assume AtC. lmmac. AM1F)1, equity OAC. Eves, (714) cassette tape. Asking 781-4927 Riverside. <714) $2050. 960-1648 979-0605 N pt Beb. '67BUG,1700cceng. s:tood 1970 Por-;che 914. good cond. xtras , S1200 . cond. Cover. $3,lOO, 642 ?8.14 ______ ·52 Rambler <;ta wgn, &io-2409 'i3 VW Bus. In good concl. motor JU'il OH'rhaulcd. '70 Por<iche 914. clean, n<.'l'ds paint. S2700. Call nd-; body wk $125. !'tereo FM. SJ,1)50. SS7·0572Carter 898·3059. 546·2441J 19·4 PM> or ~ .......... _ ... 9800 ............. -5.-.... -.-.---9800 497-2.">66 17 !I P M> ~. "ew ~ " ---------....................... ······················· s700 CASH REBAIEI OH EVERY NEW PONTIAC LEMANS IN STOCK! NEW 177 GRAN LEMANS '.;I 2.000R COUPE Landau k>P. 403 V-8 engine, automatic. bucket seats. accent '>tripes. custom bells. air conditioned. radial white wall tires. Rallye Gauqe cluster and clock. oower .leering. till wheel. Rallye whnels. ?G37K7P2041 52) S.D. Frwy.-lrvme 768-5888 '69 Chrysler 300 full pwr, air, AM/FM. new tir~s, $800 /ofr.492·0352 CadiUac 9915 COfttinental 9930 .............................................. it 72 Lincoln Cont Mk tv. , On1ncJe county•s Seville Cettter • Loaded, coocourse cond, :.erious ioqui res only, S4400 /ofr .552-3437 or 644-1120. PP. 9912 ....................... •16 Se•iDe is T·TOP yellow only 1-'ull power, clio:i~te con· ZJOOO·mi. Auto, P tS. P /B, trol. air c9nd1t1onsng, stereo, leather, elec. win- \ inyl padded top, full dows. Like brand new! leather sntenor, A~f/FM Orig. ownr. $7,890. stereo with tape. crwse 540-4464 control. till wheel &1--------- custom grill. Exqwsttc! (61J~LXL>. $9895 Nabers Cadillac :?600 HJrhor Blvt.I. Co)t.:J Mi:sJ 540·9 I 00 •C°"ette77 4 Spd, low miles, tilt, tape. Runs super! GENERAL AtITO LEASING Since 1959 (213)869·2007 .. eor.ette ?7 $165. mo. 38 Mo's. CEL, with option to buy. $6,270. lotal payments + T & L. $880.del. GENERAL AtrrO LEASING •---...------• Since l959 <213)869·2007 1975FORD 8PASS. WAGON VS. a utomatic, factory air cond., pwr. steering. windows & brakes, tinted g lass, tape, beater, w /S/w tires w /Wheel COY• ers. (162MlA ). $4299 PHIL LONG FORD S.D. Frwy.·lrvine 76&.5888 '75 PLYMOUTH CUstolb. Fury 9-passenger wagod only $1,995. Low bl~ book on this vehicle If S:l.100. A good clean c• but 1t has 71,000 miles od it. See in Daily Pilot parking lot at 330 West Bay Street. Costa M~ or caU 642-4321 for IDOllO, information. Ask fri Rlck or Oscu ia Bee& garage. • '54 Plymouth two ._, 8 .---PHIL cyl, overdrive, m t C11111 LONG ,_$950_1b6_t_o_rr_. 64S-5315 __ . ___ - FORD '63 Salellite, DU~ pat.1 uphols. Runs mat ~ 551·2699 n Duster, auto, AM radio. 2 dr, bench seats. $1.00la. .;:~outb .Daster. i , ... _c.ie_._._ey Auto. Air, P1S, P/B. ... .. __ c-,.._ $2475. Private Pan~ -========~ 962-2611 altel'Spm. '70 Ford CUSTOM Six. ponffoc 99ff auto Trans. PS. x.lnt cood •••••n••••••••-••• .. nu tires. $795. 840-2666. '7S Firebird. Formula 40Q. '7S Granada. xlnt eond. stereo, air, wht/Wht. PSi. new t r ansmission, PB, auto t rans, alat radials, air, V8, S31'15. cond, lo mi. must seU. 84&-Z163 or 898-2636, aak 67~7674 days, ~ ~ for Shelby eve. ----------~ ''14 Raocbero, a u to, '75 L E M ANS Sport stereo, AC, m ags, C-Oupe, A·l shape, Make • Michetins, 34M. $3700. orrer. PP. 968-46:H btwnf i 957-0212 &4. -----~----1 '76 Ranchero. GT. Silver, '76 Fireblrd Form~ zlat 1_977 ASTRE 33 MILES PER GALLON Cadfflac SeYilles Teri to choose. All fully loaded-4 with shadow finish. (3192). • Maroon brougham inl & cond. all power. IS.oot stripping, ruu pwr, air, Firm. 549-0909 '73 Veffe. stereo, air shocks, trlr -67-4-G-ra_n_d_o..;;_·_ -.,.-.... -n-lL-,,• ..... Full •-ir 2 ts t hitch & crse cont. Less .. •.,.., u.... ..,.. pwr .. a · &e o mi, full power. windowrC. EPA tested. 23 mpg. (city) 33 mpg (highway). ~~ :.-::~~·5 3488 5500 CASH REBATE! W!"'HA VE A. LARGE SELECTION OF RHE USED CA.RS! Ponv equoooed. o•••'"'"• ¥•11ow. .__ lnl9flcr. I t0:2 NtflYI Mint -lo ....... l•c:t oty etf rool l>llClMt _. .. ~·~ $2197 . ?I POMnAC c .... v-•. •uto, '""···r 1ac1ory ••• conclllton•"9. -~15'°°'-Tl $1388 • .. eno1ne.~ .., c~ "'"VI ,_ -''-'"9 Pow•• Drellel Cl119NGMI $4695 '1 S POlllHot: LIM_. JDr.H.T. SALE PRICED THRUMAY ALLEN T·tops, l transparent set . ~0~~7~ $54SO. trunk release, ah'. ~ Runs perfect, like new. i---------1 sell; will talk prlc._ fJ)7'15 Will trade. 64.5-8614 645-1602or534-S297 ; or 523-2991 Joe Rupar. Olds/Cadillac!GMC S.D. Frwy.·Avery Exit LAGUNANlGUEL CALL 495-6430 ••••••••••••••••••••••• '67 RS. xlnt cond, sharp, vin y l top..? cassette stereo, PS. YB, air• mu.st sell. $1300. 494-7113 1975 c.uu.ao · w.saYN>. VS. automatic. factory $3799 air conc:t., pwr. steering PHIL LOMG FORD & brakes, radio, b4!ater, W>yl roof, tinted fta18, S.D. Frwf.·lrvi.De w /s/W tires & wheel cov-7 6a.S881 en. (l32S'7~ 199 ,_19_7_6_C_OUG __ All_X_R7-1 PHIL LOMG F01D s.D .• ..,.,.,,.~ 76a.san .. .................... . 1971 CHIYY MOMTICARl.O 6S PonUac Statloll WOS. all xtras, xlnt con"" $1000. 642·1634 ·n1• ....................... . . . . . . ., ~ . ~ .. , I o • t l f \ I I l ' • 1 • } r • • I " ~ • . I ~ .. , ~·Mey 25. 11n ______ .;;.;OAl~LV;...Pl;...L;;;.;O-..T_D ......... 9 . .~ Want Miieage? We Got ltl 1977 ASTRE 33 M.P.G. . -H1way Based on the results of tests conduct°ed or certified by the U.S. Environment Protection· Agency, the typical gas .~1:;::::dthi:0ve:~cle2 i; IMMEDIATE DELIVERY -- $ + TAX & LICENSE $ ~ MO. M.P.G. City, 33 M.P.G .. 0 Sat s M cl Hiway. Your Actual pen •1 •• , On ay Mileage May vary. · Memorial Day Weekend Total selling price $4003.70 including tax & license. Total down payment $295.00 and 48 monthly paymenls of $99.90 Deferred payment price is $5090.20 A.P.R. 14.06% on approved credit with GMAC. • J MODEL • SJ MODEL • L J MODEL IMMEDIATE V-8 auto. trans factory air conditioning oower steerin-;i. pOWer brakes radio. vinyl root (~MOP) $3495 1975 FORD PINTO RUHAIOUT 4 cyl .. auro trans . AM ad10 5X11Y154257 1974 BUICK REGAL V-8 auto trans factory air cond1t1onmg MWN steering AM radio Cordova top 970KKB s3595 1973 PLYMOUTH IARRACUDA V·8. auto trans. factory a•r conditioning. Power steering. AM radio. Cordova too (687HEJJ. $2495 1975 CHEVY MOMTE CARLO V-8. auto trans . factory air corid1tioning. oower steering. AM/FM stereo radio w18 track tape. Cordova too (444MNY) $4495 I '•WY. • FIREBIRD • ESPRIT • FORMULA •TRANS AM DELIVERY IMMEDIATE DELIVERY V-8. auto trans factory air conditioning. oower steenrlg oower brakes. radio. whitewall tires. vinyl •oof (779LYU) •3 7i95 1976 FORD PIMTO 4 cyl auto trans. AM radio. Cordova top (441PON). ~3195 1974 OLDS CUTLASS SUPREME V-8. auto trans . factory air conditioning. oower steering. AM radio Cordova top (460LXFl '3995 1974 CHEVY CAPRICE 4 DR. V-8. auto trans . factory air conditioning. p0wer steering oower brakes. radio, whitewall tires. vinyl •oof (384KIOJ $3395 1975 CHEVY SURFER VAN V-8, auto trans .. AM/FM stereo radio w/8 track tape. (74437Z). $5395 1975 CHEV. CAMARO LT V-8. auto. trans .. factory air conditioning. Power steering. oower disc brakes. oower windows. radio. vinyl roof. rallye wheels tilt steenng (786MXB). s479 1975 OLDS ROYALE 1975 PONTIAC SAFARI V-8, auto traM .. factory air conditioning oower V-8. auto trans . factory air cond1t1onlng, oower steering, AM radio, Cordova top. 4 dr. (430M0Rl. steering. AM radio. t1tt. roof rack. (228MV1 l s4595 $4695 1975 UMCOLM MARK IV V-8. auto. trans • factorv air condition1n-;i. ex>wer steering. pawer windows. power seats. AM/FM stereo radio w/8 track tape. Padded Cordova top, tilt. cruise. leather f588LVQl. $6995 1975 OLDS CUTLASS V-8. auto. trans.. factory air conditioning. Power steering. AM/FM stereo radio. Cordova top. (378LJQ). s4195 I .. 1973 DATSUN ST A. WGM. 4 cyl .. auto. trans .. AM radio. roof rack. (583HNU). 12495 1973 PONTIAC GRAND SAFARI V-8. auto. trans.. factory air conditioning. Power steering. p0wer windows. power seats. AM/FM stereo radio. Cordova top, tilt. cruise. pwr. door locks.(540KQF). '2995 1974 POMT AIC FIRHIRD V-8. auto. trans.. factory air conditioning. oower steering. p0wer disc brakes. radio. rallye wheels. (114JGU). s399s 1975 IUICK LESAIRE V-8. auto. trans.. factOl'Y alr condltlontng. oower steering. power brakat. stereo radio, whitewall tires. vinyl roof. lillted glass. (231 MKO) s4595 I I I l ' , I ......................................... Plymnulh -1974 OLDS CUTUSS 1974 MADA U-4 1974 CHEVY MALllU CLASSIC V·8. automatic. air conditioning. PoW9" steen(l9. Automatic. air conditioning. AM/FM stereo radio V-8. automatic. air cond1t1oning. power stper.ing. pawer brakes radt0. heater. wtwtewall tires. t1tt w/cassette. heater. rota-v engine. white sidewall oower brakes. radio, heater, wMewalf tires wheel. cruise control. Lie. Ho. 333KFH. tires. mags. Liceme 880REA (71 SKSOl 1975 PLYMOUTH RllY V-8. automatic. air cond•tionino. POWl8I' steering. pawer brakes. radio. heater. wMewall tires. v1nyt roof. (101LPCl 1972 CHIYSLB HIWYOUH V-8. automatic. air conditioning. pawer steering. pawer brakes. power windows. radio. heater. whitewall ttres. vinyl roof. electriC door loci<s. lie. No. 295GIU. '1491 92295 1972 PLYMOUTH FUIY 1976 CHRYSLB V-8. &tJtomatic. air oonc:htionlng. power steering. MIWPOIT pe>wer brllces. radio. heater. whitewall tires. vinyl ~-8. automatic. air oonditioning. pawer steering, roof. (128GJCJ power bl'akes. power windows. AM/FM radio. heater. whttewall tires. vinyl roof Lie No. $1495 S34REB $5295 1976 C .. YSLll '76 DODGE ASPEN COIDOIA COUPl v.a. air conditioning power stelring PoW84' 8 cv!inder. automatic. air conditioning. Power brakes. oower wi~ AM radio heater. vinyl ~teen~. power ~rakes. radio. heater. whitewall IOP. automatic. Uc. N.o. 5~2PIN. • tires. vmyt roof. Lie. No. 191POY. '•991 .t3395 ALL CAIS All SUIJICT TO PllOI SAU. ALL PllCIS AB YAUD UMTI. IO P.M. ALL PllCD All PLUS TAX AND UCIMSI. SAU IMDS Wt•17. INTERNATIONAL TRUCl<S BRAND NEW I 977 INTERNATIONAL SCOUT TERRA PICK-UP BRAND NEW 1977 ~INTERNATIONAL SCOUT II 4 WHEEL DRIVE Al c .. An . To Prior Wt. Al rr-. /ft ¥ u.tll I 0 ,,... M hicn /ft ... T• _,Uc ..... W. S.Jt.77. •I . Afteraooa N.Y.Stoek8 VOt:. 70, NO. US, .t SECTIONS, 48 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA WEDNESDAY, MAY 25, 1977 TEN CENT. • ~iilS: 'We ·Want to Stay Alive' Charges Rejected Nazi, Gay Group Claims Denied By MICHAEL PASKEVICH OUIM Dlllly ~l ... Sl•lf Parental claims that organized · Nan and gay groups operate at · Huntington Beach High School ~ere natty rejected by school trustees Tuesday. However, another issue, or- canized religion on campus, was once again broug_bt before the board by Mrs . Tommye Millhouse of Seal Beach. Holding a copy of the hlgb school's Casla Bond Due yearbook, Mrs. Millhouse pre· sented the "documented proof" which trustees claimed was lack· ing in her previous charges re- garding Nazism and gay ac- tivity. . Citing an "Open Forum Club" listed in the yearbook, Mrs. Millhouse said the club promotes •'altered states of consciousness, yoga and transcendental medita- tion (TM)." Adding that ''TM is not just a form of relaxation but a Hindu Inn Sale Backed; Huntington Objects By ROBERT BARKER Of ti. DMty i-tlet St.tlf The sale of the financially troubled Huntington Beach Inn for $3.8 million was approved Tuesday by a federal bankruptcy ~ud&e ia Santa Ana over city ob-~ecti•. However, the sale of the pl'o- perty to the Strucl\JJ'e invest.- ment and Developtnent Com· ~any of Costa Iii••• la 1ttll subject to .aerutin)' by the city which baa the right of appronl forlhereasslpmentoftheleaae. Assistant City Attorney Bill .Amsbary said today the city will lmist that alleged detertor2'linc conditions of the hotel be correct- ed beforeltglves lta okay. · Amsbary saJd estimates for \ work to get the hotel and a<Uoln· ing properties up to standard r,ange from $500,000 to as high as I $1.800,ooo. He saJd that a cash bond pro- . bably will be required from the buyers tor the amount or repairs. The sale includes the 144-room Rare Parrot, ]ma, T/Ue/ Sought inHB An all·polnta bulletin was out today for a rare. yellow.headed Amazon parrot named Jaws and a bur1lar Huntln1ton Beach police aay new the coop with the btrd. . The suspect ls sought In con. rfectlon with a Tuesday break-in •t the second story apartment of Ray-COvarrublas, 2019 California st., who lost the prized tropical bird. Jnvesti1atora say It appears S1w1, valued at l"O to $400, wu apparently all that was taken by wtioeverlWfed e>pen Covarrubias' 1U~llaa baJconydoor. hotel, a nine-bole golf course, the Driftwood Mobile Home Park, · two liquor licenses and a service station. Lawyers for the city had at- tempted to block the sale Tues- day on grounds that tbe pre. cond.lU.. ~ M kA°" to all bidders. They alSo indicated that the ci- ty doesn't look favQt"ably at the po11ibllity of addinf new encum- br•nces-totbef acllity. Under terma of the sale, Struc· lure Investment would pay $1.4 million to Glendale Federal Sav· ings and Loan. bolder of the first •trust deed and $600,000 to Automation Inc., holder or the second trust deed. Another $600,000 would go to creditors. A total of $1.2 million also would be paid to Huntington Limited Company, the operators of the complex prior to the time a receiver was appointed. The payment would come at the end of 10 years although there will be annual interest payments. Dave Thomas. one of three partners in the investment firm. said his group bas agreed to •nd U40.000 lo correct defa- dencies. He said projects include redo- 1 n g streets, repainting. re- lurnishing, adding two tennis courts, overhauling &Jr coadi· tionlne. putting in new We in bathrooms and relurblahlng con- ference rooms.. He said, however, his group will not aaree to post a bond for <See SALE, Pace AZ> Drug Ring Broken DELANO (AP> -Narrotlcs agent.I in Kern and Tulare coun· ties say they have cracked a ma- jor, soutbem San Joaquin Valley drug ring with the arr~ts of six people here. A pound of heroin valued at $1.25 million dollars was seized during a raid on a re- sidence. Drug '~hony' FBI Blada ExwttwniatA' religious form," Mrs. Millhouse angrily asked the board, "what are you going to do about it!" "At this lime, nothing,•• replied board Prestdent Don MacAllister, obviously angry about "the hundreds of hours ol staff time" involved in the pre· vious investigation. Huntington Beach High School Principal Larry Lucas said, ''there is no practice of TM or in· struction in TM al the school. The Open Forum Club meets two days a week and la the study of • various religious and non- religious philosophies." he said. "If the club were promoting a re- ligion it would be illegal," be added. Trustees took no formal action on Mrs. Millhouse's charges and declined to launch another in· vestigation. However, Trustee Doris Allen said, "If we can investigate taco chips we can investigate this club." She referred to a recent religious dispute in which a food vendor was forced to stop adding a religious motto to bags of taco chips. At Tuesday's board meeting, held before a crowd or about 200 at Edison High Sctlool, district Superintendent Jake Abbot of. fered a terse rebuttal to Mrs. Millhouse's charges of Nazi and gay organizations at the Hunt- ington Hllh campus. Wblle admitting that there were isolated incidents of Nazism involving two students at the campus during the 1974-75 school year, Abbott said there presently . 'is no evidence, no rumors and no information of Nazi activity." "Regarding the gays, it is absolutely the same situation," Abbott added. He said the recently completed investigation involved a survey of teachers publicly named by Mrs. Millhouse al a prior meet· ing and the cooperation of Hunt· ington Beach Police Chief Earle Robitaille. ·'I think we should call a halt to this sort or stuff." said Trustee Helen Dille. She wu Joined by Trustee Zita Wessa and board President MacAllist.er, both requesting that future parental concerns be taken care of at the school level rather than be brou~ht before a <See CLAIMS, Page A2) 2 Countians Charged With Prostitution / Huntington Beach police ar- r ested two Orange County women on prostitution charges Tuesday night after an alleged rendezvous with them at a local hotel. Officers identified the suspects as Carol R. Turner. 23, or 10651 Tibbs Circle, Garden Grove. and Rita J . Shamrowicz, 26, of 13382 Westminster Blvd ., Westminster. lnvestJgators charge that the suspects placed personal ads seeking charming 1entJemen who wanted to meet ladies. lnvesttaators alle1e they checked out the lonely hearts ad and It was agreed a meeting could be arranced, at which time the women introduced themselves. They were arrested on the mis· demeanor charge and booked on· ly alter, police assert, they said wby they wished to meet gentlemen and bow much the en· counter would cost. ' Gunmen's Teri-or ,,....,-, ..... ·., ~ ·Continues APWh &Jt 11 1 GETTING HER MESSAGE ACROSS, FRONT AND BACK Sun Bring• T-shirt W••thet to CaHfornl• Great Put ·on T-smrts Blossoming SACRAMENTO (AP) -Some or tbe m essages are risque, some a re fu.nca-and a few are out· rageous 8t unprintable. But tbei warm 1pnn1 SW\ bu broraght ·T-shirt weather to Callrornia again, and thousands of youne women are blosaomlng as walking billboards. A state bank report says It quickly sold out its promotional T -shirts with the m essage, "When you're not the biggest, you· d better be good.•· Women bought most of them. and reorders keep coming in. a bank official said. That T-shirt follows the newest trend of putting part of the message on the front, and the punch line on the back. Other popular '.I'·shirts have a variety of messages: -On lhe drought: "Conserve water. Shower~th a friend." -For diete)-s: ''Caution: Starving dieter. May bite if pro- voked." r-A warning, on a tightly fit. ting, low-cut T-shirt: "Eat your heart out.·• -Advertising: "Wanted: Singte m en. Generous with money and affection. Liberal bank account preferred. Stable oe~. No turkey. pleae. lDCl within. .. -Another warning: "You toucba my body, I slappa you face." -And a boast: "It's real." A Macy's department store clerk said two hot·sellers this year are T -shirts that say "California girls have warmer bodies.'' and "I'm a virgin, but this is a very old T-shirt." "You wouldn't believe all the little old ladies who come in and buy thatone,'' she said. Men's T·shirts have fewer written messages. The most popular men 's seller is covered with a picture of a smillng, swimsuit·clad Farrah Faweett-Majors. '·But the shirt doesn't say anything," a sales clerk said. "I guess it doesn't have to," she added. I Valley Approves • Protested Center After five months-of opposition by residents tn the nortbeut sec· tor of the city, the Fountain Valley City Council has approved a shopping center at the comer of Warner Avenue and E uclid Street. The council voted 4 to O Tues- day to allow Robert Johnson, a Newport Beach developer, to · build a supermarket, liquor st<>re, restaurant and several shops on a 4.5-acre parcel of land. Residents who live behind tbe proJ>OSed center claimed it would create added traffic h azards, drainaae problems, noise and air, poUut.ton. Lorena S. Lackman-Tomol, of 11063 Tilton Circle, told the coun- cil 1be had collected 13' signatures from resident• tbrouehout the city who OJ>POM the abopplnl center. ResJdent. bad met with Mayor Roger Stanton aever.i times 1D So. )'OW". ~el"-ln·law•s de- cided to open an offlc• and be wanta to "bori"oW" your desk. No• Wbatdoyoudo? "I told it ~tb a clauilled ad." Here'• UM -'I that did the trick for tb1I c.o.ta Mesa man: the past two months and suc· ceeded in wiMing assurances for some modifications to the plan . But Councilman Bernie Svalstad said Tuesday, "If we, made all the changes the homeowners wanted, there would be no sboppina center." I Councilman Marv-in Adler dis- agreed wltb residents who claimed a traffic hazard wolild , e1'ist u shoppin& center patrons turned east from Euclid Street. Residents also contend Mlle Square Park vllitors will make greatest use of the shopping center and would cause parking problems along Tilton Circle. ASSEN, The Netherlands <AP) -Captive children chanted "We want to stay alive!" today as South Moluccan extremists let one deadline for death pass but again threatened to start killing more than 160 hostages if the Dutch government did not ineet their demands. Officials said "steady negotia- tions" were continuing with two fovernment psychiatrists as middlemen. For two days, two bands of gunmen have held 105 children and silt teachers at a village school in nearby Bovensmilde and at least SS hostages in a hi- jacked train stopped 1n the mid- dle of open pastureland 10 miles north of here. Four or 21 South Moluccan prisoners whose freedom the ter· rorlsts have demanded were brought to the official "crisis center" here, officials said. "We're keeping them on ice," said an official. Two hours before the deadline at 2 p.m. local lime (5 a.m. PDT>. several children were brought to the windows or the school and cried out in unison, "We want to stay alive, Van AJt." ' Andries van Agt is the Dutclr- justlce minister and the top gov· ernment strategist in dealing • with tbe gunmen. The Asian militants -six at the school and seven in the train -spoke with senior Dutch of. ficlala by telephone. This morn- ing, they rejected a government appeal for release of the children and repeated their threat lo shoot hostages. But Dutch Premier Joop den Uyl was cautiously hopeful. "It looks as if there is a certain basis for conversation develop. ing," he told reporters. A Justice Mini s try spoke5woman said, "We are con- lin uing steady negotiations because we hope there is still a c hance that the terrorists will surrender the children." The gunmen, members of an immigrant community from the former Dutch colony of the South Moluccan Islands, now part of Jit- <SeeTERROR, Page A%) Marina High Unit To Present Drama Marina High School studentS will stage the drama "Inherit the Wind" Thursday a nd Friday nights at 8 o'clock in the Hun~ lngton Beach High School Auditorium, 1905 Main St., Hun~ ington Beach. The play is based on the famous Scopes monkey trial in· volvlng William Jennings Bryan and Clarence Darrow. Ticket prices are $1.50 for students and $2.50 for adultl. C:oasc Weather Sllabt chance of eprlnkla or u,bt showers tontsht. Decreuln1 ctoudl· neu Thursday morning. Lowa tonight 52 to 57. Hiahl Thund•>' 68 to 7'- • ( .... A2 DAIL y PILOT H/F Wednesday. May 2S. 1177 For Valley Park Issue By RAYMOND ESTRADA J R. Ol llW O•llY l'llol Sl•ll Fountain Valley Mayor Pro Tem Bemie Svalstad has pro- posed & $l million bond issue lo raise funds for a multi·purpofie facility at Mile Square Park Svalstad also proposed Tues- day that $227,000 or the city's $390,000 in federal revenue shar· ing funds be earmarked for con- Bond roposed struction of the propotied build· mg which would house activities of the Fountain Valley Communi· ty Theater, senior citizens' group and Cultural Arts Association. City officials estimated the $1 million bond issue woutd cost the averaee homeowner about aeven cents more per $100 assessed valuation on next year's lax bill. Fountain Valley's current lax rate is $1.21 per $100 assessed valuation. Representatives from com· munlly groups, including the Jo'ountain Valley Boys' Club, Girls' Club and Teen Help·Youth Service Bureau. asked the c<>un- cil Tuesday for a share of the city's revenue sharing funds. Fired General Says But Svalslad said he wanted $163,000 or the revenue sharing funds to buy a city street sweeper, fire truck and pay for Fountain Valley's parti~pation in a federal lobbyist program. War Seen Likely From Kore·a Pullout W ASJUNGTON (AP) -The general whom President Carter reassigned f6r criticizLng ad· ministration policy on Korea testified today that North Korea is building up its might and he is convinced Carter's plan to withdraw U.S. ground forces would lead to war. Maj. Gen. John K. Singlaub. whom Carter fired as chief of Amin 'Finn' About Visit NAIRORI, Kenya CAPl -Ug;mdan President Jdi Amin says he will definite· ly attend n ext month's Co mmonwealth con· ference in London "whether they (t h e British> like it or not." Uganda radio reporte d today. British government sources said 1n London on Thursday that Amin will not be allowed into Britam for the summit British newspapers. members of Parliament and public rigurcs de - manded Amin be barred from entering Br1ta1n because of alleged atrocities and human rights vtolations 1n hii. East African nation. Lying Told By Witness SANTA cnuz (AP> The ad· rn1llcd lover of an alle~ed double murderer has ~en accused o< ly· tn(it on Lhe witness stand during hii> trial. Und<'r inten~e exammation by Oisl. Ally Chris Cottle, Debbie Johnson, 20, said Tut.'sday s he hed to deputtt.'s when she claimed Richard Anthony Sommerhalder had bem with her thl' entire night when two womt.'n d1 ... appearcd staff oC U.S. forces in Korea for criticizing the withdrawal plan, told a House Armed Services subcommiUee his fear or war is based on new intelligence of the North Korean buildup. U.S. intelligence discovered this year that the North Koreans have increased their number of tanks from 500 to 2,000 the past four or five years, the general 'testified. The general, who is awaiting reassignment by the Army, said that in addition to the North Korean increase in combat ships and jet fighters that has already been publicly reported. Con· tradicting a Congresi.ional Budget Office study. Singlaub testified that North Korea's military power is superior to South Korea's now. even with the U.S. forces there. Rep. Samuel S. Stratton <D· N. Y .), chairman of the s ubcom· mittee before which Sin,::laub testified. asked if he \\las saying U.S. and Korean military of· ficers overwhelmingly agree the U.S. withdrawal will ultimately lead to war. "'Thal is absolutely corred,"" the general replied. Later. he was asked tf he was saying it might lead to war or it \It Ill lead to war. Singlaub replied that Korean military officers "state nat out. unequivocally that when U S forces are withdrawn North Korean President Kim II Sung will attack and I said that trom a military point of view I agre<' with that.·· Meanwhil e, Carter's two special envoys, Philip C. Habib and Gen. George S Bro"' n. told President Park Chunj( fief• tod.iy of plans to withdraw J:l.000 American troops from Korea 1n four to five years Park did not welC'ome the plan. which was announced ear ht.'r m Washington. but agrt'ed to aC' ('Cpl it as Amt>nC'a 's "established policy." an .ude said He ~aid Park asked for AmC'nC'an help 1n stren~thcntnJ: South Korea ~ military llabi b. undc r scnet ar~ of s tale. and Brown <'ha1rman or 1 h<' Joint Chief'\ of Starr. m et with P J rk for three hour~ Mayor Roger Stanton and Councilman AJ Hollinden have said previously they are opPQISed to using the revenue sharing for tbe street sweeper and fli'e truck. The council is expected to make a final decision on the re· venue sharinl funds June 7. Svalstad said the facility, which many community groups say is needed, would cost about $1.5 million. "If the voters don't want us to s pend that kind of money, they'll vote against the bond issue," said Svalstad. Fro•PageAJ TERROR ••• donesia, were demanding re· lease o( 21 jailed countryme.n and a jumbo jet flight, with hostages, from Amsterdam to an un- disclosed destination. Some South Moluccans are serving terms in Dutch jails for using political violence in the past in fruitless attempts to force the Dutch government to help them win independence from Indonesia for their homeland. "If you dare not to meet our de· m ands ... we will not hesitate or bluff to shoot down a number of hostages for your pleasure," the terrorists said in a letter to Dutch authorities that was released Tuesday. The government refused to dis· cuss any deals unless the schoolchildren were released first. Fro• Page Al CLAIMS ••. public board without document cd proof "'When the credibility of school staff is questioned and appears in the press. that's when I become concerned," Mac Allister said. Teacher spokesman Ray Cooper said "Huntington Beach 1c; an outstanding high school and the C'harges have cast a shadow of doubt on the school, its teachers and students." His com- ments 'drew applause from those in th<.' audience. Dutch Vote Held AMSTERDAM. The Netherlands <AP)-Heavy voter turnout was reported today as Outch vot<>rs cast ballots in the first general election since 1972. Sommerhaldcr. u 30-ye&r-old handyman. 1s accused in the dou· ble slaytnJi! Junt' 25 o( Mary C:orm&m and V1ck1 Rc•10re. whose bodies were found on a hillside near a Santa Cn11 mountain highway. Directors OK Sale 3 MUSKETEERS R41D PIZZERl.4 LA MESA <AP) -At the stroke of midnight. three men in fencing masks and waving long. bladed knives swung lusttly into a pizza parlor on Lake Murray Boulevard. They made off with ~early today. OR.ANH~ "' DAILY PILOT Of Irvine Company By TOM BARLEY Of II• O.lty Piiot St•ff Meeting in San Francisco late Tuesday, directors of the James Irvine Foundation authorized the sale of Lbe Irvine Company for $337.4 million to a consortium that will rename the company Taubman-Allen.Irvine Inc. The action by a unanimoui; foundation board came just four days after the TAI group outbid Mobil Corporation, the firm that was once on the verge of acquir· ing lbe Orange County land com· pany for $200 million. lrvi.e Company holdings in· elude 80,000 acres in Orange County, 6 ,000 a<."res in California's Imperial Valley aod 101,000 acres knotm aa the Flying D Ranch in Gallatin and Madison Counties bet'feen Bozeman and Butte, Montana. Foundation directors noted that the transfer of title has been epproved by Ounge County Superior Court Judge James F. Judge. He commented 1a~t Fri· day that he thought $337.4 million represented fair market value for the Irvine Company. Foundation directors said they expect to cklSe the deal with TAI within the next eo days The ule will then 10 to Judge Judie f« final anroval. Irvine beiros Joan Jrvin• Smltb. wtio fl.led the lawautt that ...,... a~ baUle lor: compaa,, Will bie one ol the di.Ne- lon oltbenew ~auoo. Mr9. Smitb Ind Dine otbet' ltt· " ton prowfded the capital to ,.i back an offering of $40.10 a share for the Irvine Company stock. Mobil was on the point or ac· quiring the company for $24 a share when Mrs. Smith took legal action two years ago. Other principals in TAl include Southern California real estate developer Donald Bren, Detroit developer Alfred Taubman, Wall Street financier Charles Allen and auto magnate Henry Ford 11 . SWAT Team Quells Valley Disturbance The Fountain Valley Special Weapons and Tactics (SWAT> team was called in to quell a family disturbance which erupt- ed lnto violence late Tuesday night, pollce reported. Police arrested John An~ Renna. 48. on assault charges alter he allegedly struck his wif ei Ma~y Lou, with a loaded piato during an 1rpmet\t. ReMa, of 18231 Crater 1 Lake Court. remains In Orange County J aU today in Utu of $10,000 bail on n charge of U1au1t wlth a deldb weapon. Renna, an equipment operator, ls •cbeduled to face ar- rait1nment ln w..i Oranae Coun- ty MunlclpalCourtJuo.c1 • ornc:ers ••kl the 1uapect was drlllkinf befon the Incident. He wat 1111~ Upttain at tM ~ be wu taken fftli c\lltOCty .~~- • ~P-acents . Bubbles and Marbles Rep. Walter Flowers (0-Ala.), bas his gum bubble burst in his face while playing in the second annual Con gressional Marbles Tournament Tue~day in Washington, D.C. Avalon Merchants Flay Water Cuts While Orange County officials ponder water shortages, just of· Jcoast at Avalon, Catalina Island, shopkeepers and resi· dents are confronted today with drastic water rationing. Avalon water users have been ordered to cut back water con· sumption by 50 percent. <Related story today Page A3 > Island storekeepers. about lo enter their big tourist season. see the one-half cut in allowable water use as a catastrophe. "We have only one industry here and that ·s tourism," said Gregor W. Milne, president of the <.:atallna Island Businessmen ·~ Association. "I am one or 150 small businessmen here who cannot make it a full year unless we have tourism." The mandatory program is necessary explain officials of the Southern California Edison Co.. bttause the island's fresh water reservoir dropped below 190-acre-feet. less than a fifth of its capacity. Meantime. the Orange County Board of Supervisors appointed a Water Emergency Task Force consisting or farmers. builders. industrialists, college professors and water agency managers. The commillee was asked to de· cide with.in three weeks on a voluntary water rationing pro· gram to cut usage by 10 percent. The Los Angeles Metrop01itan Water District announced Tues· <lay it is reactivating a small pumping plant in the San Fernando Valley lo deliver Colorado River water to the valley, western Los Angeles Countv and southern Ventura Count~·- From Page Al SALE .•. the repairs. as sought by the city. vincent Moorhouse, director of l he Harbors and Beaches Department, is heading a task force to look into deficiencies. Amsbary noted that 40 rooms or the hotel, formerly called the Sheraton Beach Inn, are vacant because or a lack or furnishings. He also indicated that asphalt pavement throughout the entire mobile home park may have to be redone. The property is located on 43 5 acres of beachfront land. Heritage captures a great Western European tradition for today's interiors The sources? Designs by the thousands from the vast, gorgeously vaned output of Western European furniture makers The translators? Famous Heritage" craftsmen. The results? Our Bnttany ru occasional collecUon. Perfection in leafy·heart cherry. pecan and English brown oak burl veneers .. with several extraordinary finishes. The lime to see it aJI? This very wee~! SUMMER SALE • Demailil Reprisal By STEVE MITCHELL Of .. o.uy ,.llel Statf A small lfOUP of parents and community members are calling for the realgnaUon of top State Department of Health ofticiaJs in the wake of the firing last week of FJ\rview State Hospital Director Michael Levine. · The group of ~bout two dozen members cautnc themselves the P arellt Advocac~ Committee also b demanding an investiga- tion oC the department of health and the reinstatement of Levine as executive director of the 1,600-patienl facility in Costa Mesa. They say charges that Levine was "brash and abrasive" are true, and they claim "that's the only way be could get bis pro· grams insli{ated." Those charges were leveled against Levine by Matthew J. Guglielmo, president of the Fairview Families and Friends. Inc., an orgaoizati011 whose ex- ecutive board supported the fir · ing. Guglielmo called the Parent Advocacy Committee "a small offshoot (of the FFTl making a lot of noise," and added that the group could not get along wilh his organization, · But members or the advocacy group think of themselves as a watchdog organization .trying to promote positive changes at the hospital for the mentally re- tarded. ~ Betty Lombardo of Ana,heint, who has two sons at Falrvie'ot, said Levine achieved many con- structive improvements for the developmentally disabled during his eight month tenure as direc- tor Kathy Boka. of Laguna Beach, whose child died at Fairview five years ago, said Levine "looked into problems at the hospital without going through all the stat<.• red tape. He was after re- sults." The group. headed by Ruth Stiers of Costa Mesa. outlined pro- j ccts and goals that they claim were set by Dr. Levine, adding that they fear these projects might go by the wayside under the new administration. They said Levine was trying to· -Place patients in homes on the hospital grounds lo p~pare them for the transition lo the out· side world. -Dropped the use of psychotropic drugs at. the hospital. "They're no longer pop- ping pills for behavior," Mrs. Stiers said. HTA9l.ltHIEO 1..i NOW JN PROORF.SS PROHSSIONAL INTUllOR OESION WITHOUT 01&.IGATION •COMFORT A BU fllAAKINQ • COHVlNtlNT f'IHANCINQ 1514 NORTH MAIN• SANTA ANA •~t-4391 • ' VOL 70, NO. 145, 4 SECTIONS, 48 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALI FORNI A TEN CENTS 3 Asked to Over Levine By STEVE MITCHELL OI IM O.lly ,., .. ,It.II A small group or parents and community members are calling for the resignation of top State Department of Health officials in the wake of the firing last week or Fairview State Hospital Direct.or Michael Levine. The group or about two doien members calling themselves the Parent Advocacy Committee also is demanding an Investiga- tion of the department of bblth and the relmtatemeot of r..evtne as executive director of the 1,600-patient facility in Costa Mesa. They say charges that Levine was ''brash and abruive" are true, and they claim ·~that's the only way be could get bis pro- grams instigated." Those charges were leveled a1alnst Levine by Matthew J. Ou11lelmo, president of the Fairview FamiUes and Friends. Inc., an oreanliation whose ex- ecutive board supported the fll'· lng. Guglielmo caUed the Parent Advocacy Commlttee "a small offshoot (of the FFT) making a lot of noise," and added that the group could not get along with his organization. Nixon Coul 't But members of the advoc~cy group think of themselves as a watchdog organiuUon tryiJ\I to promote positive changes at the hospital for the mentally re- tarded. Betty Lombardo of Anaheim, who bas two sons at Fairview, said Levine achieved many con- structive improvements for the developmentally disabled during bis eight month tenure as direc- See . ,. Chance for Fa& Trial :; ~ ., . ... .~ Dally ...... Sl•lf Pllolo IRVINE YOUTH, ARMED WITH SKATEBOARDS, PICKET OUTSIDE CITY HALL Kida Tell City Council They Oppose Paying for Skateboarding Skateboarding Foes Fail to Sway City Opposition to bulldine a com- ~ercial s kateboard course ln Jtvine's Heritage Park reachdi new heights Tuesday at Irvine City Hall, but 1t was not enough to convince the counci l to scrap tjte project. Despite more than JO hour or protest by residents who live Oear the park on Walnut Avenue and picketing outside by young skateboarders, the council voted 3-2 to go ahead with the com· mercial venture. Only Mayor Dave Sills and Councilman John Burton said they would rather put the course elsewhere since most residents tn the north end or town a,;.e op- posed t.o the project. Two spokesmen, who said they represented nine homeowner as- socl ation11 and roughly 4.400 ,.. r Orange Coast ... Weather homes near Heritage Park. tried to persuade the council that the commercial skateboard coune would be harmful lo lbe neighborhood and unfair to the children. <See SKATE, Page .Ul * * * Irvine Nixes Skate Course Relocation Council Backs Federal Buy Of Cotut Land The .Irvine City Council reaf· firmed its position supporting federal acquisition of the Irvine coastal area Tuesday and Invited the Friends of the Irvine Coast to a future council meeting. Only Councilman John 'Burton opposed the motion. comment· mg, "I'm not mterested in hear- ing the Friends of the Irvine Coast describe property I know very well." The others. though, said they would still like the federal gov- ernment to buy the coastal area between Newport Beach and Laguna Beach, if it is financially feasible. The property, roughly 10.000 acres, is owned by the Irvine Company. When the Friends attend a future council meeting they will exptain what they have in mind in pursuing federal acquisition and tell the city what they would like in terms or city staff as- sistance. At that point, Irvine council members are expected to dec1de whether or not the staff lime should be spent on the project. lrritie Projeet \ .· Praises Agnew in TV Talk WASHINGTON (AP)t Former President Nixon says he would have preferred "the agony of a trial'· to accepting a pre- sidential pardon that he knew made him look guilty. But, he said, he was persuaded "there was no chance whatever I could get a fair trial." And, Nixon said in a television interview t.o be shown tonight, he regarded former Vice President Spiro T. Agnew as "an honest man ... a courageous man" who made mistakes. (Channels 11, 8 and29at 7:30p.m.> The interview with David Frost. fourth in a series, reached its emotional high point when the discussion turned to Nixon leav- ing the While House in disgrace in August 1974 '·Resignation meant life without purpose as far as I was concerned,'' Nixon said. ''No one in the world, and no one in our his· tory could know how I felt. No one can know how it feels to resign the presidency of the United Stales. "Is that punishment enough?" Nixon said with strong feeling. "Oh, probably not · · To the question , "Did you, in a sens<'. fe<'I that resignation was worse than death?" Nixon said: "In some ways I didn 'treel it in term s that the popular mythologist s about this era write; that. well, resignation ia' so terrible that I better go out and fall on a sword, or take a gun and shoot m.yseU • I wasn't about to do that. I never think in those terms, suicidal terms. death wish and all that. That's all Just, just bunk." Without mentioning them by name. Nixon spoke bitterly about reporters Bob Woodward and Carl Bernstein, authors or the book, "The Final Days." With tight-tipped anger, he called their book "contemptible journalism," while admitting he had read only stories a bout the work rather than th~ book itself. •·All I say is Mrs. Nixon read it and her stroke came three days later," Nixonaaid. "I didn'twant her to read it becauae I knew the kind ol trash it was and the kind or tr u h they are . • . . ~ .. "This doesn't indicate that that caused the stroke. because. the doctors don't know what caused the stroke." the former president added, "but it sure didn't beJp. •• Nixon almost spat out: "1 have (see NIXON, Pace AU tor. Kathy Boka. of Laguna Beach, whose child died at Fairview five years ag°' said Levine "IOOked into problems at the hospital witfK>"t going through all the state red tape. He was aft.er re- sults.•• The group, headed by Ruth Stien of Costa Mesa, outlined pro- jects and goals that they claim were set by Dr. Levine. adding that they fear these projects might go by the wayside under the new administration. They said Levine was trying to: -Place patients in homes on the hospital grounds to prepare them for the transition to the out- side world. -Dropped the u se of psychotropic drugs at the <See LEVINE, Page A%) ..... ...,..'" GETI1NG HER MESSAGE ACROSS, FRONT AND BACK ·Sun Brings T·Shlrt Weather to Callfornla • Great Put ·on T-shirts Blossoming SACRAMENTO CAP) -Some of the messages are risque, some are fWlQ}' and a !ew are out- ra1eous or u,npJint.able. But the warm spring sun has brought T -shirt weather to Calilornia again, and thousands or y~ women are blossoming as waOOng billboards. A state bank report says it qtiickty sold out its promotional T -s hirts with the message, "When you're not the biggest, you'd better be good." Women bought most of them, and reorders keep coming in, a bank.official said. Thal T·shirt follows the newest trend or putting part of the message on the front, and the punch line on the back. Other popular T-shirts have a variety of messages: -On the drought: "Conserve water. Shower with a friend." -For dieters : "Caution: Starving dieter. May bite if pro.- voked." -A warning, on a tightly fit· ting, low-cut T-shirt: "Eat your heart out.'' -Advertising: ••wanted: Single men. Generous with money and affection. Liberal bank account preferred. Stable occupation. No turkey. please. • Inquire within." -Another warning: "You toucha my body, I slappa you face." -And a boast: "It's real." A Macy's department store clerk said two hot-sellers this year are T-shirts that say "California girls have warmer bodies." and 'Tm a virgin, but .this is a very old T-shirt." "You wouldn't believe all the little old ladies who come in and buy that one," she said. Men's T·shirts have fewer written messages. 'the most popular men's seller is covered with a picture of a smiling, swimsuit-clad Farrah Fawcett-Majors. "But the shirt doesn't say anything," a sales clerk said. "1 guess it doesn't have to,'' she added. Death Deadline Passes in Siege ASSEN, The Netherlands (AP) -Captive children chanted "We want to stay alive!" t~ay as South Moluccan extremists let one de~e for death pass but a1ain threaterted to 1tart kil~g more than 160 h<>!ltages lf UJe J)utch government dld not meet their demands. Qffic,ials_said •',Steady negotia· tions" were continuing wit.b two 1overnmeot psychiatrists as middlemen. For two days, two bands of aun"'en have held 105 children and six teachers at a villa1e .. Slight chance o r lttinJdea Ol' light showers tbnjght. Decreasing cloudi- nets Thunday morning. Lows tonight ~2 to 57. Highs Thursday 68 to 74. Commercial i"JUDe Q~'d ' I I INSIDE TODll 't' Belief in gajor. aid muat b6 · the reaaon whw two broCMrt care for 10,000 o/ the brutta. Thal . and U/e·long . alf ecUon. Ando bustling turtle bwine11. See P.aoe Al. .. dex The Irvine Company was given tentative approval Tuesday b>' the Irvine City Council for a ione cban1e to allow actlvtUes auch as a bowling alley and skating rink at a site in Irvine near Park Wesi Apal"tmetlta . A2 DAIL y PILOT Wednesday. May 25, 1 sn Irvine Teaf!laerS ·Er0•P-AJ I r 1 rvlne citizens wlll have a ohance tonight to tell Irvine school trustees wt)at they tb1nk of t~e new merit pay proposal for lt!acbers revealed last week. • The public hearing on the pay proposal is early in the board meeting. which begins at 7:30 p.m. at Universlty High School, Room 223ofthe LlttleTheater. D11ly .. llol Stiff P"4tto IRVINE GIRL PROTESTS She's Against Paying From Pag~ A I · SKATE ..• Charles Gordon said most of the potential users would be una- ble to afford skateboarding there on a regular basis, but that the course would attract numerous s kateboarders Crom elsewhere who would fc<·I free to use the rest of Heritage Park without charge. Petitions signed by nearly 1,000 youn gsters in th e nine homeowners <is::.ociahons were presented to the council The petitions suid th<' youths did not want a commercial s kateboard course because they could not af. ford it. ''If the directors or nine homeowners association~ are un- animously oppos«.>d to this pro- 1ect. how can our City Council do anything but rcJcct tht.> starr re com mendal1on tu allow il., .. Gordon askl'd Bul the counC'tl majority said they thought the· tourse would br- ing in nceMd <'llY revenue. ~d they said there• are suU.c1ent num bcrs in I rvanc who wa:lt a skateboard t•mir!.t' on the scale being planned by Leisure Specialties. headed by Jay Hen- derson. Councilwoman Mary Ann Galdo tried to amend the motion so that revenue from the com- mercial course would be used to build a free course nearby. But that a mendme nt was backed only by Mrs. Gwdo and Councilwoman Gabrielle Pryor. ORANGE COAST DAILY PILOT , .... 11.c_,, Vl<.tl"<ftlcMnl•ndOl-lllMl"'9" ~nkff'lll (dllo< "..._, .......... M.1 ... ,1"' &tllo< ~ .. .._ llkMN ...... " AU"l..,I Ma11ot9h19 Eei- Offlc .. ~YIMO•• lJ'lW•\lftoy~tr ..... ~~91\ ";:'~ .. ~~~~=r~~.,. $acM--Yoll<!\I >SlOl lA Pot -ti S... Di.to Fr_., T .. eptton. (114) 904321 a..-.ed Acnrtltlng 14i.911W .....-c• Yt1ir,-Ot4'<1 M1-U10 ~,....,5""0.- , 4tl-Ol)O ~ ""'0....... W!t ~~ ::t..~.~.::r.~-tl .. 'l':'':.'=' .... ., "' •U•ttlllH wlll>owt •-•el -""''-_...,.._ ~--c1-. ... , ........ ~-... =I bHctlllllell ay ttf'r1-r ., M, ..... a11 " ,. """"'""' ...... .,., ....., u.•-w, Trustees are offering the teachers a three.year pact thut gradually phases in a merit pay system. based on performance rather Ulan tonievlty. The first year of \he contract offers just a $500 across'the board pay raise with no merit pay, the second year brings in lower base uJaries accompanied J>Y merit pay and the third year continues then~ system. ON ••• not.hint but utter contempt. And I wUl neverfor&ivetheai. Never.'' In the book. the two authors sald Mrs. Nixon went to the ser- vants quarters in search of Uq~or during the last days In the White House. "For them to ..• take me on. is one thing, .. Nixon said. "For them to take her on, in my view. that'• below the belt. But tl\e former president con· li11med one acaount in the book - that the nl1ht before Nixon an- nounced his resignation, he and Secretary of Slate Henry A. Kiss- inger cried and knelt in silent prayer. Community members are in· vited to comment on the pay packa~. Once the hearing has been held, representatives from the teachers and trustees will begin negotiating on the new pro- posal. Other items set for tonight's preliminary meeting include; -Tbe first look at the pre Jiminary bu<Jaetfor 1977·78. Automotive Hybrid "Now. Henry. I know you and l are both alike in one way," Nixon recalled saying, "We don't wear our religion on our sleeve. I'm a Quaker and you're a Jew and neither of us ls very orthodox, but. I think both ol us probably have a deeper religious sensitivity than some o( those that are so loudly proclaiming it all the time.•• -Final action on the list of ad- ditional high school textbooks for 1977-78. Wh~t do you get when you cross a 1968 VW with a Triumph motorcycle? Buddy Channell 29 of Akron, Ohio. came up with what he' calls a "Volkswagen Trike ... built in his garage. The vehicle. registered as a motorcycle. can reach 100 miles an hour. Frost: Did either of you speak? Nixon: No, not a word. That's not the Quaker fashion. Nixon said he telephoned Kiss- inger later to ask: "Why dop't we jus t keep that incident to ourselves?" Nixon said he bad made thal suggestion because he felt Kissinger might have been embarrassed by the incident. • -Actions necessary to com· plete the lease extension for the SELF Alternative High School. -Discussion of a summer writ- ing project involving persons from the Irvine school di.strict and from UC Irvine. Irvine Co, Sale OkaYed -The possibility of reusing architectural plans instead or starting over each time a school is built. Consortium to Pay $337 .4 Million Village Forwn Meet Slated at School -The televising of school board meetings. -The financial impact of var ious curricular and extra- curricular activities on parents. E'ro...PageAJ LEVINE ••• hospital. "They're no longer pop. ping pills for behavior," Mrs. Stiers said. -Attempted to implement <1 h ospiJal aide prog ram so psychiatric technicians could provide duties othe r than custodial care. -Founde d an admissions. 'transfers and discharges com· mittee to discuss the stalus of Fairview patients. -Instigated a program where patients were taken to communi- ty hospitals or dental offices for medical car e i nst ead or al Fairview. -Imple mented several one-to- one programs with patients using a behavior modification team -Was attempting to get more occupationa l and physical ther apists at the hospital. Mrs. Stiers said there are only three full-time and two half-time physical therapists currently ~l Fair view. Child Porno Jailing Asked WAS HI NGTON fA P 1 Legislation providing for im· prisonmenl up to 10 years for use of a child lo produce porno- graphic material was introduced in the Senate. The bill was cosponsored TufllS - d a y by Sens. Charles Ma th Ills c D Md.). and J ohn C. Culver <D· Iowa 1. who will conduct hearings on child pornol(raphy Friday in Chicago. It would make at a federal crime to use or permit to be used, any child in the production of pornographic materials. Offen ders would be subject to fines up to $10.000 or imprisonment up to JOyearsorboth. Park Employe Dies in Fall YOSEMITE NATIONAL PARK (AP) -A Yosemite Na- tional Park employe from Utica, N. Y ., was killed when be fell 400 feet while helping rescue two stranded climbers, rangers said. Jack Dorn, 30. lost his balance and fell over a ledge along Yosemite Falls trail Monday. His bod y was recovered by park employes. By TOM BARLEY Ol 1 ... D•ol~ Polol Sl•lf Meeting in San Francisco late Tuesday. directors of the James Irvine Foundation authorized the sale of the Irvine Company for $337.4 million to a consortium that will rename the company Taubman-Allen-Irvi ne Inc. The action by a unanimous Korea Pul/,out Could Mean War-General WASIDNGTON (AP> -· The general whom President Carter reasi;igned for criticizing ad- ministration poli cy on Korea testified today that North Korea is building up its might and he 1s convinced Carter's plan to withdraw U.S. ground forces would lead to war. Maj. Gen. John K. Smglaub. whom Carter fired as chief 0 1 stare of U.S forces in Korea for criticizing the withdrawal plan. told a House Armed Services subcomm1llee his fear of war 1s based on new intelligence of the North Korean buildup. U.S. intelligence discovered this year that the North Koreans have increased their number of tanks from 500 to 2,000 the pasl four or five years, the general testified. The general, who is awaiting reassignment by the Army, said that in addition to th~ North Korean increase in combat ship~ and jet lighters that has alread~· been publicly reported. Con- tradicting a 'co,gression<.il Budget Office study. Singlaub testified that North Kor<'a·s military power is superior lo South Korea's now, even with the U.S. forces there. Fro.Page Al TERROR ••• Moluccan Islands. now part of In- donesia, were dem a nding re- lease of 21 jailed countrymen and a jumbo jet flight, with hostages. from Amsterdam to an un- disclosed destination. Some South Moluccans are serving terms In Dutch jails for using political violence in the past in fruitless attempts to force the Dutch government to help them win independence from Indonesia for their homeland. · '·If you dare not to meet our de- mands .•. we will not hesitate or bluff to shoot down a number or hostages for your pleasure, .. the terrorists said in a letter to Dutch authorities that was released Tuesday. The government refused to dis- c uss any deals unless the schoolchildren were released first. Council 1\ction Tbe following actions were taken by the Irvine City Council at Tuesday's meeting: FOREIGN TRADE: Told atty state members to pursue the establlshmerit of a ••fotelgn trade zone" ln Irvine. The ione would be desitned w attract import. and exp0rt firms to the Irvine area, most likely in the proposed Irvine Jn· dustrial Complex·Eut. foundation board came JUSl four days after the TAI group outbid Mobil Corporation, the firm that was once on th<' verge of acquir- ing the Orange County land com- pany for $200 million. Irvine Company holdmgs in- clude 80,000 acres in Orange Co unty. 6,000 acres i n California's Imperial Valley and 101,000 acres known as the Flying D Ranch in Gallatin and Madison Counties between Bozeman and Butte. Montana. Foundation directors noted that the transfer or title has been a pproved by Orange County Superior Court Judge James F. Judge. He commented last Fri- day that he thought $33'1.4 million represented fair market value for the Irvine Company. Foundation directors said they expect to r•ose the deal wiU{TAI within the next 60 days. The sale will then ~o lo Judge J udgc for final approval. . J rvine heiress Joan Irvine Sm 1th. "ho filed the lawsuit that s parked <l bidding battle fo~ the company. will be one of the dire<,;- tors or the new corporation. Mrs Smith and nine other tn· \<'~tors provided the capital to hack an offering of S40 10,a share £or the In 1ne Company :-.lock Mobil was on the l)Oint of ac- quiring the company for $24 a share when Mrs. Smith took legal action two years ago. Other principals in TAI include Southern califomia real estate developer Donald Bren, Detroit developer Alfred Taubman, Wall Street financier Charles Allen and auto magnate Henry Ford Il. Irvine Schools' Gyms Available The gymnasiums at University and Irvine High Schools in Irvine wlll be available for drop-in basketball this week through Aug. 30. University High will be open from 7 to 9:30 p.m . on Thursdays and Irvine High will have the same hours on Tuesdays. Adults may participate a nd must wear tennis shoes. For more informa- tion, phone754-3639. Kenton Serious READING, Pa. (AP) Bandleader Stan Kenton was r e- po rted in serious condition after undergoing surgery at Reading Hospital . Heritage captures a great Western European tradition for today's interiors The sources., Oe&agns by the thousands from the vast, gorg.eously varied output of Western European furniture makers . The translators? FamOU$ Heritage• craftsmen. The results? Our Brittany r.., occasional collection. Perfection in leafy-heart cherry, pecan and English brown oak burl veneers with several extraordinary fini shes. The time to see it all? This very weekt The summer recreation pro- gram, the city's tree ordinance and alternate traffic routes to be used during Northwood construc- tion will be discussed at tonight's Village Forum meeting at Irvine High School. • The meeting begins at 7:30 and is open to the public. Olh':r topics on tonight's agenda mclude garage sale signs, str~t tree policy and house numbers on curbs. ROU TOP DESK ROLLED WITH AD So. your brother-in-law's de· clded to open an office and he wanll to "borrow" your desk. Now whatdo youdo? "J sold it with a classified ad ... Here's the ad that did the trick !or this Costa Mesa man: ..d Exec desk w /roll out I""" drawer.~-XXX·XXXX If you have something to sell, call 642-5678. The Daily Pilot is the best place to advertise. EnA8l 1$HID 1"1 SUMMER SALE NOW J PROGRESS ,ltOFESSIONAL INTERIOR D£SIG'N WITHOUT OBLIGATION •C0 ... FOATA8LE ltAAICING • COHVENl&NT PINANCINQ 15f4 NORTH M IN• SANTAANA•S.1--4391 Tu•O•Y· Wtdnetday, ThVllday end Sat11r4ly t :JOto 5:30 -.Ollcay l2to t • f~eyt ~tot VOL. 70, NO. 145, 4 SECTIONS, 48 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TEN CENTS T~Shirt ~logans Spicy Spri._,, Put-on AP~ GETTING HER MESSAGE ACROSS, FRONT AND BACK Sun Brings T-Shlrt Weather to California Death Deadline Passes in Siege ASSEN, The Netherlands CAP > -Captive children cha nted "We want to stay alive!" today as South Moluccan extremists let · one deadline for death pass but again threatened lo start killing inore than 160 hostages if the Dutch government did not meet their demands. Officials said "steady negotia· tions" were conlinuin~ with two 'overnment psychiatrists as middlemen. For two days, two bands of gunmen have held 105 children and six teachers at a village School in nearby Bovensmilde and at least SS hostages in a hi· jacked train stopped in the mid- dle of open pastureland 10 miles north or here. Four of 21 South Moluccan prisoners whose freedom the ter- rorists have demanded were brought to the off1c1al "crisis County to Pay For Recovery Of Ani/acts Orange County j!o vcrnment will pay the bill for recovl·nn)l artifacts found on ('OOStruct1on sites in unincorporated areas. supervisors decided Tuesday. They also agreed lo pass the government cost on lo builders by increasing building permit fees. Supervisors. responding lo a report on cultural and S<'tc.'Ollfic resources in the county, said any artifacts or fosstls found become the property O( the C'OUnl y. And they decided lo h1r<' a specialist in archeolORY to direct the fossil-findln~ effort Board Chairman Tom Riley said the plan starts a process that wlll permit future generations •<to learn about our prehistoric past." Supervisor Ralph Clark said he b'9lieves it unfair for county ceneral funds lo pay for the pre· aervaUon etrort. Spreading the cost to builders would be more equitable, he su.gesled. Supervisor Phil Anthony cau- tioned against increasing build- 111 fees saying county residents already face ·•runaway costs or !lousing." But. George Osborne. director of the county Environmental Management Agency, said his ataff is atudylog a plan lo reduce building permit fees. Adding ln the cost or trclleological recovery, he said, will make the reduction less, but tt still will be cul in the near l•ture. ROl.i TOP DESK ROLLED WITH AD So. your brother-in-law's de- ~ded to open an office and he ,.-ants to "borrow'' your desk. ~ow what do you do? t .. l IOld it with a classified ad." • HeN's the ad that did the trlck for Ulla Colt.a Mesa man: ~ Eicec desk w /roll out draw • ~ llX.lMtUX U JOU have eomethlna to sell. Hll MW6'18. Th Daily Ptklt ii ua. best place to advertl ,. center" here. officials said . "We're keeping them on ice," said an official. Two hours before the deadline at 2 p.m. local lime (5 a.m. PDT>. several children were br'ought to the windows or the school and cried out in unison, "We want to stay alive, Van Agt.'' Andries van Agt is the Dutch justice minister and the lop gov- ernment strategist in dealing with the gunmen. The Asian militants -six at the school and seven ln the train -spoke with senior Dutch of- ficials by telephone. This morn- ing, they rejected a government appeal for r~lease of the children and repeated theit threat to shoot hostages. But Dutch Premier Joop den Uyl was cautiously hopeful. "It looks as if there is a certain basis for conversation develop- ing,'· he told reporters. A Justice Ministl'y spokeswoman said, ··we are con- t 1 nu ing steady negotiations because we hope there is still a chance that the terrorists will surrender the children." The gunmen, members of an immigrant community from the former Dutch colony of the South Moluccan Islands, now part of In- donesia, were demanding re· <SttTERROR, PageA2) 3 MUSKEI'EERS RAID PIZZERIA. LA MESA <AP> -Al the stroke of midnight. three men in fencing masks and waving long- bladed knives swung lustily Into a p1ua parlor on Lake Murray Boulevard. They made off with $35 early today. SACRAMENTO (AP) -Some of th~ messages are risque, some are fUMy and a few are out- rageous or unprintable. But the warm spring sun has brought T -shirt weather lo California acain, and thousands or young women are blossoming as walking billboard.s. A state bank report says it quickly sold out its promotional T-shirts with the message, "When you're not the biggest, you'd better be good." Women bought most or them. and reorders keep coming in, a bank official said. That T-shirt follows the newest trend of putting part or the message n the front, and the punch line on lbe back. Other popular T-shirts have a vari~ty or messages: -On the drought: "Conserve water. Shower with a friend." -For dieters: "Caution: Starving dieter. May bite if pro- voked. '' -A warning, on a tightly fit. ting, low-cul T-shirt: "Eat your heart out." ' . -.AdverU1tn1: .. Wanted: Single snen. Generous with money and affection. Liberal bank account preferred. Stable occupation. No turkey. please. Inquire within ... -Another warning: "You touch a my body, J slappa you race." -And a boast: "It's real." A Macy's department store clerk said two hot-sellers this year are T-shirts that say Water Penalties Surcharge Approved in Clemente By JACK CHAPPELL ottMO.lly PlloUQff The San Clemente City Council approved a water surcharge plan Tuesday. penalizing residents and commercial customers who don't cut 10 percent from their last year's usage. The action implementing an ordinance passed earlier will be retroactive to April I and the first bills bearing the surcharge will be mailed out in the next couple of weeks. City Manager Gerald Weeks said today. The council rejected a plan whereby all residents would have to cut water use to 90 percent or an average or all home use - 10,SOO gallons. Teachers To Picket In Laguna Lacuna Beach teachers were set to begin "informational picketing" today as their representatives met with school district negotiators in what the teachers labeled a "last ditch" attempt lo head orr an impasse in salary and working condition talks. Negotiating items include dif- ferences in salary -the teachers want a six percent hike, the dis- trict has offered three percent - class size and health benefits. The teachers earlier had declared an impasse unilateral- ly. The school board bas not and has requested additional negotiatini. Ir impasse -deadlock between the parties -occurs, an impartial state mediator could be called in to arbitrate the issue. Arbitration by the Education Employment Relations Board is advisory. The teachers could still strike while arbitration is un- derway. Instead, the cutback will be based on the actual amount used during a corresponding month last year by the residents and business establishments The vote was 3-1 in ra'.ior or the plan with Councilman Tony DiGiovanni opposed and Coun- cilman Thomas O'Keefe absent. No one opposed imposition or the surcharge as a means of en- couraging conservation. The op- position was over how the sur- charge should be figured. Col. Frank Andrews supported the averaging plan. Under it, all residents would be required to use 10 percent less than the city- wide residential average of 14 un· its, or 10,500 gallons a month. Andrews said this plan would insure that persons who were alwa)'S frugal in water use - those who began conserving last year-would not be unduly penalized. He said people who had used water excessively last year would bave an advantage this year under the other system, in that the base from which the 10 percent cutback was figured would be greater for them. Lucille Taylor disagreed. She noted that she and her husband have cut their usage 48 percent from that of last year, but are still above the city average. Mrs. Taylor said they have cut back bathing. landscape water- <See WATER, Page A2) Drug 'Phony' FBI Hunts ExtDrtioniata . RENO (AP > -The FBI was searching for extor- tionists today who escaped with a $1.Zmlllion ransom after fooling a bank executive and his wife into think· ing they had been injected with a lethal drug. Jack Keith, special agent in charge of the FBI of- fice here, said Tuesday that Reno N. Fruzza and his wife, Polly. were taken hostage Monday evening in their fashionable home in suburban Rancho Circle. Fruzza is a vice president of the First National Bank of Nevada, the state's largest. and manages the bank's downtown Las Vegas office. At least two men were involved in the scheme, in- vestigators said. Keith said that the armed intruders forced their way into the Fruzza hom e and held the couple hostage for more than 12 hours. The Fruzzas were kept shackled to beds in separate bedrooms, but were not mistreated, he said. Keith confirmed that the Fruzzas were given in· jections Tuesday and were told they had been given a deadly drug and would die with.in eight hours if they did not follow instructions. Parents Want Levine Back at Fairview By Sl'EVE MITCHELL Of the O•llY l'llot Sl•fl A small group of parents and community members are calling for the resignation of top State Department of Health officials in the wakeofthelirlng last week of Fairview .state Hospital Director Michael Levine. The group of about two dozen members calling themselves the Parent Advocacy Committee also is demanding an lnvestlga· tion of tM department of health and the reinstatement of Levine as executive director of the 1,600-patient facility in Costa Mesa. They say charaes that Levine wu "bruh and abrasive" are true, and they clalm "that's the -only way be could &et bis pro- grams imtigated. • • Tbose charges were leveled aaalnst Levine by MatUlew J . Guglielmo, president of tbe (See LEVINE, P••e Al) ..Calitomla glrls bave warmer bodies," and "I'm a virgin. but this is a very old T-shirt." "You wouldn't believe all the little old ladies who come in and buy that one.'' she said. Men's T-shirts have fewer written messages. Tt\e most popular men ·s seller is covered with a picture of a smillng, swimsuit-clad Farrah FawceU·Majors. "But the shirt doesn't say anything," a sales clerk said. "I guess it doesn •t have to," she added. v Amin 'Finn' About Visit NAIROBI, Kenya (AP> -Ugandan President Idi Amin says he will definite- ly attend next month's Commonwealth con- ference in Londdn "whether they (tbe British) like it or not," Uganda radio reported today. British government sources said in London on Thursday that Amin will not be allowed into BritaJn for the summit. British n ewspapers, members of Parliament and public figures de- manded Amin be barred from entering Britain because of alleged atrocities and human rights violations in his East African nation. ' SC Police Sift Goods Froni Van ~ . San Clemente police seized thousands of dollars of property believed to be stolen after a man sped away from a service station 'tuesday without paying for $11 in gasoline. Darryl L. Deluz, 30, of San Bernardino was booked on suspi- cion of theft and possessing s tolen property. Today police detectives sifted through a mound or stereo equip- ment, a televisfon, professional camera equipment, numerous watches and a large quantity of jewelry seized when Police Of- ficer ~vid Hartman stopped a van driven by Deluz in San Juan Capistrano. Officer Hartman had pursued the vehicle after a report from Snyders Union, 2360 S. El Camino Real, that a petty theft of gasoline had occurred. A vehicle description was given by the at· tendanL Police Lt. Ray Hartman, de· tectlvedivision commander. said the police officer noticed the amount or property when he looked in the van to see if there were other occupants in the veld· cle. Deluz told police he was rnov· ing to Los Angeles. I · Police noted a large quantity of jewelry wu wrapped up in a sock and other property was car· ried in a pillow C8$e. Lieutenant Hartman said the department will now have to try and trace the property and would be contacting other law enforce- ment aaeneies. Coast Weather Sli1bt chance o( sprinkles or li&bt showers tonlaht. Decreasl61 cloudi· neaa 'lbursday morning. Lowa t.onl1bt 52 to 57. Hlgbs niuraday 08 to 74. 2 DAIL V PILOT l/SC a ~urfers lilie tile Weather Oranae Coaat surfers woke up to some l)}ce wnves this morning up and down the coastline, but weather forecasters say ~t won't last. , The southwest swell is being generated by a stor m about three days ago ofr South America. Thal 1storm has since blown out• aod .weather watchers sec about 18 hours of Sood surf along the Orange Coast. Los Angeles Weather Service forecaster Art Elchelbereer said south facing beaches will benefit the most from the South American gift. Newport Beach lifeguard Capt. Bud Belshe said a lot of wetsuit clad surfers were enjoyin~ three to five foot waves at 48th Street this morning He said there are 17 seconds between sets. "which indicates the storm came from pretty far away." Belshe added that a light wind is keeping the waves semi· glassy. Huntington Beach lifeguards report surf in the three to six foot range, but say the surf is not that great. "We've got long lines that are closing out.·• explained lifeguard Steve Davidson. Ile said there! were very few surfers out late this mornini:. adding that a strong side current. along with 63 degree w atcr. 1s d1scourag10~ s wimmers San Clementc lifeguard Ri ch Chew said surf in his area is ex- cellent. with two to four foot sets from the pier to Trafalgar Street. La~una Bc~1ch lifeguards said the south\\~st s" ell is not helpmj! their south facing beaches. but added that lhl' mcomm~ tide this <ifternoon m1~ht help that s1tua· tion. · · 1 t '11 get mOH' l'OnsislC'nt down bv Brooks and Thalia Streets b\ this aftHnoon." predicted lifeguard D1l·k .Johnson He s<tid 1waves ~H'rc• bre<1k1ng in th<' four to five foot r;.ingc this morning Cal, Burglar Puss'Yfoots Off With C<Uh A cat burglar crept into a sleeping man's h<>droom cmd re- moved $240 cash from his dresser accordin~ to u report filed Tues day with the Laguna Beach Police Department. Frank Benham of 337 Cypres:i Qrive told officers that before re- tiring for the evening Monday, he had placed the money on his dresser and dosed the bedroom wi ndow. During the night, he got cold. got up and closed the window again. In the morning he found the money had been taken. Police believe the second fl oor wi ndow was the point of entry for .. the cat burglar Another burJtlary rl'ported Tuesday involved the theft of $735 in cash and jewelry from three persons ul 465 Brooks Slree\, Laguna Beach Victims "e re I 1Stl•d Ms Peggy Hunt. D. Paul t"inkleman and James Boslc~ Entry was believed to have been throuJ{h Mn unlocked door. A .3.57 magnum Colt Troo~r revolver valued at $300 was re ported stolen from Charles Spencer. 976 Nona St.. La~una Beach. Thc theft ()('Curred during a movr from the rt>s1dence, police sa1c1. Charges Sought SAN DIEGO CAP> School Supt. T<>m Goodman i~ asking approval of the Board of Eduea- tlon to file unfair lubor practice charges against the San Diego Teachers Association. because It has sla~cd n sickout, work· slowdown and threatened to strike. °"ANOE COAST l -.c DAILY PILOT TtwO<•-C""'' Oa1ty P!lo! 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'~ lly •• ,,, .. u ,. ,_11111, lty "1111 ...... -1111•. Miii!.,., ---.u 11_1..,.,, .... Cu r b Lifted l rVine <;ompany Sale O K'd D•lly ~fi.t Stiff ""°t• STRAIGHT A Valedlctorlen Miller Cap, Gown Tune Set Toni~t Saddleback College's eighth gr aduating c.lass will be present- ed with Associate in Arts degrees tonight at6o'clock in commence· ment exercises on the campll:) athletic field. A total of 407 sophomores. tn· eluding 215 women and 192 men. will receive diplom as. culminat ing two-year courses of s tudy at the Mission Viejo school. The class valedictorian. who earned straight A's during her stay at Saddleback. 1s 34-year-old history ma1or Marjorie Lynn Miller of Mission Viejo Mrs. Miller. who is married and has two children, said she de· cided to go to college'bccause It was something she was unable to do when she was youn~er .. Sad dleback offers <t fantastic op- portunity to anyone 1n the area,·· shc said. The top graduate, who s aid she spends many hours with her studies. said history always came easy to her She feels sht· "has an advantagt• over the IR year-olds because J"v c lived more of it <history J than they have." Renecling the composition of the community it sen l'S. ranging from young families to retirees, the college's graduates range in age from 18 to 66. There are also three married couples. a mother and daught<'r. a father and daughter and a ~·~ ler a nd brother gr.tdual1ng toeetber. Besides Mrs. Miller. 49 or the students will be graduated with honors. having maintained ~t le as t B-plus avera~es during the tr studies. The commencement C<'remonies will be~in with thf' pledge to the fla~. led by Geno Bokosk;,. student bod) pr<•s1clt•nt Trustee Ro~rt L. Price "111 of fer the invocation <Jnd \\ elcom111J.( remarks ~ill b<' mJdt· by Robert Lombardi. college presidt'nt The commencl'm<'nl arldrf's-. " 11l cons1st of <1 program cntlllt•d · A Collegl' CollaJ:t>. · to be prr• st•ntt'd by Araduahn~ fon•n-.1cs students C~tht>rtnl' Gai.h and G.1n K<'v Board-of tru,tct•s l'rc..,ulent Larry Taylor .ind Or Do' ll· ~h'Kmne}'. dean of acad~m11: protrams. will present d1ptom..ts and mtrodue<' thf' J.!radual«''\ \luc;u· \\tll bt.• pr" 1dt'd h> lhl· col 11·~,. c·o nc<.'rt I .ind und,•r tht· d1 rectmn of T<'rr J .'iiewman The laq:cst contingent among lhc' j?raduates art' studl·nt' from M1ss1on VieJo, followed by El Toro. San Clement<.'. San Juan Capistrano and Tustin There arc also f(raduates from such places as Bi~ Rl'ar Lake. Ca mp Pend le ton . Lake EI s i nor<·. Louisiana. Texas and Oregon. A •ewer pennit re~trlctton placed on the city o f San Clemente by the San Dieao Regional Waler Quality Control loard 10 months ago was lifted this week. City Manager Gerald Weeks SDid today he feels the lifting of the sewer permit restriction will favorably in!1uence new building in the city, although the city still had 151 permits left lo Issue even under the restriction. Weeks said that on the basis of calls to his office by lending in- 11tituuons. there had been reluc- tance to make loans for new con- struction when the issue was clouded by the permit ban. ··or course. we have ex- perienced phenomenal growth in :spite of the sewer connection • Fro•PageAJ LEVINE •.. Fairview Families and Friends, Inc .. an organization whose ex· ccutive board supported the fir- ing. Gugli elmo called the Purent Advocacy Committee •·a small offshoot (of the FFT) making a lot of noise," and added that the group could not get along w1th his organization. ... But members of the advocacy group think of themselves as a watchdog organization trying to promote positive changes at the hospital for the mentally re· larded. Betty· Lombardo of Anaheim. who has two sons at F airview, s aid Levine achieved many con- strucll\'e improvem ents for the developmentally disabled during his eight month tenure as direc- tor. Kathy Boka. or Laguna Beach. whose child died at Fairview five years ago, said Levine "looked into problems at the hospital without going through all the state red tape. He was after re- sult:>" The ~roup, headed by Ruth Stiers of Costa Mesa, outlined pro- jects and goals that they claim were set by Dr. Levine, adding that they fear these projects might go by the wayside under the new administration. They said Levine was tr.' ing to Place patients in home~ on th<.' hospital grounds to pn·p•Hc· them for the transition to the out side world Dropped the u s e of psychotropic drugs at the hospital. "They're no longer pop- pmg pills for behavior:· Mrs Stiers !iaJd. Attempted to implement a h ospital aide program so psychiatric technicians could providl' duties oth er than custodial care. Council Sets Budget Study Capital improvements and plannmg department allocati will be reviewed tonight. as n Juan Capistrano councilmen on- tmue their study of the city's re- vased five.year budget. Tonieht 's study session is . cheduled to begm at 7 p.m. in t•o unc1l chambers. located in the My office building, 32400 Paseo Adelanto. Councilmen also are scheduled to interview Linda Dunn and David Peace, the two finalists for a scat on the city par ks and recreation commission. The in- terviews will be conducted in public. Fired General Says War Seen Likely From Korea Pullout WASHINGTON CAP ) -The general whom President Carter reassigned for criticizing ad· ministration policy on Korea testified today that North Korea is bullclina up its might and be is convinced Carte r 's plan to withdraw U.S. ground forces would lead to war. Maj. Gen. John K. Singlaub. whom Carter fired as chief ot stalf of U.S. forces in Korea for crittclzing the withdrawal plan, told a House Armed Services subcommittee his fear or war is based on new intelligence of the North Korean buildup . U.S. lntelUgence discovered this year that the North Koreans hive lncre•sed their number of tank.a &om 500 to 2.000 the put lour or five year&, the general testJfted. Tbe Keneral whO ll awaJUrig rell&lsnment b7 th Arm)', Uld that In addlUon to th•~North KorHn tncruse in comb11' •hiP9 and jft npiers that bu alnidy been publicly reported. COD· tradictlng a Congressional Budget Office 1tudy, Singlaub t~stilled that North Korea's mllitary power is sup~rior to South Korea's now, even with the U.S. forces there. Rep. Samuel S. Stntton ()).. N. Y. >. chairman of th4t subcofll· mltiee before wbtda Singlaub teatirled, uked if he was saying U.S. and Korean military of- ficers overwhelmingly agree the U.S. Withdrawal wW ultima~ely leadtowar. "That is absolutely correct.•• tbe seneral repUed. Later, he WU asked if be WU saylna It mllbt lead to war or It wUl lead lo war. Singlaub replied that Korean military omc;ers "IUlte fJat.. out. uneqwvocallr that wben U.S. lorcea are withdrawn North Kor~an PtesJd~t Kim It Surat wUl au.ck and 1 tald that trom a military point ot vtew l aaroe with that." ' ban." Weeks said, noting the city has had S20 million in new build- ine stnce\Jan. l. He said he was aware of several projects being held back until the sewer problem was re· solved. While lifting the restriction on sewer connection permits. the re· gional board did retain other features of the cease and desist order slapped on the city last July. The order still prevents the ci- ty from using reclaimed waler, effluent produced by the treat- m ent plant. for ground water recharge in the San Mateo basin. and it keeps pressure on the city to participate in the South East Regional Reclamation Authority <S ERRA> a multi-agency, multi- million dollar sewage collection, treatment and disposal system. The board will consider lifting of the cease and desist order in late September after the city completes an environmental im pact report on the SER RA pro· ject and completes chlorination equipment modifications in the treatment plant. O~oly Pilot Stall PllOlo Oaamfwr Chief .\1 a x i n e M a u r 1 c e . n e" .nanager of the San .Ju~m Capistrano Chamber ol Co mmerce ..... 111 be 1n traduced at Thur .... da\·s me('tmg of tht· ('hamber: at the El Adohe Hc:-.taurant. 31891 Camino Capistrano Wlnnn- Judith Beggs of San Juan Capistrano was presented a Sl.000 scholarship to study nursing. The Mission Com- munity Hospital awarded 27 student scholarships. Story Page A9. Frona Page A J TERROR ••• lease of 21 jailed countrymen and a jumbo jet night, with host ages, from Amsterdam to a n un- disclosed destination. Some South Moluccans are serving terms in Dutch jails for using political violence in the past in fruitless attempts to force the Dutch government to help them win independence from Indonesia for their homeland. .. H you dare not to meet our de- mands .. we will not hesitate or bluff to shoot down a number of hostages for your pleasure,·· the terrorists said in a letter to Dutch authorities that was released Tuesday. The government refused to dts· cuss any deals unle~s thl' "l'hookh1ldren were rclt•ascd first. Concert Tonight At Clemente High San Clemente High School will present a spring concert torught m the Triton Center on campus. under the direction of Richard Dastrup. choir director. T he concert is scheduled to begin at 7:30 p .m . The school's madrigal, a cappella and girls' glee ensembles will perform at the free concert. The high school 1s located at 700 Ave. Pico. Heritage captures a great Western European tradition for today's interiors The sources? Designs by the thousands from the vast, gorgeously varied output or Western European furniture makers. The translators? Famous HetUage1t craftsmen. The results? Our Brittany TM occasional collection. Perfect.ion In leafy-heart cherry, pecan and EnsUsh brown oak burl veneers ... with severa.1,xtraordinary flniabes. The tlrne to see it all! This very week I SUMM ER SALE By TOM BARLEY Ottt-0.lly l"lltC SUff MeetJ.ne in San Francisco late Tuesday, dlrec.tora of the James Irvine Foundatlon authorized the sale of the Irvine Company for "37.4 million lo a consortium that will rename the company Taubman-Allen·lrvine Jne. The acUon by a unanimous foundation boaM came just four daya after tho TA! croup outbid Mobtl ~auon. the firm that was once on the vetae of a~ulr· 101 the Orange Coullty land com· paoy for S200 million. Irvine Company holdings tn- c lude 80,000 acres in Orange County , 6 ,000 ac res in California's Imperial Valley and 101,000 acres known as the Flying D Ranch in Gallatin and Madison Counties between Bozeman and Butte, Montana. Foundation directors noted that the transfer of title bu been a ppr.oved by Orange County Superior Court Judge James F. Judge. He commented last Fri· day that he thought $337.4 miJUon represented fair market. value £or the Irvine Company. Foundation directors said they expect to close the deal with TAI within the next60days. The sale will then go to Judge Judge for final approval. Fro• Page A I WATER ••• ing, lauodering, and have in- stalled consen·ation plumbing. Even so. they used 16 units o! water in April. She said they have extensive gardens ar ound the home. Councilman B. Patrick Lane led the fight on the council ror the plan which s uccessfull y passed. He said it would be unfair lo impose the residential average on citizens because of the high number of apartments and con- dominiums in the city. These, with limited grounds and often with only two occupants, would result in a low city-wide average. he said This low average would make it unfair to families, or the owners of single family homes. Lane won the s upport or Donna Wilkinson and Coun c ilman William Walker. Tbe city manager noted water use ln the city is down about 20 percent. I NOW IN PROGRESS PAO~ESSIONAL INTERIOR DESIGN WITHOUT 094.IOATl()N • COMfOATA9l.I ,AlllKINQ • CONV!NIUtT "NA,.CINO 151' NORTH MAIN • SANTA ANA•S•1~391 f11woer. Wed,,•H•v Tnu1101y •"d Sa111101y t .3010 & 30 Mono.-y 1110 9 • F 110~ t .SO tot \ I I • , • I I 4. ' ' -. Orange Coast EDITION ·Topy;s ~lo Ing N.Y. S toeks 1 VOL. 70, NO. 145, 4 SECTIONS, "8 PAGES ORANGE CO UN TY, CALIFORNIA WEDNESDAY, MAY 25, 1977 N TENCENTSl T~Shirt Slogans Spicy. Spring Put-on SACRAMENTO (AP> -Some or the messages are risque, some are funny and a few are out· r ageows or unprintable. But the warm spring sun has brought T·shirl weather to Caiifomia again. and thousands o( yoWlg women are blossoming as walking billboards. A state bank report says it quickly sold out its promotional T-shirts wlth the message, "When you're not the biggest, you 'd better be good." Women bought most or them, and reorders keep coming in, a bank official said. • Thal T·shlrt follows the newest trend of putting part or the message on the front, and the punch line on the back. Other popular T-shirts have a variety or messages: -On the drought: .. Conserve water. Shower with a friend." -For dieters: "Caution: Starving dieter. May bite i! pro- voked.'' -A warning, on a tightly fit. Una. low-cut T·sbirt : "Eat your heart out:• -Advertising: "Wanted: Single men. Generous with money and affection . Liberal bank account preferred. Stable (See T·SIDllTS, Page A2) 'Life Witlwut Purpose' Nixon:·No Fair Trial .,.......,... .. GETTING HER MESSAGE ACROSS, FRONT ANO BACK Sun Brings T-Shlrt Weather to Cattfornle WASHINGTON CAP > - Former President Nixon says he would have preferred "the agony of a trial" to accepting a pre· sidentlal pardon that he knew made him look guilty. But, he said, he was persuaded "there was no chance whatever I could get a fair trial." Irvine Co. Sale Okayed Consor tium to Pay $337.4 Million By TOM BARIJEY Ot , .. D••lv Pilot Sl•ll Meeting in San Francisco lcite Tuesday. directors of the James Irvine Foundation authorizc.'CI the sale of the Irvine Company for $337.4 million to a consortium lhat will rename the company Taubman·All en-Irvine Inc. The action by a unanimous foundation board came just four days after the TAI group outbid Mobil Corporation, the firm that was once on the verge of acquir· Ing the Orange County land com· pany for $200 m il hon. Irvine Company holdJngs m· elude 80,000 acres in Oran~e Cou~ty , 6,000 ac r es in California's Imperial Valley and 101,000 acres known as the Flying D Ranch in Gallatin and Madison Counties between Bozeman and Butte, Montana. Foundation directors noted that the transfer of title has been ?.pproved by Orange County Superior Court Judge James F. Judge. He commented last Fri- day that be thought $337.4 million represented fair market value for the Irvine Company. Foundation directors said they expect io cJ05e the deal with TAI wiUun the next 60 days. The sale will then go to Judge Judge for final approval. Irvine heir ess Joan Irvine Smith, who filed the lawsuit that sparked a bidding battle for the company, will be one of the direc- tors of the new corporation. Mrs. Smith and nine other in· vestors provided the capital to back an offering of $40.10 a share for the Irvine Company stock. Mobil was on the point of ac- quiring the company for $24 a share when Mrs. Smith took legal action two years ago. Other principals in TAI include Southern California r eal estate developer Donald Bren, Detroit developer Alfred Taubman, Wall Street financier Charles Allen and auto magnate Henry Ford II. And, Nixon said in a television interview to be shown tonight, he regarded former Vice President Spiro T. Agnew as "an honest man .•. a courageous man" who made mistakes. (Channels 11, 8 and29at7:30p.m .) The inte rview with David Frost. fourth in a'3eries, reached Amin 'Finn' About Visit NAIROBI , -Ugandan P ident Jdi Amin says he w· 1 definite· ly attend nex month's Co mmonwea lth con· f e r e n ce in London "w hether th ey (the British) like It or not," Uganda radio reported today. British government sources said in London on Thursday that Amin will not be allowed into Britain for the summit. British ne wspapers, me mbers of Parliament and public figur es de· manded Amin be barred from entering Brita in be caus e o f alleged atrocities and human rights violations in his East African nation. its emotional high point when the discussion turoed to Nixon leav· ing the White House in disgrace in August 1974. "Resignation mea nt life without purpose as far as I was concerned," Nixon said. "No one in the world. and no one in our his· tory could know bow I fell. Noone can know bow it feels to resign the presidencyofthe-UnitedStates. · .. Is that punishment enough?'' Nixon said with strong feeling, ··oh, probably not." To the question, "Did you, in a sense, feel that resignation was worse than death?" Nixon said: "In some ways I didn't reel it in terms that th e popular mythologists about this era write; that, well, resignation is' so terrible that I better go out and fall on a sword, or take a gun and shoot myself •.. I wasn't •bout to do that. I never think in those terms, suicidal terms, death wish and all that. That's all just. Cost: $150,000 just bllllk." Without mentioning them by name, Nixon spoke bitterly about reporters Bob Woodward and Carl Bernstein, authors of the book, "The Final Days." With tight·lipped anger, he called their book "contemptible journalism," while admitting be had read only stories about the work rather than the book itself. .. AU I say is Mrs. Nixon r ead it and her stroke came three days later," Nixon said. "I didn't want her to read it because I knew the kind of trash it was and the kind or trash they are ... "This doesn't indicate that that caused the stroke, because the doctors don't know what caused the stroke," the former president added, "but it sure didn't help." Nixon almost spat out: ''I have nothing but utter contempt. And l will never forgive them. Never." In the book, the two authors <see NIXON, Page A2) N-M Management Granted Pay Hike 160 Hostages Still Face Deftth The 7S-members of the Newport-Mesa Unified School District management team were granted pay raises totaling $1SO,OOO Tuesday. Heading the list of raises granted by school trustees was district Superintendent John Nicoll whose $43,100 salary will go to $45,000 on July 1. by about one percent, which will make the actual pay increases about four percent. Avalon IJmits Water Supply ' ASSEN. Th<' Netherlands <AP> ' -Captive childr<'n chanted "We want to stay alive'" today as South Moluccan C'xtremi!>l~ let one deadlint' (or death pass but again threate ned to start killing more than 160 host uge-; 1r thl' Dutch governmC'nt did not meet their demands Officials said .. sl<'adv n<'got1n lions" were continuing \.\1th two government psyt·h1.11ri ... ts as .middlemen. For two days, l"o bands of gunmen have held 105 <·h1ldren and six teachers at J v11lagC' school in n<.•arby BoH•nsmilclr and at least 5S host a~C's 1n a h1 jacked train stC1ppl'd in the• mid die of open pastun·l:rncl 10 mil e., north of here Four of 21 South Molurcan prisoners whose freedom the ter rorists have demund<'d WNC' brought to the official "crisis center" here. officials said "We're keeping them on IC('," said an official. Two hours before the deadline ::it 2 p.m. local time <S a.m POT J. sever al children WE'r e brought to the windows or the .,chool and cned out in unison. ·w<' want to stay ahve, Van Agt. .. Andnt•s \·an A~t 1s the Dutch justice minister and the top gov· emment strategist in dealing "1th the gunmen The Asian militants -six at the school and seven in the train spoke with senior Dutch of. facials by telephone. This morn· in~. they rejected a government Jppeal for release of lhe children and repeated their threat to shoot hostages. But Dutch Prt'mtt>r Joop den Uy! was cautiously hopeful. "It looks as lfthere is a certain basis for conversation develop· ROU TOP DESK ROUED WITH AD So. your brother·ln·law's de· c1ded to open an office and he wants to "borrow" youc desk. Now what do you do? ''I sold 1t with a classified ad." Here's the ad that did the trick for this Costa Mesa man: f,xC'C' dC'c;k w /roll out drawer. SSS xxx·xxxx IC you have something to sell, call 642·5678. The Daily Pilot is the best place to advertise. ing, ''he told reporters. A Ju s ti ce Mini s try spokeswoman said , "We are con· tinuing steady negotiations because we hope there is still a chance that the terrorists will surrender the children.'' The gunmen, members o( an Im migrant community from the former Dutch colony of the South Moluccan Islands, now part of In· ·donesia. were demanding re· lease o( 21 Jailed countrymen and a jumbo jet flight. with hostages, from Ams terda m lo an un· disclosed destination. Some South Moluccans are serving terms in Dutch jails for using political violence in the past In fruitless attempts to force the Dutch government to help them win independence from Indonesia for their homeland. Nicoll and his deputy, Dr. Norman Loats were both granted four.year contracts by the school board, with salaries to be negotiated each year. Loats and the other members or the management team, which includes school principals and assistant principals as well as districtwide department heads and employes, were given raises that will total five percent. That includes fringe benefits. District Administrative Assis- tant Jean Harmon explained the administrative pay package is identical to one that teachers will receive in the coming fiscal year. She said the district cost of maintaining existing fringe benefits such as health and den· tat care, is expected to increase While Orange County officials ponder water shortages, just of- f coast at Avalon, Catalina Island. shopkeepers and resi- d ents are confronted today with drastic water rationing. Avalon water users have been ordered to cut back water con· sumption by SO percent. <Related story today PageA3) · · Island storekeepers, about to enter their big tourist season, see the one·half cut in allowable water use as a catastrophe. "We have only one industry here and that's tourism," said Gregor W. Milne, president of the <.;atalina Island Businessmen~ Association. "I am one of 150 s mall businessmen here who can not make it a full year unless we have tourism." City Services Shift Plagues Council Coast Weather Slight chance o f s prinkles or light showers tonight. Decreasing cloudi· nest Thursday morning. Lows tonight S2 to 57. Hiabs Thursday 68 to 74. INSIDE TODAY BeUef in gator. a.Sd muat ·be the rNaOR why two brother! care for 10,000 of the brutea. Th4t . and U/e·long . alf ection. Ando bustling turtle bu.rinea&. SneageA.I. By JOANNE REYNOLDS Ot ,.,. O.lly ~;i.c Sl•ff Newport Beach city coun· cilmen are faced with a problem that is a combination jigsaw puzzle and chess game in trylng to relocate city services. The components of their pro- blem are: -The former church on Balboa Island. Jt now houses the city library's technical services, but is to be turned into a park in the coming fiscal year. -The former Parks, Beaches and Recreation building on the Balboa Peninsula. It c urrently house~ the ·voluntary Action Center (VAC) and a related senior citizens group, RSVP, which could be displaced by the library's technical services operation. -The former city council chamber at city hall. It coukt be uaed . by teclmlcal servlcd or could be turned into a lecture hall for city arts Commlulon ~ grams. -'Ibe former cbureh on the Ensign Vlew Park 1lto in Newport Hellhts. It is being eyed ror a variety of uses, lnclud.int lhe arta commiulon, PB and R program,, VAC, technical Hl'Vlces or a senlor cttls.ea center annex. -The yet.to-be built Newport Center Library. It could get an additional 4,000 square feet to house technical services and other library services. -1be senior cttizens center in Corona del Mar. Jt could, when it occupies the full aite, house VAC. Councilmen have been con· templat.lng moving the technical· services to the peninsula building for the past month in order to make good on a promise to Balboa Island residents that their long.sought community park would get started on the church site on Agate Avenue. The move bad the blessing ot the Parks, Beaches and Recrea· lion Commission. Orflcials of V AC, who pay $1 a year for the use of the peninsula building, were IOl'1')' to leave. but planned DO opposlUan. Since theo, commwiity reac· lion has arown aroong peninsula rnidmtl and Monday, the PB and R comm!.._ reversed Its eatUer ded.sklft Ud asked lhe couneU to let VAC remain. BObb1 I.Ovell, pm.ldent ~ tbe Cenliil' Newport Beach Com· mun.lty AasociaUon. backed the com on. Sbe 1aic.t bW boerd of direc:ton la ii> favor of the (SffSllD'T. Pa1eA2) WHEltE OH WHI R!?-Newport Beach city COUridlmen are being askod to di&play the wildOm of Solomon ln decldlo& what agencies should be boUsed in these scat· tered inunlclpal facillUes : (1) Senior t Cltlzem Center, (2) a former church OD BalbOi blanCi, (3) the lormer PB and a beadqua.tten, (4) former c.ll)' cowicU chambers, (5) fotmer cbUrch at &Wp View Park and (8) new cltf library. .t2 DAILY PILOT N w~ M!Y ~. 1on Urine BCU!ked Parehts;_Seek · 3 Resignfitions By STEVE MITCHELL Of ttle 0•11'1' tl'li.t Steff A srnall eroup of parequ and community members are ~aJUng for the reUgnaUon of top State Department of Health otticlals In tbe wake or the firing last week of F.airview State Hospital Director Michael Levine. The group or about two dozen members caHlng themselves the Parent Advocacy Committee also is demandinc an investiga- tion of the department of health and the rein.statement of Levine a& executive director of the General Warns of Korea ·War WASHlNGTON (AP > The general whom President Carter reassigned for criticizine ad· ministration policy on Korea testified today that North Korea is building up its might and he Is convinced Carter's plan to withdraw U.S. ground forces would lead to war Maj. Gen. John K . Singlaub. whom Carter fired as chief ot staff of U.S. forces In Korea for criticizing the withdrawal plan. told a House Armed Services s ubcommittee his fear of war is based on new intelligence of the North Korean buildup. U.S. intelliirence discovered this year that the North Koreans have increased their number of tanks from 500 lo 2,000 the past four or five years, the general testified. The general. who is awaiting reassignment by the Army, said that in addition to the North Korean increase in combat ships and jet fighters that has already been publicly reported. Con- t~ adicting a Congressional Budget Office s tudy. Singlaub testified lh•1t North Korea's military power 1s superior to South Korea's now. even with the U.S. forces there. Rep. Samuel S. Stratton (0. N. Y. >. chairman of the subcom. mittee before which Sanglaub testified, asked 1f he was 1.ayang lJ.S. and Korean military of- ficers overwhelmingly agree the U.6 withdrawal "111 ultimately lead to war. "That 1s absolutely correct," the general replied Later. hL' wus asked if he wus saying 1t might lead lo war or 1\ will lead to war Singlaub replied that Korean military orfic'ers ··state flat out, unequivocally that when U .S. forces arc withdrawn North Korean President Kim ll Sun~ will attack and I s aid that Jrom a military point of view I agree with that." Meanwhile, Carter's two !->pecial envoys, Phthp C. Habib and Gen. George S. Brown. told President Park Chung Hee today of plans to withdraw 33,000 American troops from Korea m four to five years. Park did not welcome the plan, which was announced earher m \\'ashington, but agreed to ac t•ept it as America's "established policy," an aide said. lie said Park asked for American help m strengthening South Korea·i. military Habib, undl'rsetrl!iurv or state, and Brown. cha1rma11 or thl' Joint C'hicfs of Stuff, mt>l w1\h Park for thrN' hour!\ Blast Kills Two OAKLAND (AP>-Two main· tenance men were killed Tues- day In an explosion that ripped the win~ off a parked transport plane at Oakland International's old North Field. airport officials said. OAANOECOAIT N DAILY PILOT nw Or•....-(&1\I cuu. r 1•04 .,01•n1•f\u h. ,,,,., l)l"fdUWHf.-\ Pt•U 1\p"t»l1""'°t>y t ... /)1'•"'0f> CM·\tf'vbthPU"'QComo•n• ~'_."-OU~,., .. ~l\ltofO ~f\dlY thfOVQI'\ ,,1.4W for (~\t• ....... ~ ........ ~,, ft••t f\, """'''"01°" .. _,., ,.Min t•lf\ V•ll••· H•ln• \•fdtto.t-U: V•11t• •Nf UO'IU"•&o«~ '>Ovl~Co<l\t "'''""'-°""'"" ~·!~~~~·!:'~~::,'~, ~ ~~~. ~:: $t'9lt CO\t• MU• C•Hforn1_,.,.,, ll•IM•tN.W.... P<nl0.111 •t>G Pullll"- Jull •. t•'-'t Vko li're\ldont -0.-•I ,,._ T'IMMHICenlt Edu .. ~tA.M•._.... ~n .. lf1tld41ot Of#lflM, .._ 11-P !Nfl AWICMll ~IMIOl"9 £dllon 1,600-patient facility io Costa Meea. They say charges that Levine was "brash and abrulve" are true, and they claim "that's the only way he could get his pro· grams instigated." Those charges were leveled against Levine by Matthew J . CugUelmo, preside.t1t of the Fairview Families and Friends, lnc .. an organization whose ex- ecutive board supported the fir- ing. Guglielmo called the Parent Advocacy Committee ·•a small offshoot (of the FFT) making a lot of noise." and added thal the group could not get along with h1~ organization. But members of the advocacy group think of themselves as a watchdog organization trying to promote positive changes at the hos pital for the m entally re- tarded. Betty Lombilrdo of Anaheim. who has two SOM· at Fairview, said Levine achieved many con· structive improvements for the developmentally disabled during his eight month tenure as direc· tor. Kathy Boka. of Laguna Beach. whose child died al Fairview five years ago, said Levine ''looked into problems at the hospital without going through all the slate red tape. He was after re- sults." The group. headed by Ruth Stiers of Costa Mesa, ovtlined pro- Jects and goals that they claim were set by Dr. Levine, adding that they fear. these projects might go by the wayside under the new administration From Page Al SHIFT ... agency staying because of the services it provides to the com· munity, especially to senior citizens who are members of F AC-supported RSVP <Retired Seniors Volunteer Program >. The alternative to using th<' peninsula building would be to move technica) services into the old city council chambers, but Librarian Bradley Simon noted that the Balboa Island location has about 2.400 square feel and the old chambers only have 1,350 s quare feet, making a ti~hl squeeze for the employes ~ho process new books and repair old ones. In addition. members of thl' city·s arts comm1ss1on are look 1ng for a facility to use for lee t11res and performrng arts pro· grams and have been eyin~ the old council chambers as well a:- the church at Ensil'n Vie~ Park By the time testimony \\ as con eluded, the park s ite at ChH Drive and El Modena Avenut• had hffn suggestl'd as a ncv. home for the technical sl'rnt·c~. VAC and the arts pro(i(rams Ht>wever. that site also ha'! been considered for r<'creallon programs run by the PB and R department as well as a tern porary annex for senior c1t1zen programs until the full Corona del Mar facility open!> an 1978 Councdwoman Lucille Kuehn. defeated last year in her attempt to g<'t the city council to build a l.S.000-square foot library at Newport Center. su~gestcd that part of the problem could t)c> solved by going back to the larger hhrary instead of the 10.000-square foot 'ltructure now planned. When a reprcwntat1ve oC the RSVP program su~,:t<'sted that room mi(i(ht be made for all of the VAC programs at the senior citizens center. counc1Jmc n called a halt to the prcx:eedlngs. They asked City Manai?er Robert Wynn to study the space and cost consideration of all of the proposals and bring his re- port back to them at their June 13 meeting. Fro• Pa~ Al l T-SHIRTS ... occupation. No turkey, please. Inquire within.'' -Another warning: "You toucha my body, 1 slappa you face." -And a boast: "Il's real." A Macy's department store clerk said two hot-sellers this year are T-shirts that say "California girls have warmer bodies," and "I'm a virgin, but this is a very old T-shirt." "You wouldn't believe all the little old ladies who come in and b\JY that one," she s&id. Men's T -shirts have fe wer written messaees. The most popular men's seller i" covered with a pictul'e ot a tnlllinf, 1wlm1ult-clad Farrah Fawcett-Majors. "But tll• abirt d n't. •lY anyt.Mni/' a sales clerk aatd. "I cuess lt doesn't hive to," she added. " -·- Loch Ness Monster? No, it's just Del Rita, a seven-year-old elephant who likes to swim. Del Rita, one of the stars of Puck's Canadian Traveling Circus, takes her daily bath in Lake On- tario near Toronto, "guarded" by the vessel Haida. She likes to submerge and use her trunk as a snorkel. WuntytoPay For Recovery Of Artifacts Or ange County government "111 pay the bill for recovering artifacts found on construction sites in unincorporated areas, supervisors decided Tuesday. They also agreed to pass the government cost on to builders by increasing building permit fees . Supervisors. responding to a report on cultural and scientific rf'sources in the county. said any artifacts or fossils found become the property of the county. And they decided to hire a specialist in archeology to direct the fossil·findin~ effort. Board Chairman Tom Riley said the plan starts a process that wtll permit future generations "to learn about our prehistoric past.'' Supervisor Ralph Clark said he believes it unfair for county general funds lo pay for the pre- serv at1on effort Spreading the cost to builders would be more equitable. ht.' suggested. S upernsor Prut Anthony cau llonect against increasing build~ ing fees saying county residents Jlready face "runaway costs of housan~ ... But George Osborne, director of the county Environmental Management Agency, said his :-taff is studying a plan to reduce hu1ldmg permit fees. Addin~ in the cosl of archcolog1cal recovery, he said. "ill make the reduction less, but 1t still wtll be cut in the near future Fro• Page A J NIXON ••• :..itd Mrs. Nixon went to the ser· 'ants quarters in search or liquor <luring the last days in the White I louse · For them lo . lake me on ,.., om.· thmg ... Nixon said. "For them to take her on, In my view, that· below the belt. But the former president con- firmed one account in the book - that the night before Nixon an· nounced his resil'natlon, he and St·crclary of Statc Henry A. Kiss· inJ(N cried and knelt in silent pray<'r ··Now, Henry, J know you and I are both alike in one way." Nixon recalled saying. •·we don't wear our religion on our s leeve. I'm a Quaker and you're a Jew and neither of us is very orthodox, but I thank both of us probably have a deeper religious sensitivity than some of those that are so loudly proclaiming it all the time." Frost: Oideither9fyouspeak? Nixon: No, not a word. That's not the Quaker fashion. Nixon said he telephoned Kiss- inger later to ask: "Why don't we Just keep that incident to' ourselves'!'' Nixon said he had made that suggestion because he felt Kissinger might have been embarrassed by the incident. Agents Hunt Blood Money Good Surfing Due To Fa~e Quickly Orange Coast surfers woke up to some nice waves this morning up and down the coastline, but weather forecasters say it won't last. The southwest swell is being generated by a storm about three days ago off South America. That storm has since blown out, and weather watchers see about 18 hours of good Surf along the Orange Coast. Los Angeles Weather Service forecaster Art Eichelberger said south facing beaches will benefit the most from the South American gifl. Newport Beach lifeguard Capt. SC Plrza Shopper Loses 4 Hub Caps A shopper at South Coast Plaza Tuesday afternoon told Costa Mesa police someone stole four hubcaps from her Cadillac Seville in the parking lot. Brynn Kelly, 223 Vista Nata, Newport Beach, said she was on· ly gone for JO minutes Tuesday when the theft occurred. Bud Belshe said a lot of wetsuit clad surfers were enjoying three to five foot waves at 48th Street this morning. He said there are 17 seconds between sets. "which indicates the storm came from pretty far away." Belshe added that a light wind is keeping the waves semi· glassy. Huntington Beach Hrcguurd:. report surf in the three to six fool range, but say ~he surf is not thal great. "We've got long lines that arc closing out." explained lifeguard Steve Davidson. He said there were very few surfers out late this morning, adding that a strong side current. along with 63 degree water, is discouraging swimmers. San Clemente lifeguard Rich Chew said surf in his area is ex- cellent. with two to four foot sels from the pier to Trafalgar Street. Laguna Beach lifeguards said the southwest swell ls not helping their south facing beaches, but added that the incoming tide this afternoon might help that situa tion. Heritage captures a great Western European tradition for today's interiors The sources'! Designs by the thousands from the vast. gorgeously varied output of Western European furniture makers The translators? Famous Hentagel'. craftsmen. The results! Our Brittany rM occasional coUcctlon. Perfection in leafy-heart che.-ry, pecan and English brown oak burl veneers. wilh several extraordinary finishes. The time to see it aJI~ This very week! SUMMER SALE Employ es Seek Pay Increase · The Newport·Mesa chapter of lhe Calltornia State Employes Assoelation la •~king a seven to 8.5 percent pay raise for t.000 non-toachina school persoMel for lhocomintfiscal year. An inch thick contract proposal went to trustees o1 the Newport. Mesa Unllied School District Tuesd~. It will be available for peN1aJ by the public at district omces bqil\llln8 Thunday. Superintendent John Nicoll re-m 1nded t.nalteea that, under col· lective bar1ainin& laws, the public ia allowed to study the coo· tract proposal•. A public hearing bas been set for June 14 so lhat district residents can tell trustees what they think ol the proposals. Highlights of the proposed COD· tract include revisions to the salary schedule and pay raises ranging from seven to 8.5 percent depending on the employe's place on the salary schedule. The 1,000 non-teaching e mployes who are represented by the CSEA also are asking for an agency shop, which would mean all school employes represented by the CSEA would have to join the 300-member or- ganization. The union also is ask- ing the district to supply and equip office space for the group. Another proposal includes use or binding arbitration to setUe. contract disputes with the schooi board. · The proposed contract also seeks 14 paid holidays per year mstead of the 11 now granted. Additional. fringe benefits sought include district.paid vis. ion care, prescription drugs, ad- ditional life insurance coverage a nd a tax sheltered annuity plan. Jamboree Widening Project Approved A joint agreement with Newport Beach city officials for the $451,000 widening or Jam- boree Road won the unanimous approval of Orange County supervisors Tuesday. The project will run between Ford Road and MacArthur · Boule\•ard and is being financed primarily under terms or the county's Arterial Highway Financing Program. . ' ~,r ~ Heritag~4' I .. ESTA9LISHEO ,.., NOW IN PROGRESS ATLANTA (AP) -FBI agents plan today to ask for a warrant to search the mobile home or a woman taken into custody Tues· day. the sixth person arrestfd in connection wllh tbe mHlion dollar robbery and alayine of In· dianapolis heireH Marjorie Jack.son. Roberuna Harroll. S3, or Rine· , gold, Oa., was arrested at the Ponderou Camp Part about 2:S mtln northwttt 0( here. Sbe wu to be arntped todaytn U .S. Dbt= trict Court ln AUanta on a c~• ol receivtn1 stolen cunency 1n excess ol $5,000, the FBJ ta.kl. 'ROFf!SSIONAl l~TtRIOR DESIGN WITHOUT 08LIGATl()N • COM,ORTAl'-f PARl<INQ •CONVENIENT "NANCINO 1514 NOATH MAIN• SANTA ANA•S-41-.4391 The Store of Famous Names T11noa~. WtctnnGay, T111111der '"dlat11t.itt: ~10s~ Monaay 121ot• Fmsayt;30tot ' ' Afternoo N.Y.Stoeks ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TEN CENTS 3 ~keel to Quit Over Levine BJ Bl'EVE MITCHELL ot•Delll PttMMllff A amall group of parents and community members are caWnc for the reslpation of top state Department ol Health officials in the wake of the f1ring last week ot Fairview State Hospital Director Michael Levine. The ll'OUP of about two dozen members calling themselves the Parent. Advocacy Committee $50,000 Taken also ta demudlna a ln•estlea· Uon ol the department of hetlth and the ninstatement of Levine H executive dlrector of the 1,800-paUent faclllty in Costa Mesa. They say charces that Levine waa "brub and abrasive" are true, and they claim "that's the only way be could get bis pro- gramsinstiiated." Th'*= charges were leveled against Levine by Matthew J. Gu1lielmo, president of the Fairview Familles and Friends, Inc., an organization whose ex- ecutive board supported the fir· ing. Guglielmo called the Parent Advocacy Committee "a small offshoot (of\ the FFT) making a lot of noise," and added that the croup coold not get along with his organiUtion. Clues Lacking Amin 'Finn' About Visit NAIROBI, Kenya (AP> -Ugandan President Idi Amin says he will definite- ly attend next month's Commonwealth con· ferenc e in London "whether they (the British> like it or not," Uganda radio reported today. In Bank Holdup FBI investigators have no leads to the identity or whereabouts of a bold gunman who strode into a Laguna Hills bank Tuesday and made off with $50,000 that had just been de- livered by armored car. An FBI spokesman in Santa Ana said the heist bad "obvious- ly" been well planned and timed to take place immediately after the cash shipment was taken into the bank. The bandit struck at about 10:30 a.m., walking in the north door of the Bank of America branch in the Taj Mahal building at the corner of Paseo de Valen- cia and El Toro Road, near Laguna Hills Mall. Hf reportedJy leaped ~ • four-foot barrier, into the area where the cash delivery bad been taken. Whnesses told inveaUgaton the robber brandished a gun and told the 20 people in the bank to '·remain calm and remain where you are." The FBI spokesman said no shots were fired and the gunman left the bank after the money wu put into a green vinyl tote bag. Witnesses said the 1unman sped away in a late·model. green and white Oldsmobile, which was Two Armored Truck Guards, Cash Sought PHOENIX, Ariz. CAP> -An armored truck which disap- peared on a bank run Tuesday with about $300,000 in cash was discovered abandoned early to- day along Interstate 17 north ol Phoenix, but the whereabouts of most of the money and the two guards were unknown. The Department of Public Safety said one of Its helicopters •potted the abandoned truck about 6:30 a.m. near the 1-lT Bumble Bee exit, approximately 50 miles north of PboeQJx. A spokesman said the vehicle could not be a potted from the nearby interstate. The IPOkesman said the keya were ttll1 ln the truck, 8Dd a amaU amount of money wu ln the vehicle, although be didn't know bow much. However, the two guards, both lon1time Purolator emplo1a. were missing. The FBI conllrmed that the truck wu located and that ft was ~arrJinc about $300,000 wben lt left. Phoenix Tueaday. but decllDed further comment. •ay· lnl the matter was under in· yeatigatlon. found abandoned about two blocks from the bank a few hours later, the FBI official said. The car bad been stolen in Santa Ana earlier in the day. FBI investigators speculate that the bandit made good bis escape in another vehicle he had left parked where the getaway car was abandoned. The gunman was described as being about six feet tall with blond hair and a fair complexion. The FBI was planning to develop bank camera pictures or the sus- pect today. British government sources said in London on Thursday that Amin Will not be allowed into Britain for the summit. British newspapers, members of Parliament and public figures de· manded Amin be barred from entering Britain because of alleged atrocities and human rights violations in his East African nation. StulJJ.eback College Grtuluation Tonight Saddleback College's eighth graduating class will be present- ed with Associate in Arts degrees tonight at6 o· cloclt in commence- ment exerclsea on the camp~ athletic field. A tot.al of 407 sophomores. in· eluding 215 women and 192 men, will receive diplomas. culminal· ing two-year courses of study at the Misdoo Viejo school. The dass valedictorian, who earned st.rai1ht A's during her stay al Saddleback, ls 34-year-old history major Marjorie Lynn Miller u Mission Viejo. Mrs. Miller, who ia married aad has two children. aaid she de. clded to go to college because it wu sometlilni ahe was unable to do when she wu younger. "Sad- dleback offers a f antaatic op- portunity to anyone in the area," ahelaid. The top eraduate, who sald she spends many hours with her studies, said history always came easy to her. She feels she "hu an advantage over the 18- year·olda because I've lived more ol it (history) than they ba•e." R~ the composition of lhe community it serves, rancing from YGUDI ramilles to retirees, the eolJele's &raduates range in ace from 11 to•· There ue also three married couplee, a mother and daughter, a f atber and daupter and a sis- ter and brolber graduating toe ether. Desiclel Mn. Mlller, 49 ol the O.Uy ,., ... Staff ll'llete STRAIGHT A Yeledtctot'lan Miiier students will be graduated with honors. having maintained at least B-plus averages durinc their atudies. The commencement ceremomes will begin with the pledge to the flag, led by Geno . Bokosky, student body president. Trustee Robert L. Price will of- fer the fnvocaUon and welcomtni remarks will be made by Robert (See COLLEGE, Pase AZ> But members ol the advocacy group _think of .themselves u a watcbdol organization trylna to promote positive changes at the hospital for the mentally re- tarded. Betty Lombardo of Anaheim, who bas two sons at Fairview, said Levine achieved many con- structive improvements for the developmentally disabled during bis eight month tenure as direc· tor. Kathy Boka, of Laguna Beach, whose child died at Fairview five years ago, said Levine "looked into problems at the hospital without going through all the state red tape. He was after re· suits." The group, beaded by Ruth Stiers of Costa Mesa, outlined pr°' jects and goals that they claim were set by Dr. Levine, adding that they fear these projects might go by the wayside under the new administration. They said Levine was tryioi to: -Place patients in homes oo the hospital grounds to prepare them for the transition to tboout. side world. -Dropped the use ot psychotropic drugs at the (See LEVINE, Page A!) ace _ Gunmen's Terror Continues ASSEN, The Netherlands (AP> -Captive children chanted "We want to stay alive!" today as South Moluccan extremists let one deadline for death pass but again threatened to start killing more than 160 hostages if the Dutch government did not meet their demands. Officials said "steady negotia- tions" were continuing with two government psychiatrists as middlemen. For two days, two bands of gunmen have held 105 children and six teachers at a village school in nearby Bovensmilde and al least 55 hostages in a hi- jacked train stopped in the mid- dle of open pastureland 10 miles north of here. Four of 21 South MoJuccan prisoners whose freedom t.be ter- roriats have cleme•ded were brought to the official •'crisis cent.er" here, officials said. "We're keepina them on ice," said an official. Two hours before the deadline at 2 p.m. local time (5 a.m. PDT >. several children were brought to the windows or the school and cried out in unison, _"We want to stay alive, Van Agl." Andries van Agt is the Dutch justice minister and the lop gov- ernment strategist in dealing with the gunmen. The Asian militants -six at the school and seven in the train -spoke with senior Dutch of· ficials by telephone. This morn- ing, they rejected a government appeal for release of the chUdren and repealed their threat to shoot hostages. But Dutch Premier Joop den Uyl was cautiously hopeful.· • 'lllooks as if there is .a certain basis for conversation develop- <SeeTERROll, Page AZ) A,Wl,........ff GErrlNG HER MESSAGE ACROSS, FRONT AND BACK Sun Bring• T-Shlrt Weather to Callfomla .. Gi-eat Put-on T-shirts Blossoming SACRAMENTO CAP) -Some of the messages are risque, some are funny and a few are out- rageous or unprintable. But the warm spring sun has brought T-shirt weather to California again, and thousands of young women are blossoming as walking billboards. A stale bank report says it quickly sold out its promotional T -shirts with the message, "When you're not the biggest, you'd better be good." Women bought most of them, and reorders keep camtng in, a bank official said. That T-shirt follows the newest trend of pulling part or the message on the front, and the punch line on the back. Other popular T-shirts have a variety of messages: -On the drought: "Conserve waler. Shower with a friend." -For dieters: "Caution: Starving dieter. May bite if pro- voked." -A warning, on a tightly fit. ting, low -cut T-shirt: "Eat your heart out." -Advertising : "Wanted: Single men. Generous with money and affection. Liberal bank account preferred. Stable occupation. No turkey, please. Inquire within." -Another warning: "You toucha my body, I slappa you face." -And a boast: "It's real." General Says New Korean War Looms A Macy's department store clerk said two hot-sellers this year are T-shirts that say "California girls have warmer bodies," and "I'm a virgin, but this is a very old T·shlrt." "You wouldn't believe all the little old ladies who come in and buy that one," she said. Men·s T-shirts have fewer written messages. The most popular men's seller is covered with a picture of a smiling, swimsuit-clad Farrah "That is absolutely correct," the general replied. Later, be was asked if he was saying it might lead to war or it will lead to war. Singlaub replied that Korean- military officers "state nat out, unequivocally that when tJ.S. foteea are withdrawn North Korean President Kim Jl Sung wlll attack and I said that from a military point of view I agree with that." Meanwhile, Carter'a two <See KOREA, Page A2) Child Porno J&iling Asked . Fawcett-Majors.· , "But the shirt doesn't say anything," a sales clerk said. "1 guess it doesn't have to," she added. Coast Weather Slieht chance of sprtnldes or light showers tonight. Decreasin1 cloudl· ness Thursday morning. Lows tonight 52 to 57, High& Thursday 68 to 74. INSIDE TODA 't' Self.el m gottrr. cdd muit be the remon ""'11 two brothers cart for 101000 of the bn&tea. Tbo.t . ~ Uff·long . afftttion. And a bUtU. Nrllc budMu. &!a~ageAI. il DAILY PILOT SB Weclne.day, ~ 2S, 1977 ork Win"flranre~ Nation's 1'op . ... . Dads Horioreil NEW YORK <AP> -They joked and they w•r• philosophical , but tbe men named u Fathen1 of the Year shared honors with all the dads of America. · Most complained that their work left them little time with their children -a problem they said many fathers face daily. Yankee outlielder Roy White, who spends much time on the road, s~ud he's frequently ex- hausted after big games, but makes a point after home games t.o "spend as much time as poss!· ble with my ~on and daughter.'' He advised. "You should never be too tired to talk to your children." White was among 10 people honored by the National Father's Day Committee at a luncheon al· tended by 1,300 people at the Americana Hotel. "There are many fathers who Widening Of Trabuco Approved An $885,000 plan for the widen· ing and realignment of a portion of Trabuco Road in the El Toro area won the unanimous ap· proval of Orange County supervisors Tuesday. The project, which is to begin this summer and be finished next February, calls for improving Trabuco from Bake Parkway to Lake Forest Driveway and for placing raised medians on Lake f'oresl between Serrano Road and Trabuco. Trabuco will be widened to four lanes . a report to supervisors said, except through Ascension Cemetery when it will be kept at two lanes. Supervisor Tom Riley also asked county ofricials to use cau· lion in the cemetery area so graves would not be disturbed and so thos<' attending ~raveside services would not be inconve· nienced. Countv officials s aid during construction trafric will be rout: ed along Bake Parkway, Toledo Way and Lake Forest Drive. The county will pay $668,000 of the im· · provemenl costi, and Occidental Lane, Inc . will provide $217,000. From Pagr AJ KOREA ... s pecial envoys, Philip C Habib and Gen. George S. Brown, told President Park Chun~ Hee today or plans lr> withdraw 33,000 American troops from Korea in four to rive years. Park did not welcome the plan, which was announced earlier in Washinitton. but agreed to ac- ctpt it as America's "established policy." an aide said. He said Park asked for American help in st r engthe nang South Korea 's mihlarv Ha bib. undersecretary of state. and Brown. chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Stuff. met with Park for three hours Park Employe. Dies in Fall YOSEMITE NATIONAL PARK <AP) -A Yosemite Na· tional Park employc from Utica, N. Y ., was killed when he fell 400 feet while helping rescue two stranded climbers. rangers said. Jack Dorn, 30. lost his balance and fell over u ledge along Yosemite Falls trail Monday. His body was recovered by park employes. OAANOE COAST "' DAILY PILOT n ... o. ...... t:°M\I 0.lff l'tl04 Wllfl-Cfl IH°"' ~tPW>Nf".,. Prf\' •\tM.lbtl~bftf\tOJ ...... c-" ""~'"'"''!CG mo•"• StMr• ..S.tl•"-outtff\f\f'd Mol'td•" ""WO" Fnoe, •• COfl• ""''"· ,_..,OOft lkt1tch H1tfttl"tf0ft .... " ~°"""" t•'n \'•tt•y ftvtf'I \•ddt"t\"'' V4lttf ~ L•-IM<K• \oul•CH\I "'"""'~ .. 1""1 '' Dllbl•\M<I ~•lur<IH\ ...... s...ciln T"9 f)f'ttw:lp.tl P"JOil\t'ltl'\O ol~t h Mt »I 1VH t .. , Slr.,.l.~l•Mot • C•hl'1fnle~ ..... " ....... Pr~'IMnt •nd """"''"""° Jt011 CwWI V~• PrnldtM •fld c;.-·•-- '"-"' "-t dllv , ... ,...,,.M,.._ ~ ... 01nca &lll1or O.rln "· w.. lllctl9N I', llMll """'""' Men1olfM1 l'clllofl Saddltb1cll V11tey ()tfb JRlll u Pu llud el S... or ... ~·-~T Omc11 C.O.t•Mou now.1•S..•St•lfl M""li"'ll.., 8U<ll lltlU l .. <ll~•frd l•d""" IHt<ll 11 .. 0~Sll'ffl T11.pt1011e (71t)I0"'321 Qeum.d Adv.ntll,. M2-M71 ~-V•t"'y-Oflk o 511-tl10 ,.,..,.s...c .. _ 4 ..... have fielded a baseball with their sons who are deserving of this," he said in accepting a statuetteol af ather and cbUd. Jerry StWer quipped that when his LS.year-old daughter, Amy, heard he was named Entertain· ment Father of the Year, she asked, "How come? No one checked with us! • • Stiller and bis wire, Anne Meara, also have a son, l)en· jamin, 11. Ambassador Aadrew Voug, traveling in Africa. received the award as National Father of the Year in absentia. Leon J aworski, named Jurisprudence Father of the Year, joked that his son suggest· ed he wear tennis shoes so he wouldn't "get struck by lightn· ing'' .when he accepted the award. BetUamin Hooks, incoming ex- ecutive director of the NAACP, accepted tbe award as Humanitarian Fatner on behalf of •'those fathers in the swelter- ing heat of the ghettos who strive to do so much." Others named Fathers of the Year in their fields were James Broderick, television; federal energy chief James Schlesinger; Jobn Chancellor, communica- tions; John Newcombe, teM.is, a nd United F~deration or Teachers President Albert Shanker, labor and education. Fro• Page AJ TERROR ••. ing," he told reporters. A Justice Ministry spokeswoman said, "We are con· tinuing steady negotiations because we hope there is still a chance that the terrorists will surrender the children." The gunmen, members or an immigrant community from the former Dutch colony or the South Moluccan Islands. now part or In· donesia, were demanding re- lease of 21 jailed countrymen and a jumbo jet flight, with hostages, from Amsterdam to an un· disclosed destination. Some South Moluccans arc serving terms in Dutch jails for using political violence in the past in fruitless attempts to force the Dutch government to help them win independence from Indonesia for their homeland. "Ir you dare not to meet our de· mands ... we will not hesitate or blurf lo shoot down a number of hostages for your pleasure." the terrorists said in a letter to Dutch authorities that was rele1:1sed Tuesday. The government refused lo dis· cus s any deals unless the s choolchildren "ere released first Viejo Library To Be Clos.ed For Tuv Weeks The Mission VieJo Rel'ional Public ubrar) will close for two weeks. beg\nning Ma} 31. so the hbrary staff can inventory 1b books The library will reopen al 10 am. Monday, June 13. While the library is closed. patrons may use the branches in neighborhing communities. The Laguna B$ach and San Clemente branches arc open from 10 a.m. to 9 p.m. Monday through Thursday and from 1to5 p.m Friday through Sunday. The University Park branch in Irvine is open from 10 a.m. t.o 9 p.m. Monday through Thursday and 10 a .m. to 5 p.m . Friday and Saturday. The new Dana Niguel branch, which will open on June 6, will have the same schedule as the University Park branch. f'ro• Page Al COLLEGE. • • Lombardi, college presidenL The commencement address will consist of a program entitled "A College Collage," to be pre· sented by grac\µaling forensics students Catherine Gash and Gary Key. Board or trustees President Larry Taylor and Dr. Doyle McKinney, dean of academic programs, will present dip1omN and introduce tbe graduates .. Music will be provided by the col· Jece concert band under tho dir~ction at Terry Newman. . The largest contincent among the 1raduates are students from bllssloo Viejo, followed by El toro, San Clemente, San Juan Capistrano and Twatin. Tbere are aJso.,..aduatea from aucb places u Bll Bear Lake Camp Pendleton. Lake ldaino·u, Louil.iNl8, Tex.as aod Orqon. • Locla Ness Monster? No, it's just Del Rita, a seven-year-old elephant who likes to swim. Del Rita. one of the stars of Puck's Canadian Traveling Circus, takes her daily bath in Lake On· lario near Toronto. "guarded'' by the vessel Hatda. She likes to submerge and use her trunk as a snorkel. Irvine Co. Sale Okayed Consortium to Pay $337.4 Million By TOM BARLEY Ol t• Dally Piiot Staff Meeting in San Francisco late Tuesday, directors of the James Irvine Foundation authorized the sale of the Irvine Company for $337.4 million to a consortium that will rename the company Taubman-Allen-Irvine Inc. The action by a unanimous foundation board came just four days after the TAI group outbid Mobil Corporation, the firm thal was once on the verge of acquir· ing the Orange County land com· pany for $200 million. Irvine Company holdings irt· elude 80,000 acres in Orange Co unty, 6,000 acres in California's Imperial Valley and 101,000 acres known as the Flying D Ranch in Gallatin and Madison Countjes betweeo Bozeman and Butte, Montana. Avalon Merchants Flay Water Cuts Foundation directors noted that the transfer of title has been approved by Orange County Superior Court Judge James F . Judge. He commented last Fri- day that he thought $337.4 million represented fair market value for the Irvine Company. Foundation directors said they expect to close the deal with TAI within the next 60 days. The sale will then go to Judge Judge for Canal approval. Irvine heiress Joan Irvine Smith, who filed the lawsuit that sparked a bidding battle for the company, will be one of the direc- tors of the new corporation. While Orange County officials ponder waler shortages, just of. fcoast at Avalon, Catalina Is land, s hopkeepers and r esi- dents are confronted today wilb drastic water rationing. Avalon water users have been ordered to cut back water eon· sumption by 50 percent. <Related story today Page AJ > Island storekeepers, about to enter their big tourist season, see the one-half cul in allowable water use as a catastrophe. "We have only one industry here and that's tourism," said Gregor W. Milne, president of the Calahna Island Businessmen's Association. "I a m one of 150 small businessmen here who cannot make it a full year unless we have tourism." The mandatory program is necessary. explain officials of the Southern California Edison Co., because the island's fresh water reservoir dropped below 190-acre-feet, less than a fifth of its capacity. Meantime, the Orange County Board of Supervisors appointed a Water Emergency Task Force consisting or farmers, builders, industrialists, college professors and water agency managers. The committee was asked to de· Fro. Page A J LEVINE ••• hospital. "They're no longer pop· ping pills for behavior," .Mrs. Stiers said. · -Attempted to implement a hos pital aide program so psychiatric technicians could provide duties other than custodial care. -Founded an admissions, transrers and discharges com- mittee to dJscuss the status or Fairview patients. -Instigated a program where patients were taken to communi- ty hospitals or dental offices for medical care instead of at Fairview. -Implemented several one-to- one proerams. with p•tients using a behavior modification team. -Was attempting to 1et more occupatlonal and pbysical therapists at the hospital. Mrs, Stiers said there are only three full-time and two half-time physical therapists currently at Fairview. cide within three weeks on a voluntary water rationing pro· gram t.o cut usage by tO percent. The Los Angeles Metropolitan Water District announced Tues· day it is reactivating a small pumping plant in the San Fernando Valley to deliver Colorado River water to the valley, western Los Angeles County and southern Ventura County. Mrs. Smith and nine other m· vestors provided t.he capital to back an oUering or $40.10 a share for the Irvine Company stock. Mobil was on the point of ac· quiring the company for $24 a share when Mrs. Smith took legal action two years ago. "'. tleritage captures a great Western European tradition for today's interiors The sources? Deslans by the. thousands from the vast, 16raeously varied output or Western European furniture makers. The t.ramlat.ors? Famous Herltage-3 craftsmen. Tho resul~? Our Brittany TM occul<>aal collection. Perf ect.lon in leafy.heart cherry, pecan and English brown oalt burl veneers ... with several extraordinary finishes. The lim~ t.o see lt aJl? This veiy week! ... ( I SUMMER SALE .... Surfers . l,ike the Weather Orange Co.at surfers woke up to some nice waves this morning up and down the coastline, but weather forecuters say it won•t last. Th.e southwest swell is beinr generated by a storm about three days agGo!f South America. That storm has since blown out, and weather watchers see about 18 hours of good surf along the Orange Coqt. Los Angeles Weatber Service forecaster Art Eichelberger said south f acinl beaches will benefit the most from the South American gift, Newport Beach lifeguard Capt. Bud Bel.she said a lot of wetsuit dad surfers were enjoyirig three to five foot waves at 48lh Street this morning. Jle said there are 17 seconds between sets, "which indicates the storm came from pretty far away." Bel she added that a light wind is keeping the waves semi· glassy. Huntington Beach lifeguards report surf in the three to six foot range, but say the sun is not that great. ''We've got long lines that are closing out," explained lifeguard Steve Davidson. He said there were very few surfers out late this morning, addin~ that a strong side current, along with 63 degree water. is discouraging swimmers. San Clemente lifeguard Rich Chew srud surf in his area is ex· cellcnl. with two to four foot sets from the pier to Trafalgar Street. Laguna Beach lifeguards said the southwest swell is not helping their south facing beaches, but added that the incoming tide this artrrnoon might help that situa- tion. •'It 'IJ get more consistent down by Brooks and Tiralia Streets by this afternoon," predicted lifeguard Dick Johnson. He said waves were breaking in the four to rive foot range this morning. 3 MUSKETEERS R41D PIZZERIA. LA MESA (AP> -At the stroke of midnight, three men in fencing masks and waving long-. - bladed knives swung lustily into a pizza parlor on Lake Murray Boulevard. They made ofC with $3S early today. ·r ~ Heritag~v San Clemente Man Faces Theft Rap -., HT48LISHED Ulf2 • NOW JN PBOORF.SS Oranao County aherlff'• of·· flcer:s have fiJed charcee of petty tbell against a San Clemente man acCUMd or tum, a raCCl\lt'l· ball r~uet from a La&uaa Hilla Nall store wltllout payln1 for Jt. Oep\rt..la boded tho dt.ation to lames Gril8n Gl,ynn, ll, 01 11'1 A ~mida Micliid1 in.et a com· ialalnt wu ftkid by enaploJtll ol UaeSUn,BGebUka~. Wednesday~& Afternoon Pricel TRANSACTIONS Salt\ .... '-' .... 10.. ~ TK¥1tlr .•19 sU ._.. . TKMlt11 • • IO lo\ h•t ........ 1 .... 33\lt "' te1~or lO ' 4 • • "" TelHI\ I 4111 S '"' ... 1111-.. Tel.Oyfl DI • • J 10l • " T.i1>tml f1 .o. P .•..• Tele• IO 41 ,...._ '- T9fl'I(• tM1 alM 22~-"' ,,,_. "' no u -" Te .. uft.M •. d.J 1•~-" '··~ t • t12l ~-.... TH -·It t tJt I " Tu ll t,iS t JO '-••••. T•I .o.«>.. a ~ .,.. 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Fi&ures compiled by the wine and ~lrita newaletter Impact, ahow that whisky shipments dropped 1.5 perc~t last year. adding up~ the worst year· to· year loss ln the modern history of alcoholic beveraees . THE SIGNlnCANT DEVELOPMENT OF 1976 wu that all wbiak.y types -bourbons, Scotches, Canadians and blends -are ln full retreat before the advances of what the industry calla "white goods:" vodka, rum. white wine. Domestic blended whiskies -Imperial, Schenley Reserve, Corby's Reserve, Calvert Extra -have been declining in popularity since the end of World W~ II. So their 9 percent decrease last year was not surprlsa.ng. Sea· gram's 7 Crown still holds first place in the brand-by.brand stand· in gs, but Sm irnofC vodka will pass it before the end of the decade. Bourbon sales had been holding up well un- Money Tree til last year. Then they were clobbered, wlth shipments down 12 percent. Vodka ls far ahead of bourbon as the leader of the alcoholic parade. Impact estimates vodka's share of the distilled spirits market at 20 percent; bourbons have 15 percent. THE BOURBONS BUCKING THE TREND are, in· terestingly enough, the high-priced premium brands Wlld Turkey and Jack Daniels <although Jack Daniels ls technically not a bourbon but a Tennessee sour mash whisky). Sales of Jack Daniels were up 19 percent last ye~. Old Crow once a top-selling brand, has lost a quarter of tts sales ove~ the past three years. First place in the bourbon segment still belongs to Jim Beam. S<:otch sales, which soared during the 1950s and 1960s, have gone into reverse. Shipments were down 5 percent last year. Here. too, the high-priced brands are doing we.11. Sales of Chivas Regal were up 21 percent. Meanwhile, shipments of bulk Scotch for bottling here declined 12 percent. The leader of the Scolch category continues to be J&B. closely followed by Cutty Sark and Dewar's -all premium-priced brands. Further proof, if any was needed, that whisky is on ~e skids came in the halt to the rising sales of Canadian whiskies which are blends. They made up one of the strongest categories in the liquor market, their sales having expanded by nearly 50 percent between 1970 and 1975. Last year shipments of Canadian whiskies were down 2 percent. The two leaders, Seagram VO and Canadian Club, were both down more than that. MORE AND MORE AMERICANS ARE ordering white wine instead of a martini as a cocktail. That's why gin is not sharing in the gains made by other "white goods." Gi n ship· ments were down 4 percent last year. Vodka is outselling gin 2-to-1. And who orders a Manhattan any more? That's a cock tall with a lethal dose of whisky. The most buoyant of alcoholic beverages, from the sales standpoint, is rum. Its sales have more than doubled in the past decade and s hiproents were up 17 percent last year. Rum sales are half of gif\'s. Th'e great beneficiary of the swing to rum is the Bacardi brand. selling more than 4 mil~ion cases a year an~ ranking No. 3 in the liquor industry behtnd 7 Crown and Smtmoff. Phone Company Fights Vandals Damage to public telephones cost General Telephone of California close to $2 million last year. Vandalism to coin telephones caused close to $150,000 worth of damage to General equipment in 1976. Repair and reinstallation costs were $452,700. Estimated loss of revenue while coin phones were out of order reached Sl.3 million. At least $8,000 was stolen from the telephones, the company said. "WE F1GHT BACK," SAID PIDL Sheridan, security director. "Through helpful citizens and law enforcement agencies, the company finds and prosecutes those who destroy property. Las~ year we recovered about $24,000.' • General has about $4S million invested in Its more than 30,000 public instruments in Southern California. Each phone and booth costs between $1,000 and $2,000 and the company spends about $10.5 million annually to maintain the phones, including Janitorial service. "We're also taking posltJve steps to correct the high cost of vandallsm through prevention. The company is US· lag a new type of coin phone which is much harder to van· dalize. It ls a single·slot model, alao designed for easier operation and fewer service problems. We began installing the new phones lut year and we've noticed a reduction in security problem& wJth these phones," Sheridan said. Record Harvest Defies Drought FRESNO CAP> -Despite tho be1lrlnlncs of the drou~ht followed by rain and -cannery •trike at the wron1 time, the San JoaquJn Valley had a rec<h'd agricultural harvest In 1976. Gross value of all crops In the eight-county region ex· ceeded $497 billion last year. accordin1 to Aasociated Press compJlationt taken from county aincultural commissioner reports. · The valley'• total croi> value waa up t6 ~rcent from $424 mUUon trom the previous year. · Most f a.rmers had plenty of ~olr and wtU water to atave oft drought problems unUJ the current aeuon, and the impact of a harvest·Ume atrlko lbowed Ul> only In the ngu.res for San Joaquin County. There, the 1ross doUar valueottom•"*dedlned t27mUUon. . Susar beet. values allo were down SlO million because ot tower prteft. but San Joaquin County C'f'OWel"S made gains in enouah other areu to reduce the ovit-aJl decline In crop valu~to~1000.