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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1977-07-20 - Orange Coast Pilot7 .. ·' Towns Isolated II II ' • Mom Abandons Starving Kids • Carter Backs Gas Tax \Hike • • SA Bullion Heist Lo~ Mot•nts • • Citi~s, se-.ools ~ey tO Tax ffike 3Killed ., DAILY PILOT . ·. . , . * * * 10' * * * . • • ;· 1: - . , •4~ "'' ' .. , •· • ';···f;.· •.•. , . ' ' Johnstown, ra., Floods Again WEDNESDAY AFTERNOON, JULY 20, 19n VOL 70, NO. 201, 4 SECTIONS, 41 PAGES Property Rates --~~~~~~-.~~~~-~ ~itie~, Schools Key to Tax Hike By KATHY CLANCY OI UM Oaily Pilot Stall How much will existing property tax rates in Orange County have to drop if county property owners aren't to be hit with higher tax bills this year? ACCORDING TO a county report, cities along the Orange Coast will have to slice from 11to30 cents off their tax rates to maintain the status quo. The same report shows that county government must hack 23 cents off the county's $L43 tax rate to keep tax· payers even. And Orange Coast school districts will have to lop from seven cents to $1.24 off their tax rates if taxpayers aren't to get socked with higher tax bills this year. ·SHOULD LOCAL taxing agen~ies fail to reduce their property tax rates by those amounts most homeowners will again be handed higher tax bills this year because of the record 19. 7 percent gain in county assessed valuation. That's because assessed value is the base that rates are !pplied to in determining tax bills. If assessed valua· tion climbs and tax rates don't go down by the same percentage, the net result is higher property tax bills. As property values have climbed in recent years most tax rates have declined. But the declines in most instances haven't kept pace with the rises in value. -The county report, by Auditor-Controller Vic Heim, shows what tax rates would have to drop to if tax bills are not to go up. IN THE CASE of Laguna Beach, for example, city council members would have to chop last year's $1.65 rate by 30 cents per $100 of assessed valuation. And in the Irvine Unified School Qistrict, for instance. the tax rate would have to drop by $1.24 to $3. 75. But the property tax picture isn't that simple. · The county report does not take into account com· plicated state scbool finance laws which leave many ~ tricts hard-pressed to lower: tax rates. (See PROPEJlTY, Page A3) Ice Man Conaeth JOHNSTOWN, Pa. CAP) - Eight hours of rain swelled creeks over their banks today. isolating many communities and pouring a waist-high torttent into parts of this southwest Penn- sylvania city, which was alm95t wiped out in the famous Jotuistowp Flood of 1889. Civil Defense authorities in EbensbUrg said three persons were confirmed dead and five others missing. No identities were available. A Ci\ril Defe~e ~pokesman Caner Backs Gasoline Tax Hike5 Cems WASIIlNGTON (AP) -Presi· dent Carter has tentatively ap· \ proved a proposal to increase the federal gasoline tax by up to five cents a gallon to finance transportation and other energy. related programs, an administra- tion source says. Driver Les Jones of West Orange, N.J., found .a cool way of beating Tuesday's 100 degree heat · in Newark. The temperature was a cooling 30 degrees inside the Rubel Ice Company's ice house as Jones waited for his truck to be loaded. (Story on Page A4). Carter gave his assent Tues- day during a meeting of oCficials including Transportation Secretary Brock Adams, energy adviser James Schlesinger, economic adviser Charles Schultze and budget director Bert Lance. The officials met to discuss a wide range of energy proposals Insurers (0 Cheek that may be sul)mitted to the House ad hoc energy committee chaired by Rep. Thomas L. > • Asbl~y (D-Obio). Bldli• H~ • L · The gllsoll.ne tax proposal On elst . OSS would io\tolve an increase ot three. four or five cents in the tax By PHIUP ROSMARIN Oft• 1>.111~ Pl~ Sutt Insurance adjustors are due at Swiss Vaulb> Inc. in Santa Al\a Thur84ay to unravel the losses in the largest unsolved robbery in Orange County history. The gold and silver bullion ex· , • ' that motorists pay for gasoUne at chaqge ~nd brolCeragfl firm, ai the p~mp, the SOW'ce said. The 1404 N. Gr!U)d Ave •• was robbed currentfaxi$fourc:entsagallon. July 9 ...... a Satttrday -after the ' Carter, while ·giving general company president, Vipcent M. a(>~oval to the proll(>sa.t, still Carrano, agreed to meet a must live his final okay bef9fe it prospectivecli'entafterbOUl'S.' i~ sent in final form to Capltol Instead of making a depo$it of Hill, tbe source said. The ad- 20 bags t:A ailvel.'. which Carran~ mlniatratlon is "moving pretty said his tel~ c.Uer Wldhlm exped~tiously.. to shape the b~ wanted to do, tl\tuQ~ alleged· p~age of propoatlls, be said. ly pointed a gun at Carrano~ Carter's proposal to increase allowed tonf ederatea inside:.:....~. (See GAS, Page AJ) Cart~no ~a PQfice that. wnue the gunhlan forced ttlm tb alt f ac• inf a wall inside hi• own oftlce, Bo~ ..,.0·~1 . the C)ther robbet-a d.ttlllantled two 'aaa"llC'e.,. Al huge v.ult. bom, wetahtnt toDS I ' • , said Mayor Herbert Pfuhl Jr. asked for military help to control looting, Whole communities. including · 15,000 residents in nearby Windber, were isolated as the flash flood blocked highways and knocked out communications. "People are on the rooftops a.pd in fl!~. They're everywhere as we.understand it," said Elmer Shank, deputy Cambria County Civil Defense director. Two National Guard battalions were activated to help evacuate people stranded in their homes by tber~mpagingwater. "Streams that I never knew ex· isted are causing problems," said another Civil Defense spokesman. • He said offibials asked for boats from every available gov· ernment agency. State police helicopters and scuba divers were pressed into rescue service. The flooding washed out the four-track Conrail mainline and a railroad spokesman said about 50 freight trains were held up on either side of the Conemaugh River Valley. Amtrak, the national passenger train corporation, said service on both directions of the National Limited and Broadway Limited was interrupted. Passengers were being bused between aff~ted points. Pfuhl said damages could run as high as $100 million in Johnstown. An official of Bethlehem Steel Corp., which employs about 12,000 in several Johnstown-area plants, said coke ovens, blast furnaces and open hearths were shut down becat.lse of the flood· ing. (~ee FlpOD, Page A2) \ Coast l\reatber _!2 DAil Y PILOT s Sec~ty Council OKs Viet U.N. Bid l ' NITED NATIONS, N.)'. t AP~ 1'hc St.l(.'Urtty Council re c·ommcnded Vietnam ror U.N. m e mbeuhlp today by un- .1111mouscom ot wit.bout a vote. Tho councU•1 action, ma(lc po~:.1ble when the Urutod Stats ··nllud tu oppo.•IUo.o to Vltit. o.amt.-se ~mbenhlp, WU opt• tt•qu15ito few flnal approval <:A. \!1t•Loame1e J'Qembenhtp al tho next seas.ton of tho General Aa- o:.l'mblyonSept. 20. V 1etnam and the already re- c om mended African nallon of DJ1boull Wlll bo the 148th and H9lh U.N. members. It had been agreed beforehand that the 15-member council would adopt the Vi etnamese · membership resolullon by con-· aen1u&. without a vote, thus 1par- 1n1 the United St1tlc1 the choice or ~llhcr ClllSlinK 1t .. yes" vote or ubstal.ninii. 1'ho Un.lted Stat.ea announced in Ma,y that lt would no longer vt>to Vlet.nall)'s a°ppUc1tlon for entry into the world body. U.S. officiab cited Haoal-, coopera- ttoo ln tracking dowaAJoericans misiUnr in actiorl IQ tlle Viet- namese war and~ the Carter adml.nlslraUoa ved In the univew;ality or United Na- tions. The United States vetoed mem- bership for its former Com· munist e nemy on three oc- casions. twice as North and South Vietnam in 1975 and once as the newly unified Vietnam last year. The Nnericans first cited the Security CouncU's refusal to con- dder a South Korean mem- bor ship application, and later said theJ would continue vetoini . Vietnameae membership until they received cooperation in locating MIA.I. In Tuesday's Sectlrity CouncU debate, U.S. delegate Donald F. McHenry said Vietoam's entry into the United Nations would contribute to U.N. univer51llity a nd place Vietnam under obliga- tions "to settle disputes peaceful- ly and to advance human rights. .. We look forward:·to working with Vietnam. as with all other members of this body, to bring• about a new era of peace, cooperation and triendabip,' • McHenry said. Peaee in Oetoher? Frotr1 P~g~ Al Carter Ends Talks FLOOD ••• .. There are no reports of in-on lsliaell•S, Aliabs juriesorl~oflife attheplants. although pockets of employes re- main stranded throughout the _ operations," he said. WASIIlNGTON (AP) -Presi- dent Carter ended talks today with Prime Minister Menahem Begin by saying the Israeli and Arab positions "will lead to the reconvening of the Geneva con· !erence" on Middle East peace. Carter said the negotiations .. very likely" would s tart in Oc- tober, <is suggested by Begin and Eg yptian P r esident Anwar Sadat. He also said Secretary or State Cy rus R. Vance would t ravel to Jerusalem and the Arab capitals beginning Aug. l to pursue the groundwork for peace negotiations. Sources in Washington said Beg in offered a peace plan to President Carter on Tuesday whereby Israel would trade large pa rts of the occupied Golan Heights and Sinai Desert for peace with Syria and Egypt but would not withdraw from the oc- cupied West Bank of the Jordan Ri ver. Earlier, Carter and Begin ap- peared to disagree on how quick- ly terms of any sctUcmentsh.ould , be implemented. Carter said · Tuesday that progress must be m ade this year, but Begin cau- tioned "there must be some pa· tience." • Alter escorting Begin to his limousine outside the White House, Carter told reporters, "We have laid a lot of the groundwork for peace talks. "We've not found a ny of the positions taken by Mr. Begin or the Arab states to be so adamant that they are not eager for ac- commodation:• The President said the Middle Eas t adversaries saw the "transcendent goal as peace," but added that it was "difficult to predict" the chances of success. Begin and Carter ended their third and last meeting 45 minutes :i.head of schedule because, said Carter, it was .. an unexpectedly harmonious session." Fro•PageAJ GAS ••• gasoliµe taxes by five 'cents a gallon, with a possible rise to 50 cents after 10 years, was killed in the House Ways and Means Com· mittee last month. The revenues under that plan would have been refunded as rebates equally to everyone, giving an incentive for consumers to become energy savers. Aftel' that defeat, the ad- ministration began considering a variation of a similarly rejected pro pos a 1 by Rep. Da,n Rostenkowskl <D·Ill.), that would have increased taxes by three cents a gallon, with tbe re- venues diverted to finane!e mass transit and energy research. 09'ANGeCOMT • DAILY PILOT Carter, however, noted the dif-Two Bethlehem coal mines. ferences between the Israeli and Cambria Division portals 77 and Arab positions were considera-38E, were flooded, and mines 31 ble. and 33 were closed because oI a Carter declined to state any • power outage. views on the territorial issues. Emergency medical centers s aying it would be "inap· werebeingsetuponhighground. propriate • • • There are strong Cars floated in the water and differences of opinion and it is firemen stood by helplessly as bestto be reticent." flames engulfed at least three Carter said it was fo r the Arabs Johnstown buildings. and Israelis to negotiate the ••we couldn't get to any of the problem. fires," said Capt. Francis Petro. ••r11 stick to my public views, "The torrent of water was so but I think this is the time to be great we couldn't cross the quiet about specifics," be said. . streets with our lruck.s." "I'll tell you, it's a mess, a real In Beirut Yasir Arafat's catastrophe,'" said Petro, a Palestine Liberation Organiza-lifetime resident. "There has to tion declared today that Begin's be loss oI life. If &here isn't. it's a latest peace proposals would set miracle." the stage for a fifth Arab-Israeli Two-thirds of this city of 41,200 war. was under a foot of water or .. This is a war plan, not a peace more. The downtown area was plan," said PLO spokesman under six feet, and the Mahmoud Labadi. .. The PLO r e-Conemaugh River and Little jects the Begin plan from A to Z, Stony Creek reportedly over- because it negates the right of the flowed. Palestinian people to self· The Pennsylvania Department determinationandnationhood." of Environmental Resources said 7.75 inches or rain fell in Cambria County during a 24-hour PILUI' AD SOLD 'EJIERITHING' ''There's no need to keep the ad running, we sold everything, just everything!" That's the sales success ex· perience of the South Laguna worn an who placed this classified notice in the Daily Pilot: Old office desk. corni:?r Maple desk. Tressel ta· bl e, old Hoosier cup-board, deep freeze. xx:<· XXXlf. If you have clutter you want to convert to cash, call 642-5618. We make it easy for you to place an ad in the people's marketplace- the Daily Pilot. period. The flooding here was· the worst since St. Patrick's Day, 1936, which residents say caused the greatest monetary loss in the city·~ history. But Johnstown is best known for a flood May 31, 1889, that claimed 2,200 lives and made the city synonomous with disaster around the world. In the 1889 dis- .aster, a churning wall of water roared through the Little Conemaugh River Valley from a burst dam. pushing buildings and people belore it. 18 Allem Nabbed SIERRA VISTA, Ariz. (AP)- Elgbteen illegal aliens bound for Califomla were found crammed into a small van pass~ through here Tuesday, police said. FrosP~AI PROPERTY TAX ••• IN MANY CASES, for example. the increases in as- sessed valuation mean the state chips in less for education while local property owners spend more. The report also does not account for new county prop- erty which result in new additions to the county tax roll. That is a factor Assessor Bradley Jacobs attributes with 4.5 percent of the county's 19. 7 percent overall gain. What Heim's figures do show is what tax rate would be needed to keep the past year's property tax bills level. FOR arms along the Orange Coast therequlred cuts would include 19 cents to a tax rate of $1.01 in Fountain Valley; a 22-cent reduction to a $1.03 rate in Costa Mesa; a 28-cent cut to $1.34 in Huntington Beach; a 14-cent cut to a rate of 51 cents in Irvine; an 18-cent cu\ to a rate of 93 cents In Newport Beach. San Clemente city offtclata. would need to make a 25-cent r$ cut to 96 cents; San Juan Capistrano, 23 cents to a 1kent rate; Seal Beach, U cents to a 96-cent rate, and Wostmin.Ster a 12-cent cut to 59 cents. AmoWaa O\iier Orange Coasi School Districts. the sad: dleback V-alley di1b1ct woold require a $1.10 cut to a tax rate d. $4.23 per SlOO of assessed valuation: Capistrano Unified a 81;-cent drop to "1.34; U!.IUll• Beach UnJ!ied. a 52-cent droP to a $2.0l rate; Newport.Mesa UnJfled, a 62-cent drop to $3.11 in NewP)rt Beach and a 63-cent dfop to $3.33 in <l>sta Meaa; Also, BantioP>n Beach Union m,b, a SS.Cent cut to $1.94; Fountain 'Valley elementary,.25cents toSl.08; Hunt· ington Beach elementary, a ~t cut to $1.41; Ocean Vlaw elem~. • 19-cen.t cut to $1.20· Se41 ~eh elementary, a 1even..cent cut to $1.01. and Westminster elemQtarJ, aM-cellt cu.t to $1..0L lll!Dl'S'hGVllES also say a lkent cut tO 81 .. 5 ~ ner-$100" u~ v&JuaUoa Would be lleedtd ln the Co..i e<>mnillDity Colle1e DJ&trict. wblle an 18-cent cut to a '21· cent tiX rate would be -..ec1 to off Ht welNd vilaatfoD hlk~ tn the sacSdleback Qinmntty Collec•Dlitnct ~tax rate ~ far,;1Cenct• coob"Olled bY the •. cOWJ\y. BOUd d SUperNOrl WOUid be three cents each for the county HattiOi'I, BeaCh4lii Md Parka .Dlitttct 8ild the coulQ~ttc;I Dlatrtct: In 1 repart llKIWI dli'ecton or the Qtana• ~ ·~l t>litrict Would Deed to cut thm rate to 3,4 cti\ll 1rOm •·• .cild* I*.•" ••lied •Al\micil to ralle the T num~Of dOllln that ~l'llct lUt 1ear. • Koreagate Prosecutors? These four former Watergate prosecution figures are be- ing considered to head the investigation of the Korean influence-buying scandal in Congress. Clockwise, from top left, they are Archibald Cox, Leon Jaworski, John Doar and Sam Dash. "\:> .2 Off-duty·Marines SO$pects in Rape Two Marines, employed in their off-duty hours as security guards in a new housing develop- m ent in Newport Beach, were taken into CYStody by police ear- ly today in .connection with the rape or a 17-year-old girl. Police said today they booked one of the guards, Gary Armstrong, 24, on a ~harge of f or cible rape; but charges against the other were pending the outcome of an investigation. The second Marine was iden· tified as Marcus LilUe, but in· formation on where be and Armstrong are stationed was not immediately available. Police said the girl was raped in the Seavi~w Terrace tract where she and her 17-vear-old boyfriend had driven at 12:30 a.m. after attending a party·in Corona del Mar. Police s1lid the young couple were discovered· by the two guards who then assaulted the girl. They said the boyfriend, who was present during the rape, apparently admed the victim not to scream or struggle because the two guards might call the police. Officers said the yout.h feared arrest on charges of trespassing in the private com· munity. The girl told officers her boyfriend took her home after the incident, but she decided to re· port the crime and drove to the police station just after 1 a.m. l GIVEIN, There's temptation everywhere you turn .... at safe prices Fro•PageAl BULLION •.. because lhey were behind on payments, they ..OQU)d lose lht dollar \'alue ol their stores. But Jack Fulton, vice presi- dent or the firm, sald those who held valid insurance policies would be eligible to collect on the insurance upon bringing the ac- counts uptodate. Fulton said one woman was so anxious that she brought in an en- velope containing a check for past due premiums, and insisted that be take it. "It's all right," fult.on told her. ''You can Just mall I\,'' But she pressed it into his band and said, .. No, you take it now." Fulton·said that many clients are claiming to have stored more in safety deposit boxes than was listed on insurance inventories. P aradoxically, be said, other clients are claiming now to have stored less. · He cited the case or one woman insured for $5,000 worth or jewelry, who now claims the value actually was $200,000. Because oft.he robbery, she's out $195,000, iI the claim is true. "Other people are saying there • was nothing in that box except grandmother 's will." Fulton said. He said there have been several claims to large sums of foreign money s tored in the vaults. Although such clai ms would be useless to r ecover on io- s1;1rance, "If you like to set up a nice tax loss, you just claim a qu.arter or a million dollars ... be said. Fulton said that complete, run. ning inventories were kept on in- s ured accounts, both to protect clients and Swiss Vaults. "We know there were people who had nothing but money and papers in some accounts, or they would have been insured. _ ••Now all of a sudden they're saying there was a lot more. Maybe there was and maybe there wasn't. 1 Fulton said some boxes hadn't been opened for as long as two years. - FBI agents, poring over lists ot clients, recognized atdeast two names of persons who hadn't a • chance to open their boxes for some time: The owners were in led er al prisons. One convict had stored only a few silver and gold bullion coins, but the other stored 500 ounces or silver. worth $2,290 on today's market. Most or the Swiss Vault clien· tele, according to Fulton, were doctors, lawyers and other pro- f essionals. · Meantime, FBI otriciaJs and S anta Ana police today r eported no leads in the robbery. . Richard Woolf, an agent in the Los Angeles di vision, s aid "There have b~ no significant develop. ments.'' '' Surn111er ae Sumn1er sail~ sale .) . Drexel and Heritage Furniture Reduced up to2()% sale W!ybeQlUllcMf N lheleprklel. ~anriliypdlt! On!Jctfll :andHeift.age" Uphohlel'YuptoJMolf •. Supetb~cl , dining room,bcdroomtnd ~ fumiWre (ilgnlflandy) NdUced. Collie be ...... nta.te•lcM!ilerhomc. )Gllf loweller horMI CONVENIENT FINANCING. PRC)fESSIONAl. IHTE<RIOR DESIGN WITHOUT 08LIGATl0t( ANO COMfORTABL£ PARKING. 1514 NORTH MAIN• SANTA ANA '71-41 G41 .. 39t ~· Orange ·coast E 0 f'T I 0 rt VOL 70, NO. 201, ~SECTIONS, "8 PAGES. ORANGE COUNTY, CALI FORNI A \ ·. Toe:f*r's ~1.,sln._ . N.Y. Stoeks WEDNESDAY, JULY 20, 1977 -,------------Cities, SeJaool Districts Must /let--------..... ~ ....... -..."""' ' ··€a1-Higher Tl\xes Be Averted? By KATHY CLANCY • Of ... Dlll4r ..... IWH How much will existing property tax rates in Orange County have to drop if county property owners aren't to be hit with higher tax bills this year? ACCORDING TO a county repor~ cities along the Orange Coast will have to slice from 11to30 cents eff their tax rates to maintain the status quo. The same r eport shows that county government must hack 23 cents off the county's $1.43 tax rate to keep tax-payers even. And Orange Coast school districts will have to lop from W.manSeeks seven cents to $1.24 off tbe1r tax rates if taxpayers aren't to get socked with higher tax bills this year. · SHOULD LOCAL taxing agencies fail to reduce their property tax rates by those amounts most homeowners will again be handed higher tax bills this year because of the record 19.7 percent gain in county assessect valuation. That's because assessed value is the base that rates are applied to in determining tax bills. If assessed valua- tion climbs and tax rates don't go down by the same percentage, the net result is higher property tax bills. As property values have climbed in recent years most tax rates have declined. But the declines jn most instances h Mesan Sues Her Doctor for Right By GARY GRANVILLE Ol IM o.i1., PO.i SLtll A suit filed Tuesday in Orange County Superior Court asks that the court or- der a doctor caring for a stricken Costa Mesa woman to follow the woman's long- standing written directive by allowing her "to die in dignity." Such an order would mean dis continuing giving 84-year-old Marie Welday the medication and drugs that have kept her alive for more than a year, ac. cording to \he complaint. The la<vsuit filed by the stricke n woman's daughter. Marie Leuck, is believed to be one of the first under California'~ new so-called Right to Die Law. Mrs. Leuck based her lawsuit on a notarized affidavit signed by her mother on June 27, 1972. In that typewritten one-page affidavit, Mrs. Weld ay said, "No doctor is to take any measure whatsoever to artifically pre· serve or stimulate life in my body when it is ready to die." "My reason is simple. I want to die in dignity," Mrs. Welday said in her affidavit. According to the lawsuit, Newport B eac h physician Theodore A. Alex has, since May 4 , 1976, disregarded Mrs. Welday's wish to not have her life sustained by artifical m eans. It is declared in the complaint that on that date Mrs~ Welday "suffered a stroke leaving her permanently co matose. 1taralyzed and blind." The compiaint alleges the woman's death is imminent and that she is "being kept artificial- ly alive under the direction of the defendant by the administration of glucose, electrolytes. heart and blQOd pressure medication and other nutrients administered through a nasal tube.'' ) The lawsuit notes that Mrs. Welday as a patient in Park Superior Convalescent Hospital in Newport Beach is unable lo manage her own affairs. In a separate court petition, Mrs. Leuck asked to be appointed her guardian. The lawsuit alleges that the 84 ·year -old stricken woman's "death is being prolonged against her expressed wishes" and is interfering with her "right to choose the manner of her death once il is certain and immi· nent." 1, It pleads with the c£rt to order Dr. Al ex and othen' who might treat Mrs. Weldaytdallowher"to die naturally and according to her wishes.'' It is expected that a bearing on the lawsuit seeking the court in- junction will be scheduled for hearing within a month. haven'tkept pace with the rises in value. . The county report, »Y Auditor·Controller Vic Heim, shows what tax rates would have to drop to if tax bills are nottogoup. . IN THE CASE of Laguna Beach, for example, city council members would have to chop last year's $1.65 rate by 30 cents per $100 of assessed valuation. And in the Irvine Unified School District, for instance, the tax rate would have to drop by $1.24 to $3.75. But the property tax picture isn't that simple. The county report does not take into account com· (See hoPERTY, Page A!) Five-cent Tax On Gas Wins · ~urut~Projt'et Campaign Raises Legal Questions Nancy Striley, a member of Costa Mesa High School's Future Farmers of Ame~iea does a last minute to}it!\ up 0,11 ber goat. Ruby, just befdre Juttglng today at the OraNe County Fair. Ruby and several other kind• of livestock are on display at the fair which runs through Sunday. Relat· • ed story, photo, AlO. Tentative OK WASHINGTON CAP) -Presi- dent Carter has tentatively ap- proved a prop0sal to increase the federal gasoline tax by up to five cents a gallon to finance transportation and other energy. related programs, an administra- tion source says. Carter gave his assent Tues· day during a meeting of officials ·;n c luding Transportation Secretary Brock Adams, energy adviser James Schlesinger, economic adviser Charl es Schultze and budget director Bert Lance. The officials met to discuss a · wide range of energy proposals that may be submitted to the House ad hoc energy committee chaired by R ep. Thomas L. Ashley (D·Ohio). The gasoline tax proposal would involve an increase or three, foor or five cents in the tax that motorists pay for gasoline at the pump, the source said. The current tax is four cents a gallon. Carter, while giving general approval to the proposal. still must give his final okay before it is sent in final form to Capitol Hill, the source said. The ad· ministration is "moving pretty expeditiously" to shape the package of proposals, he said. Carter's proposal to increase gasoline taxes by five cents ~ gallon, with a possible rise lo SO cents after 10 years, was killed in the House Ways and Means COm· mittee last month. The revenues under that plan would have been refunded as rebates equally to everyone, giving an incentive for c:onsumers to become energy savers. BySTEVEMITCHELL Homeowners filed a public orn.o.i1.,P110ts1a11 notice to circulate a petition last An initiative campaign which, June 30, and must wait until if successful, would wipe out Satur~ lo begin the petition plans for a 665-unit home and drive, aceording lo homeowner apartment project in north Costa spokesman Mike McLaughlin. a Mesa, has raised a number of Newport Beach attorney who complex legal questions today. lives in north Costa Mesa. North Costa Mesa Homeowners But there is a lime sc~edule in· Association members will mount volved which could see tbe de- a petition drive Saturd11y to col-veloper obtaining his building lect al least 3,600 signatures of permits for the project before Costa Mesa voters to force a re-petitioners havetheir&ignatures. zone on properly in their The second reading of the final neighborhood. development' plan for Arnet The parcel in the controversy is comes Aug. 3. If approved at that 48 acres of beanfields straddling time, the plan is adopted as law bolhsidesoCSouthCoastDrive. 30 days later, and the developer The land is leased to the Amel can file for building permits for Development Co. o( Santa Ana by the project. ownerGeoeK.awamura. Can Arne! begin work on the $20 Final development plans ap. to $30 million project at that time, proved this week by the Costa in spite or the initiative cam- Mesa City Council show 126 paign? single·family homes and 539 Opinionsdilfer. apartmentsonthesite. City Manager Fred Sorsabal But homeowners, who claim said the city would probably not the approved project wlll cause issue building permits if the peti- massive traffic tieups and in· lion •signatures are in but not cr eased crime in their portion of certllied by the county by that the city, are seeking an initiative date. in order to rezone the area to R·l, "We might bold up In that case, or single-family residential use. but I'd have to get a legal opinion The Amel property is currently on thalflrst. "he said. zoned R-2, or medium density but ,. Assistant City Attorney Robert this involv~s a complicated Campagnaaaidhebelievestheci- .. trade-ofC" procedure wherein ty is obligated to iss9e the permits single family homes are mixed ifeverythingelseilftttorder. with high·d~ity apartments to "If we (the cJtyt interfere with createtheR·2deslgnation. (See PltOJEcr, Page AZ> and that state police were on the ecene. • , Gov. *it.on Sbapp declared a state clef treme emergency and waa to tour the stricken com· Mesa Council Ups Freeze On Building Costa Mesa councilmen tacked another eight months onto a · building freeze on a four block area in the city's westside this week because they are not through looking at the area yet. The unanimous vote extends a four-month freeze approved for the area last March 21 In order for city planning officials lo re- vie\t density problems in the residential area. The freeze area ·encompasses homes between Hamilton and 19th Streets on the north and south, and Pomona and PJacen· tia A venues on the east and west. It also includes a small area on Maple Street north or Bernard ,Street. Planners for the city say the area, currently zoned for hiJb density apartments, ls becomini overdeveloped. The city is con· sideripg changing the area back to tnedium density development. Lots in the freeze area typical· ly are 60 by 300 f~et and. have many of the development pro- blems of long, narrow lots. ifn the past such sites have been de- signed With apartmenta on one side and long drlvewaya on tbe otber •. SeniOr GoHers Get Compromise Costa Mesa . councilm·en reached a compromise on re- duced rat.es for senior citizens us· ing the municipal golf course this week, but at least one elderly golfer still felt that he bad been left in ~e rough. City officials have been con- sidering charging $15 a month Coe older users of the Costa Mesa Golf and Country Club instead of $.10. But while the quesUon of the fee was not the is$Ue, the hours of play for the older golfers was. City Manager Fred Sqr-sabal suggested older ,solfers ustpg the $15 Ucket. be allowed to use the Mesa Linda and Los hagos courses only in the afternoon hours. But ntired pur~ng agent Jaworski Set -WASHINGTON CAP) li'ormer speci-1 Watergate pros- ecutor Leon Jaworski, whO ob- tained the tape that forced former 1'esident Nixon to re- aign, airetd tbis afternoeln to become ddef lnvestigatO( of the House p$>00 into .alleged Korean ln.Ouenee-bU)iog ln Congreu. - Dick Foster said oldsters were getting th~ leftovers. and that af. ternoon play on the course is dangerous for senior citizens, who could suffer mness in the af. ternoon heat. He suggested the $15 tickets be good anytime on either course. City officials said Costa Mesa might lose $12,000 to $15,000 an- nually if they did that. The elders, they reasoned, would be using up play time that full· paying golfers could be using. Foster sald poppycock. • 'W-:'re only ta.Udng about 30 ~35 seniOl" citizens," be said. ,~ '<, · • I City recreation department of. ficials said that' number is more like 100 older goff ers. and coun- cilmen this week decided it was time for a compromise. · · . The new golf course regula· lions now allow senior citizens who llve in Costa Mesa to play golf on the Mesa Linda Course any time of the da.Y. <See GOLF, Page A2> • Coast Weather Low cloadi late tonight and Thursday morning. Otherwise llJDDY Thurs• d.,. Lows tonight 56 to 65. ·Htcba '!bur.day near '70 at btac!MI to near a> inland. INllDE TODAY . ,, I 1\2 ~l V PILOT c BoJ1nces Baek Bullion M~ 102, Retunu to Work IA>sses Queried . OLUSTEE. Fla. CAP> -"Thll is the tarsi time I ".i:, ~11·~ .. " W1lhc Srown, 102. I Id u he reported back lo work 40 a Green Thumb PtOll'Dm for elderly peo- ph• Ht• mtSsed ix months because of an operation m whwh !\ome toes wt•re umpututt.'d due to a circul atory problem. Rrown Kuyi; tht.• loss hasn't affected his work. which ts cutting brush and pulling weeds. GrN•n Thumb octiciul~ were surprised when Hro~n n•turm•d and w~nh.•d his job back In the Olustee Expcnmcntul Forest in northern Jt'lorida. By PJUUP ROSMARIN Ol t• 0.11• ...... ''-" Insurance ad.just.ors are due at Swiss Vaults Inc. in Santa Ana Thursday io unravel the losses in the largest unsolved robbery in Orange County history. Ile work1J 20 hours a week at $2.30 an hour. sup- plementing has Social Security income of a.bout $148 a monlh. Brown was put in u nursing home after his operation, but he was too impatient to stay long. "I 'll work as long as I am able," Brown says. ''I trus t in the Lord. You have to trust in Him." The aold and silver bu1Uon ex• change and brokerage firm, at 1404 N. Grand Ave., was robbed July 9 -a Saturday -after the company president, Vincent M. Carrano, agreed to m eet a prospective client after hours. Instead or making a deposit or 20 bags of silver, which Carrano said his telephone caJler told him he wanted to do, the man alleged- ly pointed a gun at Carrano and allowed confederates inside. Starving, Naked Carrano told police that while the gunman forced blm to sit fac· mg a wall inside his own office, the other robbers dismantled two huge vault boxes, weighing torui each, and carted them away. NEW YORK (AP>-Six naked and sl::irvint-i children -the youngest four weeks old. the oldest 6 years -have been found huddled in bed 10 a filthy apart· m ent in the Canarsie section of Brooklyn. Police arrested a 25·year ·old woman today and charged her with endangering the welfare of the children. The children, found Tuesday night after police received an anonymous telephone tip, were suffering from debydration and exposure. a spokesman at Kings County Hospital said. Some of the children told police Vacationing CM Woman's Trailer .Burns A vacationing Costa Mesa woman 1s due for an unpleasant surprise when she returns to her mobile home. It burned Tuesday afternoon. Barbara Barker, 1640 Newport Blvd., Space 63. left this week on a vacation, according lo the manager of lhe El Nido Trailer Park. • The fire caused $7.000 damage to the lratlcr and $4,500 lo its con tents. firemen estimate. Fire Capt. Gerald Poarch sc.11d fire anaJy!>tS believe lhc fire was 1·aused by a gas stove instaJled too close to wooden cabinets. Poarch said he did not know i( the s tove was on at the lime of the fire. 2JJ Workers Poi.soned ORANGE COVE (AP) -At lt-asl 28 citrus workers were poisoned by a pesticide as they harvested oranges near here, Tulare County officials report. The workers wer e poisoned by the pesticide Parathion while picking fruit on property owned by Pacific Ag'ricultural Service Co., county Agricultural Com· miss1ont-r Clyde Churchill said. Front Page AJ GOLF .•• Older players from elsewhere obtaining the $15 card will still be /' limited to pl ay in the afternoon on either course. Sorsabal told councilmen this week, "I think it would be nice to give any senior citizen a break, but Costa Mesa's taxpayers are ptcking up the tab, and maybe we should be paying just for our own seniors.·· Foster said he was hoping the morning play would be good for all senior citizens, ''but if they don't live here. I guess It's their own hard luck." ORA NOE COAST c:. DAILY PILOT their father rued of 8 heart attack about two weeks ago. They said their mother left several days <.1go. Shirley Jordan, lhe mother or two of the children, left them alone while she searched for her 23·year-old sister, Brenda, the mother of four of the children. police said today. The two sisters, both apparent- ly unmarried, had been living together in the three·story, low- income housing project, police said. Brenda Jordan disappeared several days ago, and her sister left lhe children lo search for her, officers said. Police picked up both women today, but charged Shirley Jordan because she had most re· cent custody of the children, they said. The children were treated at the hospital and placed in two foster homes by the Sl. Joseph's Childrens' S.ervices agency. Richard Lutz of St. Joseph's said the agency would evaluate the situation before making a re· commendation on whether the children should be returned lo their mothers. TONIGHT MUSIC OF AMERICA -Free concert. Bluegrass with Abe Brown and Canyon Grass, South Coast Village, 7:30 p.m. ORANGE COUNTY FAJR - Continui ng through July 24. "JACQUES BREL'' -South Coast Repertory T h eater, Tuesday.Sunday through July 30, 8p.m. TmJRSDA Y , JULY 21 COASTLINE CC LECTURE - .. Making lt as a Single," Mariners School, 7 p.m. Estimates of insured losses were $1.1 million, but police say uninscrcd losses clajmed may bring the total lo more than $3 million. Most or the goods stored in the firm's two vault rooms were gold and silver bullion. Jewelry, cash and foreign exchange also were taken in the theft. Some clients who stored precious metals.ill the vaults rushed after the robbery to pay overdue insurance pre· mi u m s. They feared that because they were behind on payments, they would lose the dollar value of their stores. Bul Jack Fulton, vice presi· dent of the firm. said those who held valid insurance policies would be eligible to collect on the insurance upon bringing the ac· counts up to date. Fulton said one woman was so anxious that she brought in an en· velope containing a check for past due premiums, and insisted that he take it. E'ront Page Al FLOOD ••• inj uries. Damage was extensive. Pfuhl was quoted by a Civil Defense worker as saying the cost could run as high as $100 million. The churning water snapped trees and power poles and over- turned scores of cars as th e flood gushed mto the city. Henderson said 30 mobile hornes wer e washed away, although there were no fatalities. The flooding was the worst here smce 1936, when high water on St. Patrick·s Day caused the greatest monetary damage of the city's many floods. But Johnstown is best known for the May 31, 1889, deluge when the South Fork Dam burst and unleased a wall of water that r oared through the Little Conem augh Valley, pushing peo- ple and buildings before it. Thal dam no longer exists. E'ro• Page AJ PROPERTY TAX ••• plicated state school finance laws which leave many dis- tricts hard -pre~sed to lower tax r ates. IN MANY CASES, for example, the increases in as- sessed valuation mean the state chips in less tor education while local property owners spend more. The report also does not account for new county prop- ·. erty which result in new additions to the county tax roll. That is a factor Assessor Bradley Jacobs attributes with 4.5 percent of the county's 19. 7 percent overall gain. What Helm's figures do show is what tax rate wouI<! be needed to keep the past year's property tax bills level. FOR CITIES along the Orange Coast the required cuts would include 19 cents to J1 tax rate of $1.01 in Fountain Valley; a 22·cent redu~Uon to a $1.03 rate in Co$ta Mesa; a 28·cent cut to $1.34 in Huntington Beach; a 14-cent cut to a rate of 51 cents in Irvine; an 18·cent cut to a rate ot 93 cents in Newport Beach. San Clemente city officials would need to make a 25- cent rate cut to 96 c~nts; San Juan Capicstrano, 23 cents to a 76·ce'nt rate; Seal Beach, 11 cents to a 96·cent rate, and Westminster , a 12-cent cut to 59 cents. Among other Orange Coast School Districts, the Sad· dleback Valley district would require a $1.10 cut to a tax rate of $4.23 per $100 of ~essed valuaUon; Capistrano Unified a 91-cent drop to $3.34; La.JUDa Beach Unified, a 52-cent drop to a $2.01 rate; Newport-Mesa Unified, a 62· cent drop to $3.11 in Newport Beach and a 63·cent drop to $3.38inCosta Mesa; Also, Huntington Beacb Union lflgh. a 38·cent cut to $1.94; Fountain Valley elementary, 25 cents to$1.09; H\mt· lngton Beach clctnentary, a 25-cent cut to $1.41; Ocaan View elemeqtary, a 29·cent cut to $1.20; seaJ Beach elementary, a seven-cent cut to $1.01, and Westminster · elementary, a24·cent cut tott.01. HEIM'S FIGURES alao say a 13·cent cut to 61.5 cents per $100 of assessed valuation w®ld be needed ll\ the CQast Community College District .. while an lB·Cenl cut-~• 12-- cent taJC rate would be hetded lO offset assessed valuatiOll hikes in the Saddleback COCJ't:nunity Colleae Dlstrtct. Am<>na tax rate drops for uenclea controlled by th• county Board ot SuP.ervilOl'S would be three centa each tor the couniy Hartibra, Biacbes and Paro District aild the county Flood Control Dlatrlct. ' Jn addiUon. tlie report ahowa directon of tbe <>ranle ~~wit District 1ftJuld nffd tO cutitbetr ratt~to 3.4 cents ~centi__peJ" '100ot aueaed valuation tl:tralli Use tamenambii' of1t0Uan that they dld last 7ear • . , 1tfao That? Emmanuel Figueroa, 4, pecks arou.nd the edge of a mir· ror at a reflection of himself. He is among 65 children enrolled in a Head Start program at the GJadalupe Center on Milwaukee's South s ide. FBI Arrests Pair In Mi~sile Spy .Plot FORT LAUDERDALE, Fla. (AP) -Two men, one from Germany, were arrested by the FBI today and acc\15ed of con· spiring to s muggle components of lhe top.secret u,s . cruise mis· sile to the Soviet Union. "We have arrested two enemy agents," Julius L. Mattson, special agent in charge of the FBJ office in Miami, said shortly after the two were picked up without incident at the Fort Lauderdale airport. They were identified as Carl L. Weischenberg, 33, a citizen of W esL Germany and a resident of Freeport in the Bahamas, and Carl Johh Heiser Ill, 32, of Highland Beach, Fla. There was no indication of where and how Heiser obtained or planned to obtain parts for the cruise missile, a pilollcss weapon which can fly a prearranged, low·level route lo its tar gel. The FBI initially refused to elaborate on the charges against Ute two. But an affidavit filed al their hearing before a federal magistrate a few hours later ac· c used Heiser or furnishing military and det~nse secrets to Weischenberg for mo~e than two years. 'l'hey were formally charged with "acting as agents of East Germany and the Soviet Union without prior notification to the secretary· of state. The FBI said the adrutional charges ma!' be filed. In Washington, the FBr said the affidavit aJleged that Heiser "has been at least sirice April 1976, furnishing information ad· versely affecting the national de· fense of the United Slates to. Weischen~rg ... . .-According to the affidavit, Weiscf\enberg attempted to buy for the Soviet Union uranium ox· ide 205, thorium 230 and other m aterials, and reportedly of. fered Heiser $250,000 to take com· ponents or the U.S. cruise missile to a Russian in Cuba. ·'As late as June 30. Heiser re· portedly commented that he was involved in international es· pionage with the East Germans and Russians and as late H July 1, was stiJl reportedly planning to deliver unspecified components of the U.S. crwse m1ss1le io a Sovie} agent based in Cub~ •t th~ statement said. GIVEIN There's temptation ever,ere you turn ... at sa le pric s . . I .-Drexel' Heritage Reduced up to2Q% ~be cauriousP At ettesopritts. )QI c:an only pt(Jfitr Otecl.'f" itnd Hent•ge' upholstery up ro 20% off. Superb st!lcctions of dlning'lJOm. b«ll'OOln •ndOCQsloNI furniture (•lg1'1fiantlyl redu<cd, COfmt be tempted .• , ~create a lpvetier homr, YQ1.1t lovcflcr ~l .Froa Page Al PROJECT ••• 1ssuing the permtls," he said, "WI.! would be violating our own na.lb and, perhaps eive the developer the right to sue. Campagna said that if the in- itiative ts passed by tbe voters next March, and Arnel is well into coostruct.loooftbeproject, the de- veloper might end up with a oon- conf orming use on the land. "'fhe portion with aparlments built on it would be nonconform- ing at any rate," he explained. Since the land would be zon~ for single family houses, the com- plt!ted apartments WOWd not COD· lotm with that z9oing but would rernainini standiAg. He said that ~e homeowners could try to get a court injunction to prevent the start of construe· lion ~fore they get th~ necessary, signatures, "But l'm ·inclined to feel they would be in a better posi- tion to wait until they have the certified signatures." , The homeowners group plans to- ha vo at least 5,000 signatures before Sept. 1, when Arne! could conceivably file for building permits. Homeowner spokesman Mik(· McLaughlin said his group does not lhmk they'll have tom~ a n uuunctaonlohalt work. ·'I think the council will talce a Jook at our petition signatures and decide not to issue permits," he said. "I don'llhink they would de· liberately try to frustrate the in- itiative process." "It seems to me that what's go- ing to happen is, Amel will have lo force action lo get the city to issue builrung permits." ln other words, Arnel will have tosuethecily. · · Arnel has the problem of whether or not they can obtain a constitutionally protected, vested right in this project by construct· mg an good faith while knowing the whole questton is up for de- C' 1!> 10n by the entire city," Mc Laughlin said. "They have lo decide whether lo put millions into construction of a project they might not be able to complete." Spokesmen for Arne! Develop- ment Co. were unavailable for comment today. A company employe said the onJy persons who could discuss the initiativt: l-a mpaign are on vacation. Deputy Wounded FRESNO (AP) -A esoo County Sheriff's dep ty r e- mained in guarded condi ion to- day after he was shot in the stomach wt\jle serving a search warrant for heroin, offici Is sajd. Ross E. Kelly, In hts mid· s, was wounded Tuesday whe he, two other deputies a d four policemen forced their ay into a home altei theU' lcnoc went un. heeded. sale ,. S~e . CONVENtCNT f'INANCING, PROrE~IONAL INTtRIOR OtSt¢('4 WITHOUT 08~10.\TION ANO C0t>4ro1n ABLC PARK!NO. . . 1514 NORTM MAIN• SANY.A ANA (114) 541•4391 DAIL y PILOT A:J ' County's . FtUr Queen 'Inherited' Beauty Budget LIKE MOTHER -Mission Viejo's Bonnie Luebke (right) is shown with Lawrence Welk and Alice Lon after win- ning the Miss Champagne Mus ic title 20 years ago. Her daughter Debbie is the r eigning queen of the Orange County Fair. ,, Delly ,.l .. t Slaff PllOIO MOTHER BONNIE WITH DAUGHTS!R DEBBIE LUEBKE Beauty Contest Trophies Run In the Family Tennis Tiff • 7 Cup Proteste_rs Face Trial Friday Trials of all seven r emainjng defendants among the Davis Cup Dozen, the 12 demonstrators who last spring crashed the tenrus m atches in Newport Beach to protest South Africa's racial policies, are now scheduled for Friday. Judge Donald Dungan con- Unued the case of five scheduled to go on trial in Harbor Judicial Dist rict Court Tuesday morning so they m ay a ll be heard together. Judge Dungan is currenUy con· s idering a number of motions made last week by attorneys for Smoke Clinic ·Will Correct ·False Claims Legal actJon taken by the dis- trict attorney's ollice against an Anaheim smoking clinic bas been abandoned w[tb the firm's pledge that it will no longer in- dulge ln mJsleadine advertising. Officials ot No Smoke Center, Tnc .• nave also assured represen- tatives of the consomer fraud division that they will make restitution to cu.stomtrs wboae complaints lod to tho atlng of the Orange County Superior Court action. Lawyers ror the firm accepted the tenm ol an injunction that pumanenUy bars any IUture D:iitleadlna 1dvcrtlsh11. two defendants whose trial already was scheduled to begin Friday morning. Alex Dortch and Stanley Alex- ander, both of Los Angeles, have pleaded innocent to charges of vandalism and trespassiilg and are free on $tiOO bail each. They were allegedly involved in tossing an oily, sticky. chemical substance onto center court at the Newport Beach Ten- nis Club during Davis Cup play between the U.S. and South Africa. Trespassing charges only were fil ed against the remaining five, Leone Cherksey, Oscar Lara, Willie Johnson. Keenan Sheedy, and Gladys Estrada, wbo al· legedly tried to stage a sit·in on the same court in an effort to dis· rupt the matches. Still five other defendants in· volved in that delaying action pleaded gUiJty to trespaulnc cbarees In June. They were ordered to pay S20C> ruies Cit submit to a prescribed period of community social.and charitable work as unpaid vGlun- teera. The sit-in occurred April 17, the day after Dortch and Alex- ander were arrested following llie goo-llirowing epis6C! American team captain Tony Trabert became 10 f\lrtoua at tbt acU-.jat tnJecUon of l'aclal potlUci Into the aportllle event that he pua.uneled a lew wllh bl• racqu~ · Pl'Oteaters clil.lm he •houtd bave be.n arrested arid bOoked lor auault, auertln& dis-crtminMGl'Y~on. By WILLIAM SCHRIEBER 0ta.o.11r~*"*" Though three of ber four dau1hters are beauty pageant veterans, Bonnie Luebke ol Mis· al on Viejo 1h1tten the etereotype of a pusbY backat11e mother. Part ol the reasoo abe doesn't crave such vicarloua competition may lie in her own string of pageant victories ln tbe 19508. . Her impressive list of UUes ranges from Miu Madison, Wlsconsln, and Queen of tbe Wiaconsin NaUooal Guard t9 the first UUe ot Mias Champagne Music for Lawrence Welk in 1956. Ironically, Mrs . Luebke will have to portray exactly the kind o{ beauty contestant's m9ther she has always disliked in an up- coming movie featuring her daughter Debbie, reigoing queen ol the 19'T1 Orange County Fair. The former beauty queen and m other or five, still strikingly t>eautiful 20 years after winning her last title, bas a healthy philosophy about s uch competi- tions. "Thirty years ago, beauty pageants were all body," she said. "That's an old concept because it isn't r eally just a beauty contest anymore. Judges are looking for tal ent and persqnality-a kind of sparkle." . A,.WlN-e 'MAD MEN HAVE THE RIGHT OF WAY' James Meadows Ends 1, 700-mlle Sall to Boston 'Madn~' Sails Mrs. Luebke said her ex- periences in beauty pageants were extremely helpful to her in developing poise, charm and an Rtx:rtJ, Ma,.ns G-.! J _ ~ -! '-r open way with other people. She '.I:"" Uu.te ~UI sees the same advantages to her BOSTON (AP) -The lHoot sailboat missed the dock, then daughters, if they choose to com-came about just in tJme for a p•ff of air to spin it dizzily into a pete. . motorboat. "But if they weren't interested "Mad men have the right of way," James Meadows shouted for themselves, I would never, t th bo T d ever think or pushjng them, .. she a e power at ues ay as he ended a 1,700-mile journey via a said. "Winrung isn't really why a Sunfish sailboat from Miami, just one or the oddball sagas o{ the sea on New England's summer waters. girl should enter these contests. There should be other reasons." EARLIER THIS SUMMER, A MIAMI man tried to set a Mrs. Luebke's oldest daughter, trans-Atlantic record by driving a power boat from Portugal to a 19·year·old child psychology Newport, R.I. Mechanical problems stopped him at sea and the student in Colorado. never com· voyage was abandoned. peled in pageants. Debbie. on the Last weekend, an Irishman visited Boston to recount the trip other hand, already has a list or he made across the North Atlantic in a 26-foot, banana-shaped titles to her credit and 12·year· craft made of sewn ox hide. old Carolyn was r ecently named On Sunduy .· another adventurer set sail for Ireland from Miss Pre·teen Orange County. MarbleheaC1.Mass .. in al7·footmflatablesailingdinghy. Melissa.11, is still trying. "I 'M A VERY UNCONVENTIONAL sailor." said Meadows, Perhaps Mrs. Luebke's fondest from Concord, M:i ss .. before leaving Miami on April 1. m emories of her days in beauty Instead of charts, Meadows piloted by gas station road competition came when she was maps. chosen from a field of 2SO en· ··After a wh it e, I graduated to Rand·McNally," he said. trants for the Miss Champagne He crui sed the Intercoastal Waterway, and when at sea, Slashed Another $7.6111llll• •as sliced from Oranae County aovern· ment'a proposed ~.8 millioo 1977·76 budget by co~nty supervisors Tuesday. Adding that to another $2.9 million ln trimminas approved earlier, tbe county budset now stands at $MS.4 million with addl· tional cboppinc expected aa public bearings continue this week. Tuesday's paring cut about 3.5 cents per $100 of assessed valua- tion hom the tentative property t ax rate leaving it for the present at $1.49, six cents higher tbanlasl year. But once supervisors pump in $9 mllllon worth of federal re- venue sharing funds earmarked for property tax relief and con- tinue their budget chopping the rate should drop by more &ban nine more cenl-'. Tuesday's afternoon budget hearing opened with an angry ex- c b a nge b etween Supervisors Laurence Schmit and Ralph Clark. Schmit proposed consolidating the county information and refer- ral programs with the consumer protection and veterans service activities a.s a way of saving money. But Clark criticized Schmit for bringing his idea up at budget time and accused him or trying to take advantage o{ a popular tax- cutting stance. "I think you brought up a stupid thing," Clark continued. Schmit continued by accusing fell ow supervisors of not listen- ing to the woperty taxpayers pleas about costs. Schmit then proposed a county staff study about the consolida· lion, but generated little support. Supervisor Ralph Diedricb said be couldn't ask the staff to spend their time at taxpayers' expense making a study unless Schmit could provide evidence to support his position first. The bulk of the $7.6 million trimmed from the budget Tue54 day came in the proposed $128 million huma n and social services programs. Music title. never strayed more than five miles from the beach. His boat was She was on her honeymoon equipped with a small radio, a compass, a paddle, food and HB V th when she entered the Sacramen· water, a pup tent, sleeping bag and a ration of grog. .I OU to pageant, judged. by disc MEADOWS TOTED A SPEARGUN BUT said be loaded and jockeys from all over California. cocked it only when he slept in snaky Florida swamps. ~ -M -need "I entered because I was most While crossing Delaware Bay, it wu 90'Calm that he had to ~T~ interested to see if he (Lawrence paddle. He said a large ship passed so close that be could bave Welk) was as nice a man as splattered it with an egg. W.R Shoo,.;na everyone said," Mrs. Luebke re-ii .,_ -e called. "He really was -it was justlikeafamily.'' Lo H •I ~· AHuntlngtonBeaehyoutbw~ A description of the 1956 Miss wer-cost omes shot and killed one man and. Champagne Music a ppeared in a wounded two others during a Sacramento newspaper column. · fracas at a New Year's party was It called her "aome dish'' and "a OK' d • N • I A~ sentenced Tuesday to indefinite 22·year·01d, 5·6 brown eyed Ill 1gue . . a cYoomutmhiAtmuthenont .wtyith. the California blonde built to specifications." As Miss Ohampagne Music, Orange County Superior Court Mrs. Luebke performed m any Provis ion f or so·called Ineflect,whatihecommission ·Judge H. Warren Knight sen· functions with the Welk troupe, moder at e cost h ou s ing was approved on a 5-0 vote Monday tenced Thomas Joseph .Stack. 20, including dancing with the band wedged into Orange County was a recommendation for the ot 9593 Pettswood Drive, after master himself, meeting his Planning Commission approval zone change needed to designate S tack pleaded guilty to plane at airports, making public Monday of a 312-acre industrial- the 312 acres a planned com-manslaughter and two counts of a ppearances and workin g commercial·residential develop-munityd.istrtct. assault with a deadly weapon. backstage with the women who ment in Laguna Niguel. In so doing, the commission ~tac~ wa.s _jailed Jan. 1 after wanted to meet him. The multipurpose development followed a planning staff recom-being identified as the man who "The average age of these will eventually surround the now mendation that included a men-shot Brian Schneider, 20, of women was about 50,'' she said. isol ated Ziggurat to the west side tion of the development as a 7621 Seine Drive, Huntington· "He was like Elvis Presley to of La Paz Road between Laguna potential "town center" for the Beach, in the chest with a .22• • them. They just went wild." Niguel Regional Park and OsO: Saddleback area. caliber rifle. After her stint with Welk, Mrs. Parkway. <Related story Page The plan endorsed by lhe com-Schneider died ln the driveway Luebke continued fashfon model· A7 .) mission commits Narland Corp., of a home at20641 Goshawk Lane fng but said she had already As a pproved by the com-a Rockwell International sub-where an argument erupted dur· made her choice of career -mission. 121 of the 312 acres will sidiary, to specified uses on de· ing a New Year's party • marriage and family. be devoted to industrial use and signaled land parcels. Two other men. identified as "1 made the choice and didn't 64 acres are designated for com· During the dtscussion leading John A. "Junior" Hunter, 21, and miss it (show business) at all," mercial use. to the commission's unanimous Bradley J. Gillespie, 21, both of she said. The plan calls for roughly 500 vote, commission Chairman Huntington Beach, were also "I gness a lot o{ women will residential units to be clusterred William MacDougall called the shot by Stack in what police bate me for it but to me, a on 55 acres and the balance or the development "a good opporturu-described as a drunken brawl. woman's place is in the home -land to be used for open space t y for low and moderate cost Both men have since recovered th at 's the hardest job of all. _a_n_d_r_o_a_d_w_a_y_s. ________ .;..;b.;;.ou;;;.;s;;.;;i~ng~.:..."------------f.;...ro;...m..;;....;.th_e.;...i_r ... w...;:ou..::;;.nds.::::..:. ____ _ There aren't enough hours in a day to raise five children and have a career too." She and her husband, Ron. pre- sident ol an El Toro machinery company, moved to the Sad- dleback Valley eight years ago specifically because they thought it was a good place to raise a ramur. Even the Luebke's 16-year-otd son bas won awards -for his sports activities. "He really likes hls sisters to compete In the pageants," Mrs. Luebke said. "They bring home so many beautiful girlfriends." Does she still watch Lawrence Welk? "All the Wotnen in our family, especially the young ones, really love him," she a aid. "The men think he's corny." MoonCultu.t CovenNrula HOUSToN (AP) -A leader or the Moonies was tba one who cov- ered the nudi~. EASTERN TIME Cl0Ck·watch1ng m l/u Orient Ancient Oriental civilizaUons are r .;ponsible for so many fascinating "firsts," it should come &$ no surprise to anyone that the Chinese and Japanese pioneered in bulldine some ingenious timepieces. A huge automaton-astromoDllcal clock which kept time In Su Sun&, China in 1090 A.D. is of apedal interest to horological historians. lt ran by water, and was considered one ot the wonders of lhat era. The Opulence of Diamonds The Accuracy of Omega Y' o u 'tt fi n d opulence everywhere in this exqulsite Omega women's dress watch. In the yellow or white HK gold textured bracelet. In the diamonds framinf the face. And in the unrivaled Omega mecnanlsm inside. • . , • ' • • I l I ' ' Patrick Hi.ekey, Hou.it.on direc- tor of the ftev. Sutt. .Myung Moon's ~ Ch~h. ad-- milted that on Monday ntaht be pasted cardt>Oatd dresses over pictuf9 ol nude womcin palnted . on the willdowa ol several adult boOki~ anCt lou.n1es. Jl• 1ave no ..eason. The Japanese developed a "stick" clock. It feattlred a descendlng driving weight, which indicated tim~ with a pointer as it moved down an inscribed panel. Japap was alao home ot the romantic incense clock. A tralUng wisp ()( hlce.ose wound ib 1• war through a maze -to mark the .._ _______ ,_ ___ _ passage of time. In Geisha houses, these fragrant devices were often 'used to time the vlstb or guest&. • I I "l can't 1ot tbero olf. and now I'll ~ably t.ave to P•Y IOa:lt to c«M oUt and take theiD: (lff, •• ao em~e aa1d. Mechanlcnl watches were lntroduced to t.he Orient by .Europeans in 1542. and were among .lhe motl 1ou1t)t·1Ctct or Western gadeets. Now the 01-ient ·~ f!be Umepfecea to lh~ world. ~-~~-------~Willl~:illl;il:i.liiiiillilJ ... A.. DAtl v PILOT s Wednet.c11r. July 20, 1077 ' Jaa •• Oil Moving Again wl•la Tem •plahae TnU:k Hi/3 Pi.peline~ Leak Repaired HOW'S 'ftlA'n A family ol my ltquaJnt.ncc flnolly aot fed up w~lh trylnC to watct\ lelfJvlslon 1n one or lhose fnnac areas <>I Newport Beach. So they called ln the televtston expert1. You may have vlewtd TV yourself an one of tho~e places The Jet Crom Orance County Airport roan ove-rhead Just In time to wipe.a grand·slam home run in TV's Game of the Week The announcer screams. "Wow! Did you see lhat'!" No, )'OU didn't. Your screen was floppme around like a bowl of Jello in an earthquake. Or, just in the cTucial moment o( ''As The World Turns," the guy next d oor turns on his buzz.saw. And that turns your TV picture upside down. MY FRIENDS HAO all these· experiences. Fed up, the lady of the household called the TV man to have a new super antenna in- stalled on the roof Slightly apprehensive. shl' asked for assurances that the ex- pensive new antenna would im prove television reception. The TV man's reply came to her In an accent almost as fuzzy as her television picture. He answered: "Laydie, when we get done. that pitcher will be clair as a bayell .. " "How's that again?·· ''Clair as a bayell. laydie. You know bayell, bayell -clang, clang." .. You mean clear as a bell?" "You got it, layd1e. Clair as a bayell." • Thus it was aftt'r they spanned the communications gap, the new antenna wenl up nnd the TV picture became clair, or whatever All of this i.uggcsts we do have communication gaps in this country caused by use of jargon. slang and regional accents. THESE PROBLEMS have even engulfed Washington, D.C. where our legislators gather to ponder the great issues. Our coastal Congressman Bob Badham, the Republican from Newport Beach, confirJns this. Badham admits in his early days in the House. he had ~o learn a whole new jargon just to do business. "t discovered, fer example that 'the other body' is the U.S. Senate. And 'the other end of Pennsylvania Avenue' is the President." Badham recalled. ·•During what an observer might believe is an angry debate, a House member may declare. "I would like to engage the dist· inguished gentleman from California in a colloquy.'" A colloquy is defined by Webster as a conversation or dialogue. But in Congress, Badham says it may simply mean another congressman is ready to fight with you some more. MAYBe THE ·ONLY national language we'll end up with Is the jargon used by thOse people on Citizen's Band radios. But you need a translator there, too. You know what it means when a CBer shouts over hls car radio, "Watch Your Donkey?" He's telling you a police car is comlng up behind you. And when a CB trucker is carrying "A Load of Postholes," Jt means he's run· ningempty. And I hope all of this la clair as a bayell to you. DEADHORSE, Alllki (AP) Oil la movlna aaaln in the troubl•plaauod Alaaka pipeline after the thlrd shutdown In 16 days. AJ in the other stoppaaes, otflclala blamed "human error " Repalr crews drove a wooden wedge Into a 1 \!ia·lnch vent fitting on a valve Tuesday evening to plug a leak caused when a truck rammed Into a section of the 800·mile line. The Interior Department said that more than 200 barrels -8,400 gallons -had s prayed from the line and cleanup crews were collecting as much of the spilled fuel as possi· ble. ALYESKA PIPELINE Service Co. refused to allow reporters to visit the scene 23 miles south of Prudhoe Bay. But from a plane flying over the site, it looked like a black and brown fan had spread over about seven acres of tundra. Some oil had reached two nearby lakes, but it was not possible from the air lo Judge how serious the pollution was. Oil in the pipeline started mo\'- 1 ng again al 2: 11 EDT, three hours after the repairs were made. An Interior spokesman said the agency did not "requ1n· t1ny special approval" before flow was restarted. LESS THAN 24 H OURS earlier, the Interior Department Jupiter Orbiter ---PlptliH Closed ---. WHERE TRUCK STRUCK PIPE Valvo Break Forced Shutdown had given Alyeska pt'rm1s<>1on to restart the ri. 7 billion pipeline following a JO.day shutdown . Thal had bL•cn caused by an ex- plosion that destroyed Pump Sta- tion No. 8, and Interior blamed "human error.'' The leak was rC'ported at 5:55 p.m . EDT. The truck. a front House Votes Fund For Space Project WASHINGTON CAP> It looks hke ftnancrng for the Jupiter Orbiter space project. heavily lobl.Jicd by Cahforn1a Gov. Edmund Brown Jr., is back in its orbit. - The U.S. House of Representat1 ves reversed 1tsc1r Tuesday and voled to fund its dcvclopml•nt for the next fi scal vcar. In an unexpected 280·131 tally, the House agreed with the Senate to restore $20.7 million lhat the House Appropriations Committee. followed by the House itself, had earlier voted to strikL· Price Rbe Predl~ted In '78 WASHINGTON (AP ) -Americans will find improvement in unemployment and inflation next year, although pnces still may rise as much as 6.5 percent, congressional budget experts said to- day. The Congressional Budget Office said members of Congress writing a federal budget for the 1978 fiscal year, must conclude tha t ''the realistic outlook is for no more than a !low unwinding of the. · -[ ___ 1_N_su_o_R_T___.J current rate of inflation." Jn testimony prepared for the Senate Budget Commit- tee, budget office director Alice R1vhn s aid inflation could be held to between 4.5 and 6.5 percent if increases in food prices do not exceed 6.5 percent. The government's most recent figures show an annual innationrate of 7 .2 percent for this year. ~ Conmt!tlon O~turned NEW YORK (AP) -An appellate court has thrown out the murder conviction of Peter Leonard, ruling that he was in .. a tortured emotional state and was weakened physically" when he confessed three years ago to setU.ng a fire that killed 24 persons in a discotheque. The Appellate J)tvision ruled Tuesday that Leonard's conf~ssion was coerced anctcou.ld not be used as a basis for conviction. The court said Leonard, 25, had slept only three hours on the night before his interrogation, almost two weeks after the fire. and . that he was in the constant company of detecUves from 7 a.m. until about 10:30 p.m. Levnard was sentented to 15 years to life in prison on July 16, 1975, on charges of second·degree murder, arson, burglary . and pet- ty larceny. He tried then to withdraw his guilty plea. but was re- fused by Supreme Court Judge George Beishetm Jr. Priest•ldW•g De"4Hne Near SAN SALVADOR, El Salvador (AP)-Policeandsoldiers armed with submachine guns patrolled outside churches. a seminary and rectories today as a right·wing terrorist deadline approached for killing this counlrr.'$ 50 Jes ult priests. "We are awaiting the will of God." one Jesuit said when asked what steps the priests had taken to protect themselves. The clandestine White Warriors Union. reportedly a group of re· tired army officers linked with government security forces, has is- sued an ultimatum saying the priests will be killed "immediately and systematically" it they do not leave this military.governed Cen· tr al American republic by Thursday. Scattered Rainfall Due Little Relief Expected From Stomu re • ...,.ac11rn .. 1t t4 ,. '° " es '' tJ 11 100 '° .. /4 .. ,. t1 11 .) H ~ 70 .u ----,.J1' ~ • 10. 0} 01 ., 11 .91 " .. " ., .. ,. tj ,. ., ,, ., .. ti ,, ,, J1 •"d m-1"0 •-clouds •1""11 Ille coat I tlld '"4_.,eas. lll••• 11 • clla11ce ol 111u"· dtriM...,.s 111 tlllO mountafr1 and cfio. Mn tr•• wllh IUIWl'f skies likely to _ ...... "o.,..vw, IN relatlvw llvnllellly IS UN< ltd lo l'ff<l't Tuelday't INrll - ... ~ ~-........ pel'C.ilt. TM Ult Mtel• CMc Glnltl' b U • 11t< ltd • rMdl e lllOll et a. Mlle "**I Of ~ beslft wilt tfllof MWIY •Ill. """°"" lllllts wrH lllltl'I' lit tl!t atory In SOIM ew1tr .. end '"' llW\d ,...._ wl"' flftl•al• .. '"'" .... ,,, •• pee .. . c ........ eaiHri l••• "'"" lfld .. ,,y "'""'"' ... ci~tll1 91MrW4,. 111nn~ tl"O'Ulll fTlolrMty, l.lfl\t Vttlttll• .. lllft l!ftl!I end mwl\lno 111ura. "'•M Tl\lfiOtY "'el' 1011 lllfa~•. eo1111M1, CHll•I ~utu·•· Wiii , ..... bth'l'f•11 ti e11d 10. lnltlld ttin• ... rtl\119) Wiii rtl\09 llelW-U .... d .. , newAltrltmotftlUNWIJllM .. . ~-,,,...., l'lda WIONllDAY SetOllf IM S.Mp "'· 1 I "'~ ....... ~ .... THURJOAY 'Jrtl ltw ........ : r ll'lrttlllQll U:.ttp.!'11. .> S.CIMCllOW 61Up.n1. t. I ~f"lJat1t .. "'-• sata•~.,p.M ,___ fflft 10:10 • rn.. "" td!• ''"· loader, was helping to bury the valve, which like others along the line was uncovered for the June startup to make lt more access&· ble. It was the second time in less than a month that a truck had hit a section of the line. The earlier incident involved a section of pipeline with no oil in it. EDWARD PATrON, Alyeska chie( executive officer, said the truck knocked off a small vent on a valve. An Interior swkesman said the line was shut down im· mediately, but oil already in the pipe sprayed out until the pressure was relieved. An Alyeska spokeswoman said the -'8-inch line was not damaged and the damaged valve fitting was replaced five hours after the leak was reported EARLY TUESDAY, sever al hours after the pipeline had restarted, an 011 well pumpin~ s tation at Prudhoe Bay -one of four that feed the pipeline -was closed because of a leak of 40 to 50 barrels, some 2,100 gallons. HiJJ Library Not Lacking WASIUNGTON <AP) - The director of the Library of Congress has proposed new rules to dispose of sur· plus books following dis· closures that an Ohio con· gressman allegedly took almost 82,000 books over the last six years U .S. Rep . Charles Carney of Youngstown, Ohio. was accused in newspaper r eports of tak· ing the best of the books for himself and giving the resl to schools or to fri ends and rel a lives. Under reforms outlined at a congressional hearing Tuesday by Danie l Boorstin, director of the Library of Congress. con· gressmen would b e permitted only to borrow s urplus library books. They would be all owed to earmark certain books for donation. to educ:,ational in- stitutions. but irctuat-dis· trf buUon would be handled bythehbrary, Maggie's B~k in Town Margaret Trudeau, estranged wife of Canadian Prime Minister Pierre Trudeau. visits backstage in New York- with stars of the National Ballet of Canada Karen Kain. right, and F..rank .AuiUStyn. Tt\is was Mrs. Trudeau's first public appeatanc~ since her separation. She-makes her home.in ~ew Yprk ~ity. .. Deadly Heat Wave , Fries Most of U.S. By The Associated Press The heat wave gripping most or the nation bas gone from un- com Cortable to destructive and deadly. In Davenport. Iowa, a young molher watched her four children -ages 2 to 10 -drown in the Misst~Sippi River on Tuesday as they sought relief from the heat. Ruth TriP,lett, 27, who cannot swim, was helpless-. AND IN ST. LOUIS officials blamed the heat for the deaths of nine persons over the past two days. Four elderly people from the same apartment building died on Monday. On Tuesday five other deaths in the area were attributed to the heat wave. The hot weather that has beer. hovering over a 2,000·mile belt from the Atlantic Coast to the Rockk!s for the past eight days -and longer in some places -was not expected to let up until the weekend at the earliest. NEW YORK CITY recorded a temperature of 102, a record for the day. Lamar, Colo., reported a high of 105. The thermometer reached 97 at the Baltimore· Washington International Airport. tying the recordfortbeday. ··· · -In Maryland, Yoong D. Hance, the state agriculture secretary, said crops in several parts of the state are showing signs of damage from the prolonJed spell J>(-tteat and n9 1'4\\~ Cantaloupe, tomato and cucumbef croys as well as A~ture Janel Jlre threatened. Delaware, Vtrginla, fowa a.nctlndlariilwere·among the other states reporting.problems wilh.~J*..and li.veet.ook. .. ·• In Baltimore an jlir pollu~on alert contin~~ for .a fifth day to- day ;ind some induitries wer«l ·cttttJng production to reduce pollu· t.j~>n. Air J>Ollution alerts a1$Q_were .Pn in .oarts of Ken.t~kY. Oblo., Minnesota, New York and Massachusetts. .. I. • When we want to find O\Jt if > , (, ' ' our School PrOgram ... is effective in ,geftJng young people inVO.lvea· in the~r World, . .... " -we ask the experts. .. ' .;: -.. Teachers. . ... ~~ \ They tell u1 our VEC School Program, In combination with today'• new1p1per, la the moat .tfectlve way .. they've found to build, atudent awarene11 and to develop 1tudent1' critical thinking, rHding, and dl1cu1- 1lon 1klll1. Our pro9r1m 11 dfflgned to draw 1tude!'t• Into dl1cu11*'• of today's major lsau.a. BHt of all, th• progr'1" . ' - .-. t •. t hall.engH ktd• to Ji, their m11'ch 9'HI , lmaa'nallon1 and to Hco.rn• lnvolvH • IA·ih"r community and In tbe w.odd, Mo'und them. A• partners Wtttt .... a,qt\,ool• If' the ~ctlfcaUon of our youftt people, we fe.Whhi l• onf of o&Jr n\oal Important ptoJ.Ct1. ' We could tell you more about our • a.cMot Pf.ff'""'' we-. ~ et theh achodta '"' l\.a~ muct\ ktter. ·• --.,.. ,. r ,...,, " .. Th• program provides greater awar•n••• of eurr.enl •ff•lr1 • It atlmulat•• •tudent• 'and they are more lnform9d • • reeult of your "rvlc•." , ' ' 'or harthtr l1tfOrmaUon about •"' vac pro9ra111, ~ .. pullltlO ••vi•• "'•"•'9r M MMU1. DAILY PILOT l --,........ .. ' &nten '~t Ta:x -. Break "'""SACRAMENTO (AP) -Thts new property tax relief bill is likely to &Jve the renters a better share of the proceeds than b~fore. allhou1h both they and Ute homeowners will hatve more to divide up. The formula agreed upon hate Tuesd~ is 1 split of M percent ror bomeownen and 36 percent for tbe rentt!T'I, ~mparcd to the l>reftl'Jt spJlt ol about IS percent ~or ~ers and IS percent for renters. 11IS AGal!EMENT wu re- ached by three senators and three assemblymen. Assemblyman Bill Lockyer, D- S~n Leandro, said that presenUy ,the homeowners get about 85 per- cent ol the benefits and the ren· ters about 15 percent -but the taxpaying body is about half homeowners and half renters. Sen. Jerry Smith, D·Saratoga, the author of one of the bills-SD 12 -moved for a 2·1 split, $.500 million to the homeowners and $250 million to the renters. BUT ASSEMBLYMAN Willie Brown, D·San Francisco, who said he has many r enters in his district, argued for $575 million for homeowners and $325 for ren- ters. Brown finally suggested $525 million for homeowners and $300 million for renters, which was quickly figured out at a 64-36 split. It passed 5-0, with one member absent. The thii'd bill is by Sen. Nicholas Petris, D- Oakland. CNaaEffed Gov. Edmund Brown Jr. has accepted a formal in- vitation from the Peking government to visit China. The invite was made last weekend when Brown met with a delegation from the Peking government touring educational institutions in the United States. Bus Fares Hike Okayed SAN FRANCISCO (AP) - Greyhound Lines, Inc., has been granted authority to r aise its statewide passenger fares and express rates in California by 5.2 percent to cover increased labor costs. The state Public Utilities Com· mission said Tuesday the in· crease. effective Aug. 8, will pro· vide an estimated $2.1 million in additional revenue. Just one pair of winning tennis glasses will get you a great cover for only $2.50. And, we show 6 from a collectfon. Ma if/phone. Fashion Accessorles.16. Back Court. Goldtone /tortoise. $12. ~ Ccitlbe. Black/white, red/white, beige/white, navy/white. $20. Wednesday, July 20. 19n DAILY flLOT t A:f Ransolll Note Bingol·Fmd GrandsOn a.ochilla Kidnap 'Elaborately' Planned OAKLAND (AP) -A $5 million ransom note was part of a package of kidnap documents found in the house of one or the three defendants in the Chowchilla mass abduction case, according to testimony al a pre· lrial hearing. Lt. Edward Volpe of the Alameda County sheriff's de- partment recalled Tuesday thal orticers found the note, a lengthy kidnap plan and a list of victims in the bedroom of Frederick N. Woods, 25. The disclosure of the items ended a year of secrecy about some of the 4,800 pieces of evidence connected with the bizarre July 15, 1976, kidnaping of 26 Chowchilla school children and bus driver Ed Ray. THE OFFICER said he yelled "bingo" when he discovered the contents to the envelope. Volpe said the ransom note in- dicated a demand for $5 million but he did not elaborate. The con- tents of the note and the kidhap pl11n were not disclosed. However . Alameda Countv Deputy Dist. Ally. Rae Bokc.r described lhe pl an as .. very d<'· tailed. several pages long ·· SUPERIOR COURT .Judge Leo Deegan has depicted the plotting of the kidnaping as ··extremely sophisticated.'· Documents seized a t the Woods' family's 100-acre Portola Valley estate during a JuJy 21. 1976, searc h outlined a -well-planned crime, Volpe said. However, the list of victims ap· peared to have been haslily scrawled on a bug from a quick· food outlet, he added. Among the items seized at the ~oods's estate, according to the inventory, were purchase docu- ments for .several vehicles, in- cluding vans the state contends were used to transport the kidnap victims to a rock quarry 100 miles north where. they were en· tombed in a buried moving van. They dug their way out 17 hours Jater. Also found was an empty pantyhose p ackage which in- vestigators said could have con- tained the stocking masks worn by the kidnapers. All the evidence in the case has been under seal. The inventory of evidence seized at the Woods estate came to light despite the bitter objections of Woods· at- torney, Herbert Yanqowitz. XMarks Spot Map Leads to Pot Fann CORONA (AP) -Police.guided by a handmade map have uprooted two tons of marijuana from a plantation in the Cleveland National Forest. "Our contacts on the street had been telling us for some time that there was a large plantation somewhere in the area." Lt. Bill Howe said Tuesday, a day after Riverside County sheriff's deputi es and narcotics agents raided the two-acre farm . THE OFFICERS CONFISCATED 216 plants. rang1,11g fro.m five to 15-feet tall Street value o( the plants was estimated by police at $1 m illion. Officers were led to the site by a pencil ·drawn map thal they received from an anonymous source -probably a dis · grunlled customer or a competitive marijuana dealer. Howe said. ARRESTED WERE ROY C. PAUL, 26; Thomas Pretzer, 30, and his wife Sharon, 26. The woman allegedly· had been trying lo burn a brick of marijuana in a barbecue behind the house when she was arrested. All three were charged with cultivation and possession of marijuana, and Mrs. Pretzer was also charged with at- tempting lo destroy evidence. The men were held on $50.000 bail and the woman on $6,000 bail Watching Groucho SANTA MONICA (AP) -The ailing Groucho Marx has a new temporary conservator -his 27-year-old grandson, Andrew . but the court fight over the come· di an· s welfare is not over. ' An expected resolution of the bitter litigation f a il ed l.o materialize Tuesday. re- port ed l y bee a use of ob- jections from M arx's longtime co mpanion Erin Flem- ing. Attorneys indicated that MARX Miss Fleming wants time lo evalu ate Andrew M arx's performance as temporary con- servator before she approves his permanent appointment. The 36-year-old Miss Fleming was removed as Marx's con· servator last.April and vowed lo fight in court to regain her power. But after long depositions f r o m Miss F l emi n g a n d employes of the Marx household were revealed, attorneys hinted she would be willing lo step aside in favor of Andrew Marx. THE DEPOSITIONS told ol bizarre activities, including Miss Fleming's alleged abuse of the 86-year-old comic. Superior Court Judge Edward Rafeedie conferred Tuesday with attorneys for Miss Fleming and Groucho's only· son, Arthur. before announcing that the ap- pointment of Andrew would not be ermanent. Tennis players! Buy a pair of '6 Loves / and net a $5 racket cover for $2.50! i .41 DAIL PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE College Out of Step Coast C.Ommunity College District taxpayers will ht.• ~O<'kl>d w1lh n 12 t·ent tn{·n·use in the district's 80 1.·l'nl tax r .llc Aui.: :s. if d1M·uMHons by trustees la~t "t.•ck W'<.' uny lndtt•ulwn Otstr1l·t otf1c 1uls insist thc·y nt•e<1 S4 2 million In rt> .. c•rv~ fundb tut·kcd onto nt•xt y~ur's $76 4 milhon hudgc!l to <'USh10 11 uny s uqmsc• roi»ts the threo·collcgl• d1 .. tnrt mJ4lht l'Xpt•r 1l'llN' llut what trUbtt·<is i.hould lw dotnR 1s cuttmg the l.tx rutl' not uddini: to 1t ~rty ownl'rit wall be tut with a !)ubstantially higher tax bill (•vcn 1f the dista 1ct kct·µs the rate when• 1t 1s. because a~scsscd valuation.' 111 tht! d1st nct are ex pectedtogou p an avt•rage20pcrn·nt this year. Trustees should bE:> looking at cutting costly pro· grams and \\Orkang with a k-ss-sazcable reserve. They !)hould be com1nji! uµ with a budget proposal which "111 at least mamtaan the tax rule at its cu rrent level. Even recognizing the vast arr ay of services and <"ducational opportun1t1cs otf cr ed by the Coa~t dis lncl. its truslcl'S must rccogmle the double blow they arc d eahng with a substantial rate inc rease at the :-.a me time property valuations ar.e still increasing. Gesture Not Enough Meanwhile. truste<.•s in the Newport-Mesa Unified Sch ool Distritt where the assessed value of m ost homes and businesses rose a n average of 19.7 percent a re giving the m selves hearty congratulations for n• ducing p art of the district's lax rate by 25percent. W e think the con gratula tions a rc prematur e because the reduction was only two cents off a n exist· ing eight-centlcvy · The school tax rate, which n ow 1s $4.237 in Costa Mesa and $3.9328 m Newport Beach. is composed of three type!, of levies. There is the $3.60 general fund tax. Thal rate cannot be set until August when the assessor's figures are completed. Then ther e are the various taxes that pay off bonded debt and building loans. Those cannot be altered. The third 1s the permissive override. the eight-cent c ivic center tax which pays for projects. s uch as swimming pools, that are used by the entire {'Ommunity. It was this rate that was lower ed two (•enls. constituting the 25 percent cut. T he two cent reduction was a nice gesture. But. the tc1xpayers in the Newport-Mesa district still have a right to expect a nother 65 cents to come ofr the general fund tax rate if the trustees are to m eet their pledge of holding the line on increases in the tax bills. Sign Schedule Fair Costa Mesa council m embers this week approved a complex sign a mortization schedule which outlines JUSt exactly when businesses with nonconforming s igns must comply with the three-year old sign law. The resolution as based on the value of .existing signs al the ta m e of the adoption of the ordinance in March of 1974. It asks businesses to provide proof of the value of the sign whe n purchased , and then lacks on a n infla - tion factor based on the Consumer Price Index chart. In th'at way, s igns that might .have cost $2,000 back in 1950. would cost nearlv twice that amount to· day. The a m ortization scheduie would reflect that in- flation. giving the business a little more time to take down its nonconforming s ign. Opponents of the sign ordinance cannot chaq~e tha t the C'ity is rushing in to take down s igns. The luw is already three years old. and the conservative schedule adopted this week is more than fair. And, when it is actively enforced by the city, Costa Mesa will become a more attractive community, to the benefit of everyone. c Voters Want Names Of Bribed Members o~ar Gloon1y Gus Overtime Curr. Inf easifJle To lhc 1<:d1to1 .. ll makes litllt• !>ens!' for the government lo investigate and find thatovt•r a hundrcci members of lhc lloust• received bribes from South Korea 1( lh1.·y do not publish the namcsoflh1.· culprits We. the votNs. want to know the name of every pohtic1an who receives an illegal bribe. We have the right lo know and 1f that information 1s on a govt:'rnment document. we want 1t published A COUPLE of olher mteresl.Ulg <1Uestions. -Why put so much effort into gelling a death penally law dur- ing Gov. Brown's term since he will have the power to prevent any executions while governor? · -If the 81 bomber is so ob- solete and so limited in use, why is Russia producing a similar model at a rate of 16 per monlh? In closing, this observation: The tax put on domestic oil by the government to bring the price of domestic oil up to imported oil will be paid for at the filling sta- tion by us. JIM BOLDING Satufled luror ro the Editor How forlunall' we. the Jurors serving al Har bor Municipal Court. have been to have served under lhe system devised and implemented by Carol Nazano. She has made our time and effort more cffed1ve as well as pleasant through her dedication to her job ( MAILBOX ) Le tiers from readers are welcome The right lo condense letters to fit space or eliminate libel is reserved Letters of 300 words or le.•s t.11111 be gwen preference All letters mU3t m· elude $ignature and mailing address but names may be w1thlu!ld on re· quest 1/ suf /ic1ent r eason u apparent Poetry will not be published. I would like to see her cost· saving juror service system 1m plemenll'd countywidc I would also suggest that she present her program lo the appropnale slate agency. If she can i.ave $19.000 at one court alone. think what could be saved in a larger area! Ms. Nazario is a valuable asset to our court. My thanks to her. ALICE BEVERIDGE M 1.-Naairio's cosl·satJing idea f/Qr which she won a countll award) m· volved calling Jurors for one month of duty instead of two. and lettm9 them remain on call hy phone. al /tome or u,'()rk. instead of reporlmg m person on each of their assigned d11ty days. -r:d1tor Poor Chafe~ To t he Editor : It disturbs me that the an tipathy against homosexuality on the part of normal people is erod ing. I think this is a bad mistake A About lhal amphitheater at OC Fairgrounds: What is it going to rnsl lhc rcs1- dt•nls of Costa ML·sa 1n terms or im-rt•ased trnffic and noi se.'°' Who's going to pay for the nl'Cl'S!>ary im pron•ml·nts lo aciJat·cnt strN'ls. for traffic lights and t•onlrol sy~tems. for in crca•wct r1re and polt<.'l' pro tect1on·' M.0 .0 A primary drive of homo sa- p1ens is preservation of the species. Normally this is done through procreation. The homosexual must do it by recruitment. l 'M NOT saying thal lhe homosexual has this drive to pre- serve the species. but I sure don't wan t m y c hildr en o r grandchildren to be the subjecLc; lo prove or disprove the proposi· lion. In addition. l resent the ex· proprialion of the word "gay." I always want to be gay, but never, never a homosexual·. An un- fortunate choice of words for so sad a condition Isn't there something perverse in lhe choice of this word? Why not "abs ... for abnormals. or even "'diffs" for different" J W. REID Of Love and Innocence A Smtdl Boy'• Gift ~"" Hu Mother My friend Bill Lynn was bartender on the S.S. Santa Marlana, which was recently my home for 54 days. We are al>out the same age, and have si~lar backgrounds -growing up in New York City in a world of priests and mothers and Tam· many Hall. "Ir it. wasn't for crooked Iris h cops," said Bill. "l would have spent my en· Ure chllOhOod i n t b e Ca tholic R·eforma · tory." To which sentl· ment. I could only clve a s pfrlted H · $eDt. "l'be C.R . wa• a quasl· penal place where they kept bo)rl who were lncorrlalble or clOM to it. Another thina Bill and I had tn common. aJOf\J wltb thousands of otber boyat was that we beiged for cltaret.U! and clgu coupons in front of the Whelan and United C.tgar stores. Tho coupons were ~ bat • 11 u.tes tncenttv~ When you 1ot a couple of hundred ot them you could buy a Louisville alu.ag~.~ or a Frankie Frinb baaebaU aiovet or aome otber useful art1de. Tbe c~ were our ~ ltltote tcr. ~hidl t.bire •u v ry UUJ Ud >prae- Llca Uy .none Ol 1t. for Ta.J.kin, to Bill 1.JDn aboui CHARLES McCABE . . these coupons reminded me or something I hadn't thought ot tor may.be a half century. I suppose I was about nine. I decided to do something good for my mother. who was at. that time the sole sup· port of three sons, of which I was the eldest. or all tbe household chores abe did. the one ebo most disliked was wasblnc the windows on our tenement fiat on Columbus Avenue. She dld this once a month or so, uslq r1.11 macJo ol torn.up ltnoa abitt.s or un· derwear. The Job took a loq Umo, and she was pretty hard to Jive with when it wu ftnllbecl. I looked at the catalol\le that contained colored plct.urea Clf'tbe dandy thinaa you could bU>' with cigar eoupons. One llem struck my eye and cauaht my heart.. lt wu • chamois atin, maybe a yard 'lquart, and lt •as v. ex- pensive, Uke maybe 500 coupons. lhru tbe p&fect ttdq to~ wt.ndow WUbtna almoet JSalnl~s. • street where they redeemed the coupons. The chamois was gift· wrapped, as were all the items. Going back to the house, I really ran most of the way. I had never given m y mother a pr~aent. She was out on some errand when I got back. I had to wait. with all the impatience of the virtuous about to commit virtue. I placed the box on the kitchen ta- ble. When my mother returned I steered her into the kitchen and pointed af the box. Puuled, alte took oft the red ribbon and opened \lP the box. IT ~ her • minute to re-alise what. t.he object was. Theo 1be broke out lnlo floods of tears. Stie took mo to her bl'9ut. lo between the tear• 1he started to laU,fb.. 1ben it would be tun •1aln. 1 suppose that a•~ before or since had I ever been so close lo her. or course by now I reallled the enormU,y or what 1 had doae. t ha'1 committed t.bc gaffe of mlk· tn1 her a Sift ot aomelhl!1& th•~ tltlttiacd11er Uf at. alae w.s, real· ly. nothlnc more than • d0mest1c ae"ant. And I had doti• it With the innocence and love of a cklld. Al•&>'•· after that, my mother cleaned. the windows with tM •aftle Old r.,.. Tbe cbamoli atayed In ILi box~ perhaps to bet' dylli1 day, fo< all l knew, a ... proof to a bOy wbO had dODe the riaftttblq In tho Wl'Oftl w•Y· Law Overlooks Reality In the wake of the frantic cf· forts of Governor Jerry Brown to convince evcryonl.' t h at the welcoming mat 1s out for in· dustry tn Ca lifornia, hi~ most re· cent appointee to lhe U.C. Board or Re~ents has just pushed through the Assembly what As· :,emblyman Dan Boatwn~hl has call ed "the mosl anli busincS!> legislation" in stale history. ll would make il unlawful for employers to require cmployes lo work over· lim e. IL wou ld apply to a ll who employ 50or more. The Mea · s ure , AB 1295. although author ed by Assemb ly - m a n Tom Bates. was introduced at the urging of State AFL-ClO labor leader Jack Henning. recently appointed a UC regent by Brown, who has made il his number one crusade. He sees it as a move to relieve unemployment and a lleges that many companies regularly work employes as much as 40 to 50 hours weekly in overtime. That contention . industry spokesmen opposing the bill point out, is ridiculous on the face of it. "Any company allowing ex· cessive overtime could quickly find itself oul or business ... They explain. however. that well managed businesses must budget for a certain amount of overtime up to the point where it becomes more economical to add employcs ''WORKLOADS have peaks and valleys in any business. But if you maintained a payroll to meet the peaks without overtime you would have people standing around with nothing to do most of the tlme. And hiring extra people just to meet the peaks would mean continual rounds of layoffs. Besides you can't always get peo. pie al a moment'• notice." It doesn't take much imagina· tlen to visuall1e many situations where routine work hours sud· denly develop a need for over- time. When sickness takes an employe out others often must work extra hours to fill in. Rush work orders may not be common in a particular business but. all t.be same when they occur the ability to mee• them may spell the difference between business aucceu and business failure. Henatna's blU advances the theory that all overtime work abould be entimy voluntary. But many work operations are ~donned by crew• or teams. What happen.a wben an entire crew is wlllln• to put in extra tJme except one key member who would rather •o fiablna? • ( EARL WATERS ) There arc many situations which can be poinled to which make such a proposal ludicrous Whal happens when a bus driver. delayed by traffic. completes h1~ shirt before arrivi ng at h1 ~ destination" Does he pull the bus off the side and walk away .. CALIFORNIA 1s still a prime agricultur al. state with many seasonal crops which not only must be harvested at lhe nght time but processed at the can- neries on deh very. Overt1 me has always been a necessary part of lhe work If there are specific instances where labor is finding compelled overtime a pro ble m or a hardship, it would seem t hat would be a matter for labor or- ganizations lo negotiate wilh the employers involved. What Henning obviously is at· t cm pling to do is to achievt• through legislation that which he cannot win at the bargaining ta· ble. It appears an abuse of the legislative system. While at the moment Henning has represented united support among labor organizations for the measure it might be suspect ed that. upon examination. some units of labor will weaken as they sec what havoc such a bill can raise with their employment. Am ong those, for example. would be construction workers who may wonder how a big con- tractor could avoid huge waste in concrete pouring when deliveries a re I ate a nd over ti me is necessary lo complete the job. Nutritionists Seek Diet Disease Links On Aug. 15 in Quebec City. Canada, there will be a Nutrition Congress. Eight hundred del cgales from all over our hemisphere will compare notes on what's good for you. Some of the lecturers from 12 nations who will be there have re vealed this mu c h a l - ready: Evidence 1s now "con elusive" re· lating diet to cancer. Some of our nation's ~t D\ltritional re· search is con· ducted on a continuing basis at Loma Linda University in Calllomia. There they continue to recon· firm the relationship between your food intake and your health. THERE THEY have now established that Seventh-day Ad· ventists have less cancer; that the rest of us are three times more likely to die of cancer than are Adventists. Adventist d iet consciousness dates baclc a hundred years to the earfy teachlngs or Ellen G. White. Modem medical science is, more and more, finding out that sbewas right.. Examples: Adventists wbo do not smoke a nd do not drink alcohol or coffee have leas cancer of the Jung, mouth, esophagus and bladder. . Adventilts wbo obterve a strictly vegetarian dlet have less cancer of the breast, ovary, prostate and boWel. ( PAUL HARVEY) way people eat and drink. Scienllsts al the University of Texas have also ascertained Ulal pepper and other spicy season- ings "alter cells permanently." ·'These spices disorganize chromosomes, and turmeric in particular (turmeric is the main ingredient in curry powder) caused chromosomes to break up and finally to disintegrate." Such a process might easily change a normal cell into a cancer cell. THESE common seasonings have never been investigated ~fore because it was always as- sumed Utey were safe -and it is still lik'1.y that some individuals "tolerate" some such ·foods where others do not. Until recently most tesearch has sought a viral cause and a chemical answer to cancer. No1J the research emphasis re- 1 ates to the ch e mical and pbysiotoeical result& of the tbing8 •e eat and the way we live. ORANGE COAST DAfLY PILOT , . • • • ' t i ~ ----" '""'1!11\ ... ,_ L._J - - Quartet File ~at Suit On Swap . Deal ... 87 JACK atAPPEU. OI • O.ttr PM.I IWI The hUI• •l•pped-pyramld ahuped build Ute tA the rolUq bll11 ol La1una Niguel culled the "Zluurat" hu been an obJ9Cl of cunosity, con- tro•WIY and not a lllUe bit ol lll·luck aince before earth wu b.ltned at the 1lte. Destined a11 a rutunalic faclllty foe the space dlTl*m ol North American Rockwell, the Z111ural •• COIQPltled aflt!t the aeroepuce boom bust and It ·.-~. unklnd.l1 dubbed a ''white elephant." THE NEWEST CONTROVERSY OVER the 150,000.aquare foot fadlity involves a auit filed in Wubl.altcm. D.C. by four bualneumen aeekina to overturn a S20 million awap between the aovern- meat and Rod: well. That trade abil\ed property declared 1urplua bJ the 1ovemment to Roekwell in exchao&e for the Lapu Nlpel fllCil.lty. The bullnelamen, a coallUoo ol mac:hlneey and real estate representatives, cbar&ed the method o! exchange prevented buinesaes like theirs from bid· ding on the surplu property. The swt further alleges the General Services Administration (GSA) and Rockwell cjrcumvented procedures which required congressional approval of alterations costing in excess of $500,000 for ac. quired buildings. CONTROVER SY OVER BUILDING CONTINUES Fate of Laguna Nlguel Site Stlll Undecided THE GOVERNMENT HAS HELO THE keys to the ZiggUl''t since 1974. At the \ime, government ac- quisition was announced, GSA representatives said the massive floor space of the building was needed to house government archives stored in inadequate facilities in Bell. Nepotism Shown? The archives required massive floor space but few employes, thus making few demands on local taxing agencies for large numbers of federal employes. Brown lmertUJ Kin of Friends Martin Pearlmutter, a spokesman for the GSA's regional office in San Francisco, said Tues- day the Laguna Niguel facility is about 21 pUcent occupied by government agencies. Those include the National Archives, Army recruiting, IRS, Fish a nd Wildlife Service and the geologic survey oCfice. PEARLMUTrER SAID llE WAS UNAWARE of the lawsuit which also seeks to enjoin the GSA from spending more money on lhe facility and from putting new tenants in the building. Pending before Congress is a prospeetum seek· ing $3.2 million for alterations to the facility. Until tbe fate of the appropriation is known, Pearlmutter said he could not say what additional agencies would be coming to lhc facility. The suit by the businessmen also claims thal the surplus property traded to Rockwell was under· valued for the trade. ATTllE TIME OF THE SWAP, Tom Hannom. regional GSA chief, said the trade was a "good deal for the public." At that time, the Ziggurat had cost $25 million to build. The surplus property was valued at just un- der $20 million. After taking over the surplus property however, according to published reports, Rockwell had it reappraised at $7.3 million higher than the trade figure. Wafting through the discussions of the GSA trade have been reports the swap was promoted to enable then-President Nixon easy access to his presidential records on retirement. THE LAGUNA NIGUEL FACILITY is within 10 miles of the former Western White House and has a hell pad on the roof of the seven-story, tiered build· ing. When the building was acquired in 1974, the government estimated it would be three"'+'ears before it was full. OAKLAND (AP) -Oa~lapd police fatally wounded a 42-year-old San Francisco man, after his alleged attempt lo rob a fast-food restaurant was foiled by a panicky waitress. police said. An Alameda County coroner's spokesm an said Raymond Hilliard was pronounced dead on arrival at Alta Bates Hospital Tuesday. Oakland Police Lt. Bill Clark said the alleged robber fled a Jack-in-the-box restaurant after a waitress responded to his demand for cash by run- ning into a back room. Police were called and two officers chased the man for several blocks before he aimed a loaded re· volver at them and lhey both fired, Clark said . The coroner's office said Hilliard died of a gunshot wound to the chest. SACRAMENTO (AP> Some of the "summer interns " in Gov. Ed· mund Brown Jr. 's office turn out to be relatives and friends of highly placed Californians. . The intern program, which pays $500 to $600 a month, is an attempt to expose youths to possible career op· portunities in stale government. THE GOVERNOR ·s OFFICK said Tuesday lhat hundreds or students ap- plied for the appointments . About 35 were cho.c;en. A KXTV reporter obtained a list of appointees Tuesday. and among them found : -Jeff Silberman, an economics maJOr at UC Berkeley who 1s the son of Richard Silbcrmun. Brown's new secretary of business und trans po.rta· lion. The governor 's office said he is nol receiving pay, however. -Scott Keene, brother of A s· PLUMllMG HIATIMG All COMD. '"-·----· S.rvlCf' I I\ VOVI' Arra -C.11 MISSION VIEJO 7"'77 <:amt"° C1101,1r111•0 '~" O•PQO Frwy. al I"'"'" Pkwy.I 495-0401 COSTI' MESA 1S76 N•wPClrl lll•d 642-1753 51 Lie. a 1116~1 LA YER c.--.o.., ~·-·---GUAUMTHD FHS AU.rl 't ... _....,u .. AU.•··--· --""· -u ... ---uw. ....... T..-• .,-.... -a.,,. JAMES PATRICK CUMMINGHAM I I 07·S. C-t Hwy • ---~~~ ... .._., OP 97-17 2 YOUR · BUTCHER IS COMING ·TO lAGUNA HILSI semblym an Ba rry Keene (D· Eureka). -Vicki S<:bweickart, a daughter of Russell "Rusty" S<.1lweickart, a civilian Apollo 9 astronaut in 1969 and a friend of Brown's. -Jeanine Hu ll, r eportedly a personal friend of Brown's director of consumer affairs, Richard Spohn. -Brian Victoria, reportedly a PhD candidate in Buddhism at UCLA a nd a friend of Brown's arts counselor. Jacques Barzaghi. COMMENTED BROWN'S chief of staff, Gray Davis : "We didn't want to rule out anyone outstanding just because they knew important peo- ple." Call 642-5678. Put a few words to work for you. ~100() HEHATE ~.~) LAN(~IA \,.., "'•lll •f1 1t1•tt ••l 11ld '"'°'·"'''llu•l1t\\OlJt\ll11t1l1111t111\1ll .t• • •l111h 11 .. 111 it1tl•I 11°1lluuht 1111 .. uf11t '" JitUu1I 1111h 1h111 I·•'' ,1 ,ll•tl • 111' "llh 1111" .t•I .1l l1f111 111111111h1"'1 Maybe you could use some dental work? Uke, a Bridge ove·r . troubled Molars, perhaps. ,, ff you could, here's a tune you can hum: At Dr. Flanzer's, you may be able to get all vour dental work done at "° cod to you. How does it work? One man's ceiling is another man's floor. Your dental insurance might handle the whole number at Dr. Flanzer's. And that's the name of that tune. Dr. Arnold H. Flcinzer 370 E. 17th St. SAVE UPTO 50% OFF • ~tacks of shoes from iall our big names . . ., ' l!ADIES'· SHOES Costa Mesa ...... 642-0112 •' . leg. to$33 ........ Now·s49o to~ 1590 MEN'S SHOES Reg. to $58 .• • ••• Now ~5~0 to s279o SALE ,SJARTS THURSDAY _JULY 21 9:36 AM s..y,.tl lfll j JJ W,..,.. ................. All ....... \ .. I ' . ' , . . .. . . • . 3 • • 1 l Ji(;'S'" ~I at I 06 minlstrntor of the 53-bed Needles-Desert Communi- ty H01pital ln the community on the California· Arizona border. THERMAL CAP) -Isidore Hernande:& thinks Euatemert and Midwesterners bem& wilted by 00 de1ree temperatures can adapt to bot weather the ume way his nursery plani. haw adapted to the deaert, where it's over lOOdegl'ees.dally. .. We really give little thought to beat prostra- ~ bon." Smith said. "I doubt if we've bad a dozen H mandei ls the foreman at the Thermal cases this sum.mer. ..... ,,..,,. .. ,..,....,...., Farrah Fawcett · Majors, Vice Presi- dent Walter Mondale and Muhammad Ali are among celebrities who will appear in the Robert F . Kennedy Pro- Ce lebrity Tennis Tournament next month at Forest I fills. Dangers Of 'Pere' Outlined WASHINGTON (AP) -The most commonly used dry cleaning fluid causes cancer in mice a nd may be harmful lo l aundry patrons and workers, the Nalional Cancer Institute says. The NCI findings, due to be published in the Federal Register about Sept. I. are based on a two -year t es t of perchloroethylenc. or .. perc." UP TO 6f; percent of the male mi ce-who lived through two years of testing got hvcr cancers Forty percent of the fem ale m1Cl' dt•\•clopcd t·ancer The NCI s aid 100,000 work er!> could b t: threatened in addition to customers of the coun- try's 18 ,000 coin - operated cleaning establishments DRY CLEAN I NG s pokes m e n ca lled :·perc" safe and said the only practical substitute would violate fire codes in most c1t1<'s. If "perc" is abandoned, the result would be d1rt1er clothes. according to Charles Riggott. executive vice president of the Intcrna- t ion al Fabricare Institute. The Dow Chemical Nunery in thla Southern Califoruia desert town naml'<i f<H' Ila weather. He came here rune years 110 from Phoenix, another hot sp<>t, and has spent almo:.t ull of bis S6 years in sweltedng climates "l 'U . TELL YOtJ ONE TIUNG, sometimes hot wt-ulher helps a little," says Hernandez. "If 1 sweat J htll"· I feel better. I lose a little weight. When you sweat you drink more water and drinking water is ~ood for you ·• On Monday, when 1t was 11>2 m Roanoke, Va .. <And 100 ln New York City, it \Ila.& only 106 here, the National Weather Service said-one degree cooler than the average maximum_ July temperature in these parta. I The hi&hest temperat.u.d!l recorded In Thermal durin1 July in the past 13 Jlleal'$ was ll8. It hlt 117 laatmootb. / THE IUGUEST TEMPERATURE fe<:orded on earth was 136 at A2iz.ia, Ti:ipoli, on Sept. 13, 1922. Hernandez says peqple in the eastern two- thirds of the nation who .are sweating through the hot spell can learn a lot from how he treats the citrus plants his nursery-sells to landscapers: "They have to start slow like the plants. You take them out of the sh.ade the first week for~ pet· cent ol the time. After a month they can be outside 100 percent of the tim~' · HERNANDEZ CONCEDES THAT DURING hot summer months in this agricultural community of 400, people readjust their schedules a bit. His three-man crew starts work at5a.rn. so they.can be done at 1:30 p.m. before the sun is at its sizzling height. Jim Davis, district ranger for the Riverside County Parks and Recreation Department in Thermal, says the best way to cope with the beat .. is to have an air conditioner." If that's not bandy, he says wet towels on tbe forehead help. ARMED FORCES PERSONNEL O N maneuvers had no choice about when they worked Monday, and 19 Marines suffering from heat ex- haustion were evacuated Crom the Mojave Deserl- about 25 miles north of Thermal -after the tern· perature near Twentynine Palms soared to 117 degrees. A spokesman said most of the Marines were treated and released . One might think the blistering desert heal would make cases like the Marines' more common. but that's not the case. says Elwood Smith, ad TllE F.\1\111 .\ CIRCUS . Jh Ril Kf'a nf' ' C o . . w h i c h m a k e s 1 • ......... ,.,,, "perc," said Dow studies , .. ,::'~~-;.""'. .... · in which rats breathed. vapor concentrations "After you miss a shot , you hafta look.at your three to six limes tho:se rocket like daddy always does." now permitted in t,he --------------------! workplace produced no cancers. THE F INDINGS will go to federal r egulatory agencies for possible ac- tton. Dr. Sidney Wolfe , director of Ral ph Nader's Health Reform Research Group, said the findings should force government agencies to lake action. ATTENTION PROFESSIONAL .and SEMl- PIU)FESSIO~AL t'f»EOPLE . · Are you willing to rest ~n your achlevementa· -.or are you a ~It restless? Feel dlasat1sf1ed'>' Has your career .. peaked p1,1r· • reached a plateau? Would you we4come a challenge Which would with e to 8 hours Ptr week •.• 1. permit you to retain the aectJrtty of ~ preMnt income. wtllle 2. starting your own independent buslr1esa pwttlme? No matter t\OW high your I n c o m • . o r h o w· comfortlbte your present surroundings. there Is no for m ol gain ful employment that ca" compare with really r'4nnlng YOU R OWN BUSINESS. At Dial, a homeowner loan can be used for just about anything. Including hilt consolida~ tion. And yes, chances are rt will reduce your monthly payments. Substantially. Call your nearby Dial office for the facts and figure$. No • names. No sales pitches. And no obf igation. Because at Dial, we don't want you to like us just fot our money. e . Dial Finance ' • • Hoffteowner Loans to $50,000 Anaheim: 344 Wtat Uncofn A~a. 772-7425 Buen• Park: 7091 L"*"n Avt. 821-6460 Cotta Mt11: 2760 HarbOr B1wcf, "ABOUT 90 PERCENT OF THE people we see with heat prostration are people passing through town or tourists from Los Angeles (265 miles away) who maybe have played a little bit too hard. ··we treat them in the emergency room or ad- mit them, whatever is needed. But the problem ap- pears to have lessened in recent years. l can't real· ly tell you why, but maybe people are drinking more fluids these days.·' Ronald McDonald will ~ppear/7 at the .£~ Orange County Fair July 20 2:00 P.M. 5:00 P.M. Polyester Pantsuits le~utlful double \nit ""ttultt mothltM ~ able. Short or lone lleevff. Mluot Qn,d holf 1het. -.. ----- ANNOUNCING THE OPEHIHG Of THE KASLOW MEDICAL-SELF-'r.ARE CENnR,' INC: Newport Beach Offering: A. Nutritionally oriented self- care program B. Response point therapy for treatment of: 1 Smoking addiction 2. Appetite control Call 842-5678. Put a few words to work for ou. 351 Hospital Rood, M•. m Newport Beach 631-2712 Soon •••... BETTER S_A~ADS WILL:·· BEGIN IN j LAGUNA HILLS! ------------------:-:-:::~:::: ' • •· urt · locartd-'"""1~ . · room IS ou'rt d1n1ng a Btach No mallt'r wht'rt' Y Lakt Fort'st, Lagun v· · El Toro. ·rits-World. Mission ie;o. ring ntiRhboring cont'"""'. , .r the or her encltan t' -beginning in or any OJ lads-and mor . berter sa 'II soon t nJOY you L.us:una H ,~·11:s !~-------;iiii Fashion ' sum·mer .CleBrarice .. Selected PontMt1, SwiMw .. r, Sportswear « "-'vwHr. ChooH from Ml.NI', JvnlOf's, Dual, qnd Hoff stt ••. Not all 1iies in oil 1tyfH in *" hd99t Shop. limltecl OUontltl". This la opportunity. YOUR opportunity -to fully awci.. youa. .-b.Ulty. to ll~ • challanglng llfe tet th• tull"t. and to ,. .. P numerous rewarda Spec. •· CDlfltt C.ntef FUtltrton: 228 Or Mitt ~~~......b~~~l-4~~~~~~~~~~-.-~~..:-.: Garden Grove: 12oe2 lro61churst St. finanolally. CAL~ 0fange: 10~N. Tuatin A". ~rfi9!1tU-·~t.ll••M~lll.-J ..... Millf9t.~~~A ...... ltf'!,.....l-!!!~..U~~~~~~~~·~~ 312110U ll'l'1li"St. ~ W•stmlMtar~ 11S3n liiiih atilt. . .... ~· Wedl\Mday, July 20, 1977 OAJL Y PlloT A 9 ~s~~;::ID!!~!.!!~er~~EJ':~!!~~~rian Di~!.,~!~~!':~~~ r.~!~ ·: · ~"'rlf ,:\-··: '" ',•-.: adolescents and )Ouna adults are DOCTOR · IN w1thoui proper supervision by a syringe. E)(amlned ln t.he , ,.,.Vi. ~OUR Dur Dr. Stelncruhn: Our going In for vel:etarl3n diet.8. What ·THE HOUSE dietitian. laboratory, it can be determined .... . ~rs .. duu.rhtt'r h•• aonu dlt.•t criuy ft 'i. cffo('t such a diet Will have on your whether ther~·s • risk the Want. ~:·.,.~ ·,. '· ' I nol. qut·!>llon or loaln.; wmaiht lhat daughter IS quc:.t1onablc, Mrs. c. " MEDICALETTES Will be deformed. Jr~tl.\rf!NOS bothcnht.ir Shl'hHJolncducullof beruuso l don't know lhe actual DearDr.Stelncrohn: l'm42and There'saslightamountofrlskin ' ~ .. f>~,C k1J1 1n their first year of collug1: tvpo and consumption of foods In a nulritionJst to be sure that she is have just learned that I'm prcg. doing the procedure, but it has ~.. . . ". . _ • "ho 11hun meat. u11pce1ull y hl·r diet getting surrtcient calories, amino nan• We've walled a long time for been ereatly reduced by new :j!'-'&i'j~~lV When lht· t•omes hom e on vucJ There ure modif1 cat1ons of acids, and adequate sources of this. bull have a certain amount of techniques. Timing is important. l.~ · t..1 tum It 11rurt1l·all( kill~ ui. to !>ll , cgelaraun did:.. For example. iron. calcium. riboflavin, vitamin anxiety. I've heard that at age t2 The safest time is about.tG weeks of I.· ... '~· . ·A. ,,. " down to Ii no1rna dinner and find there IS the lactovegetarian, A. vitamin D and vitamin 812. there 's a greater risk of eiving pregnancy. ~ . J\'.~F •ht• IJoca not l'<tl hill• thu rc~t ol U!> \\ h1ch l'Ontatns plant foods and birth to a melformcd Infant. Isn't Evldentty 1 It's a procedure that • ., . ~fl da11 y products including eg~s. MIND YOU. l'M not ad,ocallng there some new test before actual should be done only by trained and ' ·~9. · ~·e· ··I · M A v EGET AR I AN . The so·<: alien "pure" vegetarian vegetarian diets for youngsters or birth of the 1t hild that can warn experienced personnel. r ' . s Mother ... sht• l'IU) b, and lh..1t l'O<b d1l'l l'OlllUlllS plant foods only rr grownups. Whal (am saying IS that aarents about this possibility? ..• : • theoraumcnt hcrd1ctofpl;,1ntfood:.iswellsup· a well·balanced . nutritious Mrs.G . ...;· ·: ·•• . · She looks well und feels wdl pleml.'nle<.I with milk and eggs it s vegetarian diet Is not Invariably a COMMENT: There is a process ·;;:-;~A~ ~. • 1~ ,.,..,, Whut we're wondt•rlng about 1s posi.1ble that i.ht' 1s nutnt1onaJly "crazy" diet. called amruocentes1s. The doctor °" hcthcr or not such u diet will :.af l· without mt'.' at. But there's potential nutritional (specially tr(\ined ) extract& a harm ht•r Mrs. C. But !>he'd better get advice from deficiency when a buneh of kids get smaJl amount o( the fluid that sur· C.tn1le lo eyu, f01 lolllily, lot. COMPAIE JO UJ'l.' IUND '' 1.6' l99c 126· 20 EXPOSURE COLOR PRINT FILM lilllitt4 tllM a,.c1e1 offer. ~ 320UNCE LIQUID DETERGENT I• tt•li4 ,-er "-ti. ii .-.:t ?.' 16 OUNCE PURE BABY Oil ci..,. ..... ~. & ,,.1ec11. Comport lo Noll. I 64 for 14-0t. ~ w ') l40UNCl 69( PURl TALC BABY POWDER c-,..• to Nel'I. l-41 lor Moro ~ lQt 1120 249 ·~~ TRAYll SYRING( c..,..,. 111t1. au'" 1 ~. 'Ji'.?u:~:54c ILUCH · 12 OUIK(~ 1 ( UQUID • G~CUANR CoMpett to Ntl'I. 1.S1for14·01. ~14.oz. fURNl~~c;' 89( POLISH co .. ,.,, to Ntt'T. 1.n ftr ll 001. ~~~0:~99c Klllll j IOX.Of 16 J FEEN·A·MINT CHEWING GUM LAXATIVE c...,.,. It lllt1. 794 I~ ~ 9VOll TRANSISTOR 2 s 1 IATIIRllS FOR YOUI CHOIC( NOW 66c ~l!Di? ASSORTlD 32·0Z. MOUTHWASH \~ .. 11~r: ( 5· ae: I -' .':.~I. .. ('(}Sl/f.'T/(' -- I·; 1:.i 1.1 .. -; if-.::J L' PACK OF .300 ~7 COSMETIC BAW ' I -- ' ,., ..,, .. ..., .... COMPARE TO NAT'l. HAND AT 1.37 FOi lS·OZ. ,., ulii lrrlle!IM. COMPAll TO NlT'l. IUND AT 2.0t SUPlR CLOSEOUT PURCHASE •Ll9UIOMWUP44 c •Olltl COtOI •UPSTKIS '°'Gl°" ea •l'ft.SMAOOW • s. ~ ... ..., ,., ndl a little price -. .. tf ..~,..........., ... ~ .... -& -..,., ~.We ..... T111F(1 Htire ... ,, ........ tllb In ,nee. a..... .,.. ,......,i.. ........... ,_._...,, .. )·WAY FROSTED UTllU BS . 2,.-100 LONG LIF& . llTE BULBS Seft ...... °"' twke ,.. S0/100/UO ""'· if•tf ............ . zo.•· • ...,...._... , .. . C•ll IU-5178. Put • few words to work for you. 91i REG. 8.99 299 750 Ml. (25.4 01.) MONOGRAM STRAIGHT BOURBON Grtet hy et itt ... ,.,..,In'"'' -IMW t•t• iowtt ill spedel tff tf. 851 3-SPEED .JuRNTABLE SPECIAL 33 95 IEG. • 3t.9S ~. • • .. .· ~ . . . • ' ' ONE MAN BAND Werner Hirzel is a one- man band al the Orange County Fair this year, pulling along a m yriad of instruments while playing an accordian from his native Sw1tzcrl<.1nd. Ilirzel now lives in San Diego hut makes the rounds of county fairs throughout the state. OC Board Fears Repons Merger Orange County's separate census in- formation and monlhly unemployment reporls are in danger of being merged into rt'ports cov- enng the Lo::. Angeles- Long Bcal'h art•as. coun- t v :-.uperv1 ... ors learned Tuc:-.dav Supl'r\ 1sors agn·c·d the c·o11nty's sep arate !-tal1sl1eal reporting are:.i should he r<.'tamcd. Supl'rv1sor Ralph Clark said the merger of the county's statistics in- to the larger area also could hamper efforts to get federal housing, transportation and education dollars. A report to supervisor s said the loss o! the 10- di vidual status could re- sult m monthly labor re· ports for the entire Los Angeles-Orange County- Long Beach area. rather th::in a separate Orange ·county report As federal regulations are now. Orange County would be merged into the other areas depending on the outcome of the 1980 census. Unless regulations are changed. the merger would occur 1f the census shows that more than 20 percent of the county re- sidents commute to Los Angeles to work. I t also could occur if the numbe r of Los Angeles residents work- ing in Orange County or the number of Orange County working in Los Angeles equals 15 per- cent of the county's employed workers. At the suggestion of Supervisor Ralph Clark, the board agreed to coordinate its efforts to retain lhe county's separate status with the county's cille!> and con· gressmen. Deatru Elsew~re SE A TTL E (AP) Noel Wil'n, 78. a pioneer Alaska aviator and a founder of Wien Air Alaska airline, died Mon- day night, the airlines re- ported Tuesday. Death Notice• NEW CANAAN, Conn. (AP) -Eliot Noyes, 66, the designer of IBM's World's Fair pavilions at Brussels and San An- tonio, died Sunday at his home. Death Notice• JONES Ronald Jot>e1i and 81111~ Jon .. or El EDWARD 8UATON JONES. PHMd Toro, C.. Servo<"' wlll be held Tlluri .. llWllV July "· .,,, '" Coro11a. Jyly 21 at l ·OOPM. a .. 11 Brcwdway Calttorn1" Mr. JGnf'S wa' a native of C...,pel w1\ll Rf'v. R~rt 8. JacotK OI· CahfQrn1'1. H• '' wr11tvtd by h1s wit• t1clatlng. Interment at F•lrh•vtn Marqdrfl Jonu. Costa Mo•. ca, Mf'morl•I Part , S•nt• Ana. 8ett e1o1uqntt"'s T~"Y 1no 01.,a ol CO\ta aroad• .. yMort ... rycllr«lors. MM ... Col • V•••r ... """ IC•rtn or !Minta Ana. C• Son' Edw•rd ol Or•90n, DANIEL M•Cl\a•I o1 hxas. ""'11\er Toi• Jones, IRENE FRANCES DANIEL, ~·- Costa Mf's.,, c.. •nCI ~osttrs Myra df'nl ol N-port ee .. cll, Calll0<n111. CIM.ls, !Wiiy Rutl>fr1orCI. M•rlon LO.f· Pass..i aw•y JUiy 17, 19n. Survived lly 11.r, all of !.anta Ana, C:.. 8roll'•trS r..r 1\11~ R~rt F. Dillnif'I. son Marl< Danil'4 of Nt!WllO<I lle«h. c... Fair· F eat11res Stafford ~ Guitarist, Hunwrist to Perform Twice <iullur plJycr Jim begins 2-4 p.m. 4-H action 6 :45 p.m. Burbank Stttfford mixes humor NoontolOp.m.Batten-show,inthe4-Hbulldlng. Police Youth Band, on with his strum ming berg lace making, latch 3 p . m. Pop cot n fairgrounds. tonight on the Am -hook rug making, punch Theater Marlonettes, 7 p .m . 4 -H Meat phlthcater stage at the embroidery, in Home fairgrounds. Market on the Hoor. OnngeCowltyFair. Living and Design 3 p.m. Keith Dem· HeritageStage. Stafford will perform Pavilion. linger, escape artist. 7:30 p.qi. Parade on al 6 and 9 p.m. Cree of 1 p.m. FFA market HeritageStage. fairgrounds. charae lo falrgoers. and Ceeder beef judging. 4 p.m. United Star 8 p.m. Demolition Reserved seats are 1 :30 p.m. 4-H cuts acrobats, Heritage Derby in Grandstand uvailable up front for "Meat Market on the Stage. Arena. prices ranging from $2 to Hoof" on Heritage Stage. s p.m. Keith Dem-9 p.m. George Benson $3. 1: 30 p. m . World's linger, escape artist, on Amphitheater stage. Singer-guitarlst Fastest omelet de -HeritageStage. 9:15 Kids Next Door G e o '8 e B e n s o n monstration, Gourmet 5.7 p.m. Self-dlscovery p e r form an c e on headlines fair activities Gallery. through art experiences, Heritage Show. Thursday niA.:ht in the 1:30-5:30 p.m. George Fine Arts Building. The fair will remain Amphitheater. with Rodney and the Music 6 p.m. George Benson open until midnight performances also at 6 Man. Mountain Dew per r or ma i n Am . every night through next and 9 p.m. General ad-Stage. phitheater . · S unday. General ad- mission is Cree for those 2 p.m. Mime show and 6 : 3 o p. m . M on. mission is $2 for adults performances, wlth re-Eddie's Magic, Heritage tezuma's Revenge on and $1 for children. QUEENIE Bv Phlf lnterlandi "What I'm looking for is a run·lovi.ng activist, feminist, serve seating at $2 and Stage. . Mountain Dew Stage. Parking is $1. $3. ~~~~~;..._~~~__;_~~~~___;:;;__.~~~___;:;;..._~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ environmentalist who can really cook." H U RRI CANE Helldri vers will be featured tonight in the Grandstand Arena and the Demolition Derby will be he ld in the Grandstand Arena Thursday night. Both Ar ena performances begin at 8 p.m. Cost is $2 for adults and $1 !or children under 13. Other lair activities in- clude: TONIGHT 6 p.m. Popcorn Theater Marionettes, on fairgrounds. 6 p.m. Jim Stalford in Amphitheater. 7 p.m. 4-H steer show demonstration, Heritage Stage. 7: 30 p.m. Parade on fairgrounds. 8 p.m. Hur ricane Helldrivers, Grandstand Arena. 9 p.m. Jim Stalford, amphitheater. 9 : 15 p.m. Young Life Singers. Heritage Stage. THURSDAY All Day Art of crochenit, old world tile demonstration. Dec·a · Board d<.'monstral1on, ull al Home Living and Design Pavilion. 9 a.m. 4·11 market and feeder beef judging Old Comic Films Set At Library A series of free oldtime comedy films will be shown this week at the Huntmgton Beach Public Library, 7111 Talbert St. Charlie Chaplin's "The Gold Rus h" will be shown at 7 p.m. today. Another Chapli n film, "The Rink." a Laurel and Hardy film , "Live Ghost," and a Little Rascals movie. "Spook Spoofin'," will be shown Fridayal2p.m . These films will be s hown io the library's Pacific Room, "The Gold Rush" will be shown again at the Lifeguard Station. near Lake Street and Pacific Coast Highway on Satur- dar ats: 15i;>.m. l . CONAIR HAIR BLOWER DRYER •You are a beautiful person inside & out. ... with Conair to style your hair. • Dual Voltage • It's right at home either in your home or anywhere in the world Vagabond 1000. 1688 DELTA KITCHEN FAUCET • Single lever controls temperature & flow. •Trouble free ... long lasting • An excellent value ,, .. Have a new house without moving. Ghdden H6use Paint spreads easy. Ones last. Looks like a m1lllon bucks 7!'! Glidden Spred Latex Gloss House and Trim Paint is formulated to go on with greatest of case. Long lasting durable lrnrsh. 1':! SHARP CAROUSEL MICROWAVE OVEN ~ Soend your Summer in the Sun • not in the kitchen • Fast meals ... balanced meals. . .healthy meals • The Carousel turns food for even cooking • Indispensable in your kitchen. .In your hie. Model #-R-6750 • Model 1:11200 I with lro-lftCJ Unit $428.001 36900 IN-SINK~RA TOR GARBAGE DISPOSAL • Garbage doesn't need to be a grind! • Let the ln-sink-erator do it •.. • Oulelly and efficiently. • New. bigger 1'1 hp motor does the job even better. • =333 JR. SALAD SPINNER • Works exactly like a child's spinnino top • Spins out water rn seconds ... for C-R-1-S-P greens • How easy tt works. 411 WORKMATE ALL-PURPOSE WORK CENTER AND VISE 4988 ...... -Foldaway Portable f0< use anywhere. Holds wedge. tubular. irregular shapes. Model 79-002 -----------dauglltf'r Deborah Ann Butler of Jo.• R1vf'rslde, CA , aunl Elll!t!n WOOdrow, For the Record Rockwell International McCOaMICI( MOITUAallS Laguna Beach 494-941 5 Laguna Hills 768-0933 San Juan Capistrano <495-1770 IALTZ.aH•HOM · FUMHAL NOMI Corona del Mar 673·9450 Costa Mesa 645:2424 HLLUOADWAY MOITUARY 110 Broadway Cotta Mesa 642-9150 SMl"IH TUTNLL LAMI WBTCUfPCHAPB. 427 E. 17th St. Costa MeM • MM888 • S~a Ma Cheoel 519 N. Broadway SantaAne • 6-47-4131 NICI RotHllS SMmtS' MOITUAlY 027MalnSt Huntlnglon a.ecti 53M53Q ......... y c:otoMIAl ........... HOMI 7801 Boin ~ve. We1tmln1ttr 89;1-3525 . __:,,__.. unclf' Allt!f' Woodrow of Votta, ~. P•ivate l""'lly M!rVfU$ -r@ held 0'1 Tues., July 1'. Pacific V'-w Mortuary dirf'dors. ltOWNTREE PHVU.IS G. ROWNTREE, resident of Cott• Mesa, Catllomta. Peued aw av July 19, 1m. Sul'vlwd 11\1 her shiers Muy tnoeman, Costa Mua, Ca., BHtrlce Mc:Gnth, FIMlda, brothers Emest Greelw, Cost. Mesa end Henry Howe, Flori"-. Nephews Al•n W. GrMley -A~ G. Grffi.y, both of Coste Mesi, C<I. Many grNt nephews end nieces end s..,.r.i vr•t orHt nel)Mw• ~ niKH. Servlcn wlll be held on Thurs .. ll:OOAM at 8•11 8roadwav~t.1"'~ at Harbor Rest Memorl•I Partc. Bell 8rOldwev Mot1 uary dl1'9Cton. Birth• Glidden SPRED SATIN • beallfifd IOlffng .... frcMn '°" bnnh or roltr. How the bkjgelt ..,,_. ""'· Whft. or colon. WEED EATER ® CLIP PE 8 inch cut· 24.88 SNIPPY 10 inch cul 44.88 NEED IE 16 lnch cut HeavydulJ 59.88 • You've seen it on TV ••• you'll love it • Cuts with fishing line •• • no blades • • • safel • Cuts around trees ••• along sidewalks ••• everywhere. 3 /8" Electric ~A~tt~~ice. a really fine drill ... for , .. - Bill or Phil °' Jill SO FT. FLEXOGEM HOSE Finest hose available .•. truly tOQS If we Sltf 10. you can believe us.I How long do y0u need? • I J KERN'S DU NAVIN Tomato TOWELS ... , ..... •""'· TO\\ El~., .~1 son' STIOMG UlY JUMBO ROLL39c NEW GILLITTE RIGHT GUARD ANTl-PERSPIRANT Double Proted1on. Regular or Un· scented. MEW ENVIRONMENTAL fORMUlA SPRAY CAN ~ 2.50L 79~ DISINFECT ANT IMIROIOERED CATSUP 32 oz. 59c 1 Casserole HOLDERS LYSOL BASIN/ 3 DIFFlRlNT SIZES 1.99 2.99 3.99 Oeodonz es and cleans. 17 oz. 77 c BANKAMERICARD Perky color & pattern are per manenlly ft red to a ·~----~rugged steel 3 9 9 core. #1424 • HANSON Bathroom Scale cm V1vac1ous colors enhance your bathroom decor.· 4 49 ~15031/2 • u. "Wet Ones" POP·UP ••• WASll·UPS For instant ct~an-ups! sac 10 SMUTS ! BEST of Nl\TURt • l . NUTRITIONAL SUPPLEMENTS . .. .. ... ... ... .. l Vitamin A 10.000 Units 1 19 100 CAPSULES • CAPSUUS 19 GUIM tOO's 2.59 "Eclipse" ~ .......... ---S•nSueea lotlot1 f1JI$ Protection for ti'-"'. sun·sens1hve skin. m.! 2 89 ·~ •• 4DZ. • Dramamine PREVOO TRAVEL SU.SS -UT*9ts ~Jgc Stainless steel prongs. Pak of 6 K~RN'S CONCORD . Grape Jelly 3 LB. JAR ggc BEER 1 99 t1 H. CAS£ Blttles OF 12 • CARNATION "Coff ee·Mate" NON-DAIRY CREAMER BRUT 33 11 Qt JAR 79c FRESH-MINT TASTE LISTER-MINT MOUTHWASH & Gargle 240L1.39 LYSOL SPRAY DISINFECT ANT Eliminates odors & household germs. 18 Ot 1.69 -o-- SKIN MOISTlltlZIR OLYMPIA BEER Physical fitness for a man's ~u't:t~l 5.99 . •kin. 4 DL 1.99 1 __ ,... OITi1Il~~ OOillttlraIDIDJ . ~l\ ~ooornrnrP~~~ ENTtR & WIN FABULOUS PRIZES Non-alkaline pH, with natural 1 09 protem. 8 OZ. • "JONl"11011cwavc . le Gentle. Regular. 1 5 9 : ~.!. .: Super or Body 1 • • • :~~;n" 1 :;ll1SP;A2Y 9 ~ c~- FOl'mulas. 13 OZ. • • -· "Tame" CIElllE llNSE . 1 3 9 & COICllTIONEI 11 Ol. . • "Earth Born" lllY SHAMPOO 1 29 ~ Non· Tear. 12 OZ. • ClAIROl Herbal Essence Lauder's ASPltlt-FRH sco1cH 5 99 Anacin-3 OUAIT • New! Extra Strong, fast & 88 gentle. C SHAMPOO Seagram's "7 Crown" 30 uems WHISKIY ::::======~ DISH TOWELS & CLOTHS from EXCELLO '/J GAl.11 ~gg. IM W£ Of mm~MICAl UIOI, NlllllllUM FAii TUI£ PllCU Will 1£ Ill mm. AUTO SUPPLIES Oil Filters by m Dish Towel "ONE-A-DAY" VITAMINS Plus Minerals HOUOAY A ~~~c~sER fttii Fast vaporizin& ~ action. "r:r:. ,· .. 1.59. ...Affl£ WEAYr' Assorted Stripes. 1 00 ·UllO on • Linatone f ood supplement tor your cfog or cat's Min lnCI coat. 11 ll. 2.99 ---- ' I I 1\ J 2 DAILY PILOT Fiesta's Winners Listed . l San Clemtnte'1 fleata • weekend had many win- t ners, from little Min.I· Ml11 Sao Cle m ontt • Krilton Coll in • to ' lifesuard Mlke "Lum py" Brousard, who won an ocean ~amps event. for physical proweaa. Winners an the 24th an- nual fiesta parade Satur- day included lllov•' C •••""'' D•"O fro"' 6'i"•M•m ~t<..t \WM~t•"-•' wn ,....,_ • .,,_.\(noel IMlnCI. m• tOf' \ tretlf\Y c()IO City Pl&10 AUOO:•et•llft. fi..t lWHP\t~ \outl\ Coo•I J•yu e\, Quee"' tn>pfly lcW' l ... lf ll<l<6' ll<WI ~n C'-"1~ Jun•o< •nO ~nlOr wom ... '(llA» PH--1\I , ,,~, le>< ,,,.., .. .,..., ... ,,,.f .... t Winners an the ocean festival beach games, spo n s ored by Sa n Clemente hfeguards in- cluded: ~it't•wn o •corm•n o t Sttn (ltfT'lentetor lheont-mtlt' tw 1m O•ve J.>hn_, • San 01~ stat• parl• ltfeguarCI, for tne ocHn reS<ue rdCt c;arv Fr.-ich al>CI St••" Hellor 01 San c1...-te tor lh!! epen Clory r11c• J"I< Ltnb of Nh•POr1 e .. ch for the openpad<llf!bollrCI r«e Oan Gr.,,.m, Huntington Buth 'tale park llf1'9UdrCI, tor thtl lofe<;iuM<I one·mlle run Tim Harvey, S..n Clemente ""'• park llleguMCI, for the llleQu•rCI one m1te\w1m San Cl•mente llfeuu•rCll for tne 111"-!uarCI oorv rel•V Laguna Buen llle<;iuarcu for th" paCIClleC>oarCI re1av .Joy Reealls Beatles Truth, Justice •... By MARY CAMPB£LL NEW YORK (AP) -"Beatlemania," without a plot and witho~an official opening night, is running at lhe' Winter Garden Theater on Broadway and sell· ing out nearly every performance. The mostly teen-age audience the night we saw it loved it and we did, too. What it takes to love it is joy in hearing those great Beatles songs again. OF COURSE, YOU could do that with a r ecord player and a copy of, for in- stance, a newly released. best-selling r e- cord of the Beatles live at the Hollywood Bowl taped in the '60s . But at "Beatle~nia" you get four young men "portraying" the Beatles and playing their songs in chronological order plus a boredom-preventing bath in multimedia nostalgia. During "She Loves You" the audience sees a movie of the Selma civil rights march. "li I Fell" brings slides or political, sports and entertainment celebrities of 1964 -the audience ap- plauded the cast of "Star Trek." "A DAY IN THE LIFE," the only-song played unbearably loud, was back- •~w1..._...,. grounded by a man-in-space walk; • "Lucy in the Sky with Dfatnonda" had dizzyiq psychedelic effects. A moving, lighted sign sometimes moves across the top of the stage, giving the news headlines at the time of the song being played. The three young men on stage pl&ying auitars and the one behind at his drum set play Be,.tles arrangement.a and sound like the Beatles. Mitch Weissman looks like Paul McCartney but Joe Pecorino, Leslie Fradkin and J1,1slin Mc Neill don't look like John, George <\nd Ringo. \ BIOGRAPHICAL INFORMATION on the stage foursome lists nothing b1,1t birthdates, color of hair and eyes. The tour perf or1J1ers run off for quick costume and wig changes as the evening progresses a nd the "Beatles" age. "John" lookll more like "himself" when he reaches the era of granny glasses, shoulder-length hair and a soldier's jacket. "Beatlemania" opened May 26 and originally set an opening night ol June 10, but producers David Krebs and Steven Leber changed their minds. Critics are attending whenever they want to. The program credits Krebs, Leber and lighUng desianer Jules Fisher with the idea. 1 IT'S AN IDEA THAT'S rolling with a 1 bandwagon. • London recently had a stage show tell- ing the story of the Beatles as a group. j A movie ls soon to be made of "Sergeant Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band," Beatles songs arranged to chronicle the rise or a fictional rock musician to superstardom. ~ A briUsh m¥sic professor has written yet another ~k about the Beatles, •'Twilight of the Gods." . · · And of course, there are frequent pleas · for the Beatles to reunite. SOMEHOW, WE 'RE MORE com- fortable with "Beatlemania" than we would be with a real Beatles reunion. Some girls screamed during ''Michelle'' and the rest of the audience laughed; it aettmeci so quaint. The Beatles, it they did get together now, couldn't go back to being the inner cent, talented mop-top Liverpudlians oC 1964 the way this fake foursome, with the cute wigs, can. It would be a blow to more than one generation it the BeaUes were a disappointment. In "BeaUemania" the1're not; they're a r eal blastfrom the past. Faster than a s peeding bullet, more powerful than a locomotive, and still wear- ing the fashion of an earli er er a, Superman stands poised ready to defend Manhatten against evil. In real life, this mild-mannered reporter is Christopher Reeve, all decked out for the filming of the movie "Superman," to be released next year. ·eank savings cernncate -SAn Clemontf' s tate park ' 1tfe<1uarC1stor the slluttl• run relay Newl)Orl ~acn 11teguora' tor the ...--------------------<..har101 rel•Y maturing? If you have a bank certificate of deposit about to mature, make sure you know what your new interest rate will-be-because we can pay you higher interest than any -Mike "Lumpy" Brousard, • Son Clemente sl<ltot park llfeguarCl, for lhe gruehng musiul ll*IS competition, an •••nt In wh1<11 he hotels t,,. nalloNI lotle. 1 Winners in the city- • sponsored first annual l beach volleyball tourna- m ent: -Brian Sh~rbart of San Juan C•P•Strano and h1\ ~rt~r wl'\O.,,fl' n•me was ~vctU4lbl•, 1n thfo mt-f"I \ open comoeution -Sh.or anCI Lynn Auhl1q of Ca111>trano 8~<1ch tn th" wom•n s o~n -WooCIY Brook\ of Coron• d<!I MM And Mart•~ Wurh of N,._,..oort 8e•ch ,,, 1rw muted compehl!on Doo, Poo Battle j 1l n Yards J I PORTLAND, Ore. CAP) -A fertilizer war rages in Portland -with the fertilizer being pro- vided by everythin g from elephants to bats. . .. • .. l i i ' , ( ' j -; . F irst came ZooOoo, a I fertilizer sold a s a fund- raising venture by the Washington Park Zoo. ZooDoo is wh at zookeepers shovel out of elephant cages. I Now the Oregon Museum of Science and I Industry is selling OMSl- 1 Poo. Museum director Lor e n M cK inle y t describes the product as I "a selected bl end of rare I rodent refuse, carefully . com pounded by cons- 1 c ie ntious conserva -l tionists." "Rare rod&nt refuse" tra ns lates to I dr oppings from th e , mice. rabbits and bats that the museum uses for research. In an obvious swipe at the comp e titi o n , Mc Kinley adds th at OMSf-Poo "is guara n- teed to keep elephants out of your shrubbery." Tax Criminal SAN FRANCISCO CAP> -A Canadian engineer whose now- bankrupt Palo Alto firm s old inte r ests in 120 partnerships created to develop industrial parks has been sentenced \o three years in federal prison for tax crimes. Sant Ram Pallan, 38. a Canadian citize n who lives in Stockton, said he will appeal. Open Spaces Wins Backing 'Most San Juan Capistrano residents responding to a survey prefer preser vation or the open, natural quality of the proposed 100-to 200-acre C. Russell Cook Park in southeast San Juan. The results of a citizen questionnaire on the use of the park site, located between San Juan Creek and San Juan Creek Road, were aired during the first hearing before the city parks and recreation com mission on the park plans. THE SURVEY QUERIED RESIDENTS about preferences for development of the park and asked what type or recreational activities and facilities they would like to have. Most said they preferred bicycle paths, multi- purpose fi elds and hiking and equestrian trails. Several residents who s poke at the meeting sup- ported those recreation uses and the area's natural qualities. TWO REPRESENTATIVES OF LOCAL sports groups appeared before the commission and re- quested playing fields for soccer and football. Ron Gibson, city resident and Golden West College geology instructor, had additional advice for commission members beyond recreational uses for the proposed park. "I'VE WORKED IN GEOLOGY FOR a long time and I'm familiar with the area," he told com- missioners. "I would urge you to build any perma· nent structure on high ground." Gibson said the periodic flooding of San Juan Creek could cause problems due to erosion: The proposed park is located around the creek bed on a flood plain. Poor F.atso Heat Beating's Tough MIAMI (AP) -Fat people, look out. A heat wave means more suffering for you. According to Dr. Syvil Marqult, of Psychological Associates of Miami, fat people have a rpore difficult time in the heat partly because large sections of skin are unexposed to whatever cooling breezes are available. "It's hard for them to separate their legs . • . and their arms remain pressed to their sides," be says. , Hikers' Map Av<Ulable By theAasoclated Presa Hikers and other outdoorsmen may be interest· ed in the newest to)>ological map issued by the U.S. Geological Survey. The fold-out map covers Yosemite Valley in . California and a text on the back describes the aeolo&Y and geography of the area. Copies or the map are available for $2 from the Branch of Distribution, U.S. Geological Survey, ... P.O. Box 25286, Federal Center, Denver, Colo., 80225. . l 1100'11 earn more al ba~~~~~B~;r~:~:5~~ , , . and Keogh accounts). Home F I deral I Before you invest, take a .look at our chart and compare our rates with the rates your .... bank pays. You can double your money In less than 9 yea~ our 73~% rate when you leave your Interest on deposit. The figures speak for themselves. And we make transferring your savings as easy as it is profitable. Simply bring your bank passbook or certificate to your nearest Home Federal office.and we'll make the transfer for you. Your $2 Billion Family Financial Center HOME FEDERAL SAVINGS of San Diego Huntington Be,ch Pfflce: 21:1,1 Main Street• 536-6511 Huntington Belch/Downtown; f t1 Main Street · 53a.6591 lrvtne Ottlce: -4~3 Campus Drive · 752-6161 San Juan Capistrano OffJce: 32039 Camino Caplstrano·<49C3-0601 Santa A('la Office> 100 West 17th Street • 835-4336 Seal Beach Office: 1350 ~aclflc Coast Hwy.· (714) 898-3481(213)598-5576 , Home Federal Savings and I.min Association of San l>iego 1 .. Wedn!ld!y, ,July 20, 1977 OAIL Y PILOT •J. l HoHunl • • .National Lea~e "ins Again -: EW VOBK <AP> -"What you IO lont'" Jim Palmer Cilt\ed • • . and Billy MarUn !d do nothlnt more th11n slve Umore'a ace pltdler a 1bru1 .. \hebooi. •,al mer wun't out there l&JI *6t Jone Tuesday nt1bl, but lt. ;111Ust have seemed more like a. ~"tence than an honor. It dldn'L Oke tho NaUonal Leaaue mort tban n few fhdtJ of the wrlat. to turn him and the reat of the American L~acue 1nlo Joa~n CIOCt qain with a 7 ·~ All·at.ar aametriumph. AcCCl"din& to the box score, Palmer luted lwo full lnnlnp or th• camaa• at Yanket Stadium that 1av• the National• their 1hl' lh stral&bt victory and lCth lo the last. U of theae mld·Hason cla11lc1. Buto(ftclally bt madelt Into the third lnnln• before M arUn, tho manaaer ot the New York Yankees and th• Amerlcan Loafue •tan, lrud1ed to \he mound and muoifully removed Pu I mer That was only moments after Steve Garvey of Los Anaeles un- loaded a mam.motb home run lo· lo the American League bullpen 1n left-center field to 1ive the Na- tionals a 5-0 lead ••• which was two innings alter Philadelphia's JOE MORGAN HOMERS IN FIRST INNING OF ALL-STAR GAME. Debuts in Portland .. • • ~ ;; :.llouton Opti .. niistic ~: Ii,/ ead~$iill~Yti.cN -. I J 'I " PORTLAND; Ote. tAPi ._ try, Bouton.said, be'& 1elllnC his Fourteen years ago. Jim Bouton $125,000 house in Englewood, was on the JDOUnd in Clevel~nd, N.J., and purchasing a more pitching in We All-star game. modest $751~ home for bis wife Tuesday night, 2,800 miles and threecniJdren. ' from Yankee Stadium and at the His vehicle back to the ·~Uber end or the professional bigtime, he hopes, will be tbe ' -baseball spectrum, Bouton was knuckltball, that mystetlous burling khuckleballs for the spinless pitch that bobs a-'d "Portland Mavericks or the Class weaves to the'plate with no one-.A:. :Northwest League, a team batter. catcher or pitcher -:With a reputation as enigmatic knowing exactly where it is go--·Poa unorthodox as Boutoh's own. ing. . -There were 3,904 people in But rusiage has foiled lilit•at- ;ii1!lcety Civic Stadium and the op-tempts so far. This spring, he '])enents were the Grays Harbor. was cut by the White Sox .Knox-Wasb ., Loggers. Most or the ville farm team in the Class AA .pf ,yers were barely walking Southern League to make room .when Bouton signed his first pro for younger players. Then be was :contract. dropped by Durango in tbe Class ·: What is a 38·year-old man who AAA Mexican League. lia,s written a bestseller. starred So he called Bing ·Russell, the 111-a television serjes and worked actor·writer from Southern ·as a sportscaster for two or New California who owns the Yqrk's largest television stations Mavericks, a moUey crew 'Of doing drawing a $400 monthly hustling youngsters who are paid. gaJary and pitching against the $400 per. month during lbe BUID· likes d Salem, Walla Walla and mer and have no afflliaUon with Bellingham? a ma}orleagueuam. • . ~ • Thirty-elgh t is just a ro the fll'St three innings of his :iaoinber," he shrugged after go-Portland debut, Bouton's :jhg nine innings and scattering knuckler floated over the plate :4tsbt bits for a 6·5 victory in his like a softball in a slow-pitch ~sday nlght debut. g am e. Grays Harbor's =::tsouton created and starred in youngsters hammered out f1Ye ;a;televislon series based on bis runs on slx hits tbrougll_the flitt :'4:pptroverslal bestseller about threeframes. · ' ' :~eball ••Ball Four." After the Then the knuc1cler started Bob- ~es was canceled following a Seelllla&oCt•acem ' =-ir~f run on CBS last fall, Bouton . • , ' :J>ejected an offer to return to :1'CBS as a sportscaster. -::~e aawn·to-darlt scheaule of :4• telfiision •lt°'1 lei&. bkn -4rained. ••1 dldn't see the sun for ~bDutayear," beaaid. • ~1 could have been making $100.000 a year. but my body aaJd -out and run around and play :t.aa. 1 don't feel llke-t thoucht 1 :would feel a1 this a1e:• • Bellldll. be NlcJ. 1J1011Seastlng · .e notldl l.tvcrUe pmstlme. .. ~ ... Job 1'*~ either aot fP,,. ~ °'" be • .,.. star « ~.~ Uffeckt 01 PY' :Un' ltrlnc two HntcDc• ·~~ &nd look~ at tb8 tlme •e a be • Gret J .nglnakl bll5bed a two-run homer t.o ritht field to make ft 4-0 in the flnt Ira.me • • • which was a minute or two aft.er Dave Parker ot Pittsburgh and Geor1e Foster ol ClncinnaU doubled for ·the lnnin1's second run .•• wblcb was two batters after leadoff halt.er Joe Morgan of Cin- clnnaU started it all with a tower· ing homer into the rigbt field seats. Needless to say, the rest or the game was almost anticlimaUc. Oh, the Americans did make some noises. Riehle Zisk of the Chicago White Sox (and a Na- Uonal Leaguer until this Year of the Free Aae11t> doW>led homo two runs ofC Cincinnati's 'l'om Seaver lo the sixth innina, Willie Randolph or the Yanks sln818d for another run ott him in the seventh and Georae Scott hit a two-run bomer'in the ninth. That first-inning outburst, Parker's homer in the third and what turned out to be a g~e­ winning two-run single by San Diego's Dave Winfield off Yankee reliever Sparky LyJe made Don Sutton of Los .Angeles a winne.r of lbe game and ol the game's Most Valuable Pliu-er Award. For bis part, Palmer was the v muter aUh.e understat.e1qent. .. I iueas yoo can say I didn't pitch v«yw~" he observed alter the' five-run raking. the first time he'd been scored upon following friCM sh\ltOUt inQi.nga of thfee.hit All-star !)urli.DJJ. Morgan, who•tarted it all with hi• ho.m~ about a half-dozen r()wa into 'the rtght.fiel.d aeats. 11eemeCl t.o be 1Qing it wouldn't ·have mattered if Cy Young hlmselt had been out there pitcbingforthe Americans. .. Wb~ you look.down our line- up and see what we've got com- ing up after me, it's got to make you thiDt to yourself, 'There's no way to keep these guys from get• png an awful lot of runs. There's .nO way to beat them.' Let's face; it: we're awesome." Both he and Luzinski, who punched bis homer a little deeper mto those stands beyond Beggie Jackson's reach, said Palmer's . in~ty to get the curve ball w•ing was the deciding factor. "He may not have Jotten more than maybe one or two of them ovor all night," said Morgan. .. He had great velocity but no curYe wh._tsoever." ...... AndLu.zfnskl added: "Noques- tion that was bis downfall. U he'd SeeNLAU..tan P8'oBZ Bigg~t ~I'h1·i11 Ever--Sntton Dodgers Star Chosen 'Most Valuable Player NEW YORK (AP> -The pen- ny·pinchlng New York Yankees or yesterday let pitcher Don Sut- ton •lip away and the American League is'much poorer for it. Sutton blanked the American League in the first three innings Tuesday night, starting the Na- tional League oo its way to a 7.5 victory in the 48th All·slar-game at Yankee Stadium. It was the National League's sixth straight All·star victory and the 14th in the last 15 mid-season classics. Sutton always wanted to be a Yankee but his dream of wearing pinstripes was shattered by a Yankees offer of only $2,000. Stars Wilt As Spikers ~·eF~st By DAVE CUNNINGHAM Of .. 09Uy 'ftllet SWH A tired, sloppy Orange County Stars team lost to the Santa Barbara Spikers three games to one in lntematlooai Volleyball Association (IVA)' action Tues· day night at Anaheim Convention Center • Games scores were 12·7, 12·10, 11-13, JH. ..... , "Our whole team just wasn't mentally prepared for it," says Stars player·cqa.c;b Dodge Paf~.}~ guyt' ttom our team'~ ed in i.IJe All-star game have ad. seveti games in ·the-last f$\e:or l.0 day8. We were tired andl"~ally sloppy.:• The loss drops Orange Coun- ty's record to 1.().9 and moves the 8·7 Spikers lnto first place in the IVA's Western Divlsion, just seven percentage points ahead of the Stars. -Th~ ~kera were witl\OUt their top bitter, Luis ~tnyard, who is recovering from an ankle injury. But the Stars were also below full strength, with Wilt Chamberlain • nursing a p11Uedgroin muscle. Cbunbef~ain pliiYed the first two games, but sat out Uie rest of \he mat.ch on the advice of-Stars trainer George Curtis. ··wilt injured himself during the AU-star game but I never even reallied it," Parker said. "When it started lo bother bi m again l9nigbt the trainer recom- mended M sit down." • 1 A crowd d. 2,193 came to watch Chamberlain play in his last botne game of the season. His contract only calla for matches during the first half of the season, and while the Stars have nine home matches remaining Cham- berlain will not appear it any or them. The· primary factor in Tuesday's· match was Jose GarcJa,. Santa Barbara's fiery hitter w)>p .wll gett.ing his first cbJlJ)Ce tQ re8"-Y show what he can do. · · NorD)allt Qatcia'pfays second fiddle to Ehlyard, but with the Bradlllll!unable to play. Garcia took command. "Garda was tough. We just couldn't stop him," Parker said. ·~IJetO de P'tt!ltas ran their of· len.se well and their passtna was excellent." Most al Ute Spikers' good pass· inl came rtom Unda Fernandez. wbo il.o made several spec. taculardip act saves. , The Star• are on the road ~'iVlil~ El Paso-Juarez • whlfa ,santa Barbara travels to DtlWW'. to Play the 10-S Eastern l>l"9._.eadlq Comets. Instead, he signed with the Los Angeles Dodgers for $15,000 and a college education. "I always was a Yankees fan," said the 32-year-old right·hander who has now pitched eight score- less All-star innings in four ap- pearances. "When I was young .. I could never envision myself playing for anybody else. I had that fantasy to pitch in the ma- jors and part of my dream was to pitch for the Yankees.'" Part ot bis dream came true Tuesday night. He pitched in Yankee Stadium, where be struck out four, walked one and permitted one single to earn un· animous selection as the game's most valuable player. And Sutton said be was almost dreaming when be took the mound Tuesday night. ."I don't think that I really knew where I was," said Sutton. whose 10-4 record bas helped tbe Dodgers pull 9lh games In front of World Champion Cincbmati in the NL West. "I really don't remember the guys If aced. You may fmd this hard to comprehend. but to me it is simply amazing-all that has happened. "I fully expected to see Bobby Richard.son, Tony Kobek and other great Yankees playing behind me.•• WILLIE RANDOLPH Avd'IDS SLIDING MIKE SCHMIDT. The Yankees, who probably have the highest payroll in tbe mctjors, could certainly use Sut-t.on. But he's happy now. "When I was picked for the All· star team, I thought it was nice. Wben Sparky Anderson. sent word tbat I was to be the starting pitcher, I thought it was doubly nice. .. And now the MVP. It is more than I can comprehend. I can't comprehend all tbe nice things that have happened to me this week. I'm sure lt will be a couple of days before I can. "I can't believe anything I do the rest d my career will give methefeellngihavenow:• Blow to Head Outrageous, Says Swann SAN FRANCISCO CAP)-Pitts- burgh Steelers wide receiver Lynn Swann has testified be was the victim or a violent headhunter when he took a knockout shot from defensive back George Atkinsoo last Sep· t.ember. Swann testified in Atkinsoll's $2 million slander suit against the Steelers and coach Cbuch Noll that the defensive back's blow was "unnecessary, unwar-· ranted and totally outrageous." • He said he didn't see Atkinson before beiD.g struck. Atkinson filed suit after Noll said be intentionally tried to maim Swann and the coach llnked the Oakland Raiders de- fensive back t.o a "criminal el~ ment" ln pro football. The trial is in its second week in U.S. DistrictCou.rtJtere. Swann Tuesday saw films or Atkinson knocking him oo the head and gave his version of the incident. The films showed Atkinson striking Swann as Steeler Franco Harris caught a pass several yards away. Atkinson has testified he was try. ing to tackle Swann because he thought be was the intended re· ceiver. ' "1 knew the ball was not com- ing to me," Swann testified. "There was no way I could do any damage to anybody or block anyone. I was only on the field." "Did you consider you wtte be· ing tackled?" asked attorney James M. Macinnis • "That's done to someone car· rying the ball," Swann replied.. ''I was wantonly struck in the baclR." Atkinson "completely forgot his prime directive of tackling Franco Harris:• Swann said. "He completA!ly, unwarrantedly. violently, maliciously bit me from behind and allowed Franco to run right by him.' ... · ·. Swann, 25, a three-year NFL veteran, said lfe seriously con· sidered rettting bec~us~ of tbe Atklnsoo incic)ebt and others. He no# plans t.o play th1s season. ·' O"IL Y PILOT Jul 20, 1977 f . Smith Eliminated : . From Net Tourney ASHlNGTON ~,...itfd atan Stan SmH.b and curr Richey wert· ousted Tuesday 10 the aocond da ~ of the Waabanaton Star anlt.'rn.1 Uonal tennis tourney. Smitb lmt to Zan Guerry. 6 :1. 6-3, -tuJe John Yuill defo1ilted Richey, 6·3. 6-2 in 102 de&rct· beat. In olber f1rsl·round m¥lche-. Tuesday Brian Ji'a1rlle beat Elhut Tdt&cber. 8-3, 6..C; Ken Wilkison • ~uated John 1''eaver. 6·4, 6 :! ·Butch Seewugen down<.-d Paul • )(ront, 6-1. 6.J, Natt MltcheJI : dropped Marcelo Lara. 6·4. 7-5; : and Tim Golliltson beat Doug • Crofford. 6-~. 6-2 · Brian Teacher ousted another ! top seed, nicking Raul Raourez. : 6·4,. 4-6. 7-6, m a ram-delayed • Monday match. Additional scor es in cluded Brian Gottfried ov er I van • Molina, 6-3, 6-4 . Eddie D1bbs over Sherwood Stewart. 6-4, 6·4 . . Hank Pfister defeated Ismael el : •Shafei, 6-7. 6·0, 6-4; Hans : :Gildemeister beat J'etf Austin. • :6-2, 6-2; Victor Pecci ousted Tom : ;Gullikson, 6-4, 6-7, 7-6; and Terry : :Moor topped Fred McN1ur, 7·5, : 1-6. : :Sterdc Goe• 26·6 % :: CELJE. Yugos l avia '·Yugoslavia's Nenad Stekic <.le· feated U.S. Olympic gold medalist Arnie Robinson in the long jump at an international track and field meet Tuesday. Stekic's winning distance was 26 -6114. Robinson was second with . a l eap of 25-11 and West •• Germany's Hans Baumgartner •:was third at 24-6. , . ; :onaard Golf ~r Lead• : : SAN DI EGO Corey Pavin of : :Oxnard leads the premier boys : · 15-17 bracket in the Junior World '. golf championships going into .. today's second 18holes. • Despite the presence of a ,quartet of sons of notod golfer:-. ·Pav in fired a 70 in opening-round : action Tuesday to take lhe lead a stroke ahead of Dale Riley of .Honolulu, David Game of Bellflower and Tracy Nakazaki : ~r Los Angeles and Cra1gan Pap- : :J>as of South Africa 1n the pre- ; ~t1ge bracket. . •' Jock Nlcklisus II h1td an 83, Bobb) Cuspcr finished at 87. Kelvin Devlin had an 89 an<l Tim llarney, compehn a In the vounger 13-14 class, completed h111 round with a 79. All are sons uf pro &olfers. Tt181paTrade• TAMPA, f1a. -The T111npa Bay Buccaneer s a nnounced Tuesday the trade of defensive t:nd Pat Toomay to the Oakland Raiders for an undisclosed future ~ ational Football League dran choice. Toomay. an eight-year veteran from Vanderbilt, played for Dallas and Buffalo before joining the Bucslastyear. A•tia Ad.,"a11ee. VERO BEACH-Tracy Austin defeated Lila Hirsch in the third round of the U.S. Tennis Associa- tion girls' 16 1'\Stional clay court <:hampionships. J Austin won./.6'·1. 6-3, while Martha Korbut(defeated Heather Ludloff, 6-0, 6·3Tuesday. Antonopoll• WI•• MEMPHIS-Rain abbreviated the third round of the U.S. Tennis Association girls' 18 National Clay Court championships., but some matches were comoleted with Lea Antonopolis d efeat-. ing Janet Wepfer.6-0,6-2. Also, Anne Smith beat Natalya Smith, 6-1, 6·1. Car oline Stoll downed Susan Hill. 6·3, 6-2; Lln- da Siegel ousted Sue Rasmussen. 6 0. 6·3. Julie Pressley downed Donna Lies. 6-1. 6-0; and Ann Henricksson beat Laura Garner, 7-5. 6·4. Garrbon lt'aleed SAN DIEGO -Wide receiver Gary Garrison was waived for the $100 fee Tuesday by the San Diego Chargers for whom he caught 404 passes and scored 58 touchdowns in a decade or pro· f essional football. The Houston Oilers picked up waivers immediately on Gar · rison . a 33-year-old native of Amarillo. Tex., but as a vested pleyer he was allowed until Wed· nesday to sign or declare himself a free agent. ;;·NL ALL-STARS ..• .. • # '. Continued From Page Bl '.'.been able lo break 1t over. ':Perhaps be might have had some of us a little more off stride." And IA.tzinski 's homer was a sort <>f dream come true. "To get your first hit in an all· star game be popped out twice. last year in his all-star debut and to make it a homer -and to do 1t in your first appearance in Yankee Stadium is an unbelieva- • ble thrill." Seaver, making his first ap· · 'pearance in New York since be- . "jng traded to Cincinnati by the New York Mets barely a month • -:ago, received a tumult11ous ova- ; lion when he was introduced, a · thunderous greeting far exceed- : .ing even those for two of New <York's other superheroes, Willi e · : ·Mays and J oe DiMaggio. .. l c9uld've stood back and done nothing. but l sensed that wasn't what the crowd wanted ltle t.o do." he said of his cap- waving acknowledeements that brought. more waves or cheers cascading down from the lriple- dec ked stands. "J mean, l worked 10 years for those people in this town. I wanted to thank : them, too." . ; When someone wondered if he : f'H disappointed in the way he ~~itched in bis big comeback ap- ~ pearaoce, Seaver let loose with 1 one of his familiar cackles aDd S ~aid: "What was wrong with the : ~a:r I pitched? Nobody eot hurt, ~~they?" . :1 No ••• although Seaver 5hlmself l:aearly bec~e a casual- 'iY dUriqbiJ two-inning, four-hit, ; three-nm appearance. ~' Alter Minnesota's Rod Carew ~buued a pitch past Seaver's hip ;Sor • leadoff single ln tbe sixth, . ' Randolph sent another screamer back to the mound. Seaver managed to knock thls down with his glove and wrist. "I couldn't get the first one and the second one darn near killed me,·• he joked . Seaver was the only NL pitcher rougJted up by the Americans. Sutton. San Francisco's Gary Lavelle, Chicago''s Rick Reuschel and Pittsburgh's Rich Gossage each gave up one hit. While Cleveland's Jim Kern a nd Dennis Eckersley, Dave LaRoche o( California and Boston's Bill Campbell all s ilenced the Nationals, Palmer (five hits and five runs) and Lyle <t hree hits and two runs) absorbed virtually all the punish· ment the senior circuit had to of. fer. "The score wasn't thl\t in- dicative of the closeness of the game," Morgan said . "I mean, one would think a 7-5 game was ~lose. But they never really were in the game . . . They were play- ing caich-up the whole game and never really caught up. H4TIOfllAL AMa•ICAN .... 11111 Mo<9.n lb • 1 I I CIAW lb TrlllO ti> t o o o Scott lb o.rnv tb " 3 1 1 t l'l•'*!llfl& Mont!Wr lb , 1 O O O Brell lb Perke• rf l I t 0 • C•m*'I p TmPllnts t.t t o Flllrly!Jh FoJtet'cl ' 11 ' LyltO Mol'lltl,, 0100 MunlOn-.. u1.-krn 1 t 1 2 YH11111e1 Wlnfldff· , 0, t LyMCf C.y a.1 'l O O O Zlltl If S.•wr1> o o o o $f!Qltonrl S<nlll! llh I 0 1 0 JICUon" SCl!McM II' o o 0 o Rl<t 11 111.USClllC> 0000 f"llftt. Sturnsc O O O O WYMt•rc eencllc loo o eurtlO!'lt• l.IYfllt! P 0 0 0 0 Cl'l\flfltUI R09J• ? 0 0 0 Plllll'erD ~laft.U-100~ l(enlD VlnfW rf I 0 0 0 J-lllf\ S<n'9ft o • o o o o ~C!ll"llyo ~ante 'O O t ... lltllf\ GMU~p 0009 ~R~~D N.Ule&:a.. .. , ..... ) 1 I 0 7 I I 2 J O I 1 2000 11000 1000 •• 010, 1000 a.o o o • ' t 0 0 >Ott 0000 , 0 1•0 7 0 I 0 2000 1 1 1' ,000 I 1 o o 0000 •o•~ I 00 0 0000 10011 Otto to•• Wiil lrrine Stadi11111 Be·Readg1 Irvine High athletic director Brian Quinn says contrac- tors ,have promised the 3,000-seat football stadium on the Irvine High campus will be ready for the mid-September football openers (Tustin vs. Irvine's University Sept. 16 and Aquinas High of San Bernardino against Irvine the following night.) The all-weather track consist.s Qf r.utr berized .asphalt. The stadium seats will be cement, similar to the El Modena High setup. · • Ricardo's Goal: Lead NFL oomoN. ·; . CnnUnaedfropi~a&eBl Mesan Wants ta Be Top Scorer in League By ROGER CAR~N with the Lions earlier. the ball with the upper part of his 01111e1>e11yf'1i.tsllff "l missed a PAT against New instep (just below the ankle, yet Costa Mesa's Bennie Ricardo. Orleans,•' recalls Ricardo. ••That on the top part of the foot>. who established himself as the was the day l m atured as a Actual practice for the Lions Detroit Lions' NQ. 1 placeklcker kicker. l was told to forget it, tbat begiris Thursday, but the months in 1976, has.set a {lew goal as he il happens. I came back with a since December have not found begins preparation for the '77 Na-43-yard field goal, but I vowed Ricardo idle. He's been working tlonal League Football campaign then that I'd never again take out at Orange Coast College with in Pontiac, Mich. · a nything for granted." the weights, running and playing "l want to lead the NFL in Ricardo says he reels he!s racquetballtokeepinshape. scoring," says Ricardo. ' capable of hitting with coqsisten-There are still several weeks Ric a rd o cy from 50 yards out (that mean.s before Detroit's first exhibition e s ti mat es the line of scrimmage is at the game and it's not until Sept. 18 that it'll take enemy 33 in the NFL> and he at-that Sl. Louis invades Michigan 100 PQints to tributes bis distance from a 5-10, forthe NFLopener. aeeo.m-plish 177-pound frame to fl exibility Butiticardo says the anticipa- that and he within a whip-like leg. Ricardo's l ion is mounting. says it boils fl exibility is reflected by his 'T m relaxed, butjuiced,"s ays down to 25 abilitytodoaspllt the former Costa Mesa High, field goals Not a true sidewinder. Ricardo Orange Coast College and San bing and weaving, the batters s tarted bitting the ball strai,ht up or straight down. Bouton blanked Grays Harbor on two hits the rest of the way, Portland s~ored a~ in the botto~ ofibe ninth to win it and -aouton prO- nounced himself satisfied. But it is a long way from the Mavericks to the Yankees, and the man who rankled baseball's establishment With ··aa11 Four" must know somewhere that the odds are against making it back to the top of the game. But he in- sists it's possible. ,, ''I don'l see'Why not." be said. ••rm certainly s trong enough to do it. Hoyt Wilhelm pitched knuot_~~alls until be was 49 and the wuo-reason he quit was he didn't have the reflexes t.o field balls hit back at him." and 25 extra m oves In from an -angle. yet hits Diego State standout. ~eNHYRICAtlOO points. .,.-~~~~~~~_..;;.~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~- In hi.S first year at Detroit alter bumping Errol Mann from the Detroit roster, Riaardo kicked 10 of 13 field goals and his kickoffs got the kind or "hang time" that keeps NFL coaches happy. Hang time is the amount of time before the ball comes down and the longer the .better for the on- rushing kicking team. "Last year was a good year tor· me," says Ricardo. "But this one is really important to me. A solid year this lime ~d it would meaxt back-to-back good years at age 23. ll would establish my credibility." It wasn't all roses for Ricardo in his rookie year in tbe NFL. even after finally hookinc up with Detroit after losing his shot Top Divers lnMVMeet More than 30 or the top divers in the United States will compete thla weekend in the American Cup meet at Mission Viejo's new dlvin1 complex located at Marguerite Recreation Center. Jenny Chandler, Ofyinpic gold medalllt in the women's three- , .meter sprlngboartl competition at Montreal, wiU be orfe. of the favorites. • Kent Vosler and Bar~,ar~ Weinstein. the defending men's and women's national 10.metel" platform diving champs, will also compete. All three are trained by Ron O'Brien, who was recently signed to join the Mission Viejo Nadador4'S'newly-created diving program. Wbetr O'Brien comes to Mis· slon Viejo next spring he's ex-pected to b'rlng with' him bis three star subjects. Chandler, Yotter ailll Weh'dtein. Other O~~piana who will c.ompe.te: thls-w euend a.re Robert er_.,, and Melfua Brll~. .t Three-meter ptelims beam at 10 a,m. Saturdar1 "1th fin.al• at 3. The 11me ~heG\lle applies tor tbe 10:.meter platfOtm dlvin1 · SUnday. t ~ took tfle. bttt and mode It bdt~rf In o lot of lbOnda.ful WO)lia. Ar5t of all, we added more than fi0,000 squa~ feet of apace to give y0u more room to enjoy the charm of Del Mar. But not Just space. The..- " WedneSday July 20 1977 CAIL V PILOT 83 1977 Prep Grid Schedules Top Soccer Teams Claeb Sports Calendar ........ Y<llHtl•I l..otllflO ... <II HIQI\ Wt.llolllott ~tu.-8HCll yt ~ill ti S.36; S.. ci.n-te vs h1611<1• 01 •;O ; 0-Hllli w Et CMnlno at I Mi..-w.i'o on c..tlr-YttlOy"' t .UI. M IUIO" VlflO "' Antflelf'll •I 8-1\uN-.,... o 1W •• ,,<--Y#ftT ...... k-• ~ le AC l-.._,_ ht"'"' OCI 14UnlwMllf<ltM ....... V .... I Ott ,,,..,._c..__• _.,.. .... ... Otl •o.i.11o11t~• ~ ...... ..._, ,. .... • '-"• n •-•u • v..__, .... .., , ,. .... N•v 40...Kllh•tMi .. IMv .. 10• .......... w ... v ..... \o-...... ___ ., .. _ (·--.......... .... .,_ .. 0<1 • .....,_, ... ..,. c•-•• ........... ..... 10 At '911 (lemom• ''"'"' ...... 1111.M ()ft t\ LA Pioft •• ~ft (._nwtw,. ..,,qfl: 1 JOtt ,_ UHl!ltittw• .. _. It &•ton •I OCCt '-tit JI Co-I• ---•I occ . 0.1 ll"'N9n .. H1Qlll Ill'•" on ·• •t .._., .. C1h ""•••"• 1 ., ... Oct I &1 MM•n• •I N•*ll•" '1••1110<H19'1t Nn " •At l....,.f',,11 H•• I IOt'" ......... tt .. 1,., ......... ,(ff\.t" ·~· C--1 .. , .... Oct '°'-•I H••DOll li•rDOr. 0<1 U\oeftl•ANl•l\A llowlT >0 Ckt "'!IA V•ll•Y•I ~A llowll HO• ) Tu.Un •t Net•OOfl '1•rl>o• I 10 M9' It Al ( .. _ (w.rom,,,_1 ..... Nh II ~-hlll Al Tll\tln I """' .. -.... .......... ,, ... , ... • _ ... .., .... , \e1IC IO ~ V .. t.., •t HIH'tlf191 ... Se .. ttAt-tH .. -1 ·-" "'"' h<"'""'"'' •• "' \fft » W'I C-M H--1 S.tl " "•flench et Univ. or --· """-· CkL 1 £1 T_ .. '*•-Vlell ...... • ..... tJ L• Wit-M H\lflC11191Dft .. ~11141911 Ck1 U 0..-. .. llh •I S.. 0.-141 S.~ 2' ltetellt •t Wfltrnlnst ... H .... I "'•"' Ck1 ,. ~ 9McJt .... ....., .. _, CkL 1' Mi>&IM V,.le « _,_., H..-1 "°"' • UN..er\lty .. 11v1ne O<strkl ~ .......... Hov llc.t•~•tOCCt CaqMew ~ IOEIOor-•tV•left<l•H191\ J\Cf'tmm.eige1 Io m Sept 11 1..1 0..-ftlA •I 8o~• Gr•- H19" I ~OI llE•t•ncl1•tOCCI Sept lO 0&1\• Hiits al S•I\ C•.,•-ent• .. 19hl Oct 8 Miuo0nVl•101tOCCI 0<1 ISS...Clerne,,,••I OCC 9 O<t 21 Un1vt"''V •t lrvlnt "'0"' A Oc• 78 El Toro at M1u1on Vu.•10 "'""' H(IV • LdQUn• 8t•C" .,, Ntiwoort Mitrbor I NO• ., Corona d<'I "'"'di OC< ft \•"'· 10 CoroM del Mar hcrlmm• .. I t :•1.m. Se• 16 Est..,cl.ut occ e !.ept. 2•Wflt Torr•no 11 OCCt Oct. t Plus X at Hunllllgton lie~" lifl)fll Oct. 7Ma1tt'O.f MOCCI Oct. UM¥1f•ut0CCI Ocl. JI Al..._, .. ~ Oct 211'-taln V"l•Y 11 Atlllwfm .......... ..... 4 w.mnlnst ... •t HumlnQIOfl 9"<:11 Hl<aftl Hov. IOHuntiftgtonhKll"10CC ~Hiiis !of:pt 10 Tll\t1n •t D•N H•ll• 1 .. ,,,.,. m.t9•> 10• m. StPI 16 LO\ AmlQO> e l !>•n C lem•nlP Ho'lfl t ' !>epl ZJ E•tel••or .ti S•n Clfmtntt • ...0111 Seot lO Cost• M<'>• •I !..on Clomentf' ~·qh 8 1, • 0<1 I Un1wrsttyatlrv1n~t-419nl Ott U C<IM •I $.on Cl•men•~ Hoqn 8 Ou. 2IA•M•wooV1e108 0<1 18 Al lMIU"" !Hoc" 8 NOV .. Cl TorOoll Mt\Sk>n v1~10 t-41on f.ITo,.. \tpt 10 Sono'• 41 L .. t H•b'• (\cr1m m•oP>7 pm S.pt 1& Al V•len< •• 8 S.pt 11 Bre• •I Ml\\lon Vleoo li1Qh8 !>ept. '.JO Al l "9Ufl" Buch 8 Oct 1 Coron1 dell M•r •I MI •~Ion Voelol • • Oct •1C-.111W.V_ .. ,.,., .• 0c t U At 14111\Clfltloll •H<ll I O<t.tt ~-~8Htll Oct. u U-Al ~ S.1111 ..... Ho.. ·~ .. 1'110relOCCI Nov IOAtWKtmiMltrt ................. S.PI •O Ulll,....5'1¥ I Kr Imm-I 10 •m S.pt 16AIGero.nGrow 1·):) Seot 1A At lot..-Grt-1 lO Sept lO Cvllf'e" I Oct 1 LosAt1m1tos1 Oct u Fountain va11ev I 0t I )I At w .. trnonster O<t 71 Newport H•rllor I Hov. • Mertn•1t Westm1Mt., NO• 10 Edo>On al OCC 8 frvute Sr ot It Oort Lugo Is< nmm•Q•H 1 o.m. Sept. 11 Aqul111S7;JO S.pt. UAt~ne Buell l :JO S.111. JO UVtrM lull\erotn II Oa· 111191\ 1 :JO Oct.1 EIP!O"e1:l0 0<1. n At &ouk!W City, Neva<I• a Oct.JI bye OCI. 2' At S.rr-(Wr1g+llwoodl J-JOp.m. r Nov.Slfflte\I "°". It Cl!Pt1W-V.itey 7. JO .............. S.pt. '° c.c>1str1no v.11.., '"'''"'· tn~l 1:30o.m. S.pt, 16At8rttt S.pt 7llntonel Seot lO El Toro I Oct UM1n..,,,V•ejot 0<1 10 Corona•• M•r •t N...,oort HarDOr I Ott 71 Oan41 HollU Nov ' Co\t• Me~• •• Nt.WOOt"t Her Dor I HO\f tt U,,l\fet"$1h4il frvtM H'9hl Mllrin1 !>eot 10 ~letiac• fscrommaoe I 1 p m . •t Westminster St"e>t t6 C0tona drl M•r at NewDOf1 H•rtior t Sept. ll Magnoha al Westminster 8 Oct. I Los Alamllos at Western HIQll I lO Oct 1 Loar•utWestmln~cera Oct. UEdhonatocce Oct. 11 Fount1ln V•ll•Y ., Hunt· lt19ton 8'!1Cll Hil)fl I Ocl 11AIW~tmln5lerl Most From BB 14Rams Live In Coast Area By DAVE CUNNINGHAM Of 1"9 01lty l'le.. St .. I If Huntington Beach wanted to form a football team comprised or its own residents, it could prob· ably enter the NFL and do better than half of the teams already there. How's this for starters-John Cappelletti at running back and Ron Jessie at wide receiver. On d efe nse, Jack Reynolds at line backer, Monte J ackson al cornerback, Dave Elmendorf al safely and Cody Jones at tackle. Sound like the LA R ams? It is. and all of the above-mentioned Rams are neighbors in Hunt· ington Beach. The city team could also get Ray Malavasi as defensive coordinator and Jim Wagstaff as defensive backfield coach. both with the Rams and residents of Huntington Beach. We could cheat a Utile. too, and nab Rams head coach Chuck Knox, a r esident of nearby Huntington Harbour. Since we're cheating anyway1 why not dip into Foun· tain Vadey and pick up a rew '°"" CA,.,.•LUTTI players like linebackers Isaiah Robertson and Jim Youneblood and tackle Larry Brooks? We could bolster our coaching staff rrom Foun· lain Valley, too. by getting the Rams' offensive backfield and special teams coach. Elijah Pitts. In all, 14 members or the 1977 Rams squad re· side in Huntington Beach or Fountain Valley. Eight more from the roster bave settled in other Orange County cities. Besides H untington Beach and Fountain Valley, the most popular is Westminater, which has attracted defensive end Jack Youngblood, center Rich Saul and tackle Doug France. Safety Bill Simpson lives in Garden Grove and linebacker Rick Kay resides in theclt.y ofOranae. But Huntington Beach has lured far more Rams than any other city. Running back John Cappelletti. who has lived there ror three years, was asked what the blf attraction was. " just like it. There's no particular reason why 10 many Rams llve here. It's Just colncldence, Jj he says. C.ppellettl nid he encountered a 1ood op- portunity to but som e property about ooe mile from &be beach, and Juat ended up U.vinl Ulere. .. la fact. I didn't know a lol d U.e pl.,era lived lD UM~ Bea@ and Fountain Valley area unW lift8' l mO¥ed in/' ca,,eu.w aaya . .JUlt beCame they Uvo cloH to one another dOima'l men tbe Ram. pl..,.. aoclalhe a lot dur· iAI tb.t oft·M NOD. ••we actUally •ee each CJtber mote durlnt the seuon/' Ctippe:Uettl 1ay1, ''because dwi~f the off. HHGD • tot of Uie CUYI are dolnl other tblnp and aren "t around.'' Mon OI the Huntinlton Beach Rama report to summft tralnlnJ c:amnrPriday. A few ba•e already checked into the Ca State (l'\allertonl tralnina headquarten. For Ram• like Joe Namath (New York> aod llim Bttte!Mft (AusUn, Texas) tl'a • loial trip, but lor 14 tA the coacMI and P'""8 Jt'a Jutt •abort drtvefrOcnbom~ . , w , J lo!•• • H1111t11•e10 .. •••<II •I W•tltnlMte<t N•• \tAllNwporlM•rbOrt MIWO.I kllt IOAl .... _IHer .. r IM.rom ....... ,,."' ~I t• Ott ""'"'°' 11 UC S.l\t• •••01r11 T.eot n Notti\•• 5A aow1 ' JO Stoot ttukewooo11SA8owll lO O<t l ldiMl'lll OC(I OCI UAl\I l'eull 0<1 J09hllooAm•l"l \A9owl8 O<t 21 ... JoM lioKO •• 'ltA Uow• 1 'IO No• ) Plu• l( .. 1 SA Bowl. Nov IOS.rvll•et SA Bowll Mlui... Yl•1• 'Mtt>l IOKllM~ Sept "S-1.0.ck I \ept !JAi Tu•tlnl Sept SIVnlftoH•t O<l. I C.O.ta IM""•• occ • ()(I Uet~a....111 <kl JI OtM HlllH Ott 21 Ceroni •1 M., 11 H•wpor1 M1rDOr8 Nov 4 At~ c; .. ....,.,. I Nn• •OE I Torot ..._~"·""' S.pl "' -· 0.1 '"'""'-" P"' I S.111 ULllMllllh nl S.pl.UC«ONdtt Marl Ott tS.r•lte.CL• Patm• Par~ I Oct 1AWfltm1.,~torl Ott 21 lid1W)n9 Oct. 11•1 Hun11noton lie.ell 8 Nov • FOUt\teln Vellty 11 occ a No• IOM•rlnet S.ntt ..... ..te S.ot. 10 E.t.IM>Cll lxrlmm•,..1 1 p"' Sept. 16 At BolH Grande I ,JO S.pl 2l LI Quinta at totse Grinde 1 JO SPECIAL VALUES FOR TODAY THRU SUNDAY ,., .. ,, PLU!> $l.71fET. BLACKWALL TUBELESS 4°PLYPOLY 27 MONTH LIMITED WARRANTYi~~_.::: FIBERGLASS POLYESTER WHITEWALL TIRES $ WHITEWALL TIRES 2 FIBERGLASS BELTS+ 2 POL YESTf:R RADIAL BODY PLIES +I STEEL BELT 88 ER78-14 fR78-U GR78-l4 $3S.99 $36.61 $38.39 $40.29 GR7B·15 $40.29 HR78·1' $43.59 HR78-15 $43.59 JR78-15 LR78-l5 $ 36 MONT)~~13 jj~-'------1-~ LIMITED WARRANTY *~ ~· JO (At"-.. , -., ,....,.,.,, Merbtrl Ott 1U.V-.. e<lll OcL tSCMt.llMWtlOCCI 0<1.11 l!t Toro I O<t. llUnlw?ltvl Nov.•Ml..i-'VltiOI NOV 11 Otlli Hllltl ""'""'" S.ot tOH11nll"91on Buen Sept. tO At Huntlnqton e .. c~ l•trlmm-110• m !,ept.16 Tu\tll\ll lrv1ne HIQlll !>ept. t3 LO\ Aml90s •• GllM'l Grave Hl9f\7:lOo m S.pt, )0 Al Ml HI on Vle 10 I O<t. I 0..,. Hiii\ et lrvlne HIOll I O<t. U IEIToro4tMhslonVlejo6 Oct. Jt<;Ml.I Mfftlt Irvine HIQhl O<t. 2'AIStnC .. mtnlol ,,. Nov • eo.--clel Mir •I lt'rlllf Migtll Nov. tO L..-IMtc:tl •I lrlllne HIQlll COSTA MESA 2946 BRISTOL ST. SO. OF SAN DtEGO FWY. PHONE: 549-1533 LOS ANGELES- Bayern-Municb, the world champion soccer team from Germany, tancles with a pair of top Mexican teams at the Los Angeles Coliseum Friday and Sunday. Friday night at 8 it's the Mexico National team which will feature the opposition, while Sunday's 3:30 encounter involves the University or Guadalajara. Tickets are $8, $12 for both 'ames. FULLERTON °'*' btsllet11t111Mo .. 11 e11....,i. Mltft 1-...ri. Cal~ W flCA ti 1: Sovttw'• Gii Auto vs lluikl A Grow ot •:JO>. Santa Ano HIQl't bo>MllNll ~·­IUnl~ty "1' N.....,port HIM!or ot \ p.m.I Clutl~rton Coll-t>el>k•ltNlll ~•ou. IS•d«llet>.tck Colt!'<)• n SoulMrn Clllfo1n1•ot ~I H•rbot A,... bo•e""ll teao"" I Hunt •"910tl Bea<" •I Botu Gr-e .11 'II Aec CV .. 1 j JO. E d t>On • WHlmonster •I TtWlnl<le P111 ~ ul S;llO; Ntwoort HerbOr ,, E •t•nto.t M TeWll'IC.le Perl< 111 e. Coron• M l M•• "' Coitt Mew at Lions Par• •t ) JO "°"" .. Inv.ii.., •I~ Oulnl• •I Lions p ... ,. ..... Amwkan Leo-bAMl>ell Coto•• Meu•t LltHtb<• IS:UI, Ple<enti1 1t• lffwpott • c.-t.t ~ Hlo/I lj; ISi. SANTAANA 1530 S. HARBOR BLVP. PHONE: 870.0700 120 E. Flrtsr ST. AT CYPRESS '"ONE: 547·7'77 Women's Go lf ~ .. ttll I qw Ql'OW ltow net ,_., A 11\Qhl tow oros..-1 Setty Gtll"91\ef, ... 1. 1(1y ROdQtfs. t9. 8 lllQ!lt low Nt t Id• T,,_, ~ 8 lllglll low 9ro" ' 111•1 MMO•rlt• M•<l•r11ne, P•• GuhO ~ TMI,... Too-•. .. ( lllgl\I low g~s 1. Ven111• Cllr·•· 111n .. n. •OS. C l11gn1 low n .. 1-1 tl•ll•~ T~•cl\out '1 8•H bell tWOH•mr t Brllv G<11109,...r ,,no i<•"'' 0«1on<1. )•, Mary KronmM And I/al Morton,)~ , ffutl'I Le Port• •n<I Biii• 1 Utl'IOut, )6 • 11••1 Jon Aba11•n •nd Autr l 4 Port• wllh L•ura Bl•os""lt ~ne lnetmt'Toonwy,>1. C.11642-5678. P14t a few words to work for ou. WESTMINSTER . 15221 BEACH BLVD •• PHONE: 893'8544 OPENMON~.T~H=R:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:::::::::::;:::;;:;;:;;;~:::·::··5:P:.:M:·==:::::~ $2.90 $3.0, 10-S~EED~t.~~TtJililiilH .. uF ...... FY ..... M_04TO_c1oss ALEMITE CD-2~ ~~.-lliillrl"'lill~" RACING 20 INOt ~~ OIL DETEIGEIT BICYCLE BIKE 01 • RACU HANOlUAllS OIL TIEATMEIT • S'OKE PllOTEClOll ,,,.,,'-~ • RACING SAOO\E • KICK !>TANO t CAllPfll HANO llRA(ES • CHRO"'f RIMS -~Nll&:'llllf' WORKS FROM ANY 12 VOLT SYSTEM PLUGS INTO LIGHTll 1995 ' TRAILER TOWING MIRROR PROTlCTS & IEAUTlflES VINYL, PUSTK, RUBIER OR llATHER • s.ok out wot~. """""'•· ond cfort • Annh <rocking. 79() 1L49 ~~. VINYL, 'lASTK, RUIHI OR UATHll CLEANER USE ON EVERY· THING. fOA CAR, HOME, OR OlllCf. 16Fl. 89' oz. UL TRA-PlA TE SHIELDS & SHINES HARD SURFACES MHJ\lS, PAINT, fltflC.lJ\SS, lllf, f IC. 7 IL 01. 119 GEMi/NE-SPORT GRIP LA(f.ONSTEERING WHEEL COVER Modi~ 0~~~!~~!::::. 229 -• .. IOI looh Woo leo•""' fA. • BARSUAXS STOP LEAK llOCK,U OIAfOI & MUD GASKrT UU atPAa .ll10 lvbrfcotH woter f,""'P teol1. Stole Ofld rust ru atonc. Ahoolutely "° '"PGV9 ~~oz. 77c $ SIZE PRICI FED. EXC. BLACK TUBELESS TAX 175R·l3 $31.99 $1 .95 175R·1' $32.99 $2.09 165R·15 $U.99 $2.03 185R-14 $35.99 $2.31 A~~ Ala;mitos Racing Results TUHU'(alte&\llta ,lltST ltAC• -:UO yerd,, ) year olcU Ctehnfng. Pur .. ~, 100 H'""'"rwmv CMyl._ 14,00 7.20 4.90 L•lfeo L.Ot• <W•rdl 1.60 •·'° HevadffloYal ICltN .. I 1 . .0 Tlme-11.32 Al&o "" -Dtc-•v• APf'll, TM WIHrd of to,, SIHPt .Slllne, Crem1 Btrs, MldWey<:opy, ~Oun II S<rat~lled -Hf'U ltunner I( •aact• J0Hlli.1tty Wiiiy a t- UUWt LcQeo, ~aid Utt.• sacoNo !1Ac•-"°"'"''· 2yeer old\. C1llmlno. For meJOtM. Pllrse SU Oll Relletero CWerdl 6.60 s.• 1.411 • VIII Ing Ame CCA«lou) SA 3.00 OH-Go ICrUU Sir ( ... tt) 2.20 OH·lt99\Qr\'IMlll(8fooklleid) UO Ttme-11.D Also r111 -Jettow ~ Father Jim. My A-. Little Spoller, Fast H 8old, P9ww by lue Noscr.UllH DH·DMO!w41f for._ • THlllU> ltACa -810 v•rds 3 year -· .. loll). Cl.timlnf. f'ul'R '2, lOO. ti11wellenlt1t CC•rel9~1 6.00 4.00 3.61 O~·l.eteelll (Clerlnel 6.40 10'40 DH-Vole!IWP911eo(l(nlglltll.IO 6.00 Ttme-ao Also ,., -TrWtton Snip. ltoyel P1u, Eeote Oancer, Mr Tiger Aodlel. LAI Dlnere • Scr•la.d -ICn•gtit l'llll•. No Sad SonQJ, Jot FrHltr, Sig Slla.t OH·DucfhHI lot AllK• SS 8xac:Uo S.Hew1lltll ltle A DH.+ Latulla, Paid SUI.• H •XKta J.Haw.ilell Illa A ...... VetetorPllleo,,.ald ...... l'OUltTH ltAC•-170yards. Jy"r 0101 & up. Cl .. ming. Purse U,000 Surt Glad IRouohl 7.liO 4.00 2.40 Gollml1$ Phciet>e IT•Hturtl•.60 2.60 DuPt'I Patt ... n <Creager) 3.60 Tlme -•.12 Also ret1 -Sc>clr~llng SH, Remblln Easy, 81«k erou.r, John's ltotkec. I'm Gonna Go Ho 1ctetches l"I FTH ltACE -3JO ya,,is. 3 YNr olds I up. Ctatmll'IQ. PUrse $3,000 I m •Smooth Jet Al' Wire ..... COURAGEOUS ttAS CLOSE CALL IN RACE Mlehap Almolft RHult1 In Dl•mHtJng Courageous 'Blows It in the Ninth' NEWPORT, R .I. (AP) -Courageous, one oI three American yachts vyin& to defend the America's Cup for the 23rd time, broke a beadstay in observation trials against En,erprise Tuesday .. and the race was abandoned. Transpae Raee Merlin Take.s Five Trophies . By ALMON LOCKABEY Dall\'~"............... : If BJJl Lee had to haul all of the trophies he won- in this year's Los Angeles to Honolulu yacht race home in the cockpit of his 67-foot Merlin, the sleek sloop would not be classed as "ultra-light-rlisolaceoHmt." · The 34·year-old designer-builder-owner-skip·.· per or Mer.Un was cheered to the "rafters" of the elite- Iii k ai Hotel Monday night as he made Ci ve trips to the. Podium to pick up major trophies he won in the 29th Transpae. ··The be-arded ex-Newp()rt Beach Sea Scout had a· perpetual grin on his face aa he trudged to the stand to pick up: THE BAR N DOOR AND W. L. Stewart Memorial Silver Tea Set for the first yacht to finish · the 2,225-mile race with a new elapsed time record. The Navigator's Trophy for the first yacht to· finish awarded to Merlin's Don Snyder. : The Governor ol Hawaii Trophy and the Skip· Warren Memorial Trophy foe the first yacht on cor-• reeled lime in Division II. The Navigator's Trophy for the first Division II yacht on corrected time. : THE TRANSPACIFIC YACHT Club Trophy for . the first Class A yacht ( correcLed time> in Division. 11. Major trophy winner in DiviS'ion I for conven· · tional type yachts was Jim Kt lroy, owner skipper of · the 79-foot ketch Klaloa, sailing under the banner of Los Angeles Yacht Club. Kialoa's hardward collec· lion: The Governor of Hawaii and the King Kalakaua Trophies for the first Division I Yacht on ~orrected time. The ~avigator's Trophy for the first boat on corrected time. (Navigator was John Pigott). THE MO&GAN ADAMS TROPHY for the first Cl ass A Yacht on corrected time. (. SWIMMER STEVEN BUTLER WITH COACH FLEET PEEPLES. (Mytesl 9.40 300 2.IO TepTop(.Ad.tlrl HO 2.10 ''We just overran the base and got thrown mit." said Atlanta Braves owner Ted T\lrner. helmsman of Courageous. "The rod on the headstay came loose right where it screws into the fitting." The winner of the Clark Sweet Memorial Trophy for the second boat on corrected time In Division I was Mark Johnson's 73-fool ketch Windward P assage. Passage also won the TPYC Trouby for the second Cl~s A boat on corrected time. , .. ~ Yout"' 2 , Begins Swimming Career , M lAMI (AP l Steven Butler celebrated his 'second birthday by getting out his toy boats and ·swimming half a mile. ! "My son's a real star," his proud father. Al ~Butler. 27, declared. The 2·ycar-old's swimming car eer began in the fo mily tub. By the age of eight months he was being ,tutored by hi s first swimming coach. Fleet Peoples. "He's an unusual little monkey," Peeples says. • Steven swam the quarter ·miJe in 42 minutes !F eb. 3 in Orlando and waved to the crowd as he ~went by He appeared on television and the :university of Florida sent him an honorary scholarship The Gators even sent him a question· na1re to fi ll out, much ltke lhe one they send to high ~hoot football stars ~ 00He has no fear." says Peeples. who has taught r,re than 15.000 people over 55 years. '-~ Peeples look the J·foot·lall 37-pounder to a lake :.rtnming the campus of Rolhns College shortly i~ler S~ven 's birthday on J une 24. Peeples threw ~ven into Lake Virginia and told him to swim the alf mile lo a dock -,. Steven did, but ins isted upon carrying his toy lQals during the swim. With a tiny boat in each and. he bobbed, dog-paddled, floated and swam in ater SO·feet deep. He made the swlm in 46 ~ni~:ples c"<plained the half·mile pace with a ugh. "He swam fai;tcr because he swam part of e way with some older girls -3-year-old girls." ~ "l can't figure him out.'' Peeples says. "'This le kid is absolutely perfect in every way for a g swim. I've never seen a child like him in my e. I've never coached a swimmer with such won- rful control of breath as he has. ~ "But I do not plan to set any goals for him. Thal ~n create too much disappointment. His potential y is going to do later." Deep Sea Fishing HE WPOAT CDavey"U.ockerl -'" an91~n ' NrracucM, 1 bO~to, too Od\\ • v~11ow1 .. 1, •JS roo cOd J hdl 1but, 11 vellowOn tun•. OXNARD 10S •no••rs; 670 Of~ b.tu, 48 ullco bAU, 6 ting cod. SI? , rock ll•h. MOR AO BAY (8r••5 Ulllltllltl 7l anglP,. 776 rock cod. IVlr9•i Lend· 1n11J -31 ilflQltr.. 2 llng cOd, 46S rock cOd. PARADISE cove 69 •no••"' 103 rock t>on, 1• Ullto O.H, 7 llelll>IJI, IA ling cod. SANTA MONICA -6S •notef\ ' ll•l•but, 4 !Mtncl bau, 115 rock ben. Barte -Sii llnQltrs: SS macurel, 11 rock t>au. Sc1111cotwtu MARIHADELltlEY -SJ1nQltr\ 1 sand t>ou. 12 mKkerel, 6' roek on•. 179 rock cod. DI.NA WMARF -210 -ltrt• Ht b•"· S b•rr•cuda 101 1>01.,10. • nellbul, 63 rock <Od JOS m•ckerel l wn1te sea btis.. SAN Dll!GO IM.,.,itllNI Pieri 11• AnVl•rs l,t1S.1ba<ore, 'yellow~ll. T bluelln tllltf SANTA 9Alt8AAA -3' ... gteo: 40iroc•cod •11ncicod 1u1mon REDONDO -111 eno••" I l>IU#lon lun• I .. \ cahc..o ban. • C>•rr~ud• 1 wn11e M>• o.u, 1 lleloout, 20s otue ban. 11,.,,. 91 0>1•9ters S 1>1r r1cude, 41m«k••••. n•roc k cOd VENTURA -6S •nolers UO c•lico b<IU, 400 saftd bats, 1 wlllte MA NH, uorock cod,2cowcod. POAT HU•N•MI! -S4 •nolen· ise <•11<o oan. 316 rock cOd. 12 hnO cod. SIAL 81ACH -119 enotert: 1,037 roc;k cod. ,.,. .. -UT •noten. 10 Hnd bAH. l2111lll>Ut, SAN l'CEDRO IPon1 O'Calll -0 •nottrs• 1 twtrracudl, U llOnllo, 161 ullco beu. 139 rock cod, 7 mec:ure1. lttnd St. LAndi119j 76 •ngltrs: • vellow111I, I t>orrecu<N, 415 ullco 0en.S<lbonlto.11ob1 ueoau. LONG 81!ACN 1 .. 1,,_. Pieri -45 anottrs: 1 1>3rrecud3, t1 calko N H, 46 C>onl!o, 31 macktrel, 360 ro<k cod. <OUffn'• Whlr11 -51 .enoi.n: l?J t>ontlo, m ullco NH, 16 Hnd t>eu. 1 1>errecue11. 4lrou ('>Cl, 51 blue twt u . DH· Little Tiny Go CAll(tofl) 2. 10 OH·O..pOlvot(HarO 2.10 T1me-1a.12 Also r•n -Top Moon Sport, Mvn•mets.~ Ho scr.tltllei DH·~Mllle•1tor--SIXTH RACE -3SO yards.> n•r OIOS & UP. C•••m1no. Purse Sl,500 C.irr1e1~ (K1119nll 9.20 J,.., 2 60 l.40 '60 3.60 Clll<k Doolin (Harl) H•v•O• Fl.,,.,r ITrNsurel Tlme-18.01 Also r..i -Sky~ Diem-. Go Ca· 1un, Husllln B;;g, Speck Priest, Sllu Breue Perr !>cr.ilclled -Orville Marlon, Ouoc• M ICk•V U Euci. 5-C.rrl~ CHll I J.Clllck Doolin, P1id "7.50 Sl!VENTH RACIE -AOO yards. 3 veer otds I \IP. Cl.aiming For II Illes a m•rn.,Purst '3.llOO Cll••oln Fren ILlpnam1 99 oo 1• 20 10 •O Wiid Ca\11 IHerll s 20 • oo Cllaroe 10 C""nc• I Knogfll • 1 AO Tim~ 20 3S Also '"" -Mon Ruby Pac, Min 6 •ndu<<•. MMf Mel~Y. Lono a Go. ~ouqPl Minnre-, L•ltle RefJlita, LOC*1 l .~,. ,, No scr•lclles & IGHTH AACE -JSO V••ds. >ye.tr olds. A 11-lf\Ce. Pune $3,000 81g•noUQI\ CDtlOmbAI S 00 '·'° 2.IO Jel Ottk H-CFerausonl 1.80 l.40 AnQ~•sCMrQl!r ITrNsurel 4 00 Time-1194 AIS.O .... -Ima Tin'(, Tur Al>IH Tull, TN!s Moon. Gv~v Fave. Helull. Moore 800, Bio M Tru KawNll Scr.,tci'Nt-TlmeTo6e 8o1cl U I! •Ktl 2·81teMutll & lt·Jel Deck Heftll, ~.aldJll.40 NINTH ltACIE -3SO Y'"''· l year OIOS. Cla1mtng. Purse U, 100 H•'s Fooltn <Crta911'1 ~.40 3 . .IO 2.IO Cll•rll• Rkh ITreHUN!I lt.40 & • .io Some IClndaSallot IPaullnel '·'° Time-II.OS Al•o ran -Go Pauum Gal, Somerset Aeols. Velvet Sle4119, Son"y Salo, SC>ot Doll,Gredy o.. Run Kitty ScratcMCI -l"m • S•lnt, Hull Crow. Mr. Pr.Irle Wind, • $J •aacu J.Me's , ... ,,. & 1-Cllerlt,. ltlcll, P•ldS.UZ.Je Alttndan<e-S,713 Turner was in the Jead by "about three or four boat lengths and we had Enterprise's air" when the stay came loose on the third leg of the first race. Turner said he expected repairs to be complet· ed by Wednesday morning. Parts had to be ordered from Marblehead, Mass. "We were ahead and pulling away," said Turner. "We were blowing them out. We blew another one in the bottom of the ninth. Top trophy winner from the Newport Beach area was the Cal-40 Vivant with co-skipuers Scott · Alexander and Fen Bevin, Newport Harbor Yacht • Club, a nd Phil Rowe, Santa Barbara Yacht Cluh. •• They were awarded the Harry G. Steele Memorial Tromhy tor Ute 1lrst (;lass D boat on corrected lime in Division I. "Maybe I'm a j inx to the team ." 40 John Arens or Balboa Yacht. Club woo the TPYC trophy for third in Class Din his 37-foot sloop Cottontail. 'Custody' Issue Encounter' Wins i . •I Minister· Due MiickintJe Regatta : • · MACKINAC ISLAND, first three arrived, leav· : B +-~ Mich. (AP) -The yacht ing 61 boats becalmed on : f J dg. Encounter appeared to the far side of th e: e 0 re U e have won the Chicago to ' Mackinac Bridge in the_. : Mackinac race on cot·· last 30 miles of the 333.: · • reeled time iQ4ay as the mile race. Some 325 !- SAN FRANCISCO (AP)-Ajudge has ordered r est\ of the fleet was boatsstartedtberacem • the Rev. Jim Jones, head of Peoples Temple becalmed. Chicago Salur<fay but : Church, and a Sao Francisco woman lo appear in Encounter owned by three were knocked out. ~ court to answer questions about a 16-year-old tem-George Sletterland of earlybyheavyseas. ~ pie member whose Milwaukee, was third p:==;;;r.;;:;;;~;;;:;=::; mother wants her home. ( J .across the finish line. one OKER? Superior Court Judge Sl'A.TE h our and 31 minutes llG SAYINGS OH Joseph Kennedy issued a behind the first to cross, • HOMEOWNERS writ or habeas corpus Sassy. Tuesday at the request of Sassy1 owned by Duteh •·AUTO ln...anc:e Lanie Belt Martin, an Oaklandwomanwhoclalms Sch m idt of GTosse ji, Peoples Temple has "possession and physical Pointe, was the first boat custody" of her daughter. Ernestine Ruth Glazier. to cross the line in ex. Jones and Esther Dillard, the young woman's tremelylightwinds. maternal grandmother, were ordered to appear in Heritage, QWDed by a Kennedy's court on Thursday. The mother said ber D o n W i 1 d ·m a n o f daughter left home in December, 1975, after joining Chicago, was second to INSURANCE the temple. finish. 541-5554 '· The wind died after the r 1114 HARBOR BLVD. COSTA MES.A ( .~~~~~~~.!!!!!!!!~~~~~~ 3 GI_, Bodle• Dt1e I• 11.S. ~pends on how much interest he shows in swim· ing later. You can't really tell what a 2·year-0ld The Bullers, who recently moved to Miami 1 th>m the Orlando area. informed the Guinness Book $fI World Records about Steven's quarter-mile «7Nim. In a letter to his parents .. a Guinness official Alamitos Entries SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -The bodies of three U.S. Army hellcopter crewmen shot down ove~ North Korea will be returned to the United States Thursday, the Army says. l'•T .... lllt '91tTI-: 1:0 A plane carrying the coffins or CWO Joseph :~~:~~·:~~=~r.,· 122 Miles. 26, Sgt. Ronald Wells, 22. and Sgt. Robert SIVE ~ngralulaled Steven but said his name could not be tered in their book -there are no s\andards for year-old swimmers. ~ Butler says that's no big deal. ~ •·we won't force him into anything," the father ;3ys. "If he wants to keep swimming, be can. Ir be ~esn't, he doesn't.·· -~ f.step, EmerSon ...... f1,S..·Pon10 Wo,..en -Havr•t110v1 CC!IJ taut ttuntll, "2; Sl-AU$Mll IS·PI ••• HawatllOOl .. WlkSt.cft,.,... Mefl-b-IBI bNtGormat1, .. 2; "-Ila~,__ C81 beet Ooulerty· P.rrot,~. Mlllff-~Ootherty CS.Pl llt•t W•llltHl·EINl"IOft,M. A-Ul\l¥ .. llllltllt&o$tM. ' ..... Oete ........... ,7 TMrdH-<BnliDQ> m Haynes, 29, is scheduled lo leave Yokota AFB in l'lltlTltACa -wver4" tvur Het>e1yWa1C11(H.rtl 1n J Wed d olds. ~. c1a;m1119• Ce•·tJAd. Torlltt• Fl• <c..rc10U1 m . apan nes ay and arrive at Travis AFB ..,,,.,.'2100.~prkeuoot. Lotus.uc.<U,_...• 11• Californiaatlp.m.Thursday. FencyP.s91'11.-<8roekJI 119 DIOtnMIHFlre(l(nlgl>ll lit l.IKkYFOfSure!PWllnt, 11• Hec11w~8ellw.Jr. IO•lstel 1n 8atulCl\IMllC•lll 1Z2 MyFlclClelioftevJMvlnl '" eo11 V..iMolrl IWerdl Ill war Truckle <Adtfrl 1n 5"rtl119 Soll l~lfll 122 O.Unt CTrMSUrel 122 Vein ellw IAlll•> 11t 8amlly0oo(Cerdoie) IU NtNTit ltAC• -sso yardl. t ygr Olds. Clllmlftg.. Purse SllQO. Clelmln9 Cll•tk Hl"WllkM IUjlllaml Ht Famous Sir(~) U7 PnttS'9ClO. J • Go8CH'OGo(Alll9llfl) 1l1 GoStetTGe!Wardl WttNllSSWlfjj !Trte1U,.) 0o s...,,_ tMe1r1 "' 119 SECOffO •Aa -400 yard&. 3 VtU olds & up. Cl~mlng Pllf"a.t 11100. Clalmltlf "'1<• • Mr. Hlp'NTuctd d) • 122 ::~.~~~~=·,•> ·. Cute H Tru (Nlylt81 01vm11110\aon ICerdOl•I Alie!~ ICrtegerl. BAnO~Charll• (Hartl Alttntl\19 IUpnem) 112 11t 1tt 122 121 112· 122 In Off Limits lat IMylnl 111 Aunnl119 Hot (Hart) . 1 H Pegusus Moon (Otloml)ji I 1n e.u1t11'1CNr99 <Knlohl l 11• Blterney C8rooksl I It m GOHer Has m •n mTwo Aces 11t 1n m NORTH MYRTLE :~ B!IACH, S.C. CAP> - Ronald Gunter's lour wood almost wu .., hot m as the weather ~esday m as be scored two holes-,.. m'GM m ~me roarsct m OVeT tM ~Cbwood Golt Club coune. , The 37-year-old ,,,Gunter, of in BarbouravUle1 W. Va •• m '" Internal R ev enue '" s.rvtee' aaent on vaca· 11• tlon. had h.la fl.-st ace o._ the l61·>'ard ~ 3 efghth hole . He. dupllc•ted the ~t Site Old lor IW·Pr.•t SACRAMENTO CAP> -Four years of studies show a coastal site is out of the question for the pro- posed $2.3 bllllon Sundesm nuclear J>C)Wer plant pJ anned near Blythe in Ri veralde County. That was the testimony Tuesday of Gary Oot· ton, project manager for Sun4esert for San Diego Gas & Electric Co., as he appeared before a slate Energy Comm ission hearlftg on the utility's notice oC intent to construct the plant. Cop 8-Dlnlb•al •I O.•rge . SAN DIEGO (AP> -Police Chief Willlam Kolender say1 assault with intent to murder char get will be dropped against one of two Tijuana pollc?emen wounded in a shootout with members of the undercover San Diego border crimes task force . Kolender also told a neW1 conference Tuesday that a total or 46 shots were exchanged, with San Diego otncere dressed as Mexican peasanta firing 35 of the slugs that left the pair of Mexican otticen serio~ wounded. ........ 1"'41etefl .. ,,..,;, : LOS ANOEL!:S (AP> -TwoBan IAd• Obllpo rancben have been ihdlcted oa ebarse1 of tecullftl bank loam wllh DOMxietenteetUe u t.he cottaterat. A fedtral pand Jqry In 1..<11 Aoaelea Tuesday tn• dieted Kenneth Palm, 87, and his brother, Robert. 82, both of P.,o RoblM, on charges ot consj)iracy, mall fraud and ma.ldni false statement& to crocker NaUon-1 Bank. on th'e Knapp WOFkshoe ' • K48/K58 Regular $23.99 Now only .$20.99 Cushioned . Comfort Insole Sizestol4 Wide. Widths &~ W@lYll? ~@[(Wn@@ ...... ,.lllff DEAa aSAD i If JOR'le elder· t y alld dcm'l k ... a'°9t die buk ex· amlntt bo8Ce _... • ., ....... , .... advlcf' from e.. AU.oney GeaeraJ vellt-J . Voeqer .... , tH lilelJJ kMp )'oe from Wc9•1a• a vletJm. V lcllm• are •e•ually senior t'IUn u auiou to do tbm uare la n 11t&Ua1 crhne by cooper •Ual wllb ••• ftlf•~etH•t. IO whea I telephooe call la rece hed from a aell· predaJated .. ,au examlDer, .. dial'• ~time &o be tare.kl. Alter Ute "baDk examlaer•t clevuly &els Ute vlctJa to ldeaUly the name and locatloe ol bis baak, It· b ex- plaiaed &laat ~ ba.ak 11111peet1 oae ol lu employes hae bee9 pJlfe:rtn& luDda, and the vlcUm is uked for help. The victim la warned &Jtat tbe nc· cess of tbe lDYatle•ti• depeads oa bls. or her abWty to remliD silent. following lnatractlou explicitly ud, above all, DO& to contact 11ayone COD· cerning the lnveaUgaUon. Whal tbe "bank examiner .. did not tell the victim was that his name bad been carefully selected from the telephone book by three or four con men. Aller name selectJoo, the team begins the tedious task of caJUng possible victims until a cooperative one is found. ............ DEAR PAT: l saved an o1d sut>- 1 c r ip t Ion 1ol ic itation from Moneyt worth magazine because It of. fer ed some Interesting consumer In· formaUon pamph.leta tree if one aub· 1crlbecl. Js this a good deal? I seem to rec all huvina read some derogatory lnformatlon nbout thla magazine's publlaher In your column . R.T., Huntington Beach. The A YS Item concerned legal ac- Uoa agalal& The Webster'• DlctJonary . Co •• owned by Moaeyswortb magulne pablhher Ralph Glmburg, aJoag with a clecepUve advertising suit agal.Dlt MODeytwor11a med by &Jae New Y ol'k Attoney General. la an ameaded complaint, the California Attorney Geaeral also baa charged Glmbarl ud bis N.Y. COi .. poraUon, Avant Gude Media. with false advertlsha1 and other unlawful pradlces, lnch1d1D' non-clellvery. It was alleged tbat ID 6rdeJ' to sell an bscrlptlons, Ginsberg offered ••free" copiet of the consumer publications you mentioned with a , a atLsfaction or money-back guarantee. The .,,ubllcatlons were either obsolete or avaUabte from the government, and many subscribers never received them or the magazine, according to the suit. ProhJbltion of further misleadJng advertislng and civil penalties of $2,500 for each viola- tion of Jaw are being sought by the at- torney gene.raL APWlnt""°le 'CPL. KLINGER' IN FAMILIAR UNIFORM Toledo's Proud of J amie Ferr ~be willing person is told to withdraw a specific amount of money - usuaUy severaJ thousand dollars - from the bank. Shortly after the withdrawal Is made, the "bank ex· a miner" arrives at the victim's home, identifies himself and proceeds to ·mark the bills. He tbeta gives tbe vic- tim a receipt. When nothlDg further Is beard from the "bank examiner," the victim usually calls the bank, only to learn that he has been swindled. F•r fer PIG..e 'J'rlp'1 DEAR PAT: I want to compare the air fare costs of various flights to several cities in the East. Rather than go through a travel agent for this tn- f ~rmation, I'd prefer to study the f1gll:r~ on my own. Making a hasty dee1s1on may cost me money. Has anyone ever published comparison material on airline discount and charter rates now in effect? 50th Anniversary Of 'Sound' Cited Last year there were 141 victims in California, 132 women and nlne men, ranging in age from 62·92, and who Jost in excess or $223,000, an blcrease of about 35 percent over the 1975 re- ported loss of $166,000. J .A., lrvine LOS ANGELES (AP) -Hollywood is tossing a party to celebrate issuance of a postage stamp honoring the soth anniversary of sound movies. J ack Valenti, president of the Motion Picture Association, will serve as general chairman of a luncheon at the Hollywood Palladium Oct. 6. Film makers who pioneered the development of sound will be honored. U you want to know more about other frauds, write to the State At- torney Geru>ral 's Office, Public In· quir y Unit, 555 C apltol Mall , Sacramento, CA 95814, and ask for your free copy of Information Pam- phlet No. 3, "On Guard: A Guide for the Consumer.•• "Consumer Fact Sheet on Air Fatea" is a one.page summary of. fered by the Civil Aeronautics Board. It lists the lowest avalJable fares and alternatives. Rquest a free copy by writing to Distribution Unlt, CAB Publications Service Section, 1825 Connecticut Ave., N.W., WashJngton, DC20428. Oc~. 6 is ~~e an~versary of the opening of "The Jazz Singer , the first feature with synchronized sound. Ceremonies will be held at television station KTLA, present occupa nt of the studio where Warner Bros. filmed "The J azz Singer " with Al Jolson. LM.Boyd Sylve.ster Tops Farr~ Quack. who's the most popuJar pmup star of all? Farrah Fawcctt·Majors you say? Not anymore. It's Sylvester Stallone now. His posters are ou tselling hers by five to one. No Hollywood film with the word "love" in its title has ever won the best-picture category of the Academy Awards. Thal word "love" in film titles is thought to be bad for box office. Or such is the claim of theater owners. A client bets me a small unspecified sum that ther e 's a n instance in American railroad history wher ein a car was derailed s imply b y a passenger turning over in his sleep. Won't bite on that one, sir. It happened. On a circus train. The passenger was a sea elepbanl Metal expands mor e than glass wh en equal heat is applied to both. No doubt you knew that. So you knew, too, that's why the job of removing a tight jar Ud is made easier by dipping it into boiling water. It's not that thir: hot water dissolves what makes it stick, that's : not it. EARTHWORMS Q. "li earthworms won't drown in water, why do they :come out of the 8l'QUDd duri.Qg heavy ralba?.0 •·· A. They don't drown in surface water. But water filtered through soil contains litUe ox· ygen. So they do indeed burrow their way out of that. Q. '"How do you account for the fact that forest fttes haven't burned down all the giant Sequoi,atreest '" A. '1blir f oot·thick' bark contains no resin. They're ahao1Ulreproof. · ln Eai>tian hieroglyphics, the character that represents the number one million is a drawlnt d a man with his arms upraised 1n an attitude of astonishment. 'Star Wars' R ecor ding H it s Sna g LOS ANGELES (AP) -20th Century Fox Records has won a court injunc tion s topping Sprin g bo a rd Int.·e rnational from m a rketing an album featuring music from the bit sci·fi movie. ''Star Wars." 20tb·Century'a own release of tbe original souadtrack, performed by the London Symphony, has rocketed up the charts and ia 1n the Top~ with a bullet in. all three trade maeazines. The lhjunction was· 1ou1ht becaus e Springboard'• 11album jacket was very nearly identical to ours," eaid Frank Malloy of 20thta lef al ltaff. 'We have no objecUon to people comlna out with Qiuaic from 'Star Wara,t tn fact we're 'Glad You Asked That' by Marilyn iind Hy Gardntr Wednpd!y. July 20, 1977 s DAILY PILOT 84 Pride of Toledo ~~ • 'Klinger' Plugs Town on ~MAS~ TOLEDO, Obie> <AP>-..Fam alt.be 'yoWlC-Ky fattier raQ '.a cor TV blt "'MASH'' may be su:rpriaed to grocery at Locust and Ontario." learn 1hat Corporal KJlqer really "I try to defend Toledo as much arewuplnToledo. can on the showt especially wheq What'• more, be did a bitoh in the other actors take d.111 at lt." Arm1 and once wrote •friend, "I've• said. ••Uke the line about. even had niy rifie fou.-daya ·so far and dying In "Toledo, or the ooe about hav.n'tahotanyone." b in ..... 1_ ... And in high school 25 years ago, e g Dv•.uu-.. to do in Toledo but 10 Klinger h\lllB Ol,lt at Ton$' Packo's, an the movies. · · '- east si~restauraot th~t.really makes· "WHEN I WAS A kid growing ue Hungarian bot dogs, the ones Klin· never knew Toledo was as pretty as -er yeamaforontbetelevlsionseries. • ia. 1 only knew what my eyes aaw 8llll "A Im' OF THINGS are based on truth In the show," said Kllnaer, re- memberedbereasJameel Farah. the name be trimmed to Jamie Farr for actmi. "But as far as I know, I'm the only one that really is from the home towu weclaim on the show," heaaid in • telephone interview. Farr w.as home in June, honored b1 the elty he keeps Wore the TV au. dlence.. He brouaht b.m wife and two children for their first visit to the nortbend ethn.ic Dei&)aborbood where hecrewup. City officials presented him a ceremonial glass -Toledo's version of the key to the city-and Scott High School dedicated a new-..,erfonning arts wing te him. THERE ALSO WAS a 25th an- niversary reunion for the Woodward High School Class of 1952, Farr's cl ass, which be mentions on the show. Farr said bis given name was from his mother, Jamella. "She sang a lit- Ue a~ acted some when she was for as far as a penny eouldtakemo~ bus... ·" Though Farr left Toledo n;ic Hollywood in 1952 he did not est= himself u an actor until he si>entr couple aeuons .as an occasi playeroo0 MASH". •: •'I 1tudled at the Pasa=e PJaybousefOr a year and MGM me to audition for .. Blackbo Jwigle.' I co& tbel'Ole but after~ was ~CJlWOl'k," Jut said. .: .. ••• BE SPBNT TWO years In tlj; service, ud bad ~almost 10 lea,n years, QDtil ·about 1969 before ~ startedtobappenforme. :·· · ••1 worked. for an airline. I wait1l yardage goods s alesman. Then I was on the original Dick Van Dyke Show a nd became a regular for a while QD the Danny K_aye Show with Harv~. Korman. ; .... NBCGet,s Pageant His first two seasons with "MASJJlf was as a "day pJayer," or occasio~· actor. "It was the third season bef~' I was made a regular und~ ~~· tract," he said. "Now we are~ our sixth eeason. It's fantastic." :•. ~------------------------------------~·~· LOS ANGELES CAP) -NBC will present the Miss Black Ame rica P ageant on television Sept. 9, marking the first n etwork showing of the beauty contest. The telec a s t will originate at the Santa M o ni ca Ci v ic Auditorium. where the Oscars were presented for several years. Book Bought LOS ANGELES CAP) -Ed Friendly Produc- tions bas acquired television rights to "My 30 Years Backstairs at the White House," the bestseller by Lillian Rogers Parks, who once served as a White House maid. - A long time a<JC> in a -fa; fei CNrctf... .. .,. 'Ille • Md .,, real Hw IMI ...... In his first ••llllltk lftOM role.. unrA llDllEVE . ! ' • • Jll DAILY PILOT Wednnctay, Juty 20, 1m 'Vienna' Fine .. at Bowl This w?itt r nndl It lmpoulblo to imaaine a men approprt1i. mualcal IOU.Ina tor a aummer e venl.Qa at the Hollywood Bowl tbaa &be 0 Nlaht In Old Vl " celebrated lul weeke11d. And be can mo.t certa1Dly not vlJuallr.e a more appf'OIWiat. conductor for the occulon than tho aentaf Brtcb Le.l.Dldorf, a 1pritely aaaestro who feel u.a OW' VlenneM putrlea wt th verv• and elan. Hem.Se 1un we sot tbem all: Jolwm Strauaa Jr., Mocart. ltrelller aod BIYdn lneludlnc a roua-ini remtit.loo of tho ... Blue Danube" that made many an onlooker Iona to wbllk bit com pan.loo from their box aeau and w alt.z alq the allle11. ITS A SAl'E 8ET THAT Lelnsdorf would have waltaed alOQI with them. He was in that Jdad of mood Saturday nJgbt, obviously en,f oytna every mo- meot ot old Vienna and determined to extract every owice ohalety from those lovely scores. . Ah, summer. The cream ot Viennese music, Aod be chose well when he picked con-cold buffet and fine wine, splendid box seats and a certJDaater Sld.DAty Harth to remind us again. via his lovely lady at his aide. . aifted vioUn. of the sreat genius ot Fritz Kreisler. ...._ What more fittinC reward for the music critic~ ••caprice Vlennol1," ••uebealeid" and wno toils unceuin&ly d~g the winter months! ••uebedreud" were fiawleuly and hauntingly de--------------------livered to ua in the moet memcrable aolo spot of the evening. BVT THEN BACK TO THE frivolities that so deU;hted a capacity bowl audience: Leinsdorf sportl.na a comic bat, the biggest basket of nowers this writer has ever seen distributed to soloists and a laree bottle of champagne ibat was last seen ~ ing examined by members otthe orchestra. PUBUC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE W.ll&AUOclata,fnc. .~ { l'ICTITIOUS 8USINl!SS NAMaSTAT•M•NT Tlletouowlfllpenonsereelolng_.. WllUemG.Well,PfllS- M•u: Tiils Nt-t -filed """' tlle LANCA STER$ Hll!AD• Count'1'ClertlOIOr99Coi.wltYottJ- OUARTERS, 1619:1 llNdl lllwd., H11t1t· 21. 1917. p'"'6 lnQWll Beedl, CA 92641 .... ·~ • ........... .._,,.. Pl,_ Eelwwd Wllllam Lenc.ntw 10231 .-..bl__, or..,..._,., ._"~ _,. ....... Dr H\lllta--.......,,:. CA J-2',lndJu1'1'4.13.20.tm • ftM6 • .._.. -.. DO:S-77 MktlMf Levi' .. LllMetltr, "'21---------- 5-lllN S.~ WHtmlnsltt', CA 92613 Tiii• business 11 conellloclecl l>t • PUBLIC NOTICE ..... -~~ ·-------~--Mk'-! L. l.Mleatter PICTITlOUS 8USINUS Tiiis •t•t-t -filed wltll t he NAME STATEMENT Count'I' Cltfk OI Or9199 County on July • Tlw follOWlng pw-. Is doing llUSl- U, 1917. M U H : P7to21 KE N'S AUTO S AL es. 10U2 Publl"*I O'"e11Q19 Coest Delly Piiot, GtrOtn ~ lllW., Gtrden Grove, JU4'1'20.21,tndAuQoMt3, 10, tt713111-71 CA.'2443 PtJBUC NOTICE Kenroetll Hesll. 6'91 w..tlflt ld Or.J HuntlnQton8Nc'1, CA. '26'7 Thlt business Is conouc1ed by en ln-----------1 dlvldutl. l'ICTITIOUSIUSINl!SS K-thH&.sh NAME STATEMl!NT Tiii• statement WAS filed with the TM following perlOI\ Is doing bus1· County Clerk of Orange county on July ness .1s· I>, 1'177. INDUSTRIAL SPECIALISTS, 7102 F7151' Yukon Dr .. Huntlnoton6tach,CA92l>48 Publlslled Or411>911 Coast Deily Piiot, Dennis Otte Grelltm, 1702 Yukon J uly 13,20,21,endAu9U~IJ, 1911 Or .• Huntington 6tach, CA '2648 3027.71 Tlllt bulinfQ 11 conoucttd by en In---------- dMoual. PVBUC ~OTICE Dennis Deft Gr_,, Tiiis statement ws wes lllt!O Wlll't the --.-,CT-tTl_OU_S_l_U_Sl-Nl!_S_S __ Counly CMf'k Of Ortr199 Count ... on July NAME STATEMENT 1,1911. Thf'toOowing Sl =PWI •'THE DEEP ... IPGI ::.:= DAILY 7:30.f:45 .m SAT /SUK-I :J0.3:4o.s.so.a:OO. I 0: I 0 .., SlCGUJPWI ........ ..... •tm •·s C!f!!18 IN .... ..... -- IUll'S CllWWI WMS.. ..... ...... -- '™EDIE,.' IPGI DAILY 1:30.3:40 5:50.S:OO. I 0: I 0 ) :;:,~,. WALT DlSNEYMnJCTDIP • :A ~le of1Wo Cl lttas _____ co.._.,.. .. ..,_ fn:lc- Techntcolore l!:!I AT HUNTINGTON AND CINEMA WEST ALL SEATS .25 TILL 2:30 DAILY HUNTINGTON CINEMA HACH AT B.US. H.L 848-0388 CINEMA WEST WESTMINSTERATGOLDENWEST WESTMIN.CENTER 892-4493 \ ··CINEMA VIEJO S.D. FREEW A YTO LA PAZ MISSION VIEJO 830-6990 HARBOR TWIN· HARBOR AT WILSON. COSTA MESA 646-0573.. .. 646-3266 , ~ s • . • • .. . .. .. " .. ~ . • j .. ,. -. . -"' . :· "'71551 nessa\: ~•redolftllbuSI· •~---------·------... Pubtlsned Orenge C.0.st O.lly Piiot, (II COMITAS ASSOCIATES: (2) J uly 13,20,21,tndAu;uslJ, 1917 IMAGE ASSOCIATes. Mll Anlrlm -------------------302J.7l Circ, Hunlington6tech.CA. 92641 LA MIUDA ' • LMfWOOO ' WAUl4N LUIOAIN ~ 11.IO MONDAY*""' &ATUllOAY I~ ..-,.i ll:JD .. S-00 LA MIRADA 4 ONLY lllNOA'l'a t HOl.IOAVI tt:IO 10 2-00 UU. ..-.w -I09f Of NtllO NIW YOH. NIW YOUcNI 12:)0 J:IS ._._ l t4S. -. IJCMAID l'ITC>e e UAU llJOOIS GRIASID LIOHTNING(N) 1:00 JtOO 4145 6:JO • llJO IDtlS ..,,.. OMI AN9 OMLYr VIVA KNtlVIU(N) MUI ltOCKY (N) • ~( °"'" ... .,. 111111 l.Jlef~.Jll..M.lille 1111\ ... 1-TMfTllCmCll ---fl-R-lo4f--·-•11 ·-·- •a ·~~ JoauJA~r=•P9> Ml 17f3l2. I '=":'£:;:- PlJBl.JC NOTICE Luc•s C. Cotnlles. 6421 Antrim Cir .. Hunt1n9ton Beach, CA. t1M7 Mtehttt Haesetu. M2l Antrim l'ICTtTIOUSIUSINESS Cir ,Hunllnotonl!c!e<h,CA.92647 liiiiiiiiiiijj NAMESTATEM•NT TlllS business Is COllducted by • Tl>t! tollowlng persons ere dOlng busl· general Pdflnt1'1"'o. NIGHTLY SPECIALS MU•S Luca1C.Com1t•s WALL STREET, 27112 Fof'bts Ad.. This \lat-I was flied wHh lhf' Lagund NIQUl!I. CA. 97.,7 Coun1 v Clerk ol OranQe County on July Wa1ta.Auoc1a1~.1nc .. •C•tlfornla 1, 1911. corporehO<\, 1140 Ttmplt Ttrr•ce, 1"111612 Laguna Suell, CA 976Sl Pubh\hed Oran11& C<Msl Odlly Pilot, This ~H1ns ls conducted b'I' • cor· July 13.:10.71,andAugustl, 1911 pore lion. 3047.77 "THE SORCERER" PG No"- ''MURDER BY'DEATH" "A BRIDGE TOO FAA" PG •.. HO"-'· "ANNIE HALL" PG "YOUNG F~ANKENSTEIN" PG "NEW YORK. NEW YORK" PG No"- "SILVER STREAK" PG "FUN WITH DICK &JANE" PG "WELCOME TO L.A.'' CPG). "ANNIE HALL" (PG) ..YOUNG FRANKENSTEIN" .. THE LAST REMAKE OF BEAU GESTE". ."BITE THI; BULLET" (PG) . . ·. "ROCKY" PG "HUSTLE"R "THE OTHER .SIDE OF MIDNIGHT'' (R) .. ONCE IS NOT ENOUGH" No"- "EXORCIST II: THE HERETIC" R "RABID" ·STARRING BURT LANCASTER. MICHAEL YORK. NIGEL DAVENPORT, BARBARA, CARRERA edwards BRISTOL CINEMA BRISTOL AT MACARTHUR 540-7444 ~ CO-HIT AT LIDO ~INE~A "FUTURE WORLD" edwards LIDO CINEMA NEWPORT BLVD. AT VIA LIDO NEWPORT BEACH 673-8350 STUFFED BELL PEPPER· WEDNESDAY'S SPECIAL TURKEY WITH DRESSING THURSDAY'S SPECIAL SWISS STEAK ··~~-.... -....., -io~ ,..-... .,-y • .....-. ..... -w. -,_ ·-· .. M•...,.--4•1 ......... FRIDAY SPECIAL All THE ASH t. CHIPS YOU CAN EAT ••• 219 I st 1ervift9 includes fl'lt. Ii chi;s, c'"'"" col• slaw, rolf ........... All FOa 199 SUHDAY SPICIAL All THE FRIED CHICXEH YOU CAN EAT. •• 239 I st senh19 l•cf•clH whlpp.d potatoes. col•· llow, roll Ir blltttr. KIDDIE DRUMSTICK PLATTER . . ~ :-: '.·:, 1------------------. ,._ SOUTH COAST PLAZA 546-2071 3333 So. lrfstol. Costa Mele HOUIS: Mo&.oM. 11-1 W. 11·7 S.. 11-6 ~ t=:======================~~ i Clvll Grumbling... : : l Gloomy Gu• T'! t In the l1J!1lflQl{t}fj; ---~ ''I LOVE lHE MUSIC, I LOVE THE SENTIMENT1I LOVE THE IDEA. There Is nothing about 'New York, New York' that doesn't thrill m.e. BOY, DO WE NEED IT NOW!" , ltBJC RBBD .. ~ New Yorll Dan:1 N•111• • • _lj :.~-- . . . ilr. II w~· c.1 to L.A. Wedneeday. July 20. 1917 DAILY PILOT 87 I Blackout Thwarts TV Ratings NEW YORK (AP ) -Wlth the top two shows m the A.C. Nlel1en r aUnp lut weet, NBC was first pliace nutionwldo durlni prime time. But the stand~ ins• were affected by New York'• blackout. which THE YEAR'S BEST MO~IE. (PG) SHOWTIMES WED.-12:45-3:00-5:15 7:30-10:00 PRl..&A T .-12:00-2:30-5:00-7:30-10:00-12 MIDNIGHT DAJLY-12:00-2:30-15:00-7:30-10:00 ,•EWPORT. OEHTE.R, Samull Z. Altoff '"-ta A Sorldy Howord/Sllj) S"'°*'/Mojor Produefion BURT ~NCASTERMICHAEL YORK knocked out ratings for five WedaeldQ Pl'Oll'Alm; including "Charlie's Anl,IJ ... FilUrel made available Tuesdq rave NBC-1 Monday ld&bt movie. .. Breakout," a top za.• rattq, represmtmr J.S.9 mllllon households. The last ol 80 rated abowa wu .. Nanc1 Drew," on ABC, which drew 5.2 mllllon. · Averages for the week eod1ni July 17 gave NBC a 13.8 rating, repre1eDttni 9.8 mllllon homes: CBS. a 13.4. or 9.5 mlllion. and ABC. au.a. ore.a mllllon. In order. the'top lOahowa were: MBl'Mltout, .. ~ "'9 Mid Qilld,. NK"• Tit__,_.. ........ 1U mllllon ~; Miu Uni-lr.OiNft1, CBS, 19.S. OT tJ.t mllllon; "l..nerne & Slllrtey," ABC, tt.1, Of' 1M mllllon1 uSlettlw" ABC'• Tuel4ll., "'°"1!1 ta.9,or13.4 mtlllon; ""-" o • .,,.. .. A&e. 11.2.0f' 1i.tmNllon; "Quin. c.v." NBC. 11.t, or 12.1; "Sfllllldl t. Vamell," cas. 11.f,Of' 12.7 mNlloft: "Jef· fenOftll."C~ 16.f,Of' 1lmllllaftJ "M.A.5.H .. "CBS. 16.2.0f'U.Sl'llltllan. • MAGIC MOUMl llflt ' I (PG) ForClUaWedAd AC110N caua DaUyPilot AJ>.VISOR Call 142-1171. Puta fewworda towrk for,Ou: To place your message before the reading public. phone Daily Pilot Classified, 642-S678 SOl 'Tll ('0 .\ST THI AT Wt L ."I , ,,...,, JI f f,( t-t •I• , ... "Sfil WilS-IPCH .. "AUIMI TOOFArlNJ "AHIOGf TOOFA•"lPGI THE°CITY ~OPfllNG CENTRE'· OAANGE • 934-31111 A StRR IS BORn SlRE&tnD ~ edwards MESA CINEMA MIWPOlff&YD.AT ame ST. COSTA MESA -.as SYLVHftR STAUOHI PLUS") TAUA S .. R.E "Islands in the Stream~' ----"ORCA" -RICHAJm HARRIS-CIURLO 11 E RAllPLINQ ...... ··--____ .. __ ----.. --.. ·--..... -A ---.. -... ---··--~ ~r ~ .. __ ii n-•-• • -s . • I . -=-. MWtEll M • ANAHEIM 525a3526 tlWAY » • ~iNSTER lUTWelllt llALL WESTMJNSTER !il3oOMe art CSfTRE • ORANGE 134·3911 tunlilOfOI • HUNTINOTON BEACH'847-llOI 'RTOL CIDA • SANTAANA 540•1441 FOUNTAIN VAUIY • FTN. VALLEY 839-1500 C1E11A1 AND • ANAHEIM '635-7601 . , . .. ~ . . ;.: .. e~ .. ;(' . ' ... .... Ko :-.. . . .. :· ~IOITtlg in "THE ISLAND OF DR. MOIUU" o1to s1orr1ng NIGEL DAVENPORT • BARIAU CADERA RICHAID IASEHART os "Soiw of 1t1e law'" Rtleosed by Amerlco" ......,.lollol Plctlnt i..:SAOOl=LEBA:;t::::at:_:Pl~'::~:,A ,:.• _:;El:;_T:,:;O:;:R0~_::58:;1:_:·5880=::_.!CIRAMGE=::.!llAl::iU.::,:~1~· _:O:;RANO:,::,E·:;__,:83::7:,:-«MO=:J •. : btcu!Nt Produtto SAMUEl Z. ARICOfF Oftd SANDY HO\ORD Bcned on the l>O\ltl by H G. Wtlt. Scrwnploy by JOHN HERMAN SHANtR ood AL llAMRUS • Mutt<. ti., lAIJll(N(( ROSlHTHAL ProdllCtd by JOjlN TEMl'lf-SMITH ond St:IP SIUOff • Direct«! b'I OOH TAYlOR (Ionic £drt10n by TfMf'O 8()()1(S. ~· 11'1 ACE 8()()1(S •• •• .,SI.AHO OF DR. MOREAU" IPCiJ "RITVltEWORLD" "OltCATHI IULLSl WHALE" "GRl%l.L Y" IP~I "BA Tf-..ITY ROW" "15UHDS IM THI STREAM• . •fAtff ASTlC AMMATIOM ff5n¥ AL,. INI , .. FAHTAsnC PUMfr PRESENTS A NEW LUNCHEON MENU PLUS AN INSPIRING BUFFET: 11:30 to 2:30 BARON OF BEEF Carved • Buffet Style .. Daily ........ MONDAY: . TVISDAY: Pepper SteU, tu Foo Yoni. B·~Q 8parei ·Ribs, Potatoes Fried Rice, Cbln&M NOOClle1. .o· Brusel Sprout.. Beel Eu f1our Soup , Bar • &,,up WEDNESDAY: Mexican Day CJUU RelJenot. Enchllada1. R1ce &i Refrtect Beans, AlbondJ1u Soup TBUllSDAY: New Enihnd Bolled Beef. Corned Bet(, Cabbage. Car~ & Potnoes, Q-eam ot CaullllO'f'er FRIDAY: New Orleans Sh~mp Creole (A Gourmet Treat> Bolton aam Chowder Robert Altman presents W~· a film by Alan Rudolph to L.A. Ke.$-~~ S-.e.e.r~ ~~~~ +t~K~. ~+t~ G~~ _).,e__.~ V~L\-~ ~~~ 'D~?#e- .. :· .. · .. . ;. :-; .... .. " . \ '~ ~ ~ . • • .. ·= . :: /. ~ I ' ·I I I r I' , ( OM.VPtLOT Towable~ and narrow ai~le unit~ too. Inside \'W's RalJlrit Cutaway shows features of a special Volkswagen R$bbit de· veloped under a contract with the U.S. Department of Transporta· tion. The car gets 60 miles per gallon and has reduced exhaust emissions and a high level of occupancy safety. It features front and rear·end energy management systems, a solt nose, a transverse turbo-<:barged diesel engine and front and rear head rests. ·Taxable Sales Jump 19.23% in 3 Months SACRAMENTO (AP) -Taxable sales in California increased over 1976 by 19.23 percent during the first three months of this year, the Board of Equalization says. That $3.5 billion increase was the second biggest quarterly increase in more than 20 years, the board said. merchants reported taxable sales of $22.1 billion, Boa rd Chairman William Bennett said. In recent years, that rate of in- crease was exceeded only in the spring 1973 quarter, Bennett said. . FROM JAN. 1 through March 31. l:AL-LIFf Crocker Retlnces By region, sales increases were 19.9 percent in Southern California, 19.6 percent in the San Francisco Bay Area, 17.9 percent in the San Joaquin Valley and central coast regions, and 20.3 percent in the mountain and ex• treme Northern California region. 1126 E. Washington Santa Ana • CA92701 71 4/973·1400 w ••• • • •o• "# • • ' I..•" 1..-.• ~·t •~Cl•• I·•~ ••"' • 1+4(1-00L~ Happenings ..• Films Theater Dance Television In the Mongage Rates SAN FRANCISCO CAP) -Crocker Bank has announced it lowered its prime residential mortgage rate from 91 ~ to 9 percent. The reduced rate went rnto effect Monday. Barne officials said the easing of in· terest rates charged in the secondary money market is behind the reduc- tion. Loans for 90 percent of the value of an owner-occupied single family home up to $55,000 have also been re- duced to 9 percent, the bank said. Loans on condominiums and dwell· ings with up to four units valued up to $100,000 will be reduced to 91/• per- cent. Crocker Bank also announced. THE REPORT SAID lumber and buildi ng dealers reported a 453 per· cent increase over 1976. Other big increases by type of sales outlet were car dealers, up 303 per- cent; mobile home, trailer a nd camper dealers, up 31.53 percent; boat, motorcycle and airplane dealers, up 25.33 percent; service sta- tions, up24.13 percent; apparel stores. up 13. 73 percent. FedMart Faces Suit SAN DIEGO <AP) -Fed.Mart. a San Diego grocery retailing chain, ts being accused of selling milk below cost in a California Department of Agriculture suit seeking a bait to tbe practice. Borrow up to $10,000 . Take 10 years to repay You pay 10% simple annual interest The Annual Percentage Rate is 11.7% If you're a property owner, the available (as little as 3 years) at a higher annual percentage rate. And you may be able to repay up to 20 percmt of the principal in any year w ithout penalty, as provided by State Law. On a $10,000 loan· you'll have 120 monthly PQymntts of SBJ.33 (interest only) and a final prindpal repayment of $20,000. Newport Equity Funds Team want:> to arrange a loan for you. We're . brokers. We'll find the cash you're looking for and arrange a loan of up to $10.000 at 10 percent simple annual interest for 10 years. Of course you may be able to borrow • more (up to $50,000) and shorter terms are 'Newport Equity 'Funds, Inc. Licen"d IJroker ,,.. ' . . . . Appliance· Targets Set_ . • ,. FEA Seeks Volunteer Cutbacks by 1980 ~ I : ...... . . ~ By'ltle Auoelated Pre. ENEllGY TUGETS-ll~ reductiona in tbe'•WIY used by household appliances may be ln the o!fl.ag under ~ voluntary pro. gram establiahed by the Federal Ener&y Administration. The program sets targets for enerfY savings by 1980 for major appUanc:es. The tareets were de. veloped by the FEA and the Na· tional Bureau of Standards. They include: -Refrigerators, 47 percent -Freezers. 30 percent. -Dishwashers. 25 percent. -Clothes dryers, 11 percent. -Water beaters, 23 percent. -Room air cOodiUQllers, 30 percent. -Home beaters eseept furnaces, 13 percent. -Televlsi111seta, 79~rcent. -Kitcben ranges and ovem. 64percent. -Clothes washers, 47 percent. Officials aald targets for humidifiers. dehumidifiers, furnaces and central air condi- tioners will be announced at a later date. Altboulh tbe targets are volun- tary, manufacturers are re· quired to file reports with the FEA showing whether the st.an· darda will be met. U a target appears anllkelJ to be met, the FF.A wW th• de-velop a manda&«y ataDdard for theproducL Heerinp oo tile ftrloaa ltan- darda will be be.Id ID Wuhlngt.oa Aug. JS.19. To testlf1, send your request, by Au1. JO, to Executive Commumcatleos1 Reom 8317, Box NU. Pedetai Enera Ad· miJalstratioa. Waabingtoo. D.C. 20461. To send comments, write, by· Aug. 22 to the same address with the comments marked "Proposed Efficiency Improve- ment Targets." TIRE PROBE -The methoc!s u sed by tire companies to calculate warranty credits for ( NEWSTOVSE J consumers are being investigat- ed by the Federal Trade Com- ml11ion. Officials said the probe by the Cleveland olfice seeks to de- termine whet.her marketers are using artificially inflated adjust· meJJt prices or other practices that deceive c;mers about the valueclthewar anty. The commias said use of in· nated adjustm t amounts may cause tbe coosumer to pay a high price for replacement tires because the Inflated adjustment price negates tbe value of the warranbf. They alao said that because the eorisumer may mistakenly believe he is protected by the warranty be tends to replace a defective Ure with the same brand, 'in effect transforming the warranty into a powerful sales t.ool. As an example, an FTC official said , dealers h ave v arious methods of determining the value or a tire and do not necessarily use the actual selling price. Yotrmllht bring in a falled tire with '15 percent wear and the dealer could say the value was *20. IO it would cost you $1S for a replacement. But, the FTC spokesman said, the value of the tire miOit really be only $15, so you receive no real warranty protection ln this case. GAS SAVINGS -The General Services Administration, which provides government vehicles, has issued a series of .rules for drivers to help save gas. The rules will apply to persons driving governmen t -owned vehicles. They include: -Do not idle the engine for more than me minute. Over The Counter IWDUsff.p -Reduce auto travel to:iai minimum possible. ; ! : -Use the smallest. vell1Cl• reaslble for tbejo!J. < .. : TBUCK CHECK The ~ l.ional Highway Trame Saf<¢1 Administration is investigatiNt' possible safety defect in 1$5 through 1977 International Harvester heavy trucks. Officials said the probe centers on alleged failures of alumioutn wheel hubs. which may c~• damage to elements of the~· ing system in the trucks. The agency said it bas rece\;v~ 98 reports of such bub failUf~ but there have been no accid~ or Injuries reported. lnterna; tional Harvester estimates lb.a\ there are about 22,000 of ~, trucks in use. : . , Officials asked truckers :~ periencing problems lo repod.Jq the Office or Defects Investio._: lion, National Highway Tr~o Safety Administration, 'QI) Seventh St. SW, Washin~o~;' D.C. 20590. Or they can call (~J 424-9393. : . ~ WINDOW SAFETY PROBE~ The government is investigating reports of defective windows in some newer mobile homes. · The Department of Housinc and Urban Development re~ that windows designed as es: r outes from bedrooms OD 0 mobile homes manufactured since June lS, 1976, may be de- f~tive. ~ Some Jatcbes have f allea O«, and the windows then tend to~ s hut, impeding escape. O~ reports indicate some windO!J$ are bard to open, making i~·~ .. ficult for children or the el~ to escape. '·;,.: If the manufacturer does ~ help solve the problem con.({fij the nearest HUD office or ~ to the Department of Ho~~· a nd Urban Development• Washington, D.C. 20410. . New VOAIC (A CUllr .,_. 1-. N te.lft' M "4 ~ . "" 2\41 T.mpH 3IVJ 3'1\IJ " ~ '• -TIW tol!owMg •s Olllllf ,,; .._ 15'16 IC-n A at\lt tsllo P""5 "NC ti~ tM Tech PUb M:2 :tt,,Y.! Vp• and Do-·:~ •', Is ll Mlected Met-O.i. 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I IW.--\1 R«tr 6012 6J ,,.,,_ .... varco t.41 1 21 1~ ... llot< ... 10 .«lb n .JO u-"" VMClttd I ' ~ MY.• I Row•" .1211 J.4'9 26'1o-~ VMET Tr •. J 'Mii .... RopCCol ao. Ill ~~:.:: ~ ~$~"" .1~ ~ .~ :~·;.; =~t:,~.:O!g1~ ~~ 22'~-"• VVlnPI 1.1'. 2 46 +IV. Ruu Tog .It. 8 4,J Ill\ UAACO I 30 1 12 '1~ .... Ry<HrS ~~Sii~ 11""> ,_,., ~~r~~°J_J: ! 2~ m:·~·v; By MILTON MOSKOWITZ ' When the New York Knickerbockers take the field thi~ fall for tbe 1977-78 season ~the National Basketball As sociation, they will have a new bead coach: WilUs Reed, oo<· ol tbe most popular players ever to wear a Knick uniform. They also will have a new owner: Gulf & Western In dustries, one ot lhe most rapacious corporations ever to ap pear on t.he U.S. industrial scene. LAST MARCH, IN THE SAM E WEEK that Reed's ap· pointment was announced, Gutr & Western <G&W> an. nounced a bid for all the shares of Madison Square Garden -Corp. that it did not already own. That bid succeeded. G&W owns more than 80 percent oJ Madison Square Garden, enough to effeet a formal merger . A major sports complex will become a small part or a vast conglomerate. In addition to the Knickerbockers. Madison Square G<trden brings to G&W the New York R angers hockey team. an 80 percent interest in International Holiday on Ice, two horse racing tracks (Roosevelt Raceway int.he New York area, Arlington Par~ in the Chicago area), real estate in New York and llllnois and. o( course, the Manhattan arena for which the company is named. Money Tree Chewing up these . units will cause no digestion problems for G&W As one in vestment publication recently commented. acquisitions are ··a way of Ille for the company." It has made more than 100 of them during the past two decades. R EEO WJLL FI ND THAT HE has joined a corporate team that plays in so m a ny games that the Wall Street Journal reports: ''Many investment houses don't even have analysts foll owing the company r egularly because it is so complex." · G&W owns the n ation's largest cigar maker. Consolidated Cigar <Dutch Masters, El Producto, Muriel). G&W owns one of the nation's largest apparel makers, Kayser-Roth. G&W owns a major motion picture and TV film pro- ducer, Paramount Pictures. G&W owns one of the nation's major tine producers, New Jersey Zinc. G&\V GROWS SUGAR JN THE Dominican Republie>, has citrus groves in Florida, produces paper products through its ownership of the Brown Company, ,makes 1>ersonal loans to consumers through some 1,000 Associate5 Investment offices, manufactures air·condilioning compo· nents. metal work presses and a wide !inf'. of automotive replacement parts. Among G&W's latest acquisitions were Marquette Ce· ment and the book publisher. Si mon & Schuster, and its sub- sidiary. Pocketbooks. Gulf & Western is almost as notorious for the companies that got away from it as for the ones it managed to ensnare. •1 G&W SOUGHT, AT ONE TIME OR another. such prize~ as Armour. Allis-Chalmers and Sinclair Oil. It was once a, major holder of stock in Pan American World Airways and the A&P grocery chain. At the time of the Madison Square: Garden tender offer in March, G&W had holdings amount4 'I ing to 25 percent of the Simmons bedding company: 26 per- cent or the Hawaiian real estate giant, Amfac : 36 percent ot:: Diamond Oil ; 19 percent of Skil ; 14 percent of Esquire; ~, percent of American Financial: 6 percent of apparel makel' Warnaco; and 6 percent of Wurlitzer. 1: DO'W Stays in Plus; Blue Chips Slump ~ NEW YORK (AP> -The stock market seltled back ~ somewhat today after a three-day rally as profit·takiog pre- ssure moved in on some blue chip issues. T he Dow Jones average ot 30 industrial stocks. up by, about 41f.a points earlier in the day, gave up some or t.hat to postagainoll.2lpointsto920.48. Gainers and losers were about evenly matched among issues trading on the New York Stock Exchange. Big Board volume came to a fairly active 29.38 million. , shares. SCASv 13 ISi '', •111 Vn8ncp ... 9 391 12''•• "• A SCM'9 1' "° JS • 'II uc•mp '·'°" m s•~· '" DowJ011e• t•erag~• $OSCon .so s n 13" '. VnC•rO 1.IO I 141 ""' ••• H'hat Sto~k• Did Sel>lne SOii 16J 30•• I'• VnCmrce 1' 11 I'•-"• New Y0<kfAP) F11wl Oow Jonesdver•~S SefOllln 16 8 103 S' > • '• UnlonCo 10 15 6' t • '• S s.tewv 2.20 10111' .... '• VnEtec 1.l610 130 , ... '· STOCK °"'" Hl<in '--Cl CltQ »91CP 36 1 111 II'•+. 'I VnElpt 'so. L10 SJ • ••• 30 Ind 910 IJ '11 TS •u 0 m'4 .. 121 SJoMn I.JO II lot Jll ,. 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Ame<"rcan Slock t!~c11ange IU•-'· ~~M~~l~l.I! •I ,.,...~·=" :~ -1'1t Hulley Oii. ....... 115,300 21\lo -I'°' USN el Res....... '1,000 1~ + Vt IC•IHr Ind...... 6•,100 S•.lo • ~ MlttlllED . ... •. • 65,600 31'11 -i WVI ll)C. ••• .. • •• S.C,600 JJ•t, • ~'I TotolPtl NA...... SJ,100 ~ -14 Cllleftn Ort..... Sl.tOO t• -1 lm09f'Oil A...... SO.AGO 11 -14 lttterpoot .. . . . . • •9.000 2' -" IJp• and Do"'n• Pel. UCI 10.0 VO 1U Up 10.7 Vo t.' Vo .0 VP 7,t Uo 7.l Up 7.l UD 1.0 Uo t' UJ .s UP 6.J I D ~~ • J +·~ I ~ : t2 iii :: ~ .:::In:•~~ , . :1 .L.. i 1~ ~~~ l~i ~fflEat • ; R:; . .... •1 I NEW YOAK CAPI Advant..i O~h,,_d vnc"•"9f'd Tolwl •~Wf"\ N~w IQ/I n1Qh\ New I'll tow• S•L£S Prtv Today dn ,.. •so 101 Sl9 .. , •11 1•u 1m 10 llo8 )1 19 Oue to late transmission today's listing will not appear In the Dally Pilot. · WftAT AM•ll DID NEW YORI( (API Prev. TOdlY d4Y 211 ua ,5' 2IS 30l m tlS ~ 4' SS I 1Z AMEJC SALIS Oue to late transmission today's tist lng will not appear In the Dally Pilot. SteclulnTM Spotlfgltf I. I I . . • • If . • • •. . . . . .. • . . ' .. .. 8Jf OM.v PILOl W1dntt<11y July 20 1977 MARMADUKE by Br•d Anderson BOOMER C•••·.---.... 1&). 'ltW 7.20 -----------------------------"Must you invite your friends to drop in whe never they're in the neighborhood?" FUNKY WINKERBEAN TANK McNAMARA CINCINNATI R.E~ ~ MOON MULLINS l ~CA~A Bt\%6\U. FAN, WT GOCV OOEf 1 'IOIJ r~o ~NNY ~~~M FOR A CA'Jf. Cf~?!?! ~>'l'-"""""'\I .TODAY'S CIDSSIDBD PVZZLI ACROSS 49 Nonme1all1r element l Females 'iO French fi "Beat 111 1ncoml' 10 Hit nard r, 1 Tall. thin a"11 14 Encou1aQP unQ~•IV 15 NorthPrn <.,2 Toll US ColV 'i'i [luc 1ddl' 16 Sinuous r.e Conta•n•nra t 7 Canada' lhP NH QIOuO Welland f.() Gold~ 18 Canapr VM tsraeh •~adf'• 20 Bus abbr &1 SoonQ 21 Percervr hr own 23 Preli• w11h fi2 Churchr,· dome anl1 r11ntril D3rl~ nau1 o3 FPmale 24 Pubhc amm1I• vehicles 64 Comply w11h 26 Seal5 on 1n ordtr letters 65 Emmen1 28 OependablP DOWN 30 Kayak 31 listen' t Nume11cal 32 Permttlln!I pr eh• ab1temen1 2 ···Sue&. TV 36 Jackie's comedian hu1b1nd :i Ch1ntsP 37 lnslruments rl'goon 38 Educ. group 4 Greek letlf'• 39 Beverage 5 Pickl OHi resldulJ 2 6 Photos words ] NPWIP8PN 41 Harnes~ mate11al ractnR hots« 8 El~ctncal un11 44 Colorado q Goll l".oursr park area 45 Bookies 10 Ru1t111s. a• bu11ness ~omt labnu 46 Herdened on 11 Squ1nde1 lhe 1urfact 12 Ward off Yesterday"s Puzzle Solved D 0 Z E N s l AV S T I R ~ "' C: l E T fl 1 L E R 'J E l A ~ E S l I RA N I NA t N ! l T ~ • I( E D F p. CE 0 T E A I' 0 I E T E II <; ~ E p 0 R TIE O -M A E ~ v f RS •o F I'll t• IHA B R I A S•P A CE R.P Y ll If E l K •M All 0 u P E 11 T £ N• A ~ LI F E l O •1 r, IA ~ IH Ii E 4 P TfO T S 15 H ~ " T C U T • G R :.. T E R I IA • t l ll< I '-"' T 0 'I E tll I~ A AG IR A c 0 RN S R E E 0 S E 13 Novices 19 M11•1can food 22 Tiie ult1ma1e 25 Rtiouest 26 M1htarv establish men ts 27 Black ruckoo' 18 Tne furthPr one 19 Not well done 10 Beak 0~11~ 31 Was mcohere111 33 Mo1tva11on 34 Turn 35 Cranium p11ts )7 Emoto0n E P T p E A T 40 Canada·s Mr. Pearson. et al 41 Chemical compound 42 Au10111s· problem 43 Gonebv 45 Came iri l11s1 46 RCMP and FBI concern 47 RtMve 48 Rl'mOvf' stnngs 49 lnsanf' 51 •· ma1e~1v Treason 53 Notion 54 M••' 56 Suppor11n11 57 0 1ff1cuhv S9 Month. Abbr ~ I ' 0 A ~~1e,W Of Mt~e WITM A f€C~OtNG ~AllZLIN~ JLJ5 r ~N1' 10 A PLASTIC ?U~GeoN 1 MISS PEACH by Mell ro L.IKE iv TAKE A 1t7AD HCWIE r=JWM CAMP. µ,()W 00 I J:IND ONE ? ) , YOLA MAV! TO Kl~, A L.OT' OF Pi=NC~5'e? IJEFOlrE YOU. FINDAW.40. GORDO 1-:0 by Tom Batiuk I WONDER IF A JUR<.> WOOLD Wt> l'EMPORAR<rl IN5ANlll,l ~ by Jeff Millar and Bill Hinds JUDGE PARKER THIS MIGITT 50UND tMPLAUS16LE, 5AM ... WT I'VE NEVER HAD AN ATTORNEY! IT'S JUST THAT I'VE EVER NEEDED ONE! Pnr:s:all TUMBLEWEEDS . . # ;. . ' .. \• . . ·' '··· .. I , _.,,/ ''· ·'' .. DOOLEY'S WORLD DR. SMOCK :r've: GOI'" -ro RSMS.Me>E:R -ro R S A P IHE: 1,,Ae>El.-eeFORE: :r: GIVE: 'E:.M ME:.PICI NE: .' MOTLEY'S CREW v e:.s, SSN p "e 1G eAee:" POWN -ro 1 2.1 4 , P L.EA SE:. :I Pt P 1-r AGA IN ! w~u.., 1'H.AN1<.c;, f'.OR ~fl'fT~ING , Ml~(; ANO MAB~L. .. ~ MOTU;YS 5U~G .ARS; Gli?GAT H05T6 !f ANO l'M NOT SORE THAT I NEED ONE NOW! THAT'S WHY I'M HERE ... TO SEEK YOUR AOVICE ! MAATHA OF COURSE, HAD A WHOLE &AmRv Of LAWYERS WHO HANDLED HER MANV FINANCIAL INT£~STS! by Gus Arriola by Harold Le Ooux by Tom K. Ryan THMl!'S AISOLU"fll-Y NO-rRU'Tl4 -r'nil IWMCM "YlfA1' I HeN MAPS A NATION.A&-WILPJ..fF& ~! PEANUTS by Cbarlts M. Sctlul1 · '(OO'RE A 0lRO, ANO BIROS OONT SHAVE! by Roger Bradfield; I ~ ' . by George LemO{d "• by Templeton and Formai. THE GIRLS "'We bqin cad! day with a hearty brakfUt of your cfike COfttistq o( onnse juice, cereal, eas. watnes. blcoo, rtn. motfina,jam' -oh.111 definitely take tllit tour!" "• DENNIS THE MENACE ~ I .. , Tonight's 1V Highlights : KTLA e 8: 00 -Bl& Battle.. The · J apanese onslauaht In the PacLrlc durine World War 11 is captured on film in this doc umentary which ahowa the 1urpri1e. attack on P~arl Harbor, the BJltaan "death mareh," the fall of Correeldor and the dropping of the atomic bomb. ·• · KHJ D 8 :00 "Tho Curetakers.'' Polly Bergen, Robert Stack and Lauren Bacall head the cast ot this 1963 movie drama set in a mental institution. CB.5 8 9 00 "In the Heat of the • Ni(hl.'' Rod Steiger won an Oscar in this Oscar-winning movie from 1967 aa a red- necked Southern sheriff aided in a murder investiga tion by a black · • Northern detective <Sidney Poitier). ·~ . . . .TV DAILY lOG 1 \f wl!DNl!SDAY I I I EVl!NING I 6:00 0 (I) (Ctn f3J) Otl Nrws .a ~ CIJ OOl m lltws 8 Voraa• to lht Bottom of the S.a ct.) Gemtr P'ytt • c ~(IJ) News • : . 1D hrtrid1t f 1111tly • Cl> Nin Slllith l Jonts •• l'l) cw-Cavlltry ~I LM Lucy CD Uectnc C.0..n' • ..lZ) Dnniallc S.rlH : el) Mak1111 It Count : -6:30-, ·ft MYSTERY SUSPENSE : ~ * '1H£ SMUGGURS" ; ..:n Mow1e: C~J ('0) "The Smu1· • "1ters" (susp) '68-Sh1rley Booth. : • David O~toshu, Carol Lynley I 61 m Andy Gfiffitlt r101 likn Griffin Show (IJJJ f_V) My Thrff ~ ~Did Vin Oyh (~ r•i> 8"1i1chtd ~ii (3 j """ ! .'5) Min Builds, Man Dtslroys . ,. 7:00 : n1 £mer1ency Ont o u 113l m m m New\ Cl Um Club ~ •J My Thrtt Sons : 8) lo TtU Ille lrlllh : , p Concentration 61 I love Lucy 1 (Q The FBI i (•1r, ~)) Family Alf11r ' fl) Koftan L.11111111 P'ro1ra111i : 'Ml Maybe11y u .o. • ID Ma<Nt1l/lehm lltport : (}fl lJ)) hrtnd11 h1111ty • '1( Cross-Wlb : el) Rul Estate I You .. .. ., .. .. ' -7:30-: o m ic .... T11a1 ,_ I 0 l.OYt l/ntfiull Stylt (I} Tiit Odd c.,lt · Ullatdl~ • $12'1,llOO Quest!On n.. '°'"'' ~ o wr.w hid °' .,_. .AD lltwltdltd ((ill (I)) '°" Gou Ille tou11try fl3J cu Ctl*ity Swetpsu••• 41t Hoc1n'1 Htn1et fD Channel 21 Tenlshl (~ CV) lfady 8uncl1 1391 I.ins Clvb ~ Bia Btide~h Festini 8 (fl rrAl (8 ())) lai.tt. (R) When two thugs begin ri~pinr off other crrm1n1I$ by 1mpersonatinr police ol11ters, Barella postS as a drug dealer to trap them. 11J Mowte: ~ (21tr) "The Midni111t Mu" (mys) '74-Burl Lancaster , Cameron Mitchell m Mtn Gtiff111 Show (!) Tiii Vir1ini1ft fD C.ul P'erf01m1r1c:es g!) Almost Us -9:30- D@ ()) CIJ QJJ C..-, TilN Oauahlers" M1Ctuel Co11st11ti11e o~ys • widllwtfed cllilf of police w4lo learns that liw enforcement b 1 l11l compared to beine lither ind mother lo I lrlO of &rowin& did&lllefl 10:00 D ® Cl) f0 aJ> Ki11rst0tt: Confidentlaf The mystenoos death of 1 reporter fnend ol Tony M1nno 1nv<1lves Tony, Beth i nd K1np:ton in 1 senes of Slated 1Wdents and an edortion plot lo poison the WJter SIJpply of 1 resort. OG News (8J Morie: (C) "BUl!fts of Ballots" (dra) '36-Humphrey Boprt. o m ®J ca Cl)) c11art11'1 An1tb A call.girt operation makes the mistahe ot robbrn2 a syndicate man 1Jf) Mm:us Welby e!)No.1 -10:30-m m m11tws 11:00 0 D CD m Qtl lltws 0 (tlll Cl.J) Lon Amerian Style u (]) 111> CJ) Nin Iii lrOllSidt m Meet A live Indian on * "fEllCWOOD 2NIGHT!" m FtfllWlld 211i111t Q) Mimis W.by t-m (I)) The~~ llll ltst ef Groudto fD The 0ptn MN eD M1<Nerl/ul1m ltport -11:30-u (()1) (])) Cl) CIS Lm Movie: ,C) "Mldlo C1llahu" (wes) '70- Juvid Janssen. Ju n Stabt1e. ., @ CD m QJ>"""" c:.-())Mom: "Coftde111ne•" (clra) '30-Ronald Coleman. D CD cm> (f2t) Cl)) lookits/ ..,_, of llM .... m Site Whips Mtn Happy • At Her Luther Castle "TABLOID" TO"IGHT! m Tabltlcl 1a> The 100 a" Em C.,tiorle4 ABC btllin& ICews 12:00 e T wllipt l.11111 C!l llowle: ct> "Color ... DtJ4" (dfl ) '69-TOlll T~n. Car(llyn Jones m MetnMws Cl) Motlt: "Fm fOf All" (com) 49 Robert Cumm1nes. Ann Blyth -12:30-m Mofle: "Cfy Hale" (dra) U - Ma11ml Suflavan. Ann Southern 1:00' D ~»Cl> <Bl T......, • ---Sllew: ~ llollstef 11111 Ille Qf1,.. "T """.. "TllirtffA tto.rs ly _., .. -1:30-m Mowil:.,.... .,.. (mys) ·51-Ridlard Conte, MJf Adlnls 2:o0 Cl .... o..Mtfutin:~nt· ' mtllt W-6 llan&w," "Twt ~ Wonl" -2:05-• ... "lhrl ,,...... (mya) '47-'AM Sheridan, RoMrt Aidt. . -2:30- ... All·lipt Slier. .,.,_. W11 ~ ~-.. "Mild ...... CtM ....... _ , w.dnesday. July 20, urn DAILY PILOT 8 J J .UC Sci.enti,sts Urged Neutron Bomb BERKELEY (AP> -Univenlty of California aclenu.ta "anrea1lvely Influenced" tbe military to pursue the neutron bomb and the weapon was de· veloped at the Lawrence Uvermc:re t.aboratory, accord.Ina to matetlal1 relea.sfld bf a UC pbyaiclst. Coplea ol 1973 con1res1ional i.ttmoQy by Dr. Harold Alnew, dlrector of the VC·admlnlsteted Los Falangist Salutes APWl ... photo Carmen Polo, widow of the late dictator Francisco Franco, is framed by Falangist salutes as she leaves the tomb of her husband at the Valley of the Fallen 30 miles from Madrid. She had attended a Spanish ceremony marking her husband's victory in the Spanish Civil War. Box Office Smash Featured on TV LOS ANGELES (AP) As if "Star Wars" isn't ·getting enough attention at the nation's box offices -it will be the subject of a television special by ABConSept.16 . The network will present "The Making of 'Star Wars"' with scenes from the George Lucas movie plus behind-the·scenes shoL'i of the trick photo· graphy and processes. The show will be produced by the television division of 20th Century-Fox. which made the movie. Alamos laboratory tn New Mexico, were among the -THE FEBRUARY ISSUE OF Energy and· documents released Tuesd'Y by Prof. Charles Technology Review, which carried a documenl Schwartz. tiUed "Achievements and Developments at the AGNEW'S TESTIMONY DID NOT use the Lawrence Livermore Laboratory." lt said: words "neutron bomb" but discussed a "weapon .. We were quite s uccessful In developing new designed to deliver a neutron doee ot (deleted) to a desl1ns for tactical weapons that considerably re- dlstance ot (deleted) from ground zero." duce the collateral damaae produced by a nuclear He described the effects or the ·weapon u exploelon." follows: -The September·October 1976 edition or a "In a very short time, he would become very ill Livermore laboratory newsletter which reported: and incapacitated. In a day or so, he would ~ dead." " ••• WHAT WE ARE TRYING to develop are tactical weapons that can slop an attack, terminate IN IDS TESTIMONY, AGNEW s aid an elite awar,andslillprotectEurope. . group at Los Alamos •·meets with outside people in "It is a very formidable problem. Achieving the defense community and in various think·tanks. that goal will. provide Ii further deterrent ag-''They are working very aggressively trying to gression." influence the Department of Defense to consider us--""-.------------------ ing these (deleted> weapons. . . " Schwartz released the materials at a news con· ference publicized by a group called Campaign to Abolish Nuclear Weapona. THE NEWS CONFERENCE CAME just before the first meeting of a special nine-member commit· tee formed by UC President David Saxon to review the university's contract with the Livermore and Los Alamos laboratories . The two facilities get $.1.6 million a year from the Energy Research and Developtnent Administration (ERDA). Evidence that the neutron bomb was developed al the Livermore laboratory was contained in the other materials Schwartz released: LAGUNA HILLS LAGUNAHIUS GIANT CLEARANCE PUBLIC AUCTION ORDERED BY THE PRINCIPALS OF ASSADI INTERNATIONAL TO UQUIDA TE EHTIRI IMVBQ'OIY OF AUTH&rTIC HANDMADE . ORIENT AL ~UGS FOR IMMEDIA Tl CLEARAHCE TO PUIUC AMD 11tADI SALE TAl(ES PLACE SUNDAY, JULY 24, 2:00 P.M. VIEW I :00 P.M. ON THE PREMISES OF HOLIDAY INN 25205 LA PAZ ROAD LAGUNA HILLS Col011CJtlde 405 fwy.I For lnlorma11on. Call Collect (213) 654-5548 Terms Cash or Cheaue Auctroneer A. Asher Ceremony Slated at Branch July 22, 23, 24 Dedication ceremonies for Orange County's new branch f!re station in Irvine have been set for 10 a.m.'July30. The ceremony will be conducted by Assistant County Fire Chie f Robert Taylor and speakers will Include Supervisors Chairman Tom Riley, Irvine Mayor Bill Vardoulls and Coun- ty Fire Chief Ca rl Downs. The station. at 4691 Walnut Ave .• will be the county's :;5th. ·1t is a one story rustic wood struc· tu.re. The 4,600·square-foot building wtll be manned 24 ho urs a day I L replaces a fi ve.year -old temporary trailer sta - tion n e ar Mo ulton Parkway and San Can- yon Avenue. The station will boose a three-man engine com- pany and beginning in September, a paramedic ®''· . The structure co~t $228,615 . WUlard T. Jordu~ of Costa Mesa w•• the ,Jirchitect and Lyl• Parks Jr., lnc., of La ·Habra was th e I ell•r1al con tr actor , county olflct8ls said. SPECIAL GRAMl)OPENIMG HOURS: FRI., & SAT. 10 A.M.-9 P.M;·suM. 12 MOOM-4 P.M. FREE DRAWING '50 MERCHANDISE GIFT CERTIFICATE • Otnner Rings • Bridal Sets • Chains • Complete Restoration Of Antique Clocks & Watches • Expert Watch. Cloc k · Jewelry Repair on Premises by a Master Craftsman • Hans Eckert-25 Years Experlttnce as a Jeweler -I DRAWING HELD . SUNDAY, JULY 24 4 P.M. WIMMER MEED NOT .E PRESENT • Specializing in Fine Jewelry. Gems. Watches • Custom Watch Crystal Fitting • Old European Craftsmanship Combined with Modern Technology • Locating the Unusual--Our Specialty • Member American Watchmakers. Inst. • Member Callf. Retail Jewelers Assoc. ' i 1• •J2 DAIL V PILOT W!dn!!day, July 20, 1011 • For Miiitary I I Lower~cost · Downtown Mall Mtdled .~:A~ .. ·~ ' Location Near SJC Mission Proposed . . 117 WIU..IAM HODGE ... ....., ........... 11~ YYOD Hecucber and San Juan Capiltraoo clty of. flclala are ex:p1orlna po.alb!• de- velopme nt of a 10-called downtown mall la tho city'• con. tr al buaineaa dit trlct. The mall would be localed near Ban on Tris Nixed.Again COLUMBIA. S.C. (AP> -A federal judge baa refused for • second time to ban the produc- tion and sale of garments treated with the flame-retardant chemical Tris, suspected of caus· ing cancer. The Consumer Product Safety Commission sought to ban the use of the chemical, but U.S. Dis- trict Court Judge Robert Chap- man, ruling last month in a suit brought by Springs Mills,. said the federal agency had not met s everal procedural r equire- ments. Tris is used primarily in children's sleepwear. PUBLIC NOTICE f'ICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The IOllllW•"9 person IS d01n9 buSI· ness •s: BRITE·WELD SALES, 1783S Sky Park Cl rice,:: 14·D. lrvlne. CA 92714 J esse R. Corwin, •rn Co;-kwood Irvine, C.llfornla 92714 ' This business Is Conducted by an In· dlvldual . .Jesse R. Corwin~ • Tiiis Slatement was flled willl the Counly Cl•rk Of Or91nge County on J une 24.1977. F77"1 PubllsN!d Orange Coast Dally Piiot, July IJ, 20, 27, Md.AugustJ, 1971 3011·77 PUBLIC NOTICE f'ICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person Is doing busl• nttss as: CUTZ INTERNATIONAL HAIR DESIGN, J.04 Illa OPOrto, Suite 20S and 20SA, Newp0rt ~a<h, C•llfornla 92663 Alfl'<'do lllncent San9u1nettl, 1618 "B" Iowa Stree1, Costa Mesa, Cal1forn1cl926~ This business is conducted by cln ln- d1v1duat. Alfredo J. Sangulneltl TrM statement was filed with tht' County Cler~ of Orange County on June 2, t91/ 1'77014 Publls11<!<1 OranlJI' Cont Daily Piiot, June29,andJuly6, 13,20, 1977 2315-71 PUBlJC NOTICE FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT Tilt following person is dOing bus• l'lusas: SUNDOWN ~ERi/iCE CENTER, 19n1 Bea<h BlvC!., Hunll!'glon Beach. CA'l7M8 Lynne l<oelller, 1S11 Mult>rrry, Upland.CA This busirwss ls conducted by an in- dlvldual, Lynne 1<oe111er Tiiis slat~t was llled with IM County Cieri< of Ot'a11941 County on July 6. 1917. • ..... r1Htt Published Orange Coast Daill' Piiot. J uly tl, l0,27,andAugustl, 1971 3024-77 PUBLIC NOTICE f'ICTITIOUS IUSIN•ss NAM€ STATEMENT Tiie following person b doing busl· M ssas: NEWPOR T A PARTM E NT FORMS, 1110.C Newport Blvd., Costa Mesa. C., 92627 Charles William OouoMrtv, 3601 Par~vlew L-. 18·8. lrvfne, Ca. 92714 Tiii\ buslneu Is conducted by an ln- dlvldual. ChMIH W. Ooooht!r!y · Thi\ stat~nt was flllld with the tounly Cler-of 0"1r1ge County on Jufy · JS, 1911. F79001 Publis'-Ora~ Coast Dally Pilot, July 20, 21,and A119usl3. 10, 1917 3121-17 PUBLIC NOTICE f'tCTITIOUS BUSINl!SS •NAME STATEMENT The fofloWlng per$0nS eredolng busl· nessas: (I) VlLLA·OEANNA CO. & SON (2) THE F INAL TOUCH, 1100 W. kal~l&8<:anr,.;,~~·ri,~:.9~~-. en llllnols Corporation (quelllhtd for C.lllornlal, 16152 &eecll 81vd .• SUlle no. Hunt1.ng1on l!eecll, C.lllcmle 91647 Tiiis buslneu Is candudld by • COi'· porallOI'\. · AC·OC ENTERPRISES, INC. {ly: Its President Tiiis itolftment was fifed Wllfl Ille _County Cler• of Orange County on July 15, 1977. ,, .. ,, Publlst.ed Orange ~t o.ttr Pilot, \Jut120, 27,endAUgust3, I0, 1977 Sll0-7T PUeLIC NOTICE Camlno Caplatrano 11nd the fam•d Ml11lon San Juan Capl•tl'ano with the hope of elim.lnatlni parldna aod traffic. problema ln the old area. area bordered by Camino Capistrano, Or&eaa Hlgbwl)'. El Camino Bell andF,onter street. ONE OPl'ION WOULD close Camino Cap.lstrano between "WE'VE DEALT with issues Ortega Hi&bway and Forster such as growth control that did Street but Merrell said that n ot d l r ec t I Y a dd re s·s alternative presents aome- b e a u ti f i c ation is s u es . ' ' "difficult traffic flow problems." Heckscher told a gathering of The other two alternatives pro- city businessmen and property . vide mall apace between Camino o wners in proposi ng the. CapistranoandElCaminoReal, downtown plan. with businesses facislg both the "We should now be directing bordering streets aJid the abop- our attention to a downtown core ping mall. that would alleviate some of the Both Heckscher and Merrell problems auch as parking and stressed that the. plans were pre. traffic control," be said. · !lminary and suggested a •teer· Heckscher said several mg committee be formed to ex· downtown business owners bad plore the econqmic feaalbllltf of complained to the city of prob-developing such a downtown· lema getting mission tourists· mall. intothebusinessdlstrict. RESPONDING TO questions- Food Remail'ltS WASHINGTON (AP) -The Senato has a~ to keep groc-eries a bar1aln fot the nation'• millt-Y service personnel. • p • It vOted 59 to 33 Tuesday to klll a propcfc_ecl three.year pba~eout of ~ $300 million ltie government pays each yea( to auba14lze :lhe salaries ol the 2$,000 clerks and manager# W,bJ> (tafl the 418 commianries which. provicJe out-tate groceries to U .s. military families in tb,e Umted States and around the wor•d, THE SENATE TtlEN ClC)NTiNUEt) 'work OD tbe pending $111 billion defense 41Ppropriations b1ll. The Senate ·Appropl'i•tloo• Commlftee contended tha~ au~dl.lin& the. salaries of :the comlQissary staffs no 19111er ii ~ed ··~ U&lt ol curreat military salaries anil bendits. the tilch ~ of conttmling the subsidy. ,.m tbefact~P10'1d• net combat readlneas and ma1tu DO mlllm7 contribution to the nallcmal 4ef~ '"· • : - "THEY COMPLAIN about ov.er fmancing of the pl'Oject, v a ns and trucks parking on Heckscher said the plan would. Camino Capistrano and blocking· not call for a major expenditu.rei· their business from vi ew," be of taxpayerfunds .... No RefJ~ttal /" . , SEN. TED STEVENS (R·Alaaka). 'the~• assistant Republiclan 1~. ~e4. &hat~e availabilitJ' of low.cost foocl •t-military eem• miasaries JS a promise made by Ult govfll'Allld to induce enlistments. · : explained. "We are talking about provid-One of the interesting works of art at the John Michael Kohler A.ts Center's 7th an- nual Outdoor Arts Festival in Sheboygan, Wis. is this blue-jeaned wall piece by Milwaukee ceramist Mark Sijan. The artist has copyrighted the work so no ope can butt in on a good idea. · "That commitment should not be brot~n Heckscher and city Planning ing a plan the area businesses Director Tom Merrell unveiled can follow," Heckscher ex- three alternative plans they de-plained. veloped looking into the mal l's "We're only going to put this potential. plan in if it's economically feasi- Each alternative deals with the ble for private enterprise." Dr. Elton Cairns, Assistant Head, Electrochemistry Department ''I'm excited and optimistic. I think the chances of our developing a high temperature battery that will end up in an el~­ tric car are rather good. We're interested in electric cars because we recognize the need for a shift in our primary source of transporta- tion energy ... from oil to coal or nuclear energy. 0 The potential range of electric cars depends on how and where you drive the vehicle. If you allocate 25% of the vehicle weight to a zinc nickel oxide battery and you drive the car in urban traffic conditions, then you get a range of about 100 miles. If you replace that with an equal weight of a lithium iron sulfide high temperature battery, then you get about 200 miles. · It's high perfonnance • enough so you could ·~ ily attain nonhal high- way speedS. Once fully developed, this battery •• Stevens said. ' 0l).POnents of eliminating ~e subsidy said it would amount to an annui\l ~ase ill a aoldt~'s pay of 3.~ percent to 4 percent. would cause.a trpop morale problem and mitke requiting m9re difficult. should provide both adequate range and perfonnance for a full· sired electric car. 'f\nd there are some pos.5ibilities that might let us dOuble the range. Then you might have a vehicle range of 400 niiles. 'l\t the moment, the high temperature cells we '1ave here at GM have.a lifetime record of over 10,000 hours of continuo~ operation and over 700 complete discharge-recharge cycles. No one anywhere else has done that well. '(There are a number of hen· I efits. one is a pollutiop-free car. I think . ifs better to have one large pollution q>ntrol system at an electric power plant than it is to have a million pollu- tion control systems on cars. "There are some problems, too. We must select materials for the HIGH TEMPERAroRE ~TTERv f'l'CK container..of the cell which will remain inert over long per:i00s of time. And these materials must be inexpensive. GM is a nmter at1 finding effective, low-cost, large-volume production methods.:Jf GM: can't dd it, I don't think anyone can. . . "It's very gratifying to know that research we do falls into very broad, important categories that relate to every~y life. as well as being interesting and technically challenging. I~makesmefeel · good that the work I do amid be useful to everyone inJenns of · national energy self-sufficiency. It's about the best combination a , technical person can have:' . General Motors People building transportation to ~e people • .I . . : .. ... I i . t I I It . Started In Greece . . BJ&UBAllAGHJ ·BOWEN .... ...., .......... n,c Mlddle Eut, let'• rocc lt. hu brouaht u1 far more than economic and POlitlcaJ beldacbel. t n fact. Ifft wtten 't for the n!ne naUollll that a bare 1 comm OD cula1ne, vecttarlps &Del barbecue butfa alike would 1Ull be aeanbial for ablak kabob. bulaur, fellll I and baklava. Not to mention Ulvah, tho boaey-aeaame candy that's a reformed But· tetfincer tan'1de111bL As far M Kay P11toriua of La1una Beach 11 concerned, "Greece la Yihere It aU t>eian. Some people say French and Italian azslnes are tbe bues for other culsJnea, but actuall.Y. you can find it all tn Oreek eoold.ftg." 111.ra. Paatartu la an iDstruct« of lnt.emat.lonal cookery whea 1be'1 not bandllnl public relationa for scuJptol'-husband Harold- or cbairiDC actlvtttea for tho Docent'& Council of the Newport· Harbor Art Mm.um. Jter interat in Greek culaine evolftd d\lrlllf ber travell ln the fOa. wbea abe lived in Sweden, the land of her own berltace, then bt~lillted through continental and Mediterranean Eurwe. (Her husband la Dutch.> ''What we know here u Greek food ts really peuant's food there. It seems aophisticated lo us, but for them, it is a matter of putting to 8ood uae their i.ndigenous resources,•• she said. ·, LAD is the Greek's meat staple, she says, simply because • there Is no room along the rocky hillsides for grazing cattle. It is served f98Sted or boiled and salted, then shredded for stuffing in· to grape leaves (dolmas); or marinated in chunks for skewering onto kat>obs. Visitors to the Middle East -and even to a few Southland restaurants -will see whole legs of lamb turning over hot coals "chawarma" sfyle. The meat from this giant leg will be carved sliver:thin to stuff inside pocket bread sandwiches (souvlaki>. For kabobing, the lamb chunks are usualJy m arinated in lemon juice and olive oil and spices of the whim . "Lemon juice is a major seasoning in Greece. although in this country, you wouldn't think of it as such," said Mrs. Pastorius. Other commonly used flavorings are cinnamon, anise, cloves and minL Saffron may be used to color rice; it also adds its own piquant flavor. Parsley, onions, garlic and yogurt are also widely usod, and regarded since antiquity as remedial intestinal soothers. Although Mrs. Pastorius favors old wprld recipes, gleaned, she says, from Time·Life cookbooks and "The Complete Greek Cookbook," by Theresa Karas Yianilos. she makes the task of as· sembling foods easy with the use of a food processor, a microwave, a pasta machine and other "invaluable" gadgets. COOKING should be fun, she says, not drudgery bound by old methods. She also stresses the use of fresh ingredients which means "keeping aware of the stores that have the best lur~over." . For example, Feta cheese, a sharp, crumbly, goat cheese native to Greece, seems to take on a brinier flavor the longer it's preserved, she says. That that's available here is manufactured in Denmark and sold in cans in the deh section of markets. "But since it's imported, the cans bear no comprehensible dates. so you just have to know your stores." she said. Another thing that will make or break a Greek dinner, she said, is filo dough, uncooked pastry that comes in one-pound packages of 16-inch sheets and is used for layering filled desserts or spinach and cheese pie. "It has to be fresh to be worth your time,·' she said. BAKLAVA Layered Pa5lry with Walnuts and Hooey Syrup ~pound butter cut into ~-in<:h bits 1h cup vegetable oil 40 sheets filo pastrr 4 cups shelled walnuts pulverized in a blender Clarify the bulterin a heaV)' saucepan or skillet in the follow· ing fashion: Melt the butter slowly over low heat without letting it brown. skimming off the foam as it rises to the surface. Retnove the pan Crom the heat. let it rest for 2 or 3 minutes, then spoon off the clear bUtter and disca(d the milky solids at the bottom of the pan. Preheat oven to3S0° and stir vegetable oil into the clarified but· ter. Using a paatry brush coat the bottom and· sides of a 13x9X:Z'h·lnch baking dish with about 1 tablespoon of the mix· ture. Fold a sheet of filo in half crosswise, lift it up genUy and un- fold it into the prepared dish. Press the pastry flat. fold down the excess around the s\des and flatten it against the bottom. Brush the entire surface df the pastry lightly with the butter and oil mix· ture, and lay another sheet of filo on top. folding it down and but- tering it in similar fashion. Sprinkle the pastry evenly with about · 3 tabJespoons of walnuts. Repeat tlle same procedure using two sheets of buttered filo and 3 tablespoons of the pulverized walnuts each time to make 19 layers in IOI. Spread remaining sheets of fllo on top and brush the baklava with all of the remaining butter and oil mixture. With a small, sharp knife score the top of the pastry with parallel diagonal lines about 1h inch deep and 2 inches apart, then cross them diagonally to form diamond shapes. Bake in the mid· dle of the oven for 30 minutes. Reduce the heat to 300° and bake for 45 minutes lonaer. Syrup: 1 lh cups sugar :V.. cup water 1 tabl~poon fresh lemon juice 1 tablespoon honey Combine sugar, water and lemon juice in a small saucepan and. stirring constantly. cook over moderate heat until the sugar dissolves. Increase the heat to high and, timing it from the mo· ment the SYJ:UP bolls, cook briskly, uncovered, for about 5 minutes. ' When the baklava is done. remove it from the oven and pour the sy~ over it. Cool to room temperature, and just before serv- ing, cut into dlamond-shaped serving pieces. o.11, Piiot f'Mto lty G•rv Amllf'OH .. Greek cookery Is hardly foreign to Kay Pastorius who says, •'know your stores" to get freshest Ingredients, like filo dough, to make wrapped hors d'oeuvres and pastries . BARBARA OIUS-BO~N. Food Editor Wednesday, Jiiiy 20, 19n C1 A Party? Dolmas Wrap It Up Middle Eastern cuisine is truly a celebration for the senses. In fact, a menu offering traditional; but easy dishes that highlight contrast in flavors, colors. tex· lures and arom a, is excuse enough for a party. For starters, dolmas or stuffed grape leaves, provide simple. yet sophisticated tabletop Care. They can be simmered under cover in a chafer and served with handy wooden picks. Dolmas, as we are familiar with them. combine a traditional Greek stuffing of ground lamb or beef and rice. garlic and herbs. They are wrapped in vine leaves. available in the gourmet section of most supermarkets. However, som e inventive cooks choose to wrap them in tender spinach or Swiss chard leaves. Turkish·style. Cabbage can be substituted, also. but should be par-boiled briefly in UghUy salted water, then drained thoroughly before wrapping. The results are bite-size (or two·bite size) overstuCfed pillows of savory mystery. For companion appetizers. serve triangles oC warmed pita bread and crisp, cut-up vegetables with Hummus, a pureed and seasoned chick-pea dip easily made from a can of garbanzo beans. If you are a cook who like to "start from scratch," included also is a recipe for Felafel. heralded by vegetarians as their protein-filled answer to ham· burgers or beef tacos. Patties are made from ground. cooked garbanzos <you can use Tabletop fare: stuffed vine leaves and hummus. dried beans and cook them over- night 4l a slo"-coolter); they are fried, then combined with shredded vegetabl~ inside a pita bread pocket. These are great make·aheads;· they can be frozen, then thawed, fried, and put out buffet-style for casual backyard meals-in-hand. DOLMAS l pound ground beef or lamb 1 egg 1'2 cup chopped onion 1h cup uncooked rice 1 ~cups water, divided '• cup parsley 2 cloves pressed garlic 1 tablespoon chopped fresh mint leaves (or 1 teaspoon dried mint) th teaspoon salt 1/4 teasp()'On~pper 1h cup dry white wine l jar Cl pound) vine lea\'es. drained In large bowl.-mix ground beef or lamb. egg, onion, rice, ~cup water, parsley, garlic, mint, salt and pepper. Drain and rinse vine leaves in colander under cool running water. Separate leaves; place a rounded teaspoon of rice mixture in center of each leaf. Fold sides over filling and roll .up. Place seam side down in chafing dish. Add remaining l If.I cups water and wine. Bring to boil, reduce heat and cover. Simmer 40 lo 45 minutes. until liquid is absorbed. Keep warm over canned heat. Yield: 10·12 servings (40 stuffed graJ)e leaves). HUMMUS 1 can 06 ounces) chick peas. drained 1h cup tahini (sesame seed paste) 11\l cup orange juice If.I cup milk 2 tablespoons lemon juice 1'11 teaspoon salt ~ teaspoon paprika l dove garlic Pita bread, cut into wedges Raw vegetables Place all ingredients except bread and vegetables in electric blender container, cover and pro.- cess until smooth. Transfer to fondue saucepan and place over canned heat. Serve as dip w\Ui pita bread and vegetable,s. Yield: 2'h cups. FELAFEL 1 lh cups dried garbanzos 3 cups boiling w.ater 2 carrots, cut in l·lnch piecd 2 celery ribs, cut in 1-incb pieces . 1 medium onion. cut in quarters 1 medium clove garlic, peeled and slivered · 1 teaspoon salt . 1h teaspoon black pepper 2 fresh basil leaves, crushed (or 1h teaspoon dried, crumbled> 1/4 cup fresh parsle)", chopped Soak garbanzos io col(! water to cover 12 hours. Drain. Arrange vegetables in bottom of crock pot; cover with beans and herbs. sail and pepper. Pour boiling water over and cover. Cook o.o low 8·9hours. Drain beans. Di scard vegetables. except carrots, and resetve broth in refrigerator to use foi: cooking rice or bulgur. In food processor or blender, grind garbanzos and carrots un- til they are the texture of fine meal. Combine with the follow- ing ingredients 11nd divide into 3-inch patties about •A -inch thick: t egg white 1 tablespoon soy sauce 'f.I teaspoon dill weed, crushed 3 tablespoons wheat flour 3 tablespoons toasted sesame seeds In large frying pan. heat 2 tablespoons olive oil or butter, or mixture of both. Fry patties carefully 3 minutes on each side. or until golden. (Patties may be dipped beforehand in flour, wheat germ or sesame seeds for a crisp crust) Keep warm on platter. Serve with slit pita loaves and condl· ments of sb'redded 1ucchini or cucumber. finely diced tomatoes and ereen onion tossed in lemon juice witb a sprinkling of dill weed. Makes f patties. t -("2 DAIL V PILOT WtH:tllffday, July 20, 1977 reek Peasants' Staple r lamb Teams [~·:. .. ( •• ~ . ~~-· With Eggplant A mt•nu for 111x liA hearty and nutrllloua as It is lnterest- ln6: in oA 11p1cy Grl'ek wt1.y · Mouaaaka Ceagplant cuserolel. Spinach u Jad with t<'l'la chee11e dresalna and Honey Berries for d t•i.st'rl MOUSSA&A 1 pound lean around *I or lamb 2 medium oniona, chopped fine l teaspoon each minced paraley and rOHmary \1:1 cup beer l tablespoon tomato paste 2 teaspoons salt, divided Fresh around pepper l laree or 2 medium-size egfplaota 2 ege whites beaten stiff 1h cup bread crumbs 2 tablespoons butter or margarine 2 tablespoons flour 1 cup mllk or half and half l cup Parmesan cheese Brown beef or lamb in salad oil; drain excess fat and add chopped oruon.s. Cook until transparent. Add parsley, rosemary, beer, tomato paste, 1 teaspoon salt and pepper to meat. Simmer, covered, for about 20 minutes, stirring occasionally. Cut eggplant in 11•-lnch slices. Salt lightly and pat with paper toweling lo absorb excess moisture. Arrange on bot- tom or baking dish in even layer. Beal egg whites and add to meat mixture, folding until evenly distributed. Spread meat mixture on top or eggplant slices. Cover with remaining eggplant slices. In s mall saucepan, melt butter , whisk in flour to make a smooth Daste. then slowly whlsk in milk. Season roux with remaining salt and pepper and pour over final layer of eggplant. Top with Parmesan cheese. Bake casserole at 350 degrees for 35 minutes. or until lightly browned on top. Serves 6-8. Eggplant casserole feeds six sumptuously. SPINACH SALAD WllJ'H FETA CREESE DRESSING l head spmach, rinsed and drained thoroughly t head Bibb lettuce, rinsed and drained 6 ounces Grei?k or stuffed olives 1/4 cup white or purple onion, cut in slivers 4 tablespoons olive oil 1 tablespoon lemon juice ~ tablespoon white wine vinegar 1h cup Feta cheese, crumbled 'h teaspoon dried mint leaves, crushed Salt and pepper Tear spinach and lettuce into bite-size pieces. Arrange In lar ge salad bowl. Drain and pour olives over and arrange onion slivers on top. · In blender container, whir together oil, lemon juice, wine vinegar, mint leaves, salt and pepper. (Add a dash of hot pepper sauce if desired.) Just before serving, pour over green mixture. Toss with crumbled Feta cheese and serve immediately. Scrves6·8. ries HONEY BERRIES 1 pmt each. raspberries and blueberries and strawber- 1 teaspoon grated lemon rind 2 3 cupsourcreamorplainyogurt 2 tablespoons honey Rmse and bull berries; drain in collander and toss lightly m large bowl to mix. In blender, whir together sour cream, lemon rind and honey. Just before serving, fold this mixture into berries; scoop into individual dishes and serve immediately. Senes 6. SPA CE-AGE TREND 'Fast' Foods Gainirig WEST LAFAYETTEt Ind. (~P)-By 1980, about balf olthe food consumed ln this country will be prepared away from home, predict• a Purdue University consumer and family science pl'Of esaor. "People · now spend one of every three food doll~rs in restauraols and f ast·f ood outlets, and by i.o. they will be Jpeodlng one"' every two tood ,doll an on food away Crom home," Lee M. Kreul1111. Tbe reuon f M tbS. Uh• expect- ed lncruae) be •a.vs. la that.there are loereulninumben of ~e tlvlo1 alone. m°" woaan work· nt and expected lAcrementa ln dJ1po1ablelncome. . . ''TD mNlllVll WAGB riles "The trend.of buying foocfpre- pared away f~ bome is boost- ing restaurant tncomea but hurt- ing superm arkets,•• he aaid. "Grocery stores are aelliq no more than they were five 1ean a10... · "There also have been quite a few changes 1n fast food menus.•• heaaya. "Fast food oaUeta lite do&nl more expertmenttn1 with tlddl· Uonal fe.atwet 1ucb aa aaladbarl and fllb ltemt to aQPPl--1 tbetrmenu." . CHUNK TUIA BEEF C HUCK SEVEN-BONE STEAKS LEAH MEATY 89 CUTS c -LB. FRESH FROZEN TURKEY DRUMSTICKS. EXCELLENT FOR BAKING 33~. IEEF ROUND BOMEUSS 1 09 TENDERIZED IEEF · Swiss Steak La. Cube Steak ~Mliii~' ~ FOSTER OR ZACKY F.AIM,S LIND.A-CORM TORTILLAS ~ I DOL,ACIC 1 oc Wlttlowt COllft°" 25' ·~ .... c..-"' .,...c_ EA ~ _n...,.,i1 . IAR M FRESHLY CUT Sliced LUNCH MEATS ·~ .. e:e::~ FRYING CHICKEN 59~ COTTO SALAMt PICKLE PIMENTO IOLOGM.A 98~ L l.PMI 1.89u. C.HEESE SALE . WISCONSIN CHEDDAR · MONTEREY JACX SLICD AMERICAN MORWAY IMPORTED SWISS WISCONSIN LONGHORN CHEDDAR FARMERJOHM WIENERS 1~ 1~~ 1~.~ 1~.~ MARIARllA · 1 TAVERN MIX FULL QUART . HEINZ S LI. IAG Ill SAUCE ALL FU VORS 16 OZ. IOTILI JIMS RANCH FRESH EGGS LARGE GRADE AA SPRINGFIELD ALL VEGETABLE MARIAllNE WHOLE KBNEL 30JCAN .:j· • . • :~ .. . Chicken chunks, avacado and hsrd-cool<ed eggs lace a French dinner classic: Cobb Salad sans fish. ..... ·. Cobb a French Favorite The perfect signature to a summery soiree - a Cobb Salad, served with classic French dress· ing that features crumbled blue cheese. COBB SALAD 1 medium head lettuce, coarsely broken 2 cups coarsely chopped watercress leaves 3 hard-cooked eggs, quartered 1h pound bacon. cooked and crumbled 2 medium avocados, peeled, pitted and sliced 21h cups cut-up cooked chicken 1 tablespoon chopped chives Combine all ingredients in bowl : mix lightly. Line large or individual salad bowls with crisp lettuce. Add salad mixture. U desired, garnish with tomato W('dgcs. Serve with Peppy French Dressing. Yield: 4quarts. about 6to8servings. PEPPY FRENCH DRESSING ~~cup salad oil If.I cup vinegar I./• cup J:atchup l/z teaspoon dry mustard lh teaspoon paprika Vz teaspoon Tabasco sauce 1-" teaspoon salt lh teaspoon sugar 2 tablespoons crumbled blue cheese Combine all ingredients in jar with tight cov- er. Shake to mix well. Yield: 1114 cups. Shimmering: Fruit 'n' Yogurt I Molded yogurt salads are popular, easy to serve and lovely to look at. Convenient fruit flavored gelatins blend beautifully with this pi· quant dairy food. This sunny, summer salad con· tains crisp, raw crunch interest. YOGURT SUMMER SALAD ~cupwater 1 (3·ounce) package lemon gelatin ·~cupmilk l pint plain yogurt 2 tablespoons lemon juice • 2 cup diced unpared cucumber 'h cup diced carrot 2 tablespoons minced onion 2 lablespoons minced parsley Salad greens Monterey jack cheese, cucumbers. car rots and radishes for garnish Heat water to boiling. Immediately add gelatin and stir over low heat until dissolved. Cool. Stir in milk. yogurt and lemon juice, mix· · • ing with wire whip until smooth. Chill until it ,. begins to thicken (this may only take a few minutes). .. Fold in cucumber, carrot, onion and parsley. ~-• o(. Turn into 3~ to 4-cup salad mold. Chill until firm. Invert onto plate. Surround with greens. Gamlsb as desired with mo'nterey jack cheese. cucumber twists. carrot curls and radishes. Makes 4 servings. , ~Bourbon Sizzles Beef ~Bourgeois · ~f :; By TOM HOGE mixed with egg yolk and ,. .. ..._ ... ....,wn•., capers. ,i;. Americans are so fond I like this recipe for ,;:or hamburgers that.~ey burgers lace d with • .munch about 11 b1lhon whiskey. It's from my ~unds of lb.em a year, own cookbook "The :and the U.S. Department Bourbon Cook0book,'' of Agriculture predict.a Stackpole Boots. that chopped beef con· sumption will soar to 14 2 pounds ground · .:billion ciouoos by 1.,. round · -t• That's a big s tep ~teaspoonsalt forward for the meat V.l teaspoon .eaclt, patty that GermJD im· pepperandt~enc --· misranta introduced to 1 sm all OQlOn grated America in the 19lb cen· 1h c up chopped ~ury and became a boon peanuts ..(toth0&4twhocouldnotaf· 4 tables poons ford steaks or roasts. bourbbn In those days, the ham-Put meat on large plat· burger was called l!am-ter OI' sheet of waxed -burg steak after the paper and natten beef :-!(Jerman city of that wilhbeelof.handlil!itis • ame whose citizens in tbln layer. Spnnkle .. :learned of ft through meat with salt. pepper, radios with Ru1Sia's turmeric. onion and 'attic Provinces, where peanuts. Form into ball bopped meat was aialn and squeeie and '"popular. preas till ~erythina is · la faet, 1'1mbur1er thorough)ymixed. oes bd totbe Tatar in-~:: meat into ' big •Mien wbo eceupled the p and m.ll 3 tneb· Baltic Nlloh in tM llid• ea from beat. tlll they dle Al• and wbo bad a reach state ~ clooeMU ..JweU-for lbredded you prefer. Pat boarboa aw meat. BeDce the into larce lad.le. iaJdt.e ame !bet Tan.re, tbe wbea l'&rm and pour · ncooJred 1'ambur1er over bambu~ieis.. many eplcvreans relish Serves4. Vegetables In sweet-tart salad. DAIL v PtLOT C:J Wednesday. July 20, 1977 -'· Label Plan Un"c;orked 8y LOUISE COOK .Atteelale<l'"'"•Wrltw The federal 1overnment is trying to help the growing number of wine drinkers across the country l~arn more about the beverages they buy. Industry statistics show that wine consumption has risen 90 percent from 1966 to the present and some sources predict that by 1980, Americans wUI drtnk more wine than liquor. Many consumers. however, are confused by the variety of wines avail able. Government ef- forts to simplify things by providing more information about the contents of American wines have been under way for some time. but they have bogged down in debate and discussion. .. Earlier this month, the Bureau or Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms of the Department or the Treasury announced a new set of proposed regulations for labels on U.S.-produced wine and officials say they hope to be able to take some ~ firm action soon. THE NEW PROPOS~ are an outgrowth of 1976 recomm endations which were modified after public hearings and comments from consumers and industry spokesmen. Hearings on the latest plan are scheduled in Washington and San Francisco next month. Written comment& will be accepted through Sept. 26. Individuals who want to expres$ an opi- nion should send six copies of their statement to· Director, Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms, Washington, D.c.; 20226. A key section of the bureau regulations would involve standards for wine which is labeled to show where it comes from. The bureau proposed three "appellation of origin" designations: the United States, a state or a county. Seventy.five percent of the grapes_ used to make wine that listed an appellation of origin would have to come from the place named. The agency also proposed two "controlled appellation" designations for individual, named vineyards and specific locations distinguished by a particular geographic feature, known as viticultural areas, such as ''Napa Valley." Eighty-five percent of the grapes used in a wine labeled with a vitlcultural area and 95 percent or those in a vineyard-labeled wine would have to come from the place named. The proposed regulations would set new standards for varietal wines made from specific grape types, requiring that a varietal wlne such as CabemetSauvignon derive at least 75 percent of its volume from the type listed on the label. If more than one grape type is used, the percentage of each would have to be shown. CONCORD·TYPE grapes which have a very distinctive and dominant flavor would be e)Cempt from this provision. These varietals would be allowed to contain only 51 percent of the Concord· type grape. Wines labeled with a vintage would have to be derived from grapes harvested during the year shown and grown in the labeled area of origin. The bureau rejected an industry proposal to lower from 95 to 75 percent the volume ot grapes used in vintage wine which must come from the labeled area of origin. It had proposed a special government seal for wine which met especially strict standards. Bureau spokesmen said that the proposal, opposed by the industry. was dropped because or a concern that consumers would mistake the seal for an assurance of quality. Other proposals include: -Phasing' out by 1983 the term "estate botUed. ••The buceau said the term, as applied to American wines, was subject to varied inter- pretations and was meaningless to consumers. -Banning the use on American wines or foreign-language terms referring to quality or condition ol grapes at the time or harvesL -Requiring that the name, address and registry number of .the bottler be shown on wine labels . Pricft eff«tl•• ........ w .. ""' J) 5UIJECT TO A 'f AIUllUT1 FRISH SALMON FRESH ALBACORE FILLET 5189 LI. FHSH . SEA BASS FllSH SOLE '[)~ ~'fd4.$e4. ';~ .................. .......,. 411 JOlh Street ... ..,..leec .. ..... '7J.1116 ( Pilot J Candid commentarlee, _ Logbook _ DAILY PILOT ' exclu1ively in the Introduce your taste buds to Schirmer's elegant Bavarian Braunschweiger with Pistachio nuts, but be generous. This brawny Braunschweiger is created the slow, old-time way from delicately smo~ed liver, combined with the lush goodness of Pistachio nuts, then stuffed in a colorful casing to preserve all that goodness. Ideal for appetizers, snacks and dips. Try it today! L.ook tor the little Schirmer's Sausage Maker on the pachf• in your market. ~~···-Schirmat® ahe Sociable Sausage ALB.ERTSON'S we've made our Catsup 7C.tastier. r-~-----~----------------------~~--~----~---,~ @ Save 7C on oeiM;'.d~ Catsup J2oz. @·:~. Take this coupon to your grocer. 'M:>rth 7C on your next purchase of 32 oz. bottle of DEL MONTE Catsup law Good only tn cities or I owns 1n USA where advertised Cash value 1120c. Coupon will not be honored through outside 194nc1es, brokers. or others Who are not retail d181nbutora of our mercnandl$8 or spocmcauy authorized by ua to present coupons for rw<lemption. FM redemptiofi of propelty rec.,.,ed and handled coupon. mall to 00. MONTE FOODS, PO BOX 1450, a.JNTON, tOWA 52734. Offef llmlt.d '° one ~ I* famltr, lfOUP or orgenluHon. Arly ~tloft i' Of thit CIO\IP0'1. oll'lef than under tfl8 t.l11a as stated herein, conatltut81 frlUd. @ " 0oupon • .,.,_ .......,.30.1117 ~ .. Coupon COde 322A2 • I I ~--------~----~-~~-~-~~~ . . • .... DAIL V PILOT Wednttda Ju 20 1971 ' ; ) , .. ~ ' • as, Hundreds of Specials ... plus Thousands of E·veryaay Low~ PriCes, Plus Mo ref ~ l!J:•· everyday ••• you'll -find hundreds of · PECl&LS .at ~ -, . af e_w~~ ! Helie . ' ·--re JUSf ·a f ,.,z . . ., . ' . '. . . Pkg. Ma:rina Tissue Large~·'' AA'' Eggs Lucerne Fresh . 1-r;tpzen Carton . . Grapefruit Juice Town House Pink Variety \ -· ', · l lMITlll• ". Q sPECIAi 46·0Z. .1--: j ' Can Star-Kist Tuna Chunk light Tuna , ,--·-'\ . ', ~'-·. Q sPECIAL --' :_ / , ., . J. c . -lit • T-BONE ·sJEAKS ~ o~ Porterhouse or Top Sirloin Steaks ·~ USDA USDA Choi ce Beef Loin I I j ' CHOICE DEL MONT~ CATSUP 6-:.:~7A~ 32-oz. Bottle ,--. / r For Your Convenience "' NOW ••• ALL SAFEWAY STORES OPEN 8 A.M. MONDAY throuah SATURDAY "" Cheek Your Local Safew1r for Sumtar Hounr ~ SODA POP Cragmont (Plus Deposit) 4 Oart Bo~les I 1 ~ ............ <Sto.:,..,.~~~s=fz::!::..'O~:ta~tl-~..;,z;:s:::re.::~ "'" __ .,..._ __ ,_,_..,. i) y • •I I -· . Wedneeday, July 20, 1977 1Appetizers: Thoughtful Ways to Nutri·tion 8y 1ublUtuUnar 1.000. ulorie portions of chip• and dip wtt.b MON nutrlt 1ou1 , h11 fllllns appeUHn, you'll be doin• bot.b ~ and your rueau a lavor. Not Oftly will be you s up•lytn1 mor o balanced nutrttlon, you won 't be deatroy ln a everyone'a appetites for whatever '• hot on th~ era II Tbecalones consumed 1n a drink before dinner un be U1htened too. by mixina a favorite wine (preferably red) with dub soda and lime Juice or • sucar·free soda. Here some ideas for Ju epared mustard 1 tea s poon Worc~-.terahlre sauce Oub liquid pepp~r aauce '·• c u p f i n e J y chopped c•nned pimiento Appl~ or pear1:1, cul 1n wedges Piac~ cheeses. milk, ffiU ll lMrd , Worceattirahirc s <1ucc and liquid pepper s auce 1n s mall 11uucepan or chafing dJsh Cook over low heat, stirring unlll c h~ese melts and m i xture ls smooth . Remove from beat and stir ln pimiento. Serve hot from chafinl dish for dlpplnj wltb apple or pear wedges. Yield: about3cupsdlp. CIDUDIP 1-'J cup uncreamed cottage cheese 11.t cup chili sauce l tablespoon chili seasoning mix 1 teupooq prepared horseradish • 'r1t teupoon salt ~ cup plain yogurt In 1mall rnixlng bowl or blender, beat tocether couaie cheese and chm sauce until smooth. Add seasonln• 111ix . horseradish and salt. Fold in yogurt. Cover and chill. Yield: l~ cups dip. sA voav AVOCADO TOASTIES 8 slices rye bread, cut ifl lhirda 2 ripe avocaclos, mashed 1 teaspoon spit 1 teaspoon lime Julee 1 teaspoon Worcestershire sauce Groundblack pepper to taste M~onnaise Toast rye bread pieces on cookie sheet under broiler, turnioC until both sides are golden brown. Spread each with mayonnaise just to cover and molJten slightly. In small bowl, mix m iuhed or pureed avocados with salt, lime juice, .Worcestershire sauce and pepper~ Spread tout fingers with mixture and serve 1mmediateJr. Makes 24 appetizers. ROT PAaMESAN PUFFS 12 1lleea thin Pumpemfc•el bread. cut in fourths l cup mayonnaile ·~ cup 1rated P.armesan cheese l teaspoon deh- ydrated onJon fia.kes 1 tablespoon each sherry and Worcestershire sauce 2egewhites Toast pumpernickel OAILY PILOT . ~ starters. MA&INATEDSlllUMP Z p'ounds fresh or frozen large shrimp ~ cup vecet.able oil . 1hcuplimejuice 1 '• 3 tablespoons dry while wine - 1 tablespoon finely chopped chives . . 1 clove ga rl oc Albertsons our Great" Coupon$- minced · l 1r.i teaspoons s ail •1~ teaspoon dillwee<I Seve r a l da s h e~ liquid pepper sauce Thaw s hrimp , If frozen. Place in shallow baking dish. Combine oil, lime juice, wine , chives, garli c, s alt, dillweed and liquid pepper sauce. Pour marinade mixture over shrimp . Cover. Refrigerate 4 to 6 hours or overnight . Oc · casionally spoon marinadeovershrimp. 3049 Coast Hwy., Corona Del Mar:• 10114 Adams St., Hunt. Beach Remove shrimp , res erving marinade. Thre ad s hrimp ·on skewers or place in a wire grill basket. Grill over hot coals until done CS lo 10 minutes>. turning and brushing often with res erve d m a rinade Serve on wooden pick:.. Yield : 30 appetizers. SPICY CHEESE AND • FRUITDIP 1 cup shredded sharp American cheese 1 cup shredded Swiss cheese ~ 1 can (6 ounces ) 1 evaporated skim milk 1 tablespoon Spicy Blends :Speedy • Exotic foods are one of the delights of the Middle East. M~t recipes have taken cen turies to perfect and are rich blends of vivid spices. These are speedy ·versions of some Middle · · Eastern favorites. YOGURT SOUP 1/2 pint plain yogurt lcupmilk 1 can (24 fl . oz .> vegetable cocktail juice _ 1h teaspoon de· hydrated onion fiakes t,ia teaspoon hot pep- per sauce . • Avocado. ripe , • In bowl, blend yogurt ·and milk gradually stir .in vegetable cocktail Juice. Add remaining in· ''gredienta. Pour into . blender; blend until ·smooth. Chill. Serve in chilled bowls. Garnish with avocado slices • • ,:Makesfservings. MIDDAY SOUP l can (24 fl. 01.) 'vegetable cocktail juice • 'At cup sliced green onions · ~ 1 teaapoon l emon j uice • 2 c u ps fr o zen :,:1ened raw tbrlmp 4541 Campus Dr., Irvine ~ Full Cut Bone In • 880,Dip ' or Reg. ~·~-}_) •. '~-·ti , '. ~-8-oz. Pkg. . Kratt Miracle Whip , c " c .. " • In eaucepan~ combine lvegetable cocktail Juice, ~Dions and lemon; brine p boil. Add shrimp; re- )luce heat. Simmer ! ~lnutee or until done. llCllW I min or more. IJerft lo cbllltcl bowJI. lllWl41m'Yinp. fJ ' ' Morrell Wieners Meat • 1-Lb~ Pkg. ~lberttona Supreme Beef Loin Top Sirloin Steak .s 98 Whole .... Lb. '1.71 . Lb. Save s2.25 "' . . . . .. . ,. . [fl OAIL Y PILOT Bou nty Broiled H•N are two 1uper. eaay ideu for ve1uble diabea S•uc•'em and crlU ·an; or, irate them for •PIC)' rrttttta C&EEN ANO OOLO n.JPS t m~um 1>1u tur chin I I m~Jum·S•t~ t'ar rot 3e>gg:. 1 1 cup nour ......... Cookies SAN FRANCISCO (APl Prediction a stranger will soon reveal to you the deepest secrets about fortune cookies It ls wisely written that Cortune cookies are not o( Chinese origin. ln fact. one manufacturer claims that he exports his cookies toTwwan. "It's aa American as chop suey." says Eddie Louie, a Uttle old cookie maker whose family bas been in the business for three decades. "The secret la sample." says Louie. owner of the Lotus factory. "Nobody can resist readfog their fortune. no matter how corny ll is.·· The hub of the fortune cookie trade-.s San Francisco, where tile Ding Ho Fortune Cookie Co. in the Mission Distract manufactures malltons of the wheatnour cookies The products from Loui1:'t-Lotus Co. arE nib· bled and read worldwide X-rated parties Indeed. the fortunes of Louie s business have been so &ood he has br am.hed out a b1L. Lolus now offers novelty items such as sax·anch fortune cookies. And there are the X·rated vanety. Louie says he 1s the p1one.er ol the off.color fortune cookies. He says lhey are for men who t"n- joy stag Jokes about women. The naughtly cook a cs constitute about 15 percent or his trade. The onJy problem with the X·raled messa&es is that they somelamt•i. mystt-noui-ly end up in th(.' han~ of tortune seeker!. who don t11nd such Joke~ a mLsmg · ;1 ·~been b big headtt(ht· somtt1 m~s. Lou it· say~ · l tried c.oior cod.n~ 1hl· pup<:r. but colored pHper dulr.'' wo1k on tht\machml' l •rn·d color· toding tht-lOOlt1es. but colored 101 turw cookie~ look just ten ibie • 11 1 envele>p\.I 1 l \.t o.t 1 1p1ghell1 sauce max Bulter or margarine Da1ry sour cream (optional> Saucy Kabobs are ready in minutes. "There has been quite an 1..:1.plos1on ir. popularity of lhest things in the past ~IJ yi;ari: ... says Louie. whose cookie clients include supermarkets. aarhncs. sh1phnes and ~chool Wh11e L0t.:l: '!'. t hl' unconte!>ted Cather of lh!• X - 1 atcd lortur.e cookll.'. no one 1s quite sun· who made the first Jortunt-cook1~ Sor family consump· lion Shred zucchini and «arrot coarsely. Beat erp lightly; stir in flour and cootenu of uuee mix envelope. Add shredded vecetables. Heat 2 to 3 tablespoons butter m large skillet. Drop spoonfuls of ivegetable batter into skillet. Cook over med ium heal until brown, turning once Serve topped with sour cream or butter, grated Parmesan or salt and pepper. llakes 6 serv· in as. SNAPPY VEGETABLE KABOM 2 carrots, scraped and cut in l·inch lengths l zucdtini, sliced 10 to 12 cherry tomatoes 2 tablespoons butter or mar&arine 1 table spoo n Worcestershire sauce 1 tablespoon mayon· naise l tableapoon lemon Juice Cook carrots in small amount ot salted bollinc water !5 minutes, drain. Alternate on 6 skewers with zucchini and tomatoes. Melt butter In am all saucepan. Add Worc;estershlre, ml)'on· na(se and lemon juice. Stir briskly until well blended. Brush or spoon over kabobs. Bake at 400 ' for 10 minutes. Sweetest Sip Wins LA JOLLA (APl -Stµ and spit. Sip and spit. That's how thl' chairman of the Health chcmisll'y department is spending his summer at the University of California at San Diego. After hundreds ol such taste tests. Dr. Murray Goodman says asafesug· ar substitute for sac- charin may be round. C Ong ress TheFoodandDrugAd-ministrallon is consider-s I t d 1r'lg a ban on saccharin a e because of .ex~rir_ncn1:5 an Canada indicating 1t caused bl~dder cancer in Lectures. workshops, nutrition panels and de· monstrations will be highlighted ul the North American Vegetarian Congress which wall be held in Arcata, Northern California. July 25·31. Workshops will key ways to attack. world hunger. food preparation for balanced family nutrition, scientific information relating diet to vitamin and mineral requirement8. Additional information about the conference can rats fed large amounls of al. Congressional hear· ings are under way in Washington, and the prospects are good that ano ther n on·sugar sweetener is needed. Goodman. along with two colleagues. s tarted out with the laboratory- d is covered substance aspartame, which is 200 times sweeter than sugar. ··we made small changes in th e aspartame molecule," he said. By seeing what changes led to sweet molecules or away from s weetness, Goodman de· vised a general model. ''I sip and spit," said the u ruvers1ty professor. who 1s a chemist. "I sip som e distilled water. then some compound. then spit out the com · pound and rinse with dis· tailed water.·· The rt•sl·ar<:hl'rs ha vt.' produced about 40 com· pound s related to aspartame with a dOlCn of those turning out lo be new, sweet s ubstances and "now we'll make compounds that. fit our model, "Goodman said. So far, he said. none or the compounds is clearly better lhan aspartame whlch is madeuptooflwo amino Acids. aspartac acid and a derivative of phenylvalanine. be ob ta i n e d by ------------------- contacting the San HIGH PRQ:TEIN ~cl~t;i~~~ .. ~:~c~r~a8d~ , I way. San Francisco. CA . 94109. For Ad Action can a Daily Pilot AD-VISOR &42-ss1s LOW CALORIE USO.A PRIME SIDE OF BEEF 89C LI. CUT•WIAmD J OO.lSOUS. USOACHOICE ·s1DE OF BEEF sa c u. WHOLE TOP SIRLOlH s 148 ll. CUT&WU flf'ID 12·14 u. WHOLE SPEMCIR $2 39 LI. cur & WIA,,., S.7U. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ TRIP TO BOTH ACAPULCO & MEXICO CITY!! PIKU tfftUIYI •ID . )•l T 20, T•U "",JUI ', •. 101 IED-X ft!aEEF '~ HUCK STEA •• .. !I ·' ., .. 1, 't ,I -t • .. --- . -.-.. -,_ ......... Wednesd.y, July 20. 1977 DAIL y PILO'f C1 Reporter on the Run Pulls a Fast One for 2 B\ ann R vr~s•.1. ..... °"'" ... , .. ,, .. ,, Time ia mcm!"y wh,·n one W'Of'ks al "u<·h orr duly pur11u1ti. :ti' f1 ,.,. lance writing or p¥Jnt1n11 and dnw10• rur sult'. which AJ't" m\ UVtl<'.allOM ou\ Ide the d011h .-1ghl· hour it rind Ttme 1:i. cilso d r,•MlUru• not to ~ !lquandered. "hether you ww h•111un· hours for tennis. 1eolf, JOtt&mg. swimming, pul tenng in lhe garden 01 :i.ampJy sw~mg stories with the bOys at the nelchborhood saloon. But bow often does an evening Just get away from you with day-to-day duUea and unexpected in&.errupdofs too? This can be a problem for many busy people. Cocktail hour· Is u tradition at our house Cor example, and watching the 6 o'clock TV news is alao on the agenda. What a perverse Busman's Holiday after spending u day 10 the newsroom .. butit happens. And then Barney The Pup. chief sampler of various fare 1n lhe cookbook Susi lhl· wife and I are compiling, de- mands about 45 minutes or rough-housing on the· floor with his favorite squeak toy or bone. Too often. it's dinner at 8:30 or 9 when we finaJly get our C-rat ions • toe ether, then, after cleanup and a swim/sim- mer in the jacuzzi, it's bedtime, with nothing much accomplished. LATELY WE'VF. ex p erimented with fast food, but not th<.• drive-through outlet or finger -lick in '· cood . mediocre. or awful variety. Sometimes it's sur- prising how swiftly one can assemble a good, quick but flavorful din- ner with all the fresh s ummer fruits and vegetables currently a vailable. plus a meat, poultry or seafood main course. By adding toasted French bread, rolls. tortillas and /or your own favorite dairy pro· d uct. such as milk. cot· tage cheese or ice cream dessert, you've covered the four good groups for nutrition (Every body need.., milk . but the author's prefers a glass of Zln- fandel or burgundy with dinner.) Charcoal grilling on the ~Et:c or deck 1s ideal for summH dinin~ and needn't be too liml'- consuming either . Use instant charcoal which is (really) instantly ready ror cooking. Brownie Honey Sweet Does your family melt 1n your hand when brownies melt in their mouths? Here's a sweet cookie-bar -moist like brownies should be - that's made with honey and no sugar. BONEY BROWNIES ~cupfiour " teaspoon baking soda 'i4 teaspoon salt 211.a squares '(21.6 ounces) unsweetened chocolate ¥.. cup butter 2egp lcupsugar ~cuphoney ~teaspoon vanilla 1 cu p coarsely chopped walnuts Bfff Blide Cut Chuck Steak per lb. Whole or Point Cut Fresh II Beef Brisket per lb. B roller chickens. qu~rtered, can be maflnated the night Nfor" and popped into a 27~desree oven for half an hour the mlnute you 1et home, then finished off on the hibachi or barbecue for that 1pec1al navor. They are also in· expensive. Don 't overlook parhally·prepared foods such es market · marinated steaks, ribs or chicken parts reedy to go right on tbe coals. Our philosophy is that we'll never get that cookbook finished if we spend half our evenings cooking. Here's a speedy entree concocted one night which seemed excep- tionally good. STllEET EDITION-ON-A·STICK One package frozen and thawed, or 1h pound plump fresh scallops Four to six strips re- formed real pork bacon substitute, or real bacon, the latter slightly parboiled Prunes-in.port, eight orlOofthem• One sweet red onion stlced ~ to one-inch thick, cut lnt.o squares of lhree·rini thicknesses Zucchini or summer squash, cut into 8 to 10 slices 1h to to one-inch thick <Vary ingredients by preference to incl~de cherry tomatoes, whole mushrooms brushed with oll or melted butter, fresh pineapple chWlks or apncot halves with a spritz of lemon juice.> Thread alternately oo two or three wooden skewers they work better than metal - a lternating bacon or Sizzlean slices between scallops, prunes and other chosen chunks. Broil to desired done- neas, usually S to 7 st l ck e a c h e nd minutes. lengthwise into a one- Serve with a green inch long piece of green salad, a good, tt1rt, onion.) home-made mayon· nalse·based sauce (oo •prunes-in-port are de- the mustardy side), hot liclous and so simple · rolls or tortlllas, cold even an adult male - while wine, and chilled newspaper reporter can fresh fruit and cheese, or make them. Pour one s herbet. box or pitted prunes and Shrim~ could be sub-one 4/Sth quart bottle of U ed port wine into a crock or s tut or scallops. glass jar witb cover. Stir To seeure ingredients every few days and use on your kebab skewer, after three weeks. summer ro uce 29 Aalphe-W/P09 Up Cooking G1ug1 Fresh Hen Tanays . ® per lb. Beet Rib-Spencer Rib Eye Slealc Peak of the Seuon Sweet, flavorful Cnnhaw Melons I., Freestone 25 extra 3 1 I \ \\ n.......... Medium Large . j !; , ' f/uatlll8S s1 .. ':'. • Size':.• = ,.' ~~ 39 Frt-" 15 ftec!•"'!-61•11J Smilhpet ~ wriole 1b. •• Cucilnbers each • Watennelon II Super sa0191 by the box ful! Mediln Size Yelow bh l.a'gll Stzl Yalow ~":':. WeigM 43 9 ~1't":1WelgM 6'' Freestone Freeslone Peaches ::. Peaches ::. Vallncil Mlftilftuln Wtlght 31 lb. bo1 Slndst Oranges 49 A1torted Flnot1 ::.-. Vi o-•. II 12 oz. pkg. II I \Alge Elbow Of'lelad SID Golden Grain Macaroni 1201. pkg. Stokeff-French Sllcedot CUI Gremllems 17oz. can • per box 5•• .. USDA Choice Beef-Golden Premium Meats Pantry Fillers Super Floral llffl 1110\ind·llonel .. t ~.Wti Beef Tip Steak ~ lb ~j;J &;;;c11kXi~Roast ~ lb. USOA TN~ll CutTCJP lto4'ftd·I~ per m1ec London Broll lb. SOA IHILol~ ,., ~•oitc Tri· Tip Roast RI. ~htfCloucll per Round Bone Roast 111. USDA Letft C111>n ,.., tcwo1c1 Stewing Beef lb. USDA llfff Plate per CWOIC( Short Ribs I& Wines & Spirits Health & Beauty 1•• ~~·~ic 1• DPortcRoast 1•• D ~Steak 221 D iC~H~ 11 • ~ lttlpM.-Polnt Cod Corned Beef Brisket 12• ~ o."' Fresh Sole Fillet • 79 D Pacinc Oysters Super Bakery Frozen Foods ':. .79 ~.89 per lb. per lb. per lb. •tell 141 :: .18 ·~;Piants ':.-:-4''1· ~P~Prants 1:.~·· .39 Super Deli D ,..,,..._.s7Coolttd Sliced Ham o st;;ctMddar ~ Met!Frarih ~Hormel Wranglers D Kreft Slntlt Sllct Food American Cheese ~ lallttouu ~Jeck Cheese ,.,_ 45 .. ... lor. 49 bll. • ISOcl 47 bot • lor. 49 Oii. a ·~99 Mell 2•• 411. 97 plt9. I lib 1'' p~g. 1'>1b. 244 P'• 24oc. 211 ... ,. • Jo.. 49 ...... ~.99 Home 'N Leisure l 'tOZ. 59 ,_ ... 10011. 51 ,.., . ~.75 ,:: .89 •edt • 49 .59 .i . . ,, -.. ;. ... ... ... :: :: . . . ... ~ I \ I I I . (8 DAil Y PILOT Wednesday. July 20. 1977 Drought Cited In Beef Cut WASHINGTON (AP > -C atUti p}'oduction h 115 been cul back on a worldwtdc basis because of sagging beer prices and drouaht. The Agric ultur e Department, in an an· nual review, says most ot the decline has oc- curred tn the big beer productng countries. like Auatralia, New Zealand, the U.S. and Canada. In the United States. ror example, the cattle inventory on Jan. 1 this year was 199.9 million head, down 4 percent from Jan. l , 1976. In all, cattle inven- tories in 52 selected countries on J a n . 1 totaled about 71S.5 milhon head. down l per- cent. It was the second consecutive year of decline tor the 52- country herd, the depart- m e nt 's Foreign Aeric ultural Service said. "Drought was an im- portant factor in the herd reduction in almost all of the countries s howing de clines.'· said the agency. "In the United States and Canada, where num- bers were down 4 per" cent i(I each country dur- I· ··_Spuds . Please Instantly Who s~ everything that tastes eood and looks elegant has to be made from scratch? Here are two side-dish ideas made from de- hydrated potato flakes and frozen hash browns . They're sure to please summer steak 'n potato lovers. POTATO PORCUPINES 2 tablespoons butter or margarine 1h c up choppe d onion Instant mas h t:d potatoes for 6 servings l teaspoon salt 1h teaspoon pepper 1 cup (4 ounces) s hredd ed Cheddar cheese 1 t a bl es po o n chopped parsley 2 eggs 2 tablespoons water l 1h cups corn flake:. In a small skillet STAnaaaos. MONIY BACK GUARANTll OM QUALITY MIAH I VUtf •olCI Ol ¥f4f IS UNCOHOITIOHALl f W AtANlllO .ZO•llA\ll'OU OtlfOU.MONff WIU 11 Cl41llfUll f ll'UHOIO f -~ ~------~ WILSON S SLICED BACON n 01 ••a llPPl • JVliiitlO BURRITOS 10 U/ l• s12' ~ ,. 45c =\(ti --------~ ~IAlllllllO~ • • VAM • ~ur.11> 79c LUNCHEON MEATS , , 01 ~·c. 1 • us .. ~•OlCH URBOT FILLET llll" '110/IN OOKED SHRIMP ing 1976. unfavorable feed-catUe price ratios have been an important factor in a two-year drop in numben." CatUe inventories in Australia dropped 4.3 percent last year to 32 million head on Jan. 1, the fW.l decline in more than a decade, the report said. The New Zealand in· ventory dropped 2 per· cent last year to fewer than 9.$ mlUfon head. The· two countries are leadillg suppliers of beef to the U.$1 market. The report said that the So¥iet Uruon's cattle "()Hf • SllCfO BACON ~!~ IUI • IOHfllSS STIWMIAT Htr • llOIH<O • IOHClUS Tl••OAST 1HOM,UI WlllON • 11tAITlll,1(Cl IONILUI melt butter. add onion and cook until lender ; set aside. Prepare ins· tant mashed potatoes according to package directions, r e ducing water by 1h cup. Add onion, salt, nutmeg, pep- per, cheese and parsley. Beat in 1 egg (the mix· lure should be fairly dry). Shape large spoon- fuls of mixture into balls. ;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;= ::;;;:;;;;;;;;;•maiiiil HALI' 11&11• Beat remaining egg with water. Crush corn . flakes lightly. Coat· the potato balls with egg mixture, roll in cork corn flakes and place on greased baking sheet. Bake in 400• F. oven 20 lo 25 minutes. 6 Yield: 6 se r vi ng s (12 porcupines>. CASCADE POTATO CASSEROLE 1 tablespoon butter or margarine 'Ai cup chopped onion 1 can (10~ ounces) condensed c rea m or celery soup l package (3 ounces) cream cheese at room temperature 'hteaspoonsalt 14 teaspoon pepper 4 cups Idaho frozen hash brown potatoes 1 cup (4 ounces> shredded sharp Cheddar cheese In a small skillet melt butler, add onion. and cook until onion is tender. In large bowl, beat undiluted soup and cheese together until smooth; stir in salt, pep- per, onion and potatoes. Turn into a l 'Ai -quart casserole or baking dish. Top with s hredded cheese. Bake in 350° F. •ven Cor L bour. Yield: 6 servings. Zip Needed? Don't underestimate the fresh flavoring power of any citrus rind. Add it to rice, fruit salads, pancake batter and salad dressing. herd dropped this year for the first time since 1969, totaling 110.3 million head on Jan. 1. compared with 111.03 mHlloo a year earlier. However, another re· port by the Foreign Agricultural Service suggests that the Soviet Union's cattle herd may be making a comback in 1977. \ r· -- Although the report provided no total figures, it aaid that catUe num- bers on Soviet collective and state-owned farms as of April 1 were ue 3 percent from the same date last year • Drought has forced cut-back in cattle production world wide. LB. ..... GROUND BllF ANY S1ZE PKO. NOT TO EXCEED 30'1• F A 1 BEEF CHUCK ROAST It.ADE.CUT BEEF RUMP ROAST ROUND IONE-IH 59~ 97~ HOUSE PLANT .. ' , .. ' I _...___ --~ ...... .-...... Wednetday, July 20, t971 ~ DAILY P1LOT C9 Kirsh Sweet On Kiwi The .Blues The blues are back' Al least lar1e bowl and n:Ux with sugar rind the kind berry lovers look and marshmallow nurr. Freeze ~leaspoonnutmei forward to. . EnJOY fresh ber· evaporated milk unUI mushy and i,4 teupoon fall ries in these recipes, or use them then whip wltb an elec:lrtc mixer ~~ cup mUk to make shortcake in place or or hand beater until very thick. Lemon Juice strawberries -a timeless sum· Fold whipped milk into Pour blueberries fnto a large mer treat. blueberry mixture. Pile mixture saucepan and drizzle wtlb water BLUEBERR V high in pie shell. Freeze unUJ and about a tablespoon of lemon MARSHMALLOW PIE hard. Cover and freeze unlll juice. Stir ln su1~ and cOOk ber- 3 cups fresh blueberries, needed. Garnish with whipped ries unUl they just begin to bub· rinsed and drained cream and fresh blueberries. ble. Lower heat. A 1.2 cup sugar Yield: 19·inch pie. Mix toeether flour. baking re l jar (7·'r2 oz.) marshmallow CLASSIC powder and remaming lngre· Enjoy on• of lht' r ur· fluff BLUEBERRY GRUNT dlents. Stir in milk into flour mix· rent fruit deliahu in lh11 1 can (13 oz.> evaporated 2 pints blueberr:ies, washed ture until dry particles are Just eleaant · ··Cot"ur • la k I milk and drained moistened. Drop dough by spoor.· c r e m e . . K l w I s . Ba c . 1 9-inch pie shell, made of ~ cup water fuls on top ohlmmering blueber· some t f me• ca 11 c d graham cracker crumbs ~cup sugar ries. Cover skillet and cook !0·15 Chlneae 1ooaeberries, Mash berries or whirl in l'hcupsflour minutes unUl dough 1s puffed. are stnkln1Jy dlfforent blender at low speed unlit coarse-2 teaspoons baking powder Serve dumplings with berries ~it.or ad n•vor. Tb•y ly chopped. Place berries into a 2 teaspoons grated orange and sauce, thick cream or yogurt. , :;u:'iw.U ~a liq•eur ...-~~~~..:......:.:...-.:.~--=~__;_~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~--~~~~~~~~ .;~;;::~ S . . ch ,. our m_ eat d c~ta1e cheese h 11 ~~~~~~:r:~~.d w~t lower prices over~ • ne i large <s to 1 In· ·, Grade A Frying ,. "" ·,~ .. s > heart-shaped ~~h? • i~~:r.i~:!~:i.·::: ... Chicken A 70 Oscar Mayer . -mi.""" -·------ w el::i:~cc!~:!~~!:t . WH~LEBOOY SOUTHERN. L . Sliced Bacon 149 Boneless ~:f!,~~e J~a~~~T1/~~~ ........................ i-La. PKG. _: Round Steak99 cr"am, beating until 1r;;~~~~~~~~~·li'~~~-:_ . BONDED BEEF .........•..• LB. v~1'Y smooth. Pack . ..., ------ c b'eese mixture into ;··. . "'1"b1' . :P.. ) b&§ket or mold. Cover '.~ with waxed pa.per. Pface basket or mold ott a rack in a pan and let d1~in several hours or oter n ight in the refrigerator. Unmold on a serving plate. il>eel and slice Kiwi Fl'luit. Arrange half or K~i Fruit slices around mold. Combine r emain· ink Kiwi Fruit slices with s t rawberrie s; sw1nkle with kirsch or liClJ.leur; ch.ill and serve with the mold. Makes 6 sqtvings. ·Note: If s w eet er dessert is desired, 1h cup c onfectioner's s ugar may be added to cottage clteese before beating; fruit served with the mold may a l so be sweetened to taste. This dessert brunch treat is often served with Fiench Croissants. ; > . • Melba Maybe? Summery fruits take well to this poached melba. Use fresh peaches or nectarines. Simmer them in wine, then serve them chilled with r aspberry sauce and cream. POACHED SUMMER MELBA . 2 large peaches or ne~tarines • 'h cup dry wh ite wihe or uncorked cham· pagne 1h pint whipping er, am • ~ cup raspberry preserves ~ 1 ounce Kirsch • 1.4 cup toasted allbond slivers 1 tablespoon ~dered auaar ~ lf aJve an.er peel !Milt. Simmer 6-i minutes In w1'ne; drain . Stir ra19berry preserves into wibe, then Kirsch. Heat lh(otJgh. Place a peach o ectarine half in each se ing dish. Top with m led raspberry sause. W ip cream with p dered sugar and· er n each serving with enerous dollop. Top almonds. Serves 4. Cross Rib Roast LB 121 Porterhouse Steak u.208 IONnrsa 80NOEO BEU CHUC.K . .. flONOEO Bttf LOIH . • • • ........ !-!!P!r~~d ~ib Roast. t• 139 !-c!!f !!Rd ~I~ ~.~~ak L8 1'' 7 -Bone Chuck Roast lB sac T -Bone Steak LB 111 80NMB OEEf • BONOEO BUf lOtN ~~t~!Y!!l!!! LB 271 Hoffy Sliced Bacon 1L6Pl(Q.1 39 7 -Bone Chuck Steak lB age llONOf.O HEP Boneless Stewing Beel e0f<o£O 1tu . !!!L~P!fc~r.ibs Chicken Breast Quarters OR L(G OUAllTlllS I ~YING . te.121 le 68C~ l8 79~ Boneless Rump Roast BOND£O't!t u S•flL()jN cur . LB 131 !!es!'.!!~~fE~L~!ak L• 1" !!~0~!!~!iP Roast Ul 131 Fresh Fillet of Sole ll. 219 _ ~ ~cy ga111esrjust low everyday prices. · " · . Packaged & Conned Frozen & Doir!J . HoJserdd & Pet R-qduce ~ -~t lady lee Grapefruit ~!~J .. Lee Ice Cream ·-, .. ggc Dove liquid _ • z ~N~~TURAL 46-0Z c"f.: 45 0 £~!.~Ilion Non Fat Milk ~" ::: 3" ~~~~.r.~~~2,0Z .( 8 go .BUN 19c ..... LB.39c Macaroni & Cheese Oh Bo~ Peppe~on~. ~_lz~~ 31·01~ 175 Spray N Wash Stain Ramo1ero"'1211 Dinner . ~ z3c !r.~1~lo!~~~.~1y Oran'~· 0.~~~~41c co_m.at .. c.ieansir · .... ·· ~ .... JJ~OlL ~i~i~E~~~~•:.~ eox ".,-;:, 55c Parkay Soft Margarine "., to: 59c A;aX Li~~id Cleaner ·:::~.31~: Ranch Style Chili Beans ·~ol'C 2ac Delicatessen White King Water Softe~.~~:;. 79c Underwood Deviled Ham 57c Swift Sugar Zee Paper Napkins !~a~~!i~~u~.ookies ~.::~ 79c. · ~~.~.~ Ham,.~La~~ 319 "' ,.~.; 111 Harve.st Day Tomatoes ,8 0, C• .. 39c f.!fomer John Bologna ,, Ol c;:: 97c Harvest Day Catsup.. . . .. 0i~ 43c ~~':'!'!r John Ham Roll •lOl ~age E~!~!'t~s ~areal _ ·-· ... $.()~~ 92c Buddigs Sliced Meats 502 :C 75c ~.!~. Mo~.t~ .. Pe~r. ~~.!!~ ~01~ &Qc ~v~!~~,·~ .~heese ~~~-! ... •OZ !: 25c Del Mont~ sw.~t ~~~~~.h, 1a.oL~ 79c ~m~~!X!~~.~uits H~n~~~. -~o.rk ~. ~ea~~ )•·OZ~ 4 7c . Stokely Cul Green 8~~<~•-oz ~ 330 Uquor. Beer & Wine !~l!.~~I ~~quila _ OT •ll 411 ~!l~f !~o---E ~r::'n 111 ~~~ ~-··· •. _ .. -tV11-ot.aTLS 111 UOyo11 ~ AVMMlf OHl.'I' Af ITOllU WIT>! VOVOll O(l'T • .... .., ................. ...... ............... ____ __ ..................... . ,. ::= '::r.=t-=: r:-.r :in--- • Purr Cat Food tPl ~ 17c Luck~ Discount Center lllllSMlOW •v• I •l!~f ar OtSCOUNl CC"1CRS ·a....· .. ·•*"1111 1•1 I. INWIM'r DL I (I~ Frozen Yogurt A Cool Quench Whether uaing your own yogurt blend or soft· frozen blends available at some counters to take home ln pints or quarts, here's a selection of snappy coolers, slushes and sou.mes to help in- . s pire otber yoiurUdeaa, . . . II you don't want to add alcohol to this, \I.Se about a teaspoon of erated orange rind instead: ST&AWBERRY-OllANGE SLUSH l cup atrawberry frosen yogurt 1 cup oranie juice 6-10 fresh strawberries 1 tablespoon orange liqueur Blend all ingredients together in electric blender and refreeze about 30 minutes for a stif- fer conslstency. Or, serve with straws, and garnish with mint sprigs. MANGO· LEMON SOUFFLE 1 cup soft.frozen lemon yogurt 1 mvelope unflavored &elaftn 6 oances manco nectar (canned) ~~femonor (lulel'WL 1 tabfespocio arated caDci{ecl gincer Heat adatln In Juice over low flame until~ solved. Pour into blender ccctaiDer with manao cbullks, Yoeurt. linaer and dtnaa ~Blend th~. Befr-ene for 1 bour. Servea~ . "' APPLEGNNAMON nozEN NOG 6 ouneea vaollla li'ozen )'OIUlt leQ ~teaspoon cinnamon Dash nutmeg 1 cup pure apple juice 4 ice cubes (optional) r .. " Sandwich rolls: a homespun touch. 1 ripe mango, peeled, pitted arid cut up Blend all ingredients to1ether in electri'.t; blender. lee cubes wlll make it less ol a llUah ~ 1 .more ol a smoothie. Serves 2. Picnic . ·Rolls ~'Round The casual season ts here -picnics, beach parties , outdoor barbecues -and if liv- ing quarters are small it's a good time to get together with friends in the great out-of-doors. Hard rolls make a perfect sandwich to take to the beach. Split and toasted over an outdoor grill they make a de· licious sponge for mop- ping up juices from a s izzling s teak or barbecued chicken. They don't crush easily in knapsack or bike basket and there's plenty of c rus t to support a generous sandwich fill- ing. For stuffing on loca· tion, bring salami and cheese along with a bot- tle of wine. ONE BOWL HARD ROLLS ·Ph to 51h cups unsift- ed flour 2 lablespoons sugar 2 teaspoons salt l package active dry yeast 3 tablespoons sof- tened margarine 11/2 c ups hot tap water 1 egg white (al room temperature) Cornmeal 1,2 cup water 1 t easpoo n cor· nstarch In a large bowl thoroughly mix 11/:J cups • flour, sugar, salt and un- dissolved yeast. Add soft- e n ed m a r gari n e . Gradually add hot tap water to dry ingredients and beat 2 minutes at medium speed of electric mixer, scraping bowl oc· casionally. Add egg white and 1 cup flour, or enough flour to make a thick batter. Beat at high speed 2 minutes, scrap- ing bowl occasionally. Stir in enough addi- tional flour to make a soft dough. Turn out onto lightly floured board: knead until smooth and elastic, about 8 to 10 minutes . Place in greased bowl, turning to grease top. Cover ; let rise in warm place, free from draft, until doubled 1n bulk , about 45 minutes. Punch dough down; turn out onto h g btly flour ed board. Cover; let rest 10 minutes. Divide in half. Form each half Into a 9-inch roll. Cut into nine 1-incb pieces. Form in to s mooth balls. Place about 3 inches apart on greased baking sheets sprinkled with cornmeal. Cover; let rise in warm ~lace. free from draft. u ntil doubled in bulk, about 45 minutes. Slowly bleod remain· ing lhcup_water into corn· starch. Bring mixture to a boll. Cool slighl!Y. Wben ready to bake, brush each roll with cor· nstarcb glaze. Slit tops with a sharp knile criss· cross fashion. U desired, sprinkle with aesame or· J>OPP1---. Bate bl a V«Ybot oven <•so•F.> about 15 ; mtnutes, or until dOM. ; Remove from ba1dn• : sheet& ad cool OD ,,Uo : rack;a. JlakeS 11,ii dosen : rails. • . • ~In a Pickle? Groceri~s @ ~ft~~ .. oz. ...... 48c Frozen roods ~ MenuM•k.,. \lY ~· Ollll* WIOOft OOm. ~ Veo,.-0."'9.Aa.Wle • w-. .... 6 ,-® Chicken Chow Mein 89c . a-~ Ot1tMll Dllww • 1S GI. •••• @ ~'!!..~~ .. ~~~ ........ 59c ® ~·~!~.!~~~-~~!~ ..• Summer Favorite HUNT'S PORK & BEANS ' No. 2'h Size Can 49c 0 ~~!.k.!i!~~! etnr •••••••••••• •111 ® ~~~~"!.'!~~-............ •1• 0 ~1~~~~,~~~ ......... s411 ® R•nch Style Beans 29c 19 CR.~ •••••••••••••••••••••••••••• C !!-e!! ~~1~ Gen •••••.••••••• &SC 0 ~~~~s !.0!'~~~~ ........ 45c @ ~=~ ,!~~~~."~ ....... 37c @ HUNT'S TOMATO ~~~~~-~ ...... ····· 799'_ .. ,\ . ·~~ ·. 0 Instant Breakfast 93c, ·~ . Heritage House Asal. • 6 peck . . . • . • • \ . •, , ·,., r) ~~~~~"~~aP~~ o~.a~~ ... 77~ ,~ '. _ . ~:, ~~·..,., \[~,·~ Cool Down Your Summer With ~ool @SEVEN-UP -~~~~. ~~ .. 4 i*1 : [~~::~-~-~--:·'SO<e1c Plain, Meat, Muatwoom, Merlnlra 15.SOZ. ® ~~~=··~=-J ......... sac @ ~~~G~ ~~ ........ 4~*1 0. Potato Chips 73c Harnage HouM Rig., Dip, BBQ 8 OL •• • Heritage House HAMBURGER OR HOT DOG BUNS ·-::--® 35c io's ®MINUTE MAID LEMONADE 6 Oz. Can 23c ·® ~!'~oc!'.:!!~ or ..••••••• s112 @ 2:='? ~l!k!o_ ~~:!~ ... 54c ® ~~z e. -:a,.":. ...... •175 WESTWOOD Q1cE CREAM 9fte AM. ~ • HeN Gallon ......... ~- @ !~~~"1'o ~~;»!'~~~~······ .8~ 0 ~~L:~~.~~~ ........... 25c 0 ~~~~~~ Grepe • 6 Peck ••.• 3gc New aummer hour• for '°"' shopping convenience ALL STORES NOW OPEN ·a A.M. MON.thru SAT. Check your local atore for 8und8y hours. Mr. Fazio refuses to be undersold ••• and that includes Alpha Beta, Luc~, Market Basket, Ralphs, Safeway and Vons ••• Basket for Basket. Deli-Dairy @ COLBY LONGHORN ~~,~~~~ 9 OJ ••••...••••••. 99c ® ~,·~ ':!r~ f {~~~ ........... s11e @ !~: ~ll~~~m ~~~~~kg .••••• 75c 0 Flori da Citrus Punch 79c Sunny Delight 64 oz • Q Salad Dressing 79c Heri1ege Houle 1000 lllln<I • 16 oz Jar .. SLICED · @~~~~~N Wrapped C'-Food 12 en ..99c Health & Beauty Aids DIAL VERY DRY 8 ~~g~!~~~99c Q ~ ~~~~.eou~ ............ 97c 0 ~~~0• !!~'!'1e~! ................ 73c 0 ~:~~ .. ~~~~~t~ ........... 77c Q ~!. "!~~!1o,~l~t.~~ ....... 99c 0 ~~~o6n~:,·~~g. °' 100 •... 79c 0 :!·~ ~~~~.~~~~ ......... •1 57 0 !~~:S~°"C,!.~~OL ....... •1 08 Wines and Spirits @ HERITAGE HOUSE ~~!A~'!~.~~ ..... 5gc .. Grocer ks ® ~·.?:.~~~~ ... ··-····· ...... Ut. ac ® ~r~~~-~.~~ ............ 6 i 29C ICEBERG @ ~,!~Us£'L. .......... 3 §S1 r' ., @ Vine Ripened JUMBO CANTALOUPE & ....... 19c Favorite Lb. ... ~. ...ii 0 lt.redd9d cabbage ~ tr«?*: a.. ..................... t.b. ~- BELL 1 Q PEPPERS 3ne ,.,., of • .. • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •• • • • • • • .. • v- ...... Groceries 0 ~e ~c!~~~h Bot •••••••••• 8.1 c Q Ch.-cake Mix S139 Hew~ No Bak• • 1'.8 Oz. ••••• 0 ® ® 0 Aurora Tluue 47c Allt. Colors a Pl'tnts • 2 Roll Pack •••• !:.'! ~!'!'~ Rcff ••••••• sac !!:.t~!~t Foot Roi •••••. 59c Llfebouy Bath Bars 28c 50z.8er .......••••...•........ : .... @ f!'!'~.~·~1:'.~.8.~ ........ 31c Meats Short Rlba 59c .... Pt9te ................. -••••••• Lb. ~ ~ Freeh Made ® GROUND BEEF 3 lbe. 49~ or More .. __ ftOl-30 ... .... :.ii -~t!-:»!~~.!1!PC::~ .. lb.•1• Center Cu~ Chops s11• Pon l.oln ••..••••••••.••••••••••••• Lb. Meats ·o eLADEcuT CHUCK STEAKS Value Trimmed Beef 68~ ; I .. ;, t ' ), Wedneeday, Jury 20. t9n DAILY PILST £J l Kids Hooked on Summer FUn Getting ready to go after the proverbial whopper are Kent Morinishi, above, and Chris Lewis, right. Dally Piiot Photos by Richard Koehler It •• a warm and luy after· noon at Fountatn Valley's Mlle ScaiaarePark. 'l'be ripplln1 blue lake was at· tractlna fl1hing tackle-laden children to ite edge Uke a magnet drawl.ll8 metal filln11. Three teeh•led girls, perched on lak•hore boulders, basked ln theaun. A gray-halted woman. reclln- ine on a pink blanket, spoke soft- ly tQ her black poodle. A 'mlddJe-aged couple, in matching Bermuda aborts, be1an yet another round of backgammon at their picnic ta- ble retreat. The mid-summer idle was punctuated only by the plaintive quacks of ducks begging for bread scraps and the oc- casional whiz oi fishing reels. The fishing session of the Foun· tain VaUey Recreation Depart- ment's day camp was underway. "AU riiht.. sbe caught a big one.'' yelped a tee-shirted boy. "Good catch " cried another boy as a girl ~led in her four·· inch whopper. Cancer: Conserve Energy By SYDNEY OMA RR ' THURSDAY, JULYZl AR.JES <March 21- April 19): Lie low -no commitments. Wait for additional information. Time is on your side. Those who want you to sign up or Join up are likely to be misinformed -or could have ulterior motive. TAURUS (April 20- May 20): You get job done -views are verified, you gain added recognition among peers. Accent on work, health, special services. news from relative in transit. articles. Be specific, ob-of one who promises servant. willing to r e· something for nothin~. view and revise. Ability lo graph1caliy il- lustrate major points m oves you towards suc- cess. CANCER (June 21 · LIBRA (Sept. 23·0ct. July 22): Key is to con-22 >: Lunar cycle is such serve energy -settle ~at y~r J_udgment, feel- dow n, get emotional mgs, .1,ntuilion, hunch~~ CAPRICORN (Dec . Z2·Jan. l.9): Your natural talents. abilities are re- warded. Cycle is such that you get promoted. obtain appointment with one who pulls strings, who can authoritatively give orders. breather. second wind .. a r e on the nose_. Older associate, family · Means be direct, in· m e mber makes de-dependent, innovative, m ands. Ride with the confident. tide. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): Gooo lunar aspect coin· cides now with short journeys, notes. Ideas. calls from relatives. ex- pansion of activities. Social life accelerates. Make inquiries. Give full r ein to intellectual curiosity. SCORPIO (Oct. 23·; AQUARIUS (Jan . Nov. 21): Low-ke~-to-Feb. 18): Review "climate" is best -what past, apply lessons had been a frightening learned. Open lines of prospect can turn out to c o m mu n i c a ti o n . be favorable. You get Language barrier is peek backstage -secret o v c r co m e -m ore is revealed. persons are concerned, interested and ready to applaud you. PISCES (Feb. 19- March 20): Shed light on Kenny Wolf (left), Billy Miller Advice Nailed Down D E A R A N N fulfillment he seems lo LANDERS: As a teacher be searching for? and director of a private Perhaps better advice reading-improvement would b~ ''Learn the program, I disagree with tr ade you think will your advice to the 17· make you happy, but see year-old son or coJlege-if you can learn it al a educated parents who junior college instead of wanted to learn cabinet-a vocational school. m aking in vocational Besides your s hop school instead of follow· courses, take one or two Ing his parents' wishes classes ln art, business. for him to go to college. accounting or some You told him to get two other liberal arts area. years of college because 'In this way, you not only it would make him "a give your parents some better cabinet-maker hope, which may keep and a more confident them off your back. but a nd sop h isticated yo u also prepa r e person." yourself to open yoor How can he be a better own shop and enter some cabinet-m aker without other field ii and when practicing cabinet· you ge t your fill of making? How can he be cabinet-making." a more confident person You are going to hear without achieving suc-plenty from your readers cess in the thing HE about that lousy answer wants to do? And as for you gave -so get ready sophistication (whatever to defend yourself or_re· that means>. bow wUI it verse your stand. -B.F. give him the self· DEA.ll B.F.: You are JULY SALE' t_,R ANCI0-0R R f 1ne statialery cama del mar ~ ~ right. I was wrong. I'm not gotng lo alt.empt to defend my self. The answer was a bummer, and more than 1,000 peo. pie wrote to tell me so. Their letters ex· pressed sentiments ranging from "Please Anni)' Landers rethln.k your advice" to s · h .. You gotta be living In a booklet, " tra1g t Dope on Drugs." For each • cave. Don't you know the booklet ordered, send a c o II e g e s c e n e h a s d II bill l l changed? It's no longer a 0 ar P. us a ong, place where kids can self-addressed. stamped e n velop e (24 cents hide out and postpone postage) to Ann Lan· their entrance Into the real world . Nobody ders. P .O. Box 11995, should consider college _c_hi_· c_a_g_o,_I_u_. 606 __ 11_· __ _ unless he wants very much lo go and knows precisely what he is do- ing there." So, I'll take 20 lashes with the wet noodle and call It a day. Drugs? How much is too much? rs pot OK? ls LSD too much? If you're on dope or considering it, get AM Landers 's new TENNIS LESSONS for Women 8 LESSOHS/$12~50 5i19' Up Ni Weetl · COSTAMESA TENNISCLUI -557-0211- GRANO OPENING THE BELLY DANCER A new dance studio • improve the body • expand creativity • feel relaxed • offering classes morning, afternoon & evenings in beginning, intermediate and advanced belly dancino. i 4t1 E. Coaat Hwy.• COf'one del Mer Call to sign-up (714) 731-4574 GEMINI <May 21·Junc 20 >: Creative resources come to fore -you are able lo impress. imprint. lo show that your own styl~ Is best for you. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): Emphasis on pay- ment, collection. protec- tion or valuables. re- covering of lost or stolen SAGITI'ARIUS CNov . 22·Dec. 21): Accent on friends. hopes, wishes, reward derived from business enterprise. Define terms. Improve techniques -steer clear area previously feared .. ;---------------------------------------. dark with doubt. Be firm ·Techniques .Taught /.HUNTINGTON Mr. and Mrs. Steve B1E AC ff. JUN I 0 R Brew~r. ! WOBJlfN'S: The club, in Members also will host cooperaUon with the fire i ·department, Wilf hold a a federal OD luncheon !il "R A i .. noon Tuesday, Aug. 2, in eacue lln e. pro· the home of Sharon Ellis. gram for the public to de· monatrate how lo rescue and revive a drowning S 0 U T H C 0 A S T personatlO a.m. July 21, JUNIOR WOMEN : 22, 23 and 24, In the Hunt· Members will meet at ington Center Mall. 11: 30 a.m. Saturday, Ju· ly 23, at the home of Mary A.an Ellis, Foun- tain Valley. IRVINE JUNIOR EBELL CLUB : A poollide Hawaiian barbecue will be held at 7 p.m. S.twday, July 2J. in the Santa ·Ana home of ALPHA GAMMA DELTA: Betty Yeoman 8rlffett of Newport Beaob atU!nded the hi· ternati0Jl8} convention at the University of Oklahoma. Mn .. Brl!tett, who waa bonore~ by the Los Angeles area Panbellen.lc as Alpha Gamma Delta Woman· of-the-year ln 1976, is vice president of Province XX. Correction • The July 11 Stoc'y on· amyotropic lateral acleroets (AU) incor4 rectly U1ted Mrs. H. Eames Bt1bop .. de· ceaaed The Daily ~ 'reareta the etrpio. in belief that you are strong, creative and h~ve right to a second cbance. 6 .., 0 I> ANNUAL 20°/o OFF DECORATING SALE! I Sears I New. .. Exciting portrait backgiounds ... pleasing pr.ices, too! . '¢ 99 ... ,... ... -, .. . . . ~Salad 89 · Dressing ( Seven Seu Green Coddeu-16 oa 8-B-Q Sauce ~ • 79c ~., Hot, Hickory ••• 23 oz size lriquets 20ll.uc •• s211 ~ Bard and dean-burning Springfield Coca Cola ~ • • • ggc • Oii alOOSE TU OI FIESCA! ~ tart. of sil I oz. cans t Tomato J 3c : 'SAUCE Saucy Springfield in 8 oz can ·Nucoa •••.•••• 55c The margarine you know! 1 lb ctn Pickles ~·. • • &9c Kosher, Polish, ~o Garlic! 24 oz Ice Tea Mix •• $129 Lipton, with lemon! Pkg of 10 env. : Clamato 59c ·JUICE .. The zesty drink lrom Mott's! 32 oz Peanuts DRY ROAST • • sgc Planters' snack time favorite! 12 oz Zee Napkins •• 29c 'Luau colors-package of sixty Rice-a-Roni . . • 39c {;hoice of Golden Grain v&rieties! . Soup • NOOOlcs • • • 49c Marachan Beef, Chicke.1, Pork! 2Y2 oz . t:::E~sssc Tuf 'n' Ready Colors, printa! big roll W. k $125 IS DmRiDT •••• Liquid get.s at the dirt! 32 oz White King "D" $169 The big 84 ounce package for value • Paper Plates •• ggc Sprinir!ield-9 inch-pkg of 80 Cat Litter • • • • 49c 'Prize-to lb pkg •.. kitty will use it =·cAT FOOD SY~ 1 ( • FIE If la MS-CIT ta SAUi UY-• 111'1' F1ICET 111 IU! wni:tii .... EVEIYTlm YOU 1111, .._ 111 mwDS -Fl&-FOi 111 aid JOUIUY. IT'S l TIE FOi DJOYll 111 GOOD lit -llHT • YOll OWll IACK·YAID! --· 'DBllB KllBEll-----. ~Y:£.l ............ $27! UC Ill I.GI cur OR .. s2•• 1Dlll llS.D.A. CIOICE Ull •••. •. • • · . •. UC .. LOI arrS Of . s2s• FRESH EASTERN PORK • • • • • • • • • • • • • Chuc:k Steak CENTERcur ••• ' ••• :69~ You can enjoy economy at the cook-out! U.S.D.A. Choice beef'. of coune •. J ,, Split ·Broilers CUDE"•" •••••• 69~ t ~". ~ Halve& ot plmQP tnea~ ~ad tmder! ••• with giblet.a Chopped Steaks ...... am 5 1~ Does not exceed 16ft lat-3 ~lb •• • • t. bulk~ ~ • • . . . . . Ground Beef WNCRll) ••••••• 51t' , lt11·be juicy and tender for 'burgers! Not to exceed 22% fat content. M h• Mahi ' s12• a I ••••• • They'll uy .. Mabalo" l« the ~ I · Ocean ,Perch ••• s121 Taf;1 fill•ta ••• f.relh ftaleD f« U.... CRAB LEGS ' Delicioualy meaty! Alaakao crab Halibut Steak •• s3s! Center wt &om Nortbena fiab Fillet of Sole •• sr! FrellJ tlUeta ••• .ow &eJWa eote : lAIGOSTllOS~ &tn ,_, l!llitJ ... Top Sirloin llt11k~::12.11. ~i They'll love it! Listen to tho si~~·· be tmnptod by tho...,,.., then be delighted by the ~' ·.~ ~:--! Loin cut ot beer C, ~ s2•~ . Make it merrier·. witfl Margaritas! · TAVERll llX . f PBllll lpaP11 llJ11 '·~~~1~Jl 1: ~ · ~~ ...... 59c • Dlmttnaa ; ..... o.11 s4n s..~ I There ·s so mucb meaty goodness on these taete-tempters, that you'~l'Want to be prepared to serve t!bcorw! · -' SAVE $1.00 ON • Top Sirloin :r . s25! Loin cut of U.SD.A. Choice beef :.. J · 1 Bone· Roast • 89£ Chuck cut of U.S.D.A. Choice beet 0 Bone Roast • 99~ , • Chuck cut of U.S.D.A. Choice bee.i ... BONRESS ROllED 8fU $ ., ""A9 · ROAST cJ .•• Chuck cut ehoulder clod! ~ice Sliced Bacon •• s1 2! El Rancho's thicker "ranch style" SausagenAUMmu • s1 2! We make it the "old wodd11 way! We feature MDk-Fed Vear • Tbe real tlliC ••• to be san! TURKEY $J39 BREAST • Rfcb's Grade .. A"! (wldl wllc ,..._, Super Fresh Produce !!~~!!~1'!!~!~~!9£ • ! ;=::e, s7 9•: Sh rt R•b $169 El Ranchos' 86 proof! 1.75 liter 0 I S •• •• • • T H.gh . ss•• en 1 ••••• Bratwurst •••••• s 12! Save 60c OQ straight whiskey-Qt. • Pork, our own v,aJ. ~· : I • • • Vodka or .Cin ... s311 Our own .-Holiday 'l'im_.\..-Quart . Choice Beel! Boneless. Jean, tender ... ., ,.. ,_ Riti cut of U.S.D.A. Choice beet LONDOI SJ g9· ·· BEEFEATER , . BROIL • . .. · :...-;J:-·s 1549 1.JSIW • • Boords Gin ••• sg9~ It's sin & tonic weather! 1.75 Jfi' ! · Scotch.... . . s41~ Get out the IOdlil Fifth ~ ·~~OOd for your faw1.U•"-rt ••• extn1 fan<'y quality from the 'ireat Northwe11t! 1201.. t.tt. Red Rose Wine s2s~ Ntw deliiht Crom Gallo • A • .LS um_;_ ~ Frozen Food ·nners ....... 59c ~'~F~!~. :"...:i ~ !f I 1 LI ST $7266.00 SAVE $1100.00 OUR PRICE s5495 OUR PRICE ------lEASltiG? COMPARE OUR co;EETA~ DIRECT AND SAVE .. FORD. GM ITIVE RATES ON ·CHRYSLER A CARS AND TRUCKS MC WE LEASE All MAKES AND MO. _ · DELS LTD 4 H . '75 FORD LTD 4 DR. va. auto trans .~ctory air. power steering & brakes. heater (1J5142) Stk. #2894 VS. auto. trans . factory air. Power steering & brakes. radio. heater. (853GPCl Stk. •8648 , SURPnVAH va. stick shift, 1ad10. heater. mag wheels. Port holes. (04641Pl Stk. #2913T - SAVE WHEN YOU BUY-SAVE WHILE YOU DRIVE 4 speed transmission. front disc brakes. rack & pinion steering. bucket seats. cut pile carpeting. mini console. electric rear window defroster. steel belted radial ply tires. wheel covers. 2.3 liter 2V engine. front & rear bumper guards. Stk. #1060 Ser. #187325 NEW 1977 FORD MUSTANG II Hardtop 4 speed transoi1ss1on. contoured bucket seats cut pile carpeting sound 1nsulat1on package gauges. wheel covers. wts/w tires. PoWef rack & p1n1on steering. power front disc brakes. tinted glass frQnt & rear bumper guards Stk #0929 Ser. ::131428 OUR PRICE 53929 NEW 1977 FORD ·PINTO 2 DOOR OUR PRICE 53292 NEW 1977 FORD MAVERICK 2 DOOR SEDAN Cloth & vinyl seat trim. carpets. lockable glove box. flipper rear auarter windows. drip rails. wheellip mouldings. 250 CID engine. automatic transm1s:.1on. wsw tires. power steerrng. oower front disc brakes. front and rear bumper guards. ttnted glass complete. Stk. #1360 Ser. #167208 OUR PRICE 53995 MEW '77 FORD F-150 CUSTOM STYLESIDE PICKUP 300 C10 E!flS11ne. chrome front bumper. custom decor group. amp & oil .pressure gauges. automatic transmission Power steering. earner spa\'e tire slide out. dual bright swing lock mirrors. tinted glass. cigar lighter. eX1ra ooohng radiator. left handed frame mounted fuel tank. Stk. #T1383 Ser. ;rY86287 OUR PRICE '77 FORD LTD II 2 Dr. V8. auto. trans .. air cond .. oower steering & brakes. radio. heater. vinyl roof. Remainder of new car warranty (658RSD) Stk. #P2917 54991 · '74 PINTO STATIOM WAGON .4 cyl .. auto. trans .. radio. heater. air cond .• luggage rack. (528LXHJ GRANADA 4 dr.. 6 cyt . auto trans.. fact. air. PoWer steering & brakes (678LPHJ Stk. #822A DI DAI y l'tl.01' * . "1aLIC Nones ............. CM\I O.lly ...... 1~·· Ill .•• ,, "1M.IC NOTICE • \ PUBUCNOl'ICE PUBLIC NOl'ICE PUBUC NOTICB PlJBUC NOTlCE F PIJBUC NOTICE I'm•• P11bllslltd Ot..,.. eo.t5t Dally Pfi.t Jul., lO, t7, Ml Allt. 3, tO, 1m ,, .. ,; PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOJ'ICE PUBLIC NOTICE l'ICTITIOUS•UllN851 NAMI: STATl.Ml:WT Tiie loffowlng perten Is .... Ml· .-~s•J~eRIOR POOL se11vlte. 1021 Tllltr w..,, torona o.I MM. CA. 9UU J•rnes Wiiiiam ¥cltft, 1011 Tiiier w..,,c-••MM,CA.'268 • Tiii• lluSlnns Is <onc!UC\ed DY ... In· dlvlclU.I. J .W.MCKH This st•toment was llled with •• County ci.n. o1 Or t11111 CounlY on ""'1• Pubfflhed 0r""911 co.st Delly Pllol. J-2', .... July .. la,20, 1fJ7 I Znt-11 I ... 1 • J . ~~!!!.~~-~~••••••A J ~c:'!!!!.'::~~••••••• I Wedneedax. July 20. 1171 * DAILY PILOT D3 ~.~.~ ...... ~~!::~~.~ ....... ~::.~~~~ ....... Gt•ral 1002 Gttwral 1002 ~~!.~~~.~~ ....... ~:.~.~ ...... ~.~~....... ........... ,_We o..-r.. 100 Gttter.e 1002 G .... ,.. 1002 .............................................. G....... • 1002 GtMral 1002 G....... 1002 .... :;;; .......... ;c,·oi .........•....•....... ........•.............. .............•••.•••..• •·•·•·········•················•···•···•······ ....•..................•...........•. , ....... . llYIMI TlllACI-OC!AM VIEW lA>Ok out at lh~ rnlllng l'a<'tft('. uvl'r verdant a r~en yu rrl & throua h beautlfoJ. rull &frown Plnl"': you ' ro 111 a ca.rclrcc: world. u part from Jl<'Oplu & tram~. 3 Bdrnv~ . 2 baths: im ma('ulale & fresh as • d..ui.y. $162,500. OPIH DAILY I ·I I 0 7 S•INADI Tai. 673..4400 llAillJ()lt MIWPOa'r Hlt•H'fS IS NY SPECIALITY Jobo Sur Alt. T»-3020 STIPS TO HACH Sl4,to0 N e wport Boa c h' Dt-cor•tora drt111m. Cozy wood 1raloed llvlna room wllh Swodillh firepl11Ctl. Bulchtir block cuunte r top In thll f$ourmet kitchen. CoJy hidHway mBJl.cr wanii with mlrmred wardrobe Two more apacious bf<lrooma, custom sun d~k. knnla, awlmmlng & boatlna hclllties. Uon't be too late. Call now7S2 1700 lll'IN Ill 9 •fl S IV"I TON ri< t 1 R·2 3 BR.-$62,500 A great estate starter! 3 Bdrm. & family rm. with space for an additional unit. Located in good rental area. ~ BR. & FAM. RM.-$72,500 · Newly painted & carpeted, this immaculate 2 bath home is one of the best buys available. Please call for financing details. 759-0811 Fiiut""' . Gleal Wufwl 'BUq. !!!!!!!!0!!1Y!!..,..!!!!!!o!!t!!H!!.taar~!!!!•11•!!!1"!!!....,.!!!!!!!!c!!o.!!!!!!!! [ •'UNiit ~~ .......... !~.~~~~~!'! .......... ~?~~ FOUR llDROOMS, FOREMOST YllW Clever four bedroom single story with · professional decorating and landscapinJ.!, RV storage area and a foremost view of Newport Beach, the Back Bay and beyond. This Unique Home is located a few doors from the community's tennis, swimming and jacuzzi facilities. It's really fine at $169,900. U,_.l()Uf: fif)~f:S REALTORS*, 675-6000 PENINSULA hom e 4 Or 5 BR, 3 ba. all a menities Lovely neighborhood, a few steps from the beach $195.000. OTHER prestige waterfront homes with pier & float from $385,000 up. Bl LL GRUNDY, REALTOR 341 Boy~1dt•Dr•vt·. N.B 675 -6161 Gflleral 1002 PMbli1her's Notice: • • • • • • •• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • All real estate adverl1sed 2 BR . COTT AGE in I.his newspaper 1s sub $47,900 ject to the J<'cdcral !-'air CHARMING OLDER SPANISH HOME Spacioua 2 sty, 3Br, 2Ba, 2443 East Coast Highway, Corona del Mar also in Mesa Verde, at 546-5990 450 NEWPORT CENTER DRIVE 759-0811 1002 fam rm . blln s, , panoramic ocean Ylew. GeMf'al I 002 GeMf"Cll I 002 •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• S84.soo. tno 722-4364 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ....................... * Ba&oa ..!JJfanJ * I ~. 3 Bdrms .. 2 baths; lge. living rm. + 2 VI Ew _ _ bdrm .• 1 bath apt. Patio, 2 car garage. . $250,000 HARBOR VIEW HOMEs--$179,500 3 Bdrms. & den, 2-story home. 2 Oriented from beamed ceiling liVing room, 4 bedrm, 3 bath, large kitchen. + large dining rm + sep. family room. Laguna Beach. 1-'or Info, call In newest section of this lovely area of Patios. view of South bay. Shown by young fa milies. Lge 4 BR & fam rm app't. only. $275,000 home with huge rear yard. Plenty room for pool, flowers. fruit trees, etc. Near new shopping ctr. pool & tennis cts. Land included. 2239 PORT LERWICK Thurs 1-5 2 1 11 Saa Joaquin Hills Road WIWAM WINTON REAL ESTATE 229 Marine, Balboa Island 675-3331 Housini: Act of 19611 Qwet tree lined street, which makes 1t illegal to corner location across advertise "any pre from par k. Warm & cozy ference, limitation. or living room. f'ingertip discrim1nal1on based on kitchen. Flower filled ~~;~~~~;~, race, color, religion, sex, yard ! A. doll at only ~ NEWPORT CEMTER, H.I. 644-49 IC> 1002 Gteerd 1002 ···········~··········· ••••••••••••••••••••••• IRVIHE or national origin. or an $f7,900! Call fast 752·1700 --------•IGfftffal 1002 GeMral 1002 SUPER LUSK intention lo make any • '11'" 9 ·" ' " 11 '' '' P~I .... POl .... T I -~ m "' ... ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••• ••••••••••••• Large 4 bdrm. & ramily ~i':n~ ;:rJ1~e:~~:-;;a~11;!'~~~ ® ' · 2 Bclnns. +; dining area, 4 IDRM CO HOO HOST ALGIC HWPT rm.; needs family who . • frplc .. bit-in kitchen; ONLY S55,000. REDUCED $5,000 appreciates highly de· secluded patio. Move·in lr bl E tblu!r J This newspaper wi ll not "'-----".=====-condition! $13S,OOO This has to be the listing Scenic tree. lined s 8 e 85 oca· 2 BR Arbor lake Highly upgraded Huge lot - ®herbert hawk ins REAL TORS IHVESTORS, OPPORTUNITY tcHOCICS Lovely duplex located in prime area of Newport Beach. Has lot large enough for additional units. Situated at the end of quiet cul·de·sac street. Room for boat or recreational vehicle. Finest in area. $119,500. GRAI YOUR TOWEL $80,900 Lets go to the beach. Don't let the sun set before you see this super 1 Bdrm condo boasting view of the ocean as · well as Huntington Harbour. Features vaulted ·ceilings , formal dining. 2 balconies. all this and an exceptional in ves tment. LOOK HEllf! $56,950 Charming 3 Bdrm. 11 ~ Batil condo te atures fresh paint & taste ful wallpaper. Warmly paneled living room & dining room. New self- cleaning double oven in kitchen. Han- dy to all shopping & public transporta- tion. GORGEOUS & AVAii.AiLE $118,900 5 Bdrm,. 4 Bath showcase home. Huge master suite, plush carpets. tile entry, boat access, auto. garage door opener. Great family home near all schools. major shopping & freeways. Old fashioned quality throughout. DODGE THE SEAGULLS $67,900 You know how much beach property is worth at this price. Walk ao the beach, schools & shopping from this 3 Bdrm, l 1h Bath. surfside townhouse. Upgraded carpets. brick patio. double garage. built-ins. Hear the surf, smell the seaweed. 18055 MOCJHlla St. FomtalftYalley . 96J.131 I 1002 knowingly a ccl•pt any 673-3663 548-0715 Eves of the month! Seller neighborhood. Charm & tion. Ask:i.og $157,000 VALLEY 640-9900 advert•sing ror r eal moving. has orrered tow warmth rill this home. c. F. Colesworth~ ·----------•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• e.tale which 1s in "1ola COUNTRY CLUB pri ce for quic k s ale . Plush carpeting. Cozy ,. uon oflhe law This E astside Costa Beautiful location. Two fireplace. Sunny kitchen. REALTORS 640-00 0 Reduced $10 500 IRV~ME Houses for Safe Mei.a l·harmcr on quiet , pools plus tenn1s court. Hideaway master wmg. r 11l de sac Jcross from This price you'd normal· Two more spacious &chasi•• Eastbluff Harbor View liills. G:;;.:;••••••••••• 10 •• 0 • 2 • Country Club has big ly see on a 2 bdrm! Bet-bedrooms. Ste pdown 4 BR, 2 ba, dining & Cam. TIBURON, 3 bedrm, 2~~ value here 3 Bedroom terseethlS one! 648-7111 family room. Poolside lot Magnificent vu, ocean, bath beauty. Custom ap- ••••••••••••••••••••••• with boat at·c·l"ss & huge t oo ! Just reduced mtns & nlte llles. 2 brick polntments--comfort-~hady > ard orrered for a ---------i $119,900! Don't wail. Call patios. l a r g e p a t i o s - low. low pnce or S74.!K>O. LAICEELSIMORE now7SZ.1700 '-,liji3928tijejveisl.64ii0··47iJi37iilll convenience-close to CALL S56 26GO 1 Plus acre R-3. includ· Real Es tate CJPf"'"' 9 ·" s ruN m 81 Nt<P II schools and beach. Call ~~t~~:t:~;f~:~ ·~~~~~~TiEs f§;~;;~;~~~?, _Ex_e_c_uti_·ve Hom~ [~fi~~ll 1-;:;.;;;..__;_;~===== 64 0- 6161 single story. 2 bedroom. all crptd. Lake view 2 bath home. Pm·cd for TOASTING $120,000. Let's talk qui c k s a I e. C ALL MARSHMALLOWS terms. ~ COATS& WALLACE REAL ESTATE . INC. OFFICE BUILDING Great Costa Mesa comer . 17 Suites. Zoned air conditioning, reflective ·glass. hydraulic elevator; newly carpeted & draped. $325.000 3377 Via Udo. Newport INeh 673-7300 I 002 Gftlffell IOOZ 751-3191. In front of your huge «;::SEL ECT fireplace on those long I PRO PERTIES winter nights is gonna be ---------1 mighty pleasant. 4 Large $3000. ,_________ .............. «!••······ ········~·············· BALBOA ISLAND *** John Scelso 3049 Clubhoui.e Cr. Costa Mesa You are the winner of two frtt tickets ($15,00 value l, lo Rincjjn9 lros. lanuft & Bailey Circus Aug 4 thru Aug 13 Anaheim Convention Center, 800 W. Katelin Tickets must be e x changed Cor reserved seaL'> at the Convention Center ahead of lim(l. Call 642-5678, Ext 333 to claim your tickets. • * * bdrms 211 baths comple- ment lhis 2·story r ustic c-h a rme r . Bea utifu l i:alley k1lc.-hen to please I.he resident chef. Cm· ered patio surrounded by weeping willows a nd frwt trees. All t his and bei.l Eastside address too' 646-7171 t.,-#lfN I >• ' I •111 ' ,. VA BUYERS $3250. moves you into sharp 3 bl'drm home. Culdesac lot. immac. t yr new. $79.500. RED CARPET 645-3474 GARAG E SALE ad::. in the Daily Pilot bring hap py results. To place )Our The faste..,l draw in lhc drawing card phone West .. a Dally Pilot &12-5678 today. • Cluss1flcd Ad 6 12-56i8 G._rol 1002 GeMrol 1002 .••.............•......•.....................• macnab I Irvine realty WOW! Be the 1st to live i.n this beautiful 4 BR home: 'featuring gourmet kitchen, lg. family rm, wood- burning fireplace, indoor atrium & ex·lg. lot! The Village of Wood· bridge offers boating & fishing on the lake + pools~ j acuzzis & mem· bership in the new Tennis Club being built. Planned activities for the children: $109 ,900. Lila Harper 752·1414: (0 ·75) 642..a23S 901 Dover Drive 644~6200 Harbor View Center Irvine at C.mpus V•lley Center 752·1414 COUNTRY KITCH EH has this large·3 bdrm home'w1th cozy family room. Assume loan. No qualifying r equired. Ready for move-in. Call 540-3666 Wltela11 REAl ISTATI J~~~~~-'-~- MINI FARM 3 Br, 3 Ba, 3 car gar, could be 7 bed. as bldr had eriginally planned. 3 yrs new. Fresh Crwt & vegetables galore . $130.000 GREAT STARTER HOME! This 3 bdrm cnarmer is perfect for the young couple starting out. Huge encl'd back yard for the little ones w /lemon & orange trees Bicycle distance to the beach. 646-7711 OFF Last week's price! Cute starter home! Great area ! Only $52.000 ! Call RED CARPET, 754-1.202 CEHTRAL AIRCOMD SHARP 2 STORY BEAUTIFUL H i g h 1 y u p g r a d e d TURTLEROCK tasterully ftecorated fm· RB>UCED S:Z.000! ly home. Btfl wallpaper, Seller Bought Another S Bednn. 3 bath trilevel home in Mesa Verde. Greatest street in the area. Separate family room with fireplace. Formal dining, fantastic functional family borne. Reduced to $1.35,000. 546-414' ~ COATS&WALLACE REAL ESTATE. INC. Oneorthe lowet.t priced 4 blln Items thruout. 4 bdrm homes In the area. bdrms. fmly rm. Model View of the mountains. home. New dishwasher.•------"---- Owners have bought garbage disposal & TY another home & are very anteMa. Better hurry on motivated. Frml din rm this ooe at only $85,950. & fmly rm. Italian tiled 545-9491 VETERAN HOUSING SERVICE Call your local Veteran CoW1Selor for info. on VA home loans. Call: entry. New cpts. Fenced fr-wl"'l"IM.,.1 ••..,.t1 .. ••• bk yd w /fruit trees. ldeal Q I ru \'?!rt Ui!I ---------• ror entertaining. Call now. Only Sl26/500-ttealEsYite Bkr. s:»-7777, 24 HP.S. 545-9491 ==========:::::::.J!.:::;:=;:=;:=;:=;:=;:=:- $© \\.~lA-ll£2rS• 1/iat Intriguing Word Gam• wiflt a Cltuckle 14,..4 ~, CLAY .. POUAH TERRIFIC DUPLEX Just listed. 4 bdrm, 2 bath, lge family rm, din rm. breakfast rm, room to build additional unit. Walk to the bay or take a 1~ ferry ride to the ocean. 646-7711 CHOICE HORTH TUSTIH This 3 bdrm home has a dining room & sets on a p· prox y,. acre or beautiful parklike setting in the Foothill High School dis· lrict. Priced for quick sale at $89.500. OPEN SUNDAY 1·5 1091 FootbUI Blvd. AESOP REALTY 731-4911 Ask for Don or Helen R-2 ZONING Approx 7000 sq.ft. lot in tum ol cuJ·de·sac. Ideal to build one more unit. Exl.!lting home a 2 bedrm + mother-in-Law or guest rm w /sep bath. Near CORONA DEL MAR DUPLEX Lovely duplex, each unit having 2 bedrooms each. Walk to beach. Priced to Seil. ~ I I '> 1'1. Iii I{ I \ I I 't \ . ~'~I i:o1i: H•l Cor1ii ~fl lie;r ESTATE SALES! 3 Bedroom, 2 bath newer home. Ocean view. On Via Ball ena, San Clemente. Bids now be- ing accepted. Approx v a I ue $95 ,ooo. Try $85.~. 2 Bedroom, fixer on 3rd St. Coronado Island, value ls in the land. EBt.ale may accept bid of $17.~. Super buy at this price. Super fixer on 1st St. in Seal Beach, 2 on a lot. Market value could be $120,000. Initial bids now being accepted. Try $100,000. Npt. Hgts. area on quiet tree shaded streel. Lge corner lot w /room for boat or trailer. Btfl area with lots of privacy. Just listed. 646-7711 • Newport Hts. Reduced to World Wide Brokers 67:HMS Distress Pl'Operty Specialists llUllllAllT S Ol'EH ltOUSC AfAl TY 1703 0<•"9• COlll• MeH 645-9161 OCEAHVIEW HEARHISCHL Tremendous mtnside hm w/4 BR. fam. rm., dining rm .• 3 BA. GREAT VIEW from both levels. Room for pool. Fu II grown trees. lrg. lot. A bargain at $239.000. C:ill OWNER DIRECT 494.2722 or 494·3688. JACOIS REALTY 675·6'70 4.PLEX WOOOIRIDGE Sycamore model. 4 bedrm, fam rm, cust drps, elec gar door opener. extra lge back yard. cov patio, sprinklers. Just listed, hurry. won't last. Call 546-5880 -~~~· HERITAGE • • REALTORS Only 3~!1 yr. old Pnde of Ownersblp units with over 4.600 sq. n .. all un-der a ~ayY shake roof, ..__..;;._~;.;;;;..;...;;;;;;;;;;...;;;;....;=;:.1 alt condlllonih.C; private patloel I LUFFS End lmit on ireenbelt t close to pool. 3 bedrooms, f emily room, format dining. View of mountains by day1 Newp0rt Ught.s at night. Ju1t Uateci pt $147.500. . I T 0 J B A I ~ -·-,, 0 YHra ~o we talked at>out J I I I l!. the patlenoe of Job. Now we · " talk about the patience of --T-1-~-f-O_R __ 1 anyone loolclng -• -. I I' I I 0 Complete ~ <ltudtle quoted • by fotllng In the mbslng ...,.dt ,__..._"""'""..._ ..... __.~ you d.-lop "-lltll No. 3 below. Real Estate Speclallst (Dover Shores/ Baycrest/Westcliff) . ~3 -ANYTIME 1002 ••••••••••••••••••••••• LAGUNA HACH Panoramic Ocean View 3 BR,2 Ba + fam·rm. pool sized lot, greenhouse. d o& run, $Ul9,500, By Owner/Agt 494-1973 CE 110111 BLlllS CD. OVER 50 YEARS OF SERVICE OPEN HOUSES LIKE A PEM'l'HOUSI _..LUFFS .. Two p,t-0ry End Unit. Upgraded OverlOOb Pool & Ramada. 2 Suites & Lge F"am Rm. Now $lS'7 ,500 2'UVJSTA..NOBI·EZA DAtt.yi..s.. PLAN 3 .... OADMOOI .. Turtle Rock Stnale Level 4 Bedrooms, 2~ Baths. Large FamilY Room. Newly Pain t ed & Im- maculate Wrap.Around Patio Neu Pool $129,500. S9S1 SIERRA BRAVO DAILYl.S HAllOll VIEW •tpOITOlllMi>• 2 Sly With 3 L e. Br, 2Jh Ba .• Fam.· R rh .. Cust om Shuttera & Chan- del-ers, Refr1g Included. $158,000. N • ONLY PILOT * WedMtda" Ju"' to ,977 Hot1te1 For Sale Ho.sea,_ s.19·. HcMaMI..,. ScM ' I ' 'l f ••• e. e ••••••• ee e e e e. ee e •••••• ee. e. ............. ••••••• •• •• ............ Hou Stl9 HouMt .... ~ lh9jt W. JHoe••1Pef'S-. HcMl1n,_.59e ,.._..Valley 1014 tW1ii40Rleedl 1040 1na.. 1044 .... !:!.~ ............ ~!.~~ .................... --.. .. ••-•••••• ••••••••••••• •••••• • •••••• ••• •• ••••• ••••• •••• • •• • •••••••••• •••••••••• ••• • ••• ••• • •• •••••••••••••-•••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ....... I 044 Lag11Ra N t 052 ._..,..... leecl I 069 Ca , ... .._. 1021 c--. .. M• t0l2 eo. .. Meta 1024 5u•RPl •••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••~••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• .................. , ... , ....................... ....................... TOWll'fng Trees SUPER VALUE ta0'l'OM00• wALMUTsc;>cOHDO FOOmus atGcAMYOH n... 11.iaa 9.ln"Ound thli newly list· •Br pool home • ..,,000 TUITlBOCIC By owneJ", 2Br, 2.Ba. din 3br. 2~ba. a story, new ._........ .. pe 11~ mod(!I 4 BR. i'a ba hom • antasUlt view of City hgbts & lllll~. lmmcd. OC('uponcy OflM 1UiS, WID & TI4URS ••et. 7.9 P'" 21 MoalO IA Y DR. 6404410 644-4614 lllU rt.. ed beauty. lll•bJy ur,· OPEN l1SE SVN 1·5PM Homeoa ~ ac ln prestite rm, caaual air, call for tJo .. A fC f I n .... -• -...Vt t-aa••r. " k •-'"' p p t • .. 2 o 1 o 9 pa .... me. A , rpc , "'Vol -.. -'" ... laltltMl araded with ceram c Call Marleen 9U·OUI lot, nr 1chls, par .. .. • ".. • ram rm. community fM fashionable CoWltry You can't beat al tor th•• CC.-cent.er. w&Ur con<li· Real btat.e by JlcVay tbopa.4 br. 2 ba, fam rm. eves/Wlmda Po()I. •.aoo. By Owner Club nvtoc with pool. ~•Uc: borne f'ount11ll\ tloner, large cov. patio 1ardea atrium on quiet • -leodl 1041 5.'51-UQ2orm.711158 tenoJ.a eourta & prtvate an rear, parly patio andrnuch more. The best •IY OUA..IR.m It.. Call for appt. 835-1351 ~•••••••••••••••• Open Sun ll·S 1atdellpaUo! You'll love L.Jr11e Nm pus room. 3 fM S74,950 ""All (days). '1~103() <eves> OTT G! 2N7tPelican Way yo or eer(bJf ea me I bc:droom1 or don. e11tma ~l 5800,eves,968 7725 3 Brtnear bch/cbolce loc. llACMC A carp• t..i n I wit h uea, brick flrc-~1-ce . W'llEMetworil Span. courtyd w/foun· CaUfornla Homes 4Br. wit b In co m e WISTNIMt coordlnaCinc ceramic lAU more for $7S,OOO Wn. Ftplc, lots of xtras. 3ba, A/C, den/din. frplc . poulbilltlee. 3 blocka to On golf course; ne-w tilt entry and kitchen BKR.~ 1120. S70,000.S36-0767. Nds TLC. Own/Ail ~an. excellent view. thruout, end unit, 2 formal dining room. SPANISH VILLA 3 MIW TO t••cH S59-ll4'. 552-8481 Open noorplan upper, bdrms., 2 baths. $82,500 ftreplace, wet bar, and Surrounded by towering -pest apt. lower It zoned bqe muter becttoorn native trees, topped Owner, 4Br, 2Ba, la 4 II IY OWNElt R·l. Llke new-stained wttJ) littinl rooml Bx· '"# I In Collforaia'' 211~~t~:~~: ='.;~=~~Vi E:~~~.~.~~ =~~~;; (.;_i;;.imJ Uj ... Qua1··'a,"'laoo. u..... spacious Jivln1 & dining Port Circle, 9§!·2628 Grovovlew. $72,500. Ph .a •057 -~JI. Ge•r• I OOJ Corw .. Mw I OU maM room. Senora pleasing .._df!wlOlt-5Sl·5800 bome, 552·8000 * 49.,.. * • Plac• .............................................. v--...1-R-t-at Cantlna kitchen. lrlng Hncaw 1042 ofc ... KV'W'DOOL n-wtl.. ' ~ .. • '" ai1e muter bdrm suite, 2 ~' ~lish Tudor .-' -P.711-1-tlj .... TO oc•...... .. .. _. ••••••••••••••••••••••• la E-~u Ba l Lo ..... ., 2 !Holl 5An a-••tot)' uecuUve Bandlclo bedrooms & IY OWNIR 4 Ir ...... ~ Y ve-~I wli lo thla 4 ''°° OUA1ut. PftWPOllT •IM" Best Buy Completot.Y remodeled home. BoauUtully de· much a>ucb more. Only EXCHANGE 0 ll'e6--Btookft d 112 bdrm., 2.ba. beach ell quo on an ovenJM!CI lot. A c orated, mir r ors , S7S.ooo. Ask to 1eo it 2 sNlen 0 el home. Lollds ol cbann; B hoD?e near marina. * ILUFFS * NOWI H tJ NT t NG T 0 N tory. pen house beamed cell., trplc •• Good view from deck . ._ amuhlnl 48!tn~uaden dra~s. luab cerpeta. HARBOUR home. Want Sat /Sun 12·5. 4392 -·•-....io.raae+ex•-a a. .. Uahtaandfunctional Od&inalarea.4Bll,3ba. .. pha formal a plus Wet bar ip t.he family -~._ Shoncrfft income units. Any area. Margarita. 982,500. Pb --~t-L • f ll ~ plan make uu. a end wUt. Totally ~ec. Harbo V• huge fam.ib• room with room, formal dining Is R_.. Equlty'62800.Needapta 552-5800 home, 5S2 carpor · I•·• u Y ., ust .. bo (J20) Move-lnready.$149,000 r lew open beams. natural buce. 4 Bedrooms or den, ..,._., with spendable. Not area ore. ~pd.. lloat.. :J!~cparpeletelt~ sii'o.ooo see me. HASTINGS & CO. wood textures apd ~an 2 fireplaces. Covered 146-5573 1uurbiahed wJUJ · _ .... ·TftA~ 6 .. "'5560 H·11 and Jeuy view from patio. $H7,SOO. BKR. ~~!!!!!!!!!....::...:..::.......::...:...:......:..--1 bound. Woodbridge Place Blacay int, draperies & paint. ~ -"'~ I S master suite & sundedc. 540-1720 THE CALLISON CO. model. 4br, Jba. $139,~. ~Y for immediate OC· UDO ISL!. J t .... ""' to Ocean Blvd Realtora 1iu" """'• "'°" .,...,.. cupancy. See today at 3 Bad.rm. 2 bath Lusk ll.'I s ... ,..:; . Artist's Retreat 2.lltNewport Blvd. .....,,.,.., ................ $159,000 4Br. pvt beh-t ennls. ~~l~:e o~~~ll~e!: sus.~644-7211 1'ARDRL Beautilul courtyard en -NewportBch.875-4961 LETTHERIN mfl~brr~ $22SMOwr,Agt.S73-0289 C"'•"R"•, '-·tcb•n counter try with a sparkling 3 br, 1~• • ... D UVIM~ SHIM! IM ,...., ...... .,..,Il~~ SPYGLASS HILL .._.,... ..., "' "#1 lnCalifomia" p, ba home to enjoy. ~ Family rm. with 2 win· ~~ uu l B space galore! Pass thru Choice Fountain Valley 4Br. 2~2ba waterrront dow walls lets t.he enter· 499•2800 Brand new V ew 4 · r, window to full back $849SDOWN locattonwiththebestof home . Concrete h•--tn 1 -M_.•RCHSUMMITll library, Family Rm. paUo. Pantry too, and 14 ---------JBr, 2ba Mesa Verd~ by deck+3S' boat dock. Why UUJlllien ow natural Y ~ OiniDg Rm, Open wknds kit.cheo _dr_awer11. Fioor CHARMING Duple•·, 3 owner. Open daily everylhingfor$82,SOO. setUe for a Condo? Buy indoors to outdoors. C-/Oc ... Vfew Plan B. 2 Bedroom, 2 lM.8'0-17~1 t I h it ~ S3l·5800,eves847-8823 .... ,_ho f -000 Nicely up1raded, & -·r~· ba th . enc lo sedl---------o c e 1 1 n g w e Br, 2 Ba. & l Br. 2 Patios, $84,950. 2911 Royal Palm lnl'I RE Network u..., me or $21..... quick possession possi-l ~2 yr new wood and courtyard $99 ~ HAR.IOR VU slW!lpat.one fireplace in Cl~ to tennis. $162,000 !'>4S-191.811!1rry Purcell Rlty, Sunset Bch ble. 2 Bdrms. & den glass beauty. 3Br, 2~~ ba 8_.._.0· R~ .a. • hv~ room wraps Owner64().7030 -------213 /592·1381,714/846·2848 (couldbethlrdbdrm)2 w /beams. panelurg. ·"'" m;A . PALERMO . aro int.o formal dan· ---------1 BY OWNER Hllnffncl0ttleoch 1040 l-1...-1044 baths ..,.,000 ' View decks. Vacant. 831-9411 4Br, 2~388, fam rm, din ing area: King size CottaMHa 1024 3br l ~~ba.frplc,bltns ••••••••••••••••••••••• .,...,. ·-~· · $l&O,OOO. Own/Agt, rm, fro( lndacpd, master swto w /private •·•••••••••·••••••••••• 548·5082 ••••••••••••••••••••••• · Ownr .,.86 900 drasing room and run ~ ~ -------WARMINGTON 552·7000 75&-03.56 SPUTLEVEL ~~i .. ' . w i d t h m i r r o r e d CAllN FEVER C.tom EfecJance 2 bedroom townbome In .. Charming 4 BR w m2 -------- wardrobes. Humidifier won'l be a problem in with some ocean view. lhegreatdevelopmentof THE · .. · • BA, 16x20 Fam rm By Owner. Lrg cmr lot. a nd electron le air this spacious 4 bedroom, New 4 bdrm, 3 bath Woodbridge. Featuring a VILLAGE · · SOARJMGVIEW w/massive frplc & wet Sbr, 2ba, fam rm . cleaner. Room for pool, 2 bath, carpeted home homes . Mar In a den, dramatic ceilinas. · · . of the Pac1flc from com· bar. 2nd Frplc adds Remodeled klt wtwal. • veielables or both ln col· w i l b m a m m o th Highlands Tract. Canyon fireplace and nicely up· REALTORS tempwood&glua home. warmth to master BR. cab, peg & eroove oak orful pror. land1caped nreplace-PLUSH 28xl5 Dr. at Hamilton. Agent. graded. Now $91,000. Call 2Br, den, frplc, pool. Newly decorated 1 ar re-fin. $189,SOO. ()pa Hae gardens. Indoor laundry cabio-Uke den! Lovely 642-07S8 forappL RanchoSe11t.Joo.,i" $189,500 ady to move olo. SalJSunl..S.MJ.aBi rooftm. TopCoquaUty water East.side location & only MEW LISTING San Luls Rey on golr Fe.Ito Vital R.E. • ~$142,000. so ener. pper water S74•500. Isl come-1st serve• Lite I course. 3br, 3ba. 24 C&U499-~l SPLASHSPUSH ~~::::'~fl!:~£~1~ I&. jQuail ~ ~e~~'i';.a~~~~i~:~~~~ . s847N4u4~E~;o3.B~,~~9n8~~ THE ~---~a·"":. g~~t~~fz:~m: :::;r:,.h· this and the land loo for Plac• 2 patios. park-Like yard. ...,_., ~ ~.-,;~· home in Newport Beac only $175,000. To s~ this Prftft•rti•• Westside 9i7.SOO W. L BIG STEAL ~";.a' watb lar1e s pa rkling and other fine bargain -r-'752•1920 Mors Realty, 642·07S8 1;...\~,av pool. And for your priced homes. call right 1400 ouA1Ln NIWl'Oat ll&CH RANCH REALTY FDR AND YOU DON'T HAVE ,1' privacy a slumpstone now ! H u r r y • l he S&S Resale Specialists 3 SS I 2000 TO BE A TlUEF lo see -------1-0-6-7-• wall. Only Sl.37 ,500. It's a bargains don 't last! Call EASTSIDE MESA DELMAR 4or5bdrmmodels av~il: • the value in t his 4 MiuioftVltjo beauty!Call~llSl Marge Benton. 6'W·6161 SPECIAL lmmac 3Br. 2Ba. dm rm. some w/l>OOls. 968-4602 __ C_U_L_V_ERO __ A_L_E__ BDRM .. 3 BA1ll HOME. ••••••••••••••••••••••• or644·1353 STREET TO new cpts/drps Enclsd Pennln~on Properties Detailed arcbltecture La Mancha Townhouse: ~·HERITAGE ALLEY patio $84.500 Open1---------has a most popubeJadr plan y w /exterior, of wood, Cervantes Model. Xlnl Sat/Sun 12·4. 288S ANZA PACIFIC SANDS Deane 44 one story 4 room 0 N L Palos Verdes st.one, etc. J.ocaUon, view, :lear pool. On one or Costa Mesa's Ln.1131-1340or831·9081 hme.upgraded4Br2Ba. Camilyhomethatisonly Located high up on Call58I-0473 l•-------- widest streets. 2 bdrm heated filtered pool. steps Crom the comrnuni-Laguna's famed Riviera plus den. Walk to shop· -Comer lot. $87.500. 8172 lypoolandafewmoreto coastl'an e w ·ath an BY OWNER. Timberlme SEAVIEW! Thrilling pmg. Xlnt. borne for the 2-2 bdrm, I bath on R·2 l~t. the school. Call now al Hme, 4 Br 2~!1 Ba . Fam oceafl & valley views. ~ COATS&WALLACE REAL ESTATE .INC. • • REALTORS young or retired couple. ~.000. By owner. Will AgtMall~~n Dail>'; 1·5 51,900. 13!7-'~e;s yoCuul vcearndalilve~ inA OOUTSF STAADNDDILNEGBVAJECWK Rm, 2 fflc's, spectacular Just below Spyglass. ---------1 Needs some work but finance. 642-4610 · "'"' · view o mountains. CaU New 4 br, 2 ba, 2 Crplcs. I fantastic home! Great MOUNTAIN & THE BLUFFS 3 Bedroom end unit. New carpet & shutters. ~5.000 Owner / A~ 833·8~Sl Days 644·2148 Eves -------~· EASTSIDE 3BR.2BA Rm for RV or boat Super location VA.LUY 640-9900 ~TILUFF BARGAIN can be a doll house. Xlnt. MESA VERDE QUIET CUL DE SAC areal Call now t.osee this VALLE y BELOW. 768-8916eves. upgrades. $259,500. area. Great invest ment. Calif. Classic. Exlra lrg .iji· ·.: greatfamily home! RED Spacious llv. rm. approx Almost empty! Needs S41Hl614 or768-7620aft.6 And only ,,7,SOO. 545-9491 Very good luck, custom I i v r m . b 1 t n s . CARPET. 7"' .. ·'""" 28 ft. long bas WOOD buijt home l·n the Mesa .... u-v.. rumlly, 3 Br 2 Ba. Completely redone Bluffs landsca......A, cov'd patio. BEAMED CEILI NG, BY OWNER Charming clean 3 Br. 2 Ba, dining rm. new cpts & dfll5, rovered patio. dbl car garage w /Work bench. Comer lot. fncd back yard. Room for boat or RV parking. $63.700. 645-70S4 or 642-0676 ror appt Verde Sect I.on of Costa .,..... Cordova, ·ssxllOx.87' lot. condo, •ingle level 3 Br, 2 · Move in now. Owner will C II p k CENTER FIREPLACE " Mesa 3 Br ram rm & 0 ~... ar Mountain view. xtras. Ba, W/(plc & sunken liv· · · · · he lp finance. Shown ..-SET IN WALLS OF possible guest quarters. .,,, Ope H S t 3 Bdr 1 bath home 9,900. Owner. S81·1749 ing Rm, 432 Vista Suerte. Asking;:.~~800 ~n~~i:;~·529l n Gl~U:s~o:e RANCH REALTY on c~:de·~ac street . ~1tt5~~~:~s ~~e;:~~e~ .___.leach 1069 ~.n~~l-5, $lll,900. ,,. Dr. llB840-2647 S51·2000 Family rm. rprlc, & cen· kitchen has BILT·lN ••• ;:;:-.~•••••••••••••• __:;...__ ______ _ tral air cond. Quick RANGE . o v EN IY OWNER OCEAHFROHT UPPER BACK BAY LACUESTA New Woodbridge Condo I BEDROOM. WALK TO 2 Br+ den, 2 ba. Lse opt, S78 000 TllE OCEAN. CALL $87,500. $500. /mo . , • REAL EST ATE BY 644-4847 or 673-3022. Own . Lovely customized home McVAY. 842·9371. Agt. west or Irvine Ave. Cozy ---------1-~-------- den. New shake roof WAU<TO IEACH Hardwood floors. Good 3BR.38a,greatdesign! value. so call now Too many custom 64.5-7221. features lo llst. won't lasl GRAtiitADA poss~sl.!L POINTS DlSHWSHR. & LAUN· Exclusive Newport Crest Balboa duplex, 4&3 br. "" D R Y A R E A Seashore Real D;tat.e. S39·1125 127°7000 W/WA.5HER & DRYER. condo. Spacious 3 Bdrm., 675.ssoo Opens to LARGE FAM. 2~2 bath, kit c hen -------...-- PRICED TO SElL RM. with wood beamed w /separate dlmng area NE w PO RT c R-EST N l deco ted 3 BR 2 illn """'-belt built &i upgraded carpets• and CONDO ew Y ra • ce g ... ,= er d_Tapes. Excel.lent loca· Reduced Sl0,000. 3 Br, Ba home near parks & home is the best buy we schoob. Chol~ quiet cul· have, offered for only lion & co!'dilion. Must 2~2 BA, wet bar, pool, de-sac. S72,SOO. Call SI 26,500 Fun Price sell. As king $l24 .ooo. tennis, sauna, mini· Try to match this! 3 BR. Lusk $139.SOO Prime St-New paint 1--------•1 CEHTURY 21 long at st10.ooo . by Pacesetter in the Ranch of Irvine. 4 bedrooms, a dlnJng room and family room. Yard has plenty or room for a pool. Hurry at $1.08.900. Call to see. Phone ocean view. B,Y owner. 546-8640 SEE TODAY !!! 675-4958 67J.5S&I $114,SOO. Call548~~7. GONETOMORROW!! ~ VALLEY 640·9'00 NEWPORT DUPLD Steps to surf 2 BR& l BR $1.35,000 I 640-9900 VALLEY MEWPORT CREST J BR Fam rm 211 Ba Gracious living &seclusion Outstanding Value Below Market $129,900 ACT FAST' VAUEY 640-990 1006 ••••••••••••••••••••••• JUST REDUCED to $159,000. .... ORTH Westdff Re.tty (714 )960-S244 or eves " (714)832·0496 OPEN COSTA MESA New 3 Br. tge lot. fully SAT/SUN. Sharp 3 bdrm home in lndacpd. Bro.ker ---------good-condllioo, on a quMt 752-9023 Owner, 4 BR, l ~ Ba. view street. Near schools & lot, close lo bch. $72.SOQ. So. Gout Plaza. This is a SALE IY OWNER 19422 Harding Ln. H.B. oew frHh ·listing. See COLL!GE PARM 1_96;)-..__4_971 _____ _ this one before it's gone. 3Homes Between $79,900 Townhouse. Walk to Only$83,500.545-9491 & S80 .SOO 3Br . 2.bn 1'e'ac h . 2 spaciou s w /many extras . 225 bedrooms, den, 1~ bath. SUPER IONUS· lmmacµJate condition thruout. Spacious J bed.rm and dining. Giant sized family toom. This ls the really neat, bard lo find family home. See th ls before you buy. ffurry. call u• at S4o-US1. .. .._~~~HERITAGE • • REALTORS Wake Forest, 260 Prin· ff1>1. 2\11 car gar. Too RANCH REALTY ceton &i 205 Amhursl. many amenities lo men· 551·2000 83HJ40or831·9081 lion $74,SOO. Owner.1--------- Business at Horne Cute 2 BR + Cam Rm, zoned for business in choice Eastslde loc. $79,SOO. Call S46-8640 ro;J~~ e REALTORS 968-0267 UNIVERSITY P ARIC $94.950 VACANT Exciting Edinburg Immediate move·m on model townhome w /3 b h bdrms, family rm. 2',lt this 3 bedTm, 2 al baths. Huge backyard beach home on cul-de· w/brickpatio&firepil. sac. Shake roof. Fireplace. The works. Waterlront Homes Only S7t,900. Century 21 ._ ___ 931_·_14_oo __ _ Sea Breez.e 913-t708. But buy on Balboa Peninsula, 2 BR, l bd •duplex. veat owuers un-•--.. -----it. XANADU REAL ESTATE. 759-0761 So. Coast Pla1a Walk lo mall! Tri level, 4 br, 3..bath. 1ep. walnut paneled r am rm w /flagstone fplc a. wet bar. Formal dlnlng rm. Upgraded Alld llMWctilah Pool Hme 3 Br, bonus rm. family rm, approx 2400 sq.ft . maint. free back yard. w /custom pool, jacunt, pool aweep, firepll, lte mslr bdrm w /(pie, new upgraded cpta & drps.M42 Pier Or. HB. For safe by owner . 919,900. 714'1~68·9367 Open Rouse 7 /16 & 7 /17. ~aPenlnwla 1007 ··········-············ Bea~ul. on lhe .Bay in the Bal. Stereo wired throughout. Handy bari Lovely large balcony. Air conditioned. Muat .ee to appreciate this condo unit a~ $142.900, 175-1898. V,A T~RMS! Plush coordl.oated decor. EASTSIDE Bkr962-ss11 N_.ly remodeled home, Halecrest by owner. 3 Br, just right for a young Fam Rm, 2 Ba , huge famlly:q_Uiet tree lined fptc. fully cpt'd, drp'd. street.p.rof.land~ca·ping, Beaut con~. $71 ,500. f>lUsb burnt or ange _549-(g'j ___ 2 _____ _ carpet thruout. Large ma•f.er bed.rm w /drese- log rm. All this ~nd much more l Hurry I C'•ll ------~­~ FORESTE OLSON • .... •' •• ~1/t,ua MISSIOMREALTY RULTOR5 98.5 S. CaL Hwy, Laguna HARIOR VIEW! OCEANVIEW A Te1Ta Cota UJe parquet New 3 BR, 2 ilA on r ul· entry hall begins your de-sac, w/paooramic \our thru this pro· view. 190~ ¥acht feasionally decorated Enc~otress. $214,990. 5-bdrm, PLUS family Prine only. 833-2907. room "SOMERSET'' OODBRIDGE · Warmington Twnhae B Plan. 2Br, 2Ba. End unit. $83,900/lse o pllon. Ownr /agt. 642· 1212 _ VILLAGE I Edinburg Model. 3 Bdrma .. large mstr. ste. wltb sittlng rm. Wood paneled Cam. rm .. mlr· rored din. rm. Many more upsrades • PLUS full y AIR CON · omoNED. SHOf''IMG FOR A.PRICE?. Theo l ake a look at Culverdale's Plan 44 . A single 11tory f o u r bedroom. 2 bath home that could uae some TLC. Not too far from t.he ten· nla courts and swlmmin1 pool. Absentee owner nl08t anxious to market this home and plictd it aL a ,...onable •·• \ . . re d hill .... PhoM 494-0731 Price Rtductlon Lovely 4 bdrm, 3 ba. with panoramic ocean \'iew. Price lo sell fast. • LAGUNA BEACH 458 N. CST, HWY. ..... 01 .. RAHCHUVIMG But close to the ocean. shopping and schools. One acre site In San Juan Capistrano. 4 Bedrooms. 4 baths. family room: all of exquisite quality. on a private lane. Sl35.000 3 Monarch Bay Plau Laguna Niguel 496-7Z2Z 131-0136 h 0 m e . N e w w a 11 . Harbor View Mootego by eoverlngs, extensive owner. ~uperb value. used brick patios. Leased ti! 111n8. 4 Br 2 custom wall units & Ba, xlnt cond. By appt bookcases! In illustnous only. Wkdys L~mson . Newport Beach com ( 2 1 3 ) s 9 3 . 3 2 0 7 munity / e v e I w k n d s . { 2 13 ) . 433·211S4: 714~75-5979 HARBOR VIEW Another ol our beautlful "SOMERSET" model homes awaits your ln· spection! Five bdrms, famil y room . 2 fireplaces, profeaalonal· ly decorated ln aubtle earth tones . Great Newport Beach area! WATERFROHT New 800 sq rt Mobil Home, 2Br, 2Ba. $39,900. Space rent $350 mo. 4 yr lse. 67s.JIW. 675.5934 SPYGLASS Best Buy! By Owner . Brand new, view. 2700 sq ft. 4 Br, 3 be. din rm. fam rm. courtyard .,, /foWJ· -GRd yet ClltOther lain. FUUy landscaped & ln distinguis hed Harbor decoT. S2 Drakes Bay. View Homes area! A 4· SZSS.900. ~SS. Open bdrm "MONTEGO" 1·5, 7days. S ~ ed GI with Country Engllab -~-=------ta1n GSS navor . extensive patio & IY OWMEl·4 IR Cedar, aunseta Is sand! ovemanl( ·used brick ea· Lusk ln Eastbluff. Pool Barbecue on t.he deck & try · a soft Interior blend wtsolar he'1ter. Corner wet.ch sailboats breeze of cuahy. camel carpet-Lot. 6'4·1009. by or walk to the beach to / tng. wall coverin1:s &• -;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~ frollc in the 1urf. 3 shutters custom wall Bedrooms, 21,' baths. 2 unlta & formal dining fl.J'e laces. (302.) $210,000 room ! $158.SOO. Attradl•• Pool Home, professJonall)' de· corated 3 Br 2 Ba. Beautiful pvt patio yard. II 1Qual~ Owner transferted. Plaat SlZS.500.. 714-64M178 =~~ U'ICH Ocean View 4br, 3ba, faoi ---------• rm. 2100 sq ft + 400 sq fl _____ .____ B •vcREST !~.l". ll.orafe. Sl.39,SOO. 1"rack or may lease/op· A ..,..__ UOn. Immac. a 'IT old 3 BEAUTY 1.owelt' Br, tam rm In (~~~!!!~~~~ ~2:.::~wfr>u-1e Be U. Ont'° IM thit .,..1 Top «IDd. Won't rtn1 . h L-a• Hill• laotaatle 4·bdrm ramlly tut. Oalf Jobi\ Vuit.n ,, ";.> , '• \] J ta.500-$25.000 equi\l' + onto&.tclilome lo°:!::' 9r!'nY. M.aet• • cas.b for Lag. Och pro· re:=~~ an Ut• Pvt PlrtY baa btuble pert,J. "Z" a..Jtor In kltcbeo. ronnal dllllnl $10,000 im.t.r mutrat. 4M4ftl roam,...., carwt.t lQ UY· llu1t uaon. Newport 1nS. dinlnt ud f•mUy a..t.. ar + 1*"eat. ::· ~ t116 rooms, PLUS. PLUS, =+ ~ = · ••••••••••••••••••••••• Pt.US. Hurry . t.b1a won't l'V""· SUPU SHARP 38r 1 unit lut at '119,500. HAalOIVUHOMI llONTICOO ~'~B~ ~y owner. 111115 Pert ~. S\rper lotatidD • t.-rUte 7ard. 8'0.7a J oet.rl..e..... Othwl .. llstote HOMM1U11~ Wedneeday, 'uly20, 1977 * DAILYPILOT 85 •••••••••••••••••••••••• ,..................... ...................... • tto.e. . .._.. .. ,,_rS. HovtnforS.. Ote..rle•b .. le ~Properly 2000 .. .__/ r-&-~... JZ ~ .._..U...,.lfa1ct tto.nU.l•Matt~ Uwfrrslftlt• •• •• • •. • • • • • • •• •·· •• • • .• • • • • "•• • • • • •• •• •• •• ••• •• •••• • • •• • •• • • • • •. • • • • •••• •• •• •••• ••••• • ••• •• Trtr Prt&a 2100 ~· ~ 1.. •••••••••••••••.••••••• •••••••••••··~··• .. •• ••••• .. •••••••~ ... c__..-..' -•-..-.. ~tto.a ••••••••••••••••••••••• HI -..... le--3240 1--'--•244 ~ 3llJ -........,. 1016-&.egMM 1016 .__ I IOO TW04-PLIXES ••••••••••••••••••••••• VACANT 1 b .... _ "'-"• llllllf-+• -.,...,._ # ........... .............................................. . =................... COSTA MIS• MOBILE & RV PAR" dtpi, Adi;~b".dbl";;;: ••••••••••• ! .. ••••••••• ....................... ... ........... -... - blQgO CLOS! TO llACH -oc.-Ylew hoM• wlttlt l"'t .,. .. H•.taaood floon. Mom.d .......... -.I•• ltrJc• flr.place. CloH to the bHch. .... ,.11, .... ,.. ...... h ... $149,000 499-4551 aBr. 28•, t ompletely £xcellenl ~rner loca-ft ~'1'180 TURTLEJlOCK 'Br ~ •/'IOOL. $fl.I. htrn SU.600. On the t aon . c u b e sold Southern C-.llfornu• a40 •AVAl..AILI• 3BrZBa,ttlUaeoQ"m• .A..aAus. beub ·•capt1trano MPIU'ately or tocet.her. ttcres, ftlbln(oo S'lakes, MF.SADELMA.R •MOW• ou&.Lee.P.szzt _... Sborca" SC .Sp. 78. N-=wty pamtfd •nd com· rm lo expand. arou 5'tCIA1. Houes, coodomJDlum1 *THE WILLOWS. ' Br. 1.a. tlPP'I' Coodo C1G a .-ple tel y up 1rade ll . $35()T,oood. Ac d l\edec38r2Ba.avlnow. aod townbor:nes. MOlltb 2be, &iv nn. dtD rm. tam 1ou courae. Baleooy. --$1.W.OOOe.ch. ra e cepte ~mo.~2811 tomoa&.bre.ntal11tart1.n1 l'ID. SUS. ·--··HIO. = RfC/WltD. PJ5. Mobil• Holbe, Newport including at$32$to'900. Lotauctin 830-5050,aUl. _.,ora.4100 Bdl.l>oUBr.XJn&cood. fl! I . Hawalf Property 3 Bedroom Condo with JhmtlnctOGJlarbourand ~ - Adult lt:k. No pe&a. • QualR Property PP $!.~ mu, ~~~:-:;.~·:i.: Hwitinj&ul Beach. Call NOW~ ......... 3215 117 • 000 • .s-032..!____ a.,_ Place Creative Investmeni1 .car pool tennla aauna Uliormotedotalla. lbrJMttio~ •Jmo ..... -..--... -•••• JiOCO. 3Br, lllt8a, J bloc • ..-. -r.:J.t;:• , Prtaon.l.Y,644·9513 Jac~n.i include°d. ~ ~:=homo•.,.. =LA K £ PORRES T from beach $19.SOO. HB WOOOU.lln MACH D....n. call6'6-4(77 2bl'CG'd>A/C nf" sns Woodwalt Or. Iba, wo...'1126 RffOl't 2400 Lease: 4 br, 2 ba. 3 br $!15 fon:n. din rm. %JOO aq ft. Acr9opfor.-. 1200 ••••••••••••••••••••••• l!it&lut +deposit. 3brA/C S38$ Oovetedpatio.A/C,acar ••••••••··~··•••••••••• Trade Up? •RIVER LOT• $400/mO. No pets. Agent REAL TY INC. 3br S39S pr. S5l5C> lie. AvalL 8/15 • Mual 11~. 63 acre pnme We have listed a number Ariz, Blythe area . 6.11·2026 3br A/C "'5 OwllerB-15'10 unlmpJ"Oved farm land In of propertt~. in different $8,000, 10% down. 7l4/846-U71 Or M50 I \<,t '-' "'' \ 1 \(;( ~!\ tuah desert, In ulralra pricerunges,uptos:>.and $75Mo.7l4-MS-3'lfi() NEW3br 2~~ba,famrm. -2brT/H M50IMl,_.ort1Hct. lJ6' 'lHil•.1 1·•11'1 Hl-:AC.:11 c·ntry On ma111 hwy, SJ mlllion mjnj · Incl. dbbse., pool&., . br i.ftDW 3hrT/H ~•-•••••••••••-•••-~·., 11':?111 1•1.111/CI' 497 :l.489 w1wcJJ, cl(o'<.'trtclty, ga11, warehouses. Let us tailor Out of State tenn. crl:!.673-6672 •er>' mce 3 • 2 -• 3brA/C 1415 HARBOR VIEW 5 Bit ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~!phone le hlJ tuea anexcbange foryou. Prupetty 2600 s>iDeuuna c~iall L•e 1 r:::dei'1'6y~r:, c:fdf/atpe·t 3brA/C $SOO SoDMnet. CM0-16" of' -Pricedtoaellquic:Jl.$1300 r..-~21 SDC1rGw ••••••••••••••••••••••• ·~ "' 2br.deo $525 IUA- per acre. it)' owne r . lnvestmentDavilnon Montana Property for in loft. Silos, pvt ....... Noiee. • 1--BL- 11 --•• -FS-~_.__ __ _. .. _., r-:-· -Brloft.w/sauna&jacuu.J OK. $J75. Sl6lM567 AIJ,., I ....,.._, .. ... .,.,.. .. _.. IOU S.Cies•ale 1076 838-21173 9 7 sale b 2 smaU ...... vvnuvo ·-·••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ·~~~~6~3""~~·~6~6~~~ OOmesy +o.=t~. Year deck util pd. 2 car ear. PATIO HOME Leases •tartine at $500 P•u IMlicView ttnwfl.AI one ol a k1nt1 ~ Harbour ottan vaew home. 3 BR. 4 &, fam-rm. game rm, & pool $3.SO .ooo. Call ~ roi) J'IM'Utt 7JteN G RULTORS --- Harbor View P'alermo ~ Br Panoramic View ~op ava11.t>44 5621 I· round fisbl.ng, good bllDt· $650.898-?0'13 MOllda.AleatMf·ll.33 Ul<:ATION! Great 3 Br, AYoc .. C--'-· Brand new 2 br. 2 ba, -··· r 1---------1 aag, very gOO<i water 3 Br Ocean View house, brick fpk. wove;.n woods. NWPTCRESTCONDO · t Ba, home on beautiful s Acr~. fant.a.aUc view. COVINGTON well. For .further info Jge Fam Rm. srcmr. $'500 wet bar, upgraded plush •BR. cbUdrea OK..P~ ~~:.~~: ; 1::b. v~w 1~: ~!;,!: ~°:!e~~i ~~e ls a 000beauty in ~~~!:u!~t: ~;n;;8° 1D0.67UJG crptc. pool. sauna. IWitCHllAl.TY teon1s, wallt&obcb. Yl'l,y lots to Ul5Ure view and tenus.'Broker ~SLAHD Wmston,M~tana,59641• BUC:COLABEAUTY jacuai.$17S.918-9CM7 551..JOOO '850-~lm pn vacy. New lutmg itl w~== A real pride ol ownership Sale to close estate 6 ~i!.!8~~ =!. ~ t;;a,~.~· = Turtlerock, 2 BR. 2 BA. + Sl2.SB~THA RENRY ---------•Triplex in a prestigious Arizona Commercial' & or~-5605Agt. Kids/pet welcome. $350. ~ Asaoc. dues " yd REALTORS UHDER THE area. $249,500. Industrial bldgs. From 963-4567 Agent, no fee munt. water• laol.1--------- 215 Del Mar 492-4121 OLD OAK TUE MJnl WCINhouses ~sq.ft to lf,000 sq.ft. MESA del Mar 4 br, 2 ba. • Ptmo. m.aose Bdrm on Peninsula Huge Oaks cover this 2o These a r e r e al May be sold as package frpl, gar dr. opor. Xlnt. ' BR Coodo, cpta, drps. w/easy walk to Bay & acre fantastic view pro· moneymakers! Located or separately. Below ap. cond. $465.4.97-2258 refrig, pool; tennis . 5M.UMIY.PARK Beach. Woodsy & warm BY OWN ER Mira Costa perty,creelc bed,pa rllal· from WestCov1nalo San praisal.20%+retumon clubhse, $350 mo. Isl. Nrpool &teonls. tsSO. in prime location. V1lla,onPahsadesof San ly planted, near new Diego. 10vestm.enL 640-7860 or •Bedroom laat&dep.979-1888 Call497-3Z30;5Sl-623i $6SO /mo yrly lse. Clemenle,3Br2 Ba,L1v· home with shake roof. LAND 640-235Taft6PM d.dungrm,Cplc,2 baths, NEARBEACH.lBRcoo· CoodoWalnutSquare3br. Waterfront Homes ing R m, Clb priv. air condiltoned, wet bar f r o m . B ars t o w t o Rentab pool 14623Kazan 15Sat 631·1'00 Harborv1ew Hom~. love 768-8916~ves etrt. Terms. Broker. """e~ftcide double garage. patio. do. Dbl gar, pools, tennis · · ' •--------- .... I ' \.A.. &1""1 . ••••••••••••••••••••••• ti<fi .-..... 16 -Ph ~ ~C &Sun 5-7 wkdavc ly view. 3 br fa mily -----· 677-SQ}l or Many diffe re nt s ize HousesFu • heel ~/mo. .....,.....,.....,.. ;.,._ • .......,_ ' JV• room, upgraded, 1mmac, San Juan 1078 ___ 522-053<> parcels at diffe re nt rn1s RoyMcC~ WALK TO BCH •· all 'lbe Terrace 3 br cam. HBRVIEWKNOLL l ( Be b Ca...1.&-..--__ . •'9••••••••••••••••••••• ca ,,.,. .. C Cod .l. teorus poo ac. st uy r•rr-pnccs. ._....__ 1 • ._... 3106 Realtor I• IO Newport schls. Lg 4br 2sty hm. ~dge Model Nr. pool & "4JU'DllDg ape ext, in tract. $142,500. flt•it ••••••••••••••••••••••• 5 acres, Lancaste r, Hwy RIVERSIDE --Costa Mesa 541•7729 Newly deco. Kids OK. Jae. $•75/IDo. L ae. 2Br&den.3Ba••/View. escrow, long pos::.1ble. BR+ Dining /Family 138 at 212lh W., l>OOO. 'TRIPLEX+ 3 be<lrm ••••••••••••••••••••••• $485. lBt&laatmoreat. 6H-6S37 BltnappUc.Pool,tenn.is. Owner. 960-S272 r m. A /C bea uty. B y Telepbooell4-586-8597 home PLUS vacant lot. mpl furn, 1 Br+ guest 963-6882. ,_..__...;...;... ______ ,walk to sbopJ. _, mo. ---owner. $84.990. Call for AJlforSSS 000 rm w/sep bath. Avl Aug 1.2and3bedrmCondos. Woodbridg!tTwnhJD.3Br. 714·1~ *ONE OF appt. 714-831=1505Hurry! ATTENTION Cetthrf zi Sporow 1st, yrly. $300 mo. Ref's, Unfurnished Near oceau & sbop'g. 2 llh Ba. incls wsbr/dryr.~~~~~~~~ "' KIND• BUILDERS 1 . . . 1st, lst + $200 dep. Ageot846-~ BR, pool. $335. Ask I« refrig. ~/mo. AvaU "" INVESTORS nveslment Davas1on 675·285S dys. 645-5744 Mac. 962-7787 or 5'6-8609 Sept L 551·1'1218 . Luxunous retreat + two OWNER MOVING 963·7866 eves. Newly palated, lge 3 Br -===-=:.:.:.::..:...::::...=~=~t:-=---:---__,-1 story huest house. both Must sell' Close to PRIMEUSAcreranch, 2Ba,fplc,beauttroplcal BeacbCondo.2Br,l~ba.. Bock3br,2be.fam ·with 180 degrec, harbo r. Gd . st a rter 'f~':eanvifews,f:'~·ed Wmter Ren1al-3Br;2~~ encl yd,nrshops-school. pool,tennis,sec.$350/mo l'ID. din rm. upgraded.t--------- panor amlc ocean a nd home ~500 •2 0 acres or su iv. DUPLEXES.H.I. ba, newly furn . 106 $f75.675-:!m2 Mr Hatch 847-2561 .or ~/mo,6moorlon1er CONDO,ZSQ'.4 h arbor views c v e n mm: 831:6-160 & 498-0500 or lot split. All util. thru 2 duplexes. block to ApoJena. See July 15thru evea (213)!i92-1S31 lse. Agl/Owr. 759-1288 BB.3Ba. tsso. mo. more res p l~ndent at properties. 4 Olde r beach, (2)3br, 2ba, eocJ. 29.673·7975 HALECREST 3 br, 2 ba, ...:..:.=.-=::.:.:::::..:==::_--1--....-..;...._-----~S668;673-43t6 rughtrrom the 2 carpeted leased hms. Xlnt terms. 000 /rpl. Quiet neighborhood. 4, Sor 6 Br + formal din l!!ll Y. P~rlr Twnbae. i-----~----patios connected by a REDUCED Sil 000 Byappt.Bkr.1-487-9367 gTaragesLee.$1RJ6S, 642· CostaMesa 3124 Families only, no pets. rm, ram rm. pool & LaSalle 4br&famrm. Beach house. lh blk to • • om • tr, ·1603 ••••••••••••••••••••••• · · ...,CJ> ft .,,....mo 7SZ.0617 A... ocean 2br lba .-ten per wr ap around deck 1 Li:. -t br, 3 ba, lg. back i.>-240 Acres 18 mi's s of $&25.545-7S06eves JacUZZJ.-.,.,, sq. . exec . .,_, · · • &•· • • ·....,., , Pamper your guest::. in .>d Bike trail to ocean. Hemet E·ast oC v·atl NEW4PLEXES8each&Newport Heigh~ house. homeinS&SParkHunl· mo.Yrlylse.Utilinckl.d. the lavish bedroom Lo t s of wall pape r . Lake.Agricultureor sub· Co~stantine. Buy now FUrnisbed $500 mo rent. MnaVerdeExec. ington. l yr lse. Call "-Jma-.och 3241 AvlJuly:M.Cplorfamil.y areas. one a South Seas 9!9.800. Qwn(!r. 493-5828 div. $850 per a c. while being construc~ed. Adults. 358 E . 16th Sl, 4 br, 3 ba, 3 car garage. 968-4602 •••••••••-•••••••••••• pref'cl. 832-8871 Pa rad 11>e of waler r-... J._ -080 2~1 acres Dessert Hot Lg. cust. design uruts. CM. Shows like a model Pexm.ingtonProperties 2 Br 3 Ba, Jae ocean vu '85 BiiCanyonCcndo 3 c a scading over a .-rna"'"a I S rin s $600 er a c MullerRJtrs.846-4493 Me---'leac:h 3169 hgoamrdee.ne$69r. 55/5m7~·71i7ocolr. 3Br2Ba.lgeyard.•.t..m·a ~5tmoArc.lhyrBelsea.~!!£t1,.' Br.3 .Ba. va_·ew. po~I. dramatic rock garden in· ••••••• ••••••• ••• •••• •• ~1020g ' p · .. ,.... ' -a -n ... ._..._ • j lo shallow pools. decend .. ,..,. · TRJPL!X. C.M. ••••••••••••••••••••••• 644-aMS to beach. $360 per mo. acuzzi. tennis. 13MJCll1 the rock st:urway & •IY OWNER ~nk Great location, newer 3 Via Lido Nord, Lido -PvtPty. 71'"'536-7384 3 Br 3 Ba. oceenfront,_AfJ. __ . ______ _ enter 3 magical rock. 1 fJr house/furn/$30,000. for sm. 1300 br, 2ba, frpic •. Yatd. (2) Isle. 4 bdrms. $2500. mo. End Unil, 2Br, 2ba, patio. SPRINGDALE/Westm.ins-~ $l.3SO mo. Leue. Bluffs 4 BR. 3 ba. love~ !>.hin g lc & carp eted Take over low VA pay-••••••••••••••••••••••• 2br, lba, patios, enc l. Au gu s t . Ca l l Lovely decor, w/pool Cln. 3 br, 2 ba. Lg. yd. Bi.llie,833-3150 greellbelt. Porme..r Jacuzzi. ordered !>Y "' ments No q ualifying. Charming small Duplex, garages. $170,000 ~-~0-_4547 or (213) $400/mo. 549-8155 BUos. Plash cptg. $365. made,l.Agent"4-l133 wine cellar & private 536-0757 garage, close to water, Tom Lee,Rltr,642·l603 -----COLLEGEPARKHOME-898-1625 * * * ENJOYTBEPENINPT sl~pmg area complt•tc $159,000. 835-2200ext . 274. Lido Isle 2br 2ba. Sips 6, 4Br, 2Ba, nr fwy, shop-J Aldrfda 1.ova1 .. 2 Br F u _- with passage way from · days. Or eves 541-3560 Aug $1600, Sept $)400. ping & OC College, avail .1 Br, $1115. Pet OX. 4 blks • "'V + am n• .... the jacuzzi to the outdoor • ---JAX SffflJfRI ) '193-0ol27 Aug 15. 839.1097 to beach. Fee. 1821 PortCartor 2 Ba bme. Fbrn. or un.f. pool ! This home 1s 11ot SUPER CONDO BusinftsPropttty 1400 • _(2~---Homefinders S.W--0822 NewportBeacb roroneyear.~J>ermo. JUSl for anyone, but for ••••••••••••••••••••••• Protect Your Cncome ONTHEWATER 2 Br house, $250 per mo, YouaretbewlnDeroC 6'5-7573.Agl. the connoisseur of posh Large 2 br, 2 ba, single Build Your Est ate z Story. 3 Br ho me no pets, maturecpl,Jst& $1.U95. 2FBr, .kids/pets OK. twofreeffcWs o rginali t y' Cust o m story with air condition-SUPER MIR11£J 17 UNITS-all adult, w/boat dock. $790 /mo. lastmo.499-3459 nL ee. ($15.00nlue).to rurrushings to rem am at m11:. Only $37,500. " ft pool, near Knotts Berry yrl y 1 se . 6 31. 14 00 --Homefi.oders SST·~ ::et'"" b m!> ooo Farm w rf H KIDSf!ETS OK • Buyers opt,10~ . . " lf, 12.400sq.ft. Gross annual 22 UNITS· a ll ad ult. ate root omes. Easts de2 Br, ..,AS 3 Br. 2 Ba, Twnbse. new •• ca loJley Y appl on Y • sales Sl.250,000 Liquor ..,.. rtpt .1-•· •..:nt tbru Clrc BAYSHOR~ 3Br. 2ba. frplc. blhis. patio. Pvt beaches. S675 yrly lse. 6'2-32116 court yard apls. Xlnt Aug 1 thru 20, Bayshores. Spacioustwnhse. -s ... • ... ..,., ~ ,.... · us license optional Call L. "'"' oul bltn oven & range A thru A 3 962·4471 r.:: 546·8103 h rentals 4 Br across fr beach. Also 1 Br Duplex, $295 • • ug 4 ug 1 f m. jQuail ~ _ _ _ __ As craft,S44·72'70 44 UNITS pool, pndc or yrlySepton.548-6239 675-82S8or646-4848 refrig. Covered patio. A.oaheimConvenllon Pl ownership frplc, $350/mo. Avail Center.800W.Katella ForLease-3B~,3Ba .bome. ac• South LCICJllna I 08.6 "4tbi Slfdfli TRIPLEX I year old, HOUSEBOAT, $180. Uhl 2 Br 1 Ba duplex, fncd s11m. Call 962-9584 Tickets must be ex· W/commandiog view of Prop•rti•• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~ .. 19__ cent1·a1 llunt1ngt on pd. Sngls OK. F~ yard, children OK, NO ch anged for reserved ocean at N_wpt Harbor. 7S1-19lt-"'Residence 3 Arch Bay. r--~ Beachlocat.ioo. Homefltlders 557-0822 PETS.$205.646-3627 ~-seats at the Convention ~toEasign&Har~ •400 ou111ut NlWP01n HACH Brochures avail John REALTORS FOURPLEX-near-new, . HarbOur 3242 Center ahead of tlme. ~Schls from qw-:t WALK TO BEACH -Solomon's0"1ceor.Bank close to beach in Hunt· MewpcwtWatftiront $165. UUI pd.1 Br, petot. ••••••••••••••••••••••• CaU 643-S618. Ext 333 to Rd address, avail J Hot aew listings m Npl of America (V1c k1 > mgton Beach. 3 Br on water. Sleeps 10. l:loUnmL !:~d· ers ""'1-Lge 2 BR Coo~ •• mint claim10Ql'ticketa.. 1. Owner ~ Shores $82500 $93000 & Laguna Bch or your local FORSALEAS.ASE MOTEL-1 0 UnHs, $400/'Wkly. $700 /2 wu, -aw .... __, cood.Maoyamea.aties.-\14 ***. dQs,8'3-1122eves. $104,Soo.' P rop'er ly Board ofRealtors Office Approx. 20.oo6-;;.'n. in· brand new Huntington $1300/mo or lse yearlY. Lovely 3 Br, 2 Ba,+ den Mltobch. (2U)G).8247 . BrCu>do2~ Ba, 9iew. House, 642·3850. Tl.ISHn I 090 d tri l b ·1.1 t Surf moul, on the beach, 174-4384or675-0lf8 evs. home, On Sussanab Pl. Br .ba -..a ~..a-OCEANFRONT On cliff, -a $395 mo. 631·~ or us a w " o swt, 3.9x gross. rA15/ ,._,, .,,.., ,,,,,,. ' • 3 ....u ""......,on above aUJ!i. •• BtX» 141. ft . ...,.... HEWPORTCOHDO ....................... tilt-up. lil•dl PrtocipaJsOnJ,y ~Uaf1Mnl1•1d ,""' mo.~-........ poi.otsurroun~by~ oldll.editvwa.Seeclaas1-~-2700------- $80,000 3 Bd~~J'in~g~m. A~· All Prime Orange ••••••••••-••••••••••• 3br, H~ba. quiet at. Lg cbanoela. 55 side tae 38e UDO ISLE 2Br, 28a, frplc Owner prox '4 acre of beautiful COIPORATERLTY CountyLocations! lalboalslmcl 3206 fncdyrd,nupotlo&out, dock. $1200 aio. Ast Beaut 3Br2Ba wait 3 Br 2 Ba redeeorat· 645-7365 pa rklih setting. Top 714.55a.110 I Kent logen Realty ••••••••••••••••••••••• nr s ch ls. $375. Ray 840-1819. beach house. Nw cp&a. e d . '$950 ise. (213 > BLUFFS north Tustin area in CotldomlniuntSjTown· 848-8300 1 Br & Loft oo Little 548-9898 lnlae 3244 ocean view submit on 6S3-'1900. Aat for Frank Foothill Hi district. housH fw leM I 700 ~land with soaring liv· LEA5E/OPTION. 4 BR+ ••• .. ••-•-••••••••• chlJdrenOl'Pets.. *525. Karl J Bedroom end un it. Open House Sun 1·5 ••••••••••••••••••••••• TR' DLEX C mg room. $f50/mo lse. den, 3 Ba. prime Joe. n-....,,.-3 .. _ 2 ba den Prestige Properties OpenSat,&mUU-4 New carpet & shutter:.. F' 11 Bl ....,.. 1 M ~ _""/mo. "A"SOOl. ""'6""""" w:, • • M-0706 227 Via Ebo $95.000 0 wncr /Agt IOOl oothi vd. Anaheim Condo, 2 BR. 1 -..v ,_.. air cood •• DW. cpts, 113.1·8551 Days 644 2148 AESOP Realty Ba, 1 yr old, upgraded Assume loan.$129,000 CoronadelMar 3222 2 BRDupl .... ,smfcdyrd. d rps • su p er Great view 2Bclrm den NEWPORT HEIGHTS. 3 AskforDon orHelen c rpts a 1·r own e r Agt.871>-07l7 • """ nea·ghborb ood $395 • ' 'BR 11<-Ba ti50 mo; ... Eves 731-4911 · · · ••••••••••••••••••••• • 2 car gar, lcid/pels ok. • • 2 Ba. ~eek, pat>o, frpJc. • ,,. • .-· · .... VA TERMS Tustin Meadows. highly Le1sure WorldTowcrs Pac ific Property R&frALS LOIJlll'lltllh 3250 SPYGLASSHILL ~---528-8864 iJ S280 mo. + dep. Call 963-4567,Agent,nofee. Nrtowo/beach.494-6830 cld.gardener.6'S.5253 urapgraded p2~80b14·03 BR. Lux re tire Me a ls. " Management,847·9632 2 BR,2ba ...... $410/425 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Panoramic ocn vu. 48r. m. rm.. 2 a reen~ "ds HY.' d ..,,, 000 ?• 3BR,2Ba ...... "'/515 21h8a, formal din rm, 3 BACK BAY belt&pools $92,950 ma t · .., n . ....,, · Newly redecorated 2 BR, ·······-Very lovely 3 br, 2 ba, PAULMARTJ N _496-1840 _ TWO 4-PLEXES, 6 mo's l Ba, fed yrd, pet ok. 3BR,2~ .•...•... $450 cpts, drps. DW, patio. 2 ~h-Jsuto s=:,klrs, AREA Real Estate 644·7383 Fan.tastac Whate Water old Super sharp!Call, SOUTH OF lUWAY--3 $JOO.lst/last dep.333E. 4BR.2 · .....••..• 5'2() car gar., s uper area, 586-2078 cpg. mo. V S • 759-0761 BR home. Hardwood 21stSt.See Mgr ANAHEIM~ kids/pet welcome. $185. --------Charming 3 Bedroom. I iew. o . .uaguna · 3BR 2Ba $4.50 """"->=? .... NI Bath, central heal, AJC, Othef-Reat Estate Townhse. 2 Br, ~en, 2 ba. SEVEN BREAD & BUT· floors, briclt rireplace. DanoPcNnt l226 • . . ...•••••• ........_,,._, o ee. Newport Shores 2 aty. A- new bnck patio, fruit ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1700Sqft.Secunty, pool, TER UNITS hu e ~ ~~';:p~~/=~~ loL •••••••••••• .. •••••• .. • ~Mt)let 3252 frame, sparkle., S82$ trees & la r ge yard. ~Hon.$ very quht. $123,900. ' I ........ ••••••• .. •••••• mo.6'2·8850Agent $69,900. Call 549-9091. ForScft 1100 Owner, M-l'no or <213> w·~c:t=dzon::. SUMMER RENTAL Ccmdocmtolf coune.allr, Np& Sban!s, dee. 3 Br. 2 20 ~ 12 0 r c h i d • S ·A · ••••••••••••••••••••••• 790•1392. co~. ~venient fu all One block from China a.. A/C, avaiL Au-. lit. ba, frplc, cpts. drps. Heights_. Open House Dbl wt~e. ~.000 furn'd. xn/ shopping, trade open. Cove Beach it1 Corona $1Z5/mo.MM90 dswbr, dbl car, paUo, Thur /Fri 10-2 M o b • 1 e P a r k o n SC.. 1800 $160,000. lifcN~ Realty, de1 Mar. pool le tenais • ..$S2S. Brookhurst.962-7540 642·133' dys. 6-42-6578 Br Ba d I oc••u Vl"W.~r, -.1111;Gl..a37 paa. FOR SALE 4 Plex. eves CORONA DEL MAR -2 • 2 sty, P ll, &:AIU.. .,, S. Clewwnh H . l t . Specta.&uJar canyon ,,_ bltna, re/rig, gar. cpta, Fam Rm. f«mal • $l!8S. 2 Br. tidlJpea OK.. .B. s aog e 11 Ory . "' ~ d n25 499 2380 3 vt • ._..a...... $135,000. 20% d WO MISA VERDIE ocean view. 2 Br+ den . ..!.~!;.. .. -. . ; lf523" ............ tll....t-~..aP car aar. p comm. um. r~. s.. ..... c.,1.11w 107 •••••••••••••••••••••• ·EE 110111 ILlllS CD. OVER 60 VE~RS OP SERVICE SC'1·1353 Fourplex· 2 bedroom, Yearly lease. ~/mo. -~ _,.. ~W:ll\Yssu~ W/pvt bc:b facU. Pool .Homefinden 55'7"°822 builtlns . ,carpet & COLEOFHEWPORT Near n ew Marina. Spac. a hr. 2 ba in great ten-nhsi.:aoo mo W•arft .. eo.9 ExceHentlnvn.._,.. drapes. closed garages. REALTORS Magnificient vie w & a~a. DW, cpt.. drps 71'-l.-. w.-.J-2 •-a Bt ~ Quietcul-de·sacinHB.2 Fine re~tal are a . 675-5511 s pectac ular 4 bdrm comm. pool, $385: ~~ a ..... .,., • BR, lBa,, aBr. l:V.. Ba, $142,000. Prin only. Rep· house . Yrly lease. 963-4567 A.gt No Fee Gorgeous VWa 3 Br 2"' ~~1• '650' yrly. priced-al $87,900. For Jy # 975, Daily Pilot P .O. LGE cozy unturn duplex SSSO/mo. 8.13-3544 • • • Ba, fplc# pool. 2 mi,i--------- ppt. Call 848·0236 Prine. Box 1~. Costa Mesa, ca lBr, frplc & Jjoot. $350. Fo...tain Valle 3214 TUllTL!;! t\OCK 3 Br, beach. SGSmo. 8'6-8301 IA YfftOMT O'n.ly.Bkr. 92626 . . Lease.Nopets.640·7030 Y .fam R~2Ba,w/VU:W, ... _ ... u_ii,. ........ ... ---- -••••••••••••••••••••••• lge yaro, or tennis Is Mcnarcb 8W1JmJt Condo •-..w• -.nn. -. .... u,eon· Dul>lex-Eastside-CM 3 br CdM, lge a Br h~t. lge Lav •S"•ER SHARP• .....,..,,, tl546 mo. All. 2 Br 2 Ba fpk aundk• d o . $990 on th o r 2 ha + 2 br 1 ba 3 gllr. Rm, & 500 sq.ft. Fam .,.. fSi°Ol88 • • • lease/opt.loo $142,000._~834·10'8 Rm. 3 Ba, 2 car ciu , Newiypaintedls&y,4br. cpt'~pau.·o•crt yd.Fan uJAY&ll.ACH -....., 2 ba, frylc in llv rm, 1._ _______ •I ~C..~~"' rec facil. TY 71, "•I 1 woodsy. S550. 673-1.cvo bretlctaatdw1r Jn tam.,~ -_,._,.mz .., Two lledroocna rm, bU..ns, xtras. S4S> mo. Raikbo .... ... ...___-&.. Nr • .Kapolia Ir EUJ1. ~~ ........ 3269 .,..,. ..... l269 963-4iOO'f S.Joaq -............ -••••••••• , .......... ·-·--·· 1---------f Uh Pit. VW. ll S'."iO WaklalSqgare $175 RancboSeDJoaq ~ DelrfWd pis ,,.,...~ VDttaad;t Park tnl r.;..;.o;...;..;..;......;;.;;--..---1 ~~ "50 Wlapl tm red hill -~ r ~ • ) I '" ~ I • 1 I ~ -------- .. • 1 .. DAILY PILOT ~ ..... .,. J Ut, 2 a.. rpta l111t•. ~ "' ••• pllUo , ... 10 OOH. Yrly SOI l1WiZ'B t LEA.\lt J Bdrm r• t.lda"'9 C<lrn«"t lot. dou · b tut 3111 <'rdar St N"'Pt Shot• N 8 MU + d.poMu • rt'h I 4H (1711 ••••••••••••••••••••••• l Br 2 Ra home-, fnC'd yard , 1l mill' f 1om S (' be-11 tio S42!i m e• 4' !!1811 . ' W.clna9day. July 20, 1877 5MflSfllMQ/ A winning combination ol adull apartment home& w•lh luxury aooolntmeots and auoerb r~roatton llf a premium 1oc..11on Tennla•9ym•the<IOY ,p11•awimm1no•bl!hard• J< on@ Bedroom One & Two BedroorM. One Bath 1' ~ :~·· J>ark Mesl\.Vllfs \Al ....• SISO ,oulorlno Av. .• Coato Mtao 7!1-t995 .............................. .,,.. ...... u..fwtl. , ..... IBN•ta Ultfwa. ~!'!';.~.'!:'!:!':... 1-. -• -.............................................. Ml rt. h J16f S.0.0.r ...... 4ZOO Office lilltal 4400 lftmhMftt -- ....••........••.••••.• ..••••..•...........••• ...................•.•. ....,,.,...... 5015 ~on ... i. ll40 ~°" .. ach l•4o•"POP 11C ....................... ....................... ~., * • * EME:IALD IA Y IXICUTIYI SUITa.S ••••••• •••••••• ....... • I •2•3 IEOltOOM UHfTS • FIA TURI MG • UMIQUE AHO DRAMATIC R.OOR PLAHS Custom designed with exceptionally large rooms, dramatic entry ways, and luxurious amenities throughout. Bachelor. Yrly a•o mo., Lafuna. ' Bt bouse. o • 1 u x • 0 t r l c e , Ener&y uUllt.lapd,673-214$ Whit.water vu. Pvt com-penonab~ed phone cov-Discovery • • • munity, bUt to bch, t.en· eraae. secretarial Pa~/ml1Crmarket· ---------1 nlt.pc;iola.Jac,trplc.July Hrv1ces, euy access to 1n• lovestme.nt. $20,000. Udo Isle l&e3 BR, 3 Ba, 30 tbru Aug 21at. rrwya.666&kerSt.C.M. Sec. Mr. Robertson, paUoe, across Street to (710,94·0092 Nr. o c. Airpor\. $41-2982 _m._2'1M333 ______ _ bch. $700 mo. 673·2641 _ ___;.. ______ , M.I. OCEAHNOHT Dana Pt. proanlnent, new, 8',000 NJl;EI>ED tlnme<I Steps to beach. 4 Br 2 Ba, Beaut. 3br, aba. sleeps a. oceao vu. coast Hwy, ipor PJUNM~E _!t.EE.NlNAVL. fpk, cpta, drpa, ~ yrly Al.II &Sept. 642-1903 $170up. 491H 840 >'lf '"" 111 lse. 6'2·1M43 •--=---=-------Rl!.'"'IURN s.59-5311 Newport Beach near Bach., upper rear, ocean.Lge3br,2ba,gar. MoMyfolom 5025 partially rum. Adults. No Avail. now! 642·1603 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~.121s Yrly. 540-0093 ---------· Macnab· Irvine Located on s.c.._... 3176 HARBOR BLUFFS CIRCLE ••••••••••••••••••••••• YocatioftRetlfota 4250 fl EA LTV COM Pl\!llV l1t, hd & lrdT.D.'a 2400 SQ. FT. LOANS AVAILABLE ••••••••••••••••••••••• (Near Bolsa Chica and Warner) OCV1EA1WM 1 block to beach. 1 br apt HUNTINGTON BEACH furn. $100. week or S2!>0. s Lg. omces & re<:eplion ; Credit not important. 3 baths; wet bar; air 8"*er. 67:1-4183 cond.; yard space . • 846· 1328 or 840-1123 Br• n d new 2 b rs , mo. yearly. Utll. Incl. WALK 2 bllui to bc!a<'h 3 .,....._,,... """'''i..d Coda Mff• 1124 $!75-$32.S. Near Pico Bch. 87l-8471 : 833-2105 br. 2 ba ~11nv1e-w homf\ •. •• •• •••• ••••••••••• •• •••••••••••••• • •• • •••• • 1 o 5 De I R e p o 1 o . Westside C .M . n ear ~1. Tnat Placentia. <D 72) DeedS 5035 Martha Macnab 642·8235 ••••• •••••• • • • • ••• • •• • • Pam rm. frpl. rpt1 & ......_ h 3769 l!:aftM ~Jo CoataMna 1124 LGcJMoleach 1141 714/'96-5275 R...tahtoShcre 4300 drps Yr Ii.el ~ mu ._wport •ac ~"' .-••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• Landscaped open ore ape Ao 49'.! 2100 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Mature adults only, no UVEINACASTLE 2Br, H~Ba, 150 yards Male 32 straight share NearO.C. Airport. Avail. --·-WJi.TStNOHT pets. Large 1.2&3 br Detached 2 Br trgk Acres of gardens, wide from beach. S265. Call SUPER new Costa Mesa for immediate occupan· _,,_ And t ' I a .... •. Dshwhr, gaa BBQ. d ' 1•-' H b " ...... ......, 1 t 8 It 549 3122 '"--'·tr.o 1271 w• er view uxury G~ pd. 178 Scoll Pl. patio, cpt.s, rps, a ""· ocean views. uge 2 r, • ...,.,...,,,.., townhome. 751-7593 cy. o un a. . _.,..... d~. J·BR, $12:00 mo., 2 5073 No pets. 1310. 33'1 E .18th ba apta., Din. rm . S.Jue 8:»12:30Mon·Thurs. LOANS9% Also 2nd TD l.Hna Fairest Terms atnce 1949 Satttw MhJ. Co. 642-2171 545.0611 ••••••••••••••••••••••• liK . $1500 Mo. 642· SL Call S7S-6736. Fireplace. Part. furn. l 7 M/F to share 2 Br, Nwpt 8pec. n~w J lir lwnhl.e. RIW..GRUNDV -....L-1t.-w YIU-Ao1iques. High ceilinsa. Caplstr.o 8 I Hgts Hae. Incl pvt studio. NEW REM OD EL ED PRIYATIPAltn q\letloc,fplc,upgraded Ht:AL'T'OR 6756161 naw'wtt ~SJOio ~2bednn,1ba,buge Garage. Pool" apa. ••••••••••••••••••••••• $14.Smo.~9634 DwnlwnHB. WlUpaymoreloryour tbruout. $38~ lse now 621 · aon FURN p t o, priv. gar .. pet Estate livin&! Cloee to OCEAHYIEW Pror/Med/Lab.Sl00!$300 2lldT.O.&G3S7a «.., ,,_.,, 962 8098 FURN OR UN welcome. 1285/mo. Drive b h •-b l .._and ...... 2 Br, ..,.,S to M/F, 1 dep OK, 3 Br 2~\ W /UUI 963-1243 960 3224 ---------_...._,, . STfltS TO IEACH •2brtownhomew/frpl eac "' • opp nfi. 01 ,_.. -· Ba Condo w/PoOl NB. ' s..taAM 1210 2 BR,2ba $t2Syrly -LgepaUo&enc.garase ~ve~~~J:,mooa :at:~':°uit.s~~~~ f:il~~~1!1:;t'iJ:5 63J.1806aft5orwknds. COSTAMedES!-~~~~'!!tt:~~~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• 38R,2ba $5()0yrly •Adult.s,ch11d16&over 494~17 Newlydecorat .exec. tury 21 l nveslment 38r, 28a. super sharp dlx Pool&jacuzzi avail. Near nu, 2 Br, 2 Ba, with or SauutaJi.na 3110 •HOMESHARJNG• olc's. 880 sq. ft. w/cntrl DIYlsion. 963.7866 Condo, nr So C:.t Plua. yard, frpk • 2222 Pacific, View overlooking ocean & ••••••••••••••••••••••• Need resp ladies 21·35 to air,& prkg. Ofc. rurnature ---------Pool, gar, 2 wks fret Garden apartmenla. Adults. 1315/mo. 642-0758 Village Laguna. Apt. on CLOSE share lovely houses & o Pt . Ca 11 MY l ex Announc h/ rent. S360 6404462 ~~'!:~ #2 2Br, lBa, private garage, No. End. w/2 BR, 2 Ba, to Beach ·~~~~~~e'f!;,.als 714·~1. 3303 Harbor p~ MJle Square Park. 4 br. 275 E. 18th St, C .M. $225 mo. 9'79· NILi.! ~po:Si~I~ e 8J~~ a~~ CLOSER 9am-8pm 5»2'94 Bl., Bldg. D7 Lost & FoUitd Justpamtcd,$395/mo -- -631-1003 """"" mo.494-5397ber.9pm toShoppina&Freeways ••••••••••••••••••••••• 96371166 __ OCEANFRONT Bac h. Older male to s hare 2 luainffsRental 4450 ~emenh !SIOO ---DcinaPcMftt 3126 Oceanrront old Medlt. CLOSEST bd~m. with s~me ; oo ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• J bedroom, 1 huth. 2 cur $160. ulil pd. Ref's. Btwn 2-Bedroom. house. F!~d ••••••••••••••••••••••• V I rrc b drinkers. Wilson & 4DB.UXEOFC'S garage. fenced yurd. IOAM &8PM,67J.l~l-yd l~dg Juchenh .. ldn~-Y $1 SO£DEE Rmu9 crials~i .. ogns~. M~s:i~= toBestValueinTown Hurbor area . C . M. Con! l 25 all Secluded $320 mo 1223 -carpt • poss. c 1 "'pet "" .,.... ' ... 646-1891 Wkdays bet. 1 to · rm., sea . • #C N R~s SA 642· l :mi Winter rental, deluxe 4 Bhr OK. No single. $275.mo. Brand new 2Br, lba & beams1., lead3000ed windftow•. 2:30. ~r. 1 tored, 2 symr.· lwcahssee.1Lnarkee-. • · · 2 ba, 12 blk to bay & be Call642-~7 art 2PM. 3Br, 2ba. $275 to $340. 3 frp cs, sq +. 2 Bedroom luxury adult .....:....---------.. Wn....,_t« 3298 ~t~_. $450. 644-1103 --------33411 D. Cbellam Way. Possibly most distinctive &family aptsfromonly Share 2 BR rurn. apt. Forest are a. Kent Eastside 38r, H, ba, new (714"'""1""" on Calif. coast. Ste,... to $285 starting 1st wk of Aug. Hark1·ns. •••••••••••••• • ••• •••• • n .. ch /\pt nr. NB p1·er, $175 d d ,.....,. ""'' ..- uu cpts/drps , rnc Y • pvt bch. Beaut. treea, • $135.mo.646·2651 714-581-9393 Super Sharp per mo. Ul1l pd. 121 24th carport. 2522 Santa Ana. XTRA NICE, new duplex, quiet, secluded. Single or •3 Pools•Dlahwashers• --------- 4 br, 2 ~a. fplc, avail St. 673·2058or 963-5452 $350/mo. 64&-3192' 2 Br 2 Ba, $350 mo. cpl pref'd. Rera req'd. J acuzzi•Playgrounds • R m m t w a n t e d , ATTENTION Artist & now. Children, pets OK -- -661-lc.t.5 $lSOO mo. year around. Selr-cleaningovens• vegetarian, quiet. non· Craftsmen. SSO to $400 $36S/mo. Ownl•r546·5880 ~nts Clean 2br, patio, cool 4.94·2'19l. srnkr. 2br hse. 494•2979, mo. UUI incl. UNIQUE 3 BR, 2 BA. Twnhouse. Unfuml1~d beach breeze, l child OK, Lg lbr. dsbwshr, $250. ~11 W. Sunflower 497-3883 r et. studio "Tho Fac- Stanton. Pool. F'ncd yd.••••••••••••••••••••••• no pets. $250. OPEN 792 Avail. lmmed. 5S9·1S70or No. end, nr. Shaw's Cove; SS7·4800 tory" 425 E . JOlh St, ...-..:. lst& last673.4545 "'----~ 3802 W. Sha limar, Apt 3 586-3349 1-Bdrm. apta, all elec. 3886 AVOIDIMCOMPATIBLE Newport Beach or call ,_.., ~ 549-9492 $!65 mo. SOllHI Laguna ROOMATES ! 675-3181or673-4271 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~on ._och 3840 Turner Assoc. 494-1177 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Sharp 3 br, 2 ba, fplc, DW. LRG 2 br, pool, n r . ••••••••••••••••••••••• Lge quiet luxurious ex-~t-Cilut.s 'UHt.&MnlD DESK space at 17875 c~ts. drps, nice are:i, 2Bdrms.Neverlivedin. shops.'adltsonopets.Ulll IRANDHEW! Beaut.Span~h2BR,din. ec: 2 b~. 2 ba ~pt. Takes'lbeGuesswork Beach Blvd., n ear kids /pet OK . $375 · lmitobeach. Also de· pd. 1884 Mo nrovia , rm .. terrific ocean .vu Elevatortoscenlcpriv. OUtofFinding Talbert In Huntington 963- 4567. Agt, no (cc lu).e new townhouse. 548·0336 ~~ ~rn· ~f!'!:::~~1ff~ deck, stove & r_efn~.. bch. Party & same room. THAT RIGHT PERSON Beach. SSO per month. Condominium~ 3400 Open 12·5 daily: 1407 Large 2 br, l ~!z ba studio Open 12-5 Daily. 1 Mile to elec. gar. Nr. Victona total security. Perfect SoY• $$by Shorhtg Bring OWl'_l fu~1ture. Our fumshed Delaware. Huntington New cpts, tile & paint. ocean. 642·9601 Agt. Bcb. $450. Agt494-7SS1 llvingorwlcndrelreatfor recept.iorust w111 answer ••• Maryam N•lson 330 Rocbester Costa Mesa You are the wlnner of two frff tickets ($15.00 value), lo Rlnglhtq lros. BamU.n i lall.y Circus Aug4thruAug 13 Anaheim Convention Center, 800 W. Ka le Ila Tickets mus t be ex- changed for reserved seats .it the Convention Center ahead of time. Call 642-5678, Ext 3JJ lo claim your tickets. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Readt. 642-9601 846·1826 Fncd yd, gar. No dogs. 536-1808 Studio Apt in quiet the adventurous adult. ShrCM hm in X·chng for Your phone fo~ $10 ~r Eastbluff Condo on green· or Agt. $265. 546-3251 ood $200 Starting at $!HS/mo. lite hskp'g ror 11 Yl' schl month. Dally Pilot ofltce, --------- belt, J BR, 3 Ba. xlnt 3 Br 2 Ba, $350. 2 Br 2 Ba, =~rb • mo. 499-2835 lirl ~19 Aft 6 wkdys 642-4321 Discount Grand Canyon .. * * ond S800 mo 0 '"' 3985 Cottage type apt, l br. ~ Garage Re,. area · , . River Trips; 13 days c · · · °"" 8olboa llland 3806 S!SO. incl util. 2 br $275. ..,JU. · ~ · 2br N. Lag. vi·ew, patio, Ibr. Coast Hwy. $300 per Fem wants rmmate 25-32, LAGUNA 1 bl.; lo City ~.July 31.Aug 12 Aug or C213 J24-0 °'100 •••••••••• • •• •• • •• •• • •• Wtr pd. $135. dcp. Pvt 19071 Holly 848·8311 walk to bch. 223 Beverly. mo. 1st & last + $SO qt resp indi v, Bal Jsl hse. Ha_ll. 5,000-19,000 wq rt. 28-Sept 8. Call 640· 1661 Condominiums Sunny 2 Br apt. 6 doors gar & patio. No pets. Lg 2Br, I Ba. enclosed $WO. Eves 763-4364 5 secwity dep. 499-2496 aCt $198 mo .. Isl.1st. 673-1501 Prime C·2. 494-5049 Unfurni1hed 3425 from bay. $2 75 I mo Refs. 645-7388 garage, 2 bl.ks lo beach. Cd r le C t 6 0 Lost & Found 5300 ....................... Jeanne lj46 -7 171 or walktostores&bus,$260 Newnnrtleach 3869 ~~~·ml-L-d Room for re!"t· ~oman, ln Mor ~se. ue ~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• r-· ...,. rv -under 45, kit pnv, re· sq. fl. patio store an c.kean Front hvm~. pvt !'>ll·O&l!ior645·3009 mo.960-5131 ••••••••••••••••••••••• UnfundlMd 3900 asonablerenlS46-2600 Fernleaf courtyard. Lost: Burmese cal, male, st.airs to bch. spcctucu~ar I i • 1 B ~ ps tu n&D. • * * 2Br. tBa, garage, patio, 1 PARK HEWPORT •• !'!'••••••••••••••••••• Split-level w /beautiful 2 yrs old, bl,~e coll~~· view. pool. patw. Sn ,gc r. 5 c _ r James Short Bachelor s, 1 or 2 Lady to share home in crptg. Good pkng & sign CdM., area. Leroy · Lai::una, Lsc SS35 mo /\flults. n o pet:.. Y ly !8071ClearwaterCr. ~~~~l~o pets. $215 mo. Bedrooms&Townhouses mEEXCITING Leis ure World , pvt space.(213)796·3500 759-1 .. IBReward 499-2781 S!BS. 673·0072 Huntington Beach From $259.50 PALM MESA Af'TS. rm/bath. kit priv $150 ~~::..!.::='..:~~=--II----------:-- -............. P · suta 3807 Vou arcthcwmncr or New 2 & 3 Br In S·plex, S""ctacular s pa, total MINUTESTONPT mo.&17-7298 Newport.Mariner's Mile Losl:!'faleCat,longhair. 1-;aslblu!f Condo on i::recn· uonuva """ two fr•• tlcLet• ,.,~ . BCH. 1280 sq rt store ar Post multi gray. Nwpt Hghts. beH. 3 BR, 3 Ba. xlnt ••••••••••••••••••••••• .... • .. view, walk to beach, 509 recreation program . Bach, 1&2 BR (F) roommate needed. Ofc. Rcmod. $40. J erry Reward. 64&-1006 cond. S800 mo. 833 :.m85 N1t·c 2 RR apt w /lrg deck. IS15.00 val ue), to Delaware. 536-6962 social program. 8 pools, 8 rmm S2lO. & up. $1.l2.50 + ~2 ut. Lynne W (!ll)477 7001 or c213>240.~100 avatl now on yrly basis Rinqlin9 Bros. tennis courts. At Fashion bef 10 AM or aft 9 PM, ynn · LOST: White Samoyed. ----Sl501mo. Ph· 675-6775 or Barnum & Bailey ~: 2 i~·:r~:idb!~!·a~ Island, Jamboree & San /\~~1~~ ~~~s 6.1l·26S8 Store for Rent, Coast Hwy male, ans to "Kobe" vie. Townhouse 673627!! Cln:us 5S4·7'2lO JoaqwnHHlsRoad. <5BlksEastofNewport CdM. Approx 700 sq rt, llarbo!/W1lson. C.M. UnfurnisMd 3525 1714)644-1900 OfffceR...tal 4400 Call673-~ _548_·7_086 _____ _ ••••••••••••• ••• •••• ••• tta ch . upper rear. Aug 4 thru Aug 13 BLOCK FflOM IEACH Blvd.> ••••••••••••••••••••••• -=....,;....._ _______ , bd b T h partially rum . Adults. No Anaheim Convention Deluxe 4 Br 2 Ba, fplc, 546·9860 ~CLIFF "Rr,. 300 Sq ft. olc. 657 w. 19th, Fowl<f •. small while Poo· "c :t_2 ~ bo7n .?u;e/~ l)l'Ls S!l5Yrly.!>400093 Cenler,800W Katella 3 Br. view balcony, cpls, drp6, ,,.2 blk Bay & ROCllftl 4000 ,,..~,. ""-m;A CM die, Vic. Beach&Slater, .. T1nkets mus t be ex· d.shwshr, frplc, gar. No h y I J NEWPORT BEACH "~"2.130 679 '"09 H B Identify 8'2·3900 P I /clubhouse $425 ,. ____ del M 3822 ~ th S 960 140 Beac · $500. r Y se. ••••••••••••••••••••••• S r vt .,..,.. ·•• . . . 00 ~ er changed for reserved pets 205 IS t. ·4 1400 q. t. two P · 67>9227 ••••••••••••••••••••••• seats at the Convention or536-1718. 6"-ll03 ROOMS $25 wk up with baths. $400 per mo. Found, prescription mens 1---------•I Center ahead or time. 3 Br condo, H~ ba. H~ mi •D&UXf. kitchen. S37 .50 wk up 642-0200 ladustrial Rffttal 4500 Bifocal glasses. Vic. Apartmtnk Furnished .... .,,. Call 642·567~. Ext 3JJ to from beach Pool. Llke Eastbluif 3 br, 2 ba. apts. 548-97SS ••••••••••••••••••••••• Lake St. & Yorktown, ••••••••••••••••••••••• (St dalmyourtickets. new. Call art 6 pm Lease.lncl.spac.master Room&batb+kitprivin 1S1~~8~NB 1140 sq. rt. Xlnt loc. 3 H.B.S36·572.3 BolboaPettlnwla 3707 '[I,, i~r~~ * * * (7l4)837·4087 s uite, din rm & dbl New Woodbridge Home AGT.541•5032 doorsorfPlacentiaSt.at FOUND: 7/17, necklace, ••••••••••••••••••••••• -~ -garage. Auto doo r 547·9SU,SS·7494eve 782 W. 20th. Call Saun· Bch ,al So. Bay Froot" 1 br yrly, $250/mo No 2 BR. 1 BA, fpk:, encld BeachCondo.2Br,H!zba, ot>ener avail. Pool & 4..--.t.u...- 4150 1501 WestclffDr. derson days 642-0212, Onyx.759-1688,Aft5 pets. CORONA DELMAR patio, newly painted. pool, tenni s. sec. recreation area. Adults~,..........,. evesS46-2277 675Sl!OO Broker 2 Br Townhouse, frplc $285/mo 1st. last +$100. SJSO /mo. Mr Hatch. only. Nopels. l'Tom $367 •••h•••••••••••••••••• NewportFinancialCtr FOUND: Gray miniature Pool. tennis. Some ocean 751-8714 or 979·6896 8 4 7. 2 5 6 I o r .e v es up. First time this year. a Leasing Offiu Spece 45 0 female poodle. w /flea CostaMesa 3724 I · l;I (213)5921531 • W round fl vt m CallonSiteManager Storage 5 collar, vie Atlanta & •••••• ••••• •• • • • • • • • •• • & Cata ma views. ose 3 BDRM 2 B/\ TH. $275 . 865 Am1gos ay g I oor p roo ' (714) 642-3111ext246 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Newland. H.B. 556-6352 $40.00WEEK&UP loi.hopping&finebeach. KIOSOK.2POOLS NEW 2 BR. 2 Ba. 1325. Nwpt Shoru area, H\ ~~~aat0·;/0fa8dnya!!1; R.V. Storage Orange _.:...._ _ _;_ ____ _ •Studio&l lllt Apts 644'2611 64.2·7986 Free I month rent.if blksocean,2br,1badplx. gentlemanatthepopular DaUXEOFFICES C ounty Int e rn'! FOUND: Vic 17lb & •TV & Maid Scrv /\vail ---__ Easlside Bach unit. New le a sed ro r 6 mo s · Yrly Jse. 714-956-5871 Tustin Hacienda. Cull Comm! & ind.sU spaces, Raceway. 75c per n. per Irvine, N.B. Sm mostly Ph Se 'ltd I ----.-MS 3777 no R.'113847 200 to 2000 sq. rt. As low mo. Complete service white w /tan markings. • one rv. P00 ~-----Breed Apts. /\vail Aug 1. · 2 Br, huge denk, w/v1'ew. w. · _._ 290 1 s · I type 2376 N rt "I d ''M SUPER CdM ... as 35t sq. ft. Lag Niguel & ~pt. 714·675-1 ma e Pan 1 e rwpo "" · '-Frplc, cnrloscd garage Avail. now! Beaut. 2 br, lge Liv Rm, 1 blk to heh. Smnmtr Rentals 4200 6311948 5"8·9755or645-3967 LOCATIONS 631·2950 new crpt, encl. patio. 2 $365.673-1280eves. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Mission Viejo areas. Rentals Want.cl 4600 -·--------sus c "SIT"S 1,2&3 Bdrm.ApL-;. kidsok.S21S&$22S.mo. -..TE !!.a1n1~83Y1_t1°400S.D. Frwy. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Found,7/15b!klb~nPup, ~ ~ C1\Ll..675·23 11Dys. Eastside lBr+loft.Ncw Mgr 17411BKeelson.2Br.rnaBalownhse.Nr ·SAHCLEM..... ""· Pror wnrkln g cp l remale,4mos._V1c.Hun- Neatly furn lar gi: & Roqe" Realty Breed Apts Avail Aug I 118.848·9155 Hoag. Adlts, no pets . Beach homea, condos, .&.:= Offic•s seek'homc to rent in lmaton & Utica, H.B. ,mall l hr. S?2.'i to S!60 l'l'plc. enclosed garage. $285. 646-8710. and apt.a. Reserve now. "" • 8 re 8 . X 1 n t refs . 960-4494 Adults. no pets 21111 631 2950 HEWDB.UXE BERTIIAHENRY 1 ONTHFREE -------- N rtll! d N 1 dee 1BR walkto REALTORS "'·U · NI Needed'at on ce. LOST: Siamese cat. ewpo v VIEW 2 bdrm. 1 bath. Lara" 3 BR Townhouse 3 Br 2 Ba, nr beach. (pie, ew Y .. •• cu service. o ease re· ~...,,.. Call 897 0312 ..... be ch. S285 Yrly 215 Del Mar 492 4121 'd. ~ rt Pl t _ _,,,. · • gre~h color. Vic Irvine Bungalow. empld person. w ·,undeck, fpl~ ·. gar . with patio. garage + pal10. encl gar. skylight, a • . . q sq. . en y 498-3868. /\sk for J ohn & Annivers ary• N 8. no smokl'rs. mu1d serv W /0 . all a pph sC.dNMr pool. Quiet complex. dshwshr. s moke alarm, 759--0840 NPT. BCH. on Penin. l of parking. 2082 S .E. Chase Reward64.5·61SS 5"8 7197 park. beach in Adults. no pets. $335 lndry hkup. Kids OK. 2 Br. near ocean, yrly. blk. tooceanorbay. 2br, Bristol St, Newport ------------------ ---- -S'S(),molease.675·6061. 645-3:JHor837·9517 $425.893-0465 Fplc sundeclt $340. newlyrum•d.,slpsS,wk· Beacb.55'7-7010 Architect wants 3 or 4 SlOOREWARD STUNNING lt:e 1 Br ---- ---' S48.a34& l t l sz75 J & bdrm house nr. Harbor garden apt, pool. rec Front unit or corner MESA VERDE lgc 2 br. 2 Xtra lge delx 2 Br 1 Ba. Y ren a une THE EfFICf£NT Hl. Callevn646·3531 Blue grey Great Dane, area $235.710W l8th St. duplex.2Br.rrpk ,stove. ba,frplc,D/W,cnclgar, cpls, d~. D /W. rp.lc, WATERFRONTw/DOCK ~~ktor'\':~~5· lost7/4.494-0527 cpt.s & dJ'll&, So. or Cst across from park. S:HO. encl gar, lge patio, Luxury 3 yr old 1950 y. ALTERNATIVE 8uslMs II. Ht/ old eddln ba d tt.itll4on Beach 3740 Hwy. No pets. SJSO /mo. mo. 759·0761or7Sl.s888 adults. no dogs. $305. sq.ft. 3 Br 2 Ba, gar, Dana Point-f\lrn, walk to . ,..:;.~ .. ., ~~in ~h 1aW:. La"g. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Ph 67S-MSlor67S-1958. Also. same type 3 Br 2 lndry, w/dshwshr, bltns, ocean. 3Br. tam rm, Month lo montb rent in· ••••••••••••••••••••••• bch SUnnoon.498-4-496 SUNSET BCH on bay 11-IESEVILLE Ba. M50 Incl utll. Nr. (pk, cpts, drps, S850 ytly pool, szoo wk or $450 mo. eludes; recpt. service, ....._ --· ------- Studio. $250 util pd. ~ CostaM.sa 3824 2Rr w/gar, flSO mo. Yorktown & Deleware. be. Dys, 673-6100; evs 493-6736 penooalized phone CO"'.· ~ SOOS LOST : Prescription ad It. 213 . 5 9 2. 14 3 3 , ••••••••••••••••••••••• adlts, cpts/drps, range. 960-4614 774.9409 eragt;. cont. room, mail ••••••••••••••••••••••• glasses for a 4 yr cMd, vie 213·545·2904 rncd yd w/patlo. wtr pd, Beaut 4Br home w/beach aerv1ce, underground UTO W XIMG HarborSchl548·9853 ----Spac.newtnhse.2br.2ba. 2161.9 "l "SantaAna,call 2 Br. 1 Ba, no pets, 2BR&denor3br. in out front. Completely prk g . & more, in A A He~ Beach 3769 many xtras incl r IP. yd. 1·5, 6364120 Chlldi;en O.K. Close to areal loc. Kida Ok, gar. rum. fabulous view. S'1SO Newport Beach. Oulstandinl Oppor. Last fem bm Doxy, re- ••••••••••••••••••••••• garage, lndry rm. E· --shopping, S!25. 768-8764 Prof. dec'd. $450. Jacobs wkJ\lb'. llOO/Wk Auauat. TIIE EXECUTIVE Indep Contractor terms ward. Vic. Hunt's Bcb. -----------1 side. Only~. 642-1603 2 ~r Apt. f~· ~ear sh~p· S225 Deluxe Steps to bch Rlty. 675-6870 WATERFRONT HOMES SUITE Metro Car Wash S31HS12. Sharp 2br. cpts. drps, ~tS:. u ts. no pe s. Redwood, huge ceilings: Cozy lbr, 1ba, steps to 6JH400 640-S470 2950Harbor Blvd, CMLoe --t.-sm_a_ll_f_e_m_a_le-Do-g, bltns. 1 child OK. No Ca ll collect evea, beach, Shore• area, Balboa apt,sleeps6,$150. ••CdM dlx 2 rm suite, MARIHEUDIO partPekingese,red/Wht, pets. S230. 574 Joann St. (213)660-0926 (714)956-5871 Wk & up. or mo. rale. ut1J pd. AJC. ample pkg, SALES&SERVICE . Vic. Mesa Wooda, AptD.645-3417.1132-3448 One bdr apt, patio Lido Bayfront. 2 Br 6'75·5810;or642·0393 1$1.55.motomo.6'15-4!900. GrossSIOB,000.year.Full Wakeham park area. " closed ~araae 1••~1 price $37,000. includes Nd• m ed I c • t1 on • .. n • .,... w /frplc. Sandy bch. OCEANf'RONT 2 Br. 2ba, 2 Pvt orru:es. reception & ., .. 000. inven•"""'. Well Reward.~ .Blanton, unt Harbour '800/mo. 645-41685 furnlahed nicely $350 wk 2 restrooms. 720 aq ft .....,. ..,., ~ area 84&-5279. I t.37 k A total Fnt Vall 962 3200 estab. Owner movlng out LOST: 7 /~, fem. Jrisb ' OCEAN VIEWyrly 2Br1 Ju y, t S/w u a . · ey · olstate. TIME, 7Sl-1400 S.Uef', lO mo'a, D.Pl WAU<TOllACH Ba dplx. $'°0 mo. Wat;,ofront Homes rsa0 n--• .,.~tateofficeroraaM area.Reward.496-3176 l BR. gar, no pet1. 6"-6'180orM2·3839 631-1 --......r •....ia... """'"'£0 319-15lh St. 960-480& or Octanlront Weekly 8907 ...-.n••-.w• or manage w /option. Ynt tan 6 wht mutt i;;....;;_. __ ___._.__.,1 53&-1718. le 1 Br, new ept.t, paint. Seashore Dr a ar' Jba ornce avail. Overlooks BrokerUl.~1998 w/c:ollar Found 7/17' ,.,,..,<*f 15x30 patio, POO mo. ; 'A ti ·airport ft mountains. . Baker 4t 'Harbor Bl 'ri~ l.vo Of Orange """'ft'• 2 Dr. a ba, 3 blb from Itch. Avail Aug. 1. 768-1118 or COA m~l~l.y ~rn;.10 v;h Ahport/Re.gll\ry area. Hardware store, Newport 546-S290 mostbeaullrulopotlment Newpaial.tpt,1ar,Call 609007 U1 -· • ._t"' • 2l8Uflcbelaon.lrvlne. B each . 6U·5800., ________ _ communMes.ArtlOmg M-0814. . m..m3 152.oz:w Seashore Real Estate FOUND Germ/Collie rolx selllngWlhsteorns. ~-1 Br unfurn apt. DHr NwptBtb nlceZBr c.llto ''fteComp~Office" RESTAURANT or Basque & Baker••· woteffOls.ondmGjeSllc ttna.. 3142 water e~ 00J1• no ocean. sips 6 aar S300 t Offtces +work room, NJ:WPORTBEACK proxtmo. 7tl5S70.SS81 tteS.FeotuMQ pooll, ••••••••••••••••••••••• ::::~ts. 121 /mo. Juty, SJZ:1Au1'. 87s.hrs c:onf•r. rm, vault, Located hub ol at'tlvlty. roum> O'e)' •Wk kJlt.lb ~souno,timotdS. HAUOUlU-.MrS Waterfront Nwpt Bch loQnp. Gruel floof. Xl.nt ai.ooo. month ll'OU Oft •!Wiit r.et •bolllt.~3 wb and txelfng t-.ibtloule otters el••aot adult ·~, ~lf5 '2 housesU luxurtoua a Br w !boa{ prt's. 451' ft. Top Cost.aft abort hours. SH\8 92. Okhic 0.l J.&l. 611-3481 ~ wlhsoclolevents:Yennls, apart.mtota. LOc:aled tn ... .,...oan, .... mo. ava dock, UOO·tSOO wk. M .. loc. 2500 eq. • « Owner movlnf. must . """'ond~ot ex<:tuslve Huntlnaton Aus I. W.DIS day1. 87S477S leas. ('14)5-40·2200 or Hll. Terms. TINE. ~· mlfUJ>P119 w7kth0! .,.... NllVJ'<I"• The 'ff bou • ~~ (714,.......,91 ?St-1400 ..,....,,.,. x. v c. 1 - The Vlogt. Motl or ~;,. . t ar .! • Bill bland wtlfmt 3 Br BNl.Ol, C.M. Aft. Spm, ~ ~ loolGig Spa I.,... i~ r::p •xi wttldy /0t ? ..0. Cali lmPl"Oil*' ofc. 111ue, 3 MOHR •t* asJt fOt J.lnda Ck' for Fl#nllnllavatlOl>i. IJ1 c ~ floor Paa ' N2752ortu-.SC. room •. all or part. Is the namfy ot tbl 1am~. Wuda ~ondMBldfoom '' fro; J:O. are co:. ":-':"':c!:' Nt•porl. oc .. n view =;~~~~~ ~1~'*mu:e~·~~~ ._--!-0-16-~-.b-t:._c_t_P_ood-. __ ~-' plementedbyencbant1n1 , acroe1 f~n\ beach at 2;1ZlaQ.ft.Room3.~ vatmentaec~. Com· ~lbbou ,ln eau. ~.. •Minma-oo. .... ",'r •, .. ,, ... b•bms, • DAILY PH.OT 5Srd • s .. t bore. I I* lq. ll., tncl utll Nrl pany wm prove &JI Collette No r D . _ o --r be•ut u c u ouae ~ A •SIFllD bdtma. Pleo&1 ol paJ1.1 o. c. A f::rt. Bua ·~ raft lt'OU not In ex• MU'fuerit.e ~.lb I.a ...;;.:;,;.;;:;.:,;:...;.,;.;..:;..;.;..o.~~•....,.~---...~~~"""":'."~I w/A~ Y"'~l•:,•~· '"....,. apace. Weellty nla for PrMst,&40-a.s. c s ot 925,000. p/1r. Pu. llEWARD.137~ ~w DeoP&e. w:1a: ADS "'-'·•SeJ>LMMet !il,ppe Ctr Court.td wta. mA)830.112:1 tan': hiit, ........ w. \ile YOll to"•ll)t Ralbour BEA CK HS&. Stepe to daftd ofc.. SM.re recept NT SHOP >ft old. Vie. Medlte1'1'9· J.JalUt, Pttltlc~ tud in Npt Doh: l.u.WJ'. Ji ... ~. ---~ ... Joe A.muHt biHll area_ ~=Ille. D JYWyt,caWanw,\O • lbr, 2ba. ATaU aaw. $800 ~ Blmo owner 2S yrs. b · ..,v...;.;..,,_ __ ..... ......, ..... _..._. ~ ~ CCa..~.1: .._-.,.-msa EucalJ•• omc. spatoo, dusht, tlft• u•t•••r Doll't ~ .., -...ulfi WarDtr 'ct~ Alao•qllla. 8&JtiOI reno. 1 blldo bcllt. ..... ftj soi p/ft. t mo'a llal. Sll,000 • t•.ooo. ''tilt ; le c~ m:.tribl'O(>l ...... ""~· =::~,....,, =r· 711·1741 ~ .... reawljt r: \ I • •Nedneldey, July 20, t 8TT * DAIL V PILOT D 7 (Add u ... Bulld It .Diaper 1t .•. Hammer It... Carpet I lt. .. Cement H ... Wlro Jt ... Hoe it. .. Clean it. .. Move IL.Press H ... Patnt It.. Nail IL.Plaster 1t. .. Flx It ... SERVICE DIRECTORY Plumb 1t ..• Patcn tt •.. PIPe 1t ... Remooe11t ••• 1 Roof lt ... Landscape it ... T!le it ... Tri'!' lt ... Sew!t..· .. Haul it... Add It ... Plant 1t ••. Alter 1t ... Learn it ... to s' 1 • • .,..,. c.,.. Senlc. 8Httful h•-.ig •~•KJI_.. LCMdlc-... .......... ,,........ ,.,MJ/P•rllNJ RttnOdti & lepcdr .............................................. ······················· ..................................................... ;i~~:........... ...................••. • •............................................ APPUANCt= tlUA!R Ou)el Nao •Ill l•r 10W'a EUX:l'RlCAL SERVlC!: MOWlNC. EJ>CINC Want a REALLY O.~AN Landacapiaa, 30 yr• exp. Palnt • PIPtrlnl. It yn PalntJ.nt. Local·Eslab & Add-ons, patio, ftltyUghts llO l~C•ll or mlno Ro pair• • C~ SU hr, A SMALL Trlmmtn1. Cleanups, HOUSE? Call Glo1bam Free eat. Ltcenaed. aerv·c Harbor area. St Lnsured. Tona of reta. at rpra. Raid&: comm'I. Qi.II "10)411 KU c n.tn1 tool Ouar work JOBSMa-m3 Haulln1. etc. Reas. Olrl. Ff'Hest&U-51.23 MS-al'9,C·2'1·10T2 lie 183211. Refa furn. Friendly /efficient fr est 1162-4ll7 Lukay, f c-o ·-.uc... •t ':ft r HVIDO. Free •11n111illt ·-~---------· Wlndowa/Housecteutnc th1.-y &OZSSS 67M9&1 . _a:Z33 ________ _ ·-·••••••••••• ••• ••• at, ..., ••••••••••••••••••••••• ·-_: StrYkH Good rates· Good re& ••••••••••••••••••••••• AG.An FOlCI Know I ea Pal 9' t ln I . 5tooflllg Fbrmka • Om1 urpen c.• ,..A~c Remodclina. room 11ddl· ............... •••••••• Cal1Mr.Lynn538·7711 Fireplaces-Plani.rt PA.INTINGCOMPANY Int/Ext commetclal ..................... .. try. f1nt1hln1 Av.11 •••••••••u•~··•••••••• Uon, plan ch"ch & HauJin1. movlnf, paint· Alice'sHou,,ecleanin& BrlckCoocretePatlo JGENERATIONSOF apts. r'uldentlal 6 Repalrs. Lie & Ins. All •bdi. fr ctu. Maril Ecmomy At'O\lttin: Qual enatneerlnte drawl DI*· Ins, tar clean, trash, Rea.a. reliable, ntfl. Own Block Wolls BBQ Plt1 Paintlnt ExceUenCfl mobllebomes.a.1120 types. Free est. W11lt. 1Sl·U04.Sonm? •P,.Y•d cellln1~-Patlcraon En1loeerln1 malntec,J•nltortal, yd trana.64Mllnanytlme Refa.Ests.846-0464 Uc.. Bonded· lnaured. ,_ . 11.,-,. Cailanytuue,541·5830 GAaAO& CABINl::TS r,:1,., ruar, Uo t ' Co.8G-9Me careOoe m~lete service Free Est: Blockwall1, Reis fum. FREE EST .• ;;;.~ ................. Sewlng/Alteratlons stroaa wood lram;ti e.es W UIOo G••-. ~uorbiart 2•339' Hob, Hou.secleaninibyreliable alumpatone, brick. Dan~l VEBYNEATPATCH ...................... . IJN-11 unlta, wudrobo, c-.t/COR<nte ••••••••••••••••••••••• ce =~~:.e:~~~:S Call Res/Com'I. Reas, lie/· PROFESSIONAL Paint· JOBS&TEX'l(,O\E Ladles Dressm11klng. o..rbelld • '1oflr unJta ••••••••••••••••••••••• Ro.liable Expr'dJapanese Home&Apartment bond. Bob 750-9354, Ing. Int.er/Exter. Reu, Freeest. .,.. • ._ Alterations, Restyling, V.Uvtrt.'d a. lnatalled C'~Mlt:NT WORK All 1udoner "hmd1c11pe. Repatr•remodellng. Housecleanlng. Mature, 842·9177 workguar842·0386 ~ •• Pattern drafting . ftrtnto. M ma Ktndl. Rea100able. Pr~ Reuonable, tree eat. M2·6783 experienced, reliable. ~ • 548.IM(MI --~,. •• , mt. Call 150-6625 &45-5230 Mike #336782 '20, refs538--0950 Brick, block, elabe, frplca, (XOYE. Exp coll student.e ••0••••••··~· .. •••••••...._ ---------------------------------Oriental Gardener, main-stonework. 20 yra expr. will paint your home. IRepatra/Repipln1. •- ·-••••••••••••••••••••Phillipe Cement Co WEEDJNG·CLEANUPS lain t.wn, household, IMMACULATE CLEAN· Rela,eata.588-0358 Very reu. rate. Int/ext. Drains cleared. 1'ater ••••••••••••••••••••••• Car~ntry, a.ay typt', P1tUOll, rootn addltlooa. WeeJdy Maintenance auto. (714)832·6469 ING. YouD~ERVE the 1 b Qua I I ty p aJ n tin 'c ht.rs, etc, all pipes. Reu CERAMJC TILE. New or Pa.neJ, ~. rtt· Ali10 <:oocrete work 751-!i6S7. Freeest 642-9907 Hand te BEST.759-0377 8 ock, rick, •lump· w/PRIDEIFreeesLDan rates. Die\: Morris remodel.Frest,smljobs ~~mJ. lic ieiit Att !I, ~l:>n:M W llPM. lie/· VERY LOW PRICES! Ava~.m_;.~h~e~'c:.i an: The Moppets Cleaning =·w'::~~ r:.:·~~~~:: ~197 783-79112 . welcome536-at26altS. 1 on «•rdentni main· 12noon.646-5187 Service. Call us if you Bond /)le. ~36·9908, u-a-..palftttt... IHOMESAVERS. Plumb· Franun1. fin ish, rcmod~I. ll4r.D Concrete. All phuea tenance. Georee 549·2015 Mo..__ need a good job done. 63S-G4 '9'Nar...-lni & Heallni le air coo· Tree Senlce repairs , l.1c ~u1c k concrete, block & brlck ·~ Referrals.546·2393 •..&.61...•--ang Custom Painting, com· ditionlnC. Free eat, S10 ••••••••••••••••••••••• service. Wrk 0 u .. r work Free -t.s. Llc .... "°41G .. ner ....................... ..-_. ... .,., • ..,....., petWve prices. Int/Ext. hr H at •-reliable · t · I 0 " ..... .. A Haulln ln 1 wl ••••••••••••••••••••••• .. .,.,""-75 . one .,. Removing, r1mm ng, 9Ca314 booded67S.9720. ct now! for com'P f, mov g. c eanup HOUSECLEANING th ~ service. BofA, M /C OK. topping, Crest, lie/ins. In --maint. of lawn.a, shrubs $7 /up. Treework. Reas, a PERSONAL TOUCH. PETERS PA1NTING 751-3150 ..-645-5124 CArpd s.t-Ylc• Concrete Rejuventors, & trees. Res. & comm. fut, freeestSU-4597 Reliable, refs 536-3718 Expr'd. Reas Rates. PAINTING a.rea Uyrs. AODY ........................ 4.'leansrust&tollcallfor MeWeeney,645-51lM Free Est. Call Gene CONTRACTORS Rauadel&a.,.,. Removals. trimming. Shampoo & ~team clean f'ree &t. 6424416 . HAULING. Odd Jobs. Hsewrk wkdys, 7 yrs 552-0458 TAKE NOTE ••••••••••••••••••••••• pruning, free est. Lic'd, Color bn&hteners ht -Gardening Service: clean Lawstudentneedawork. Palm Springs are a. fully . ured6'22J62.I Cpls 10 mln ble»ch.. c1: .. n Block walls, Slump stone, up & hauling, weekly l_J_lm_494_·_S8S4 ______ 1 Reliable. 963-3458 L<>w Prices. Slate lie & ln· Will trade PRINTING REMODBJMG U1S • • llv, din rm, ball SIS Ave Concrete . Put 1 o s, maintenance. Reasona-~Y & Jer. Free haul-LandscapWtg s.rd. Exterior specialist. (any ,type of com · SWldecka Kltchens Expe~. Tree ~ork. fmesl rm S7 50 couch $JO chr cln vewa)'8. Lie. #270013 ble rates. free estimates. ing cleanup etc for usa ••••••••••••••••••••••• Try me-CaUco836·SSSS mere la I) for exterior "'-rts Bathrooms qualit)I'. obtainable. Mr ~. G~ar' ehm pet ~or 714·548·7&J2 After 4:30 Hk for Ron. bl 't F' bid . · painting ot my bowie in A_.ddi...,t'~-· Formica ArchLilldsay,548-0426 ... 64S-7588orS48--4987 e 1 ems. ences. gs Tree, Plant Remove, p-i-. Your Ca11.1-F\tllerton (labor only). ""'"' Cpt repair 15 yrs expr C--'--_.or removed. 557.2005 UlllT '"' 0~11·ng Sid1'ng Do k Ir R ........._.. Trim. Lawn Renovatlor A g E t 1 St $395 Call . !or info, 870-4564, ......,. T·""'-..1 wor myse efi; •••••••••••••••••••••••Gardening Service Tree i----------i & Sprink lers. Misc. vera e x r ry askforDave. Painting Repairs uninltCJ 5Jl-OtOI. N 1£W Homes. Addition&, removal, sprinklers r e· OCC Student. Big ~. T 548·5863. 2 StDry $49S, lntr $4Srm All Work Guaranteed ••••••••••••••••••••••• Remodelmg by Layne. pa.ired.673·3910 truck. Trash, tree tnm, Priceslnclmitlr'l·labor WORKGUARANTEED 26ynexpr French Grammar & Sell things fa:.t with Daily Lie. Contractor. 552.3475 etc. Randy 642-5703, Find what you want in Guar /lnsrd, Free est. Interior /Extr. Free est. Call Don Vickers Uterature. Michael Red· Pilot ~anl Ads. eves. Classified Ads 642·5678 549·3666 Daily Pilot Classirieds. Ted 552-0134 or 636·7085 2S yrs exp. 642-0095 83().7136 field, M.A. 759·13'9 lost&Fow.d 5300 Jobs Want•d, 7075HtlpWC111t.d 7100HelpWonttd nooH.tpWant•d 7100 HtlpWC111hd 7100HelpWClfthcl 7100 HelpWOllf.d 7100HelpW•t.d 7100 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• Lost: 7·13·77 'f1ny Toy . White male P oodle URGENT Automotive Answers to the nume of 1 Need Work Waitress New Detail Shop needs Bank teller, exp'd preC'd. Sumitomo Bank or Calif, C.M. ore. S49-9181 CLERICAL CLERJCAL·Typlng, 10 key add. Computer Input & bkkpng exper deslra· ble. 631-1361. DENTAL Many dental positions avall. thruout Orange Co. For more informa- Electronic assem bier. l-•0•EC.-•S•E•C•R•ET-,.•1-y• lrnmed. openlnas for the -- Pierre. Vic. of Monte Vis· Xlnl ' help. t & o R d • Top wages paid. Engine a range ewar · Prefer Days? Ph 548·3925 Steamers. eng ~ainters . Very fri endly. DJys 675-1374 Eves 646 2033 Help Want.cl 7100 bt.ifers & polls ers, UP· P __ _.. 5350 ••••••••••••••••••••••• holstery shampooers, ......---.. check out. pick-up & de· ••••••••••••••••••••••• /\ccnlng Clk to $8400 livery. Apply at ' Dnnking problem " Profit By P~_eu . 2009 Harbor Bl, CM Call Alcohol Helpline With fasl growing firm'!" 645-1030 BARLADY·Girl 2S to 30 yrs old, to tend bar, no ex per ner, Huntington Tavern ror me!Jow peo· pie only. 536·3300 BARMAIDS. Day, Night Immediate opening ror part tlme and full time C'lerk /typist to assist in the legal advertising de· partment. ----------t lion pie.Se call DR. PERSOHMEL 1201 W. La Veta, Ste209 foUowlng positions: PCB Hlghly skilled organizer stuffing & touch up, elec-needed to work in a toroolc chassis assembly pleasant. ore. You'll & also assembly for represent them in your small solid state devices expertise handling of ar- w /epoxy exp. Apply at ranitements. Type 80· Barcus-Berry lnc., 1S461 statistical. IBM selec- Sprlngdale St., Hunt· tric, dictapbone. CLERK TYPIST for busy ins ore. SH helpful. Must be able to handle tele. Call 833·9511 days or 644·S27S eves. Orange 633-9740 Free&Fee Dental Ortho. asst. ingtonBeach. Nystrom Associates a. hrs a day 8JS.J8:JO plush loc. i.eek.tng detail --------m 1 n d ed 1nd1v. ca111--------- & Relief Shif\s. CaJI for Must be capable typist appl. 548·7781 with IBM Selectnc. CLERK TYPIST Expanding Mortgage Co. an Orange County has an immediate opening for a receptionist/clerk typist. Must type 55·60 wpm Please call Cathy Tompson at Unl ·Cal MortJ(age, 114·963·7873. EO.E. P/tlme for friendly, low 1._ ________ Personnel Agency. 3723 pressure ofc. RDA or 1• Birch St. N.B. 5S7-0M5 PREGNANT? Barbara, 833-2700, Den- Cari n g confldentul rus & Dennis Personnel counseling & referral. Service of Irvine, 2082 Abortion, adoption & M1cheJson Dr. AYON· Bartender, F'emale. part· time. 25·35 yrs old . CM . 559-5560 art 1: oo PM . Ability to work well with detailed material impor· tant. Ability to meet work deadlines as e:.sen- tial. RDA eligible. Salary EHGINEBllNG 100% free to applicant. based on exp/ability. LAITECH HEED EXTilA CASH? Irvine. 559·0777, art 6 For evaluaUon & testing i---------640-4292 or components for manuf. or electro·mech'I keeping. ------- APCARE 547·2563 ACCOUHTIHG CLK Earnings are good-hours are flexible when you're Mortgage banking firm an AVON r epresen- LJHOA & VICKI in Orange Co. has an im-tntive. Call 540-704l or Outcafl MaHOC)e med. openmg for an ac-Zenith 7-1359. FortL-E... f ft• ttnj.? clerk w/exper. in 1---------nc-"'" 0 · bank reconciliations.11-·---------S<.•rvang all Orange Co. P I ease ca I J Cal h y Babysitter /llousekeeper 835 7313 Thompson, ul Uni cal permanent, live in own Spiritual Reader Mortgage, 714 / 963·7873. beach apartment, + 1815So. 1::1 Camano Heil! EOE. salary. Sngl non smoker. BEAUTICIANS wanted, take over busy clientele, good salary + com· mission. H.B. 968·8080 or S.A. 979-3590 BEAUTY OPERATOR NEWPORTER INN 644·0661 &640·4740 Automobile required for occasional driving. Salary commensurate with past work ex perience. DENTAL/Assist.+ switching devices. Req's Exper necessary, X·Ray solid state & printed lie. F /l'ime. Call 837·7112 circuitry knowledge. & COCKTAIL Dental Secretary /Book· WAITRESS keeper, exper'd or col· Learn ln 40 hrs the most lege. Call 546-3000. exciting, glamourous, Dental Chair Assist. X· highly paid profess. Day ray license. or eve :c;essions. Place-Cali 546·3000. exper. w /electrical test equip. Some J.C. logic background prcr'd. STACOSWITCH INC. 1139 Baker Costa Mesa 549-3041 Equal Oppor Employer ment assist. Good job OP· Babysitter, I child, 3 days por. DEHTAL ASSIST. San Clement!.'. 1-'ully he. r---------.-_ 1_67_3-_1_153 ______ _ For <ippt. 492 7296 Contact Mike Tinsley at 642·4321, Ext. 332 for in· terview appointment. BEAUTY OPERATORS Leading CdM Salon 644-7321or 552·0943 Factory WORK YOUR WAY THRUSUMMER Assemblers & General Laborers Fae· tory lrainees-Bluejean jobs. Long or short term. Never A Fee. Call iE[(~av SERVI CES 833-1441 •MICHELLE'S* Outcall Massaj.?t• A/PayabM Clerk Needed for largt.' in - ~urance co. that offers g r e at e mpl oyee benefits they even pro· v1de a gym for lhe health con.<>c1ous. 10 Key. typing 45 SO. walling to \\ ork w the team. Nystrom Associates Pe rsonnel Agency, 3723 Birch St. N.B. 557-oo.tS. 100% Free Wapplicanl. week. Costa Mesa area Bkkpr, slat typist for P./\ Call 714f SI ·9194 Exper. prefd. Full/part --------- 64.5·2139 ore. H.B. S/H not req'd DAILY PILOT So. Cali Coc ktail lime. Top wages. Corp. Engineering i-------------l'Ull lime perm. Aft 6PM , Waitresses, Inc .. 17922 benefits. Laguna Beach DESIGN IOAM-2AM 731 4462 MASSAGE RGURE MODELS ESCORTS OUTCALL OHL Y 631-3811 BABYSJITER Mature & &wknds536-3793 Cos330l WM.BayCSt.I r Sky Park Bl. Ste C. 494-8555. IEHGIHEBl resp. Vic. 17th & OC · a · esa, a' · Airport. CM. Active 2 yr BOOKKEEPER F/C Equal Opportumty Irvine, Ca 92714. Denlal Assist, p /time. Development, design· & Em loye ---Ch · Id E modification of new pro. old boy· 494 ·3009 or Multi books for prop. P r -Coffee Shop Waitress, atrs e. ves, some duct lines, devices &. 645-6766 _m-""gm_t._C_a_l_l 640-__ o_123_. __ 1 Clencal $780 over 18, day shin. Apply Sats. HB846-3S40 eq\Dp. for a prec1s1on. B/\BYSIITERlive.in,rm ---------•I SpiceofLife to Rosemar y. San Dependable Babysitter. electromech'J 1w1lch &bnl+salary,Spanish Bookkeeptng Isthevarietya\\aitins:a Clemente Inn , _125 rJUme,SlOOmo.Satthru manufacturer. Position SpeakingOK,842·0514 IMMEDIATE HEED versatile indiv w an Aven1da Espl1nd1an. Wed. 6 :30AM·2 :30PM. req'sknowledgeor. easy going local firm. _San __ Cl_e_m_. -----must have own trans. •SolidSlateDev1ces 1---------Babysitter, Reliable to care for Infant p/t your OUTCALL MASSAGE Apt .Ma~agers for 60 to 80 home. Refs. 581-2440 6PM·2PM 973.(>893 units in Costa Mesa . *~ CallJoy.~·l.288,0ennis COM M IS S l ON 646"'686 •PrlntedCircwts * ._ _ _._ •-.J.-& D~nnis Pers.onnel SALESMEN & SALES DO .... UTSHO• •Color&Llght Uses "'.,._·"JI .....-.. Service of Huntington MANAGER For new " ..-In Displays •Keypunchers Be.ach, 16168 Beach Blvd. bout dealer & yacht F\111 & p/time. No exper. •4-6 Years exp prer'd ----- -631 2950 BABYSITTER. my home AIHllHIT 1111&.FB &utel21. brokerage, sailing expcr nee Age 2S-4S. Woman. STACOSWITCH IMC •SHARON'S* OUTCALL MASSAC E 499-1224 EXOTIC GIRLS Massage & Modelinl( Outcall542·3HlJ,513 :1250 ----------for 1 & 9 yr old, perma· Assembly MECHANICAL PRECISION ASSEMILERS nent, non·smoker, re· liability a must, transp & ref required, Magnolia & Ellis F.V. 964·1036 [iiij-Apply in person. Mr. 1139 Baker Costa Mesa a~un AlllnC. CLERICAL _n_~_67_5-_l_403_____ Donut, 1.35 E. 17th St, CM 549.J()U .,,.,~ PJtime luam-3pm. days.·--------• "'ft alOp E 1 Tues·Fri.Baslcbkp'gre-Drapery Workroom · ..... u por mpoyer q 'd. Call 673-4848. Cook for Day Shirt at exper'd Cutter & tabler. (714) 835 •103 COCO'S Ftr. Exp. pre· finisher & free·lance in· --------- Please Call BABYSIT~SEKPPR ______ _..___ CLERICAL f'd. Interview btwn slalJer.642-1843 Engtneenn1 N. Sh 'f L' 3-SPM. 4647 MacArthur.---------M .... UF CTURl .... G 1 child. Arline couple ---------1 1ght 1 l. .-~xper. DRIVBl An A " W" arn a small manu! "O. need..'! part time person. Bookkeeper, fem . Work in helpful, bul willing to N.B. (nr O.C. Airport). SU .... D"'Y 0 .... LY ENGINEER "' ~ ~ Li t67c: 729' h h lrain resp. ind1v. Joh re· 540.2244 " "' " w !job opportumties for ve ou oJ· " your ome. your ours. 0 II 0 · 1 p · 1 For production develop· . h . 1 -----Ask for Mr Frank. q's figure aptitude. typ-__ e ver a.i Y lot r 11 1 prrr1s1on mec uruc·a as-Banking Trainee 64.2·1403 in.I! & JO key. Xlnt work· bundles lo carriers. Re· ment o sma e eclro· 432•2Avorudo semblers w 6 mo's ex· Uni Ex rt ---ing conds & bend1ts COOK quires van o.r large mechanical assemblies. Costa Mc~u per. You wall have the f' f ~I ,_ •n:: k BUSBOYS. for private w co. located in Fashion Home style cooking for wagon and a good driv· Exper. in documenta· * * * ken LeBIClfte '-'ouareth""'tnn('r•1f i•hancetomoveuploful· or nen yperson. e Co l Cl b XJ th II Hr 1230AMt 9AM retirement home. in Ing record Phone tion, production line ' ~ " ' h 1 ing public contact pos. un ry u · n our-s · s : 0 · Laguna Beach. 494·9458 · t bl hoot! & two free tickets Iv qualified mac ine too Call Willa. 833·2700. Den ly w11ge + benefits. no Call an Spm. 644-4360. 642-4321. ask for Harry rou es ng cost h1.Dldcr. We offer good . t 71 4965767 COOK & LfOUSE "-ley Equalopportuni reduc tion. Degree ($1.S 00\aluel. lo benehts & vou will work rus ~ Denrus ~ersonnel ipi, 4· • ---------• • l;'Employer . pref'd. Rlnqlin1lro1. on a variety. of PCB drill· &:rv1ce of lrvmc, 2082 IUSIOY-01 ........ ER CLERICAL KEEPER. 12 noon to ---'---"------STACOSWITCH INC la loll Michelson Dr "" 4PM. Mon-Fri, $60 wk mum •Y mg machines, adjusting. _ · we accept applications FREE '°SITIOHS English speaking only DRIVEAS 1139 Baker Costa Mesa Circ&IS tnmmang & filling to 1---------•1 Mon -Thurs 3.5, Exper. ReceptjSKy to $900 Own trans. Exper & Early AM. U, delivery S49·30U Aug 4 thru Aul( 13 tolerance Ban.king re q • d . Gu 11 l v e r · s Top oppor. to join xlnt co. re.f's. 548.9711 aft •PM L.A. Times, C.M. $300 Equal Oppor Employer AnaheimConvent1on v TELLBlS Restaurant. 1848 2 m this vanety spot. mo+.MS-0770,Bob Center. 800 W Kat('lla Apply In Person PIX OPERATOR MacArthur Blvd, Irvine. Moderate typlng & sh COOKS. So. Lag, CM, NB. . k & Tickets must be ex DICT"',u-....E o•R will land this wonderful PJtime & f1t1me. Coffee Driver: parts pie up changed for reserved ADVANCED --""""' ..-Shop exp. Ref1 please. deli very· Theodore seats at the Convention CONTROL RETURNITEMSCLK CareerOpportunity ~iChtis S40-605S Charlie's Chili Ofc. (714) Robins Ford, CM. Con- Center ahead of time. s LOAM a.K TYPIST ftERSOMNAL r~i Of t ._L75 549--0351 ta ct 8 0 b stew art Call .,~.. E 33 647 Younq t ~ c o -64.2-0010, ext 44 U"UO·S673• xt 3 to Santa Ana. Calif. lmm«I. openings for ex· LINES Lite ore background wlll Counter help Is needed. --------- claim your tickets. Equal Oppor Employer per'd, well groomed In· U..,DERWRITER get this Interesting pos. We have openlngs for 2 DRJVERS-3 routes open, • * * ---11---------dlvlduah1 to work In ., in one of Irvine's flnest women• working AM & PM. Pttl!"e. Must Wanted · Male Under 20, busy, friendly al· Immed. openln4s for companies. Benefits are wtpublic in a nice beach have cleao dnving re· Friendship + Posslble?1---------moephere. Xlnl salary, trainees & exper d Un-xlnt & the co. is a area. Apply before lpm. cord. neat appearance. Share . Home. John . ASSEMBLER benleflta & 1i;wth pole~ de~~f:.e~~tEFITS "friendly giant.'' Eastbh.tf Cleaners. ~ 19yra&over. 5'11-0470. 535-2282 TR.AIMEE$ ~~all ersonne , INCLUD.BONUSES& CallRita 540-6055 Eastblurr Dr. NB DRUGC&.BlK Handsome mun, 38. sngl clean, trim , honest. seeks to meet remlnlne. attractive young lady 18·28. J nterest5 · good mustc, rood. travel. literature. l>h aft. 8PM 642-e2$ . -ht'°""' Serrtus Sl60 •••• ••• • •••••••••••• Does a 10 hour day. 4 •WPORT PAID HEALTII PLAN Stcy Mo Sh $750 644-0932 d k I t BAHi( OF H.. . Inter...,t1·ng pos. In lovely ---------1 Cards & Gifts. P /time. ays a wee appea 0 Equal Oppor Employer Apply ""' Customer Service M0-737a. you? Conscientious ap· FGSlNSURANCE ofc overlooking the LotsofrR ---------pUcant.s will be trained to ---------kh s water. Career minded a -o s s em b I e Plastic 1---------•1 t7400F~~at:v~ile~ 208 must as this wlll lead to a Versatile peteon wlll E:Md.rqoics medical products. We of· BANK Union Fed Savingt Bldg highly paid future. love reputable ftrm of· , ~~7t/hs~~anifct ~~:e'fle~~ •LOAN CLERK* Or Call 549-8161 ~~~c :;;:g ~~::tf!~~ CS:~0s~~=:~ benefits. <Some over· Immediate opening In Xlnt oppor. in growing MB·l.2811, Dennis & Den· u me req ul red ) Ca II Huntington Beach orfice. CAR WASH co. for person w /lite typ· nl1 Penonnel Servi~• of PaaltkJh avall•ble for an TECtti41CIAH 94GINEEllHG Engineers. design & drafting. Small co. needs expert engineers. Ex- per'd in small compo· nents . Xlnt op · porlunltl es . Good salaries. Call Carol. 581-3830. EHGIHHRIMG DRAFTSMAN Exper'd. Street plans. Design. Tent. MaJ>$. Ap ply In person w /work SDmples. Robert, Bein, Wllliam Frost & Aasoc. 1401 Quall St, NB. FEE PAID Ex Sec tR.E. S12K R.E.tremecula S14.K+ Exec Sec /Pres to $l2K Also Fee Jobs Irvine Personnel Agency 488 E 17th Costa Mesa Suite~ 642-1470 File Clerk Trainee Do It Y ourseff Promotable pos. for am- bitious person seeking busy co. Cal! Kate. 833-2700. Dennis & Den· nis PersoMel Service of Irvine, 2082 Michelson Dr. FOTOM/\T taking ap- plications for sales posi t1on. shift 10.3 &/or 3·8. Training pd. must havt· own transportation. mu.st be 18 or older w /job exper. Apply at nearest Folomal. 492-3950 San Clementeor768·417l Mis sion Viejo. G94ER.AL OFFICE We are looking for a high school graduate with a mloimum of 2 year:1 clerical or ofCice ex· perience, accurate typ. tnC skills of 50 wpm, and a good speller to work Monday through Friday. 8·5. t650/month. Please call for an appointment. William Harvey Research Santa Ana n• /835·2422 F.qual Opp Em pl m JC G94ERAL CLERK Expanding N.B. Clnan. clal organiiation has oPening for responsible lndlv. for switchboard. ma&lroo m , filipg & microfilm duties. Exper. helpful, but not req'd. Apply at. CPI. 2nd F1oor, 180Newport Ct.r Dr, N. B. 644-4360, ask for Ed Cook . ~~-2422 or apply In =~·~~~c:S b::!: Ft\lme, over 18. Apply at }i~\~ls~o~~~it!it =fj~d :=~21~8168 =1.:~! ~I~ \1:~ ESCROW wuuam Harvey Some loan ex.perlence Metro Car Wash, 2950 this ( tronlc educatlon or GEHY.AL HEii Research preferred. Excellent Harbor Bl.CM. make • wupot. D&taProceslln1Trne equlvaleot work tit· *OFFICER* ~ll Or P/Ume for s mall DIVORCE Lepl Typtna Service Tne-Se"e·File Cocp°pltt. Oiuranteed 645·9580 2100HarborColta Mesa l42SS. VillaaeWay salary, working condl· C"'SL..HEB OallChrll 5'0-eGSS HeN't YawCllmc• perleoce. Typla1 30 wholesale novelty & San An CA tioos and benefitt. Call A "'-Cle Tvllitl SSH to learn lft p.reaUPe>ua wpm, and famlUarity magic co lo shipping & F..qual~pe~plm/f orapply~brancb Telephone. Mature Thilxhitco.givesaral.se estabUabmenl. Some with computer t4lrtotnal 1en'l dept.a. Apply AMRICAH penonw/exper. ~per everytimelhecostofllv· clerical dutltt for a Ofe1'9Uont II deslNJ>le. NoedelflclcntpertoafOt 9-Uam, Golden's Magic mo.+ bC!ftefits. Apply. inggoesup.Afineplace cheerful per•on, Call We can offer the 4 priV8tely owned of• Wand, 14' W. 11th .St, ASSIMIL•S SAVl ... CWS Tbe' Earl'• Plumblna. to spend your day le Iota &a.an IMl·l.29 Denn.I..-• qualified cud.ldate an ncea. Xlnt opportunity. c.M. A.nembt.ra. preclsion. 7830~er H1mt.Bch 1$216Newport81vd,C.M . ofpot.entlal. O•••l• P .. raonnet' exee!Jeota&arUA1Nlary (IJ'OWtnt compuy. Ex·'IOenl ___ ()( _______ .d male or fem. 4 yrt. min Mra. Jkawi 848 2222 601753 Oall RJta S40-80SS S.rvtce ~ Huntlniton with Uberal frlote ~ Clllt worlrJ.nt condJ.Uona. c Fee Pai • .., ~ ' e.x.per.Goodmanualdex· EQ~Oppottunlty ,."'SHtB ALSOPUJOIS Btac~!..·Beachlfivd, MoeOti to Jnclude a Salary ope.a . aall .,._.~s.r,riM~t • vn:i:~tft tcntyrt acood oresit._t, 1tmp1Qy•l' M IF lm _ _....,."'~.11 •-P ••me Sutt,ut.~ ., • c r t d I t \l n I o " , 631.a210 """'"' Pol· for mdlv. ,.__,.,. --t..i ... n• & -•c--"O... n-.. ru -/U c-_._. I ~· mectlcal /deoUI lA· . seek R busy time In fm· ••••••••••••••••••••••• .-:-p•r "smanull c·0--~;;; openintlinouraellHrve • __ -... ...._, D'!LI MANAO~R', ..-.nee. port.ot co. Alao Fee JatitWeilhd. 7075 ~.Hardwonclrii.'dt: IAf«TBJ.a IM•U.Uont,Cost.aldeaa ;;;u.=·Jlf.C.r.t. P/llme d•1•· .. ~'-•l lie &CtOW Job•. Call Carrie, '••••••••••••••••••••••• dlc1ted Individual s B RE.RENOW ll , ...-. Great job for atu· ar...,. ' . • rwp. ~xper .over ti. Pl .... applr In ptnon llcrow~ &13-2.700. Oen.nit It Den· Llve·ln COQ\paoloo. No needed. small co. Comeln&olbeworldofto-denta.71•/Ul..QIO ~forMiraft~m.C.JI toi • lmmed. Openlnc lot' n1a P~net Service of dtink1•mole. Mature w/r.ood bentfttl, ad. op. ~. Watcb your career CdM Realty end O.velop· ClerkTralnee l 511..aas.. Escrow Secy at our Irvin~. 2082 Mlchelson woman "'/rer1 /upr {lOI" • ..ivancemertt. Call bklMom lfrt;!aaffJC&ulck mp.l llrm needs ex· '-" ,.....,_ ( DIUYllY MAM. =DATA La4una Beach Of~. lfln 11 Dr. •ftb PAime caro of Ou'Ol;&el.a30.NV "'u~•nt. .-Mo.500 pertenced &lrl Fr•day, Sharp lfttllv to le.,•n !\JlltJmetorP,ertyrutar C ••JloM "'l)I exper. reqd. XJn• Gen'lott' • ..- lde'rb' fiJOr omotlon.111ly .• , JI o.tM 1 t~ec/Hcretary l)''1'> ••f*U ol .Qta proce11• atore Muat be nea., a, ..._ •allJ'1. workln1 coo.di~ ••V.t ..... •• ~~~:~7 pireraon A~+ .....,liid N=•zt::~n:::Y Mutt bave conatruc:Ui0n. it11. Lota« pltone work ab!; to 4o btevy Uftfn1. STAte~ ~~ tnclud. dent.al . Vf1Yllt.etypi;i'totlndlv. • 1 Mtcha.nlo nHded e:qet ueoCamput ~V• hkkH •Pt CommunM:a· In top C'O. Call Suaan. Apply tn penon. 2025 ~ ~.,;1_.. SavU.p t awp. post w /fan· JllllABiE w .. tey lrad, . • ' . don ikllla "unUat. 848-121f. De.nnll ., Oen• NftPC)ft Blvd, C.M. Dr"W 1411W tcUl!D.r . taauc co. Call Ray. WW bal>Jlit or t'*1"!•DY nee. U.. • , , "I lla~-. tomethln1 to ecll 1 Stilt)' open. Weltun & nil Ptt'IOIDIMI SOrvfco ot -... Y ~...,.... ,,._ ~ EOE ae.ll9, o.m. • D n· ••n~•I •r wlt•d• . .... ~Ui'if1 ~Qlalfttddldolttrell. Co.f75.e00~ ~~ uu..,uomOll D .. ch. Ull'8 Delh"«Y. HOme debv~ ~--a:a<!f · -mPenoao.1 $en'--of 6Cla>. ,, ;"1,r,, • ~':,!,'•;!"~·d. Both ·'l'eopljwtii~Peopie : c .. LDcm" ":"I ~It.ch ~&tlt•ltln\:~ ~~!' .. ~,. ~··. -~~&-· ~~! .ac:-Slc:alTAaY .1 HilltinllCD 8dcb. 111611 -.,... Y>I :...o&.... • ..._ l ;-'ft" •·'='P,~~·.v -· "' l.' .. ~·J,-, _._ .,i; 1..a--\ Blech81Yd 9blta1Jl HOIT_,.I~-or. rou'r .-a.Nim Uwal C!Olnm 1 '11MK'•·-t-Wom•nr lo en ror1 Cla111ffed •d•·-1411 bfl ~· ol hnl udl day, ·, ~Dtr.olll•wf ,.nu· _ • , . Md.SM. ttc ·,+ _,,., MllAY. <>niiill• ; ~Y'lnm clllldr m ,._.,. VWtt, j lleftlll •maJI items or ro11 llOO·S400 mo.,__ "!10,Jt t.tl1 J cLaJ Mn. flnn. Tni-10 Tr1~, a • Dall~ Pll«>l Jl.U~ -,. ,.,.,· 'Jo.~! A.no/:1161 .Tal'1a UR.-..J;:i~...-rORY Home . 4 °1011 art i an7 lU'I. J&a~l, ~·U bna dtpeftdab\e ; • ., ,·..,11;a lllFt"; <,.wpm, 1la JOG pm! Qml:WA.110~, sell .. ,.,, ~;,"' '1ill¥l+l:AltelfD ___ •-~~l _ t :a.n . , 1 ~ ~ i car+beclO•.Mt--. MM>lll. ·-'•1'811-~,r ~ .. •· -.,~ . I . -, ,, • 1 Htfp W uted 71 Oc-H.ip Wanted 7100 H .. 'W•t.d 7100 ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• SAUS S4LISPIASON Heip 'W...U 7 ICMI ...... Wm.d 7100 .W••u 1001 Ba D~ll V PILO_r ___ .. __ WeOrthd•y. Jury 20. 1877 ~?~ ..... !!.~~ !~t~.~ ..... ?!.~~ ~!~ ..... ?!.~~ lllC.rlONIST SUPPLIMIHT f'or g't.ild ty;., jewelry ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~~~·:.·•••••••••-•••••• -.. ··-·~~··1 t:nwal ollsu. aorae INSUltANCI Ofe MJo;OJCALAS..4>1STANT Add •oother allJI lo 1our YOCM IHCOME store, eaper'd m window s E c R E T ... R y _ TRl!l:a.orBERS&Top-DRASTIC: 'horthud, typtn1 m Back ornce a1r1. HUAl liat ol acc:ompllsbmenta. display & knowledae of BOOK KEE P~R fot -. MU:ll be up'd. A l"orHl Ave. L•1uaa ~~~lol Ol*ki~~-111· perm. il\,lton 8ucb Pbyaklan. S.A. b&Md co. wtU train S~!!,SnSSS china .• crystal, sliver fr b·~'"'-c P.roduc":-8 _,_ q;u.j•d. FUU or p/lJcne REDUCTIONS r~ada .,... "-..., 1ruur. u Rt!Pl:Y claalrlod Ad 1'77 Y o u o 11 l " e • r '""' Ml fi ell" Full tt .. ......,. -...,_ -per pref'd, wlll traln Oallyv •Poot, P.O. Bolt awttcl1bo.trd. Utetyplng. TalPHOMIWORK =C ry. me, ol11a1. Buildinl prodw:ta wor-t avail. Earn up to Sole of ouWtonding r1ddl*'IOO mouz t to k or constr exper prcf'd. $100perday CallSoony, cn11...,,,;~/ & '-'II.--... .., _:. -1560, Colt• Meu, Ca. accur• e nee~. wor Hou•on.11 .. 15 .,,_ .... l ... ""' • 4 'Wl .,,,, ........ ev•• bt wo 7 .._ t ....,......~ Sm:": I ~a; 1e q • • IHY94TOlY tr.ms _ _ ----~~rn!t~~~ A:: COWGEsTUDEMTS 't!9~~e:•aM!°t ;.;.j;'knd;':-. ....._ nK75-8m • • AMERJCAN Anti~ue hardworkioJ. dod• •Ud COHTitOl CLUIC '141dlcal Trimacrtber, t!Xp aoclate. Pel'$0Dnel Aaen-Guaranteed Hourly Bad Pay. s:U-C911. TRUCK Dri--at"-•" ("1'1itn ord ~ •DCtiv. T>Pll a mUAl, 1h .S w Pl Bo Secretary for Sal ea/ ·-· m ..... • L.1..,21 ..L.... -uth;: . --l"IULOo c:krll for part. m Jtadioloay, h'Ont ore, cy, 37ZS Birth Sl, , ... B. aao us nus. 5:30 Ma.rketinl ~OUDI dependable lor delivery .-, 5tTJTI1~ • """1 • 1 r .dPlll'llOD lw depe at ••r<-ralt firm. Cuti tsmo. 495.4100 & 557.()06S. lOO'lf.Freetoap. pm to a :ao pm. Call ~ .... ""' ~ to ••oo Bl,._ .. _.,cal Se:lf aen. mmH88S Tf!B~-• iverai •• dull••· Enlr)'htvel1J09.Llte&,yp-831-07~ plicanL ~orcometo250E. ~ .-....... au _,.._....,_ \tanul. Hcrt'tuuil U · 1111 Oood w/dotaU. No -l'lthSt Costa Mesa FREE. GrowinJ co. !.!,.'!_!_t__.ealrs._."!.! !.~.!.~ TYPIST 2500NewportBl9d. c.Jf. JICT, a m~t. t'•ll t'urol, "1''*' t.aQ'.a ApPb. Mb MIDICA&. llCll'T. ., . seeks i """4 ..... , JU.Wt. A,..,.... Ute 1 .. mn O..ehcr11(t.~ urr•t oraen'lfrootolc tnedlcat Receptionist toS750 SA1.£S. ambltious part w1goJ'ft::ev~~zo: 50 Wi>bm. Exce,111ent K~'-OC'11.!f:1u!':: ""'•Cet IOIO · Nu AJrpoft w.,-.SA 11.'l&buint Jmmed. Opet!• Contlfte.ralRalr time activity wrth super olce personality to 1rowt potent.a It b I I l Full ..... -............... . GllLNtDAY tngG38-9850 SoughlforCrontofcpos. futw-e . Call Chuck for become part of (-4 ) benefits. Newport ~~.~!into.apcb; waaben. dr)ltrs. a.au JA.ct( IN THI IOX c>f extra 11peclal firm. •PP'· 751·5613 person team. Lots of Beach, 63l·l85S. Pennyaa9er Produc:Cn Im models. $100 1 yr Xlnt t)'pt c ltlM St-11:(' i• •~4!'PUnl llJ>PllCAUona M~rnl Tmu. perm. t:arn Call Sally, 8J3.2700, Den· resporn.slbillty.& very lite SECRETARY Dept .• 1660 Placentia, ruar. Free del'-'ery. 111«' Good t .. h•r,hone for our M1dnll" shift up to $1000 mo. Fuller rus & Demus Persoonel SALES-ADVBTISIHG typmg. Terriftc potential Public Rel. v.. time, sec C.M Matreh&. WlllallobQ. ~o~~~~''"k~-... ~~~ f'\JU & part time CJPf!O· Rruab (714) ~7. _ Service of Irvine. 2082 IM & benefits. Also Fee 21,l, hrs day, flex hrs. 1 _6.'16-1MO. _______ _ wk to :-.~n t';ill tnr in tnR• 61 v11il. l'lx. •PPIY MOTS.MAIDS Michelson Dr. -~~Cb . ., ~ Nwpt Cntr. Call Carol, TYPIST jltecpt FRGHT DAMAGED h'l\1'-"' ~.:e'?,;~~ 2:9~·1i~n-~;:: i''Ull or p/tlme Custa RECEPTIONIST TOURIST GUIDE ".,! __ _. S4 bushrs640-019 Part Ume for construe· HOl'POINT SALE. D>a WlNOOWl,...~lGN~ M 645-9137 ~-"·-• PUBLICATION ..._.t..,. tioo office. Call Shirley w. Wamer nr Harbor. OtrrunoRt-al.San(;lt-m. t:i<llW"ea.:... _ .;._WJg ... typing lmpor-P-11i•l "'-It Secretary, Corporate ....... ~ .,, _ _._"'-ft.--!\.'4>fflilll _ • -taot. Appty, 22S Forest .. _. ""'..---legal position. Newport _.,_·------·--:--·1..::<Mlll~ .. ~-=::.;.;:.•.:.:;.;•~;;;;;;;;;;.,.._ J.A..UTOtU.AL ~~rt:;:.~~~~~~~ Aw,LagunaBeacb. $425toSl275wk 2790HarborBlvd,C. . Center. Experienced. WAITRESS /WAITER CASBPAD> Gtl.LNtDAT l>t-JWnd t•ou1ih· for ofc Chuonel Ion 6030 W. Commissions PLUS ex-callfUO.-OllOO. For private country For Wabr!Dryn/Jtd:d.c' lndepeodeot pnnttnl! t o t'll'W\J~i;. N.8 Nishts Pul.'ific ~t 'mo, N.B. RlCS'T fl'YPIST peoses oo trade out plan Saleswomen to sell Club. Attractive. over21, workini/ld.ISJ.ataa .-4.a w 3 day~ or ~vei 6pm·2.30um. 40 llr wk. 643.aooo F /time. Personable. PLUS renewal account&. diagnostic kits over tbe SECltETARY xlnt hourly wafe + wkuds8312227 amdable Pb: 6"--0606 ---stron& typing skills, Complete training. 3-5 Sf.No uper neceas. 2 Person ore in N.B. Sal beol!flls. No Upa, full & Will b~ some retnp. ----MOTOIROUTE some sh. Apply in Years oats.ide sales ex-cal Sci. oriented $575~mo.BrsS.SMoa part time opeDlnaa. appl'a, :::= w DOl· (ft:rf W~tt.'d t.oUlSl»ll wm K!~P ~R JOli and The Dally ~uot bu 8 persm,Robert5:;.l~n • WFU1.e1li'!tesam· perience necessary. pnlf C&llZak645-2lll thl1I i. Te1eph. ~5792 n4-496-S787 &!8oscrap m.sz:58 ~w tllltlng an veh1cll's 4 e · more as an large toute 10 Newport .,... •-°" • Protected territory in "'" .mswer phone W1U traUl income loiX coUDse~or Beach, afternoons Mon ,&-•O~t "' Assoc .• 1401 OnmgeOoumy. SANDWICH & SALAD SECY·ADMIHST Waitreu Pbod/COdttails. UsedWasW•ei41CdrJer. Clll5"a·~ool~9·3666 with TC.A. We traUl, 1hru l'nday, Sa1 & Sun Quai.ISt,N.B. FABRICATOB,foodpre-OwcaftoatOffice Awl,yaft4pm,Sid'aBlue &oodeondidma.lllO~ ------~~ ~~~~~ mornings . Good for higb Becept/typist. Must have Mil UMDS.A Y peratioe treinee, $Alil '° for-life member MDRT-Beet, 107 21atJ>UlB 642-6135 GUARDS County,493-21181 schooiorcolJegestudent. good t et e p bone '2131429-6763 ~ =: ~:·~~·i!ri~ ~l!:.1_P_;et. peN~nt-est WAJTRESS.OIHMM Blacutone caa df)"er. CostaMcsa&Cernto:. SS~ cash deposit. re-personality, type 60 Kitchen, 979.0747 aft. ~ exper. YP-We accept applications Kenmorewasbertsoea. Permanent. full & Part qwrei:L Call 642-4321, ~sk wpm, nice appearance. ing-dict skills. Pleas teJe Mon·Thun s.5• Exper. GE Gu Dryer, Kenmore time. Phone & transp n · KEYPUNCH for CU'CulaUon. JeaVlDg Nice waterfront location. Sales Clerk, mature, resp. lOAM. personality. Benef Sal re q 'd. Gu 11 iv er• s Washer ~00 ea. Gaaran- 1.1 'd_ Ret1rt-d wl'lc·omt· KlYENTRY nameandphoneorcome Call Bob 615-9800 persontowork4•5 nigbts SUMTRESS opeo.67J..Q7. Restaurant, 18482 teed&delivered5'6-88'72_ , ... 1 in and WI out. appuca-' a wlc at 7-11 Store, 28933 ~ I 546--0274 . oft-hrs JO 2 2 Yrs exper. req'd. Vay:; ttoo. Must own car and RECEPTIONIST Crown Valley Prkwy, We are looking for a SECY /RECPT. part time, MacArthur Blvd Irv111e. BuiJt-in elect. oven. 4 CIO!.ed Wednesdays &swingsbuts avail have good drivmg re· T E L E p H 0 M E Lag. Niguel. h 1 g h I y qua Ii f 1 e d Harbor area. M.D.'S of· WAITRESSES bw'uerstove. Xlntcoad .. HAIRDRESSER C.allorcomemtoday cord. __ __ OPERATOR SALES CLERKS. :!~:i~~r~8aJ~:!~se~r ftce .. Exp.pr~.540-458S &DISHWASHERS wht.$125.646-3'36 Apply In Person IL[[" Do you crave diversity F U R N I T U R E alterations for a fine Service Stat~on Atten· Needed_ I m med. 16cu.ft. no frost refrilt, Regis Beauty Salon ~ • .:I NOW Recruiting sharp, Jots ol person to person R E P A I R M E N & store in Newport Beach. dant, ex per d •. Day & employment. Must speak good cood. -· 5<>. Csl Plaza 540-8888 bff. A v •C E !:> ambitious man to sell oootacl'! You'll find it as METAL POLISHERS Tbisaeamstresa must be Eves.1'Ull 4q~/time. Ap· English. Refs. Apply, 6"-28Cl 833-1441 hardware. tools & shop a receptionist telephone wanted for nautical anti-1ilwled in her work back-ply, Shell St.anon, 17th & 2833W Coast Hwy NB HAPPYH"' ... DS equipmenttoindustria• operatoratSDl,2to3yrs que sbop, Apply 111 l(round.Call6"-5070ask Irvine.NB. · • '· • UpriebtlZcuftJNaer. "'" --------•accounts. Avg $280 ""r exper,goodtypingskills, person. The Lighthouse, fQrTailorShopmuage.r. Servi St ti -ed WANT INDE·PEN· f/5.. lsLookingForYou Kltchen&diningrmhelp, .. ~ I "thth •• bill. .,.,OlE CoastH CdM ce 8 ~u wa... DENCE&INCOME? Be 642-30'5 ,_. t "Wk. No exper. nee. Call a ong w1 e a ty to .. , . wy . eiu-nrr "'RY (2) l'Ull & P '"'-e. Some a tax counselor wltb --.-------.. c n or women o mature woman in guest handJ 'l ti /tact ~'""' ,._... ,,l·uJpture ucryhr nails. home. 7AM-3PM shift, 751·9134. &rus:.:>o':i~s:;;com-SALIS LOVEKIDS!t!!! exper. Top wages + T.C.A. PresUge, high Refragerator. $225. perform pedicures & C.M.646-6716 --mensurate w /ablity. Exper. in bridal. You are special & this conup&:vacpaJ:atter,1 commlssioos, we train. Wasber;J;:/.or. $1'15. manicurei.. A career NURSERYMAN along w /Cull range com-womens ready-to-wear, unusualoppor.isforyou. yr. Apply. arey s Call 552·9800 .or .So. ·G.E.Gd ~ onented md1v. KJTCHENHELP panybenetits. & sportswear for fine Comtnunicatew/parents ~yrou. 604 S. Coast OnneeCowrty-.-1 UprigbtFreaer Earnupto$800wk Part-ume, food prepara-Exper'd. (/time. Mature SYMIOLIC specialty s hop.· Call & cbUdren w/care &: .... ,,Lag.Bch.NopboQe ~.--..~w=-->u'= Newport Arca lion & sandwiches, call male over 21. 6 Days in-7,,..,,.,,.,, t kill,., .,,00 calla Welder,.._l•lon '-JU __ _..._ ~ clud. Sat/Sun. Work DISPLAYS ~.orapp · 5 · •0 •• • • I"·--$W 6'$-3914 \lal-Pra<.1.tc<' Ins. Log Inn 549·9446 blwn 9 & GENE'S Jill Foster ~5001 Service Sta. Attendanl, Small co. needs hard ---------Provided llAM w/plants & trees. $3 Hr& 1762 McGaw AY•, I" Laguna Hills Mall &>elilog&Soellingof exper'd. Full or p/time. work in&, dedicated PRVT. J»TY wants gd. lleoilth&Dental lienef1ls - -----~~egt~.!!~~::~e~~~t Equal Oppty Employ Westminster Mall NewportBeacbAgency Apply Arco Station 17th worker. Call Carol, Washel'. dryer. ~g. We provide all worktnR KITCHEN MGR. MJF 4340Campus Drive &Irvine, C.M. • 581-3830. 536-421.0 . supplies. Will be worktnR Charhe '~ Chill. Xlnt sal, poteolJal. Laguna Halls CASlilER-Mature, resp. ____ ....;;... _____________ ,----------.-------- w r !-: X C 1. tJ s J V 1-; bo nus & benefits. Nursery, Inc, El Toro. Rental Store woman. P /time eves & ServSt.a Help needed im-WeneedSOpeoplewhoare lkycJK aOZO p~~~~~~~mfomat1on ~9·035l ---!00-56.Sl. ---Mech:~!~l~~n~lined. ;J;.;,~5iiJt~6<f.,~Y • OC Put y~~~~!! use! :;:i:~1k:'y~B Appty, :,~~~s&f1°M~~~~::!t ~·;~·~·;~·;;i~·;;••;;.: CALL 642-HAIL Lak1.• Patrol lifeguard. 1''/time. 6 Day wk. Wkdy Insurance co. located in 7Sl·9l75. We can tell you Reynolds~ 531 Fri_meS. · Hardwa~ Sales Clerk plltml'. Mtn 5 yrs e'<pcr Supplemt'nl you1 ~oc. set-. Call fo r a ppl. Resume required. CPR. PANIAGERS of!. Must be neat in ap-Newport Ctr is looking SHIPPING CLERK how to lose pounds & likenew$125ea.SC8-4650 Red Cross. 40h r s per "" pear. & hav e neat Sales f<X' a secy w /good sb & Ex per. desired_, but not. ~~ money at the same •• ..:a.c-M~-1-.,..,R w ee k Sun & Sail. Clean paekagjng work ... __ _, · ..... ..., -_.., an:n---580®i0 N 18 & mmuwriting .. Will train. typmg skills. Good hrs., req'd. Will tram. lrvme --·--------_ oexper. nee. over. Apply 1930 Newport I. MCIC)llin 8·4 with an hour for area. Call for appt. ••••••••••••••••••••••• XJnl working conds & Blvd, CM Juncb. Nystrom As· 540-7639. EOE. Used Lurnber. f''Xl2"'x18• LEGALSECY pay. Day. s w1ni: & ___ stiU hasa sociat.esPersonnelAgen· _ _ WILLIAMS (22), 3"x10"xl6' (4)0 Prl'shg1ous ofc seeks graveyard shifts. Local. Rental cons ultant for fewHceptionial ry, 3723 Birch St, N.B. Stained Glass, p~time :it 2"xJo••xttt,~" ((32), T· . • proven corporate ability Park Ne wport Apts. ScHs Positions: !)57.00.S. l00% Free to ap-first. Ex per. pref d. St.art SONOMA brackets (.26),644-Ur18 mrn:L He the profe~ional you ~Q~ office • Complete training Part-Time plicant ~perhr.Callforappt. FRONTOf'FICEM<:H wanttobc.$850. l d available Must have 642-4382. Goww.tCooldn9& ,.._& n73-0360 Mus t ha Vl' NC ll 4200 .fill l''oster 540-5001 l\' over 0 a pleasant personality & Ser '--m-.a __.._ +night audit ex per, good Snelling &Sndltngof .V. enjoy working with peo. Our stunning new store STORE CLERK v ..... ..,..pmettt Eqlipmtat 8030 benefits & sal:iry. Con NcwportBcachAgenry 557-0061 pie. 5 day week, work opens mid-August in SECRETARY Responsible person Store ... ••••·--•-•••• tact Hol1d.iy Inn Laguna _ i\J40Campus Dr1ve 3723 Birch St. NB weekends. Xlnt benefits. South Coast Plaza, Costa f''inancial planninu firm w/background in marine Darkroom equip. Besellel" Hills P J 5000 -C l t J T. g l Mesa. We st.ilJ have ex· ~ hardware to works days Now interviewing Fol': 23Cll, enlarger w /ac---ersonne 586· Legal Secretary -on ac oan JD • ce...,;ooal openings part· needs resp. person to . NB A l L"do Sh" S"--L & .r...1-$160 G -'-b """' Park Newport 644-1900 .,.. work 1n plush ofc 1·n m .. pp y 1 1p ._ ~5 cess. ·, r~ """" Trainee to $850 p NTING · · time for experienced Al - -Design Plaza, N.B. Sh 80, Yard, 900 Lido Park Dr. PosiffoM timer $23; El Niltlteo F HOTEL Prominent firm will CONTRACTORS Real &;tale SaJes People s ales people in the good typing. Selectnc JI. 673·7Z12 Apply.SO.Coast Plaza 218 2.8 $15; Premere TC HIGHT AUDITOR t·rcate exclusive pos. for TAKE-: NOTE wanted. Up to 90 /10% following areas: Phones. bte bookkeeping 2nd Level .. Across Crom print dryer $l8; m1sc. all • Perform audit dutie:. In· career interested person. comm. spht. NewPott helpful. Nystrom As· STUD&ITS--JOIS Vidal Sasson like new.~ eluding operating NCH Call Kal<'. 833-ZTOO, Den, Will trade PRINTING Beach. 548·8614 Apparel soc1ates Personnel Agen· FOR SUMMB July22,11-4 \200 & 10 Key adding nSe1s & Oenfmls Person208ne21 mlaenrcy1atlrpfeoroefxtceor1~or. RESEARCH SUBJECTS Sports Wear ry. :f/23 Birch St. N.B. P1t1me for sui.40 per JuJyZJ,J.2..4 '!ta~~=a.XtS in· machine Some e'<pcr • r"ice 0 rvine. ' t.ed 557-0045. 1oor;, fo'ree To mo. Growing co. Must be Forfurther information Pref"d Hour:. llPM-Miche~onDr _ painting of my house in wan age 17 or ol~er Shoes Applicant. 18+. Call 10am-lpm, CaUJackie213/27 .. ·9127 9'0-20IU Fullerton <labor only). for probl~m solving , 7.30AM . 5 Night-. per LEGAL SEC'Y perm., Call for info, 870.4564, study, reqwres h hr_. $3. G ifts 714f1Sl-8285. F,qualOpporEmployer _ week Oulstandllli.? <'O p1l1me. non-s mkr. 5 yrs. ask for Dave. wt11 be paid each sub~. I040 ifne1r1ts9 M L· recent Cal exp. JIB. --please contact Juanita II you have had previous Sec'• $800.$1300 'mo G' SI UMMBkJOinlS k y,. ... ,. man wtwoodwork ..... ~ .............. _._ • ,,pp Y am-noon on r rt 848-1400 Pirtilre Framer Wanted: 833-5575 retail sales experience • I' "' to wor s nac ...__ • !AK.C Poodle~ tioJ' Personnel Department ------must have frame shop and are interested in UCJCll Gett"Mt.E. shop at Hotel Laguna. iDg exper to learn new 10'. allaho&I. MARRIOn HOTEL Live-In Matd, pvt room, exper. Cutting matts. part-time work, come by Employers P•Y AH Fees Also, girl to work in bumwa M&-6075 · • SJ0.6'55 900NewportCenter Dr salary. Etpcr'd. Must glass & stretching can· RETAIL and see us from 10 am to Liz Reinders Agency Salad Pantry. Contact • Newport Beach love ammaJs. 642·3444. vas. Need p /tame or 4 pm, or call for an ap· 4020BitthSt.Ste lOC Joho 'Jilde, Food Mgr. MlrcllmdiN PoodlepupPJ'ltmo&ber. ~ F.qualOpp Emplyrm/f --(/time, Art World CLERKS po i n tment : ( 714) New»oft.Beach 833-8190 494·11.51. 425 S. Coaat ·-··--•••--. $50eacb. 1 LVN Frame. 660·N. Coast 957-0833, 2100 South Ca1ltorilpp\/estab'65 Hwy,LaguoaBeacb. AMllfllS 1005 Me.all .~ V 11 cal 1 on Re Ii er & h. F i i ( c •••••••••••••-.. •-•• • HOTELPOSJTIONS p/time.ParkLidoConv. Hwy,LagBc 4S4-8l05 UTOTEM ~_r_,vewaidHornd TAXIDrivers,La~a. ~ ularl d MaleBaase&JlouDd.AKC lie ad Night Auditor & Qnter. 466 Flagship Rd, PICTURE FRAMSt C:O.veniene» Martcets "" ..... ,ew a arvar • Secrretary Fee Paid for Checker Ca I> co. "or~.~ regia. Tri-color, t mo'c.. Ftont ~k Clerk N.B. 642-8044. Will train. Must be able Positions open 1st, 2nd & Sanpor'tu~f~ A:~J~lyof; Mui lilllag $9600 Male/Fem.I Mualtlfd•y•,, .Of Ji ::_uques' Be&tofr.1754535. • NCR4200. exper pref'd ..... VIP suite of inl'I co of-mature. p easan ia-AIOI • • Train ifnecessary MACHINIST todoneat,carefulwork. 3rd shifts in San ~-8..lppede/f.emale/ban.· fers multi faceted i>os position, neat appear. HUGE ware h ouseABKulldoC ntale Enthsh, Contact Holiday Inn. Class A Lathe operator, 40 Hr· week; $2.SO to Cleme nte & Laguna '"""" Also Fee Jobs. Call Sally. Xlntdriving record. Call crammed with o~r 500 g, 4 mos $125 • .M.st L 11 start. Apply 2 to S PM, Beach. Other areas have m.2700 Dennis & Den: p a t t y • 4 9, .. 7 2 1 l music boxes, nickelo-sell 554-2027 eYeniDgs. Pers~~'::!T:.:OOO ~~!~~x~i~u~et;:~~ ~1a~t 5~\v 0y~ly.L;oogu~~ openings also. No eicper. • • nls Pe~el Service of 7am-llam. deoo pial106, circus or-AKC Mini·Doxies 4 --toolo; • req'd. Apply at any of I. magn1n Irvine, 2082 Michelson T I b T I R gans, wall clocks, fema.le, 1 male. t'IS ~-. HOUSECLEANING Serv. MORRIS INDUSTRIES ,_~ -our stores. Dr. e ep one oo oom grandfather clocks, 962--0303eves/Wlmds • needs women. 25 yrs + 2901 w GARRY s A 2S88Newport Blvd Sales-~m to $20,000+. fascinating antiques. ~ 30-3:30PM. P1llmc or · •_:_· Co.staMesa 64.2·7702 llLocations.Orange~o. Over$l,000,000Worth AKC female Baasett• F' time Own lran~ Call Maid. exper'd or non Cll· PLASTICS Secretary & ~-Great . benefits, American International Hound lri·color • P;im. 536-9522 per·d seucl irf Motel. •MACHINE OPRS• RETAIL S"'L.ES SALES PEOPLE EXEC. SECRETARY secunty & rapid adv~-Galleries; 1B02·T Keuer-S.Z766aftSPM ; --1601 S Coast Hwy, Lag. Further expansion "' for new Draper's ~lore Downey Savings & Loan c4'.me~t. Call Republic log St., Irvine. Tel. • HOUSB<EEPER Bch .i94-4892. .creates perm. ope";lngs P tUmepos. avail. opening in Leisure has an opening In its ex· Distributors, Inc. Mr. 754-lTn. Open Wed thru Male Golden RetTr. $2:5 •• NIGHTS -for exper•d & trainee Apply ln person WorJd. I:.aguna Hi Us ec··.:ye office in Orange Roy, 71•1834-9088. Sat..9 AM to4 PM. Visit! Gentle, needs TLC, 8 "' Outstandmg opportunity MAIDS,FfTIME machine oprs on 2nd & Toboccontsthtc. area. Must be hper. in Co~for sharp indiv. TB.BtHOMESALES mos.548.5661or641M291> • for a..consc1ent1ous Holiday Inn. Laguna 3rdshifts.Ourtraining& 7777Edinger,HunlBch ready -to -wear . w/~ood sh & typing Furniture Stripped & l person. EnJoy excellent Hills Good benents. Con· merit review procedures sportswear or shoes.. Call s"is. Bookkeeping ._ a.dmtrial S.pply Rermisbed by Experts. Hust ~ beautiful black! co benefits. tact Personnel586-i000. assure rapid advance· RN for EENT Office in )hs. Douglas, 9:30am to s=:vin 5 & loan back We are looting f~ ex· 7S2·50S9dys,64&a28eve female German: Apply 9am-r>oon Mon -Fri ment for all employees Irvine. Xlnt hours. 4¥.a 5 : 30 pm. Dr 8 per• s helpful. Xlnl per'd telephone salespeo-Sbeplserd. 6 mo. \{.ery al·. PersonnelDepartment •MAIDS• whobavethebaaicabili· dayweek.833-1493 Corporate Of(ices. & benefits. For cur&: pie to inWate our new oatS/ltoUTopdesk..St'". fectlonate, 16vea~ MMtRIOTT HOTEL The Inn at Laguna ty & desire. Good pay + SACRAMENTO ffi4)540-7904 into. cootact Penoanel pn>graJD. management reftnlsbed. Best oCr on tbUclrell. Begiat.ered le: 9'0NewportCtt Or 211 N. Cst Hwy, Laguna night shift bonus & profit n--, ('ll .. )5'9-UIOZ. pot.ential. Salary +com· si.ooo. 9113-9130. aUabcta.a-3117 ; N Be h sharing + xlnt fringe Gll>.PHIC SALES ....,r ' _;.~ ,.a-. ..... _._ *' ,F.qua1eo:~mpT:rmtr MAINTENANCE benefits. Apply DESIGHSt PETSHOP F.QualOpporEmJ>Joyer :;;;;--• .. aoftlJlloaor AwloY• 1045~ MECHANIC 8am-5pm, needs sharp Receplioaiat F\111 & p/time-weekdaya PUBLIC ' ..... _.,. ..... ., ...... . Mm 3 yrs exper. Laguna CIMCO CornewofficeinNewport off. Must be neat in ap· SECllT.14.aY Tele ...... ll8 r..t... IOltlm. 7 wb,, 2 .we... ~pr. chld care for 11 M ul ct ri g 5406384 265Briggs,Costal\lesa Beach. Bring resume lo pear. & courtesy. Some Small Mii firm in N.B. II ~ ~ AUCTION bo&&ra~_._ yr schl girl. Live-in. Ref an 8 u n · · (l Blk So. o( Baker interview Juty n. lPM, exper. in pets & tropical .needa exper. olfice girl. Wc:ft J>)'thQe. Earll extra _._ • req.S45-4619Wkdysafi6. Mamcurist for new ex· afRedhill) 1001 Dove St., Suite250, flSh.Ca11768-042Jorapp· .,,oaitlon include& cash in our circulation .,.._. _ _._... 4 --elusive Npt Bch Salon. 546-4460 N.B. or mail to Chandler ly io pe. rson, 25511 ·-·~ •yp'-g •-L.--L. sales room. F1exib1e hrs _. .... JULY.,,. EQl!Wl_..,_.,..Lab: Ho\l'sekeeper. live-in. + ""~ Op E ~.. f M p k wi ... .....,.,~ • IU .,..,.,._ ~ -m&.apeyed F 2)tn give; salary own room, beaut Exp'd in all phases. ""'fual P mp1,1rm/ Media, 717 K 84 Suite ar,ruent~ ar way, keeping.548·9818 AM or PM • .Men. women 1·49 NOON lov~ "prot«ttoo. bw w dbr" d h 2 CUentele pref'd. Needed 500, Sac. 95814 Mtasiod V'ieJo. orstudents, lloton. £ b d --, rh~fdre;. \:ustmhe~ve immed.642·8'&84 Pn'IME,workatbomein Secretary. stock,.540-0301 '""LATiro.es Denver State & Euro-~~:; a un ance. ref's. 752·6649 dys ' MA.MAGERTRME yOUr spare Ume. $3.00 SALES-MGMT ~ ~age 9ffice. Pref. peanC001lgnme110~h& • 559 8197 evs per hr Must Jl ve,,in We ~ee<! a person ex· experience) Pleasant Telephone solicitors 19th century lumilbin'8 ~ • -·--· Aggressive person de· Cd area Cnll per d 10 lbe total ~tADj$Mll£ worklnfl conds in need•d p/time in~hljling afdebeards, *'** ~ HOUSEKEEPER Live sired for gilt edged ~:~· 875~ · .merc:bandiling concept '1Utl" stimu\alln1 environ· weekdays M per br' hal~ds. pianos, or> T__....._ J .. in N.8 . Mature. non· ~tabllshmenl Cot career · -ol o women's European ON YOUR f'AC£ meat. Contact Sandra, 53'7-31SS · • 1an. baskets, shave D:JlJ'. •-r p=::- s molter ref 11 re q Po s l Ca 11 Sus an . 9ua1ty Auw.ce boutique. At leaee 1 yr ft 640-1480 · ron, porcelains. eiw, 108 'llllll • 640-7314 ' ~-12118. Dennis &. Den· htsptdorfl'ecll pnor exper. n4M:ess in I A 81Jl"f Telephone sales, Ad-eeCatejewelry, etc. Over Balboal&luil ii • -rus Personnel Service of Xlnt . _11 IDllna«ement 4. sales. a $ecreUey, Jegd aJ probadte vertiain.g Great~tial 400 apec&acwar itema to Ycr'~tbewiUCl'o( HOUSEKEEPER. b ve In, Huntington Beach. 16168 oppor. U1 sm"" co. )fuat be ready to step in· ex 'p e r · e 1 1 re · to mate a lot or mone.• be sold to the hiabe&rt bid· ~ ,,........ • tnatwe woman, EngUsh BeacbBtvd.SUite121. !.: qualllied man. M'TL to m1mt pos. Jor tllia IN JM WALLET Sbartband req. Call SC FUD or Ptr. Salary .;. der. Ul.S.tofthit)~to ;• ~aking, non .smoker. ve 4 yrs mm exper. n V9r)' active N.B. shop. 1UIE/LIF.EU8RARIES CM!i8 commi11to:a 835-MU I>oonopenlOAll ...... .,..;: • Plt0!!.kba.colot1V. MA~U RE WOMAN eledronics. call C•~. OlllfonppU,hlttroew llubothfulUt rt s -di I --.1 . . 3'0101.-..11.·a : .... Bi, ..... Jlefs.&c2-6358or6fO-OIH() •p /tame to welcome 581..930. THILOO« . pa ecre"-r1 •• e ca cunl ~ ~ newcomeu & ~ntact ·~ DAILY M•._. time~avall. Trantcrlber. ex~ Jn • ... .._ ~_..............a.,;._-_; ' Qim , ~ IHSUIAHCl mm:banta. f1eldble l\ra. ,~ lOA ---•Fun articulate aadioloo. boahfc, full • -.:~ '-Va111......U Ai114tllirwAlllD 1 POSITIOHS Need car, Ute typing. ~?llt&UISl.le5 ~~: i UMllGO ' lndi wtaoare time.411M7al681l.q'f40 ~r::--~ 1 ~ 5 o.-4091 = 1· 1tn-1-a.e u e i ~··~ i.argtnsur•nce 547.aoes. C~OM . l'\SALBJOICiAMS?n , ~i::"'.=.to SICllrAIYP/f~ JntaiNa: 1s.1 Dk . ""' lir•W. ~':t~ hu 'nune::i., ror Mature women for Dealt -t•l•pbone-• 'fw.1'9o.it W•Offer: 1,J'or' pi'CI( loc ftrin. l'lnt OoatadBDb~ .~11 ,uc~1. 11Cbef*I ,_ HJI•,..... xr.i .... ..,, houffclemlnr mvlce ,........,,-Mlp ,. ,.,. W• bo lollillf for .....,Wli!J -· dl-'dllllOL -ll.O.B. · • •. ,. -• 10oci:Wl•1 ~~~~-= ~Car~«. To~$ ~u:.1~T:,ia:~~~ e .... ~!e',:er.:'::~ ca:r.c •. -... 2 ...... ·l rL~~r·~rr·. Sa~~r:~~s':"t':::-r=:.~~~ ~a.c.. '~or 83 ~ ~ ln the mut1c ,_....... w11 • , elper. Cond.: ...... -'· clelmJ'OS~ . £111e'r.on •~ MIOICAL. J. • ~ ' • nesa. We aft the l'All' US TODAY SICUTAITTAAt.I t~ ~ ~·for -· ~, ;_, * • * ;I;: PolcyTypltt Many medkal p0s""'ons ;jOroo K11d1anl• •ocaled 1.-:wa.L Newp0rt e .. ch ~Law ~ppt .. Mn. Balctridt•· IOAI ANTIQUES~ P'1 • :i • ~wpm accurate t-unU. thf'UOut Or.n•c REALISTAQTI~ ~"'~~1 do (lO) So. C.li!. r••km•l Hin SJlllT F•rm need• .. e,,.l•f'1 ~:...!ST'°"o g ,.s..:_;, ::.: ~-t:.= Ml5, FRai ki1YD. r .. aae: s.u.t.y ()r. For ft\OC'e lo!ornua· c.us.e. 1~aboppln1maU.. Weolfer NW "'" .• wlth.atleuUyneicpC'ln .. _ """"" · ' • i,;~ '1 • • ' 1'<10 wb. praqe uiu XJetmathapt~uck tlat)))oaseC'all w4 btvt~ 1001;a .. tlPJul~.xhu '~ 11=.too•dorrielttc.,... nCKBT R._ernitOli.i~ Dini•& lho.ft·i 8et :1 a' '"" &ntua, cute' I) Typln1 u wpm, u,.1 Dl.PaSOMMIL !ltlf,~6uvaw1iJ 1 ; tr•lttl~1 _.ro1ram. S.UN 11 PleMecaUUDda Ma,are wolllan. ruU ~t!Wtm,•.500• --~" 1·"'° !' ....... ~·..,' phone, 1201W.LeYeta,$eJ09 cr-.lve ulf1pu1on IQ:billat comm/1uan." I .. '11Mttt.. ·~· ! Uiuo,171,'IAOJln.Bom~' ' I cjau>m:mc-p j 'a~ Pllt,-GllrllD''" ~~ Oru\pFreef5PH~.o =:m:0.:c:~ ~~1 .. !l ,.=~y.:g,,n::.='r: ml095 !. SICuTAIY : .......... TN9'~,i', . .Ws1Wi'Dw4li ~: 7 ..... :; -~__....,_., _.._, IMIUIAMCl g ~;, '{ -.::.X~ "J..i",· .,/ ~ 9!)S nveatm at pr,0 1 ; ;·~.:,.:.:."'1,1.,! ~ ~·-U:.-~':.c .L~ ~=~ ::-:::;:iM:so~~dfi~~ ;:._ KNO~. ~~· _ ··"-. ! :~~-:;,., .... :J • COMl'A.MY .~ l ~,. IF~OU .~·~"! : ~~~: ••• '· ~:,t9d· IOln• Ol'JH 111'.qUlOppEmWrmlf ~ n' 1' 11 • tie .. ~ .,,..._.,,llmL ~ 1·-~ t· syLUVAln : •"::l':''-' ,,;..; ~~v '"' 1 """" ~.cetoolftror a.~t•noico.~. ?!"...,..·~mi, ~ _ 1 r•u ...-. A,,.l~bftenti':".Call Vlcld•. "''-•• ..'l";\~ \..: .. ~"r r-allCY. .,1 ... lOM:H,Dlaceb~d ·r~ • ~.an-·~ ;-,. J ,,11 • ..sbilford Applied-~ Dt11ia •Da· c US7S.:~a-&,. ..... ,c; ~~~''.,-...~,..,...~~•: :!!!i"• ...... '"· .~, fa .1th Dahy Pl104 ; ~,· .• '·'·""'Jl.O t ~ ' Jett ... ,.. rj au. cs-. .... With .. ···••ur••1, Hl.11,,• ............... .1--.~· ~ .. l-}'{~I •r"T!r ,. ' =-.... rmlf Oalalf\cid SedJOQ ....... J '} .. ;;t~· _·-r:--~ I ' 'l •• Delb'PllCilClaialftliGW.' Alt"••1 l>r •• c .. •. H i"li-~ ... ,_ -~::,..,.,:.o':l<' • ')I l'hbae&U...nt. I -t • WantAdR .. 111 ...... Mtdlelttal _ ~I...,.. -i••• .. I-· ]I -lllltMlallllll.l!}lltiiUl. w.tM-.ir:'~---'-' ti l• ........ I • -• :-. -t -·-·-""" 1--- 1 t . . .., · Mlscd•i.-IOIO Mitee"---1010 TV. Radio.. Wedn!ed!y. July 20, 1977 * DAILY PILOT DI ••••••••••••••••••••• •• •••••••••••••,••••••••• ttfl. Stereo IHI • .-.... D 0 ,_41 1010 ._eg. s• 1011 ""' WMHER 1t 0ry Se , ....................... loah. W '°'o Al//lo Ser.fee.,... A"'1o S..-.lc•. ~ Fw .... 1 1 ... :;.":'.~.............. ....................... WAN I ED Db. Avocado .,:Ir~ Concept s.s recelvtr, ........................ &ACCHIOr'Mt t400 &Acceuonn 'f400 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 0 Cala Th st TOP CASH DOLLAR ...... -.0 .................. 1.,r. PhlWpa 212 tumi.blt. 4 Scllloct22PbllBa--..... iilillillllilllliMlllillWllllilllliliiilliiiiliii DE ALll KIAa ll1Je bx •J>P • mat\, araa• ._ ... , un,· a ' O 0 U R """"' --• ----' u.adr-... S alt ~ _. 'New&v.i .. w\md""'' furo ....,1•1 w /lrarot. a .. Sto .. , 10.m·&pm, 415 Arroto PA ID f' R Y . old. $200. 67s.t'743 q .. ~x It ape era. ...._., 0.0.. i .-. of -.., ., iarlalti ei o p p • r t o o • . Chico, Laauna Beacb. JEWELRY, WATCHES, 5fl'suar. $1000.MU:WJ .a-......__.. or*· ~ ~· ._1,, W. lMh, IOtMJ~l !!~!!;_l'•r~w!,!;.t A.RT OBJECTS. GOLD, SLATE POOL TBL. 129: • Onr.'7Mlll. ,__ --. ~ , • ..,....,., ....... lk ...... -SILVER S'!RVICE, ftnn. AQyUme. M&-19U INfs&Mar'IM CM IG .... 6 .. pq TIWCf\JamTURE,Cof· WJUrlpool vacuum FINE PURN. fl AN· •N0-1"7 ... ~ _..,. fbttL Nla nr, *•I IUY•* ~:.,fbl. IOTOil1, ~a.a.. •· J1oor '"' nQU&S.MS-DOO Attention CuftapeopJet ....................... =-~w~famboat. . roU&opl>elk,t:· tz:S, IYD&er 1ll·u1 MW· w~•••t••S 8ootb applle.Uoos now G-otl tOIO ...;.._ ___ ,....;_ ___ , Oood .... Fural.t• 6 0.11&.aitt tervtr fl~. " e.c ~ Ropn 114T ,....,_. "' '-'-• aem1 Cor tbt ••••••••••••••••••••••• SIDNftSA.llOT oca-OK J wlU Tbl, ll•H•U, t50. Pfatwan MtVlce for 8, fromyowbull.neucard -s Xlmeand /lumdt.rlr • l'.U.I• Vo.. oru•e ceramic YIJlP, 8Mrt ptbl J>Jabwubtr, Send ooe card for each 4th amuaal Kain t. WANTED " · MAS19SAUC'10M W'. as . ..0.140ltfl. I dotMt. pluta. toys, uP· t.q pba ou spare We P'airln Oceu Park Sun. AYOn' man raft wttb or $1llO.MUOOO '.'.' •1t•t••1 hol wta1 cbalr ~per return permanently ~'!.:.. 1~1Jt !:.!~1.:. 11ns~. without~. Call Dalt ~ aa•, wood. Xlnt 64 • " 6 ••uWul Ii• BPlr\lah Din· botiet-biuo Jara' aoUqlM sealed attractive t•fi la ~ •• :_.._(I ....... ).,.. ..,:·1631 at '9&-2709. Gnat live-aboard. lq Tbl. I <'b.rt, Wfet '... ' d U -•-1 ................. .., _.,. Sall ...__ ... 11 •• 11.. -u • CASJIPAID bar w/' atooll ewlvel bowl• pitcher aet, en strap, mee DI au nt or(2l3)3ll8 &5" s .._uu.\Uq. -u1. Foe IDOd YMd furu. anU· rocker chair, Kenmore tablet, muy treuures, l.D. reqwrements. Pre· Sacrince. $19,000 firm. quu 6 ~olor TV 's. washer 6 tltc. deyer. 1101Mju.nlltlslotamote. vent 1ou & theft! For a * * * P/P.~ ISJ-&W •-1 60 penon&liaed tag encloee * * * Rhondollkhwch ---------i l.aro111. 1hadcll, m111c. All Hone. 0 wallpaper, fabric or J-· ..... _ _.._r.... 22'112ndst. SPINNAKBR .. 01. WICJAI. UU untcond. IU-JITI ••••••••••••••••••••••• "Day Glo" paper I: we -· ~-Costa Mesa radial. Rainbow color 1alUd wood .a..• end z Oreeo plaid bed dtvena, Palomino Pinto. Quarter will back & trim your 26061.Jghtboue YouarethewlnDerof unique deal&D, UHd tbll. l"el IMO. Now on.ty ••a.IJOU'alrvttwAve bone, aeldtn•. Western tap. Or tey two car~ QUI twofreeffcllfll twtce.m.1141 $111. Stattm1 S.tat ~te ss. 8.A. &5'1·-" EncJlsb. Show wlnner. back to back. You aretbe winner of <SlS.OOvalue), to KITBSAILBOAT TKB nIR.NJTURE Xlnt eood. 1'1Wlill0 PRICF.s: two free ffclleh ~ lros. OOHNICTION Nu kl 11 round waterbed, sz ea or 3/~ ($1.S.OO value). to ..... i ....._.. .::. UIUWI \laltL.H.B wtvet frame. Colt '550, PalemTlno ,oe1,d101(; s" 4/$&.apsuo... , =eJlrot. -w .;..,,_~ • uldqSS&O.Ml-Tm )'fl, · ra ll or ym 6/9La.-$1.50ea. la iLJa-Clrc• Udo H Boat "1M and _ _.. Khana w/aJl lack. $'700. -.._. --w A ... _.A 13 Sofa Oro/Gold Floral, Ml-2'730orMH038 10~.'!·t!:i~ Clrc• ~1~~v~Uon tnilel'$1.:!mo * Have fun, install a factory glass sliding sun roof in 1 day Save $30. off reg. price Financing & Terms Avail Catalina Auto Sun roof 1646 Superior. Costa Mesa * aoodccod. SSO. ....r1t.Dld~ 1065 NOCARDT AugUhruAugl.3 Center,800W.Katella 652-S.. ....................... Draw your own or send Anaheim Cooventlon Tickets must be ex· ERICltSON37 "!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!I 11 bin n.ame, addras, phone It Center,800W.Katella chaneed ror reserved JJb'beW,d.lneUeiDt,dal. = J~~~X ::,~~c:i: ;a ~:'1~~ ~~sit! we'll make one card pet' Tickets must be e:tt· aeat1 at tbe ConvenUoft eqwp for ~ 6 c:ruiae. Mofor'CC" WMtl Drh._ 9550 642-4040 ....: AIETIGN -ta• Add 25t each. • cbaneed for reserved Cellte.r ahead of time. PP. n"'31·2HOeva. Sc-9150 •••••••••••••••••••••• or dlnln& table W/ VaJdioa paUeru. Make ,.. seats at the CoovmtJoo aa3to _. ,~ cbain.'500.640-8209 offer.~.attePM. ~~bectormoDeyor· Center ahead of lime. catl&Q.~xt "71 MELCBAFT Racine ... •••••••••••••••••••• tt7 •-lAte Medel ued FURNITURE APPLIANCES ANTIQUES WED. 6:0Ci'M So. Cocnt Auction 2202 S. Main St. --------tJeu ,.... 8070 ... "T'RJ...-IMG Call 642-5678, Ext 333 to dalm'°'!.'!,. ta.. Sabot, fully ~_p'd. -n. HaDda. useaf Good 4X4 PICIU.P RICH OR P00.7 ' r-"' claim vn11rtickets. w /cover. Never uaed. ___ ,. ftCA, VS, pwr. steering & ••••••••••••••••••••••• P 0 Box 1560 .,,-.... ...,,. ... ...,,..,. .a1 .... air d · · · · * * * 27• Chris Craft w tmoor· ta&S. 673-aa 60-3065 b~akes, ra.._ con .• SAVE MORE MONEY WA.....,ED Cost.a Mesa, Ca. 92626 __..ft _...._ .cN>ft Wlde spoke wheels, dual .._._ 5-a... ' n I inf, o.......,. wu.-... _.,.,. GLEN L 1' Sloop. Like CT 80 Honda MwsL sell tanks CAMPER SHELL .--w -...-· TOP CASH DOLLAR CITRUS Trees bearing ft'DIU I "S Also 18' Australian raC· OUM • • rr . . . FromF1nomMfg's PAID FOR YOUR fruit. 4 ' to 8' tall. ~I Ing sailboat. Telegraph· new.-r-Ms.aau this week. Best 0 er. & ONLY 86'0 onamal SanlaAna ~Furniture JEWELRY. WATCHES, $1.2.50-$16.50.548·2046 Hl~W£Rs sun on trlr. Sl17S. New CaJl642-2995. miles. (511240). EZ ART OBJECTS, GOLD, ~ 23' Santana sailboat hull t4oM. Cat 16 Yamaha 100, '72 terms-0.A.C. l yr. pa.rts E Smith Co el ctric 12 ""30 ' & labor service policy 1 Blk No. or Warner Bet lntenstate s & 405 957"'8 133 FOR EVstY ROOM FACTORY SURPLUS ORIGINAL CARTONS SILVER SER V l C , rona e · Person -Fable -~" ~.!· SJOO. 646-"' or Make Offer. m,.2050 supef ~ c:, C1'7S. avail. A must see to FlNE FURN & AN· Secrelanal 250. Perf. Jabot-Profit -.....,......... flr1 ~ TIQUES. 64>~ cond. $130. M2·3045 FOR A JOB 16 n. Snipe l>&n·Am com· believe! Open for inspection 9A.M..SPM Daity CREDIT OK Years ago we talked loots. MarfH petition boat. Beaut. "12 Penton 12S, Curnutts, HAIRS Earrings, 32 doz. Pierced Manual hospital bed & about the patience of ~p119nt 9030 cond. Very fast. Sails, sun rims, fast, relia. AUTO CIMTER WE TAKE CONSIGNMENTS DEALBlS WB.COME ~lSAPPUANCES SALE STARTS 6PMSHARP A.Lt.ITEMS MUSTBESOLD ././Used Furn gold J?05ts & . clutchtess, mall~ess $ll5; Everest· Job. Now we talk about ••••••••••••••••••••••• compau. trlr. $195. Xtras. 84'1·3374. 1425 Balter SL, C.K. bd polished, high quality. ~n3329nangs whlchr, $lOO. the patience of anyone *ZODIAC 640-1685 540.9109 Retails $1100. Must sell v•..-looldog FOR A J OB. '73 SUZUKI 75 EBtat.e·Banlcruptcies $11100. 9 stauds io.cld . Electric Hospital Bed, . t~a:~b.14learinBoaets Stan lllller radq sabot. 1uper$ZS0.83S-OHS MAPLE· MODERN '150-2251 $!50. Good cond. 752.a6S8 Solid oak waterbeda, com· iu• _ Like new. Ullman aaill. ME~~~~AN Uvestock 8075 or1sMim. ~1:~:d ng:e:fn;c~i:i ~f.>l~~:· &48-3.m ·~~:~~!~~e!~:!i IREPOSSUSION ••••••••••••••••••••••• Stnless Oster Juicer sso. &G-0161 O.IPPIR 26 CODd. 6,800 mi. $1050/otr. Reg. Morgan mare, broke O'Keere &Merritstv sso Avon Redatart, C02, Loaded·l>eaJ>.HUM7 Mstll.6G-6611 I WAREHOUSI to ride & drive, bl k King 0 Lawn edgr ssO Beautiful white organza elect. motor $400. Tom &t.S-0229, M5-6352 xtr At 619 E. 4th St. parade Morgan gelding, 645-2:173 wedding dress, matching 642-6630 eve i8HondaMT125, e u , SantaAM En(, Western (714 ) · picture hat. Sise 10. British Seagull outboar "71<:atalina22. Llke nu. sbup.~!M42 Slate pool table, 8 mo old. 547 57~1 338-lOU Ke wool bedspread; 548~ motor. s.s HP, nearly Many xtraa. P/P. Call --------- $499 C I • 11 5 8080 padded slant board $20. Sao Courts R t new. Perf. cond. Cos 831.as98aft6PM brand new, SlSO. 498-8311 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ball Club Members tp .. _.. .._ ~ * * AMc.J• I t •c.lf. WEO.LL JEEPD INTHE ATE HUGI OIY All Models "Used Leastni Atdablo CostaW... AMC...., 253' HARBOR BLVD. , • omer group ng, 0,.1t9:l0.6 Sun • ~ 7'goldsofa$l00.55lH9'l9 tana acqubt; · $400. S300./b•t ofr. ......_.___.....___ 5 ,r_._t/i 0 MATTRESSES. Mat· For sale, hospital bed sale. Great price, call &&2-4178 14' sloop. New rigging, R..t/Sfwege 160 PLEASE HELP '1 ur D . h T ak d' rm set . S2 00 h I ha . r 6612337 newly refurblsbed. ••••••••••••••••••••••• . friend needs any. ~r all k~~shen eset : 3 chrs' tresses: King sets, S149 ; Ike; .~.:,;, c 1 ' • Qualified Shlpwrigh S150 960-3078 RentZJ' FIREBALL S/C '83 Scout. 4 whl drive, house fumiahings. Una· clothes & misc hsehld l,ueen sets: '$119 ; wa r. MOVING. Selling'74 avail. Woodwork, paint . d • • reblt eni & tram. Very · ble to buy. WHe took Items 642-3419 ubles, S99; twin a, S79. Free home demonstration SAAB, A JC. AM /FM. 6' mg. Xlnt.,':_~a~~ansbip, loah. Sllpa/ :::~ :!.:~~~ It clean. $1400. •t·ll'1C Calta llesa 54N023 everytblng. Pref in gd Factory wrapped. Save on a new Filter Queen slate pool table, Bdrm U"OVO-.. 9070 ---------- cond. We will pick up. DESK. walnut finish, no· 20%·40%:. Be~utyrest, vacuum with power fu_rn. Highriser bed , ••~••••••••••••••• Landrover "73. 88. Trop. c.all&31·2288, MV mar top, S drwrs. Xlnt Serta. Spn!'g Air, Sealy. head. Call 642·1560 for misc. 29562 Deervale. -~ Power 9040 d 11 f 8 , SO.CALIF'S roof, CB, tape, aux gas. ____ _;,,_ ____ • ........ $125 544.7230 BankAmencard, Master pl Lag a Niguel 49S-'J624 ---. Wante a p or 2 nu tires, 714·598.5452 HIDE·A·BED, black ... ~..... . Charge. "The Limey's ap . un . ••••••••••••••••••••••• Sailboat. 675·8280 or LARGEST • naugahyde, &ood cood. Frigidaire refrigerator Mattress Warehouse," J,.aurel automatic Water 30' CHRIS COMMIE 67 675-7884 fleet of "New" Motor Trsks 9560 $135.548·2687 t!Q. Dinette set $25. Old 1145 Balrer St .. near Softener, lg capacity, ~ f1ybridge, twin screws, HomeR.eot.als.OverHO ...................... . _:__ ________ 1 cabinet ra d io $15. Fairview, Costa Mesa, used 1 yr . $300 /0fr. Wanted 8081 canvas rrn, bristol, (710 BoatSUptosub-lse, Dana 19T7modelstochooee Redecorating, must 631·2658or64>8399art5. 549-8378. 645-5430 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 436-4054,0wner Harbol',3S'. from;18'tol2'. sacrlC! Gold dense pile, Q'l-6100 (714) Jnsurancetneluded cpt.s & pa~. cust drapes, <;oar'dp Sale 8055 h" Color TV, plays good. King sz mattress & box· GoodSCWIA!Hf•~/~fSri"s 1066 American CeoNtu .. ryw WANTED: Two slips for Dale'sRVRentala,lnc. crystal bght fixtures, ••••••••••••••••••••••• $75. Caruilster Vaccuum, sprinas, new $195. Queen UQ ..... • CJ-.slc, like new. .. 27 , Sailboats. Nwpt, (n4)5SM448 recliner, yellow/white Apt al Frl-Sats.6 3 Pc! $17.646-1525 szboxspriog.smattress & Freeiers & etovea engine. only s.thrs, 407 dinette aet. 833-1962 5 e . ak. Solid frame, n ew $17S. Dbl 546-0768 cu. Mu at see to ap· Balboa.,is-1393 , bdrm ate. solid 0 • Gold washer & elect. boxsprtng mattress & p_..,la•A ""GOO Call eves · GOLD Vtlvet 9' eouch & St RC~ c Ir t v dryer.Xtntcond. $195for rrame $1.lS. Also twins Wanted: 4 Tickets to •999i ...., · · Wanted. On abore moor· loveseat. $195. Hlde·a· w /matching at~reo, •pair. 9• gold velvet sofa 788-8494 Pageant or the Masters. Ing OD Balboa Jal, will bed $110. 89't-628S Danish dine set, 6 sofa, 115. Gold d.sbwshr sso. Laguna Beach, July 22. 21 • Fiberglass Launch. bl.I)' boat lfnec. 1'13-2746 redn'r. Twn bed, day Royal Std typewriter sso. Antique Sofa, nd.s com· Wall pay S3S to $40 ea. Bay boat, fishing & ski· WANTED· 30• Sall slip BEAUTIFUL furniture bed. Men's clolh'g, sz 842.9480 . plete rejuv. $40. Other Call before Thursday. in g • V H F r a d , Udo Isle 'res would lik~ R. v. Sl'ORAGE octR. 7~ fromSpygJaas H111 home. 40-42 jackets. pants 35·36 misc. items. 846·8854 SUsan Churchill 644-8650 tathomet.er, head, bunks, same '75-~ per ft per mo. Comp! Spanish, Mediterranean waist, all xlnt cond. Sew Cadillacs to Go-Carta eves. Ext67. bait tank, lnbrd Gray · a e r v I c e d e p t & Contemporaey. For pettema & misc items. Whatever the Fad V~. $42.SO or ofr. Owner loah. Speed & appl call 644·1.S:B btwn Everythine must go, RoU 'emofllhemarket :.>yards of super cond. 673-&11.S. Sid 9-7~·Trl &8·12 Sat. -moving out of at.ate. 768 With a Classified Ad brown ca rpetinf. I WILL BUY Your---------- lastday W.Wllson,CM.Aptf.t. cauNow!842·5678 873-S91J Childrens outgrown , clothes lnfants·size 12. 552-3026 ••••••••••••••••••••••• l/B SHARP 18' Bay Boat Bantams. & ducks ~ll new tuoeup. Many xt.ru types & sues. Gd family szsoo 642-S583 pets. ti up. 2612 Mesa Dr . ..;;. __ . _...;...._ ____ ~ SA Relchts. Mornings 24 • SPORT FISHH only. Fiber~:• w /trlr Pianos & ()rps 8090 galley, • ba.11 ta1lk ······-··············· dual heavy duty ball'•· S Fl Bal>y Gruel. Howard radiol, fatbometer, ae S 11 o o /beat offer . temp, swim step, outrig N e w p o r t B e • c h gers, rod bolden It Te 714-159-Ull deck. Clean It fast SLS,800. SO.Ziil PIANO· Wurlitaer Spinet. IS' fbrllt boat. 60 Mahoe. Xlnt cond. $589. lier<. Bait tank. Xln Ph 6"-m& OODl1 tBOO. IG-7817 CONN Orilan, Prelude loall, Sall 906 1111, 1 yr~=· lrv'lne, •••••••••••• •••• ••, •• • SOUTHWUTHM Spinet lYt>.• piano YACHTSALI~ w/bencb, antique areen • ~ .:::c-.•1 $&00. 8'> 7318 Plano, uprlgbtend bench. $500. or beat offer. '4&Ct$(evea. cabc>Ter. fit.a ·ae-·11 anchero, 7x44. $150. 551-48> 8 Pack Oamper, btfl int. slpa t, stove/relrtg, 'Xlnt cond, '800. Hl-4611 or lt7SFOID COVRB~ With CAMPEil SHELL. Air cond., radio & beater, low nan.. BZ &errm-0.A.C. 1 JT, puts. a. labor service policy avail. (700NQA). Alit.61 Center's price ta HOW$3199 H•1as ' ' 4 I • 1917 DICU'TIYI WO Cl.U.14MCI "'1l Stvil~ 'TT Thu.nctcrrnrd . ' ~ MAl9UIS MOTOIS 2mlD Mar1ucnt4' l'kwy MISSION VIEJO ll t·!HO 4'5-12 I 0 '77 Tram Am "T'1 Vol•~ Waaon Adot. L ••riH .\II at "C''7 low •~•at' •••••••••••••••••••••• • rats call Met or Muy GaMrll t701 .1\ Cort l"o• lA••lnc •••••••• ••••••••••••••• 645-lHt 95'0 ••••••••••••••••••••••• WIWIL11Ul' YOUROATSUM J•AJD l''OR OH NOT TOf'OOLLAI FOaTOPCARS lilW1Ck DA TSUM ••• S.eHowsd 866 Bolla Way Lllauo• NiMix-J You urti l~ wl.nour or two fne ffclteb 1 Sl~ 00 value>, to ·~lro$. 1o ........ &1ou., Clrc1n SADDlEBACI< BM .W COMltM&IH THIAu.HIW UOCSI HOWi!! COMPLITI IOOYSHOP HOWOPIH SAOOLUACK VAUIY IMPORTS H 1.zo40 495-4949 CREVIER & I Sl 6 H OAOWAY SAHIA AHA 835·3171 Tlif UUtMAtl OlllVINC ""ACHlo;[ Sall Juiin C.ipi:.tr.inv 13I·1375 493·ll75 Au..:HhruAu.: 1:.i *USED IMW's• An.the1m Convent1ot1 s L'enter,800W Katella '743 0 Cpe /R 74SLWB 1973 Coupe, front fende( damaged. Runs great. $2995. 494·2130 73 Convert hte blue. Super cond AM/l"M, SH95. 494·lm8, 494.5747 Mazda 9738 WE BUY ClEANCARS &TRUCKS '762002 <bpd S/R 960NLF T1tket:. mu)t be ex· '76 530l~p.i\1ys S70PQM ••••••••••••••••••••••• t hanl(ed for re)erved ·m2002• tip. Air. ZKG138 ,~ats at th~ Con"entton -•73 3 o CS c~. 4:>pd. miracle mazda Center ahead o! ume. 220KMT <.:c.tll 642 5078, Ext 333 to CONN Ell CHEVROLET l ld1m )Our tickets. Closed On Sundays * * * ORANGE COUMTY'S l I SO Hart»or ... d. Alfa Romeo --9705 OLDEST Coda MHCI 645·5700 ••••••••••••••••••••••• & ~~Le~~CIW.:e.z •••• !?.~~ 282.8 llarbor Blvd. '76 AU.i Romeo Alretta <;T Lo m1, air, AM 11''M COSTA M ESA 546-1200 radio 9000 mi. 833-9490 11i..1ew _ Used WE PAV TOP DOI.LAil Sales-Serv1ce·Lca:>mg "" FOR TOP USJ-:O CARS ·74 Spider. bought new"' Roy CcrYer,lnc. OVER 100 FOREIGN. DOMt-:STIC '76· lS,OOO mi. Xlnq:ond. Rolls koyce BMW MERCEDES OrcLASSl,.S llood b r a. AM/1''M '-968 0863 154-0Jamboree OM DISPLA y IC your car is ex1 ra ch· an !>tt'rco. _;_ _ _ _ Newpart Beach 640-6444 Ll--~e of lm~rts :-.cc us first. ·74 J\Jfa Spyder. FM BMW-'68, 1600. new tire!> ~ BAUER BUICK stereo. Xlnt. 18,000 mi's · h k AUTI!ORIZ D •xv>< H bo 8 new paint, new s oc s' ~t ERCEOll'<:: DEALER ....,..,, a r r lvd IJrk "rn. Must se ll. b k 1 t h " ..., ,, .,. .. new r s, new c u c ,,,,L.,, "'"anchester, -..osta ... esa 979·2500 !l62·5:M5or (1) 995-2268. $2000 ( 4"6 3561 """"'" ---10 r " · or Buena Park TOP DOLLAR PAID FOR CLEAN 497-1849 Audi 9707 . 523-7250 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Capn 9715 On the Santa Ana Fwy. •'71 AUDI Must sell, very •••••··~··••••••••••••• clean New trans & 73 Capn, VG, i\M/FM. 4 brakes. sunroof, 4 spd spd. decor group Good ••r-••I ga!> sa ve r. $1850.? cond. S2,650 6733119 &1-1 S607 Citroftt 9716 IMPORT CARS ALL MODELS WE M!ED CLEAM USED CARS MOW CALL PAPPY 540-5630 I dy ic remc. SHOO. Ph w,l~~il&J .:~:~-Mkhelins, AM· 2626HARBOR BlVO. nt. new Konis, red/blk, COSTA MESA nms Bestofr.646-8766 Autos, Used Autos, Used •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• 3 Karmann Ghfos from $2695 '72lr-Ghio #7010 ................ S289S '72 Ko""-Ghia #5031 •............... S289S '71J(-Ghio#7011 ............•... $2695 I 3 VW S..stt & Campers from $2695 ·15 c....-11ossas1 •.......•......••. ss.ns '75 1111 #5043 •..••....••...••.••.•••. S4."5 '75111116J5MWHI •..•••.............. S4.695 'H l(Oft'Oi 141• 11%6KYDI •...•...•••••..• S4,495 '74 lin. utrcn I l I SLFll .••..••....•.... $4,695 '7l l111189'CYCI ...................... Sl,995 '73 lwsl291MJUI .......•.............. SJ.995 '73 lus l 563HJHI •....•...••........••• Sl,195 '73 lusl677JJKI ..•...............•.•. S).'95 '10 c....-l7781QHI .................. $3.195 '1011111 718,.HLI ...................... $2,695 '70 c....-1164EOJI •••.•.•...••••••.• SJ,095 '6' Comper1YWTll61 •••••..••...•...•• SJ.795 19 !has to ch~ from ·111 .. 1snMCAJ ............. ,. •••••• si,1ts ·14l1t1J16J4lqct •.••••..•••••••••••••• iz.ns '741 .. #702' ....••••.••• , ••••••••.•• SJ,795 ·12 ... uaotQP> ...................... sz.••s 1s ...... 111tst.ell-HOW NEWPORT DATSUN '75 280Z 4-spd. air, mags. AM·FM stereo t ape. S h arp . Mu s t s e l l. ~/bst ofr. 6'75·0432 or 832-2759 '74 Cellca. Auto . 30,000 Wdc '77 Toyota Corolla, 2 dr, like new, AM/FM stereo, 7,000 mi, asking $3200. ~8eves. '67 Npt cstm . Eng, lires, & body in gd cond. $400. Afl Spm, Iv msg & # 548-0201 or642·261 l '71 GXY Galaxie, 4 dr, vinyl top, air, R /H, comp. motor ove rhaul, batt. & pa1nl. $1395. 673-1942 1976POMTIAC firebfrd for ... CI Automatic. p'#r. steer· 1n1· brakes-windows. AM /FM stereo tape, tilt wheel & rally ~eels. 11 ,722 actual miles. <278NRS). EZ terms· 0 .A.C. 1 yr. parts & service policy avail. ONLY $5999 MAIERS AUTOCB4TER 142S Baker St., C.M. 540.9109 "'s. Co~.$' 1976 DATSUN ~210 4 0R. Thi• cnodef Is elao fully faciOYy eQulPe>e<f. i'nd it has ONL. V 3849 tcitual mllH. Ottvet Ed. ear. (HLB210913tl00). Won't last long at this low ~ce ' ' .. ,. 1977 FIREllRD 2S87C7N136565 Demo • Sffcll.er Ptke •"' ••.••••......•.. S6 3 ' 6. 7 5 lob L~'s Demo Sole Price .... $5695.00 DISCOUNT ................ $621.75· eDEMONSTRA TORS eCOMPANY CARS eEXECUTIYE CARS • S11rJ<pr PrtCP 1, manufacturers suggested retail orice olus dPillN in lallPr! accessories. 11 any EXAMPLE 1977 BONNEVILLE BROUGHAM SEDAN 2069K7.X 110852 DPmo •Sticker Price .........••.•..... $9373.70 Bob L~'s Demo Sate Price .... $7662.00 $12.95 . 1970.PONTIAC STAllOM WAG.OH v.e 10101 ttant . factory atr eondlftOfW'IQ OQINfW 91f"Cnf'g t&dta heller. hnled giau 101ee1R1 • 1976 PONTAIC $5695 FIRHIRDESPRIT Y·I . IUIO "~"~ • laclorv ... OO"C!\llOM'Q. -*'-"'O. red10 h~lfef, ..,..,.,.If lirttS tu,t«f QIHt. " r1lly1 -· f381NYTI EXAMPLE. 1977 SUN II RD 2M27C723 12401 Demo • Sffcktr Pric• .•..• -•••••••.••••• "' t 1.n lob L~'s Demo Sole Prfc:. •••• $5025.00 DISCOUNT .•..••...••••••• $893.78 1977 EXAMPLE· 1977 CAT ALINA COUPE 2L37K7P168464 Demo •sticker Price .................. $7289.95 lob Loftiigpre's Demo Sale Price .•.• $5195.00 ----,. DISCOUNT •••••••••••••• $1394.95 EXAMPLE: Wednesday, July 20. 1971 1977 VENTURA 2Y27L7L 108758 Demo --slider Mee ••...•.•••••••••• ,$6052.40 lob LAlftgpn's Demo Sale Price •••• $11 H .OO DISCOUNT •••••••••••••••• $857.40 EXAMPLE OYER 21· TO CHMSE FROM 1977 GRAND PRIX 2H57K7P262951 Demo • SHcker Price ••••••••..•••••••• $7826.60 lob LoncJpre's Detna Sale Price ••.• $6595.00 . DISCOUNT •••••••••••••• S 1231.60 1973 OLDS . 1973FORD s2795 Y·I . t dlo. tr~!?. t1ctorv elt RO YALE V·8 auto tran• .• fa,lory,•'lln coMltooning. -ltMnf>9. DOWe< """00W& ti-rocl10. "'n~ rOOI (692MVI') oonolllOflfftg. -&1-."9. ---Mlfl.1-&rolldlo. vinyl toot. (351Jl.CJ · 1976 PONTIAC $5595 Y·I auto.~~~aCIOfY •''. COMlllontno. -u..tno. rad<O "•-'ar """'.-I,,..'"'''° ge .. r9llye ...... (039PIW) $ 9 1975 BUICK . 37 5 y.e. euto. ~~!.'.Ltactory air conortlonlno. -.._,nv. 11- 11<100. -· --'"'™' QIHe. ("8Mt'V) $2595 1974 0ATSUN 1210 4 cyt. lllllO 1,_. ltfttf'IO radtO, lle•ler ~I ~reo 1027LBGJ 1977 PONTIAC $6795 ~MS.AM V0 8. lluJo. trent., tectory air COlldllionlng. -11..,ino. -dltc bt....._ -Wlncbl!a. 11areo radio. 1te111r, wllll•w•ll Ur ... ) 11n1ec1 o-. fMOt'lllt-OOCW eoci... ¥eiollr 1111!1. (IOOflXOJ ·~ ....... , DAILY PILOT !J J ~ ' D '' DAIL y PILOT Wednesday, July 20. 1971 DEMONSTRATOR SALE!!! Huge ·Selection of 1977 Demonstrators On Sale Now at Year End Close Ou\ Savings! GREAT VALUES ON FINE USED CARS '74 SAAi 4 cyl. engine. automatic transmission. radio. heater. bucket seats. vinyl roof & Power brakes. (473KL Y). '75 CHEVY MONTE CARLO VS. automatic. radio. heater. Power steering. power brakes. w/s/w tires. AM/FM radio. vinyl top & air cond. (262Ml0). 52995 "61 OLDSMOllLE V-8, automatic. air conditioning, power steering. l)Ower brakes, radio. heater. whitewall ttres. (652ELU) PLYMOUTH BARRACUDA 6 cyt. engine. automatic transmission. radio. heater. bucket seats. console. vinyl top. wisJw tires & air cond1tiomng (261 f=UP). '51695 · '71 DOD'ff POL.ARA V-8. automatic. air conditioning. steering. powet brakes. radio. heater. whitewall tires. (017DUO) • •I• PILOT-ADVERTISER SAYE NOW WITH CUSTOM CAR LEASING.-.. LEASE THE ALL NEW CORDOBA AND YOLARE OR ANY NEW MAKE CAR, TRUCK OR YAN DIRECT AND SA YE! LOW COMPETITIVE RA TES. •• FOR INFORMATION AND PRICES CALL PAUL DEFABLIS. .. 546-1934 DEPENDABLE SERVICE YOU CAN COUNT ON WHEN YOU NEED IT! ATLAS CHRYSLER/PLYMOUTH SERVICE HOURS: MONDAY THRU FRIDAY, 7:00 A.M. TO 6:00 P.M. SATURDAY 8:00 A .M. TO 5:00 P.M •. BRAND NEW I 977 PLYMOUTH VOLARE WAGON 318 V-8 engine. bench seat. automatic transmission. tinted glass. day & night mirror. left remote conttt>I mirror. electric clock. radio. luggfge rack. Power steering. deluxe wheef cover•. door edge protectors. wsw tires. pin stripes. Ser. •HL45G782.!0892. 76 ~ERCURY COMET 8 cy!. engine. automatic. radio. rieatef'. Power steering. Power brakes. w/s/w tires. custom interior + extenor & air cond. 1958NOI_(). 169 MERCURY MAR9UIS V-8. automatic. air condlt1onino. power steering, power brakes. Power windows. Power seats. radio. heater. vinyl rool. tilt wheel. (YPZg()S) 5895 •74 AMC AMIASSADOR V·8. automatic. air conditioning. power steerlno. power brakes. Power windows. AM radio with tape. heater. whitewall tires. vlnVl roof. tilt wheel. cruiie control. (900JSI) 51395 171 CHRYSLER MEWPORT V8. automatic. radio, heater. pQWer steerino. power brakes. w/s/w tires & air conditlonlno. (1380LFJ. 51095 •75 PLYMOUTH VALIANT '76 PLYMOUTH FURY 6 cylinder. automatic. air condltiOnlno, V-8. automatic. air conditioning, powe Power steering. radio. heater, whitewall steering, Power brakes, radio. heater. tires. (031N00) vinyl roof. (~7PWM) , •73 IUICK CENTURY V-8. automatic. air conditioning. POwet' steering. power brakes. radio. heater. whitewall tires, vinyl roof. tilt wheel. (269HOO) • 51995 l I Huntington Beach Fo11ntaln V• lley ~N Afteraooa N.Y.5*-eks 1 OL. 70, NO. 201, .C SECTIONS, a PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA WEDNESDAY, JU Y 20, 1977 Can Higher Taxes Be Averted? i By KATHY CLANCY oi ... o .. 1y ,..._. 5\111 How much will existing property tax rates in Orange County have to drop 1f county property owners aren't to be hlt with higher tax bills this year? ACCORDING TO a county report, cities along the Orange Coast will have to slice from 11to30 cents off their tax rates to maintain the status quo. The same report s hows that county government must hack 23 cents off the county's $1.43 tax rate to keep tax· payers even. And Orange Coast school districts will have to lop from seven cents to $1.24 off,theu-tax rates if taxpayers aren't to get socked with higher tax bills this year. SHOULD LOCAL taxing agencies fail to reduce their property tax rates by those amounts most homeowners will again be handed higher tax bills this year because of the record 19. 7 percent gain in county assessed valuation. That's because assessed value is the base that rates are applied to in determining tax bills. If assessed valua- tion climbs and tax rates don't go down by the same percentage, the net result is higher property tax bills. As property values have climbed in recent years most tax rates have declined. But the declines in most instances ha ven•t kept pace with the rises in value. . The county report, by Auditor-Controller Vic Heim, shows what tax rates would have to drop to if ta)<_ bills are ·not to go up. IN THE CASE of Laguna Beach, for ~xample, cny council members would have to chop last year's $1.65 rate by 30 cents per $100 of assessed valuation. And in the Irvine Unified School District, for instance, the tax rate would have to drop by $1.24 to $3. 75. But the property tax picture isn't that simple. The county report does not take into account com· · <See PROPERTY, Page AZ) • JohnstJ>wn Floods Again; 3 Die ullion Loss Mounts J Insurance Tab Due on SA. Heist By PffiLIP ROSMARIN Ol Uw Dally Piiot S"fl • Insurance adjustors are due at 'swiss Vaults Inc. in Santa Ana Thursday to unravel the losses m the largest unsol vcd robbery in Orange County history. The gold and silver bullion ex- change and brokerage firm, at 140~ N. Grand Ave., was robbed July 9 -a Saturday -after the company president, Vi ncent M. Ca rrano, agreed to meet a prospective client after hours. Instead of making a deposit of 20 bags of silver, which Carrano said his telephone caller told him he wanted to do, the m an alleged- ly pointed a gun at Carrano and allowed confederates inside. Carrano told police that while the gunman forced him to sit fac· ing a wall inside his own office, the other robbers dismantled two huge vault boxes, weighing tons each, and carted them away. Estimates of insured losses were $1.l million, but police say uninsured losses claimed may bring the total to more than $3 million. Most of the goods stored in the firm's two vault rooms were gold and silver bullion. J ewelry, cash and foreign exchange also were taken in the theft. Some clients who stored precious metals In the vaults rushed after the robbery to pay overdue insurance pre- mi u ms. They fear ed that Woman Charged , Naked, Starving I . ~ Kids Abandoned NEW YORK (AP) -Six naked nd starving children -the oungest four weeks old. the ldest 6 years -have been found uddled in bed in a filthy apart· ent in the Canarsic section of rook.Iyo. " Poli ce arrested a 25-year-old woman today and charged her with endangering the welfare of the children. The children. found Tuesday night after police received an anonymous telephone lip, were suffering from dehydration and exposure. a spokesman at Kings County Hospital said. Some of the children told police their father died of a heart attack about two weeks ago. They said their mother left several days ago. Shirley Jordan, the mother of two of the chHdren, left them alone while she searched for her 23·year·old sister. Brenda, the mother of four of the children, police said today. The two sisters, both apparent- !y unmarried, had been living together in the three-story, low· income housing project, police said. Brenda Jordan disappeared several days ago, and her sister Ice Cream Racket Hit CHICAGO (AP) - Police aay they have broken up a hot ice cream ring. a.rrestinc two men who allegedly stole 810 aallona ol ice cream and sold it to dealers at dia· count prices. Police chariett Martin Graves Jr., 42, and Calvin OaU., as, w(th theft. They aro driver-aaleemen lor an le• neam compav. The two ~ under aur· •eill~ f« two weeks, Dollce say. and were al· 1= ... ..Wiii COD· t of neb eov.ted fi•90l'S u roek1 road, cncel•t• cbfp, boaey-~~ .. apaacled blaaaer lo Jee cream ........ .. left the children to search for her, officers said. Police picked up both women today, but charged Shirley Jordan because she had most re· cent custody of the children, they said. The children were trea~ed at the hospital and placed in two foster homes by the St. Joseph's Childrens' Services agency. Richard Lutz of St. Joseph's said the agency would evaluate the situation before making a re· commendation on whether the children should be returned to their mothers. H1D1tington' s Teachers Get Raise because they were behind on payments, they would lose the dollar value of thei r stores. But J ack Fulton, vice presi- dent of the firm, said those who held valid insurance policies would be eligible lo collect on the insurance upon bringing the ac- counts up to date. Fulton said one woman was so anxious that she brought in an en· velope containing a check for past due premiums, and insisted that he take it. "It's all right," Fulton told her. "You can just mail it." But she pressed it into his hand and said, "No, you take it now." Fulton said that many clients are claiming to have stored more in safety deposit boxes than was listed on Insurance inventories. Paradoxically, he said , other clients are claiming now to have stored less. He cited the case or one woman insured for $5,000 worth of jewelry, who now claims the value actually was $200,000. Because of the robbery, she's out $195,000, if the claim is true. "Other people are saying there was nothing in that box except grandmother's will," Fulton said. He said there have been several claims to large sums of foreign money stored in the vaults. Although such claims would be useless to recover on in· surance, "IC you like to set up a nice tax loss, you just claim a quarter of a million dollars," he said. Fulton said that complete, run· ning inventories were kept on in· sured accounts, both to protect clients and Swiss Vaults. "We know there were people who bad nothing but money and papers in some accounts, or they w<>Wd have been insured. "Now all of a sudden they're saying there was a lot more. Maybe there was and maybe there wasn't. • Fulton said some boxes hadn't been opened for as long as two years. FBI agents, porlng over lists of clients, recognized at least two names of persons who hadn't a chance to open their boxes for some time: 'the owners were in federal prisons. One convi9t had atored only a few ~uver aDd gold bullion coins, but the other stored SOO ounces o£ (See BULUON, Pa&e A%) Blao That? Emmanuel Figueroa, 4, peeks around the edge of a mir· ror at a reflection of himself. He is among 65 children enrolled in a Head Start program at the Guadalupe Center on Milwaukee's South side. Carter. Tentatively OKs Gas Tax Hike W ASIIlNGTON CAP) -Presi· dent Carter has tentatively ap- proved a proposal to increase the federal gasoline tax by up to five cents a gallon to finance transportation and other energy· related programs, an administra· tionsourcesays. Carter gave hls assent Tues· day during a meeting of officials including Transportation Secretary Brock Adams, energy adviser James Schlesinger, economic adviser Charles Schultze and budget director . Bert Lance. The ofticials met to' discuss a wide range of energy proposals that may be submitted to the House ad hoc energy committee chaired by Rep. Thomas L. Ashley CD-Ohio). · · The gasoline tax proposal would involve an increase of three, four t:Jrfive cents in the tax that motorists pay for 1asoline at the pump, the source said. The current t.ax is four cents a gallop. Carter, while giving general· approval to the proposal, still must give his final okay before it is sent in final form to Capitol Hill, the &OUrce said. The ad· minlstration is "moving pretty expeditiously" to shape the package of proposals, he said. Carter's proposal to increase gasoline truces by five cents a gallon. with a possible rise to 50 cents after 10 years. was killed in the House Ways and Means Com· mittee last month. The revenues under that plan would have been rehinded as rebates equally to everyone. giving an incentive for consumers to become energy sa'Vers. Aftet that defeat. the· ad- mlDistraUon began constdertng a variatioo.ol a similarly rejected proposal b Rep. Dan Rostenkowski (D·lll. ), that would have increased taxe& by thre~ cents a gallon. with the re.- venues diveiUd to finance mass trautt and energy research. Nearby . Towns Isolated JOHNSTOWN, Pa. (AP) - Eight hours of rain swelled creeks over their banks today, isolating many communities and pouring a waist·high torrent into parts of this southwest Penn· sylvania city, which was almost wiped out in.the famous Johnstown F1ood.of1889. Civil Defense authorities in Ebensburg said three persons , were confirmed dead and five otheu missing. No identities were available. ·A CivU Defense spokesman said Mayor Herbert Pfuhl Jr. asked fOI' military help to control · • looting. Whole communities, including 15,000 r11sldents in nearby Windber. were lsolated Q the nub flood bloeked highways and knocked out communications. .. People are on the rooftops and in trees. They're everywhere as we understand it," said Elmer Sbaok, deputy Cambria County Civil Defense director. Two National Guard battalions were activated to help evacuate people stranded in their homes by the rampaging water. · "Streams that! never knew ex• Isled are causing problems," said another Civil Defense spokesmal). He said officials asked for (See FLOOD, Page AZ) PIUHADSOLD 'EJ'ERYl'lllNG' "Tbere•s no need to keep the ad run.n.ing, we sold everything, just everythlng!" . That'• the sal_, success ex· perience ol the South Latuna woman who placed this cl assUied notice in the Dally Pilot: Old office desk. comer Maple desk. Tressel ta· ble, old Hoosier cup. board, ~ freeze. UX• xxxx. . . .( . It you have clutter you want to convert to cash. call 642·SS'l8. We make-it easy for you to place an ·ad In the people•s marketplace- the Dally Pilot. . . A% DAIL v PILOT H/F Weelnnday, July 20, 1tn Water Plan OK'd FV Standby Law Resenie Measure The Founl•ln Valley City Coundl bad wat r on II• mind TueedQ •b• ll 1pproved an emer1ency eoa1er•1Uon meuure and acreed to sell~ ••watw-u.tnt" ldta to reaideta OD I lr1al baai1. The c&.udby wit.er cooaerva- tJon law WGUld enacted with Ju:st. oae Cf\7 Council 1Deetiq ln1te1d of the narmalJy required two * * * public &earln11 •nd 804 day period before It. became elfec· Llve. .. It's aomethlnc we'll hold ln reserve but hopefully never have to u1e:1 allid Mayor Roser Stan· ton. The emer1ency measure would prohibit gutter floodJng, w .. bing bard-surfaced areas and vebiclee by hosiq. obviowa * * * leaks and fllllng ornamental fountains or pools. The law also would allow water to be served only to restaurant patrons who requested it. Violation of the water law could result in disconnection of water service. Valley Seeks Cash For Drought Relief Mayor Pro Tem Bernie Svalatad said he opposed some provisions of the ordinance which he said would be changed ii it were ever enacted. The coun- cl I approved the measure to to O. Svalstad pointed to the pro- vision restricting hosing of vehicles and parking lots. Councilmen balked at a pro- posal to sell 1,000 water con- servation kits to residents !or 60 cents apiece. Public Works Director Wayne Osborne proposed the city spend $1,170 to buy the 1,000 kits which include a shower flow restrictor, leak detector and toilet device to r educe water use. The kits cost $1.17 each. · Fount.ain Valley bas applied for $650,000 in federal drought re- lief funds to aid in the construc- tion of two new wells and the redrilling of a third. Tuesday the City Council ap- proved the application, which consists of $130.000 in grant and $520,000 in loan funds. E'ro• Page Al FLOOD ••• boats from every available.gov- ernment agency. State police helicopters and scuba divers were pressed into rescue service. The flooding washed out the four·track Conrail mainline and a railroad spokesman said about 50 freight trains were held up on ei~her ~d,e of the Conemaugh River Valley. Amtrak , the national passenger train corporation, said service on both directions of the National Limited and Broadway Limited was interrupted. Passengers were being bused between affected points. Pfuhl said damages could run as high as $100 million in Johnstown.• An official of Bethlehem Steel Corp .. which employs about 12,000 in several Johnstown-area plants, said coke ovens, blast furnaces and open hearths were shut down because of the flood- ing. "There are no reports of in- juries or loss of life at the plants. although pockets of employes re- main stranded throughont the operations," he said. Two Bethlehem coal mines, Cambria Division portals 77 and 38E, were flooded, and mines 31 and 33 were closed because ol a power outage. Emergency medical centers were being set up on high ground. Cars floated in the water and firemen stood by helplessly as flames engulfed at least lhr-i.(! Johnstown buildings. ··we couldn't geft~.any of the rires," said Capt. Francis Petro. "The torrent of water was so great we couldn't cross the streets with our trucks." ''1'11 lell you. it's a mess, a real catastrophe," said Petro, a lifetime resident. "There bas to be loss of life. If there isn't, it's a miracle." Two-thirds or this city of 41,200 was under a foot of water or more. The downtown area was under aix feet, and the Conemaugh River and Little Stony Creek reportedly over· flowed. f'rma Page AJ BULLION ••• silver, worth $2,290 on today's market. Most of the Swies Vault clien- tele, according to Fulton, were doctors, lawyers and other pro- fessionals. Meantime, FBI ofCiciaJs and Santa Ana police today reported no leads ln the robbery. .Richard Woolf, an al(ent In tM Los Aneeles division. said "There have been no significant develop- ments." ORANGE COMT DAILY PILOT Public Works Director Wayne Osborne said the city had an- ticipated the construction of another well next year but de- cided to take advantage of the !ederal!unds available now. One well, c urrently being drilled at Mile Square Park, will be paid for with the federal funds. A city well located near Iris Avenue and Sierra Street will be redrilled to a depth of 800 feet. The well is currently 220 feet deep, said Osborne. The city's newest well. still on the drawing boards, will be locat· ed near Edinger Avenue and Richardson Street. The city is now purchasing the well site from the state, Osborne said. The well site will cost $10,000 and will be purchased with the federal funds the city hopes to re- cieve, Osborne said. Youth Seized On Shotgun Holdup Rap A 19·year·old Wilmington youth was arrested late Tuesday night in connection with a sawed· off shotgun robbery in Westminster earlier that night. Gregory Echavarria was booked into Orange County Jail OJ:\ charges of armed robbery and possession of an illegal weapon. Westminster police said the armed robbery occurred al 10:50 p.m. at a liquor store at 14550 Brookhurst St. The gunman allegedly made off with an undetermined amount of cash which police claim was found in Echaprriaa' p095ess1on at the time of~ arrest. Body Recovered SAN DIEGO CAP} -Coroner's officers say the body of a con- .struction worker accidentally buried alive by members of hi s crew was recovered under 12 feet of dirt. The victim was Identified as Angel Torres Escobar, 41, oC Los Angeles, a worker for a firm carrying out sewer construction· in suburban National City. But Stanton and Councilman George Scott said the city ''shouldn't subsidize" the kits. Most of the council doubted many residents would use the kits. Svalstad said he was opposed to government sale of the kits and sug~sted residents buy them from private businesses. Osborne said the city could pay for the kits with federal drought relief funds' his department ex- pects to rec1eve. The fonds are earmarked for water conserva- tion, he said. Metropolitan Water District of- ficials, who have purchased 100,000 kits for resale to cities and other water agencies, claims residents can save between 15 and 30 percent of the total water used in their homes with the de· vices. E'ro• Page Al RAISE .•• The new contract grants teachers the same fringe benefits as in lhe past but Dysinger added that teachers can expect a fringe benefit premium raise or between 12 and 28 percent. The district retains a final vote on grievances filed by either side. Teachers had sought bind- ing arbitration (a final vote from an independent arbitrator) in settling post-con tr act disputes. Deputies Find Nude Body LOS ANGELES (AP) -The nude body of an unidentified boy between 12 and 15 years old was discovered by a cou nty road maintenance crew alongside Glendora Mountain Road just north of the Los Angeles suburb of Glendora. Sheriff's deputies said Tuesday it appeared the body had been in the spot for about a day. Cause of death could not be determined. FrOM PalJ*! A I PROPERTY TAX ••• plicated state school finance laws which leave many ells· tricts hard -pressed to lower tax rates. IN MANY CASES. for example, the increases in as- sessed valuation mean the.state chips in less for education while local property owners spend more. The report also does not account for new county prop· ·erty which resultin new additions to the county tax roll. · That is a factor Assessor Bradley Jacobs attributes with 4.5 percent of the county's 19. 7 percent overall gain. What Heim's figures do show is what tax rate would be needed to keep the past year's property tax bills level. FOR OTIES along the Orange Coast the required cuts would include 19 cents to a tax rate of $1.01 in Fountain Valley; a 22-cent reduction to a $1.03 rate in Costa Mesa; a 23-cent cut to $1.34 in Huntington Beach; a 14-cent cut to a rate of 51 cents in Irvine; an 18-cent cut to a rate of 93 cents in Newport Beach. San Clemente city officials would need to make a 25- cent rate cut to 96 cents; San Juan Capistranof 23 cents to a 76-cent rate; Seal Beach, 11 cents to a 96·cent rate, and Westminster, a 12-cent cut to 59 cents. A.moQe other Oranae Coast School Dlstricts, the Sad- dleback Valley district wOUld require a $1.10 cut to a tax rate of M.23 per $100 ot assessed valuation; Capistrano Unified a 91-cent drop to ~-34; La(\lna Beach Unified, a ~cent drop to a $2.01 rat.e; NeWJ>ort·Mesa Unified. a 62· cent drop to $3.11 in Newport Beach and a 83·cent drop to $S.33ineoet&Mesa; • Abo. Huntinaton Beach Union High. a 38-cent cut to $1.94; Fountain \f alley elementary. 25 Qent.a to $1.09; Hunt- ington Beach ele11J,entary, a 25-cont cut to $1.41; Ocean View ele!Dentarj,, a 29-eent cut to si.20; Seal Beach elementary, • ae-ven-.6nt cut to $1.01, and Weatrninster elementary, a U.cent cut to $1.01. HEDI'S FIGURES also say a 13-cent cut to 61.5 certta per '100 of asaessed valuation would be needed ln the Coast Community Colleae Diltrict. while an 18·cent cut to a 12- cent tu rate would be nMC!ed to offset uaeaiid valuaUOi\ hl\e1 lJ\ ttie !aadlebau CGinmunlt.Y c»Uffe Oiitiict. Amonc tu rate dropt r~ .. a11net•1·idollect by the county Boa.rd Of SU~aon wowd 1>e Uaite~leata eaeb for. the~ Harbon, ne.chell end ~ Dfi&rld. iDd UM COUDtY rlOOd Cobti'ol l)lladct. ID ....... ~'°"9 .S'.fPCltt llioW8 dlr~ Gr Ui6 CaUtr' ........ Dl*kl~Would need tO CUt Uiiitille ceftb trcm •.• celda1'tr' aoo di usaaed v~t.o'rlllllt.:..~ the aame number OI dollan that they diet lut year. 6 f: Koreagate Prosecutors? These four former Watergate prosecution figures are be- ing considered to head the investigation of the Korean influence-buying scandal in Congress. Clockwise, from top left, they are Archibald Cox, Leon Jaworski, John Doar and Sam Dash. Carter Ends Talks On Israelis, Arabs WASIUNGTON (AP) -Presi· dent Carter ended talks today with Prime Minister Mcnahem Begin by saying the Israeli and Arab positions "will lead to the reconvening or the Geneva con· fcrence'' on Middle East peace. Carter said the negotiations "very likely" would start in Oc· tober, as suggested by Begin and Egyptian President Anwar Sadat. He also said Secretary of State Cyrus R. Vance would travel to Jerusalem and the Arab capitals beginning Aug. 1 to pursue the groundwork for peace negotiations. Sources m Washington said Begin offered a peace plan to Pres ident Carter on Tuesday whereby Israel would trade large parts of the occupied Golan Heights and Sinai Desert for peace with Syria and Egypt but would not withdraw from tt1e oc- cupied West Banlc or the Jordan River. Earlier, Carter and Begin ap- peared to disagree on how quick· ly terms of any seUlement should be implemented. Carter said Tuesday that progl"ess must be made this year, but Begin cau- tioned "there must be some ;a- tience." After escorting Begin to his limousine outside the White House, Carter told r eporters. ··we have laid a lot of the groundwork for peace talks. GIVEIN There's temptation evetywhere you turn • . . at sale prices [ ~elg, I~ t Heritage • ~if l.eaking 1.ake Studied The Huntinaton Beach City Council has decided to refill bone-dry Talbert Lake so public works olftclals can try to dis.- cover why it leaks. The council ordeted the lake drained three months ago because about 300 gallons of water per minute aeeped through the 1round, said City Enslneer Michael Zambory. The water which wm be pumped into the dry lake is dis- colored and not suitable for drinking, Zambory explained. · But the city will have to pay $30 per acre foot to pump the water from two nearby city wells, he added. An acre foot. equals about 325,900 gallons. City public works officials will remove dense plant growth in the lake with bulldozers and begin tests to see where the water is seeping through within the next lew weeks, Zambory said. The lake will be sectioned of( by dikes which will be filled separately for the testing. The leaky area will later be treated. The test should last several months. Zambory said. The lake. located between Slater and Talbert avenues east of Golden West street. used to be a peal bog. It was modified for fishing and as a natural wildlife setting, officials said. Its exact dimensions are unknown. . ''The water we will pump looks like root beer," Zambory said. "When it appears in the lake, it will appear clear as it begins to settle." A Hot Time For SeIUUOr WASHINGTON (AP) - Andrew K. Loberman, 27, of Beverly Hills, was ar- rested early today in the office of Sen. Thomas Eagleton < D-Mo.}, U.S. Capitol Police said. Police said Loberman had taken apart the desk chair in Eagleton's office and tried to set a rug on !ire in the suite. Loberman was charged with arson and burglary and taken to St. Elizabeths Hospital for observation pending a hearing. sae Su rrHnPr ae sa., ... Drexel and Heritage Furniture sale Recluced up to2{)% Wl)'beavdcllsf AnhetepfceJ, ~ anafy.,..,ntt Datfl' ~«ltJge•~upto•df.~Rfectlonsof dnlng mom. bodroonu1nd OCCllllonll turnitU,.\t'~tly) reduced. Come be~.•. lnCt c:rww a loYtliet ~. ~f l<Mfief home! CONvtNtENT rJNANCING. PROFCSSION~L INTtRIO~ DESIGN WITHOUT 08LIGAT101'C I-NO COMFORTABLE PARKING. Irvine EDITION •. , Today's Cl~lag f N.Y.·Stoeks Can Higher Taxes Be-AVerted~ By KATHY CLANCY Of-0..•f"-Mlff How much wilt existing property tax rates in Orange County have to drop if county property owners aren"t to be hit with higher tax b1Jls this year? ACCORDING TO a county l'eport, cities along the Orange Coast will have to slice from 11to30 cents off their tax rates to maintain the status quo. The same report shows that county government must hack 23 cents off the county's $1.43 tax rate to keep tax· payers even. And Orange Coast. school districts will have to lop Crom seven cents to $1.:'.4 ott their tax rates if taxpayers aren't to get socked with higher tax bills this year. SHOULD LOCAL taxing agencies fail to reduce their property tax rates by those amounts most homeowners will again be handed higher tax bills this year because of the record19.7 percent gain in county asseised valuation. That's because assessed value is the base that rates are applied to in determining tax bills. If assessed •vatua. lion climbs and tax rates don't go down by the same percentage, the net result is higher property tax bills. As property values have climbed in recent years most tax rates have declined. But the declines in most instance~ haven't kept pace with the rises in value. . The coun"' report, by Auditor-Controller Vic Helm. shows what tax rates would have to drop to if tax bills are not to go up. IN THE CASE of Laguna Beach, for example, city council members would hue to chop last year's $1.65 rate by 30 cents per $100 of assessed valuation. And in the Irvine Unified School District, for instance. the tax rate would have to drop by $1.24 to $3. 75. But the property tax picture isn't that simple. The county report does not take into account com· . (See PROPERTY, Page AZ> Nearby Tow11$ Isolated APWl ...... '9 Johnstown Floods Again; Three Die ~ JOHNSTOWN, Pa. (AP) - Eight hours of rain swelled creeks over their banks today, isolating many communities and pouring a waist-high torrent into parts of this southwest Penn- sylvania city, which was almost wiped out in the famous Johnstown Flood of 1889. Ci vii Defense authorities in Ebensburg said three persons were confirmed dead and five others missing. No identities were available. A Civil Defense spokesman said Mayor Herbert Pfuhl "Jr. asked for µUlltary help to control tooUoa. W"bole communities, including 15,000 residents ln nearby Windber. were isolated as the flash flood blocked highways ~d knocked out comsnuntcattons. Two National Guard battalions were activated to help evacuate people stranded in their homes by the rampaging water. "Streams that I.never knew ex- isted are causing problems," said another Civil Defense spokesman. He said officials asked for boats Crom every available gov- ernment agency. State police helicopters and scuba divers were pressed into rescue service. The flooding washed out the four-track Conrail mainline and a railroad spokesman said about SO freight trains·were held up on either side or the Conemaugh River Valley. Amtrak, the national passenger train corporation, said service on both directions of the National Limited and Broadway <See FLOOD, Page AZ> • ¥an, .102, Retunu to Work l THIS WAS HOW IT WAS IN THE FIRST JOHNSTOWN FLOOD, BACK IN 1889 Comp•rl1ona Mount as ElgM Hours of Rain Push Creeks Over4"helr B•nks ''People are on the rooftops and in trees. They're everywhere as we understand it," said £!mer Shank. deputy Cambria County Civil Defense director. OL~EE, Fla. (AP> -'fffhll ls the first time I was sick, • Willie Brown, 102, said as he rept>rted back to work ln a Green Thumb program for elderly J.>eo- .ple. He missed six months because of an operation in which some toes were amputated due to a circulatory problem. Brown says the loss hasn't affected his work, which is cutting brush and pulling weeds. Mesan Asks Right to Die Green Thumb officials were surprised when Brown returned and wanted his job back in the Olustee Experimental Forest in northern Florida. He works 20 hours a week at $2.30 an hour, sup- plementing his Social Security income of about $1~8 a month. Brown was put in a nursing home after his operation, but he was too impatient to stay long. By GARV GRANVILLE Ot Ille Dally Pilot Stall A suit filed Tuesday in · Orange County Superior Court asks that the court or· der a doctor caring for a stricken Costa Mesa woman , to follow the woman's long- f~ standing written directive by allowing her "to die in dignity." Such an order would mean dis· continuing giving 84-year·olo Marie Welday the medication and drugs that have kept her alive for more than a year, ac· cording to the comp I a int. The lawsuit filed by the stricken woman's daughter, Marie Leuck, Is believed to be one of the first under Caltfornia's new so-called Right to Die Law. Mrs. Leuck based her lawsuit on a notarized affidavit signed by her mother on June 27, 1972. In that typewritten one-page affidavit, Mrs. Welday said, "No doctor is to take any measure Coast Weather Low cl°"'ds late tonight and Thursday morning. Otherwise 8-lPDY Thurs· day. Lowa tonl&ht 56 to 65. Highs Thursday near 70 at beach~ to near 80 inland. IN81DB TODAY · T,_. ffltvrla& Z'ggurot of Lo_guno NIQutl, wbjeot of curlotit11 . o.nd controver111 from tlw beg&mlng, fa baclc in fhf c.,.,er t;ng btca1'-te of a t1()0p of gootmmcnt prQpcrl11. seeeaoeA7. ...... whatsoever lo artifically pre· serve or stimulate life in my body when it is ready lo die." "My reason is simple. I want to die ln dignity," Mrs. Welday said in her affidavit. Two Accused As Spies for Russ Nabbed FORT LAUDERDALE, Fla. (AP> -Two men, one from Germany, were arrested by the FBI today and accused of con· spiring to smuggle components or the top-secret U.S. cruise mis· sile to the Soviet Union. ''We have arrested two enemy agents," Julius L. Mattson, special agent ·in charge of the FBI office in Miami, said shortly after the two were picked up without incident at the Fort Lauderdale airport. They were identified as Carl L. W eischenberg, 33, a citizen of West Germany and a r esident of Freeport in the Bahamas, and Carl ·John Heiser Ill, 32, or Highland Beach, Fla. There was no indication or where and bow Helser .obtained or planned to obtain parts for the cruise missile. a pilotless weapon which can ny a prearraneed, low-level route to ill target. The FBI initially refused to elab«ate on the cbaraa agalnlt the two. Jlut an affi4-vlt filed at. tb'tr hearlnl before a federal maaistrate a lew hours later ac· cuaed Helser of furntshln1 mUlta.ry 8J)d defeme 11ecrew to Weischenbera tor more than two yeats. They were f ormallY ~barsect with "acting u uen\il Of East Germany and the 80\IMl Uni(lfl wftbout pi'ior notlftcatl• to the 1ecreury of atete. The Jl!BI said the addltlaDal Cb..,• IU1 be filed. to Wllbl~ th FBI aMd I.he~ ....... thtat ...... "Ui~ at·leid . .u.ti Afdl lm. rur..-. llll011DMlclill Id·. v.n4b ......... ~ .... f_.. GI M u.AW .._.. to ~--. - According to the lawsuit, Newport Beach physician Theodore A. Alex has, since May 4, 1976, disregarded Mrs. Welday's wish to not have her life sustained by arUfical means. It is declared in the complaint that on that date Mrs. Welday "suffered a stroke leaving her permanently comatose, paralyzed and blind." <See DIES, Page AZ) "I'll work as long as I am able," Brown says. "I trust in the Lord. You have to trust in Him.'• SA BUilion Loss Mounts .Applications Clog Permit Processing Insurers Tab D~ on Gold, Silmr Heut By PIULIP ROSMARIN OltlW Dall~ PllttStaff Insurance acijustors are due at Swiss Vaults Inc. in Santa Ana Thursday to unravel the losses in the largest unsolved robbery in OraneeCounty history. The gold and silver bullion ex· change and brokerage firm. at 1404 N. Grand Ave., was robbed July 9 -a Saturday -after the company president, Vincent M. Carrano, agreed to meet a prospective client after hours. Instead of making a deposit ot 20 bags of silver, which Carrano said his telephone caller told bim he wanted to do, the man alle1ed- ly pointed a gun at Carrano and allowed confederates inside. Carrano told pollce that while the gunman forced him to sit fac· ing a wall inside bis own omce, the other robbeta dismantled two huge vault boxes, weighing tons each, and carted them away. Estimates or Insured losses were $1.l mtllion, but police1Jay uninsured l0$ses claimed may bring the total to more th~ $.l mil Hon. Most of tbe sooda JJtored ill the .. • DAILY PILOT CW A S1rilCe So t Would A// ect CptUt PhOne Job$ Tbl" Communic•Uon1 Worlwr~ o/ Ammca. a unJon romr,nlina a halC·mlllloa ltlephonc ndu1try mploy• nationwide, Including 'z.aoo Pa.cine T~l phone work.:ri m Oranse County. Is pollln1 tu m~m bersbtp for a 1tr1 kt• Union 0Cf1<'1al l'l !l ay an American Telephone und Tele 1r.ph Company (AT~T) borialnlnR team, with whom the CW A i! ntaotiattni a lbree.year eontract. 1~n·t communJcaUnc. <'WA llX'al ofrlccs u<.·ross tht- counlry .-n· holdtntc strike vot~ wh1r h wall bt! used July 2S as a bargwrung tool when the na- tlooaJ Wllon meets with AT&T d · f1clal1 ln San Francisco and New York. CW A Local 11510 In Garden Grove, rcpreaenUni the Oranie County workcrt, met this week at tho South Coast Plaza Hotel In Coata Mesa and voted 626 to 123 ror a. strike. But the aclion ($oesn'L mean that a~one will str~e. Local 11510 Vice President J\lchard Bevins, Hid a strike vote is normally taken during barguining sessions, ai> a wedge lo open up talks. He said AT&T normalJy waits to see Lhe resuy of a strike vote to see how strong the lbem· Fro•Pa~AJ ~PROPERTY TAX ••• I plicated state school finance Jaws which leave many dis- tricts hard ·pressed to lower tax rates. IN MANY CASES, for example, the increases in as· sessed vuluation mean the state chips in less for education while local property owneri spend more. The report also does not account for new county prop- (•rty which result in new additions to the county tax roll. That is a factor Assessor Bradley Jacobs attributes with 4.5 perce nt of the county's 19.7 percent overall gain. What Heim's figures do show is what tax rate would be needed to keep the past year's property tax bills level. FOR CITIES along the Orange Coast the required cuts would include 19 cents to a tax rate of $1.01 in Fountain Valley; a 22·cent reduction to a $1.03 rate in Costa Mesa; a 28·cent cut to $1.34 in Huntington Beach; a 14·cent cut to a rate of 51 cents in Irvine; an 18·cent cut to a rate of 93 cents in Newport Beach. benhlp feels about its pro~ed cont.racts. Bevi.M aald CWA leaders have asked "a substantial wace ..in· crtase-"u much as we possibly can"-but said no ftnn numbers have neen mentioned. CW A workers authorized a strlke the last time contracts were necotiated, in 197•, though one never was call ed. In 1971 there wu a 14-day strike. A spokesman for Pacific Telephione said the strike authorization vote is "almost an automatic thing they do every time we have bargaining.'' The spokesman said that if an actual strike is called, maiiage- ment olflclaJs would take over operator roles. "We eiq>ect very little interruption of. service to customers," he said. He added that there could be delays in Lelepbone installations, as well as longer pauses before an operator would be able to answer the telephone for as· s1stance calls. This is the second time the CWA bas negotiated in which the entire Bell Telephone System is involved as a single bargaining unit. Affected companies include Bell Laboratories, AT&T Longlines and Western Electric Manufacturing and subsidiaries. Koreagate Prosecutors? These four former Watergate prosecution figures are be· ing considered to head the investigation of the· Korean influenc~buying scandal in Congress. Clockwise, from top left, they are Archibald Cox, Leon Jaworski, John Doar and Sam Dash. Fro• Page AJ BULLION ••• isurunce, "If you like to set up a nice tax. loss. you just claim a quarter ot a million dollan.'• be said. Fulton said that complet., run· ning inventories were kept on in- sured accounts. both to prote<:t cllent.s and Swiss V ault.s, "We know there were people who had nothing but money and papers in some accounts, or they would have been insured. "Now nil of a sudden they're s aying there was a lot more. Maybe there was and maybe there wasn't. Fultoo said some boxes hadn't been opened .,r at Iona as two years. FBI agents, porine over lists of clients, recognized at least two names of persons who hadn't a chance to open their boxes for some time: The owners were in federal prisons. One convict had stored only a few silver and gold bullion coins, but tho other stored 500 ounces oC silver. worth $2,290 on today's market. Most. of the Swiss Vault clien· tele, according to Fulton, were doctors, lawyers and other pro- f essionals. Meantime, FBI officials and Santa Ana police today reported noleadsintherobbery. Richard Woolf. an agent in the Los Angeles di vision, said "There have been no significant develop. ments." Front Page Al SPIES ••• W eischenberg. • • "According to the affidavit. San Clemente city officials would need to make a 25- cent rate cut to 96 cents; San Juan Capistrano, 23eents to a 76·cent rate; Seal Beach, 11 cents to a 96·cent rate, and Westminster, a 12.cent cut to59 cents. Among other Orange Coast School Districts, the~­ dleback Valley district would require a $1.10 cut to at~ rate of $4.23 per $100 of assessed valuation: Caoistrano Unified a 91·cent drop to $3.34; Laguna Beach Unified, a Irvine Park OK So~ht Weischenberg attempted to bay for the Soviet Union uranium 'bx· ide 205, thorium 230 and other materials, and reportedly of- fered Helser $250,000 to take-com- ponents of the U.S. cruise missile to a Russian in Cuba. 52·cent drop.to a $2.01 rate; Newport·Mesa Unified, a 62· cent drop to $3.lt in Newport Beach and a 63·cent drop to $3.33 in Costa Mesa; AJso, Huntington Beach Union High, a 38·cent cut to $1.94; Fountain Valley elementary, 25 cents to $1.09; Hunt- ington Beach elementary, a 25·cent cut to $1.41; Ocean View elementary, a 29·cent cut to $1.20; Seal Beach elementary, a scven·cent cut to $1.01. and Westminster · elementary, a 24·ccnt cut to $1.01. HEIM'S FIGURES also say a 13·cent cut to 67.5 cents per $100 of assessed valuation would be needed in the Coast Community College District, while an 18·cent cut to a 72· l·ent tax rate would be needed to offset assessed valuation hikes in the Saddleback Community College District. Among tax rate drops for agencies controlled by the county Board of Supervisors would be three cents each for the county Harbors, Beaches and Parks District and the county Flood Control District. In addition, the report shows directors of the Orange County Transit District would need to cut their rate to 3.4 c·ents from 4.26 cents per $100 of assessed valuation to raise the same number of dollars that tl~ey did last year. TeenCemer To Celebrate Irvine teens are invited to a party at the Irvine teen center Saturday night to commemorate the center's third anniversary and to say goodbye to teen leader Mario Arellano. The free party will begin at 7 p.m. and continue until 10 at the renter, located behlnd Universi· ty High School oft Culver Drive. There will be refreshments and music will be provided by the band :·Ala Carte." For more in· formation, phone 752·5351. Pair Indicted LOS ANGELES (AP) -A bail bondsman and his associate have been indicted by a Cederal grand jury on charges of trying to bribe a federal judge. Harold "Hal" Glickm~. 43, and JaJnes Rowe, 30, both of Los Angeles, were in· dieted Tuesday on charges of conspiracy and obstruction of Justice alter they allegedly of. ft!red a Judge $50,000 in exchange for a lenient sentence for a drug trafficker. ORANGE COAST DAILY PILOT . • Front Page A J DIES ••• The complaint alleges the woman's death is imminent and that she is "being kept artificial· ly a li\•e under the dir~tion o( the defendant by the administration of glucose, electrolytes, heart and blood pressure oiedication and other nutrients admini11tered through a nasal tube." ) The lawsuit notes that Mrs. Welday as a patient in Park Superior Convalescent Hospital in Newport Beach is unable to manage her own affairs. In a separate court petition. Mrs. Leuck asked to be appointed her guardian. The lawsuit alleges that the 84 ·year·old stricken woman's "death is being prolonged against her expressed wishes" and is interfering with ber "right to choose the manner of her death once it is certain and inunl· nent." It pleads with the court to order Dr. Alex and others who might treat Mrs. Weldaytoallowher"to die naturally and according to her wishes." It ls expected that a bearing on the lawsuit seeking the court in· junction will be scheduled f oc hearing within a month. Fro.a Page AJ GAS ••• ' eoasutners to bec0tne ener11 savers. Aftet that defeat. the ad· tn\J\hrtraUon bepn consld~ a variation 'Of a almllarJ.y rejected ptopoeat by J\•r.· Dan Ro1ttnltow1kt O>·ll .), that •ould bavo lbcreued ~ bY tbr•• cents a 1allon, With tbl-re. ¥4!n~es diverted to flnanee llUllM ....._ traniit and fn«U rlMatch. Irvine Community Services commissioners will be asked to approve the final plans for Turtle Rock Community Park tonight and to call for bids. The 20·acre park in Turtl1; Rock Village has been planned by Kammeyer, Lynch and Front Page AJ FLOOD ••. Limited was interrupted. Passengers were being l>used between affected points. Pfuhl said damages could run as high as $100 million in. Johnstown. An official of Bethlehem Steel Corp., which employs about 12,000 in several Johnstown·area plants, said coke ovens, blast furnaces and open hearths were shuL down because of the flood-ing. . "There are no reports of in- juries or loss of life at the plants, although pockets of employes re· main stranded throughout the operations,•• be said. · Two Bethlehem coal mines. Cambria Division portals 77 and 38E, were flooded, and mines 31 and 33 were closed because of a power outage. Emergency medical centers were being set up on high ground. Cars floated In the water and firemen stood by belple3Sly as flames engulfed at least three Johnstown buildings. "We couldn't get to any of the fire1," slUd Capt. Francis Petro. "The torrent of water was so great we couldn't cross the streets with our trucks." "1 'll tell you, it's a mess, a real catastrophe," said Petro, a lifetime resident. ''There has to be loss of We. If there isn't, it's a miracle." Two.thirds of this city of (1,200 was under a foot of water or more. The downtown area was under slx feet, and the Conemaugh Rivfr and LitUe Stony Creek reportedly over· flowed. Blast Injures 5 TEL AVIV, Israel (AP) -An explosion Injured five persons to- day in a supermarket at the. coastal town or Nabariya six miles south of Ute Lebanese border, police said. Another ex· plosion hlt Jerusalem'• lllbllcal zoo, usually crowded with children during the summer school vacation, but no injuries were reported. Partners, witla help from Turtle Rock r esidents. Commissioners will conside:-the plans al the 7:30 m eeting at city hall. General plans include a 4·acre interpretive (nature)" center, an 11,000 square foot multipurpose building, organized and un· organJzed picnic facilities, play areas for youngsters, softball playing Cield, tennis courts, handball/basketball area, and off street parking. City staff members are recom· mending that commissioners ap. prove a compromise aereement where seven bomeowners adja· cent to the park pay half the cost or fencing between the park and the houses. The fence would consist of five· foot wrought Iron panels, sup· ported by masot\ry ptlrars, which is identical to Cencing used in other parts of Turtle Rock Village. The total cost would be $9,46.1. with homeowners picking up half and the city the other half. Other items listed on tonight's agenda include: -A review of the status of the archeological site in University Town Center. -A park plan review ot the Crestwood Estates tract in Northwood. -A look at whether the city should have an arts policy, to en· courage public and private in· s titutions to include art ex· pression in their building design and have art displays. -A review of the policy ~ hir· ing instructors for the cfty's special isl classes. GIVEIN • There's temptation everywhere you tur_n • at sale prices Drexell'J.. Hertt1,, "As late as June 30, Heiser re· portedly commented that be was involved in international es· pionage with the East Germans and Russians and as late as July 1, was still reportedly planning to deliver unspecified components of the ,U.S. cruise misslle to a Soviet agent based in Cuba," the· statement said. Wage Increased WASHINGTON CAP) Legislation increasing the $2.30 hourly minimum wage by 35 • cents effective in January with autQmat1c increases each year. received overwhelming commit- tee approval in tbe House on Tu~day. sa sale Surnrner sae .Drexel and Heritage Furniture S~le Reduced up to20*' • Miy be autiousl At~prfeef.fO'l an only profit I Dmef' •nd Herii.ge• upholatery I.Ip ttt •off.~ Miecllol is ot dlrM& room, bedroom lfld ocatloNI furniture (~ly) ~. c.ome be~ •• 'lltd aw1*. bfll8' "°'1'te. )Our IQwdier hotriet CONVENIENT ffNANC1NQ. PR()ttsSIONAl • INT£Rt0f! OEStGN WITHOUTOB(tGAftON ANO COMfOR f AD~E PARKING. . . Lag1•na/South Coast EDlTI ON VOL 70, NO. 201, -4 SECTIONS, '8 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA . . -.. WfDNESDAY, JULY 20, 1977 . Afternoon· N.Y. Stoeks ., • ,---------------Cities, School Districts Must Act--------------.... Can Higher Taxes Be AVerted? By KATHY CLANCY °' .. ~., ........... How much will existing property tax rates in Orange County have to drop if county property owners aren't to be hit with higher tax bills this year? ACCORDING TO a county report, cities along the Orange Coast will have to slice from 11to30 cents off their tax rates to maintain the status quo. The same report shows that county government must hack 23 cents off the county's $1.43 tax rate to keep tax· payers even. And Orange Coast. sch~l districts will have to lop from Nearby Towns Isolated seven cents to $1.24 otl tneir tax rates if taxpayers aren't to get socked with higher tax bills this year. SHOULD LOCAL taxing agencies fail to reduce their property tax rates by those amounts most homeowners will again be handed higher tax bills this year because of the record 19.7 percent gain in county assessed valuation. That's because assessed value is the base that rates are applied to in determining tax bills. If assessed valua- tion climbs and tax rates don't go down by the same percentage, the net result is higher property tax bills. As property values have climbed in recent years most tax rates have declinetl. But the declines in most instances • haven't kept pace with the rises in value. The county report, by Auditor-Controller Vic Heim~ shows what tax rates would have to drop to if tax bills are not to go up. IN THE CASE of Laguna Beach, for example, city council members would have to chop last year's $1.65 ratt? by 30 cents per $100 of assessed valuation. And in the Irvine Unified School District, for instance, the tax rate would have to drop by $1.24 to$3.75. But the property tax picture isn't that simple. The county report does not take into account com· (See PROPERTY, Page A%) • l Johnstown Floods i Again; Three Die I JOHNSTOWN, Pa. (AP> - tight hours or rain swelled 4reeks over their banks today. ilsolaling many communities and pourmg a waist·high torrent into parts or this southwest Penn· sylvania city, which was almost wiped out in the famous Johnstown Flood oC 1889. Civil Defense authorities in· Ebensburg said three persons were confirmed dead and five others missing. No identities were available. A Civil Defense spokesman said Mayor Herbert Pfuhl Jr. SA Bullion Robbery Investigated By PIOLIP ROSMARIN Oftlle Oalty ~llOCStatt I Insurance adjustors are due at Swiss Vaults Inc. in Santa Ana ghursday to unravel the losses in he largest unsolved robbery in range County history. i The gold and silver bullion ex- bhange and brokerage firm, at i404 N. Grand Ave., was robbed uly 9 -a Saturday -after the om pany president, Vincent M. arrano, agreed to meet a rospectiveclient after hours. Instead of making a deposit of 20 bags of silver. which Carrano said his telephone caller told him he wanted to do, the man alleged· ly potnted a gun at Cerrano and allowed confederates inside. . Carrano told police that while the gunman forced him to sit fac- ing a wall inside his own office, the other robbers dismantled two huge vault boxes, weighing tons each, and carted them away. Estimates of insured losses were $1.1 million, but police say uninsured losses claimed may bring the total to more than $3 million. Most of the goods stored in the firm's two vault rooms were gold and silver bullion. Jewelry, cash and foreign exchange also were taken in the theft: Som e client& <See BUUJON, Pace .U> Coast asked for military help to control looting. • Whole communities, including 15,000 r esidents in nearby Windber, were isolated as the flash flood blocked highways and knocked out communications. "People are on the rooftops and in trees. They're everywhere as we understand it," said Elmer Shank, deputy Cambria County Civil Defense director. Two National Guard battalions were activated to help evacuate people stranded in their homes by the rampaginf! water. A Hot Time For Senator WASIUNGTON (AP) - Andrew K. Loberman, 27, of '3everly Hills, was ar· r ested early today in the office of Sen. Thomas Eagleton CD· Mo.>. U.S. Capitol Police said. Police said Loberman had taken apart the desk chair in Eagleton's omce and tried to set a rug on fire in the suite. Loberman was charged with arson and burglary and taken to St. Elizabeths Hospital for observation pending a ~earing. Tear Gas Can Routs Armed I SAG11nman "Streams that l never knew ex· isled are causing problems," said another Civil Defense spokesman. He said oHicials asked for boats from every available gov· ernment agency. State police helicopters and scuba divers were pressed into rescue service. The flood ing washed out the four-track Conrail mainline and a railroad spokesman said about 50 freight trains were held up on either side of the Conemaugh River Valley. Amtrak, the national passenger train corporation, said service on both directions of the N a\lo~ !@it~ •S.4 Broadway l..lmlted was i nte rrupted. Passengers were being bused between affected points. Ptuhl said damages could run as bl•b as $100 million in Jobqstown. ,\a official of Bethlehem Steel (See •1000, Page .U) • Theft Prevention U~ged Ordinance. Before San Clemente Council Burglars may rind themselves locked out of San Clemente, if Police Chief Gary Brown has his way. Brown bas proposed a burglary prevention ordinance. which the City Council is to con- sider tonight. The ordinance would impose stringent condi- tions on construction of doo~ and windows in new homes and com· met'cial buildings. It would also require that buildings undergoing repairs costiDi $1.000 or more meet the lock·out standards a nd that homes being sold meet the stan· dards b efore escrow can be closed. Tonlght's council meeting is scheduled for 7:30 p .m. in council ,, ch ambers at city -hall, 100 Ave. Presidio. In a memo attached to the pro- posed ordinance, Chief Brown said the model burglary preven- tion ordinance evolved from police department participation in a county program. "We can't guarantee adoption of this ordinance will eliminate all burglaries occurring in new homes and build1ngs," said Brown. "However, we're confi· dent it will deter many." Other items of interest on tonight's agenda include: -Comideratioh of a planning com missJon recommendation that tbe 5 percent ratio of mobile · homes in the city be eliminated. The commissioners also recom· mended allowing eight mobile M.&ndoned··Kiils \ -~ ' ·s•aniiig, · NU"~~-ea NEWYORK (AP>-Slxnaked and starving children -the younJest four weeks old, the old•t 6 years -have been rou~ huddled in bed in a nlthy apart· ment in the Canaraie section ot Brooklyn. Police arrested a 25-year-dld woman today and cbarled her wlt.b endanaerlng t.be welfare o( th• cblldren. · Th• cllUdren. found Tuesday nllht tiler police received an AftOD1UlOUS teleph~ Up, wenJ auff!uinc from deh)'dration and ex~e, a spekesman at Kings c~~ HosJ>it.at laid. about two weeks a10. 'they aaid their mother left. several dQs ago. , · Shl .. Jey Jiit'daD, th• 'tnotber Of two of the' ~ldren, left tbem homes per acre, rather than the six currently allowed. Both recommendations are an attempt to provide more moderately priced housing in San Clemente. -Adoption of an ordinance re· guJaUng newspaper racks, attow· ing the city to remove them! if they carry wblications deemed obscene. Marine Gets u/eTenn ·lnSla~ng Marine-guards Held in Rape At NB Tract Two Marines, employed in their off-duty boars as security guards in a new housing develop- ment in Newport BeAch, were taken into custody by police ear· ly today in connection with the rape of a 17-year-old girl. Police said today they booked one of the guards, Gary Armstrong, 24, on a charge of forcible rape, but charges against the other were pe~ the outcome of an investigation. 1 The second Marine was idel\· tified as Marcus Little. but in· · formation on where h e and Armstrong are stationed 'W~ not immediately available. · Poli& said the 1trl was raped in the Seaview 'ten-ace uact where she and her.. 17-year-old • boyfriend bad driven at 12:30 a .m . after atteodina a party in Corona del Mar. Police said the. young CGUple were discovered by the two guards who· then assaulted the girl. They said the boyfriend, who was present.<luring Ute rape, apparently advised the vldim not to scream or struggle bee a use the two guards might call the police. Officers said the youth feared art'est on charges ol trespasslna in the private com· munlty. The girl told officers her ~ boyfriend toot her homttalter the , incident . ~ I Jt2 CAIL Y PILOT u se Tax Bill May Jump For Some t Daiille • propos<'d lax r•tc cul of 82 ceota ln th• C•p1-1.raoo Unified School Diatrart, •ome homeow1_.. fae• htaher taic bUI• to pay school c-u.-Us nl'xt yeur. A S2t 4 m11l1on r>ubh t'ullon bud&et approved by tru'itt·cs lh111 week include• a tax rutt: of $(.12 pe-r $100asested valuatloo. Total aa.~ed valuation lo the daslnct th.ts year. however, la· creased 28 t percent. Dibtncl finance offacials say res1denllal property values flue· tuate between 5 percent and 20 percent« more h1gher tbl.s year. The owner ol a home a ppralsed this year at ~.000 would pay • $824 in school d1str1ct taxes. Adoption oC a hnal school budget-and a final tax rate-is expected in August. Sam Chicas, assistant superin- tendent for general services. said he expects the final budget to be close to the pubhcation budget. The dis trict includes 20 sch0<>ls, with three more schools under construction. It covers 20 percent of Orange County. including the com· mWliUes of Laguna Niguel, San Juan Capistrano, Dana Point, Capistrano Beach, San Clemente and part of Mission Viejo. Unger Quits Planner Post In Clemente Timothy Unger, San Clemente planning commissioner for just over a year, announced his re- signation from the commission Tuesday, citing bis heavy workload as a Broadmoor Homes planner as the reason. Unger came under fire in April from union officials for an off. hand remark he made at a com· mission meeting about keeping housing costs down by barring union labor. He later apologized for the re· mark, calling it a "ludicrous thing to say" and one be lived to regret. City councilmen are expected to accept Unger's resignation at their meeting tonight. Mr. Sterling Funeral Mass Set Thursday A funeral mass will be recited Thursday in Dana Point for San Juan Capistrano account ex· ecutive William Sterling. who died Friday in a convalescent hospital. The Mass or Christian Burial is to be at 11 a.m. at St. Edwards Catholic Church. Burial is al Ascension Cemetery in El Toro. Mr. Sterling was born in Penn· sylvania. He lived in California 43 years, in San Juan nine years. He is survived by his wife. Gudren, of the couple•s home at 33371 Alipaz St., by a son, William; and by a grandaon, two brothers and a sister. Connor Laguna Htlls ary is making funeral ar- ments. Pair Arrested TUCSON, Ariz. (AP> - A Nogales, Ariz .• woman and her Mexican companion have been ordered held in lie ... or bond here al.ter U.S. eustoms agents said the couple illegally tr~d to take 4.500 rounds ol ammunition into Mexico. Boods ot $10,000 each were set Tuesday for Isidro AJuiJar-Lechuga, 29, and Gloria E. Andrade.Urtusuaste,uJ, Z'/. ORANGE COAIT vsc DAILY PILOT We41'Hday, July 20. 1tn &..r,,,.AJ 8ULUON ••• wbo 1&.orcd predoqs metals ln the vault.I rushed alter Lb• robbery lo pay overdue Insurance pre. mtum1. Tb•y feared that beeaUM tbt.1 w re bthibd on r11y.mcnta. they would 1oee the dollar value ot th~lr stores. But J1u:k t'u.llon. vicu prul- dent of the ftrm, aa1d thol6 who h ·Id v~Jid insurance pollcle~ would ~ cl1Clbl• lo collect oo the 1nsura"4·e upe>n bringing the ac- counta up todaatu. f<"ulton swd one woman was so amoous th1'l she broucbt in an en· velopo containing a check for past due premium.a. and insisted that bo take lt. ·'It's all right," Fulton told her. "You ean Just mall it." But she pressed it into his hand and said, .. No, you take it now." l''ulton said that many clients are claimin& to have stored more m safety deposit boxes than was listed on insurance inventories. Paradoxically, he said, other clients are claimiag now 10 have stored less. Postal Aide lrven Couse Rites Slated Bo.onces Baek.· Man, 102, Returm to Work OLUSTEE. Fla. CAP> -"This is the first time 1 was sick,'' WUUe Browo, 102, said as he reported back to work in a Green Thumb program for elderly peo- ple. H.e missed six months because or an operation in which some toes were amputated due to a circulatory problem. Brown says the loss hasn't affected bis work, which Is cutting brush and pulling weeds. Green Thumb officials were surprised when Brown returned and wanted h•s fab back in the Olustee Experimental For~t in northern Florida. He works 20 hours a week at 12.30 an hour, sup- plementing his Social Security income ot about $148 a month. Brown was put in a nursing home after his operation , but he was too impatient to stay long. "I'll work as long as I am abJe," Brown says. "I trust in the Lord. You have to trust in Him.•• Carter Tentatively OKs Gas Tax Hike proposal by Rep . Dan Rostenkowski CD·lll. ), that would have increased taxes by three eents a gallon. with the re· venues diverted to finance mass transit and energy research. Ero•PageAJ FLOOD ••• Corp., which employs about 12,000 in several JohnstoWJ\·wea plants, said coke ovens, blast furnaces and open hearths were shut down because of the flood· log. . "There are no reports of in· juries oc loss ot lite et the plant.s, although pockets of employea re· main stranded throuebout the opettltiona," heaaid. Two Bethlehem coal mines. Cambria Division portals 77 and 38E, were flooded, and mines 31 and 33 were closed because ol. a power outa••· Emergency medical centers were ~g~et \l onbiib ground. Cars ftoa n U)e water and firemen s by helplessly as names engulfed at least. three Johnsl(>wn buildlngs . ··w~ couldn't get to any of the fires." said Capt. Francia Petro. .. 'The torrent oC water was so great we couldn't cross the streets with our trucks.•• •TH tell y()U, it's a mess, a real catastrophe," said Petro. a lifetime resident. "There has to be loss of iile. If there isn't, it's a miracle." Two-thirds of this city or 41,~ was under a foot of water or more. The downtown area was under six feel, and the Conemaugh River and Little stony Creek reportedly over· flowed. Closure Delay Sought San Juan Capistrano city ad· ministrators will lobby the city council tonight in an effort to postpone the setting ot a spedllc closure dat.e for the controversial municipal airport. The council meet.J.na wlll take place at 7 p.m. in clty of'ttces at 32400 Pase<> Adelanto. Two weeks •to. councilmen by a t.b.l'ee-to-two vote directed city stat( to prepare a resolution ca11· ing for a firm June 1, 197.8 closure date for the city airfield. In -.a report. to councUmen this week, however, City Manager James Mocalls urged the council to back off from setting a closure date and enter 11eg0Uations with lhe airport owners over closure of the airport. The land used for lhe airport's runway and taxiways, now technically owned by the city, would revert to the airport owners when operations at the tiny airfield are halted. · City councilmen also will con- sider a proposed increase in city trash collection fees and set a permanent1977-78clty tax rate. Funeral service for lrven Couse, a supervisor in the Laguna Beach post office for 30 years and a Laguna resident for 52 years, will be held at 11 a.m. Thursday at McCormick Laguna Beach Chapel. Mr. Couse died Tuesday at bis home alter a short illness. WASHINGTON (AP) -Ptesi· dent Carter has tentatively ap· proved a proposal to increase the federal gasoline tax by up to five cents a gallon to finance transportation and other energy, related programs, an a~tra• tion source says. Carter gave bis assent Tues- day during a meeting of officials including Transportation Secretary Brock Adams, energy adviser James. Schlesinger, economic adviser Charles Schultze and budget director · Bert Lance. Panel Okays. Pier, Bowl Plan for SC Alertness Hailed In SC Smoke Case · Bob Peacock. a Ch ristian Science Reader, will officiate at the service. Burial is at Melrose Abby in Anaheim. Mr. Couse was active in the Veteran of Foreign Wars post in Laguna Beach and in the Chris· ti an Science Church. He is survived by his wife. Louise; son, Robert Couse oC Saratoga <Calif.>; daughters. Bonnie Davis of Laguna Beach and Barbara Couse of Laguna Beach and orre grandchild, Myles Davis. Atrangements are directed by McCormick Mortuary. .5Kids Hurt In Laguna 3-car Crash Five children on their way to the beach as part of a summer camp outing were injured in a three-car colljalon Tuesday in Laguna Beach. The accident occurred al about 12: 32 p.m. in the 700 block of Laguna Canyon Road. The children rar1ging in age from 12 to 9, were transported by p ri vale ambulance and by paramedic van to South Coast Community Hospital. All were released afler treatment for minor injuries. Details of the accident were unavailable from the Laguna beach Police Department. The officials met to discuss a wide range of energy proposals that may be submitted to the House ad h'oc energy committee chaired by R ep. Thomas L. Ashley <D-Obio>. The gasoline tax prpposal would involve an increase of three., four or five cents in the tax that motorists pay for gasoline at the pump, the source said. The current tax is four cents a gallon. Carter, while giving general approval to the proposal, still must give his final okay before it is sent in final form to Capitol Hill, the source said. The ad· ministration is .. moving pretty expeditiously" to shape the package of proposals, he said. Carter's proposal to increase gasoline taxes by five cents a gallon, with a possible rlse to 50 cents after 10 years, was killed in the Houae Ways and Means Com· miUee last month. The revenues under that plan would have been refunded as rebates equall.Y to everyone. giving an incentive for consumers to become eneray ~avers. After that defeat, the ad- ministration began considering n variation of a similarly rejected Wage Increased WASHINGTON <AP) Legislation increasing the $2.30 hourly minimum wage by 35 cents effective in January with automatic increases each year, received overwhelming commit· tee approval in the House on Tuesday. Frtn11Pa~Al PROPERTf TAX ••• plicated state school finance laws which leave many dis- tricts hard -pressed to lower tax rates. IN MANY CASES, for example, the increases in as- sessed valuation mean the state cJlips in less for education while local property owners spend more. The report also does not account for new county prop· erty which result in new additions to the county tax roll. That is a factor Assessor Bradley Jacobs attributes with 4.5 percent of the county's 19. 7 percent overall gain. What Helm's figurea do show Ls what tax r~te would be needed to keep the past year's property tax bills level. FOR CITIES along the Orange Coast the r equired cuts would include 19 cents to a tax rate of $1.0l in Fountain Valley; a 22-cent reduction to a $1.03 rate in Costa Mesa: a. 28-cent cut to $1.34 in Huntington Beach; a 14-cent cut to a rate of Sl cents in Irvine; an 18-eent cut to a ttate of 93 cents in Newport Beach. San Clemente city Qf.f.icials would need 1o make a 25- cent rate cut to 96 cents; 1Sat1 Juan Capistrano, 23 cents to a 76-cent rote; Seal Beach, 11 cents to a 9&-cent rate. and Westminster, a 12·cent cut to 59 cents. Among other Orange Coast School Districts, the Sa4· dleback Valley district would require a $l.10 cut to a tax rate of $4.23 P!~ SlOO Of gseuf! valuation: Caofstr~o Unified a 91·cew. drop1o SJ.~j Lo&jWul Beach Ui\Jt;ecl, a 52-cent drop to a $2.01 ratei Newport.Mesa Unlfied. a ~ cent drop to $1.U in Newpoit Beach and. a 6keilt drop to $3.33 In Costa Kesa; · Also, Runtinetorl Beac Union High, • 38i.eent oot to $1.94; Fountain V8Dey elemen~. Z5 cent.I to fl.09:...H1.tnt· 1 tngton Beach eltment.etY. a_..,. Mid tt.41; QC'ian View el~, a 29.c.m tut \o ~SlJx>; Stal B•ach elementary, a 1even·Cent cut to Sl.O~ ;lid W~tmtnsier. ,. elementary, 'D 2'·cent cui to 01 . • San Clemente planning com· missioners unanimously ap- proved a compromise plnn Tues· d a y for development o( the municipal pier and bowl area. with a bikeway or tram connect· mg the beach to North Beach. The city redevelopment agen· cy, comprised of the five city councilmen, will consider the commission's recommendation for the pier-bowl area tonight. The meeting is scheduled for 9 p.m. in council chambers at city hall, 100 Ave. Presidio. Planning commissioners studied three alternative de· velopment plans, prepared by the Keisker-Johnson consulting firm. The first of the three would not require additional city ac- quisition of land. The third. called the "most aggressive" would include a 300·space parking garage. Commissioners• Chose the second alternative, which city Manager Gerald Weeks said would call for "modera~" de· velopment. A cautious San Clemente woman, who called the city fire department late Tuesday when she thought she smelled smoke, may have averted a tragic fire, firemen said today. Esther Dunnigan, of 210 Calle de Anza, told firemen she couldn't tell where the srnell of smoke originated. It was Mrs. Dunrugan's television causing the odor, firemen said. The wtr- 833~ Figurine Stolen in Mesa .,_ Hummel porcelain figurine called "The Merry Wanderer" is doing just that· today after a· shoplifter walked off with the nine and a half Jnch piece Tues- day. Employes at Grafton Street, a china·and fieurlne store ib South Coast Plaza, told Costa Mesa police Tuesday someone stole the S330 figurine fr~ a window at the shop. • , . .. GIVE ·l·N .· ·ing was so hot inside the set, parts were charred. .. That was a close one,•• said Capt. Nick Maule. "'The set was close to breaking into flames. and it was located under some curtains, which would have gone fast." Maule said Mrs. Dunnigan was about to go to bed, just before m idnight, when she thought she s melled smoke. It she'd decided sbe was wrong and gone on to bed, chances are good the set would have started a fire. Maule said. ·: Firemen removed the set to the backyard and advised Mrs. Dun· nigan to install a smoke detector. Chamber Meet Set The Capistrano Beach Chamber of Commerce will hold a membership social mixer from 5 to 7 p .m. Thursday at California • Federal Saving and Loan As· soclation, 34000 Doheny Park lload. Wlne and hors d'oeuvres Will be served. CoetJ.a $2. sale Sum111er a· ..... sale Drexel and Heritage Furniture sale .. ReduceduptoZ~ Why becau1iausr N .._prtcxif. ~ ancnlypt#ltl o..tfl' .ncf Heritage• uptldit~ u~ to 2D'Ao oll.~ tieleal°"5 ol ~room.btdroomnfoccWcNlturnltinw(lill"ifliCan1fy) 1Hucilcl. ~be~ ••• ~ 0.-& loweffer ~. ')'OU' ~lt'r home I ____._...... --...-...-...... ---- Orange Coast ~ Today's CIMlag ·' · N.Y.Stoeks EDITION VOL. 70, NO. 201, ~SECTIONS, ~8 PAGES N TEN Cl;NT Can .Higher Taxes B~·_Averted? By KATHY CLANCY OI .. 0.01, "INI SUH How much will existing property tax rates in Orange County have to drop if county property owners aren't to be hit with higher tax bills this year? ACCORDING TO a county report, cities along the Orange Coast will have to slice from 11to30 cents off their tax rates to m aintain the status quo. The same report shows that county government must hack 23 cents off the county's $1.43 tax rate to keep tax· payers even. • And Orange Coast. school districts will have to lop from \lbmanSeeks seven cents to $1.24 ott their tax rates if taxpayers aren't to get socked with higher tax bills this year. SHOULD LOCAL taxing agencies Cail to reduce their prope1iy tax rates by those amounts most homeowners will again be handed higher tax bills this year because of the record 19.7 percent gain in county assessed valuation. That's because assessed value is the base that rates are applied to in determining tax bills. IC assessed valua· tion climbs and tax ra~ don't go down by the same percentage, the net result is higher property tax bills. As property values have climbed in recent years most t ax rates have declined. But the declines in most instances havcn'tkept pace with the rises Jn value. . The c~nty report, by Auditor-Controller Vic Heim, shows what tax rates would have to drop to if tax bills are nottogoup. IN THE CABE of Laguna Beach, for example, city council members would have to chop last year's $1.65 rate by 30 cents per $100 of assessed valuation. · " And in the Irvine Unified School District, for instance, the tax rate would have to drop by $1.24 to $3. 75. But Vle property tax picture isn't that simple. The county report does not take into account com· (See PROPERTY, Page AZ> Mes an Sues Her Doctor for Right I' By GARV GRANVILLE I Of IN Dilly Pilot Slaff j A suit filed Tuesday in , Orange County Superior . Court asks that the court or· I der a doctor caring for a stricken Costa Mesa woman to follow the woman's long· standing written directive by allowing her "to die in dignity." { Such an order would mean dis· continuing givi ng 84·year-old i Marie Welday the medication and drugs that have kept her ali ve for more than a year, ac· cording lo the complaint. The lawsuit filed by the stricken woman's daughter , Marie Leuck, is believed to be one of the first under California's new so-called Right to Die Law. Mrs. Leuck based her lawsuit on a notarized affidavit signed by her mother on June 27, 1972. In that typewritten one-page affidavit. Mrs. Welday said, "No doctor is to take any measure whatsoever to artiflcally pre· serve or stimulate lire in my body when it is ready to die." ·•My reason is simple. I want to die in dignity," Mrs. Welday said in her affidavit. According to the lawsuit, Newport Beach physician Theodore A. Al ex has. since May 4 , 1976, dis regard e d Mrs. Welday's wish to not have her life sustained by artifical means. It is declared in the complaint that on that date Mrs. Welday "surrered a stroke leaving her pe rm a n ently co m a t os e , paralyzed and blind ." The complaint alleges the woman's death is imminent and that she is "being kept artifi cial· ly alive under the direction of th e defendant by the administration of glucose, electrolytes, heart and blood pressure medication and other nutrients administered through a nasal tube." ) The lawsuit notes that Mrs. Welday as a patient in Park Superior Convaleseent Hospital in Newport Beach is unable to manage her own affairs. In a separate court petition. Mrs. Leuck asked to be appointed her guardi~n. The ,awsuit alleges that the 84·year·old stricken woman's "death is being prolonged against her expressed wishes" and is interfering with her "right to choose the manner of her death once it is certain and immi· nent." It pleads with the court to order Dr. Alex and others who might treat Mrs. Welday to alJow her "to die naturally and according to her wishes." It is expected that a hearing on the lawsuit seeking the court in· junction will be scheduled for hearing within a month. 'Big NB Users Pay SeaviewAides i He/,d in Rape More to Save Water OJ Te~"""lfer In another move to g et Newport Beach residents and businessmen to conserve water. city councilmen have wiped out th e low consum ption rate 1 formerly paid by users of large quantities of water. The council also ordered 2,000 water con· servation kits for residents. Both moves were taken during the July 11 city council meeting. Hughes Drug Use Probed LOS ANGELES CAP> -A longtime aide to industrialist Howard Hughes has been or- dered to answer questions about Hughes' use of drugs during the last two decades of his life. However, John Holmes, who was recently removed as a direc· tor of Hughes' Summa Corp., was not prevented from taking the Fifth Amendment. Superior Court Judge Nell Lake, who issued Tuesday's or· der, made a similar ruling last week in the case of another for mer Hughes aide, Clarence Waldron. Coast based on recommendations from th e council's water committee. Effective July l , all water users in the city will pay 38 cents per 100 cubic feet of water plus the 10 percent surcharge enacted two months ago by the council to entice water users into conserv· ing. Prior to that, bulk users, who use about 14 percent of the city's water, were paying 25 cents per IOQ cubic feet and no surcharge. Included in the coancll 's action was a second price change, to go into effect on July 1. 1978, when the consumption rate will rise to 45 cents per 100 cubic feet for all users. The conservation kits ordered by the city will be sold to water users at cost -about $1.25 each. They contain now restrictors for shower beads, dams to limit water used in toilet flushing and dye tablets to test toilet tan.ks for leaks. Joseph T. Devlin, director of public works, commented that the kits· were selected because they can be used for a long time. "We want people here to Wl· derstand that water conservation is not just something to get fUt with the drought. They will bave to do it permanenUy because at the increases in the cost ol the energy used lo get th e water here." According to a report prepared by the council the cost of water to the city was $79 per acre foot in 1976·77 and it ls expec:Led to rise to $88 per acre foot In 1978-79. There are '3,560 cubic feet Jn an aore!oot. · .. 1 Newport Beach's appHcaUoo to e)Cclude Ju resldentlal nei1bborbood1 from authority of tbe c:oa1ta\ commi11loo bas bolled doWn tn what city ol· ficil.lt 1ay " "•n adminiat.rativo mltund~.·· Two Marines. employed in their oCf-duty hours as security guards in a new hou sing develop· m enl in Newport Beach, were taken into custody by poli ce ear· ly today in connection with the rape of a 1'1·year-old girl. · Police said today they booked one of the g uards , Gary Armstrong, 24, on a charge of forcible rape, but cha r ges against the other were pending the outcome or an investigation. The second Marine was iden· tified as Marcus Little, but in· formation on where he and Armstrong are stationed was not immediately available. Police said the girl was raped in the Seaview Ter'race tract where she and her 17-year-old boyfriend had driven at 12::.> a.m. after aUending a party in Coronadel Mar. ' Police said the young couple were discovered by tbe two guards who then assaulted the girl. They said the boyfriend. who was present.during the rape. apparenUy advised the victim not t o scream or struggle because the two guards might call the police. omcers said the y()Utb feared arrest on charges of trupassing in the private com· munity. , Th• girl told omcera her boyfriend took l\er home after the incident, but she decided to re· port the crime and drove lo tbe police station just after La.m. Fair BeQQtie• Naecy Slriley, a ·member of Costa Mesa . High School's Future Farmers of America does .. last minute touch up on her go~t. Ruby, just before judging todf.r at the Orange County Fair. Ruby and several other kinds of liv~stock are on display at the fair wtiich runa through Sunday. Relat·, ed story, photo, AlO. Carter Tentatively OKs Gas Tax Hike WASlilNGTON (AP) -Presi· Schultze and budget director dent Carter has tentatively ap.. Bert Lance. proved a proPOsal to increase the The officials met to discuss a federal gasoline tax by up lo five wJde range or energy proposals cents a gallon to finance that may be submitted to the transportation and other energy-House ad hoc energy committee relaledprograms,anadmlnistra· chaired by Rep. Thomas L . Uonsourcesays. Ashley (D-Ohio). •· Carter gave his assent TUes· The gasoline lax proposal day during a meeting of officials would involve a n increase of inc 1 udi ng Tr ansportatlon / three, four or five cents in the tax Secretary Brock Adams, ~nergy that motorists pay for gasoline at adviser J ames Schlesinger, the pump the source said. The economic adviser Charles currentta~isfour centsagallon. PIIDI' AD SOW 'EYERYI1llNC' "There's no need to keep the ad running, we sold .everything, just everything!" That's the sales success ex· perience of the South Laguna woma,n who placed this clpssified notice in the Dai~y Pilot: Ol<l office de11t. corn4!r .Mapla desk. Tressel la· . •ble. old Hoosier cup· board, deep freeze. XXlt• xx xx: U you have.clutter you want to convert to cash, caU M2·5678. We make it easy for· you to place an ad in the people1s marketplace- tbe Daily Pilot. Carter, while giving general approval lo t.fte proposal, still must give his final okay before it ls sent in final form to Capitol Hill, the source said. The ad· ministration is "moving pretty expeditiously" to shape the package or proposals, he said. Carter's proposal to increase easoline tax~s by five cents a gallon. witfl a possible rise to 50 cents afte.r 1P years, was kllled in the House Ways and Means Com· mittee last month. The revenues under that plan would have been refunded as rebates ~uaUy to ~•!]one, giving an incentive ror con~urntn"a to become eoer_gy HYerl, After th~t defeat, the ad· mlnJajtaUOll beaan 'Consl.dering a vartatl<lft of a stmUuly reJected proposal tty Rep . Dan Rostenkowakl <D·lU.) E:looding Hits Johnstown Again; 3 Die JOHNSTOWN. Pa. CAP) -A torrent or water dumped by an eight-hour rainstorm swirled t.hrqugh the Johnstown area ear· . ly today isolaUpg 41,000 residents as roads washed away and com· munication lines were downed. At least three persons were confirmed dead and live others 'Tlai• is just total hell,' said a 1'olun• teer llre111a1t. ~..-...~ were missing near this southwl!st Pennsylvania city. where the Johnstown Flood of 1889 claimed 2,200 lives and nearly wiped out the town. Mayor Herbert Pfuhl Jr. re- portedly told police to shoot looters if nece!sary in the city's Solomon Homes area, a low· income projeet. · Later, ln a Citizens Band radio' conversaUon, Pfuhl told Cam· brla County Civil Defense of. ficlals that the Jootiog subsided and that state police were on the seen~. Gov. MU~ Sbapp declared a (See 1'1001>. P•ce AJ> laJ-Cr.eam Racket flit .. 9 DAILY PILOT Phone Strike Looming? The c.ommuni<'tt!ou Workon or Amtrlca. a un.100 compr11lna 1t half rnll110p teJ pbono 1ndu.try ~mptoyes naUonwldc, lnclud.loK 2,ltOO PaciOl' Telepbont.1 workers 10 Ora.nae County, l!I polltni 1ls memberlh.lp for a str1kt" U alon official• •U an Amertc1n Tell'pbone and Ttlt· crapb Compan y (AT•T > barg.tlnlna team. with whom Uw CWA 1s nqot1aUng a three y~ar contract, isn't communicating CW A I IX.' al office:. across the country a.re holc.hn& strike vot~ which will be used July 2S as a bargaininl( tool when the na. llonal uruon met>!.!. with AT&T ol flc1als in San Franetsco and New York. CWA Local lUlO in Garden Grove. represenung the Or&Jlie County WOC'kers, met this week at the South Coast Plait, Hotel in Costa Mesa and voted 626 to 123 for a strike. But the action doe~n't mean that anyone will strike. Local 11510 Vice President Richard Bevins. said a strike -vote is normally taken durtna bar1alning sessions. as a wedje to open up talks. He said AT&T normally waits to aee the resuts of a strike vote to see how strong the mem- bership feels dbout its proposed 'contracts. · Bevins said CWA leaders have asked "a s ubstantial wa1e in- creas~"as much as we possibly 'can"-but said no firm numbers have neen mentioned. New Officer& Named for Art Museum Retired banker Leon Lyon bas been elected president of the Board of Trustees ot the Newport Harbor Art Museum. Serving with him as vice pres1· dents will be Hancock Banning Ill; Newport Beach City Coun- cil woman Luc!lle Kuehn; John D. Nichols. and John Martin Shea. Secretary for the 1977-78 year will be Mrs. Richard Jonas. who will also ser ve with V.ice Presa· dent Shea as a co-chairman of the museum's coordinating council. Treasurer and ass istant treasurer will be Charles Hester and J . Thomas Van Dalfsen Sr. Other board members are Mrs. ~~rank Rhodes. Roland R. Speers. David S. Tappan Jr .. Thomas C. Wolff Jr .. Ernest C. Wilson. Mrs. Harold Pastorius. Mrs. Ernest A. Bryant and Mrs. Al bert A. Adams. Buena Park Man Jailed In Forgery A Buena Park m an who authorities allege forged docu· ments to facilitate sale of two lots in Big Bear is in custody today in Newport Beach on charges of conspiracy lo commit forgery. Joseph De Andrea, 36, was ar· rested near his home Tuesday by detectives who began their in· vestigat1on when the land owner whose i.1gnalure De Andl'ea al· leaedly forged came to them. Det. Todd Wilkinson said the victim and her husband told them they entered an aareement to sell the two Jots to De Andrea in an unre<:orded 10-year con- tract. Not long after, lhe couple separated and De Andrea asked to have a convenUonaJ escrow opened on Ute sale, so tl~at he could get a loan on the property. Wilkinson said the wife balked. · but later found an escrow had been opened on tho J7roperty. ORANOI CCAIT N .DAILY PILOT 'Bullion I~ ·Mounts GOV. MILTON SHAPP INSPECTS FLOOD DAMAGE State Offlclal• Tour Site In Hellcopter Fro,,.PageAJ FLOOD HITS AGAIN. • • state of extreme emergency and was to tour the &trfcken com- munities by helicopter. ·~This is Just total hell." sald Ry an Boch er, a volunteer fire.man who walched the current llft a van and smaah it Into a house. "There wetf.' p~ople on tbe roof, but we couldn't te•cue them because ot hl&h-terudon wires,'' he said. · l'be flooding, which affected eiaht western Pennsylvania counties in varying degrees. was · caused by severe thunderstorms that dumped up to 7.75 inches of rain over a 24-hour period, ac· cording to the Department of En· vironmental Resources. The ma in storm seemed to sit over Johnstown without moving for several hours. weather ob- servers said. "Streams that I never knew ex- isted are causing problems," said one Civil Defense otficlal. Johnstown Is located at the c o n f I u e n c e or t h e L 1 t tl e . Conemaugh River and Stoney Cr eek. neither or which could handle the overload from tributaries swollen wllh rainwater. · Between SOO and 1,000 r esi· dents were evacuated from homes in the Johnstown area. said state Civil Defense Director Oran K. Henderson. But many others were stranded because rescuers were unable to reach them. Two National Guard battalions were activated to help in rescue C'fforts and oHicials asked for boats from every available gov- e rnment agency. St ate police helicopters and scuba divers were also pressed into service. "People are on the rooftops and in trees. They're every- where." said Elmer.Shank, dep· uty county Civil Defense direc- tor. "Our main problem ts gel· Ung them out." Emergency medical centers were set up on high ground sur- roundln& ttle ·valley ctty, but there was no immediate word on injuries. Damage was extensive. Pfuhl was quoted by a Civil Defense worker as saying the cost could run as high as $100 million. The churning water snapped trees and power poles and over· turned scores of cars as the flood gushed into the city. Henderson said 30 mobile homes were washed away, although there were no fatalities. The flooding was the worst here since 1936, when high water on St. Patrick's Day caused the greatest monetary damage of the city's many floods. But Johnstown is best known for the May 31. 1889, d eluge when the South Fork Dam burst and unleased a wall of water th11t roared through the Little Conemaugh Valley. pushing peo· pie and buildings before It, That dam no longer exists. Bnrgl~r Ransacks Mesa Mobile Home A Newport Beach man told Costa Mesa police Tuesday someone entered his unlocked mobile home parked in Costa Mesa Monday stealing a CB radio and a cassette player. Ray C. Randel. 421 Tustin Ave., said the equipment taken from the vehicle parked at 1672 Placentia Ave. Is worth about $445. Fro•PageAI PROPERTY TAX ••• plicated state school finance laws which leave many di$· tricts hard -pressed to lower tax rates. IN MANY CASES, for example, the increases in as· sessed valuation mean the state chips in less for education while local property owners spend more. The report also does not account ror new county prop· erty which result in new additions to the county tax ran. That is a factor Assessor Bradley Jacobs attributes with 4.5 percent of the county's 19. 7 percent overall gain. Wh at Helm's figures do show is what tax rate woold be needed to keep the past year's property tax bills level. FOR CITIES along the Orange Coast the required cuts would include 19 cents to a tax rate of $1.01 in Fountain Valley; a 22-cent reduction to a $1.03 rate in Cost.a Mesa; a 28-cent cut to $1.34 in Huntington Beach; a 14-cent cut ,lo a rate of 51 cents in Irvine; ari 18-cent cut to a rate of 93 cents in Newport Beach. · San Clemente city officials would need to make a 25· cent rate cut to 96 cents; San Juan Capistrano, 23 cents to a 16·c\mt rate; Seal Beach, 11 cents to a 96-cent rate, and . Westminster, a 12-cent cut to 59 cents. Among other Oran1e C6ast School Districts, the Sad· dleback Valley district would require a $1.10 cut to a tax rate of $4.23 per $100 of assessed valuation: Capistrano Unified a 91-cent drop to $3.34 ; La~una Beach Unified, a 52-cent drop to a $2.C>l ~atf; Newport-Mes-. Unified, a 62· cent drop to $3.ll ln Newport Beac~and a 63-cent drop to $3.33 in ~la ~e,,a ; Also, ~ington Beach Union High, a 38-cent cut to $1.94; FQUntam Vatley elementary, 25 centa to $1.09; Hunt· lngton Boa4h eltmeotary, a 2&·cent cut to $1.41; Ocean Viow elemeol&ry1 a J&.ctnt cut to $1.20· Se-.1 Beach ele~entary. a Hven·cent cut to SJ,.01, and Westminster · element.,-y. a 34-c•nt cut to $1.0l. REIM'8 nGURBS also aay a 13.eent cut to 67.5 centi ptt $100 ot asaeHed valuauon •ould be n•eded li\ the toast· Community Colleae Dittrlct, while an ~ceot cut to a ~ cent tax rate would be needed to 0U1tt asaused va1uat1M hik., if\ the Si.ddleback Cortimuni\y Collo1• Dl.Strlol. .. ~ltlOgl tu tat.e dr0pt for aiencles cOitrollecl by the c0taat, 8Qinl o(S..pervtlOl'S woQld bf'\bffe ~ .. ch for th• county Hai'bon Beaehes and Pli'kl Dlitrt4t and U.. county PJOod ContfOl Dlltiict. • In aCtdltion, the r@Oft ~ dlrecttn Of \he Ofan1e COUnty Ti'inatt Dlltnct. WOUkt Med to cut their rate tO 3.4 c•nta frdlD •.• ~W '100 ol aaa••ed viJuatton to raise the same number ~ dOllars that they Clld laat year. lnsurarree Tab Due on SA Heist ByPHIUPltOSMARIN a ... Mir,, ... SUH lna~rance adjustors are due at Swiss Vaulta lnc. in Santa Ana Thursday to Ul,U'avtl the loues in the largest unsolved robbery in Oranse County h1atory. The gold and silver bullion ex- c hange and brokerage firm, at 1404 N. Grand Ave., was robbed July 9 -a Saturday -after the cOJllpany president. Vincent IJ. Carrano, •1reed to rneet a pro1pectivecllent after houra. Instead of making a deposit of 20 begs of silver, which Carre.no said his telephone caller told him he wanted to do, the man alle1ed. ly pointed a 1un at Carrano and allowed confederates inside. Carrano told police that while the gunman forced him to ail fac- lng a wall lnalde his own olflce, the other robbers dlsmanUed two huge vault boxes, weighing tons each, and carted them away. Eatlrnates of insured losses were $1.1 million, but police say uninsured ioaees claimed may brin1 the total to more than $3 million. Most ot the goods stored in the ftrm•a two vault rooms were gold and silver bullion. J ewelry, cash and foreign exchange alao were taken in the theft. Some clients who stored preci<>U9 metals in the vaults rushed after the robbery to pay overdue insurance pre· miums. They feared th at bccautse they were behind on payments, they would lose the dollar value of their stores. But Jack Fulton, vice presi- dent or the firm, said those who h eld valid insurance pollcies would be eligible to collect on the insurance upon bringing the ac- counts up to date. . Fulton eald one woman wu so anxious that.she brought in an en· velope contaJnJng a check for past due premiums, and,insisted that he take It. "lt's all ri ght," Fulton told her. "You can ji.st mail it." But she pressed it Into his hand and said, "No. you take it now." Fulton said that many clients ure claiming to have stored more in safety deposit boxes than was listed on Insurance inventories. ParadoxlcaJly. he said. other clients are claiming now to have stored less. lie cited the case of one woman Ins ured for $5,000 worth of . jewelry, who now claims the value actually was $200,000. Because of the robbery, she's out $195,000. if the claim is true. "Other people are saying there was nothing in that box except g r andmother's will." Fulton said. He said there have been s~veral claiml to large sums of foreign money tored in the v aulls. Althoueh such claims would be useless to recQver on in· surance, "It )'OU like to sef up a nice tax l°"-5, 1ou just claim a quarter ot a mllllon dollars,•• he said. Fulton said that comJ>lete, run- ning inventories were kept OD in- sured accounts. both to protect clients and Swiss Vaults. "We know there were people who had nothing but money and papers In some accounts, or they would have been insured. .. Now all ot a sudden they're saying there was a lot more. Maybe there wu and maybe lberewasn'l. Woman Charged 1 aked; Starving Kids Abandoned NEW YORK <AP> -Six naked and starving children -the youngest four weeks old, the oldest 8 years -bave been found huddled in bed in a flltby apart. ment in the Canarsie section of Brooklyn. Police arrested a 25-year-old CdMBandit Heists $300 From Store A bandit wearin g a blue baseball cap beld up a Corona del Mar liquor store late Tuesday night, escaping with $300, Newport Beach police reported today. Store clerk Leah Vaught, 24, told officers she was alone in the Windjammer Liquor store, "37 E . Cout Highway, when the man with the baseball cap came in at about10:30 p.m . She said he a s ked for cigarettes and while she was rinaing up the sale, he uruipped his blue nylon windbreaker to re- veal the handle of a blue steel r e- volver, stuck ln the waistband of hill pants. When he ordered her to give him the money out of the cash re- gister, she replied, "Are you kid- dine?" "No, I'm not kidding," he r e· torted. pulllne the eun out and pointing it at her. Miss Vaught put two packs of cigarettes and the cash in a bag: Police described the robber as being about five feet, silt inches tall and wei1rung 155 pounds. He appeared to be about 27 an• was wearing a thin. mustache, Miss v ~ught told pollce. woman today and charged her with endaneerlng the welfare of the children. The cbildren, found Tuesday nicht after pollce received an anonymous telephone ll~, were surferina from dehydration and exposure. a spokesman al Kings County Hospital said. Some of the children told police their father died of a heart attack about two weeks .,o. They said their mother left several days ago. Shirley Jordan. the mother of two of the children. left them alone while she searched for her 23-year-old sister. Brenda, the mother of four of the children, police said today. The two sisters, both apparent- ly unmarried, bad been living toeetber in the three-story, low- income housing project, police said. Brenda J ordan disappeared several days ago, and her sister left the children to search for her. officers said. Pollce picked up both women today, but charged Shirley Jordan be<:ause she had most re- cent custody of the children. they said. The children were treated at the hospital and placed in two foster homes by the St. Joseph's Childrens' Services agency. Richard Lutz of St. Joseph's said the agency would evaluate the situation before making a re- commendation on whether the children should be returned to their mothers. 18 Aliens Nabbed SIERRA VJSTA, Ariz. CAP) -• Eighteen illegal aliens bound for California were found crammed into 'a s~alt van passinj( through here Tuesday, police said. GIVEIN. e ) There's temptation everywhere you turn ... at sale prices ·Drexel ·and Heritage Furniture Reduc~ up to 2 Q% . Wiybeautlous? AJ lheseprim, you anonlypnlfitl ~ lindtfffl•'~*'fup1o 2noCf. Svpertt~s of din1,.room,bedroomtnd~ rumMt~flUntly) ~. °""9 bl~ ••• d Cftll4a ablllethome. ~r ICJll'tlitr hOft'loli I "' Sa··--· see ' Cl)NV(NlfNT flNANCINC. 'PRor£SSIONAl INTCRIOR D!StO.+ WITHOUT 08ltG~ TION AND COMrORTABlt PARl<INO ·, .. I fr SaddlellBl!k EDITION · .Mteraooa ·~' .'Y. s.oeius · - VOL. 70, NO. 201, 4 SECTIONS, "8.PAGES ,---------------Cities, Sefaool Districts Itfast Act-------....._----~111o.. .. il Can Higher Tax~ Be Averted? By KATHY CLANCY Of .. o.lly ,... ,..,. How much will existing property tax rates in Orange County have to drop if county property owners aren't to be hit wtlh higher tax bills this year? ACCORDING TO a county report, cities along the Orange Coast will have to slice from 11 to30 cents off their tax rates to maintain the status quo. The same report shows that county government must hack 23 cents off the county's $1.43 tax rate to keep tax-payers even. And Orange Coast_ school districts will have to lop from seven cents to $1.24 ol'f their tax rates if taxpayers aren't to get socked with higher tax bills this year. SHOULD LOCAL taxing agencies fail to reduce their property tax rates by those amounts most homeowners will again be banded higher tax bills this year because of the record 19. 7 percent gain in county assessed valuation. That's because assessed value is the base that rates are applied to in determining tax bills. If assessed valua- tion climbs and tax rates don't go down by"'\he same percentage, the net result is higher property tax bills. As property values have climbed in recent years most tax rates have declined. But the declines in most instances haven't kept pace with the rises in value. The county report, by Auditor-Controller· Vic Heim. shows what tax rates would have to drop to if tax bills are not to go up. JN THE CASE of Laguna Beach, f oc: example, city council members would have to chop last year's $1.65 rate by 30 cents per $100 of assessed valuation. And in the Irvine Unified School District, for instance, the tax rate would have to drop by $1.24 to $3. 75. But the property tax picture isn't that simple. The county r ep,ort does· not take into account com· · (See PROPERTY, Page A2) Nearby Towns Isolated o.l!y ...... 51.aff -· Johnstown .Floods Again;/ Three Die JOHNSTOWN, Pa. (AP> - Eight hours of rain swelled creeks over their banks today, isolating many communities and pouring a waist-high torrent into parts of this southwest Penn- sylvania city, which was almost wiped o ut in the famous Johnstown Flood of 1889. Civil Defense authorities in Ebensburg said three persons wer e confirmed dead and five other s missing. No identities were available. Pfuhl said damages could run as high as ~100 million in Johnstown. An official of Bethlehem Steel Corp., which e mploys about 12,000 in several Johnstown-area plants, said coke ovens, blast furnaces and open hearths were shut down because of the flood· ing. · ''There are no reports of in· juries or loss of life at the plants, although pockets o( employes re- main stranded throughout the operations,'' he said. Two Bethlehem coat mines . Cambria Division portals 77 and JSE, were flooded, and mines 31 and 33 were closed because oC a (Sec FLOOD, Page AZ> County's Largest BIKES EXAMINED FOR SAFETY AT UNDA VISTA SCHOOL IN MISSION VIEJO A Civil Defense spokesman said Mayor Herbert Pfuhl Jr. asked for military help to control ·tooting. ··insurance Probers Auto Club lnapector Joen Cobb Check• Blc:ycle of Ertc: Jania, 10 Acrobatics Batter Bikes Few Ttro Wheelers PlUfs Viejo Safety Clwcks Sitting astride his battered fit. Ue bicycle after a thorough safe- t y check Tuesday, Brett 'Sweetland of Mi ssion Vi ejo lstanned his checklist and re· marked "I think I got practically Ian P." Jim Watson. one of Brett's 1teache rs in the Linda Vista lSchool "Bikeology" class, was a IJittle more graphic. I "If this had been the Highway 1P atrol. they'd have laken it ' <Brett's bike> off to the side and shot it," Watson said, shaking his '.head and chuckling. Brett was one of about 25 third through sixth graders who stood in line in the school parking lot while a safety inspector from the Auto Club of Southern California checked out their two-wheelers. "l can see some things wrong even without the machine," said inspector Joan Cobb a s she leaned against the Auto Club's ••Bicycle Safety Lane" device. a day go through each of the three testing machines stationed around Southern California. The Linda Vista group was small by comparison but eager nonethe· less. The youngsters were told that they were lucky to live in Orange County. where police citations fo r unsafe bicycles are relatively rare. Two Accused As Spies for Russ Nabbed FORT LAUDERDALE, Fla. "In San Bernardino County , where I come from , they give tickets for everything," said in· speclor Cobb. She noted that it is technically illegal to ride a "dirt bike" with out safety e quipment (renectors. lights, chain guard etc. ) on lhe street. At Linda Vista. the young bikers liste ned carefull y as Inspector Cobb went ovec their vehicles. calling out defects to teacher Jim Jackson, who marked them on the checklist. "Your fork bearings are loose. Got lo tighten them up. You also need a chain guard, li ght and should tighten up the sissy bar on the seat." Upon hearing the long list of problems his bike had, Brett Sweetland s hru gged his shoulders and said, "It's an old bike. Maybe mom'll lel me get a 10-speed." Whole communWu, lncludlq 15,000 r esidents in nearby Windber, were isolated as lhe flash flood blocked highways and knocked out communications . .. People ere on the rooltopa and in treea. They're everywhere as we understand it," said Elmer Shank. deputy Cambria County Civil Defense director. Two National Guard battalions were activated to help evacuate people stranded in their homes by the rampaging water. "Streams that l never knew ex· isled are causing problems," s aid another Civil Defe nse spokesman. He said officials asked for boats Crom every available gov· ernment agency. State police helicopters and scuba divers were pressed into rescue service. The flooding washed out the four-track Conrail mainline and a railroad spokesman said about 50 freight trains were held up on either side of the Conemaugh River Valley. A mtr ak, the national passenger train corporation, said service on both directions of the National Limited and Broadway Limited was inte rrupted. Passengers were being b\15ed between affected points. . . . . . Eye Bullion Heist By PIOUP R08MAatN OfU. Di1llf ~Staff Insurance adjustors are due at Swiss Vaults Inc. in Santa Ana Thursday to unravel the losses in the largest unsolved robbe1·y in Orange County history. The gold and silver bullion ex· change and brokerage firm, at 1404 N. Grand Ave., was robbed July 9 -a Saturday -after the company president, Vincent M. Carrano, agreed to meet a prospective client after hours. Instead of making a deposit of 20 bags of silver, which Cattano s aid his telephone caller told him he wanted to do, the man alleged- ly pointed a gun at Carrano and allowed confederates inside .. Carrano told police that while the gunman forced him to sit fac- ing a wall inside his own office, the other robbers dismanUed two huge vault boxes, weighing tons each, and carted them away. Estimates of insured losses were $1.1 million, but police say uninsured losses claimed may bring the total to more than $3 million. Moet ol the goods stored in the firm's two vault rooms were gold and silver bullion. J ewelry, cash and foreign exchange also were taken in the theft. Some clients who stored precious m etals ln the vaults rushed after the robbery to pay overdue insurance pre- miums. They f ea red that because they were behind on payments, they would Jose the dollar value of their stores. But Jack Fulton, vice presi· dent of the firm, said those who held valid insurance policies would~ eligible to collect on the insur~e upon bringing the ac- counts uptodate. . F.ulton said one woman was so anxious that she brought in an en· velope containing a check for past due premiums, and insisted that he take it. "It's aJI right, .. Fulton told her. "You can just mail it." But she pressed it into bis band and said, "No, youtakeitnow." Apart from visual inspection, the dynamometer-type testing m ach ine spins the bicycle wheels, testing such things as wheel and (prk alignment and brakes. CA P) -Two men, one from Germany, were arrested by the FBI today and accused or con· spiring to smuggle components oC the top-secret U.S. cruise mis· sile to the Soviet Union. "We have arrested two enemy a gents," Julius L. Mattson, special agent in charge of the FBI office in Miami, said shortly after the two were picked up without incident at the Fort Lauderdale airport. · Doctor Active at 78 Fulton said that many clients are claiming to have stored more in sa~ deposit boxes than was listed oh insurance inventories. Paradoxically, be said, other clients are claiming now to have stored less. Inspector Cobb noted lbat many of the bicycles youngsters are riding today are unsafe not only because.of a lack of safety equipment but «!so because of the beating they lake in off.road riding and acrobatics, such as wheelstanding. "We just hope they get them repaired after they a1:~. checked," the inspector said, Doting that the Auto Club pro. yides the service free of charge to schools and nonprofit groups. During the regular school year. as many as 400 to 500 bikes SACC Head8 Set Meeting Presidents of Saddlebact Valley homeowner uaociaUons •ill meet Tbur1day to dlscu.sa a eroP<JN) to make the SaddJeback Area Coordlnaunc Council (SACC> tho county'• otlielal repr•entaUve Of ar~a reslcteml. Allhciib &\CC bu been act~ m; 1atMS "'*'· • ""uttClll ~ .-ec1 for oount7 SQPerVttcn b1 tbetr tldinbdl&ratcira would of. flci.tty man UWI ll'OUP Ill Id· N01'1 ~t&)tbeCOUDty. Tbe\pnll& :•• mMtl'lr= llesln •If:• p.~ la UM ., LOI AHIOI nter•Nl•te SCboalmJIJMloa Viejo. They were identified as Carl L. Weiscbenberg, 33, a citizen of West Germany and a resident ol Freeport in the Bahamas, and Carl John Helser III, 32, of Highland Beach, Fla. There was no indication of where and how Heiaer obtained or planned to obtain parts ror the cruise missile, a pilotlelJs weapon which can fiy a JitearraJlled. low-level route to lts tal'get. The FBI initially refused to (See SPI~, Pate AU 'WERYI'HINC' "There'• no need to keep the ad runni~w• aold everything, just eve · !" Tba\'1 e Mies success ex· perlence ol the South Lasuna worn an who placed this claulfled notice ln the DnlT Pilot. Lydia l)eane 'Rum' Saddleback Ho1pital "I\ He cited the case of one woman insured for $~000 worth of jewelry, who now claims the value actually was poo,ooo .. Because of the robbery, she's out $195,000, if the claim is true. (See BVWON, Pace A%) • t\J DAtL V Plfl.OT PROPERTY TAX. •• pltcalod stale school finance lawt which leave man,y dla-trict.1 bard -pn::saod to low tu rates. IN MANY CASES, for ex mJ;)le. the lncreaaes in u- scssed valuation m ao t.he atato chlpc ln leu for education while local property owners spend more. ' ~report wso doe. not account for now counb' prop. :C!l'ty wblcb resull ln new additions to the county tax roll. That is a factor Assessor Bradley Jacobs attributes wi1b 4.5 percent of tbe county's 19. 7 percent overall gain. Wl\at Heim 's fleurea do show is what ta>(. rate would be neeclod to keep the past year's property tax bills level. IOR O'nES along the Orange Coast the required cuts w6uld include 18 cents to a tax tat.a ot $1.01 In Fountain Valley; lrt.2-cent reduction to a $1.0S?at~ln Cett a Mesa; a 28-cent cut to $1.34 in Huntington Beach; a 14·cent cut to a rate ol 51 cents in Irvine; an 18-cent cut to a rate of 93 cents in Newport Beach. San Clemente city officials would need to make a 2s. cent rate cut to 96 cents; San Juan Capistrano. 23 cents to a 76-cent rate: Seal Beach, 11 cents to a 96-cent rate, ·and Westminster, a 12-cent cut to 59 cents. Among other Orange Coast School Districts. the Sad- dlebadt Valley district would require a $1.10 cut to a tax rate of $4.23 per SlOO of assessed valuation: Capistrano Unified a 91-cent drop to $3.34; Laguna Beach Unified, a 52·cent drop to a $2.01 rate; Ne\vport-Mesa Unified, a 62· cent drop to $3.11 in Newport Beach and a 63·cent drop to $3.33i~t.a Mesa; Also, Huntington Beach Union High, a 38·cent cut to $1.94; Fountain Valley elementary, 25 cents to $1.09; Hunt- ington Beach elementary, a 25-cent cut to $1.41; Ocean View elementary, a 29-cent cut to $1.20; Seal Beach elementary, a seven-cent cut to $1.01, and Westminster · elementary, a 24-cent cut to $1.01. HEIM'S F IGUR ES also say a 13-cent cut to 67.5 cents per $100 of assessed valuation would be needed in the Coast Community College District, while an 18-cent cut to a 72· cent tax rate would be needed to off set assessed valuation bikes jn the Saddleback Community College Dist rict. Among tax rate drops for agencies controlled by the county Board of Supervisors would be three cents each for the county Harbors. Beaches and Parks District and the county Flood Control District. In addjtion, the report shows directors of the Orange County Transit District would need to cut their rate to 3.4 cents from 4.26 cents per $100 of assessed valuation to raise the same number of dollars that they did last year. Bounces Back Ma14102, Returns to Work OLUSTEE, F la. (AP) -"This is the first time I was sick," Willie Brown.102, said as he reported back to work in a Green Thumb program for elderly peo- ple. . He missed six months because of an operation in which some toes were amputated due to a circulatory problem. Brown says the loss hasn't af(ected his work, which is cutting brush and pulling weeds. Green Thumb officials were surprised when Brown returned and wanted his job back in the Olustee Experimental Forest in northern Florida. He works 20 hours a week at $2.30 an hour, sup- plementing hJs Social Security income or about $148 a month. Brown was put in a nursing ho"'e after his operation, but he was too impatient to stay long. "~'11 work as Jong as l am able," Brown says. "I trust m the Lord. You have to trust in Him.'• F ro• Page Al BULLION ROBBERY ••• "Other people are saying there was nothing in lhat box except grandmother's will," Fulton 3aid. He said there hav1 been several claims lo large sums of foreign money stored in the vaults. Although s uch claims would be useless to recover on fn· surance, "If you like to set up a nice tax loss, you just claim a quarter or a million dollars, .. he said. Fulton said that complete, run· ning inventories were kept on in- sured accounts. both lo protect clientsandSwiss Vaults. "We know there were people ! who had nothing but money and papers in some accounts, or they would have been insured. "Now aJI or a sudden they're saying there was a lot more ...... Maybe there was and maybe there wasn't. Fulton said some boxes hadn't been opened for as long as two years. FBI agents, Poring over lists or clients, recognized at least two names or persons who hadn't a OftANGI'. COAST DAILY PILOT chance to open their boxes for some time: The owners were in federal prisons. On£: convict had stored only a few silver and gold bullion coins. hut the other stored 500 ounces or silver, worth $2,290 on today's market. Most of the Swiss Vault clien- tele, according to Fulton, were doctors, lawyers and other pro- f essionals. Meantime, FBI officials and Santa Ana police today reported noleadslntherobbery. Richard Woolf, an agent In the Los Angeles division, said "There have been no significant develop- ments." Doctor Faces Plot Charges PALM SPRINGS <AP) -The chief or psychiatry of the Desert .Mental Health Clinic Is free on $100,000 bail pendine arraign- ment on charges be conspired to 02urder a fellow doctor. Dr. Morton Kurland, 44, who co-autbcred a book on how to h andle emotional problem•. wu releued Tuesd,ay and will be ar- talped July 21. Police Ulcl Kurland w• ar. rwted aft« be alleaed11 paid aa· u.bderccw• olllc• (>Ollnl • ahlt man Sl.QOO tor tM m\ll'der di Dr. Jaat• O'Cocmol', a. O'Connor, a Yucca Valle' 1J eneu1 practl· Uboer -"o Uva m Palm Sprtnp bas Men JDY"olYed fft HHriJ 1eaa1 d.llwtes ww. Kurland. . - E'ro•l'.,,eAJ •FLOOD ••• power• oot.aie. Emereency medical centers were being set \lP on hJeh irounct. Cars floated in the water and firemen stood by helplessly as flames engulfed at least three Johnstown buildings. · "We couldn't 1et to any ol the fires," aaid Capt. Francis Petro. "The torrent. of water was so are at. we couldn't crou the· streets with our trucks." "l'U tell you, it's a mess, a real catastrophe," said Petro, a lifetime resident. "There has to be loo ol life, It there isn't. it's a miracle." Two-thirds ot this city ol 41,200 warunder a· toot or-water or more. The downtown area was. under six feet. and the Conemaugh River and Little Stony Creek reportedly over· flowed. F,....PageA1 SPIES ••• THIS WAS HOW IT WAS IN THE FIRST JOHNSTOWN FLOOD, BACK IN 1889 Comparlaona Mount aa Eight Hour• of Rain Puah Creek• Qver Their Ban~• elaborate on the charges against the two. But an aUidavit filed at their hearing before a federal rnagislrat~a few hours later ac- cused Heiser of furnishing military and defense secrets to Weischenberg Cor more than two years. They were formally charged with "acting as agents of East Germany and the Soviet Union wit hout prior notification to the secretary of state. The F BI said lbe additional charges m ay be filed. GU$ Tax Hike Supported Carter Okays Five-cent Boost for Energy I In Washiiigtoo. the FBi said lbe affidavit alleged that Heiser "has been at least since April 1976, furnishing information ad- versely affecting the national de· fense of the United States to W eischenberg. • • WASHINGTON (AP> -Presi- dent Carter has tentatively ap- proved a proposal to increase the federal gasoline tax by up to five cents a gallon to finance transportation and other energy- related programs, an administra- tion source says. f'ro• Page A J DEANE ••. ment community Tuesday. She said she is pleased with health care in Orange County but does have criticism for the pro- f ession. "I 'm concerned about specialization." she explained. "I don't like 1l to the point where a guy says he's a nose specialist and the other guy asks which nostril. .. Ovcrbedding is another prob· lem she admits exists m health ('are today. She does believe, however, that ovcrbedding statistics may be misleading because some hospitals are close to capacity while others have many unoc- cupied beds. "l wish they would talk about the needs of an area and not just lump all the hospitals together, .. she said. Dr. Deane's haJr-century in the psychiatric field has left her with some firm philosophies about life. 'Tm still a pretty big believer in the golden rule," she ex- plained. restraining her cane's sometimes rapid movement. "There's more to it than words. if you analyze it you're not going to hurt anyone." She also has ideas about the number one enemy of a clean bill or mental health. "We spend too much time en- vying other people," she said. "I've seen too many breakdowns because or jealousy and greed ... The aged psychiatrist intends to continue working with Sad· dleback Hospital and the House or Delegates of Orange County's Health Planning Council. "I think if you have special training, you must keep giving of that," she emphuiied, striking for floor with a series ot staccato bursis from her cane. ·~you get a lot more satisfac- tion in return tor what you give." llut Injures 5 TEL A VIV, Israel (AP) -An explosion injured five persons to- day in a supermarket at lbe coastal t.own of Nahariya six m iles south or \he Lebanese border, POllce sald. Another ex- ploaion hit Jenaalem'• Biblical 10 0, ua ually crowded with cblldren during the s ummer school vacatiob. but no Utjttries • •• reported. Carter gave his assent Tues· day during a meeting or officials inc 1 uding Transportation Secretary Brock Ad ams. energy adviser James Schlesinger. economic adviser Charles Schultze and budget director Berl Lance. The officials met to discuss a wide range JI energy proposals that may be submitted to the House ad hoc energy committee chaired by Rep. Thomas L. Ashley <D-Ohio). The gasoline tax proposal would involve an increase or three. four or five cents in the tax that motorists pay for gasoline al the pump. the source said. The current tax is four cents a gallon. Carter, while giving general proval to the proposal. still m st give his final ay before it is . · a orm lo Capitol Hill. the source said. The ad- ministration is "moving pretty expeditiously" to shape the package oC proposals. he said. Carter'• proposal to increase gasoline taxes by nve cents a ... gallon, with a possible rise to so cents after 10 years, was killed in the House Ways and Means Com- mittee last month. The revenues under that plan would have been retunded as rebates equally to everyone, giving an incentive for consumers to become energy savers. After that deCeat, the ad- ministration began considering a variation of a similarly rejected proposal by Rep. Dan Rostenkowski (D'-Ill.), that would have increased taxes by three cents a gallon, with the re· venues diverted to finance mass transit and energy research. Paintings on Vie w New paintings by members of the Art Guild or Laguna Hills are on exhibit in the main and lower lobbies of the SaddJeback Com- munity Hospital. 24451 Via Estrada, Lagan Hills. The paint· inas may be viewed dally from l to8p.m. GIVEIN There's temptation everywhere you tu r_n ••. at sale prices ~g, Heritage • .. According to the aCfidavit, Weischenberg attempted to buy for the Soviet Union uranium ox-• ide 205, thorium 230 and other materials, and reportedly of. fered Heiser $250,000 to take com- ponents ot the U.S. cruise missile to a Rossian in CUba. .. As late as J une 30, Heiser re- portedly commented that he was involved in international es· pionage with the East Germans and Russians and as late as July 1, was still rePortedly planning to deliver unspecified comPonents of the U.S. cruise missile to a Soviet agent based in Cuba," the statement said. U.S.Magistrate Peter Palermo in Miami ordered the two held'· without bond at the request of the • U.S. Justice Department. He set another hearing for Friday and said hewou.ld appoint cqunsel for them then. Sll·n r", ::11· sa.e Drexel and Heritage Furniture Reduced up to 2 {)% , l~'-~be autlousl At the9prices, you anoniyptar11t o.exer end Heri•• upholstery up to 20'!' off. $upeb INcions of dlnlns room. bedroom nf ~futni'!Utefslgnl('!Qnlly) reduced. eom.~ ~ ... ~ 08te a Mi« ho!M, 1GU' ~rer hc)me! CONVENIENT F1NANCINO. PROrESSION,\L INTtRIOR DtSION Wtt~OUT 08LIOA TION ANO COMFORT ABLt PAAKINQ DAILY ,.IL.OT "••t s wlda Tom .. ,.iae HOW'S ntAT! A family of my acqualntanct.• fl nully 11ot (t!d up with trylna to watch tclevillon an one ol lhost.' fnnae area11 of Newport Beach. So lhey called in the teJevisfon experts You may have vlt'wod TV yourself m one of tho:1c pluces. The jet from Orunge County Airport roars O\ erht!ad just in lime to wipe a grilJ\d·alum home run in TV's Game of lhe Week The announcer screams ·wow! D1dyou sceth,.t'1 • No, you didn't. Your screen was Oopp1ng around like a OO\\I of Jello in an earthquake Or, just in the crucial moment of "As The World Turns," the guy next door turns o n his buusaw. And that turns your TV picture upside down. MY FRIENDS HAD all these experiences. Fed up, the lady of the household called the TV man to have a new super antenna in· stalled on the roof. Slightly apprehensive. she asked for assurances that the ex- pensive new antenna would im- prove televiswn reception. The TV man's reply came to her in an accent almost as fuzzy as her television picture. He answered. "Laydie. when we get done. that pitcher will be clair as a baycll. . " "How's that again?" "Clair as a bayell, laydie. You know baycll, baycll -clang. clang." "You mean clear as a bell?" "You got it, laydie. Clair as a bayell." Thus it was after they spanned lhe communications gap, the new antenna went up and the TV picture became c lair, or whatever. All of this sug~csts we do have l'Om m unicalion g::ips in this country cHused by use of jargon, slang and regional accents. TllESE PROBLEMS have t.•vcn c'ngulfcd Washington. O.C. where our legislators gather lo ponder the great issues. Our l'O a s tal Congrt'ssman Bob Badham, the Republican from :'llewport Beach, confirms this. Badham admi ts in his early days in the House, he had ~o learn a whole new jargon just lo do business. "r discovered, for example that 'the other body' is the U.S. Senate. And 'the other end of Pennsylvania Avenue' is the Pr esidt!nl." Badham recalled. .. Durio~ what an observer might believe is an angry debate, a House member m ay declare. ··1 would like to engage the dist· i nguished gentlem an from California in a colloquy."' A colloquy is d efined by Webster as a conversation or dialogue. But in Congress, Badham says It m ay s imply mean another congressman is ready lo fight with you some more. MAYBE THE ONLY national languare we'll end up with Is the jar gon used by those people on Citizen's Band radios. But you need a translator there, too. You know what it means when a CBer shou{s over his car radio, "Watch Your Donkey?" He's telling you a police car is coming up behind you . And when a CB trucker Is carrying ''A Load of Postholes," It means he's run· ningempty. And I hope all or this is clair as a b ayell to you. Wednnct1x, July 20, 1977 Oil Moving Ag~in TruCk Hib Pipe~; Leak Repaired DEADHORSE, Aluka (AP>.:._ Ott 11 movln1 111ln Irr the trouble-pla"'ed Aluka pipeline a(ter tho t.hlrd •butdown In 18 d1y1. Al In tho other atoppaees, otttcJaJ1 .blamed "human error." Rep.tr crews drove a wooden wedec lnto a 1 ~-inch vent tilting on a valve Tueaday evenin& to plu1 a leak caused when a truck rummed Into a section of the 80Q·mil~..llo.e. The lnt.crlor Department. said that more than 200 barrels -8,400 gallons -had s prayed from the line and cleanup crews were collecting as much of the spilled ruel as possi· ble. ALY~KA PIPELINE Service Co. refused to allow reporters to visit the scene 23 miles south of Prudhoe Bay. But from a plane flying over the site, it looked like a black and brown fan had spread over about seven acres of tundra. Some oil had reached two nearby lakes, but it was not possible from the air to judge how serious the pollution was. Oil in the pipeline start.eel mov- ing again at 2:11 EDT, three hours after the repairs were made. An Interior spokesman said the agency did not "require <.1ny speci«I approval" before flow was restarted. LESS THAN 2<1 HOURS earlier. the Interior Department Jupiter Orbiter WHERE TRUCK STRUCK PIPE Valve Sre-ak Forced Shutdown had given Alyeska permission to restart the $7. 7 billion pipeline following a 10-day shutdown. Thal h<1d licen caused by an ex· plosion that destroyed Pump Sta· lion No. 8, and Interior blamed "hum an error." The leak was reported at 5:55 p.m. EDT. The truck, a front House Voles Fund For Space Project WASHI NGTON <AP) -It looks like fi nancing for the Jupiter Orbiter space project, hcuvily lobbied by California Gov. Edmund Brown Jr., is back in its orbit. The U.S. House of Represenlali ves reversed itself Tuesday and vot.ed to fund its development for the next fiscal year. ln an unexpected 280· 131 tally, the House agr eed with the Senate to restore $20. 7 million that the House Appropriations Committee, followed by the House itself, had earlier voted to strike. ~ Rl•e Predicted In '78 WASHJ NGTON <AP) -Americans will find improvement in unemployment and inflation next year. although prices still m ay rise as much as 6.5 percent, congressional budget experts said to- dav. The Congr essional Budget Office said members of Congress writing a federal budget for the 1978 fi scal year, must conclude that "the realistic outlook is for no more tha n a slow unwinding of the current rate of inflation.·' ( J In testimony prepared for IN SHORT the Senate Budget Commit- tee. budget office director ..., ___________ __._ Alice Rivlin said inflation could be held to between 4.5 and 6.5 percent if increases in food prices do not exceed 6.5 per cent. The government's most recent fi gures show an annual inflation rate of 7 .2 percent for this year. ltlurU.. C01t1'fctlo• o.,ert MMted NEW YORK CAP> -An appellate court has thrown out the murder conviction of Peter Lconurd, ruling that he was in ··a tortured emotional slate and was weakened physically" when he confessed three years ago lo setting a fire that killed 24 persons in a discotheque. The Appellate Division ruled Tuesday that Leonard's confession was coerced and could not be used as a basis for conviction. The court said Leonard, 25. had slept only three hours on the night before his interrogation, almost two weeks aher the fire, and that he was in the constant company of detectives from 7 a.m. until about 10:30 p.m. Levnard was sentenced to 15 years to life tn prison on July 16, 1975, on charges or second-degree murder, araon, burglary. and pet· ty larceny. He tried then to withdraw his guilty plea, but was re· fus ed by Supreme Court Judge George Beisheim Jr. Priftt•ldlll•g DeadUn4!t Near SAN SALVADOR, El Salvador <AP)-Pollce and soldiers armed with submachine guns patrolled outside churches. a seminary and rectories today as a right-wing terrorist deadline approached for killing this country's SO J esuJt priests. "We are awaiting the will or God." one Jesuit said when asked what steps the priests had taken to protect themselves. The clandestine White Warriors Union, reportedly a group of re· tired army officers linked with government sec\lrity forces, has is· sued an ultimatum saying the priests will be killed "immediately and systemaUcally" if they do not lea\fe this military-governed Cen· tr al American republic by Thursday. loader, wu helping to bury the valve, which like others along the ltne wu uncovered for the June startup to make it more accessi· ble. It wu the second time in less than a month that a truck had hit a secUon of the llne. The earlier incident involved a section of pipeline with no oil in it. EDWARD PAJTON, A.lyeaka - chief executive omcer, said the truck knocked orr a small vent on a valve. An Interior spokesman said the llne was shut down im- mediately, but oil already in the pipe s prayed out until the pressure was relieved. An Alyeska spokeswom an said the 48-inch line was not damaged and the damaged valve fitting was replaced five hours after the leak was reported . EARLY TUESDAY, several hours after the pipeline had restarted, an oil well pumping station at Prudhoe Bay -one of four that f~ the pipeline -was closed because of a leak of 40 to 50 barrels, some 2,100 gallons. A o ~ t) Maggle,s Baek in Town His Library Not Ltreking WASHINGTON CAP> - The d irector of the Library of Congress has pt-oposed new rules to dispose of sur- plus books following dis· closures that an Ohio con· gressman allegedly took a lmost 82,000 books over the last slx years. U.S. Rep . Ch arles Carney of Youngstown, Ohio, was accused in newspaper reports or tak· ing the best of the books for himself and giving the rest to schools or to friends and relatives. Under reforms outlined at a congressional hearing Tuesday b y Daniel Boorstin, director of the Library of Congress, con· gress m e n wo uld be permitted only to borrow surplus library books. They ~ould be allowed to earmark certain books for donation to educational In· stltutlons, but actual dis- tribution would be handled by the library. Margaret Trudeau, estranged wile of Canadian Prime Minister Pierre Trudeau. visits backstage in New York with stars of the National Ballet of Canada Karen Kain, right, and Frank~ Aw•ustyn. This was Mrs . Trudeau's first public appearance since her separation. She makes her home in New York City. Deadly Heat Wave Fries Most of U.S. 8y The Aaoclated Press The heat wave gripping most of the nation bas gone from un- comfortable to destructive and deadly. In Davenport, Iowa, a young mother watched her four children -ages 2 to 10 -drown in the Missi~sippi River on Tuesday_ as they sought relief Crom the heat. Ruth Triplett, 27, who cannot swim. was helpless. AND IN ST. LOUIS officials blamed the heat for the deaths of nine persons over the past two days. Four elderly people from the same apartment QulldJng died on Monday. On Tuesday five other deaths in the area were attributed to the heat wave. The hot weather that has beer. hovering over a 2,000·mile belt Crom the Atlantic Caast to the Rockies for the past eight days -and long'er in some places -was not expected to let up until the weekend at the earliest. NEW YOllK CITY recorded a temperature of 102, a record for the day .. Lamar, Colo .• reported a high of 105. The thermometer reached 97 at the Baltimore-Washington International Airport, tying therecordfortheday. -·-·In Maryland, Yoong D. Hance. the state agriculture secretary, said crops in several parts or the state are showing signs of damage from the prolonged se>eJl Of heat antl do l"aln. C:uttaloupe, tomato al\d cucumber crops as well as pasture land are threatened. Delaware, Virginia, Iowa and Indiana were among the other states reporting problems with cropa and livestock. ·.In Baltimore an air pollufion alert continued for a fifth day to- .Say· and some industries were cutting production to reduce pollu- tion. Air polluUon alerts allO were on-in parts of Kentucky, Ohio .• -'Minnesota, NN York and Massachusetts. • When.We want to find Out if I • <I -"o• our Schodl· ProSiifOm is effeoiite in.get.ting ' young peOple involved in their world, we ask· the exp9rts. . . " Scattered Rainfall Due They tell UI OU( YEC ScfM>ol Progrem, In comblMUon with tod•Y'- new1paper, It the mo1t •.ttecUv• WI'/ th•r'we found to bulld 1tudent awerene.1 1ftd to dw9'op 1tudent1' crftle1I thinking, relJCINtt, lftd dltc\lt• alon 1kU11. ch1Uenge1 kid• to _,.. their mind• end lm•OlnaUon1 1nd to tMcom• Involved In their community ind In the wOftd 1round them. Al partner1 with the tohooll In -th• e4u~tlon of our young people, we l•tl thlt 11 one of our moat lmport1nt proj1tct1. Our Pfotram It dttlgned to drew etudtnlt Into dlecuetJont of tod-V'• m•r latUH, 8 .. t Of .. , the~ , We could tell r.ou mo,. about our school praar•m. but .the educeton at th ... achoot1 uy It 10 much better. --· DAn..VPILOT A3 .J11st Like ·Mom County's Budget Slashed Fair Q~en 'lnherit~d' Beauty LIKE MOTHER -Mission Viejo's Bonnie Luebke (right) is shown with Lawrence Welk and Alice Lon after win- ning the Miss Champagne Music title 20 years ago. Her daug hter Debbie is the reigning queen of the Orange County Fair. Dllll'rPli.tS MOTHER BONNIE WITH DAUGHT.F.R DEBBIE LUE Beauty Contest Trophies Run In the Farnl!x. Tennis Tiff 7 Cup Protesters Face Trial Friday Trials of all seven remaining d efendants among the Davis Cup Dozen, the 12 demonstrators who last spring crashed the tennis matches in Newport Beach to protest South Africa's racial policies, are now scheduled Cor Friday. Judge Donald Dungan con- tinued the case of five scheduled to go on trial in Harbor Judicial Distrkt Court Tuesday morning so they m a y a ll b e heard together. Judge Dungan is currently con- sidering a number or motions 1nade last week by attorneys for Smoke Clinic ·Will Correct Legal actlcm taktn by the dis- trict attotne1's Office agalnat an Anaheim smoking cllnic bas been abandoned wil.h the firm's J>led1c that it wlll no longet' i"'° dulge ln m1aleadin1 adverttstna. OtrlclalJ ol No Smoke Center, Inc .• have a19CJ aaurect represen· taUvu of tile .-.umer fraud dlvJston that Ui~ wlll make h1tltuUCJll to euitomen wbQM ~om.Plai•lid to tbe llllAf Oftbe Oiance ~ S\i~ior OaitWt ectlon. Lavtym for lb• firm ac~ ttle \irma ot .n 1Jajuoctloa \hat permanently bara any 'future am&ndllfl advertlllna. By WJUJAM SCHRIEBER CM• hllr "194 ltaft Though three of her four daushters are beauty pageant veterans, Bonnie Luebke of Mia· alon Viejo ab alters the ater~ype of a pushy backstage mot.Itel. Part of the reason she doesn't crave such vtc;arlous competition may lie in her own string of paeeant victories in the 1950s. Her impressive list of titles .r,1.41u lzom -Mas Madi.on. Wlsconain, and Queen of the Wisconsin National Guard t.o the first tiUe of Miss Champagne Music for Lawrence Welk in 1956. Ironically, Mrs. Luebke will have to portray exactly I.he kind of beauty contestant's m9ther she has always disliked In an up- coming movie featuring her daughter Debbie, reign!~ queen ot the 1977 Orange County Fair. The former beauty queen and mother of live, still strikingly beautiful 20 years after winning her last lille, bas a healthy philosophy about such competi- tions. . "Thirty years ago, beauty pageants were all body," she said . "That's an old concept because it isn't really just a beauty contest anymore. Judges are looking for talent and personality - a kind of sparkle." • '"'WI,..._. 'MAD MEN HAVE THE RIGHT OF WAY' James Meadows Enda 1, 700-mlle Sall to Boston 'Madn~' Sails Mrs. Luebke said her ex· periences in beauty pageants wer e extremely helpful lo her in developing poise, charm and an Roa,d, Mane f"'-• .! J __ ~-.!/or open way with other people. She ro buute .:XU sees the same advantages to her BOSI'ON CAP> -The 14-foot sailboat missed the dock. then daughters, if they choose to com· came about just in time for a puff of air to spin it dizzily into a pete. . motorboat. "But if they weren't interested "Mad men have the right of way," James Meadows shouted for themselves, I would never, t th b ever think of pushing them," she a e power oat Tu~sday as he ended a l, 700-mile journey via a said. "Winning isn't really why a Sunfish sailboat Crom Miami, just one of the oddball sagas of the sea on New England's summer waters. girl should enter these contests. EARUER TmS SUMMER. A ulAMl man tried to set a There should be other reasons.'• 1•• Mrs. Luebke's oldest daughter, trans-Atlantic record by driving a power boat from Portugal to a 19-year·old child psychology Newport, R.I. Mechanical problems stopped him at sea and the student in Colorado, never com· voyage was abandoned. peted in pageants. Debbie, on the Last weekend, an Irishman visited Boston lo recount the trip other hand, already has a list of he made across the North Atlantic in a 26-foot, banana-shaped titles to her credit and 12-year· craft made of sewn ox hide. old Carolyn was recently nam«i On Sunday, another adventurer set sail for Ireland Crom Miss Pre-teen Orange County. Marblehead, Mass., in a 17-foot inflatable sailing dinghy. Melissa, 11, is still trying. "l'M A VERY UNCONVENTIONAL sailor," said Meadows, Perhaps Mrs. Luebke's fondest from Concord, Mass., before leaving Miami on April 1. m emories or her days in beauty Instead of charts, Meadows piloted by gas station road competition came when she was maps. chosen from a field or 250 en-"After a while, I graduated to Rand·McNally," he said. trants for the Miss Champagne He cruised the Jntercoastal Waterway, and when at sea, Music title. never strayed more than fi ve miles from the beach. His boat was She was on her honeymoon equipped with a small radio, a compass, a paddle, food and when she entered the Sacramen· water, a pup tent, sleeping bag and a ration of grog. to p ageant, judged by disc MEADOWS TOTED A SPEARGUN BUT said he loaded and jockeys from all over California. cocked it only when he slept in snaky Florida swamps. "I entered because I was most While crossing Delaware Bay, it was so calm that he had to Another tu million was sllcecl from Orange County 1ovun-ment'a proposed $558.8 mWJoa 1977·78 budget by county superVi90J'S Tuesday. Adding that to another $2.9 million in trimmings approved earlier, the county budget now stands at ~.4 mUllon with add.i· tional chopping expected as public bearings conUnue this week. Tuesday's paring cut about 3,$ cents per $100 of assessed valua- tion from tbe ttntatlve propert)' tax rate leaVing it for the present at $1.49, six cents higher than last year . But once supervisors pump In $9 million worth or federal re- venue sharing funds earmarked for property tax relief and con· tinue their budget chopping the rate should drop by more than nine more cents. Tuesday's afternoon budget hearing opened with an angry ex• change between Supervisors Laurence Schmit and Ralph Clark. Schmit proposed consolidating the county information and ref er• ral programs with the consumer protection and veterans service activities as a way of saving money. But Clark criticized Schmit for bringing his idea up at budget time and accused him of trying to t ake advantage ot a popular lax· cutting stance. ••I think you brought up a stupid thing," Clark continued. Schmit continued by accusing fellow supervisors of not listen. ing to the property taxpayers pleas about costs. Schmit then proposed a county sta{( study about the consolida· ti on, but generated little support. Supervisor Ralph Diedrich said he couldn't ask the staff to spend their time at taxpayers' expense making a s tudy unless Schmit could provide evidence to support his position first. The bulk of the $7 .6 million trimmed from the budget Tues· day came in the proposed $128 m illion human and social services programs. HBYouth Se me need interested to see if he (Lawrence paddle. He said a large ship passed so close that he could have Welk> was as nice a man as splattered it with an egg. • ~L--f • everyone sald," Mrs. Luebke re-•R .::XIA.If.I Ulg called. "He really was -It was just ilke a family." Lo H A Huntington Beach youth who A description or the 1956 Miss wer-cost omes shot and killed ·one man and Champagne Music appeared in a wounded two others during a Sacramento newspaper column. fracas at a New Year's party was It called her "some dish" and "a OK' d • N • I A sentenced Tuesday to indefinite 22 -year-old, 5·6 brown eyed ID 1gue rea commitment with the California blonde built to specifications." Youth Authority. As Miss Champagne Music, Orange County Superior Court ·Mrs. Luebke performed many Provision for so-ca lie d In effect, what the commission ·Judge H. Warren Knight sen· functions with the Welk troupe. moderate cost housing was approved on a 5-0 vote Monday tenced Thomas Joseph _Stack, 20. including dancing with the band wedged into Ora nge County was a recommendation for the of 9593 Petlswood Drive, after master himself, meeting his Planning Commission approval zone change needed to designate Stack pleaded guilty to plane al airports, 'making public Monday or a 312-acre industrial-the 312 acres a planned com· manslaughter and two counts of app earances and working commercial-residential develop· m_uqi(ydistrict. assaultwithadeadlyweapon. backstage with the women who ment in Laguna Niguel. -hi so doing, the commission ~tac~ W8:5 jailed Jan. 1 after wanted to meet him. The multipurpose development loll owed a planning staff recom-being identified as the man who "The average age or these will eventually surround the now mendation that included a men-shot Brian Schneider, 20, of women was about 50," she said. isolated Ziggurat tot.he west side lion of the development as a 7621 Seine Drive, Huntington· "He was like Elvis Presley to or La Paz Road between Laguna potential "town center" for the Beach, in the chest with a .22· theJD. 'Ibey just went wild." Niguel Regional Park and Oso· Saddleback area. caliber rifle. After her stint with Welk, Mrs. Parkway. (Related story Page The plan endorsed by the com· Schneider died ln the driveway Luebke continued fashion model~ A7.) mission commits Narland Corp., or a homeat20641 Goshawk Lane fng but said ahe bad already As approved by the com-a Rockwell International sub-where an argument erupted dur· made her choice ot career -mission, 121 or the 312 acres will sidiary. to specified uses on de· ing a New Year's party. marriage and family. be devoted to industrial use and signaled land parcels. Two otber men, identified as "I made the choice and didn't 64 acres are designated for com-During the discussion leading John A. "Junior" Hunter, 21, and miss it (show business) at all," mercial use. to the commission's unanimous Bradley J . Gillespie, 21, both or sbesaid. The plan calls for roughly SOO vote, commission Chairman Huntington Beach, were also "I guess a lot of women will residential units to be clusterred William MacDougall called the shot by Stack in what police hale me for it but to me, a onSSacresandthebalanceofthe development "a good opportunl-describedasadrunkenbrawl. woman's place is in the home -land to be used for open space ty for low and moderate c06t Both men have since recovered that's the hardest job or all. _a_n_d_r_o_ad_w_a_y_s_. ________ . h_ou_s_in_,_g"-.'_' __________ fr_o_m_th_ei_·r_w_o_u_n_ds_. ----- There aren't enough hours in a 1.~~~~~==~:i:s::nm;m;:;c;:.;1111, ~m:ammmaamm•m=m::::=:=::smac:::11n•m1fl day to raise live children and M ~ have a career too... H She and her husband, Ron, pre- sident or an El Toro machinery company, moved to the Sad· dleback Valley eight years ago specificalJy because they thought tt was a good place to raise a ramUy. Even the Luebke'a 16·year-old son bas won awards -ror his sports actiViUes. "He really likes his sisters to compete in the pageants," Mrs. Luebke said. "They bring home so rtlany beautlf\ll girlfriends." Does she st.ill watch Lawrence Welk? "All the women in our family, especially the young onea, really love him," she said. "The men think he's COl"1\)'.•• . Moon Culmt CooenNuda Gem . ' Talk The Opulence of Diamonds The Accuracy of Omega You'll find ot>ulence everywhere la thfa -exqulllte Omeca women.•a dre11 watch. In the yellow or white HK gold textured btaceJet. In the diamonds framln1 the face • And lo tbe unrivaled Omega mecban1tm inside. &~ W@Mrr ~®rrwn©@ ••1CeNel•1BJH D Aa alADSU: II you•n der· ly aad dem'• U.W abollt tltt Mak f:S• analat"T bca.Dco K ••· Mre'1 IOIDe ad\'ttf' trom a&e AUotot7 Geattal £\'eUeo J . Yto•Ctt ... t CH Mlp keep 1• f,.. ~a •lcthn. Vldl•• lrf' •••erally ae1lor eltluu uxlou to do lhelr ahart' la n1titlng crime by cooperaUQS with law t'nloteement, ao wbea a t.elepbooe call h retehed from a atlf· ».rotll.lalml "bank e-umloer." Uta''• &ltf' tJme to~ uretul. Aft.H tbt-"bank examlnf'r" d~verly Itta the victim to ldrn&Jly the ume and loutloo of bis bank, tt ·ls ex- plalaed that the bank IUSpecJ.I Gile of lta employes bu been pUfertni fund.a. and the victim ls uked for help. Tbe victim ls warned that the sue. cess ol I.be lnvestlcauoo depends on hia or ber abUlty to remain sUe1tt, following lnstructloos explicitly and, above all, not to contact anyoae con- cerning the invesllcation. What the "ba.a.k examiner" did not tell tbe victim was that his name bad been carefully selected from the telephone book by three or four con men. After name selection, the team begins the tedious task of calUng possible victims until a cooperative one is found. The willing person is told to withdraw a specific amount of money -usually several thousand dollars - from the bank. Shortly arter the withdrawal is made, the "bank ex· a miner" arrives at the vJctlm's home, identifies himself and proceeds to ·mark the bills. He then gives the vic- tim a ree?eipt. When notblng further is beard from the "bank examiner," the victim usually calls the bank, only to learn that he has been swindled. Last year there were 141 victims in California, 132 women and nine men, unging in age from 62·92, and who lost in excess of $223,000, an increase or about 35 percent over the 1975 re- ported loss or $166,000. Ir yoa want to know more about other frauds, wrlle to the State Al· torney General's OCflce, Public In· quiry Unit .• 555 Capitol Mall, Sacramento, CA 95814, and ask for your free copy or Information Pam· phlet No. 3, "On Guard: A Guide for the Consumer." LM.Bogd ........... DEAR PAT: J saved an old svb- 1 c rl pt lo n sollcltallon from Money•worth ma1aiine beca1.11e it of. fered tome interesting consumer in· lormution pamphlets free if one sub- scribed. I• this a cOOd deaU I seem to recall havinl read eome derogatory information about thi• mapzine's publisher in YOUf columq. K.T., Huntintton Beach. The A YS Item concerned legal ac- U.. •lalel& The-Webt&M'• Dldloaary Co., owaed by Moneyaworth maculne pabllaber Ralph Glmburg, along with a deceptive advertising aul& againlt Moaeysworth med by tbe N~ YGft AUorney Genera.I. la aa amended complaint, tbe CaUlonda Attontey GeaeraJ also bas cbarced Glnzbvc and bis N.Y. cor· poratloa. Anllt Garde Media. with false advertising and other ualawful practices, lDcludlng DOa-deUvery. It was alleged tJaat in c\rder to sell subscriptions, Glnzbarg offered ••rree" copies of the coa1umer publications you mentioned with a . satisfaction or money-back guarantee. The publications were either obsolete or avaJlable from the . government, and many subscribers never received them or lhe m~adae, according to the suit. Prohibition. of further misleading advertlslDg and civil penalties of $2,500 for each viola· tion of law are being sought bf tbe at· torney general. F•r tor Piette 'l'rfp1 . DEAR PAT: I want to compare the air fare costs of various flights to several cities in the East. Rather than go through a travel agent for this in· f~rmation, I'd prefer to study the f1g~r~s on my own. Making a hasty dec1s1on may cost me money. Has anyone ever published comparison material on airline discount and charter rates now in effect? J .A., Irvine ..Consumer Fact Sheet on Air Fares" ls a one-page summary ot. fered by tbe Civil Aeronautics Board. It lists the lowest available fares and · alternatives. Rquest ' free copy by writing to Distributloa Unit, CAB Publications Service Section, 1825 Connecticui Ave .• N.W., Washlogton, DC20428. • Sylvester Tops Farrah Quick. who's the most popular pinup star of all? Farrah Fawcett-MaJors you say? Not anymore. It's Sylvester Stallone now. His posters arc outselling hers by five to one. No Hollywood film with the word "love" in its title has ever won the best-picture category of the Academy Awards. That word "love" in film titles is thought to be bad for box office. Or s uch is the claim of theater owners. A client bets me a s mall unspecified sum that there's an instance in American railroad history wherein a car was derailed simply by a passenger turning over 1n his sleep. Won't bite on that ·one, sir. It happened. On a circ\Js train. The passenger was a sea elephant. Metal expands more than glass when equal heat is applied to both. No doubt you knew that. So you knew, too, that's why the job of removing a tight jar lid is made easier by dipping it into boiling water. It's not that the hot water dissolves what makes it stick. that's : notit. EARTHWORMS Q. "U earthworms won't drown in water, why do they .come out of the ground during heavy rains?:' · ·· A. They d~n·~ drown in surface water. But water filtered throueh soil contains little ox· ygen. So they do indeed burrow their way out oftbat. Q. "How do you account for the fact that forest far'5 haven't burned down all the giant Sequoia trees!" A. Their foot-thick' bark contains no resin. They're almost flreproot . In EoPtian hieroal.YPhics, the character that represents the number one million ia a drawine ot a man with his arms upraised.-ln an attitude ot astonishment. 'Star Wars' Recording Hits Snag LOS ANGELES (AP) -20th Century Fox Records has won a court injunction stopping Springboard International from mar"keting an album featuring musi~ Crom the hit aci-fi movie, •·star Wars.'' 20th-Century's own release ot the ori1inal soundtrack, perlormed by the London Symphony, has rocketed up the charts anct is Jn the Top 30 with a bullet ln. all three trade maguines. l'he, injunction WH• ~ouiht becauee :f 1>1inaboard '• "album jacket wa,s \rery Dfatly identl~ to oura." said Ft•iik Malloy ol· 20th'& leaalstafl. 44We have no objection to people comint out with music from. 'Star Wara; in fact we':re U.,py about it. lt'• OQly· wlten ~ do It ln a APWl,....e. 'CPL. KLINGER' IN FAMILIAR UNIFORM Toledo's Proud of Jamie Farr 50th Anniversary Of 'Sound' Cited LOS ANGELES (AP) -Hollywood is tossing a party. to celebrate i~suance of a postage stamp bononng the 50th anru versary of sound movies. Jack Valenti, president of the Motion Picture Association, will serve as generaJ chairman of a luncheon at the Hollywood Palladium Oct. 6. Film makers who pioneered the development or sound will be honored. Oct. 6 is the anniversary of the opening of "The Jazz Singer," the first feature with synchronized sound. Ceremonies will be held at television station KTLA, present occupant of the studio where Warner Bros. filmed "The Jazz Singer" with Al Jolson. 'Glad You Asked That' by Marilyn and Hy Gardner W!dn!!day. July 20, 1977 S · DAILY PILOT •• Pride of Toledo ~ ~ ~ 'Klinger Plugs Town on 'MASH~~~ TOLEJ>e.Obfo (AP>-Fansofthe 'young. My father ran ·a cor •• TV bit "'KASH'' may be eurpriled to arocery at Locust and Ontario." learn that Corporal Klhl&er really "l try to defend Toledo as much arew up ln Toledo. can on the show, especially when What'• more. he did a bitch in the other actors take digs at it. .. Anny a"4 dnce 'Wl'Ote, a ftlend. "I've· said. "Like the ll.lle about even had my rifle lour days so far and dying.in Toledo, or the one about th.i haven'hhotanyooe." being nntht .. "todo · Toled i....-....: And ln high school 25 years ago, ............... Ul 0 uut ao Klinger hwia O\lt -1 Tony Packo's, an the movies. · . • east side restaurant tbat really makes· ••wHEN 1 WAS A kid growing u~ [ Hungarian bot dogs. the ones Klin· never knew Toledo waa as pretty .-x. ,ieryearoslorontJ.ietelevislonseries. • is. l only knew what my eyes saw .a4; for ufar as apenaycouldtabaneori ••A lDl''OF Tllll'lGS are based on bus.·~ · •· Uutti in the show," aaid~Klinget<, l'e-" T®u..rh P~ left tol-"do _ltif membered here as Jameel Farah. the Hqllyweocf ln be did not estatilJj)a. ••me he 'trimmed to Jamie Farr (Ot' blmself as 81-actor until .be spent~ actlng. "But aa far as I know, rm the couple seasons .as an occuio~ only on&that really is from the booie playeroo ''llASH". :·. towQSweclaimontheshow ... Jlewd .. I atudie4 at the Pasa::~ In a telephone interview. Playhouse for a year and MGM • Farr was home Jn .June. honored by me to audlUou for .. Blackbo;: the city be k~ before the TV au· Ju.n1le. • I got tbe role but after th : dience. He brotlpt bis wife and two waaoutofwort. .. hesaid. : .. : children for their first visit to the BE SPENT TWO years in t}ta northend ethnic neighborhood where service, and had _..almost 10 1-.. he grew up. years, unW ·about 1969 before~· City officiah presented him a startedtobappenforme. :-.·· ceremonial glass -Toledo's version "I worked for an airline. I Wd·a of tb&key to th&city-and Scott Hieb yardqe goods 1alesman. Then I was School dedicated a new performing on the original Dick Van Dyke Show arts wlngtohim. and became a regular for a while aei: THER.E ALSO WAS a 25th an-~:r~~ K_aye Show with H~ niversary reunion for the Woodward His fir1t two seasons with .. a High School Class of 1952, Farr's was as a "day player:• or occasi • class, which be mentions on the show. actor. ••1t was the third season bei : Farr said his given name was from I was made a regular u.odez-c~: his mother, Jamelia. "She sang a lit.-tract,'' be said. 0 Now we ares~ tie a~ acted some wben she was ·oursix:tbseason.lt'sfantastic." ::; .. NBC Gets ~ Pageant LOS ANGELES (AP) -NBC will present the Miss Black America Pageant on television Sept. 9, marking the first network showing of the beauty contest. The telecast will originate at the Santa Mon-ica Civic Auditorium, where the Oscars were presented for several years. Book Bought LOS ANGELES (AP) -Ed Friendly Produc- tions has acq\:lired television rights lo "My 30 Years Backstairs at the White House," the bestseller by Lillian Rogers Parks, who once served as a White House maid. ~.._: A IOng time ago in a galaxy far, fci CtNBf- The one MCI onlY tal'lla Eicl ICnln 1n his nm drMnltlc mov1c ro1c. VIVA IDlllVE. I.· ... ~ ... .. .. .... •& DAil Y PILOT WectnNday, Juix 20. 1e11 'Vienna' Fine at Bowl ; TOM BARLEY Th.ii wrilt>r flndl lt lmpoHible to lmaalne a more ~late muslcal autunai tor .i aummer vtnlQa at th• Hollywood Bowl than tho .. Nt1ht m Old Vienna" cdebrated lul wCH!kend. And M can mOlll ccrtaJnly not vlaualllze a moru appropriaw l'OOductor for tho occai;ioo than lbc aetdal cb Lelnldorl, a 1pritely mu ·:stro wbo fed m OUT VI paatr1ea with verve and ehUl. He mado tUrt WO tot tbem all: Johann Strauss Jr., Mau.rt, Krelalcr and Haydn lncludlnt • rous-lnl renditJon o( tho "Blue Danube" that m ilde many an on!oollttt Jons to whl1k hJ1 comp1U1100 trom their box .uta and waltz aJona& the a.Isles. Music Bo• IT'S A SAFE BET THAT Lelmdorf would have waJtied alone with them. He was ln that kind of mood Saturday night, obv1oualy et:Uoyiq every mo- m enl cl cXd Vienna and determined to extract every ounce of salety from those lovely acores. Ab. aummer. The cream of Viennese musk, And he choae well when he picked con-cold buffet and fine wine, splendid box seats and a c:erlmuttt Sidney Harth to remlnd us qaln, via h1s lovely lady at hia aide. aitted violin, of lh• &reat 1entua ot Fritz Kreiller. What more ntUne reward for the music criUc; "Caprice Viennoia," "Llebealeid'' and wbotatlauoceu1DaJydwingthewintermo.nths? .. Llebes!reud" were fiawlessly and bt\lDttn;ly de------------------- Uvered to ua ln the m06l memorable aolo a})Otof the eveoiDg. • .. BVT THEN BACK TO THE frivolities that so delighted a capacity bowl audience: Lelnadorf sporting a comic hat, the blaeat basket of flowers this writer has ever seen distributed to soloists and a laree botUe of champagne that was last seen be- ing examined by members o( the orchestra. PUBLIC NOTICE W•ll•Alsocletes,lnc. l'ICTITIOUS IUSI Nl!SS NAMl ITATl!MINT Tlte fol-"1 l*'IOftl Art doing blnl· WllllemG. W•ll, p~ MMAI: Thll ata'-t w .. filed wltlt tM LA N C ASTER$ tU!AD· CountyClt<'ltolOnngeCountyonJunt QUARTERS, ltlf.1 BHCll Blvd., HYnt· 23, ltn. 1'7"'6 1119\0f'I BH<ll,CA~I Edw•rcl Wllllem Lenc'Rter I07ll Publl"'9d Or .... Olest Delly Piiot. HAl•we ~ •• Hl#lllnoton a..c(\. CA June2t,endJllll' ... 13,20, ltn 2t05-~ 92'46 Mlc"-1 Ulurl• L•ncatttr, 1'92' ----------S.POllire St., M~cmlnster, CA 92613 TlllS buslneu ls conducted oy • PUBUC NOTICE gener•l~lp. ----------Ml<,_I L LAnc9'ter ~ICTITIOUI •UllN•SS Thia 1l•lement WM llled wlll1 the HAMeSTATeMINT Counly Cl-Of Or1nge County on July • The' totlowlng penon 11 dolll!I blasl- IS, 1911. neu n : "19021 I< EN'S AUTQ SAU:L t.OJl1 Publlslted Orange Coest Delly Piiot, Gerc:ten Grow Blvd., GerdM Gro~. J uly20,27,AndAuQusU, 10, lt71 l ll1·17 CA,,260 ICentwtll HHll, 6691 Wrenlleld Dr.1 HunllfllllOn BHcn. CA. 91M7 PUBLIC NOTICE r1111 busnu Is conduc1ect by •n In· ----------1 dlvlc:tu•I. FICTITIOUS BUSI HESS NAME STATEMENT Tiie toJJowlng perllOfl IS c:tolng buSI• ne-ss tt\~ INOUSTRIAL SPECIALISTS, 7702 Yukon Dr .. Hunllnglon BHCh, CA '126•8 Dennis Dal~ Gr111\am, 7102 Yulton Or, Hunlinqlon Be11c11, CA 91b-18 Kennetll Hult Tiiis atet-1 WH filed With the County Clerk ol Orange County on July 6, 1911. F7Utt Publ•shl!CI Or11-Co.st Dally Piiot, July IJ, 20, 21.-Au11u.stl, 19n 3077.77 T n • s bus.neu Is conduc led bl' Al\ In· -dlv1aua1 PUBLIC NOTICE Of>MIS Dale Gr•lwlm Tnls srattment ws w11' lllNI with fhe Coonly Cler1t Of 0rAllQt' County on July 1.1~11. l'ICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAMI 5TAT£Ml!NT .., SlCl&SJPWl ....... , .... .., CIOlll• ......... ...... ... IAlll'S CllEIAWD ........... .... U.JWI .. ROCKJN IPGI DA&\1-"',,......, .......... .. HARD TIMESU '· ,_,_ SAT/ ..... l:Jt.lil .... 'THE DEEP .. IPGJ DAILY 1:30.3:40 5:50-l:OO. I 0: I 0 ALSO CHARLES IROHSOH "ST. IVES" .... F1IUI Tl'lc' lollow1r111 person• ar l"doing l>Usi. no?'>S8 .. : l~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~t~~~b~ll\~-~Or~·~~~~~~~D~~~N~P;•~~. t11ro~~M~IM~;m July IJ,20.21,anc:IAugustJ,1977 IMAGE ASSOCIATES, 6A21 Antrim 3073 11 Ctrc . Huntlng!On llHClt, CA. 916A1 CUNT EASTWOOD AS 'THE ENFORCER• CR• ALSO "'IL.ACK SUMD.4 y•• LA MllWIA 4 • l.MEWOOD 4 W AUi IN IAllGAIN l'tltCt t t.JO MOtlDAY 1twv IAT\1110,\Y fl,~~ IZ:JO lo S 00 LA Ml~ADA 4 ONLY IWNOo\n o HOUOAYS 1uo to 200 , llCHAI0°HAllll .. ·-.~.=: I OltCA THI K~~~· WHAi.i(~) ~ ••• ,, -tM-2400 -THI DOVI 1'°1 ·, .. -~~r--~-"""-I09T. IHAW e JACOUt1*t lllln •t~ THI ~~'(PO) mt~lMSIO fUH WITH DCCK a JANI (l'O) IOUY, NO 'AUU aJCMAAD 'ITOI e llAll MIOOU GHASID llGNfNING(PO) lrOO JrOO 4:"5 •:» . l 1>o I011S "nW CHll AMI ONl Tl'" VIVA KNllVILI (POI '1111 ROCKY f1'0J • PUBLIC NOTICE Lucasc. <:.omltM • ..,t Antrim Cir., Hun11n9lon Bl"«ll. CA. 92441 M•cnHI Heeseler, 6A2t Antrim "'CTITIOUSBUSINESS Ctr. Hunttnotonlll"aclt,CA. 91647 ljiiiiiiiiii NAMESTATEMENT Tiiis Dusl ... H Is conc:tucte<I by a 'r,.... IOllOW11'19 pertons uc c:tolng busl· C)enl"r•I oartners,,.p. nus as luc:•sC.Comll.s WALL STREET, 71112 FOlbel Rd.. Tiiis SIMt'mtnt was flJPd w ith '"" Laquna Nlq~•. CA. 91611 County Clerll ol C)(.,ge County on July WallllAsMX:laltt,lnc.,aCalllornla 1, 1977. corPOral.on, 1146 T~mple T•rr•ce, F71412 Laouna Bl"acn. CA. 92451 Published 0r•"9P Co." Dally Pilot, ThtS bust~s Is Conc:tUCttd by 11 CO<· July IJ, 20. 21,<)ndAugustl, 1'177 POrallOn. 3<M2·71 "THE SORCERER" PG NoP- "MLJRDER BY DEATH" "A BRIDGE TOO FAR" PG '· NoP.- .. ANNIE HALL" PG "YO.UNG FRANKENSTEIN" PG "NEW YORK. NEW YORK" PG No,.._ .,'SILVER STREAK" PG "FUN WITH DICK & JANE" PG "WELCOME TO L.A." (PG} "ANNIE HALL" (PG) "YOUNG FRANKENSTEIN" "THE LAST REMAKE OF BEAU GESTE" ."BITE THE BULLET" (PG) . .• "ROCKY" PG "HUSTLE" A 'STARRING BURT LANCASTER, MICHAEL YORK, NIGEL DAVENPORT, BARBARA, CARRERA edwards BRISTOL CINEMA BRISTOL AT MACARTHUR 540-7444 CO-HIT AT LIDO CINEMA "FUTURE WORLD" HUNTINGT N CINEMA 11.ACH AT ILUS. H.L 848-0388 CINEMA WEST WESTMIHSTERATGOLDENWEST WESTMIN. CENTER 892-4493 ·~CINEMA VIEJO S.D. FREIW AYTO LAPA% MISSION VIEJO 830-6990 HARBOR TWIN· HAR I OR AT WILSON, COST A MESA 646-0573• , 646-3266 NIGHTLY SPECIALS STUFFED BELL PEPPER· WEDNESDAY'S SPECIAL TURKEY WITH DRESSING THURSDAY'S SPECIAL SWISS STEAK RUDA Y SPECIAL All THE ASH & CHIPS YOU CAN EAT ••• 219 ht 1erviftg illdllc»t ff sh· & chips, creamy col• alcrw, roll & btltter. ALL FOR I'' SUHD.4 Y SPECIAL All THE Fm CHICKEK YOU CAN EAT ••• 239 I at U,.h19 h1cf11dH whlpp•d potatoes, cote alaw, roll & buthr. KIDDIE DRUMSTICK PLATTER SOUTH COAST Pl.Ali 546-2071 3333 So. ..... Costa Mna HOUaSc........,..., I .. w. 11-7 ... 114 ·: ' . -· _, ~ ·~ . .,. . .. . . . .. . • - , ----... -~ ... ... .. ... & I • • ~ • :- "THE OTHER .SIDE OF MIDNIGHT" (R) "ONCE IS NOT ENOUGH" No,._ "EXORCIST II: THE HERETI~" R edwards LIDO· CINEMA '/ 1!:==========================:.1~ i Clvll Grumbling ••• Gloomy Gus <8M ~~-;I~: ;~::I'"' UIA M1INUU e lton DI HltO ...... -:&'·-1 NIW YOIK.n':'* Y~~~~'. ~-·-~ 4214131 ·HTUINOf"NKPANTHll snnma SJAUOHI 10CKYfl'OI "RABID" ' NEWPORT ILVD. AT VIA LIDO NEWPORT BEACH 673-8.350 t In the DAILY PILOT ''I LOVE lHE MUSJC, I LOVE THE SENTIMENT, I LOVE THE IDEA • . . There is nothing about 'New York, New York' that d•n't thrill m.e. BOY, DO WE NEED IT ND'l!':0 • . &~~~ ·"' . ... . . . . -• dn &day'• NYSE COMPOSITE TRANSACTIONS 2 p.m. (EDT) Prices °'*'''-'1111"*"..,."'t11e~v.r1r,1i11~ ... ftklfk.~•w ...... ..ro.•,....•c111dflM4llb(tl kli!t .... , .. ,... Ollt t ... • ,,;.,, 4 "4S "'. " nlGlll •• • )IJ l' \Ill tllUll ''°I' .. --. II •ICM, ..... 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F•orCm .IOll 110 •-,_. r•l•lnd )Oil 113 I~._,,, F•trmtF -16 I t1 fll.lo + ,,_ F 11,ons u 60 2•~ • v. FrWltFI\ 6 I tftt •..• ,:.,.,.Mt •. tJ A • 114 F~dden .. lOl6 ~~ • ,,,_ FtdCo 190 I I JI-.. , ~~ .. ~\1·~ 1 .~ w·~.~ FedP8 .q(I 6 2'4 1'~ ..... FOSlgnl .IQ 10 61 1'14-1 FedOSt 1 .... 11 41• J1VJ., ••• Ferro 1.u e 193 33~ + ~ Fll1rebd •. •• 91.\+ Vt FldFll\ .JD S «> I -Vt FklUnl 1«1 J 14 ll\to-.. F1ocnt I.«> 7 24 U -\\ FlltrOI I )1 UV>+ ~ FlnS.n8 .41 S It 21 + '·• FlnlFed .50 • S4 UI'-,,._ F1•••tl\ l.l011 11J F!ChrC .1sr 6 "' Fl!Clllc 1 I 121 Ft8nT-.c 1 t U Fllnln 1.20 If 17 FstMlss .11o 11 n• Fs1N8o t.• I 1l2 l'tN$48" t I 2 FstP• 1.3:210 1' FIP&Mlll ,. 11 FslUnAr I u • Ftll•Bll .45 I ;,. F!Whc 1,16 9 '9 FIS(llM I lO I S Fl,llFds .60 6 US FlshrS<I .2t 1 U FlfftEftt,,.. 9"' Flemlnv .IO I 11 Flul\I .1013 310 Flnl~ot 1.1616 64 Fl•Gas 1.lll I M Fl•PL 1.S. 11 1fl Fl•Pow J.ll 9 1' F l•Stl 1.1014 • FluorCp 111 Fluor pl J.. FCIF•tr .20 I FoottC8 I I ForoM s ForMcK I 1 FMKpt l.IO .• F10ur 1.24 _. FIH-P .1?12 FosWll .IS • Foxt>ro I.JD t Fr.,.,_M .14 4 ~~r11'i'~~ ~i~,; .. ,__. ... ,...,...by ti-."-'~' Aatetltlttft Of*"""" lllHlln.,,,, ..... ,....... • s DAit. Y PILOT •• ' G&WCoaehes By HILTON MOSKOWITZ When the New York Knickerbockers take the r•eld Ulls laU tar the 19'17·78 season ol the National Basketball As· 1oclatlon, th~y will have a new bead coach: Willls Reed, one cpl the molt popular players ever to wear a Knick uniform. They al.lo wlU have a new owner: Gull & Western lo- duatrles, one of the moat rapacious corporations ever to ap-- pear on the U.S. Industrial scene. l.AST MARCH. lN THE SAME WEEK lhal Reed's ap· pointment was announced, Gulf & Western (G&W) an· nounced a bld for all the shares or Madison Square Garden Cor~ lt\JlUt dld not_ already own. That bid succee<led. G&W owns more than 80 percent ot Madison Square Garden, enough to effect a formal merger. A major sports complex wUl become a small part of a vast conglomerate. In addition to the Knickerbockers, Madison Square Garden brings to G&W the New York Rangers hockey team. an 80 percent interest in International Holiday on Ice, two horse racing tracks (Roosevelt Raceway in the New Yerk area, Arlington Park in tbe Chicago area), real estate in New York a nd Illinois and, of course, the Manhattan arena !~r w..bit.b _the company is named. Chewing up these Money Tree units will cause no digestion problems for G&W. As one in· vestment publication recently commented, acquisitions are "a way of life for the company." It bas made more than 100 or them during the past two decades. . . . REEb WILL FIND THAT HE has Joined a corporate team th.at pJays in so many games that the Wall Street Journal reports: "Many investment houses don't even have analysts following the company regularly because it is so complex." G&W owns the n ation's largest cigar maker. Consolidaied Cigar (Dutch Masters, El Producto, Muriel). G&W owns one of the naUon's largest apparel makers. Kayser·Roth. · G&W owns a major motion picture and TV film pro- ducer, Paramount Pictures. G&.W owns one of the nation's major zinc producers. New Jersey Zinc. G&W GROWS SUGAR JN THE Dominican Republic, has citrus groves in Florida, produces paper products through its ownership of the Brown Company, makes personal loans to consumers through some 1.000 Associates Investment offices, manufactures air·conditioning compo- nents, metal work presses and a wide hne of automotlve replacement parts. · Among G&W's latest acquisitions were Marquette Ce- ment and the book publisher, Simon & Schuster, and its sub- sidiary, Pocketbooks. Gull & Western ls almost as notorious for the companies 4 that got away rrom it as ro~ the ones it managed to ensnare. I I G&W SOUGHT, AT ONE TIME OR another, such prizes ' as Armour, Allis-Chalmers and Sinclair Oil. It was once a : major holder of stock in Pan American World Airways and · the A&P grocery chain. At the time of the Madison Square Garden tender offer in March, G&W bad holdings amount· ing to 25 percent of the Simmons bedding company; 26 per- cent of the Hawaiian real estate giant, Amfac;"36 percent of · Diamond Oil; 19 percent of Skil; 14 percenC of Esquire; 9 percent of American Financial: 6 percent of apparel maker · Warnaco; and 6 percent of Wurlitzer. What it didn't own yet was a professional baskelball Leam. Or a professional hockey team. Now it does. Willis Reed, welcome to the conglomerate. Fri e Money Aids Bank Customers Crocker Bank is giving away money at its Fountain Valley office. It's play money, though, meant to help customers learn how to use the bank's automated teller machine, said Don Ev ans, assistant vice president and manager of the office. The machine is to begin actual operation Aug. 2 for de- posits, withdrawals, loan payments, balance inquiries and transfers for checking, savings, Master Charge and VISA accounts. DURING THE DEMONSTRATION period. customers will be shown how to operate the machine, using the play money in place of Cllrrency. The machines will di~pensc transaction records similar to those customers will receive when it is operational. The teller machine will operate from 6 a.m. to 1 a. m., or 19 hours a day, after Aug. 2. During the demonstration period, it will be shown throughout the bank's regular , hours, 8:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. Mondays through Thursdays and until 6 p.m. Friday. ' Crocker Is introdu.cing the machines this summer in nine other offices in the state. Explosion May D~lay Oil on West Coast LOS ANGELES <AP)-The explosion that destroyed a pump station on the Trans•Alaska Pipeline earlier this month may hav~ delayed the West Coast's expected oil sur· plus by several months. The blast that destroted -Pump Stat.ion No. 8 cut the· maximwn pumping ability ol'.the'$8 billion pipeline ftom 1.2 • mlWon barrels of crude oil a day to 800,000 barrels a d•.Y, ac· cording to' olfictals of Aleyesll:a P.lpeline Senice Comp•ny, the lloe's builders. They nJd it would be .. ,evera.l montha" before the pumplUJ staUon la fuUy o~ratlonal agalri.