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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1975-07-21 - Orange Coast Pilot• nass1s to • , . DAILY PILOT .JFK Voiced Fears * * * 10< * * * Of Assassination MONDAY AFTERNOON~ JULY 21,.1975 VO'-... NO. 2t2, 2 SECTIONS, U l'AGES • • • • Vallerga Trial Under Way Today Carr y (J.S . Flags Dusty Landing For Cosmonauts HOUSTON CUPI) -Russia's two Soyuz cosmonauts landed gently and triumphantly ln a cloud of dust on a centraL.Asian prairie today. carrying five Unit- ed States flags to symbolize their historic meeting in space with three Americans. The world could watch on television as Valeri Kubasov, 40, and Alexei Leonov, 41, emerged smiling from their scorched spaceship after it came to rest on its side in the middle of the wheat belt of Kazakhstan. Moscow con- trol said they were in excellent health. "This is wonderful place, .. Kubasov said after he climbed from the Soyuz capsule and Bus Driver Charged With Man~laughter Irvine police obtained a misde- meanor manslaughter complaint today against Carolyn Conners, 23, the driver of a day camp bus involved in a fatal collision in North Irvine June 23. Issuance of the complaint and a citation for failure to yield the right-of-way was delayed to give the Santa Ana Heights woman an opportunity to recuperate from injuries she s uffered in the Rough Riders Day Camp bus ac- cident, according to police Lt. Eugene Norden. Joho Ramming, 6, of Irvine was killed and 11 others injured in the collision between the camp bus and a gravel truck at the in- tersection of Barranca and J ef- frey Roads. greeted"rescuers with a beJr bu1. "It ls a happy place d lancling. I will remember it always." Leonov, obviously tired from his six days in space, staggered slightly when he emerged and said, "It was diCficult, very dif. ficult. We are a bit shaky due to tiredness and to happiness.'' U.S. astronauts Thomas Staf- ford, Vance Brand and Donald "Deke" Slayton remained in or- bit for three more days of scien· tific work. Their Apollo, 3,450 miles to the east at the time of the Soyuz landing, is due to return to a Pacific Ocean splashdown Thursday. The astronauts were asleep when their comrades returned to earth but later radioed con· gratulations. One of the Apollo experiments planned for today -a scan of the sky with an x-ray detector-was delayed be.cause of trouble with the instrument. But the pilots went ahead with plans to make earth ovservations and measure dust particles in the atmosphere. The Soyuz was eased to a gen- Ue landing at 3:51 a .m. PDT by a big parachute and the cushioning of four rockets fired a few feet off the ground. The thrust from these rockets kicked up much of the dust. The Soyuz came down only six miles from its bullseye 33 miles from the town of Arkalyk. The site was 310 miles northwest of the Baikonur Cosmodrome from which the Cosmonauts rocketed Tuesday. Television cameras aboard two helicopters followed the big orange and white parachute and the capsule swaying below it for five minutes before the landing, described as a "thumpdown" by U.S. officials. It was lbe first <See LANDING, Page AZ) Wedding Set Switch for Chriatina ATHENS (UPI) -.Christina Onassis, one of the world's richest women, will marry Alexandros An· dreadis, 30, youngest son of Greek banker, shipowner and business tycoon Stratis Andreadis, a member of the Andre~dis household said tDday. The announcement came as • surprise. She bad been expected to marry Peter Goulandris, 27, sciOI\ of another Greek shipping family and her constant com· panion for months~ he was -1 her side when her rather was buried ln March on the family tsland of Slcorpios. The weddini will take pl.Ce Tuesday in a sub~ urban Athens c;hurch, the family ~esman •aid. ChrisUna, ~ wbo wa1 m~eft briefly al the 11e of 21ln1m to Joseph Bolkar, "41,'fl Loa Angela real estate dealer, promiled Onauis before be died &he would marry Goulandris, sources close to the Onas•is f amlly aald. 1:ppery ave ers Daily Pilot Photo by Uto P1y"° Young bodysurf ers David Grothus (left) and Denny Cole slide along the shoulder of a crystal-clear Balboa peninsula wave Sunday afternoon. Denny, who is sliding right on the wave, has met up with David, who looks a little surprised to see so· meone else on HIS wave. Carny Beaten On Last Day Of OC Fair A six foot, five-inch, 250-pound Garden Grove machinist was jailed Sunday evening, charged with brutally be•ting a partially deaf carnival game con- cessionaire at the Orange County Fair in Costa Mesa. David 0 . McBride, 19, of 13272 Blue Spruce St., was booked on a charae of assault and battery following the lnclde11t in which bis companions allegedly tried to teardownacarnivalbooth. John P. Lafferty, 23, of San Diego, was treated at Costa Mesa Memorial Hospital for facial lacerations and advised to seek X-rays for possible head il\Jurtes. police said. . Jnvntl&atqn 'aid they ¥Jived at the carnival nlldway to check a~ of a ~bt abouU:4S p.m. mid f ou.nd Lafferty sprawled oa the around, bleeding prq(usely from 'the aoie ad eout.h .. 11M vidtm'a emotcwer, Steve .BNIOto1 ol Salead'i }l'«ty, N.C.~ clalmea Lafferty epotted the bulkin.& youth's croup d cornpa-. nions trylq to steal a sturred animal toy from· an adjacent, bieoth'• ~let and Intervened. MoBrtde. however, claimed tbe p.rU*UY diUbled carny wwker had struck biJ f emal~ companion ln the r..ee and be re· uUated to protect her. (8ee8EATING,Paae~>, , JFK Assassination Fears Told by Aide WELLFLEET, Mass. CAP) - President John 'P'. K81Dedy said two years before his assassina- tion that be feared 4lttempts to till foreign leaders would make him a target, a former aide says. The aide, Richard Goodwin, quoted Kennedy as telling him in November 1961: •'If we get into that kiAd of thing, we'll all be targets." Goodwin, reached today at his summer home here, confirmed a Washington Post account. in which he said the subject of as- sasslnation flrlt came 'I> in a conversation Kennedy h~ with a AD PAl'S OFF; 'SOLDB0.4'r "An ad in the Dally Pildtreally does pay olf. I 801d my boat!" That's the atft:cess story told by the Hutlntton Beach man who placed this clUllfied ad in the Dally Pilot: 16' GLASSPAR, wnsRP Evtnrude. No t.rlr. sm. Prfpty, XU•llXX If JOU bave a boa to litll, call &4.2-5e?t. It only tue. a lew words In t9a rt1ht= m•e a sale. ~ona tbe e ~ .thertptplace la the Pllot. newspaper reporter. The reporter asked the former president how he would feel ir the United Stales a ssa ss inat ed Premier Fidel Castro or Cuba, and added that he thought it wa~ a bad idea. Kennedy replied, 'T m glad you feel that way because sug- REPORT URGES NEW RFK DEATH PROBE, AS Jestions to that effect keep com· mg to me, and I believe very stroBgly lbat the United Slates should not be a party to political assassination." Goodwin, an adviser on Latin American affairs, said Kennedy did not tell bim who made the suggestions. Goodwin said form e r Secretary ol State Dean Rusk also expressed fears about as· sasaination after Dictator Rafael Tru jillo of the Dominican Re.public was killed on May 31. 1961. Goodwin &a.id he ls convinced that Kennedy did not. authorize p&ota aaatmt Caat.ro. "'ft)ere is not. one piece or evidence t h at demonstrates anyth1na liker that at all,•• he. aid. lleanwM.le, Jobn J . McCloy, a <See .IR, Pap AJ) Defends Against 7 Counts By GARY GRANVILLE Of, .. Dally ~llot Slaff VENTURA -Orange County Assessor Jack Vallerga was in Superior Court here today pre- pared to defend himself against seven criminal charges. At mid-morning, Jack Kahill, Valleqfa 's attorney. and Deputy District Attorney Mi chael Capizzi were meeting in cham- bers with Judge Robert L. Shaw to discuss ground rules for what is expected to be a two week trial. At issue is Vallerga's role in the s ale of a computerized ap- praisal system to Spartanburg County, South Carolina. When indicting the assessor the Orange County Grand Jury charged he was guilty of a con; fllct of interest because he later accepted consulting feels related to the sale. The jury also charged his ac- ceptance or the consulting fees and expenses was embezzlement and grand theft. In interviews before the indict- ment was handed down, Vallerga pointed lo s tate codes which specified that a public official may not consult .with private firms. He pointed out the codes do ndt say one public official canri<Jt perform consulting services for' a fee on behalf of another public agency. '" Thal is expected to be the n:1'3· jor issue in the trial that \fas transferred to Ventura County because of the vast amount of pre-trial publicity. The opening of Vallerga's trial <See VALLERGA, Page A2) Ora=·-:a:-·' W e atller Night and morning low clouds but sunny after- noons Tuesday. LitUe tem· perature change. Highs from the 70s at the beaches to the low 80s inland. Lows tonight 62 to 65. INSIDE TOD/l Y For the firtt time, the West hos representation in the No· tional Political Women'• Caucus. Two Orange Coast women now hold national of· fkes. See Page BI. I 42 OAll Y PILOT s Monday,July21.1975 Picking It llp Fro• Page .41 LANDING ••• t~lec::aat of tbe end ot a SoviM spaceflight. Three hours after landing, the cos monauts arrived at the Cosmodrome and thanked enOnee:n and tecbnlciaia who prepared their rocket and spaceship for lligbt. "We are grateful to them ror their vut work," Kubasov sald before he and Leonov went by bus to the hotel "Cosmonaut" where they also stayed before launch. Leonov, an artist as well as veteran space pilot, said, 1'Mot.ber Earth took us in its fold. There is much greenery here and the skies are blue." Rus sia 's leaders quickly radioed congratulations to the spacemen and praised the joint project as a major step in cementing peace and furthering cooperation between the two superpowers . Leonov and Kubasov replied in a special message to Russia'sofficials : "Io this space flieht, important for the cause of peace and pro- gress or all the peoples of the world, we were inspired by the high assessment of the work of scientists, design~rs, workers, cosmonauts and the warm words of greeting by Leonid Brezhnev. "The cre)V o( the ship is ready to fulfill new assignments of the Motherland." Dave Cowen (left> and Ken Petersen of the Costa Mesa Street and Sanitation Department heft a discarded chair into a truck during the first day of Costa Mesa's second annual trash pickup. East side homes were covered to· day; on Tuesday the trucks will cover Mesa Verde and Coll ege Park : Wednesd ay the west s ide south of Fairview l los pi tal, and Thursday Mesa del Mar and Mesa North a reas Fro• Page Al VALLERGA today is the first round in what is expected to be his long legal bat· tie to avoid conviction on crimjnal charges as well as acts of misconduct the Grand Jury charged him with in a separate accusation. Jackson Predicts $I-a-gallon Gas Along with Rep. Andrew Hinshaw, Vallerga's name was added to an indictment that charged employes in the as- sessor's office with illegally cam- paigning on Hinshaw's behalf in 1972. Those charges will be subject of a separate trial. By United Press International Sen .. Hen r y J ackson , <D· Was h.>. p redict s $1 -a-gallon g a s olin e b y 197 6 a nd a catastrophic effect on the economy if P res ident Ford goes ahead with a threatened veto to a bill extending p rice controls on domestic oil production. Jackson. in Tampa, Fl a. to organize his Florida campaign for next year 's Democratic pre- sidential primary, told a news 'Four Arrested On Drug Raps Four Capistrano Beach rcsi- den t s were j a iled on drug charges during the weekend by Orange County Sheriff Offi cers who said they found marijuana plants at the home occupied by the four suspects . Lodged in County Ja il on charges of possessing and cultivating were Charlene Kaye Moore, 21 ; Gar y Lee Moore, 26 ; Linda Dianne Smiddy, 28, and Joseph Phillip Sm iddy, 28; all of 34594 Calle Rosita . Deputies said they discovered the marijuana plants during a search of the a partment complex on Calle Ros ita . From Page Al BEATING ..• Investigators said that as a re- sult of the row, Mc Bnde 's group of friends started to demolish one olthe carnival concessions before p>lice arrived. :: The incident was one of the few which m arred the 10-day fair, which ended Sunday. .. ' ORANGE COAST DAILY PILOT T,,., O• '",,,. (n"l\t (J,l1lv P•IOI "'"'~ """""'" ... "°"' ~ t H•,, ,,,. Nrw rr. • ... rubl,\h t'ln, th• (J ~ ~ C,o.t'\t PuOll'-"'•"il (On ' '"" \.c·t·cW' .. tt f\11l11•tt' ,.,,. gvNt\.M>d MorK1 tf I h•,,. 'f'°' , t ,,,_"v lf)I (ti f..t liN "'' ''' "flt-pnrt """'tt tiv' "'"'''"' ~" •'"' J t).Jif'I l .. 1r V.tl It <I I'¥'.,, ' .,,,,' ,, • • \/ lffll f 1'"·1 lA•1,,n' f<1, ~ "Outn < ,,..., / ,,......, •• t.,q•:1f\1• ,-., •1rh ( H1l1 ,,, tj \ .. f1,•d·•• fff•1 .. ,..,,,,.. ''• fr "" ,,,..i r1ut 11,_,.,,,,., Of4'nf 1 .t' -1'1 ~· I • •y •11rr f"'l\l1 '9•r t l ., ln1t,1.tO?l/'4 RobNt N W PP(J r, •t.k n• ''"' Pubf• rw r Jac k R . CvrlPy y ,r r Pr.-1f'ff'f\I •nd (,eM>r•I Md"'-'t.T' Thoma~ Kecvll r1111.,. .Thomas A Murph1ne -... Q.~Q [<1110< Charle<,, H Loo-. R1ct1arr1 P Nall A'-•t\hnt MAnAf1tn•l ( rtttN Officts ~tAIW•a 1lOWO\l8..,~ht'1 Nt•'°'I a..-" )HI ,.."'fl0'1._le•••CI ""'-""~"·'*~~ ..... H ..... lno10ft ....... HU' e.¥11 ..... ,,..,0 ._ .. -.. Valt.y l\1'1 U. "111 lt-M* O .... I•-•• T .... M (114) .. 2-4321 ClaHlfitd Ad¥ertitlf\il .. 2·S471 "9dld'.t\M" V••-· t"4•111ft0tf·U Sl1 °"210 ~.-,...(••-"'" 495-0UO -,,._, .. ""°'-c.-,~, .. , 540..1210 conference Sunday that a Ford veto of the oil bill "could lead lo $1 a gallon gasoline sometime in 1976 ... 'Tm nabbergasled," Jackson said. ··The President has thrown down the gauntlet. It will be catastrophic. It will have a de· vastating effect on the economy. 1 predict it will bring the economy to a new bottom." Meanwhile, Sen. Edward Ken- nedy, (0 -Mass.), has proposed up to $46 billion in tax cuts next year to counter "recessionary shocks .. that might follow an oil price in· crease. Kennedy wants to extend the $1.5 billion in this year's reduc- tions for small bus iness, increase by $4.5 billion this year's tax cuts for individuals and increase by as much as $40 billion reductions for consumers to offset the ef· fects of a possible oil price jump. I Additionally, Vallerga must answer to five counts of miscon· duct stemming from the Grand Jury's accusation. Buggy Driver . . Hurt in Crash A 42-year·old San Clemente man was injured Sunday when his dune buggy collided with ·a sedan near Pico and North El Camino Real. Darrell H. Metheny oC 2815 Via Montecito was released after erpergency aid at San Clemente General Hospital. Police identified the driver of the sedan as William D. McMaster, 57, of Santa Monica. Extensive damage to the dune buggy was reported. 'Cloud of Dust' As Soyuz Lands By HARRY F. ROSENTHAL SPACE CENTER. Houston (AP) -Americans come down with a splash .. With Russians it's more like splat! Heroes of space and international chumminess they may be. Dignified, their landing isn't. Soviet Mission Control, monitoring today's return of Soyuz cosmonauts Alexei Leonov and Valeri Kubasov, called their near-target thumpdown "a sort landing.". Obviously, soft is a relative term. THE SOYUZ CAPSULE DRIFTED THROUGH the sky, suspended from a single parachute girdled in red and white over an area reminiscent of western Kansas in the Dust Bowl days. The featureless plain below spun by as helicopter- mounled cameras broadcast a Soviet landjng live for the first time -not only internationally, but also for the Russian people. Television showed the last five minutes of Soyuz' 2'h-million-mile ~~};J:•t as it had the ( J the ~?:.:.~~~10in~~: NEWS AN A LYSIS tional spaceship called Apollo-Soyuz. now was . , nearing the ground. It was partly doudy over Kazakhstan, a wheat growing re· gion. THE SOIL LOOKED ROILED, NOT furrowed, like · sand dunes. Indeed, the landin~ite was at the edge of the Russian steppes. From space, the earth looked inviting, blue and brown and white against the blackness of infinity. Here, on the Russian plain, terra firma looked blah. Down, down, the capeule drifted. Suddenly there arose a f eariome cloud of dust.. corn- pletely obscuring the manbullt meteor. When lt cle~. the spacecraft looked like an acorn lying on its aide, tossed from an invisible, giant oak. WlnllN 3t SECONDS, MEN CAME runn.ina. The ba~h was opened. They hetpedout, first Kubuov, tben Ltonov.- The cosmonaut.I embraced. "Alexei Leonov and Valeri Kubuov fell well," said Moscow Mission CantroJ. "The ruabt prosram ol the manned spacecraft Soyus 19, the joint American Soyua· Apollo program, was fully performed." Thursday. the three Apollo aatrODauta will speed through the skies and be dumped into the Pacific near Hawall, a landing equally undlfn,lfied. . THE C08110NAUT8 WEaE PICllSD olJ the frOUDd like a ripe Pot.a\.O. The ast.tooaula are filhed out like flcqam. It aeems there~ to be a clu.ler way to wind up IUC.b adven.turea of e:qiloratlon. -J:J!.~· Chrbtopher Colu1nbul clld.n't e.x~et a br~ ; \ Drug Abuse Climbing Huntingto1" Valley Police Seeking Clues police need a lot more in· formation to nab big de- alers. There hasn't been much talk lD the past two years about the drug scene \n Huntington Beach and Fountain Valley, but narcotics orfic ers from both cities say it is still there and is still big. The chief narcotics in· vestigator in Huntington Beach says 406 juveniles and 616 adults were arrest· ed during the first six mon- :lha or 1975 for various narcotics violations. In Fountain Valley, the total arrests were 138, run· ning about 3-1 in ravor of juveniles arrested there. Fountain Valley in- vestigators have gone alter the on campus pro- blem more, while Hunt- ington Beach police are concentrating on adults pushing cocaine and heroin. · Police already know quite a bit about the drug scene locally . One or the more popular drugs among Fountain Valley youth is phencyclidine (youths call it cannabinol), an animal tranquilizer which gives a Secret Witness. high kind of like LSD. but more controlled. Huntington Beach of· ficers say there has been a s lowdown in m a rijuana and coca ine lately because of some large seizures made at the border by U.S. and Mexican authorities. Last month, 20 people were arrested in Huntington Beach fo~ growing their own marijuana in small pots. Huntington Beach police believe the use of mari- juana is on the decrease, but the use of hard drugs is on the increas e. Even though they know a lot about what is happen- ing in the local drug world, 3 Pendleton Crash Victims Identified Three Camp Pendleton Marines have died as the result of a headon collision at the base al which form er President Richard M . Nixon personally directed rescue efforts. Nixon and his party consisting or daughter. Tricia, her husband Edward Cox and Secret Service men happened upon the fatal mis- hap about two minutes after it OC· cured Thursday evening, and before military police arrived al the scene. One Marine was dead at the scene. One w as dead shortly after his arrival at the Camp Hotel ·cJemed Up For Amlli Meet~g KAMPALA, Uganda (UPI) - President ldi Amin drove up in his Mercedes to the Speke Hotel, site of a meeting of the Organiza- tion of African Unity, took one look around and told the manager, "This will just not do. Get this place cleaned up." An army of workmen appeared within minutes, scrubbed the courtyards and decorated walls and balconies with flags and bunting, hunting trophies and zebra s.kins and portraits of Amin. Pendleton Naval Medical Center and the other died in the hospital about 5 hours after the accident. The men were identified as Sgt. Larry W. Grise, at, of 343-A Fagan St., San Clemente; Sgt. David A . Vandal, 28, of Oceanside; and Cpl. Ramiro A. Delgado, 20 of San Antonio. Texas. Cause of the accident was still under inves tigation today by military authorities. Nixon and his party were re- turning to his San Clemente home from the Camp Pendleton golf course when the contingent came upon the accident. Cox said the Secret Service agents intended to pass by the collision because their first con- cern was protecting Nixon. "But, the President saw the ac- cident and said right away 'Stop, stop the car,"' Cox told Associat· ed Press in telephone interview. He said Nixon took charge al the scene ordering Secret Service agents to call for a medivac helicopter and everyone worked at getting the two badly injured Marines from one of the cars. An am~ulance helicopter is stationed at the medical center about six miles from the scene of the collision on Las Pulgas Road, about three. miles east of In· terstate 5. The DaU)' Pilot's ~ret Witness column off~rs cash rewards for tips which help police crack a major narcotics ring or ar· rest a major dealer. And the tipster needs no in· volveQleOt through tho police. Police wifl never know our tipster's identity. lf you have some solid in· formation, phone the 24.· hour Secret Witness line, 642-0700, or write to: Daily Pilot, Secret Witness, P.O. Box 790, Huntington Beach, Ca. (92648 ). And t o mainta in the secrecy of your identity, attach a simple six digit code to your information, such as ABC123 . If we need more inform a lion, we might use the first three digits in the column to re- quest it. In addition to Secret Wit- ness, there is also a coun- tywide program called We Tip, 623-1405 , which ac· cepts information only on narcotics violations. From Page Al JFK .•• I l member of the Warren Com. mission that investigated lh4 1963 assassination of Presiden( Kennedy, says he is convince<\. Lee Harvey Oswald acted alone.· "I went down there (to Dallas~ convinced, well. not convinced( but thinking there must hav(l be~n a cons piracy," McCloy, 80, SaJd Sunday in a television in -: terview. "It was a strange sort of ~ thJng." he continued. "But when we got downthere, I couldn't fin~ any connection." Booby Trap Kills Burglar PITTSBURGH, Pa. (AP) The vict\m of a shotgun booby trap, rigged by a suburban Pit; t s burgh man to ward off burglars, has been identified. : The Allegheny County coroner · said Steven M. Kayafas, 22, of New Kensington, was killed by Cl blast in the stomach when heap• parenlly tried to enter the house of Sylvester Shaw of suburban Creighton. .Shaw, 71, has been charged with murder in the incident. Police said h e had wired a shotgun to the door of his house after he was burglarized several times. • • Manners gives you up to a s1fsoo tax deduction this year. .• ... AND EVERY YEAR UNTIL YOU RETIRE! NOW YOU CAN BUILD A TAX SHELTERED RETIREMENT FUND AT MARINERS, WITH "IRA" -THE INDIVIDUAL RE- TIREMENT ACCOUNT. Mariners I ndividual Retirement A ccount is a personal tax-sheltered retirement plan. "IRA" was devel- oped by Congress to give you an effective way to build your own retire- ment fund. HERE'S HOW FAST YOUR MONEY GROWS IN A M ARINERS You can save as much as $1500 or 15% of your wages, whichever is less and your savings wlll be a tax deduc: tion during your working years. If your spouse works, your combined tax-sheltered savings can be as much as $3000 per year. Come In to Mariners and start your own lndlvldual Retirement Account. You'll be saving tax dollars now and building a much brighter future. For more Information, come In or call any one of our convenient locations. 'IRA .. ACCOUNT ln'11111du.1I Re1irrmen1 AccouMs are presMtly earninq l ' •'•per Yt'Jr when nlar.Prl in a 6 yHr cer11t1cal• Your annual yield is 1ncreasod 10 tJ big fl 06°-. when in1,.res11s edded 10 Ille IG(;OUnl balance Jnt1 compounded d111y w,,,, a ma.-•mum mo1v1C1u.ll con/ribu/lon ot Sl500 eacfl yrar. flere s flow your money w•ll grow. WITH TAX WITHOUT EXTRA SHELTERED TAX MONEY IRA SHElTEAIED FROM TAX AFTER PlAN PLAN DEFERML 5 yrs. $ 9,510 $ 6,730 $ 2,780 10 yrs. 23,540 15,750 7,700 • 20 yrs. 74,640 .... 080 30,560 30 yrs. 185,550 95,030 90,520 • AboY• '•oure. are N ied on 2S"lo 1ncomt btaellot. Feoeral regulallona require sut>ttant1al pena111u lor early wllhdrawale lrom t9'11fi~to ~nta I • • Mariners Savi 'and~A -~~ ~ .... ~ N_,.,, t.edl ,..._,.,, hkh l•tV"• le.ch k.i h4tch .. ••fly Hnl• lot A...-lot (Moln Office) (lar•ld• Oenler) , 310 Olenneyre St. (lel1ur• World) 380 So. h vetly Dr (Opp.Mt. Slnol Hotpltol) ISIS WeJtdlff Dr. 1024 loyaicfe Or. • ·(71') ,.,.. J506 131~ Seoll.oth llvd. (" 3) 553.3000 8747 IHerly lhrd. ('14)642·*0 .(714)t.f2·4000 (OPENIN<UOON) (213)M8.·'626 (113)MJ.4W • Monday, July ?t. 1975 OAIL'f PILOT A:J ;100-Oil Slick Investigated ~..._.... ......... __...__....___.._......._....-..,.-.-..,.-....._. ....................................... ~ • e P ilot Logbook Fresh Garbage For the Big Day By ARTHUR R. VINSEL Ot-0.llyl'llMS~tt Child Bride spent an inordinate amount of lime and about $2.50 in hard-earned cash at the current cost or groceries. fixing a handsome platter for The Garbage Man. Actually. it was not for The Garbage Man; but the Garbage Disposal Man. You see, we were fresh out of garbage. ''Looks pretty good," 1 observed, assuming it was breakfast. "But I thought you were poaching some eggs." "Oh, this isn't for us. It's for The Garbage Man," she chirped. "It's really ror The Garbage Disposal Man. He's coming to nx the garbage dis- posal today." SINCE WE MOVED IN. you see, the new garbage rusposal V•NSEl has consistently not done that which it ought to do and has done that which it ought not to do, to paraphrase an old preacher I heard once. The foul contraption was functioning on the basic prin· ciple of a fountain. It sprayed coffee grounds, eggshells and lemon peel a ll around the kitchen. And so, The Garbage Man cometh, or rather The Garbage Disposal Man. THE PROBLEM IS, Child Bride is public image con- scious whe n it comes to her new status as a keeper of home, hearth and garbage rusposal. She had therefore cle aned up every solitary s peck of legitimate garbage in the disposal, and in the house and taken it out. After all, who would ex- pect The Garbage Man or -The Garbage Disposal Man - to have to confront and look at garbage all day? "I don't wa nt him to think I'm a lousy housekeeper." she declared. And with that, Child Bride raided the refrigerator and prepared facsimile or a typical array of garbage of all tex- tures and sizes, so The Garbage Man -Garbage Disposal Man, rather -would have something with which to test the repaired garbage disposal. SHE SET OUT quite a nice spread. There were two egg shells (yolk and white in a dish in the icebox) a few fresh-cut lemon slices, a mound of brown rice with herbs, three carrot sticks, lettuce, buttered boiled potato with parsley. a handful of fresh-ground coffee. one· half tom ato, a bit of cold veal r oast, a chunk or cheddar cheese, celery (stalks and leaves> four crackers and a pile of pretzels. · There was even a handful of dry dog food. Barney won't touch the foul stuff anyway, so that wasn't exactly wasted. ' STARVING CIULDREN OF the world would gaze upon her mini-smorgasbord with rapture, and it certainly beat any cold plate I ever paid $1.29 for at the old college cafeteria, but The Garbage Disposal Man shunned it. He didn't need it to test the repaired infernal machine. I could tell this upon coming home for lunch. He simply looked down the hole and saw the disposal bad been installed without any chopper blades in it. Sunday's Sermon Reported By Tom Barley ReligioUs Science I Stresses 'Mantra' (Editor'& Nole: Thil i&a regular Monday feature in the Daily PUol, a penonalized account of the sermon at a church or tynagogue cholenat random from the newspapers circulation area. The church allowill be the 1Ubject of a feature story onSaturdau'schurchpage.) Millions of Americans or all faiths are finding religious thinking of Eastern origin in tune and often allied U? their personal forms of worship, Dr. Henry Ger:h~rd t.old_his con· gregation Sunday at the Church or Religious Science in Laguna Beach. Stressing the role that the "mantra" can play in the lives or those in the Western world who can accept the prin· ciple Dr. Gerhard assured his auruence, "man becomes what'be contemplates and that concept is certainly not new to religious science.'' Dr. Gerhard described the mantra as the "bundle or h~bits, thoughts, emotions and patterns" _accu~ulated !'Y the individual over the years, often agamst bas best m - terests and in conflict with his true nature . .. Many develop failure mantras," he said. "But ~ey ftnd through contemplation that the mantrl! develo~ tn a lifetime can be discarded in favor of, possibly, a spiritual mantra!' . That new personality, the speaker said, can often be ac- quired through the repetition of phrases and sessions of con· templaUon that h ave always been the hallmarks of Eastern schools of religious thought. , , Dr. Gerh ard furlhet defined the mantra as the technl- 'lueoltonal vibraUoos and the release of hidden en«aies. "This rorm of religious concentration will help you to realize your true nature and help you to achieve oneness with God," the speaker said. "Our Western world ls not. acquainted with these medJtaUve techniques," Dr. Gerhard said. "But our church hu always maintained that you becOme what Y~ ~k pro- vided you make the effort to achieve self realisation. . Those who do so, Dr. Gerhard assured his con1re1ation, can make the transition from "mortal, miaer~ble and small'' to "a,cless. deathless, ba~y and tranquil. Many wh05e ronns of meditation bave lncluded repet.l- tlon of the phrase "I am divine" have come to kno• utter· peace, tranqulllty and lhe lmowledce o( their true rela· Uonship wtth God, Or. Gerhard said. . "They have come to say 'God dwells in me and lhroush me'," be aald. ''They b.ave raised the level ?! lhclr con- aclou1nea1 t.o the point that they are really free. ~ystery Shrouds Deaths NEW YORK (AP) -Al 45, Dns. Cyril C. Marcus and Stewart L. Marcus were nationally knOWll gynecologists. The iden- tical twins shared an apartment in a luxurious East Side building. But their colleagues at New York Hospital. where the t wins practiced , and at Cornell University M e dical Center, where they were professors of clinical gynecology, said they were despondent in r ecent, weeks. Thurs d ay, after n eighbors complained of a foul odor, a han· dyman at the ir Sutton Terrace apartment house found Cyril's body, clad in undershorts and socks, lying face down on a bed. In another bedroom was the nude body of Stewart. Authorities said they had been dead about a week. The bodies were decomposed. How did they die? City M ed i ca l Examiner Oomfoick Di Maio said Sunday that autopsies have not revealed the cause or death. "Violence is ruled out." Di Maio said. "Natural causes are ruled out. That leaves us with a major mystery. It boils down to: Was it drugs or alcohol or a com- bination of both?" · He said results from t ox· icological t ests were expected from within a few days to two weeks. For the record, police have list· ed the deaths as an apparent dou- ble suicide. They found empty li · quor bottles and empty sleeping · pill·containers in the apartment. Strewn on the floor were empty s oda can s, food wrappers, clothes and about 30 empty pre· scription bottles. police said. They noted that the apartment door was double-locked from the inside; they ruled out burglary after $22 was found in a dresser ·drawer. Dr. Donald Jason, wh o performed the autopsies, said Stewart died one or two days before Cyril. Neither man had suffered Crom a serious illness, he said . J ason said Cyril weighed just over 100 pounds, although he was 5-foot·ll. ''He had clearly Jost a lot of weight," Jason said. UPI Ttltt»hOCO The First F amily President Ford and his family pose for an official photo by White H ouse photographer David Hume K ennerly. The chief executive and his wife, Betty, are seated in front of (from le ft> daughter Susan , sons Steve and Jack, a nd son Mike and his wife Gayle. In the fore- ground is Liberty, the family dog. Laguna to Receive Abalone Transplant By :JACK CHAPPELL 01 Ille O•ily Pllol ~•fl Manne biologists of the State Department of Fish and Game will make a lar'ge-scale abalone transplant off Laguna Beach Wednesday in an operation in· tended lo rebuild sizable popula- tions Qf the good-eating shellfish off the Orange County coast. A special marine habitat has been constructed to receive the 14,000 juvenile abalones to be planted in the waters of the Heisler Park Ecological Reserve off Laguna Beach. Divers from the department of Fish and Game placed more than 500 large hollow concrete con- struction blocks in three areas along the ocean floor within the reserve. The blocks will provide living space and protection for the shellfish . The abalone being planted will vary from a half inch to one inch in size. They'll be planted in three areas according lo size and will enable the Fis h and Game biologists to determine growth rates and survival information which may be used in future plantings. The refuge area was picked because game regulations pro- hibit taking of any fi s h or shellfish from the marine re- ser ve. T a nker Washing . Susp ect KEY WEST, Fla. <UPI) -Tho Coast Guard said today a 100. mile-long oil slick following the flow of the Gulf Stream from the Marquesas Islands to Marathon Key a ppears to be "lanlt washings" Crom a super 011 tanker. "Our preliminary invesliga. lion shows it is crude oil -pro- bably t ank was hings from a super tanker," A Coast Guard sookesman in Miamj said. ·•ofil ten after offloading their cargo, these ships will wash out thefl" tanks and dump the washin~ overboard." -' The Coast Guard said its io~ vestigators were checking shiV. ping records to see which tanker!: passed throug h the· Florida Straits in the last few days Iii hopes of learning the source ot lhespill. The Coast Guard's pollution "Strike Team" arrived in Key West early today to s urvey the spill and a mile-long high seas oi l containment svstem was also flown to Key West in case 1l was needed lo keep the thick sludge off the beaches. "From our aerial survey to· day, the worst concentration seems to be from Key West to Marathon,·' a Coast Guard spokesman said. ''It's holding along the edge of the Gulf Stream two lo three miles offshore and we're hoping the Gulf Stream current will carry it out to sea.·• From Key West lo the Mar· quesas Islands. there is only a "light sheen" on the water today. the Coast Guard said. ·'but from Key West to Marathon. it's about a half inch thick and 15 miles wide in some places." T he Coast Guard estimated that 40,000 to 60,000 gallons of the thick. crude oil had been dumped into the ocean and bad s pread out. along the edge of the Gulf Stream m the Lower Keys. There are only a few beaches for swimmer s in the Florida Keys, a line of rocky and man. grove-lined islands stretching south and west of the maio.land penins ula for more than 109 miles. Florida has the toughest oil spill Jaw in the nation. Their Revenge "This protection will enable the planted abalones to grow to spawning size in two to three years. When the abalones begin to spawn their larvae will be car· ried by currents into nearby areas where it is hoped they will settle to the ocean noor aud grow to adult size, Dr. Richard Burge, a state marine biologist, said. Race Hit By Tragedy Suspect,ed Rapist Slcuhed "The area in which the abalones will be planted contains lush kelp beds which should pro- vide ample food for the young abalones," he said. HONOLULU <AP) ·- Ralph and Ignacio crawled away with top honors. but a tragic accident clajmed the life of the s wiftest speedster before the finals of the fir s t H awaiian Cock r oac h Racing FestivaJ could be run. T' '\. YTON A BEACH, Fl a . (\., • 1 -Six women angered by the rape of a friend barged into a house. overpowered the suspect- ed rapist and slashed him in re· venge, a police detective says. Police Chief R . H. Palmer identified the rape suspect Sun- day as John Dotson, 20, of Daytona Beach. He was listed in satisfactory condition, under guard in a hospital's intensive care ward and undergoing treat· ment for cuts on the race, arms, shoulder s and abdomen. Dotson was charged with one count of sexual battery. Police said they were called to the Dolson home about 2 p.m. Friday by his r elatives. Officers found Dotson in the front yard, hoJrung a towel to his bleeding face. Police said he had been at· tacked in the yard. A r elative said, however, the attack oc- curred inside the house, while Dotson's girlfriend and two sis- ters were in a back room. The relative said six womeo entered the house and over· powered Dotson. Two reportedly held him down on the floor while lbe others slashed him. Police Sgt. Robert Sharpe said Sunday. •·I understand there is a connection.'' Woman Jailed In Torch Try CHICAGO CU Pl) -A woman bas been charged with trying to set fire to her estranged husband, who wu immobiliud by a waist· to-toe cast. Police uid Tbomuine McClln· ton, 26, who was arrested Satur· day night, went to the apartment ot Maurice McCUnton to demand his d.bablllty check. She alleged- ly doused him with lighter fiuid when he refused to give her the mooey. "She bad the m atch all lit and wu about to torch him," a police investigator said. McCUnton's brother, Horace, who lives across lb~ ball, beard b.ls screams and subdued Mn. McCUnton, police aa.Id. Another put it more directly: ''They were avenging the r ape, that's what they were doing." Police said the unidentified rape victim r eported a man jumped into her car, held a razor lo her throat and forced her to drive to an a partment where she was sexually assaulted early Fri· day. When· she r esisted, s he said , s he was s lash e d across the throat. She was treated at a hospital and released. Police said they later learned the rape victim had sworn out a complaint against Dotson about two hours before the women at· tacked him. Department biologists believe the large decrease m abalones in the area may be due to warm ocean water temperatures in the late 1960s which caused lhe dis· appear ance of kelp. pollution and possible over-harvesting by sport and commercial divers. The abalones will be trucked in from a hatchery near Cayucos near Morro Bay. The young shellfish will travel in rcfrigeral· ed and aerated containers lo Dana Point where the containers will be placed aboard boats for the trip to planting sites. A roach e ntered bv young David Cruz startled the fa ns with a n elapsed lime of 2.4 seconds. the be~t of the day. in the prc- h minary lime trials. But in preparation for a second run, there was a s ickening crunch as the racer was inadvertently crushed between a bottle and a cap. -HrntteFab~ SPECW.S GOOD MOM., 1\IES., JULY 2 1, 22 OHL Y 1MS AD MUST ACCOMPAMY PUICMASE SUMMER CLEARANCE 20% OFF ANY FABRIC UPHOLSTERY SAYE 510000 ,. SOFA. Z CUSHIOHS VELVET ::•UAID s15aoo •FAmC ONLY 7--U CIPT SALE l'TIMS WITH THIS AD WITH THIS AD ...... ·n.- . ' t .. ;I 4 DAILY f>tLOT c.!:::ng _Q Rains Plague Eastern Seaboard By lJalted Pres1 lntematloo1..I switches. In our relays. Lord York ad Penn.sylvanfa. Rule said many of the roads southwe~t~rn Jd(~~on Coun~, ~ TorrenlJal rains soaked por· knows what the tracks will look Trenton appeared hardest hit leading into Trenton were cut off N.Y. Offl<'tals ranee.led fiig~t.s at UOOlS of the East4:rn Seaboard lo-like wheo the water clears.'' a reporting more tha n 6 inches or by flooding. Watertown lnte_rnational Airport witla Tom ~phiae Portable Freeway? ON THE ROAD: It didn't seem like loo many people clogged our coastal beaches over this past weekend. You might blame it oo overcast or fear of sharks. Ac· tually, it was none of this. The re'ason the beach crowds w ere laggin g was because nobody could get lo the shoreline. Everybody was in automobiles. All t he automobiles we r e parked-mostly in the traffic lanes. One of the most futile cries 1 ever heard came only yesterday afternoon about 5 o'clock as the traffic stood still, jammed and idling, in downtown Laguna Beach at the intersection of Glen· neyre and Legion streets. A frustrated motorist leaned out bis window and roared at aootberhapless traveler: "YOU JERK! Do not block the intersection!'' nus was clearly an idle de- mand. Arter all, why not block • the intersection? Everybody was blocking everything else. If peo- .: pie have already blocked all four lanes, blocked the parking areas. blocked the sidewalks and blocked the view, why not block the intersection'! In wee kend tra!Cic like that, everybody ought to get a chan ce to block · something. NEWPORT BEACH was prPt· : ty well blocked over the weekend · too. This brought up another argum ent b etw een Arsene ''Blackie" Gadarian, the boatyard savant, and Newport Mayor Don Mcinnis. Gadarian, it has been noted, b as been disgrunUed with the Newport populace ever since the people voted not lo have a coastal freeway through the town. The m ayor, on the other hand, has been noted as a non-enthusiast on freeway notions. Tbus it is ev ery lime the 'Newport traffic gets thick and · mushy along Coast Highway, · Gadarian rags Mcinnis about the · need for a freeway. THE SHIPYARD SAVANT, in fact, has tried valiantly to come • up with several freeway schemes which would be platable to the Newport mayor. Gadarian has articulated on such novel road· building proposals as the Jnvisi· hie Freeway, the Underground Freeway, and the Non-Freeway Freeway. None h ave impressed tic Innis. "Over this last weekend " Gadarian e nthused, "I ga~e Mcinnis my plan for the Portable Freeway. This is Newport's answu for sure." Blackie went on to explain, ••You make the Portabl e Freeway out of plastic in a bag roll, like they do that phony grass for athletic fie lds. It would come with lanes and s tripes and ever· ything. '-THEN NEWPORT could just roll it out on the ground. Let lhe t raHic go play on it. After Newport has tried this freeway for awhile, if the people don't like it, they could just roll it up and tum it back in lo the slate." Newport's Mayor Mcinnis, at last report, was unavatlable for somment. Hewassomewbereout intbetramc. d a Y. d re n c h ID g al r ead Y spokesman said. rain by storm ·s end early I.Oday. Flooded streets were reported bee a.use the racah.ty l?st ~wer to water-logged Ne w Jersey. The train station in Trenton elsewhere in central New J ersey landing and runway lights. tou~g off isevtre ~ooding ~d was under nearly eight feel of MELVIN RULE, a spokesman but there were no major pro- was h1ng out train ~erv 1 ce water and 18 streets in tne city for the Trenton Civil Defense Of. blems. between ~ew York City a nd weresealedotrbypolice. flee, said 35 h omes were A three-day storm last week Philadelphia. Civil Defense authorities in evacuated early today when the left New Jersey ~was h and Com~uter trains as well .ns Mercer County, N.J ., declared a Assunpink Creek began to over· caused an estimated $30 million long dtslaoce Amtrak service BUil e of emergency and flash now. in4amaee, mostly lo crops. Wt;re affected. _The ~enn Central flood warnings were issued for "This is worse than last week. A brief thunderst~rm packinf! said full servace uughl not be four counties. A flash flood watch In fact, it's the worst flooding 60 mile-per-hour wulds dumped restored until Tuesday. was posted for mos t sect.ioos of we've bad here since 1971," said more than ao inch of rain in a .. THE WATER IS in our the stale and for portioosof New Rule. half hour and caWJed damage in Tragedy on Gulf Ship KEY WEST, Fla. (UPI) - ''lt's a powerful ocean," said Mel Fisher a s be stared blankly across the s un-shimmered waters of the Gulf of Mexico. "It takes people and ships." In the 17th century, the ocean took to its bottom a Spanish treasure s h ip, the "Neustra Senora de At.ocha." Last week Fisher, bead of Treasure Salvors Inc., triumphantly announced his team had discovered the Atocba and its valuable cargo. SUNDAY, TRIUMPH turned lo tragedy. The sea struck back and claimed Fisher's son, a daughter -in-law and one or his divers. They died when the firm's con- verted 60-foot tugboat, the "Northwind," capsized and sank in predawn darkness while its crew of 11 slept . Dirk Fisher, 21, the skipper of the boat, his wife, Angel, 25, and Rick Gage, 21, a diver for Treasure Salvors. were trapped below deck and drowned. "It's an unfortunate accident -a helluva tragedy," Fisher, 52, said in a barely audJble voice. "J'mjust very sad." The accident came one week after the discovery of bronze can- non and other artifacts from the Ex-private Volunteered For LSD Test PHILADELPHIA (UPI) - Richard Wevodau, a national of· fici al of the American Postal Workers Union, has discovered he was a participant in cxperi· ments conducted by the Army in the lest of h allucinogenic Urugs. Wevodau, 41, said he took part in two experiments, each lasting 30 days, while a private in the Army al Edgewood, Md., in 1958. He said he realized that he took part in the studies after reading an article which identified Col. Lloyd Sellenz as head of some of the experiments. He said the lel· t.er of commendation he received for volunteering for lhe program was signed by Sellenz. Wevodau said he was not aware that the experiments in - volved hallucinogenic drugs, and he still does not know if he was given LSD, which the Army used in some tests. However. he said neither he nor the other volun- teers were forced lo participate in the experiments. Doily Pilot D.ti"ert Is Guaranteed "-Monday·F nday If you do not have r< YolJr p!IP('r by !> 30 p m.. call b(ol()(P 7 p m an<l your copy will llC de- livered. Saturday and Sunday: If YoU do not receive vour copy by 9 a m. Satur· day. or 8 a m. Sunday call before 10 a m. and your copy win be dellvereo. Clrnl .. ~ T~..,.._ Most Orange County Areal> 64:Z-4l21 Nonh~st Hunronciton Beach. and Weslm1ns1er .... , 540.l:ZZO San Clemente. Capistrano Beach, San Juan C8pistrano. Dana Point South Laguna Laguna Niguel . • . . • . • or..ouo Atocha, a galleon which sank in a 1622 hurricane. The firm said the vessel bad about $100 million in gold and silver aboard. SURVIVORS SAID a bilge pump or hose apparently broke after they had retired Saturday night and one side of the Northwind's steel hull silenUy filled with water as it lay at anchor about 40 miles west of here. Don Kincaid, 29, the expedi- tion's underwater photographer, said he was sleeping on the upper deck. He awoke s uddenly. "I've been at sea so long I j ust knew something was wrong," Kincaid said. "I went downstairs to the e ngine r oom and found waler up to my knees." ------ Gulf of Mexico C vlf of Meaito • • . .• • • .. .. ---·-----Kincaid said Donnie Jonas, the ship's chief engineer , joined him in the engine r oom. They tried un s uccessfully to move machinery to the other side or the vessel to offset the till caused by the water. 3 MEMBERS OF SALVAGE CREW DROWNED OFF KEYS Triumph Turned to Tragedy for Salvage Team Members Minutes later the boat tipped over. Kincaid said he grabbed a life raft and then "started seeing heads pop up." Jonas was trapped for eight minutes in the flooded engine room but fou nd an air pocket. localed a fl ashlight, and found a way out. GAGE'S ROOMMATE, Jim Solanick, es caped through a porthole but the rushing water overpowered Gage before he could make it. Dirk Fisher's 16- year-old brother, Kane, a nd Keith Curry, 12-year-0ld brother of Angel Fisher, also made it to the raft. Diver s aboard the "Virga Lona," a boat io the Treasure SaJvors fleet, rescued the sur· vivors -and r etrieved the bodies or the dead. The search for the treasure was sus pended temporarily, but Fi'sher said it will r esume. "Dirk would have wanted us to bring in the rest of the treasure," he said. UPtT ............ STUNNED Mel Fisher, president of Treas ures Salvors, Inc., mourns death of son, daughter-in-law, and a third crew m e mbe r aboard caps ized vessel. Reagan 'Seriously Eying Presidency' TACOMA, Wash. CAP) - Ronald Reagan says it will take more than cheering crowds with Reagan-for-President banners to make him run against President Ford next year. The former California gov· ernor says he wants to know how much deep support there is for hid potential candidacy out in the heartland of America. And he admits that he js think· ing seriously about challenging Ford in th e R e publican primaries in 1976. But, the 64 -year-old former motion picture actor s aid in an interview Sunday, he won't make a fina l decision until later this year. Meanwhile he has a speak- ing schedule rivaling that of any declared condidate. This week, he bas appearances in six stales. "It's getting to f:he keep-you· awake-at-night stage," Reagan said when asked about his pre- sidenti al ambitions. He said. I've neither opened nor closed the door. "You have to feel there is a call lo duty from a sufficient number of people. ••If m y decision should be yes, then 1 have lo go the primary route," Reagan said. "We're not challenging an elected president. He was appointed tothatoffice." The Los Angeles Times in its Sunday edition quoted Ford's 1976 campaign manager as rul- ing out any possibility of a deal with Reagan to keep him out of next year's Republican presiden- tial primaries. Mailing Cost Hikes Seen With Accord WASHINGTON (AP)-A new labor agreement for the nation's postal workers is expected to contribute to an increase in the cost of mailing a letter before the end of the year. The new contract, tentatively agreed lo early today, averted' the possibility of a strike by the n ation's 600,000 postal workers. Details of the settlement were not announced but the postal un- ions won one major victory, reten- t ion of a no-layoff clause. "mE WAGES which we pay postal workers is one element or our costs. They're going lo go up;· Postmaster General Ben· jamin F. Bailar said al a news conference al which the settle· m enl was a nnounced. Labor. related costs are 85 percent of the Postal Service's costs. . Bailar al.so said that the Postal Service expects lo lose $800 million dollars in the fiscal year that began July 1. He said the Postal Ser vice n eeds higher rates lo start brea king even. "I'm certain ther e wilt be (postal rate) increases before the end of the year,'' Bailarsaid. The largest possible increase would be to 13 cents per first-class let· ter . The Postal Service in 1973 asked the independent Postal Rate Commission to make pre· sent postal rates permanent. The commission is expected to ap- prove a schedule of permanent postal rates within a few months, and the Postal Service then can raise the rates by instituting new temporary rates. THE AVERAGE postal clerk, postman or pick-up truck driver now makes about $13,500-a-year at top scale, plus fringe benefits. Chief federal mediator W. J . OFFIC IALS S/\ID several mobile homes were overturned, t rees a nd power lines we re downed, highway s igns were ripped up and some minor fires were ca used a:! trees snapped tugh-temsion lines. New York's J<ennedy airport got nearly two inches or rain • Frenchmen Attacking Islands? KAMPALA, Uganda (A P) - The organization of African Unity said today French troops and bat- tles bi ps were invading lhe Comoro islands in the Indian Ocean and threatening lo dis- member the self-declared in· dependent nation. A French official in Paris l'alled the report ''completely false.·• "There is no landing, and no ( I N SHORT ) warships in the area, .. the spokesman at the French Ministry for Overseas Depart· ment.s and Territories said. .JFK Probe WASHINGTON (UP[) -The Assassination of President J ohn Kennedy may have been an act of retaliation against attempts on the life of Cuban premier Fidel C a stro, says Sen. Richard Schweiker (R·Pa.) Schweiker. a m ember of the Senate committee investigating U.S. intelligence activities, said Sunday "one of the spinoffs" of the investigation could be a re· opening or the Kennedy as· sassination probe. OH Pri~e Bikes TEHRAN <UPI > -TheShahof Iran s aid today the price of oil . must go up and the move would not further damage the economic health of the world. • He said Iran would press for a price increase at the September meeting or the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries. Asked how big the jncreasc would be, he ruled out a 35 per- cent jump, saying, ''We will con· s id e r many f ac tor s simultaneously in consultation with other OPEC members." Tarkbh Protest WASHINGTON (AP)-Greek- Ame ricans by the thousands gathered at the u .S. Capitol on the first anniversary of the Turkish invasion of Cyprus to protest r estoration of American military aid to Turkey. About 15.000 demonstrators heard speakers urge Sunday that a ban on military aid to Turkey, imposed following the Greek· Turkish clash, he retained. The Sen ate approved in May the r es toration of arms aid to Turkey, and the House is expect- ed to vote on the measure this week. 300 Slaughtered*/ Lightning Strikes Party Usery Jr. called the labor settle- ment "a victory for collective bargaining, a victory for the postal unions and a victory for the Postal Service." Usery said r atification by all of the four postal unions would take "upwards of30d ays." • "We still have a lot of work to do. We have a lot of language to clean up. But an agreement has been reached and we have had a handshake on it," Usery said. ARANYAPRATHET Tha~and (AP) -Khmer Roug~ soldiers ambushed three groups of Cambodians fl eeing toward the Thai border last week and killed ~early 300 men, women aryd children without warning, witnesses say. About a dozen s urvivors told the Associated Press over the weekend the ambushes occurred about 50 miles from the Thai bor~er n ear the provincial capital o f Battambang in north~e.sl Cambodia. There was no official confirmation of their account. ·- • • llNIUy _, "''" Ill""•''" -............. ~,...,_ w- """ (......_ ,..,.1.fty •1oc:•• tN wn. .......... .n.,_ MCl-lfto~f'lht ... f'\wtl't'-l 1'11un1M,.lorm1 wtrt ••~• .. tonl9M In u. ... ,, .,.... OtNUll't' , ... , ..... .,.. "°' ~,.tww_,.. ,.._., .. -.-;, ~r. Hltillt Ill IN ...... dtttf'1• ,..,.. ,,_, le • !OS ..Wit .,. ...... -..rt ,....,.,, ...... llafedlflttO-Mlt-.,..M411. V.11 .. S-••1'9 ANNAOAl.I!. V•. CUPIJ -$1.a- e o-non~ al a baOyerd picnic _.. ~NKlled un~onuious by llohlninQ !.unday, ln<l\ldlno one man who -MrlOllsly inj11red. Herlltf'I L. Beury, SS, of AN\olnlYle •as ~.cl In serious condition al F~!llrtea HO'l)llal afi.r uper~lng Uoutll•brutlllno. Wltne$1eS J.11ld a l)Oft of llOlltnlno hit a 40-.foot maplt lrM In tM baell verd of CMy 9.. AlttenhcNM end l<no<ked -,.,.tclOut 1' friends and rt1411¥H ...,..no under en •wnlfto. ··'"°'··" ~oundmt 1•11 llll•dMd ~ ... s.ald Flo Hallman of Olney, N(J, •• , t"°"9M '""'I' ..... ci..o ... c. .. tal s ... , ,,,...., Tide• 'I am homesick sometime • bul 1 have no time for it now,' sa ys Anne Pobtamo of Finland, the new Miss Universe. The 19-year~old green-eyed blonde rues to New York Wednesday and it ·will be another month belore .sbeacts home for a vislt. Ants Attack Hoapikd HoJTOr Cited GRANITE CITY, m. <UPI > -A woman who bad a breast removed Is suing Alton Memorial Hospital because she say1 she developed an infection from hundreds of ants ~awUng on her surgical wound . . Hospital offlclaJs have acknowledged they have been havtng problems with anta. Lorene Bamea, wbo underwent the operation last Nov. ember, filed suJt lalt wet}k ln M1diaon County Circull Court She 1eek1 $50,000 lB actual damages tor htl" pain and suffer: tn1 and $100,000 lo punitive damages. The ault said Mn. Barnes awoke In poln abouts o'clock the momlnJ( after the IUl'fery and she called for help When nurses pulled back the bed covers. they found huod~eds of aot1crawlln100 the wound, the suit said. Mra. Barna was taken to the emergency room and re· band•ged but an lnf ection developed In the wound according tothe1uJ\, I .. 'Chute' Fouled Woman Hurt • In lstJUmp OAKLAND (U Pl) -Mrs. Sylvia Breuner •4 was listed in :·stable" condition at Merritt Hospitai today follo~mg a skydiving mishap in which a parachute hne tangled around her neck in a j ump from 2,800 feet. ( 1 The Alameda woman State was making h er first par achute jump following --------~ a course a l the Pope . Valley Parachute Ranch in Napa County when the m;shap occurred Satur· day. She was part of a parachute jumping class of 23 people a nd had more than six hours of ground training before making the jump, authorities said. Pilot Tim Saltonstall said the woman jumped from a Cessna 180 and went over backwards as she pushed off. Some of the parachute lines caught her arm and wrapped around her neck, causing the c hute lo billow out into two sections. She managed to unravel the line from her neck and opened a re· serve chute. But when she landed she lifted her feet ctnd hit on her backside, the pilot said. . Co•et l'lnhle Tonlglat · PASADENA <UPl )-Anewly discovered com· el w ill streak into the western sky tonight, close enough to be seen by the unaided eye, scientists at Caltech s aid. Astronomers said the comet will be al its closest approach to earth -242 million miles -at about 10 p.m. and can be seen about halfway down from Zenith in a northeast direction. • f:tlprm Lea.ft Ttea let• LONG BEACH (UPI) -Cyprus Airways Ltd., a small airline on the Island of Cyprus, has leased two used Douglas DC-9-10 twinjets, McDonnell Dougias announced today. A Douglas official said the airline plans to use the 80-seat jets to begin operations Sept. 1 between its current base at Lamaca, an area held by the Greek Cypriots , a nd Athens and London. Man Be!ld In Stab Beat,.. BURBANK (AP) -A city emptoye bas been booked for investigation of murder in the stabbing deaths of two brothers during a rock concert at a Burbank park. Police said Robert Houston, 25, was booked for investigation of murder Sunday in the deaths of John Ray Hoppes, 20, and his brother, David, 18. Both were stabbed several times in the chest. 3 Dro1en Near Pt. 1'lllflu OXNARD (AP) -A Cucamonga couple has drowned in treacherous waters off Pt. Mugu a nd lifeguards have called off their search for a third person who disappeared into the surf trying to save them. The search for Chung Ho Kim, 31, of West Cov- ina, was called off Sunday. He disappeared while trying to rescue William E . Munoz, 30, and Munoz' wife, Mi Hung, 26, who were drowned while on a fis· hing trip. Mond!Y.Juty21.1975 OAIL y PILOT AS Suit File!d Authoress Erica Jong has filed a $10 million damage suit seeking to halt produc- tion of a movie based on her best-selling book "Fear of Flying." Man Electrocuted With TV Antenna PALMDALE (UPI) -Wit- nesses said Sunday there was a puff of smoke just before Efren Madrid fell 32 feet to his death. Sheriff 's deputies said Madrid \\as electroc uted when a television antenna he was remov- ing from a roof brus hed against a power line. $500,000 Stud~ Heavy Marijuana Usage 'Addictive' SAN FRANCISCO CAP) -A mariju.ana experiment which .Ceeps volunteers stoned 24 hours· a day bas produced evidence that extremely heavy use can induce two major characteristics of ad· diction, researchers report. Unive r sity of California psychiatrist Dr. Reese T. Jones said in ·an interview that the three-year ·old experime nt at Langl ey Porter is given 210 milligrams of THC - marijuana's most active ingre- dient -in pill form with oc- casional supplements of govem- m en t g rown marijuana cigarettes. Since it takes only about 10 milligrams of THC to get a person stoned, the massive doses keep the volunteers high even when sleepinl{, he said. Neuropsychiatric Institute has THE RESEARCHER said the yielded evidence that tolerance mostseverly unpleasantintoxica- and dependence -symptoms tion was reported by two subjects us ually associated with ''hard" who "experienced psychotic, drug use -result from long and psychedlic-like symptons" and heavy marijuana consumption. wbosaidtheywouldhavedropped He stressed, however, there is the program if not drugged. no evidence of "drug.seeking Other reactions ranged from behavior" typical of persons ad-volunteers who felt so little they dieted to alcohol, heroin or other threatened to leave to those who drugs. reported the laboratory highs THE PROGRAM, sponsored were indistinguishable from by the National Institute on Drug street highs. Abuse, has cost $500,000 to date and has studied 42 volunteers Jones· said there were no truly who were paid S25 a day to live in severe withdrawal symptoms a clinic, stay stoned and s ubmit such as seizures, but some vol un- to biochemical tests for about a leers expe rienced insomnia, ir- month. A new group or 32 volun-ritability, loss of weight and ap- teers is being selected a mong petite. tre mors, nausea; loose scores of applicants. bowels, vomiting, increased Jones said each volunteer daily • salivation o r sweating. Critics Question State Lawmakers ·Nude Deal More Beaclres Eyed SAN DI EGO (AP> -One·eigbth of all beachgoers in California's second biggest city • want to use the sand and surf without any clothes on, the San Diego City Council b as been told. ' The council plans to consider Thursday ~ whether lo allow nude swimming and sunning ' at four more beaches. Black's Beach bas been l ••swimsuit optional" for a year. Reopening RFK Case Explored LOS ANGELES CAP> -A r eport recommend- ing reexamination of the bullet evid en ce in the Robert F . Kennedy as- s assinatio n case has been submitted to acting Dist. Atty. J ohn Howard. The report was pre· pared by a special 3·man committ ee of the American Academy of Forensic Sciences: After its release, Academy President Robert Jolin~ said reexamination of the physical evide nce in the case "could be helpful in clarifying the circumstances of Robert F . Kennedy's death.•• The report was pre- pared at the academy's convention last week in St. Louis and received Saturday here. Howard, one of the prosecutors who soughl the con viction of Sirhan Sirhan in the assassina· lion, said only that he and his staff were "ex- ploring the possibility of reopening the case in a judicial forum.·' Howard said tha t if the case is reopened. "it will be in a courtroom where the strict rul es or evidence will apply." SACRAMENTO (UPI) -Some California lawmakers oper a te their private law practices jointly with their statc-- fin anced di s trict legislative offices in ap- parent violation ·or the legislature's own in· tern al policies. they take pains lo se parate the i r two 1 careers a nd don't benefit financially from the ar- rangements. ASSORTED PRINTS In a few cases, the Sacramento Union re· ported Sunday, the prac· lice may a m ount to a slate s ub sidy of legislators' private busi- nesses. A substantial number or the 49 attorneys who serve in the legislature continue to practice law on the side. They contend · "We're not a bunch of apple knockers," Sen. Donald Grunsky, one of the mos t acti ve at · torneys in th e legislature. He is one of a handful or lawmakers who combine their legal practices with their dis- trict legisl ativ~ offices. The state pays $180 per month to d efray rental on the legislative offi ce. This p,ra cti ce is frowned upon by the ad- minis trative h eads of both the Senate and the Assembly. Wide selection of PETITES, FLOCKS, PRINTED and SOLID LENOS, plus many,· many more. Machine wash, tumble dry. Polyester/rayon/cotton blends. 44':/45" w;de. 2 99¢ YDS. FROM $1 .49 YD. to $1 .98 YD. SUMMER FABRICS • ''PRINCESS" WARP KNlTS . • EMBOSSED FLOR AL LACE • WAFFLE PIQUE ~--~~-~---~~~-:-:-~-=-=-~:-:-:--:-:-::-:-:-:-:':"':-::-:-:--:-:-::-:-:-:-:-=-:-:-:-:-:-:-::-:-:-:-::--=-:-:-::-:-:-:. -~~--.......,= SAU PalClS • GOOD AT All LOCATIONS CASM ond CARRY DILIVlltY AVAllAILE ('?"'--::' I AT OUR NEW STORE IMIAllUIUQ 9"f-I 15201 Beach Blvd. in Westminster Half Mlle North of the San 01990 frwy. Neat te Pep loy~ HEADQUAHHS FOR SIMMONS BEAUTYHST MATT1tlSSIS AND SOFA BIDS KING SIZE MATIRESS SETS l y SIMMOHI CloH 0vt c ..... ,. While They LAST!! •ING Slfl CUSTOM QUllnD $8200 llOSPllADS . ... ..... . ,,--.. ........ . .-.1111 MAmUS sns ....... _ • ,JI i"1 IU\\.Slll MATIIUS sos t , • ..._ I r(,.~ $19995 OUUN-SIU 11\ATIHSS sos l. t • ._ ,, Ill > '""°'1 TWIN-SIU MATillS$ sos l•·' ,,,. .... p ""'> .... All Of OUt CUJTOM SUIPllS lty SIMMONS KAYE lllN ~ltlD DOWN CHlASTICALLY, ANO YOU WON'T IUllV( MOW LOW Wl NAVI -llt(O DOWN out MAnausu COMI IN ANO 111!1 -·-(HIST 110 ---· . ·-. -· $13800 : ... ··-.. 4: ... ~ ,. •. ••-.t ...... ... ........ _. MANY ONI Of A ICIND ITtl!llS so on HHI tAlll y AND MA.Kl "TOUll CHOICI Of THI COlOIS. ANAHllM • ruullTON u ....... ..,...,_.,u ...... -"'-WHTMJNSnlt • HUNflHOTON llACH UJel -- -.i1t ....... "° ........ ._,. -fft-Jtf1 OUNOI • TUSTIN ....... ,,,_ _ 2 __ .. c,.___, ~'6Jl • JUVENILE PRINTS • CALl'COS • MANY NOVEL TY DESIGNS \ 100% Cotton, 100% .Polyester and polyester blends. .· Machine Wash · Tumble Ory 44"/54" wide. REGULAR $1 .59 YARD to $3.98 YARD ¢ Knit · Coordinates 100% Textured FORTREL • P<;>lyester Beautiful "Stac.y" Knit Coordinates in all the newest colors. 2vos.$3 62"/64" wide. Machine Wash REGULAR $2.69 YARD Double Knits ••PONTE ROMA STITCH" FANCIES All new fall colors. Machine wash, 64" wide. 100% Textured Polyester Choose from a variety of calicos, diamonds. florals and others. Ideal for sports or dress wear. 100% Textured Polyester. "LINEN BOX STITCH" Spring colors only. Machine wash. 58"/60" wide. 100% Textured Polyester. Machine Wash · Tumble Dry · 60"/62" wide. REGULAR $3.98 YARD VALUES TO $2.98 YARD 2vos.$5 HOUSE OF FlB BRICS 1 ti 11 "Y-' f i ,-, t 1 1 u, ti i r \' _ / ll I , r h :" s...c...t ..... .................. ..._ Co. .. Mew-545-1516 Wot J ts:..._. ._ ...... Wn ........ HW171 ........... IJlll ____ " U0.1542 .... :cc.... ..... ..................... lt7-101l HoMt-Ptno · ,,.. ......... So..to Afta-50·555 t heMPnCetwttr BAND CONCERT FASHION ISLAND TONIGHT9 P.M. ~ \ l I •A6 D .;\IL PILOT EDITORI. L P .:\GE Juror's Role Dulled Rachael Perry is an attractive, intelligent, 26- year-old, well educated and motivated citizen or Orange County. As such, she offers high quallfica· Lions as a member of the new Grand Jury. Save one. She also is lbe girl friend of Supervisor Jtobert Battin. Miss Perry assured the Daily Pilot.when she was selected for jury duty that s he would avoid any con· flicts between her jury duty and her friendship with Battin-and certainly there is every reason to believe her sincerity. But now her fellow grand jurors have said she ~usl remoye her~elf ~rom any proceedings involving either Ballin or D1strict Attorney Cecil Hicks. Sin ce licks' office supplies investigators for the Gran,d ~ury and ~ince a large portion of any Grand Jury s mterest involves matters directly or ul- ~1mately in . the dom~ or the Board of Supervisors, it means Miss Perry s usefulness as a juror is great - ly reduced. . Without casting any doubt on her integrity or ability. Miss Perry should ha ve been screened out of the list or prospective jurors before the names were drawn. The decision on whether a replacement juror should be impanelled should be considered prompt- ly, before the jury gets deeply into its heavy work load. A Quiet Lifesaver County area. The grooves are ground in by mac hine after freeway installation on sections experiencing heavy accident rat.es because of vehicles slipping around m wet pavement. ·These strips cut into the pavement help prevent "planing" -a phenomenon that turns a smooth piece of concrete into a glass-like s urface when tires meet wet pavement .. Here's what that program bas accomplished -Accidents in slick~dangerous sections have dropped from 3,022 to 896 per year. -Fatalities were reduced from 22 to l . -Injuries went down from 926 to 234. -Wet pavement accidents were down from 15.9 per motor vehicle mile to 4.4. -:iA.e ~otaJ savings in accidents is reckoned at oearl~~~illion. Those nearly invisible ribbons beneath your tires have proved both life-savers and money-savers. Too Much Strike Power A s if the construction business didn't have enough problem$, now comes a bill (HR 5900) which. would permit a single union with a s ingle dispute with a single emplayer to close down an entire job5ite. flow about a kind word for a program that has !:>aved lives, prevented countless injuries and saved several million dollars in vehicle damage. All this came about because of something many motorists don't e ven notice-those tiny grooves on many sections of freeway in the Los Angeles-Orange Secondary boycott, you say-illegal because the law says a union can picket only its employer on a building site. The union can't alf ect the entire jobsite or other, uninvolved employers. Well , it wouldn't be illegal if HR 5900 becomes · law. . It's about the last thing this recession-ridden country needs right now and maybe you'd like to tell your congressman UlaL ~This is Secretary Butz calling. Guess wha t! We 've got another surprise package for you!' Sit Still - And Learn · About.Life ( CHARLES McCABE ) Blaise Pascal, the 17lh Century 'French m a the m atician and theologian, once said lhat 3.11 the trouble in the world was due to the fact that m an could not sit still in a room. Granted that this was said with all the bias of a scholarly and philosophi c •mind, it is a s tat e m ent worth ponder- i n g. The phrase "m an of action" has traditionally been th e achel b y -which th e eommon man would be known. In lhe world of .sports and business lhere is no quality more praised than "hus- ~." .. Activity is ma~c uline. lncreas· •ingly it is feminine. Doing, often 1 Poinlless doing, is wbat gets the a.Jaure!. Nobody ever got a gold ~watch for skill in meditation. ... -• YET. for anyone who has taken the trouble. just plain silting in a room can be the most rewarding •• of experiences. Cootempla\ioo Qdoes not come easily to western · man. It is one of the male de- " luaions that he can never stop · working , that if he did he would s~fer som e serious fracture or Jhis being. Likewise, it is a female !;delusion tha t life depends on gel· iag up lo tidy things up, and gel- lltiag up again to tidy things up. ~ The wise man through lhe ages as found a way, it has been said. • o convert passionate activity in-. ,o a s ilent and motionl ess ~ltasure. This man can sit in a ·room without feeling that be is osing himself. On the contrary. ·tis the one time when be seems to find himself. I AM TOLD that the Zen word for readying yourself for prayer js "sitting." This makes sense. 'Tbe Oriental position for prayer js to sit crosslegged in one of ,=several postures in the belief lhat this reducea the circulation of "'.bk>od in the Jess and increases it :tQ the brain, thus helping medila· -l'ion· :, If you think lotus pasitions and WJUCh are a bit on the freaky side. .,Ot.Js quite enousb to sit alone in a flid ark room Jong enough 1'> Jet • • Dear Gloomy Gus Now that we've had June weather -"morning over· cast burning off in mid· day ... " -through most o( July, what can we an· ticipale for Augus t? P.R.K. GlootT.y Gus ceinments •re Sul>rntllH Dy re..S..s .and do • .,. Mcuwrily retle<t 1~ ¥tewS of I~ Mw,...,..r. Send -pet ~evet•GloomyGvs. O.iily Piiot. things sink in . This sinking in is the essential part of the process. Just sitting alone makes all the things we have done in the last weeks or days or hours fall into some kind of true relation. It is a change, as a holiday is. It produces lhe same kind of spiritual regeneration. TIDS contemplative.spirit. this active surrender of the active side or oneself, enables us to enter a new world, a most valua- "ble one. It is the "other half" of being a human, and gives significance lo the active and equally necessary parts of our life. There is an increasing belief among psychologists that there should be one or l wo long breaks in e very person's life. These breaks would be a year or so, in which a person would t ake absolute leave of his "life's work.'' B esides a complete c hange of scene, lbese leaves would involve periods of con- templation, formal or informal, in which the person would wonder what the hell bis life was all about. TIDS TWNG of simply sitting still in a room is a shorter kind of break, but of considerable use. It is a wish to come to grips with life. ll is the knowledge that this c an only be done if we are willing to make the j ourney inside ourselves . It will be objected to that this is j ust another form o< laziness. Nothing could be further from the truth. Laziness is a form of fear, the fear that if we honestly try to live we may fail at it. Con- templation, or sitting down, is an adventure in rinding out the only thing that matters in life, our true nature. Whether just sitting down will bring all the brave blessings M . Pascal predicted I cannot say. I can say, from experience, that l have derived more real pleasure from contemplation, wbicb ii es· SMliaJly the contemplatioaol ac- ti vlty. than I have from llC!tivit.y jLWlf. Gun Colltrol May Hobble Crime La:w (JACK ANDERSON J WASHINGTON ·-President Ford called Re publican leaders behind closed White House doors the other day to discuss what to do about the soaring crime rate. The discussion quickly centered on gun control. "The g un control issue." warned Rep. Rob e rt Mic he l < R - ill.). "is the lightning rod which buzzes lhe voters .·' Vice Presi· dent Nelson Rocke fe lle r s u gges t e d that the issue should be separated from the main crime-control legislation. "Can 't gun control be in a separ ale bill?" he asked. "Yes." agreed Sen. Robert Stafford ( R· Vt.). "Unless separated, we 'll have trouble wilh both bills.'' "Isn't gun control a bit untime· ly?'' protested Rep. J a m es Quillen (R·Tenn .) "Jim," said the President firmly, •'the statistics of gun crimes are absolutely shocking. nus zeroes in on the area of greatest threat .·· "WHAT ABOUT creating federal statutes covering crimes with !irea rJ]'l s?" suggested House Republican leader John Rhodes. ·'Thal would only add to the federal case load,'' objected Rep. Edward Hutchinson CR-Mich.) "We don't ask for the registra- tion or the gun or the gun owner.'' explained the President. But he wanted to curb the sale or cheap •'Saturday night specials,·' which street cri m.inals carry. These handguns have become "a major factor ." said the Presi- dent. "in larger crime areas." "I 'm for banning Saturday night s pecials," agreed Sen . Roman Hruska <R-Neb. >. "but only providing we get the right. definition and limitations of the term, 'Saturday night special.· The size or the gun. ye.s, The price of the gun. no." THE REAL PROBLEM, he arumbled, was the failure or local Jaw enforcement. "There are a million illegally possessed aiuns in New York City," he said, ·•anct UMs mayor bas the nerve to blame the federal government. 'Jbtte ls a failure fA local en· f attemenl of lhe law on licensed dealers.'' The conCidential White House ID.l.Dutea show lbat President l'clrd a.IM favor5 compensating crime vicllms. "I've aHD the data from 12 stata which have it.·• he said. .. Jl hu not run wild. ll's under . control." WASHINGTON WHIU.: The Houe lniernaUooal RelaUon.s . Policy subcommittee ls putting to1etber b eari nas und~r dl.Alrman Lester Wolll (0.N.Y.), oe whether renewed U S. aiUltary ald toTurkeyebould de- pend on ap end to 1\utiab opium arcnMf· t Aid for Senior Citizens? Broad ID Card Planned Whal may be the forerunner of a citizen's identity card is quietly being planned by California gov- ernment. The plan is not in- tended to be that but merely re· cognition of the existing situation as it arrects senior citizens. Both s late and local govern- ments have. jn recent years, been granting speci a l con cessions to the· e lde r s. Among other thin gs th e stale gr a nts free fis hing privileges lo the seniors . This requires the issuance of an identity card. Local governments also have extended privileges for free or discount usage of publicly owned golf courses and public transportation. Each authority deals out its version of an identity card. THE RESULT is lhat, as these amenities grow, lhe aged are b ecoming burd e ned with a pocketful or s uch cards. It was only n atural then lhat the director of the slate agency which h as the greates t ex· perience in issuing ide ntity cards, the Department of Mot.or Vehicles which Ucenses some 13 ( EARL WATERS J million drivers. should be the first to think a bout si mplifying matters for the cldel's. Director Herm ao Sillias, the most "people related" director the department has yet had, has come up with the thought that perhaps bis department s hould issue official identity cards for senior citizens which would be' acceptable to any agency, state or local. As far as it goes it seems like~ happy thought. But, as Sillias dis.' covered, it probably will l ake some legislative authority. WHAT HE apparently has yet to learn is the aversion of many to the very idea of a citizen iden· lily card. They see in this ~me kind of a dictatorial plot to make the nation a pol•ce slate. In the face or the fact that almost everyone possesses a dlivers license, the production of which is constantly being a ske<l. especially by merchants, the citizen identity card is already a11 accomplis h ed fa c t. .F\lrthermore, anyone wishing to travel out of the country is re· quired to obtain a passport. Tb~ problem with both these documents is lhat neither is any sure identification. 111 applyin g for a passport one need merely µresent a bjrth certificate and a driver's license. A birth certifi cate can qasily be obtained by the s imple expedient of searching the cemetery for so· meone born in an approprialt' year . Birth documents arf sent upon mail application. AS FOR driver licenses. it is an admitted fact that lhey can be ob t ained without positi ve ide n· tification. One fills out an ap· plication in whatever name is de- sired. passes the driver test. and receives a license complete with his own p1clun• and physical description. The only way any identity card can ever truly be such is by re· quiring applicanllt lo submit to fingerprinting. Judging £rom the screams and hollers which greeted lhe affix· ing or the thumb print. and later the photograph, to the driver license, the d ay for a ccurate identity cards is still quite-dis· tanl. ' But Sillias' idea for the senior citizen card lo relieve lhem of the repetitive requirements for such cards, deserves consideration. Still, the lime will surely come, perhaps paved by the senior citizen card. when a majority will recognize that a true identity card is essential. Listen. Here, Airlines! And yet another m ajor airline is about lo spend millions on a promotiona l and advertis ing campaign, using a famous actor. redecorating its planes, serving an inte rn a- tional m enu • s howin g foreign films. and even ped- dling boutique items from abroad. None of this wm help, at least for very long. This is not what airline customers want. and for one-tenth the cost , this airline could do itself 10 times as much good by adopting the six· point Harris P lan: . I. TELL the truth al all limes: tf the plane probably isn't going to leave for an hour and a half don't announce a •· 15-minute de: lay" and prevent passengers 'You look foreign while I h old th• hat/' (SYDNEY HARRIS J from making alternate arrange- ments. 2. Cut out all the pretentious nonsense, and offer the lowest possible fare with the minimum of frills: cut out the serving or booze, so that the stewardesses have lime to take c are or legitimate needs. 3. Get rid of the mockery of such departure and arrival times as 5:17, or 2:32, and print a re- alistic schedule geared to the nearest quarter-hour. This fi c- tion or minute punctuality was borrowed from old railroad timetables. and has no meaning in air travel. except lo frustrate a nd irritate the passenger naive e nough to believe io It. 4. Abolis h those VIP lounges, or allow .all passengers to use them : and then utilize them for delayed fights, providinf free phone servlce for pusencen who need to call tbe:lr cMstin.aUon ·cities to let people comm. to meet them know lbat they will be .Jate. 5. LET YOUR empi.oyea know what ll 1otns on , 88 .-ell as your passengers ; improved com- munh:ation lines can do more for good wlU than a hundred roreign moviet or a vat or llat domestic cbampaane. 6. Advert.I.I~ acnuio ~eltts ot scheduUng, service and conve· nlence. not the atewarde.ues' I.alls, the rabric Of the SHLs, tho thickness of lhe ste!ak, the color of the airplane, or the cheeriness ot the atmosphere. All we wanl to do is gel there and back prompt- ly. safely, and with a minimum or fou l-up. IT'S AMAZING HOW little lhe airlines have learned (or put into practice) a b out the flying public 's genuine needs a nd wants; and how litUe lhe com- plaints expressed at airports everywhere have been translal· ed into practical reforms. Promotion and advertising are h elpful only when they are backed up by performance; and lhe best performance any airline can make is improving its candid communications with its customers, and aborting its flights of fancy. Why does it take l~e board of directors years to fmd ou~ what a bright stewardess learns ID one week?" . ORANGE COA$T DAILY PILOT ROOM N. Wttd. Ptiblithn 'l'hnl"fl01 KttvU, E<JU.or #Jorboro Krribklt. EdltOrlol Pag~ E>dttor The cdltortnl pa,e of the? Oally Pilot seeks lo fnrorm and stimulate r~aders by presenlini oo th.lll POl(e di verse t'On"lmrnt.ary on topics or Jntf'l"f'~l by $)"1\dical· .oo C'Ol~mnatl.$ aod cartoon®. by pro' 1ding a forum.. for reader!!' ''1t•w6 a11d by prc-"cnting th1:c n4'1" sp1per·~ oph1lon!\ and ldC'as on <'urrcml topic~ 1'he l'<lllorial op nlon. .. ot th• 1>1.utr PHot op~ar onl In the L'dtlorial t'Olumn nl th(' \ P o1 t he J><•~e. Opinions ex P~'it.-d b lhe cotumnlstJI nnd rurtoonilll• nnd lf'ller ""rll<'rs are lbelr own und no ndon1emmt ol lhelr \•a wa by the OAiJ)' Pilot should ti(' lnfrr""d. Monday, July 21 , ms Monday, Jufy ~t. 1975 DAILY PILOT A 7 • rQ_U_EE_N_IE ____ ---.;B~y..:.P,;.:,hi:.:.,;l ,.:.:.;:"~'.e:.:.:rl.=an,:d:;..i c O Jn pany Sci-Ji Broadcast Assailed Armstrong Lawsuit Rejected . . · .... : . . . . .. ... . . . ... ... . . ·:.:. . ···.,,. .· ...• • .. ~·· : ... ..... . . .. . .. ·:· .·. : . . .. ... . .. . "Actually, nav1gal1ng by the stars is fairly simple, if you know how .·· L. M . Boyd Trade d Wife For Horse In an extensive study conducted by lhe John fl . Pierce Foundation it was learned among other things that one in every 25 wives goes lo the kitchen every morning lo put on her stockings out of the sight oC her husband. One in every 50 does likewise lo put on her bra. And one in every 100 does that, too, to put on her scanl1es. WALTF:R GLADDISll of Lakefield, England, was 81 years old when he bid good- bye lo his 76-year-old wife. She yipped and yapped at him too much about his drinking, he s aid. He bought an elderly mare named Nobby and moved into the stable with her . The hay was conforla· ble enough. "The thing <1bout Nobby," said Mr. Gladdish, "is she doesn 't snort!. she wakes me up wilh a simple nudge, and when we go for walks, you just don't hear anything o ut of her excep t h e r hooves gom~ dop clop clop.·· TORY GOES that a St. Louis policeman wrote in a r e port. "The accident victim had his foot decapitated." And after much con· sultation among tht• seruor officers, the police department bought 180 dictionaries to pass out among the p:.1trolmen. QUERIES•FROM CLIENTS Q. "You s aid George Washington refused lo shake hands with anybody during his two terms as president of the United Slates. Oidn 't that insult a lot of dignitaries?" A No, he bowed. instt'ad. Q. "WH EN a light is turned on, how much sooner does a per son without eyeglasses see it than a person with glasses'?" A. One 286 billionths of a second sooner . Q. "MY NAME is Debbie. I'm 17. My bust measureme nt is 31 inches. Is that normal ?·' A. Average is 30.1 inches. GARLIC If you rub c rushed garlic between your palms with s ufficient vigor. you'll wind up with the odor of garlic on your breath. Address mall to L.M. lk>yd, P.O. Box 1S60, Costa Mesa. CA 92626. Copyrigh11975L.M. Boyd. Cu ts Out Che inical WASHINGTON (UPI) -Three weeks after Ralph Nad e r 's re- searrhers claimed a chemical used in some ins t a nt d ecaffe inated co rr ee ca u sed a "frighteninaly high" in- cidence of cancer in tesl animals, Gener al Foods has stopped using it. A company spokesman s aid the firm .has no plans t o rec al l or otherwise retrieve exist- 1 n g inventories of "Sanka" and "Brim" - the products affected by the c hange from grocery s tore sh elves or at the consumer level. He said the firm remains confident they are safe. DR. SIDNEY Wolfe, I.ii rector of the Nader g roup, di s a g ree d, ho'wever, saying the situation is a "classic ex· ample., of the need for a massive repurc hase on the part of the company to get back the coffee products m ade under the old process. Gen e r a l Food s C hairman Jam es L . Ferguson revealed the change lo stock holders at the firm 's a nnual meeting last week. He said Sank a and Brim are ''completely safe.. To duplicate the impact of Na ti o n al Cance r Institute studies which raised the question, he said, a person would have lo drink 50 million cups of decaffeinated coffee every day for an entire.lifetime. "\V F. R EAL I ZE , however , that in inci- dents like this the r e is no way we could easily and quickly ex plain th e facts," he added . "In this case. the confusion is compounded by the complexity of a s ituation in which there arc vi!St differences between the l e vels of T C E (th e che mical involved ) in the animal s tudies and the minute residues in our products. "Because of that and out of our desire l<> minimize that confusion. we have proceeded to convert our dccaffeina· tion process entirely to methylene chloride, the solvent nol involved in the NCI study ." he said. WASHINGTON (U PI) -H. C. Wells' "War of' lbc Worlds" can still scare a few folks. So m any in fact, tbe Federal Communications Commission has reprimanded a Providence, R.I. station that broad· cast an updated version last Halloween eve. The FCC, responding to complaints, reprimanded WPRO for not adequately assuring listeners the progra m was not ror real.. THE BROADCAST WAS AIRED at 11 p.m. on Halloween eve, 1974. And although it followed Wells' script -which itself prompted panic In New Ex-Ford Exec Sues Company DETROIT (AP> -A retired Ford Motor Com- pany executive who says he drank his way up the corporate ladder to head the firm's Swiss opera- tions has filed a $1.3 million suit against the auto maker, accusing it o( turning him into an alcoholic. The suit filed in Wayne County Ci rcuit Court by J ohn R . Brennan, 56, daims that alcoholism drove him into early re· liremenl. ll says "an ~ndl ess s uccession of lon g lun che s and diplomatic social func· tions" necessary for his corpor ate rise left him addicted lo liquor. BRENNAN. ONCE board chairman and managing director of Ford in Switzerland, said his drinking problem was a "direct result" of his job and increased as he w as promoted during his 26 years with Ford. He s aid he sought aid from two Ford vice pre· sidents in a. m idnight convl'rsation over a bot- 1.l'e or scotch in a Zurich hotel bar -but was asked to sign a letter of resignation. "I SIGNED TH E let- ter. I don·t know what Ute alternative was but imagin ed that it w as public disgrace and t e rmination without benefits. At no time was I oHered help of any kind," be said. It says Ford broke oral and written con· tracts on continuation of his e mployment by fail- ing to help him overcome the drinking problem. Brennan once earned $60,000 a year with Ford. ll was not disclosed spent and drank all of my financial reserves," he said in ao affidavit. During his early days at Ford's Was hington, O.C.. office, Brenna n said he attended many social gatherings where he was "complimented on my ability to consume· liquor in large q ua ntities day after day and con· tinue to function normal· ly in business '· Schiel< announces NEW Weight Control Center If the following sounds likr you. please call the Schick Weight Cont1ol Center. r J lt11 M19ht FAST on pill\ '.J lost wtttht FAST on 1h111 l Lon M•tht FAST '" w11er diet loll wt19ht FASl on hypnom G11n1d w.itht back EVERY TI ME FASl WEIGHl LOSS IS AlMOSl AlWAVSA OISAl'POINTING FAil URE btClllKt you still have lht umt trlVtflf fer the Wlllf 10041 that made VOii tutwtttlll tn tht f,,11 pltct Sd11ck hn 111 •-• •••• 1 ptotf•m mat 1hwlopt4 evt et the wmt $6, .. ,MO. rtwttch that lt4 It lltt 11 .. "' Sduck St•• S111okm1 P19111m T r.ly 41t1trt11t! CALL NOW 55a.8404 ff SS Tow" & Co1'"try OraltCJ~ Jersey a nd New York when cured m 1938 the WPRO vers ion had Martians invading Jamestown, R.1 . According to the FCC, the show violated a 1966 commission prohibition against 'scare' announce· ments or headlines which either arc untrue or are worded in s uch a way Wi to mislead and frighte n tht: public. WPRO substituted local names and places, the FCC said, and had "sudden a nnouncements <le· livered in the tone of excitement" that "a meteorite has Callen in J am es town and killed several people,·· and that .. black-eyed, V·shaped mouthed, glis ten- ing creatures dripping saliva have come out of the capsule." THE FCC SAID THE THREE warnings broad cast during the progr am the rir~t 45 mmutt>S into the show -were not adequate because "radio uu· diences are constantly changing.·· "The only way to assure adequately that thl public would not be alarmed in this case would be an introductory statement repeakd at frequent in· tervals throughout the program," the t'CC report said. The governor, State Police a nd local law en· forcement agencies in Rhode Is land. Massachusetts and Connecticut had been informed, according to Capital Cities Communications, Inc .. which operates WPRO. . BUT THE FCC RULEDTllAT wasn't enough. "Based on the number of compla ints r e· ceived," the report said , "many persons wer e mis· led and genuinely fri ghtened by the program and the measures Capital Cities took to inform the public of the broadcast do not appear to have bt>en errective ... DALLAS <AP! A ('lvil rights s uit me~ aga1 n :,t evangelist Garner Ted Armstrong a nd the World Wide Church of God has beefl dismissed by a federal judge who s aid the plain: tiff could not prove memr lx'rship in a class "tradi,- l1onally protected by federal c ivil rights legislation · · The plaint1rr. Vernon Eu gt• n c S m 1 th . s u t~d Armstrong, the church. lkrbt:'rt W. Arms trong. Inc .. and six defe ndantl) fur $850,000 in d amages. Smith claimed the de ... fendants conspired C(> deprive him of rights U. privacy, to a normal family environment. tio good health, and to see'k financial stability. : Smith alleged the de· f e ndants induced hi:> '>'ife o f 25 years lg divorce him a nd liv with minis ters of lH World Wide Church of c;od. Smith claimed the Int' id e n t ,. a u s e d d if· ficullll'S in his hus incs:-. .Only 10 Mor¢. Days to Bank Smarter! Open an account in July. and you'll never pay a ..... service charge on your ! ' Charter Account. Our Charter Account cus tomers en.iur free checkinJ,!-this ml'an~A· no !'>enice t•harges and no minimum ha lance required -for the life of u,e ;1ccount..Any person a l acrnunt opcnl'd in .July au tomatically hecom~· a Charter A ccount.. And Ch'arlH ,\t·t·ount t'U!'>tom ers a ls o s ave with·~ • Free Traveler's Checks • Free .Kolary ::-lervice • Free Money O r d ers • f 1'l'l' .\t:cuunL Tram.fer:-; • Free Cashicr's Cheek:-; • Free Ba nk-By-L\Iail ~ Wl··,·e cxti.-nd ed rrt·e l'l1l't:king lhrouJ,!h J ul.r lo save .roll ,monl'.r, so 01>cn .rour C harter Act'ount now_ BUT ll lJ ltHY, OUR FREE C HEC J~l:\G OFFER EXPIHESJLLY :H~ I SANKA AN D Brim whether he r eceived any SOUTH COAST NATIONAL B A N K we r e the only decaf. retirement benefits or 8-19 S unflower S{rect. Costa :\lcsa. at thl' l'Ol'nl'I' of Sunflower and lk <1'1' fcinated products using pension from Ford. , Trichlorethylene. B renn an sa id th at . _____________ . _______________ ;;_1_0_.:-_>:'_10_0 ........ , .. .. THE MIRACLE WE'VE ALL BEEM W AITIMG FOR ••• A WEllHI PROIRAM~ A few d ays after Wolfe after resigning from the lod ged the ctta r ges, auto firm. he lost his Gene r a l 1'~oods sent a $70.000 '·dream house" "Dear Doctor" letter to and quit l-h r ee s ubse· the nation ·s physicians, quent jobs for fear or be· citing "possibly mislead-ing fired . He said he ing reports" and saying stopped drinking in ·a it trusted its coffee pro-17·day alcoho lic treat· ducts still merited the ment program in April confidence of all physi-1972. ~,......_...._,_,....._,......_...._,_,.....,,.........,.....,_,......,,.........,.....,_.. ... cians. "I. •. completely lost, THAT WORKS WITHOUT • PILLS •SHOTS • RIGI D DI E TS~· •WRAPS• EXERCISE • HIGH COSTS OR NONSENSE!!! :;~ I' • 24%to32% as ites Double Belted Po/yglas Tires for Compact, Standard & Big Cars Sale Ends Sat. Nigl1t s A78·13 Size Fits Vegas, Pintos, Colts, Gremlins, Falcons, Toyotas and Other Compacts i Custom Po..er Cushioo Polyglas 'I hi' 1~ Anwrkn'1 luri:r•I ~"lllni; 111" lr11 lols of good 11-.1511111 H1·~1l11·nl pol~··~lt·r 1.uril body for smoorh- ti.llng comforl. Trr~d ltrn11n11 l1lwq1l ... s b~llJ for rood- hold1ni: lrJtllon. A u~r 11rov1•d lr•·.u11l1•s1i:n that rcalh 1l11livera on m1lcoac. Th11 ls 11 lire fc•tured on man\ n( the llJ7'1 model CJI'$, $1lU llZ'H SllU DR 78 1 14 IR 71 x 13 HI 71 x 14 POL TSTlll. sta•An Sla•AID IADtAL W /S IAINAL U. ..... .. ... S36!! S36!! SG!! FIAMK WOOD rn IRc. 144Jl IMWllW M (~Jlt~ SWO'tl IL TOIO U1-1"t ...... 1111' 110 ...... ., ......... a..., 4t4-f716 --------------------------------------. ------------------------.. - FREE LECTURE .~;· Ill I • TUESDAY, JULY 22 7:30 P.M. ti ~ II 0 •• I AUltOOM .,,, HOLIDAY IMM-CO STA MHA fl' IRISTOL AND SAM DIEGO FllwY. 1 _ COME TO A FREE LECTURE 0 AND GET READY TO BE A THIN PERSON THE REST OF 1 r.· YOUR LIFE. COME ANO HEAR ABOUT THE FAKE. FADS ANO FALLACIES THAT HELP KEEP US OVERWEIGHT. JOIN THE QUESTION AND ANSWER ,., PERIOD. , 1 ,.,. • • • . ' . ·----I ..._ ..-s.pt.14, 1'6t Hen I -wMi -r-Dlillt.• ... ·--- J-. JS. I t70 Here'a _, ....... ....,.,. ,.,,..... ................. ..J 71 ....... ........ .................... 101 .................. IF I CAii DO IT ANYBODY CAN My name la MIKE TURIN. The picture I am 1howlng 11 Of myaell Jutl 8 years -oo at 255 pound•. In 11 ~ months I lost 120 pound• •tter carrying the overweight for 35 years. I wH on hundred• of gimmick diets: I spent my Ille up and down Ille• a yo yo, Finally 1 realtzed tMre ~•I be a better, a per- manent way, and there 11, without 1hots, plll1. rigid or top· aided diet•. exefelM . h'Vfl oolta or non .. nM. I hive developed a p11n tailored to )'Our tamlly and your laates. with all the looda you like to Ml No forced ffledlngs ot ll1h or fiver or enythlng elae you don't llke. My POUNDS OFF PERMANENTl.Y program wtlt eneb .. you to loose weight and keop It off PERMANENTLY, without a feeling ol dietary restrtctton It II • sale and well-PROVED PRO- GRAM. It's a MIRACLE aftet" spending years on diet alter diet •lier diet I d1aoovered there ls no reason to be overwtHgt\1, nol even by 10 pounds. Thete 11 no reason 10 give up the IOOd• you llq. There 11 no reason to baltle wtth WelQht. 1 ttave eaten more hol ludQ• ltlndaes in Ille last 5 years than ell tt\e rest ol my Ille comblMd WOUUMM IT • lllCI 11 l fT DOn TO DI .... & IAT U. lYUYOllt nu •• IOT AIL 8UIL TI , .. ., lllOT ... WllUT). ' WOULDN'T IT BE A MIRACLE not to light With thal lut 10 lbt. No m•rter ii you are 20. 50. 100 lbs. ove1weloht. • MCOBJJIMIO IY .. tCAl DOCTMI • fl09 WO... POI .,_.. -lat PAMIJIS 'I .48 DAil Y PILOT Mond.y, July 2t, 1975 r Persistence Pays Off for Bruce Dern TV DAILY LOG Mondoy Evening JULY 21 uooo r• 101 e>mm""' (3 0 '17 3 ?.116,ICJt(tl>lkws O ft 1 l•na11Za ownd wn11 wm m 'fttll Acfu m 111'41 Sqnd ED Lts l'o11*ts {!) llpune l.11flla1t htCf•lllS 1:)0 Gt Men ltrilf1• Show 9:00 f) (111 (3) ct) M111d1 (R) Whtt\ Ml) N•ura111c~-•oo's bttn 1c11nr ~lranitely -ttlls the Flndlays lh•t :,h1··, '" '°"° ud pl,ns lo mA111, MtlllJt pt1ni 1 $urp111• bridal \how. u. but lht1t·, an '"'" btRgtf Sul· pris• '" stoie 101 tverYonc (6J Tit• Untouc••blu 0 (29 II ){3lQ) S.W.A.T. "Blind Ry 808 THOMAS LOS ANGELES <AP) .:__ Alfred Hatc h cock: ''Who would ever have thought that you'd be my PUT A NIW IXPll .. CI IH YOUR LIN-SH CHAIJ.TON NHTON & ALLITAAC4ST S.. H ritiMf leading m an , much less A leading m ~n ! ·· Bruce Dern : "Well, Hitch, it just pro ves that if you hang in there long enough, you can Oake it." \ Just as 1972 was the year of Gene Hackman, Robert Redford m ade it in 1973, and Ja c k Nic holson was I974's winner , 1975 is shaping up as the time of Bru<:e Dern. EE M1•i. TtrUI 06t Tht ln•Mtn 1t1an·1 Bt11U" (~>Aller bfmr crui.td EVIDc-NCE •. Dem 1·s b1 ' b1111e1. Hondo tr1•' to convtl ic. Tht" N<"wport LIDO Bt"ach rn £1tWIC Co111~nf •~• tfll'<'' uf 1~e wound, but Mn starring this sum mer in 6 73-8350 {!) Roe~) ' Food~ l11a11v must be """'d ol his com. ''Smile." United Artists' r.1 '"d wlltn he ~uffer) from d11t1ntss ~~~~!!!!!!i!!!!!!!iiiiiiii!!i!!!!!i!!~!!!!!Lf':======~=::....:..:.:...==-: ' JO 19 Merv '"""' Siio• Gt T"-t '''' and blurted \IS•On. frank AJetler I @ Tiit BoM O"ts '"''" ~~-·"". Ill 3 I SpJ ED Muy A11•d«ldo ED r11 Chi Ch'•u ('9 a ) Oultt's CMitt m Tr1nl fllt1 ':JO O r'f 3 '•'Rhoda (Ill 'tth,n ZM ... Wllll! Hcxla O•M:Oms ~ has bttn 'vi _,_,ti ,. "SUPER SESSION'' CD '•lloPllll 1tevr1Mt al little Ratals rni a doc101 w11nou1 rtlhne her. -l\IU. -~a "''·I'll sa ECP\OSIYI SUIRMG ,.,, b'i'"' 10 "011V bul nul IS Ill. & SUH. 12·2:t0 & mulh as .,.hen she hnds Cl~l wh'I UTOH IOMH • ne1 WHO HOT KAT&OAIDS ~.nd of doctor he 1s. IT HAL JIPSON 7:oll Q 0 0 ~ 00 m CD""" (l ltUSJ4t 0 •1ein · Pl.Us---· ro r11111 ru turt I ."WET & WILD" I 0 lewlinc '°' Doll&B (6 Mod Squad E!) Yese1111 • (a l lrvtb or Collsequt11ec.s O Whirs Mr ll11c? ~ .............. 10:00 0 '11 '3 t.ltdlul ttnttt "the In 511.t v1)1ble wire·· (R) A lamed pol111c1an s CONPUn SHOW'-1:41 a t:o fD I l•tt Lucy Q) l ht Fii Q) LI Mujer Proh1bid• ~the 1111 Va11'7 wile enler\ Medical Cen1tr uMer an a)~umed name and ask' Or. Gannon not to into1m her husband of her wh~reabouls 0 m Ei) News ED Interface ( 6 ' Perry Muon (,. 'a 1) 8eun11 ED Orama {!) lhrtt Stoocn 7:10 O $25,000 l'y11m1d 0 P'Oh« Surrton O lov1 AlltrlCilft Style O <.x> a )1l 1CD C11lbe "Patri o•, · (kl All tr a ran~ ol ler101t\IS bomb rne fl S. naval ba~c M rnc C~1tbbtan 1;land ol Vtelo1ta, the fmDe fo1ce mo,,~ '" to !lac• do"" ~n1 apprehend lhe revoluhonar.cs "'''"''e fl.ans. Edward Binns l/111s I .pher Caiy ano Patrd. Macnee O Rainbow Sulldae Stamtnts in. elude "Some Very Special lambs," a loo~ at lambs Pel Park 1n lib trt'f\111le. Ill . a •eri special l11m b~use I~ ~ounp i>eoOlt who "°'~I there a1e mentally relardtd; and p• '~'· 8 lattn PJ&:ile @ G'I Smart (26 Creen Acres ID Kup's Show MCajun Joe.key;· a look ill lht B11ou,10.30 1 Fil country llat r1«s · L 111 • (11 :r1H 3 lt Tell tilt T11lh 0 Cot1111UfttlJ Fttdback 0 Mrlhon S Mow1e: tC) (1hr) @News "Blood & Sand~ (011) ., I -lyront 76t •the~ H1ltlicoc\ I r•m, fi111 Hayworth, l111da Dul ED Yttttl 1iu .. p.n1me "'"'' 10 Len Mitt A Oul 11:00 0 (}) 0 eD E?HD Nnrs W Hogan's Heroes 0 a ·fo ~ r6 t News Ill I 6 Wild World ol An1ma:s 0 Best of Groucho ED Mora t 6 Set. 811ko m Jimmy Dun Show 0 Tht luq Show Q) Bulf furiflo's Stu m Room (D Minion; lmpossjbfe {!) lJUle Rascals @ Moel Squad 117 3 Peter Gunn ?6 fht llnlouch1bles (!) lht Thin Edee 1:00 O 11 1~ (a l Guns111oh "The Gon• 1 of Cibola Blanca·· Conti (II) Mat I ~hat 011ton. F esrus and Newly posf a; gun running oullaW\ 1n order 101 I 29 (a ) Winted: Dud or Arivt f•on en!rv inlo lhe destrl lortrts.s "'"'-'' Ooc and Lyla Rcu are bt•n& 11.30 D J1} Ci) CBS ute Mowie: (C) htld prt)Ontr by 1 bind ol fo1me1I • )olnclt1sl1u ·· C<fr1) '/J -I.in· Cc>nledt11te ollic:,rs 1u1ned·c~111ws I Mithatl V111cent. Bonnie Bedtl1a. Q ~ 16• 'lo(!;) NIC Mu di , flerschel Bernardi. "''ht lueball O•kland A"s ~ I 0 ll r6) JO m Joh111f Carson Baltimore OrlOlts. Of M•lwau~ee Jr.py Bishop is guesl host. Cleo l<ine Brewers vs. Chouro While ~o.i.. I and John Dankworth guESt. O lilovlc: (C) (211r) •ar lMt '•s· 0 The H011ry1100nm ~ssed"' (dra) ·61 -hna l urne• I f 6 Mn i c Mlnltn1itioNI Sett!~ 1 lrem Z1mbahsl Ir~ .bson Robards. 1 m:n!'" coral '38 -Ge0<te ~ndcrs. Ceoige Hal!llhon. .Jr.~n Carradine ( 6 Wild W-tfd West 0 (19 a , (31 W-Hle Worftf M,s· 0 (~ r• )(i i CD Th h oll ts ,.,, •'lht !:creaming S~ull .. (R) • NogMmm.. (R) Jill is abdudl'O 0 Movie: "The Slnp" (min) '51 - from lhe ~enr of in awdenl byl M1dey Rooney. Sally fonest, Vic a mt nl1I hosi>ttal esupee JM™n& u t.amo~. Mon1G1 lew1~. a dodor (dward Albtrt guests as' the d1sturbtd lutollve. 12:00 O lwilicht Zone Gt Ou lrr's thoiw Gt °'•11ri m Monda' Thru Friday @ Get Smart Eil Soccrr froe1 Meaico Cttw ...... : (C) (Zhr) "Tilt Blc '•"'· 12:JO 0 Nfl'D bk" \d1a) '61 -Stephen Boyd, l ;OO O 10 Tomono• r ranc.t Nuye11, Ray M1ll1nd. ED c:nmEI Claren<t Darrow Hen 0 (3 i (i' I'll I ~ Hm ry Fonda p0r1m1 the lamrd lawyer 1:45 O Movie: ••tove Me Tender" Imus) rn lhos one min raur de lo1ce. as he' '5ti -[lv1s Presley Debra Pagel re1ds lrom Oarrow·s lnal s111e Richard [gan. Jame~ Orul). · ''"nls. w1t!1nps and l•lte~. re<1lls h1~ nrfy hfr. hos mm.age, and h1s1 J:JO O Movif: (C) "Tht Old Dart 1,~hl> toi rnc unoerdog throuch the Hon e" lsu!>(J) '63 -Tom PostO!I. lt~al sYl!em. I Ro~ll Morley, Janette Scolt. Tuesday DAYTIME MOVIES 10:000 1hfy Who Om" fdra) '!>4- 011\. Bo~11dt Alum lam11oll o~ (C) .. ~ 1-" (mus) ')7 - P•t Boone, Shirley Jonts. ) 00 I~ '11re End of Ille AH1i,.. (dra) ';) -Van Jo/lnson, Oel>ouh Keu. tll 6 (C) "Mr!J, lbry" (com) '63 -Ofbb1e Reynolds. Barry N•lson. l.JO J ' "H•rst fut11m• (com) 'J2 -r61 "Thef l:ot Me ~· (cnrnl lhe Mara Brothe~ '4J -!lob Ho!>f. Lotothy Lamour O (C) "Tht Ap~loou" (wt\) •61 12.00 m "ll1s Gu1 fnd•J" I :nm) '40 1 Marlon Brando. An1anette Comer, Co1rv f,ranl R""' 111d Ru "'II f.•l~h J .. hn ~a1on. llell•m• l.ent I 0tkha11 I 4 00 O (C) "Night Gallery" (m~l .,) 1:00 0 ''Jet AftKI" llf•a) '.R fohr Joan Crawford, Barry Sullrvan, Asar. 4udr~y fnll•i, C.re~"'Y Wakoll Roddy Mtl>oY<all KOCE Television (50) MONO'IY J·oo v...,. w111t ~o.n,.. ri;ocu Yoq.t l•l•cour~. l • El« Irie Comp•ny (( T W) •·oo ~wme \trttt 1CTw 1 S • Mister AO<J9r\ N•l<tltbOmoocl S.• VIII• All-.re tPBSI •.• Pttrll<•I Ge09••P"Y 'Woo•llW'r Pr~1<1ton •ndMOdll1t,.1ton"' ,.JO Hht••Y ol Ar i ••Roman Arch1t«>c1ur~·, 1 00 Y09<t Wttll ~dellne (KOCEl YO<)a l#lf(Our>e 7.JO FO(Ul: Or•nt• Ceuntr (C) O'OC( I 1,00 WorlCI Prn l 601 <P BS) I )0 Nov• CPB~l '"TM Flr$1 Signs of W•s""4; • ' JO Tiie w., It Wal (PBS) ••s..owns1 R•ms NFL Ch,.mpiOMNp" wear THE MANEATER s.._ .... _. ~~ m. ... c:.-t t416'-C.... ...... e. Solid 14" GoW fw M"'ww-~.....,,l.OL I Not 'llJ?tJ"'"''d 1 ' w yd off ~ ottoclo: b.n 11 m•• 1tol fn'l•n hm fnerdly. >..·..; $125 ~.---,.,,, I/~),.. ... .__ ..... __ THI AllT wo•H IH-St. $95 ~ .. -,,, .. ON..,_._ I l , ... ,. ''MaYthe•luenoses leave It lay. for the plemure of those whose fasfe It•• Jlldrtll Cri,t, NEW YORK MAGAZINE 709 L ..... IL•67J..404' OPEN DAILY AT MOON ..,,& SAT. ® No one Wlldtr 18 lllOlll& WUDI. -· ~IU IDHCAINA 1'IOfj °' "111 "°"° 111 llGIMO Of Hlll HOUSE lltO) r::1m'" Kua~ aPu' ' ~.· A great place for kids. In the DAILY PILOT MESA 1884 Newport Cotta MeM 5d.1 552 OMlFOR ALL .•• AMD AU FOR FUM PC COi.Oii Unrred A"11s1s rmi•"'4"'* ~-!.~!; . ., ~. COllOllA OIL MAit PETER SB.LEIS trGI '4MAMUP1r -swam&4s·nu Open D•llr. n :JO Menlttni Frt l•t:OOPM·Sl.15 THE CITY SHOPPING CENTRE ORANGE •532·6721 ~CITY CENTRE CINEMAS S.A . FRWY (MANCHESTER EX.) 0 .G. FRWY tCtTY DR. EX.I caus tic look a t beauty pageants , and costarring with Kirk Do uglas in ''Posse," a Par a mount western. He has begun his role aa Hitchcock's lead actor in "Deceit" at Universal and immediate ly afterward stars in "Won Ton Ton, The Dog Who Sav e d Warn e r Brothe r s ," a wacky comedy. For years it seemed that Bruce Dern was destined for a cureer of pl a yin g s niv e lin g cowards and sadis tic killers. What changed all that ? "THE GREAT Gatsby." announced the actor , who can a nalyze his car eer better than anyone else. "I'm sure that was the strongest smgle influence, even though the picture did nothing for anyone else. ·•'Gats b y' had a stra nge his tory . The critic al response was so : .. overwhelmingly b ad that g1vt> me a chunre to tx> it took the public tour sel'n cleaned up, wcann~ months to c.•atch on that it nice clothes and playing was worth seeing. It a n E s tabli s h ment ended up m a king $60 character. Su ddcn ly million. producers Sl'e me 111 a .. r did n . l thi nk differentlight. Now 1 <lon·t think it':-; nl'<'l'SSary. I think 1l can h a p p t' n w h t.' n l h t• audicnt•t• :-it.irt::. to say. ·H c.•y, t h1 :i ~uy 1:-. arriv111g.' "Well. I'm n •ady. Till! formula was s1mp1t·· all 1l took was 100 television shows. 19 years and JO films.'' 'Gats by' w o uld d o "For a long t1ml' anything for m e. thought the only way I was going to make it wus "AFrER ALL, J had with a breakaway hit. the fourth or fifth most -------------------- important role. But it did ---·,•:31111!101111!1,llll!I_ M~.·0•, '.!'!ST~A~R~Rl~o'1'm.• i'c•~~~ -Nero Plays Valentino LOS ANGELES (AP) -European actor Fran- co Nero will portray the silent screen's great lov- er Rudolph Valentino in ''Valentino," a two-hour television movie that will air in the coming season on ABC. Nero is best known to American audie nces for llilllliii... .. ... WAIHM IUm -u.a __ _ '"THI u.n NT 41,• SAODLEllACK PLAZA ....... v.o-o•t I U(lit•hP •• 1 \U O • "'THI ,.,ouca Of SIMUD• -''DOCTOR ZHIVAGO'' WlNHU Of 6 &C4DlMY AWUOS FOUNTAIN VALLEY• FOUNTA .. VALLEY• ••IO·•-••'• 1.-.,11 .... •N 11Q0 •~u• U\.J:H "CIHlltU UA• t.-00-.•-.•HTAltO-.C.U .,. I'°° AU-TIME GREATI till i THE ClASSIC ~ i; DOCTOR 7.111\~GO GENERAL CINEMA CORPORATION his performance a s Sir ·---------------------- Lancelot in the film version of "Camelot.'' The terrifying motion picture from lhe lerrif ying No. I best seller. aws -· IOY SUW ... D 5CWIU DmlRISS ~ J:;~ ~:::-.. '-;;,." -;r:Ji :::\..~1 ··· '!',.-~(\' ~·,1;:1i'r. ··~··:l --· ..... _ .. ~,. ··~:: ... ··" "\ :C~· .:·:·:\·.:' ·.:·\~l ·:f~S:V\::i::'ll; =t·~·.,,;\J.l-:::.;:·.;\: I .. -.=~.~ .. ·\: .. ·· -~=~: 6•4-0760 TllU•·'IU·MON·TUES 7: ... :• WED-UT-SUN 1:4M: IJ.7: ... :Jt.MI DNIOMT IARIRA STREISAND JAMES CA.AH "FUMMY LADY" "GI -ntE FOlTUHF' "'STEPFOlt.D WIVESM Ill "TOMMY" "EARTHQUAKE" "JUGGERNAUT" lPGJ 97 .. YOT.lGE OF SHAD• ""WISTWOlLD .. IPGI -oHCE IS HOT EHOUGW Ill "'EtGH S.lHCTION" UU FASHION ISLAND NEWPORT CENTER 644-<1790 . "The fa1me ... a t..ce al a rwe order" fttWm!J!~JRn PLUS "THE STEPFORO WIVES" HUMTIMGTOH fl'G) (! ... £·~~. SUH COfNIY (PG) CANDICI IUGIN. NUT Sl1'.CE l.OIESTCJlY_ .. _..,,.. Oftlle"'* Pantllll'~.&.' •••'""'""N ~ C~HIT AT CJNEMA T "MIXED COMPANY" \ t Cl~~~.~.~~.nR , I .. u. •not ctwrtt \: 97'·4141 t UISTOl CIMEMA tlf\tO\at•uc•"""ltlt' \0 (00 1 CM'fN S40.H•4 £ CIMB44 WEST Wft:Tlef\111 & f Ml\ltllfWlSf Wlff._ ClillfTM H2·44U t •STOL CIMEMA WllOl&f-.C41T ... MlCO.lfC&tftf 540-7444 Cao.9608 u1.&017. CIM&C4 WIST ""'•'-'•• •• tol .. .,,111 "'ti-Ctlfftl IU44t • • kill HIM, CMARLI' 1NtOWH! l MAVEN'T GOT A EWSPAPER! "1 c KILL M!M:? STEP ON HIM! HOW CAN I 00 ANVTHING!! k:ILL l-llM1 .-11 tUM llJ1M f-...___, ,--( •IHPAllR. ~ . AND KElT J 642·4321 FOR HOME DELI Y • • • ' ' .. , I I J "" L., ______________________ --!' ____________________________ __.~ • 4 J 8 OAIL Y PILOT .. UPI Telephoto Pn-lert Fonn . Rene Hausman, wife of Milwaukee Brewers pitcher Tom Hausman, displays nif. t y form in delivering a single during Sunday's game with Chicago wives. The latter won, 4 -3. Figueroa To Battle Cleveland CLEVELAND (AP) ·- Cleveland Indians manager Frank Robinson was so dis· mayed with the Tribe's dropping a doubleheader Saturday he de· c1ded lo find himseU a new cen- tcrfie lder Sunday. He moved rookie Rick Man- njng into centerfield and veteran George Hendrick to right and the Angel• Slate ' 7SP ""· ' 7Sp m. • 2So m. JQdians defeated the ·califomia Angels 10-4 to break a four.game losmg streak. The Indians and Angels finish their four-game series tonight Fritz Peterson. 4-7, is scheduled to start for the Indians against Ed Figueroa, 8-5. .. I've been thinking about do- in~ this for a long time." ·Robinson said. ''and the losses on. Saturday made up my mind." Robinson said that it was not done because IIendrit'k wasn ·t p&.aying well. "George says he's a natural righlfielder and that he'd prefer that position anyway.'· Robinson said. Manning said that he didn't know about tbe change until h(' saw the lineup and "it made me feel great." Manning collected three hils. including bis second home run, along with John Lowenstein and Oscar Gamble, leading the In- dians' 15-hit barrage. CALIP'ORNIA • ., , "bl """"a , 1 o o WMIOtOtl Jb 0 I 0 0 RlwrH f • I 2 l OOIMClh 4 I 2 3 SUnton rf • o 7 o (Nilklb , 0 0 0 ""'°" 2lt 1 0 0 0 llt'MJll> 3 0 0 0 61. Rodf'IQwr< • 0 0 0 0.1•1 It • 0 0 0 -..1evss 3 o o o yngep 0000 ~lerp 0 0 0 0 •e•UP • 0 0 0 0 JI 4 • ' Cl.EVE LANO • ., , "bl L~ni.l••n II S O 3 O Kuiper 2b S I O O M.lnn1fl9 cl s 2 2 I Hendn<.k rf 7 0 I 1 59<knd 1 I 2 0 Orlylb 4 117 G.ambl~ dt\ A ) 3 I B Belllb ' 2 7 4 Ast.by c l Ci t 1 Crost>y i\ • O O O Hoodo 00011 J Brown o 0 I) 0 0 Tot.al• 11 l() 0 II) 100 000 010 • 02• JOI ()Ch 10 I,.. H It Cit 18 SO ._... (L,l JI 11 • 6 ~ ~ 1 o ~!«i' 411 I ) S I 7 ~ t I 0 0 t 0 t1eod (W,). SI a • • .l • 7 ,J, 8r_, I 0 0 0 0 0 WP ...... 9'W 2. T-2;1'.A-10,401. Monday.Juty21 .197S Martin's Fate on .Line Tuesday DALLAS (AP> -Billy Martin lost and then regained his job as manager or the Texas Rangers while his American League club and the Boston Red Sox were splitting a twinight doublehl!ader Sunday, according to a reP<>rt in lbe Dallas Times Herald. Quoting a source identilied on- ly as one close to the situation, the afternoon newspaper said to- day that al one point during the evening Rangers majority owner Brad Corbell -at the urging of several minority stockholders - decided to relieve the fiery Martin of his duties as field boss. After a series of talks with some of the other Rangers owners, Corbett told reporters that Martin's future with the club could be resolved at a big board meeting Tuesday. He confirmed there was opposition to the Texas manager within the organiza· ti on. ·'All phases of the operation will be covered at that time, .. Palm£r Wim Open Hard Work Pays For U.S. Champ NORTHFIELD. N.J. (AP) Sandra Palmer has placed her name alongside th05e or such famed women golfers as Babe Didrickson Zaharias. Mickey Wright. Pally Berg and Betsy Rawls as a winner of the U.S. Women's Open. But the tiny blonde from Texas says frankly : "I've never felt I was really in that class." The 34-year-old veteran count- ed five bogeys with five birdies for an even-par final round 72 Sunday and a 72-hole toled of 295, ~even-over-par on the Atlantic City Country Club course . She coasted home with a four- stroke edge over 18-year-old amateur Nancy Lopez and pros JoAnne Carner and Sandra Post. Palmer took the lead for good on the ninth hole, but insisted, "I was fighting for my life out there. When you gel a lead, you start feeling protective.'' The 5-foot-1 1h blonde from Fort Worth earned $8,044 to boost her season's earnings to nearly $65,000, tops on the tour. . Palmer, who shot 78 in the first round but followed with 74-71-72, attributes her success to hard ~ork. ''I was not a good player when J came on the t our. ln fact. 1 was terrible. It just s hows what hap- pens when your're conscientious and you work real hard," said the former college homecoming queen. Lopez three-putted the 18th green for a bogey and a 75 to lose sole possession of second place. The powerful Carner also finished with a 75, while Canada's Post tiad a76. Lopez's finish ·was the best for an amateur since Catherine Lacoste won in 1967. She insisted she was not nervous on the 18th green, but admitted, ··1 really wanted to birdie it pretty bad." · Her parents, Domingo and Marina Lopez, flew out from Rosewell, N.M., to cheer her on the final round, and she said, "l could hear my father back in the crowd." Fliwl n hole Morn In the 30t/I annual U.S. Women's Open 9011 c.,.mplonship Suncs.ty at the •.1t.S-yard, 1M1r n. At I antic Clly Country Club: s.tndra Palmer, St.<>'• 78-7'-·11·71-'l'IS ~ndra Post, M,044 14·1l·16-1&-299 JoAnM CarMr, s,.1,044 7J.J1.H-7S-2'19 A-Nancy Lopez 73·1'·77·7S-299 ~it' McAllhlfr, $2.444 79-IS-1'"12 .JOO SanOr• Haynie, U,244 7•·11·74·76-301 Kathy Whllworlh, S2,0« /tr16-1!t-1S-J01 ~bbl• Austtn, st,944 11r1trn·19-JIOJ S.lly Lltllt, \l,7H 8Q.7C).7J.81-l04 Judy Riinkln, Sl,/'4 n.J1.J9-16-l04 JocelyM 8ouras~•. $1,744 77-76-74-76 l04 Gerda Boykin. Sl,•'M J&.n.7S-74-JOS ~naAstroloc:ies. $1,494 81·73-7'-n JOS uur• B~u.1911, Sl,319 76-7•·76-IO-JOb Jane Blatock. Sl,Jt9 7>16-8CHS-JO& 01-P•lleri.on. SI, 19' 75-74-7'-1'-307 Pal Bradley. Sl.19• 1&-11·18·14 'JIJ1 Donna Op0nl Young, SI, 19' 81·7•77·7S-)07 AmyAlcotl. Sl.019 7>7&-7•·83-308 Mary louCrooer, St,Ol'i 7'1-7&-73-80-308 Beth Stone, \t,019 76·7>17-80-308 UPI Te ........ JUBILANT SANDRA PALMER AND HER TROPHY. Golf Tourney Results SUTTON, Ma-. -Final ~Ot"H tf>d moneY- '"'""''"9 S""Cldy in the '200,000 Plffwnt Valleor QOll CIA\\•c on t~ 7, 119.yud, ""' 71 Pleawnt ll•lley Country Club cour\e: R09"r Matt1>1t, M0,000 MJic McL .. n0on. sn.eoo 8'>n Crtnsr.aw. \9,75.0 M •ller Ba.tier \9,1)1' 8uO Alhn, \9.7SO J•m \•mon\. \'I.ISO GeorQI' ocnuchon, \&,no lf!e Trl'v•no. S., ISO Geo•QI' JOllMon, s.i 600 LM! El~r, M • .00 Rocl CIKI, M,600 tiale lrw1n. M.l>OO Al Ge1~rger. M,600 Oluck (.our lney. SJ, 400 C..ry McCord, SJ,'«! ~t~w Melnylt., SJ. •OO Mark Haves, n,&00 7H H17..._276 ~10..,.._2,, 69 .-.11.10-211 ., ,.,....._,,. 10..1.n .. ,-2,. 6'-10-1US-111 •9-6'>-n·1~ 280 1~1•·10-1'0 •9-6'-n·n -291 ... ,.]J.73-111 &1>-ll-11·1l-2t1 llHl-7>-10-211 1CH1·70-10-:181 fil.1t·70-7l-71t 10-1' ...... -281 11.1Ho.+'>-m .,. , ,.n .11-m Jim Masser lo, $2,600 &uu Crarnolon. $2,600 Aft Wall, 12,600 Pewr Oosterhu1s, $7 ,600 Lyftl.Olt,$1,667 L.-rry Net_,, '1.•'7 Ma-ltudolpll, $1,6'7 MikeHlll,Sl.6'7 O.nnv e crwards, '1,667 Gf'leo'.JonM ... ,667 o. w Stockton,"·"' TauSlll Murelteml, $1,66' Ul'Wl'f Wadlllns, $1, 114 Dew Eki.etberoer. ~.11• Ed 0ou9Nr'ly, '1, 114 Fr-llleercl, $1,'14 Bob steftton, $1, l 14 eoo Nl"'Pl'I•. " 114 Mlu~-.s(.114 Jim Wle<llers, $1,'" OM Sll1u, $1, It 4 ~rd TllOl'npiOn, SI, 114 73-70-4'-71-78J 7>6'1-6'1-70-283 •'-11·14-69-183 7().7'"71-61-283 74-7().7().70-7114 70-71·1'·6'-2" ,~,. .. , , ... 69-7J.7HI 2114 1Q..68.60.11 lM n-11-70-71 2a.c 10.. .. n.n ,... n.1~1ue~21o1 n .. 1.1;>.1.l-m 10-10-1J.n ns n.11.n.1~21S 1J..1~11-1C>--11S 1~1t.14-10-71S 1u1.1•11-ns 11-1u,.n-1as 71-11-7HI-2'S 11·11·1J.6'1-?IS .,.,..,...._1&S Corbett said of the board meet- ing, "and I think it would be ac- curate to HY that a decision will be made regarding Billy's future. At another point the majority owner, who is expected to make the final decision, :;aid, "We have not been winning the way we think we should, and we are go- ing to do whatever it takes lo try lo remedy the situation." One of the latest problems con· ceming Martin and the front of- fice arose last week. when the I Texas skipper sought to acquire catcher Tom Egan, who was re- leued by the California Angels. Rangers backup catcher Bill Fahey is oo the disabled list with a broken band. General Manager Dan O'Brien opposed the Egan move, and Corbett stepped in Saturday to decide the issue in O'Brien's favor. There were reports that Martin flew into a rage and engaged in a turbulent session with Corbett after the game that rughi. "It got pretty sticky," Cor~U. said, ''but I had another meeUng with Billy this Sunday aftemooo and he had cooled down con· sider ably." , On being informed or Corbett s statements a rt e r th_e doubleheader ended, Martin said, "This is all news to me. As a matter of fact, the last big meet~ ing I had with them they told me they were going to extend my contract two more years." . '( 'I > t UPITt ........ PETER SCHNUG (WITH ARM IN AIR) LEADS THE U.S. ON F.AST BREAK AGAINST SPAIN. Rookie Was Thinking Horne Run LOS ANGELES (AP> -John Hale, a 21-year -o ld rookie out- fielder for the Los Angeles Dodgers, admitted he was think- ing home run in the 12th inning of the gam e with the Chicago Cubs. "It's the first time I've ever gone to the plate actually looking for a pitch to bit out," Hale said.of his two-run homer that broke a 3-J tie Sunday and sent the Dodgers to a 5-3 victory. The Dodgers will tr;y to sweep the brief series tonight when An· Dodgers Slate Allpmeso11 KABC (7'°) July 21 Chic,a90 at Los Angeles JutynSt. Louisa! LosAnoeles July23SI. Louts at Los Angeles 7·1Sp.m. 7.Up.m. I 7Sp.m. dy Messersmith, 12·7, makes is fifth try for his 13th victory, op- posing Chicago's Rick Reuschel, 6-10. "I got the pitch I was looking fot' -a breaking pitch out over the plate -took a good cut and out it went." T h e victory enabled Los Angeles to clip one game off Cin- cinnati's still-impressive ll'h· gam e lead in the National League West. It's the first time since July J the Dodgers have gained ground on the Reds. Bill Buckner. injured most of the season, had his biggest day with three singles, a double, two runs balled in and two stolen bases and afterward he said: "I'd have to say that we've bot· tomed out. We have played the worst baseball we could possibly play. It's got to go up from here." The Dodgers missed many scoring chances. FinaJJy, in the 12th inning, Buckner got to first on a two-out infield single. Then Hale nailed loser Tom Dettore. ' atlCAGO Kusll'l9fr ss CMOtfta I ti Mecltocklb Je. Morales rt Mondeycl Tllof'nton 1 b Trlllo7b SwllMrc Summersph Mltterw•kl< BonfWlmp know!np Oettorep ell r II Ill S I I 0 • 0 l 0 S I 2 2 '0 0 I '0 0 0 4 0 2 0 4 0 1 0 3 0 0 0 I 0 0 0 I 0 0 0 4 I 1 0 0000 I 0 0 0 LOS ANGELES nrllbf L~:ltl 6 I 1 0 Buckner ti " 1 4 2 Hat.cf S t I 2 Gerwy1b 4 I 2 O w. Ct•wforcl t1 4 0 0 0 M.Molepfl 1 0 0 0 Lacy?!> 0 0 0 0 C.'f:Jb • 0 0 0 RuuellU S 0 t I Ye~rc 5 O O 0 HoCHonp 3 I I 0 l.Mph 0000 PiH:lorek Pf" O o o o ~nl\allp 0 0 0 0 Wynnph I 0 0 0 Totals •2 J a l Totals 42 s 11 s CN<.a90 002 000 010 DC»-3 l.0$A1'1QelU 001 110 000 007-5 .. __ .. __ IP H It l'.lt la $0 ............ • • l 3 4 • Knowt.s '' t 0 0 O O Ditton (L. l ·l) 11 , 2 2 7 o 1 Hooton • 7 3 3 2 s ~rslwlll IW, 6-lt 3 1 O O I 1 w P-Bonlwlm. T ~: 11. A--cuoo .. Star Suspended Aschrless Yanks Tied by Spaniards CALI, Colombia (AP) -The tied the score al four with onl)' United States, weakened by the five seconds left in the game. He suspension of its captain and best said there were no hard feelings player, Peter Asch, tied Spain 4-4 between him and Dulgushin. Sunday in Group C water polo Peter Cu lino, coach of the Unit· competition atthe World Aquatic ed States squad, a ll from Championships. California, said, the tie with the. In other games, lhtly 6, Soviets "proves that we are the Canada 4; Yugoslavia 7, Cuba 4; ecwaI to, if not superior to, the Hungary 11, Australia 5; Russia Russians. lt proved we're in the 13. Iran 2; West Germany 4, top class of the world in water Bulgaria 3; Holland 5, Mexico 2; pqlo." The Russians are the Romania 14, Colombia 5. Olympic champions. Asch and Alexandr Dulgushin . Without Asch on Sunday, Spain of the Soviet Union were banned t.ied the eame for good in the from the two remaining pre-fourth quarter on Juan Jane's liminary rounds after a brawl at fourth goal. the end of the US-Us.5R game Saturday night which wound up • Jon Svendsen scored two in a 4-4 lie. goals for the Americans and Jim The International Water Polo Kruse (ex-UCI> and Peter Snugg Committee, after a hearing, im-scored one goal each. posed the two-game suspension. The top teams from each group Asch apologized to the commit-move into the semifinals. At this tee late Saturday night for his point, Spain has four points the part in the fight, which occurred United States two, the ~viet moments after the Soviet had Union one and Iran none. Spo1:9ts in Brief OdJs Favor Rams; Title to Russian RENO -The Pittsbur gh Steelers and the Los Angeles Rams are favored to meet in next year's Super Bowl, according to odds posted by the Reno Turf Club. The defending world champion Steelers have been installed as 8-5 favorites to win the American Conference title, while the Rams are a 9-5 pick to win the National· Conference. Minnesota, 15-2, a picked second in the National Con- ference, while Oakland, 12-S, was picked as the American Con- ference runnerup. So~t First CALI, Col ombia -Irina Kalinina of the Soviet Unioo·won the first gold medal of the World Aquatics C hampionships Sun· day, winning the women's spr· ingboar d diving with 489.81 points. ·was stricken late Saturday. Four-lime USAC stock car champion Butch Hartman drove his Dodge to victory in the stock car race before running out of gas after taking the checkered flag. Terry Ryan1s Chevroletwas second, 23.8 seconds behind with Bobb~ ~llison third in a Mat'ador. Officials found it hard to believe Hartman was able to run more than the last half of the race without a fuel stop, while others gassed up at least three limes. Hutman said be coasted acro,,s the finish line out or fuel. C'o•••• Ponpone Armed Soldiers Guard Athletes Teammate Tatiana Volynkina was second with 473.37 points, and American CbrisUne Loock took the bronze medal with 466.52 points. NEW YORK -Pele"s injured left thigh has forced postpone- ment or a New York Cosmos ex- hibltlon tonight in St. Louis and hu left up in the air the Brazilian super s t ar's s tatus for the Cosmos' North American Soccer League game against San Jose here Wednesday night. Prof. Julio Mazzei, P ele's ad· visor and trainer, said millionaire Cosmo suffered a pulled muscle and a bad bniise 0( the upper left thigh when be was tripped from behind early in the second halt of a game at Toronto CALI, CoJombia <AP> -'Ibis lq!Orts-experienced city is taking no chances, deploying a heavy number of soJdiers and policemen to protect some 700 1wimmers and their delegates. When the sports people of 39 <'ountries began competition. the ~~"turtty measures 1ntensified, from a veiled protection ol the d ays o! practicing. From Saturday on it was oo ve grttn and khaki d•ys. Tbia country bu been under a . st.ate ol liege tor some wee.ks. To some of the competit«s tbe di.splay or men in unilarm has been a shock, for otben it was something hardly not.icing and still others probably have seen some relief that • 'notl\lne will happen here." Jorge Herrera, chairman of the second World Aquatic Cham· pionshlps, said Sunday that the di.splay is a measure of precau- tion. "Many will say there arc too ·many soldieu. Bul what if AOmethin1 happens .•. on the other hand," he add@d, "lf a tow number is displayed, and something happens. people wlll say we should have known bet- ter.'' The idea of another Munich here ls remote, but until last month student groups bad rioted and lbe swimming organizaUon had to rush to get accommoda· llona for the visitors when the s tudents refused to leave the dormltoriH durln1 the summer vacaUoo period. The dele,alloos bacl &o be housed lD botell and a Mmlnary. 1be bulea carry at least one aold l.cr or policeman -the 1 soldiers dreued in khaki and the policemen in olive-green fatigues and white helmet and spats. The only incidenl so far was Friday night at the inaugural ceremonies when a aroup of penona began heckling but were drowned out by the m<M"e than SO.OOC1 people gathered for the event. Or1anlsln1 committee chart.rm an Herrera says he is ex· t.reqiely happy with the way thine• are aoioe and hopes that the event will not see any inci- ~tl. ' F09t l'friorto ... BROOKLYN, Mich. -A.J. Foyt swept past Tom Sneva on the 81tb lap Sunday and sped to a 3&h-second victory In the In· dianapollt-type halt of tbe $100,000 twln 200-mlle race •t Michigan lnt&rnatlonal Speedway. Foyt dropped out ol t.he U.S. Auto Club atMk car race, the second ball of the double..beader, after cballen1lni for the Ind throu1b 50 tape. tfoyt taeD rushed off to Houaton to visit hi.I crlUcal-.lY W dau&hter, Terry 1'Ylm, who Pele remained in the game which the Toronto Metros woo: Spaf" Q..atte. BARCELONA, Spain -~am moved into the final of the Euro- pean Zone A Davis Cup tennis series Sunday, edgi.q Romania 3-2 at the Royal Barcelona Ten· nlsClub. Romania's No. 1 player, Ilie Nutue. beat Manuel OrantCJ Spain's top plsyer, 6-2, r :. 6 4'. Tennis Roundup Tanner Def eats Australian Fae CHICAGO -John Alexander was l·Cor-2 in the SSO;OOO Interna-tJ~al protessiooal tennis cbam- p1-hip. losing the singles tlUe to top.seeded Roscoe Tanner but sharing the victory in a doubles match later the same day. Alexander teamed with Cellow Australian Phil Dent to defeat Mike Cahill and John Whitlinger of the United States for the doubles title Sunday 6-3, 6-4. Alexander had a harder time against Tanner in singles. Tan- ner won 6-1, 6· 7. 7-6. Vilas Vf«!tor HILVERSUM . The 'Netherlands -Guillermo Vilas or Argentina won the Dutch ()pen tennis c-hampionship Sunaay with a 6-4, 6-7, 6-2, 6-3 victory over Yugoslavian longshot Zel · jko Franulovic. Chlle Sweeps SANTIAGO, Chile Chile's Jaime Fillol beat South Africa's Bernie Mitton, 2·6, 6·2, 3-6, 6-1, 7-5 and Patricio Cornejo defeated South Africa's Ray Moore, 6·3, 6-4, 4-6, 6·3 Sunday to complete a 5-0 series sweep in the American ~one final of the Davis Cup tennis competition. Chile Saturday had won the zone final and the right to meet either Sweden or Spain, which are competing in the European series "A" section of the Cup competition. · Seds-an 1t1ns PHILADELPHIA -Frank Sedgman of Aµstralia upset top- seeded · Torben' Ulrich of Den- mark. 6-4, 6-1, to win the $21300 top prize in the singles fmm of the Grand Masters tennis touma, ment. The com oeUtion here which ended Sunday was limited to Win- ners of major tennis t.oumam~nts who are at least 45 years old. Io the doubles final1 Pancho . Segura and Newport Beach's Hugh Stewart defeated Sedgman and Vic Seixas. 7-S. 6-4. Czechs Breeze quallfted for the European Zone Group B final. ,;rbe Clecb8, who had fell).e iAto the final day with an unbeatable 309 lead, split Uie last two singles matches. Hungary's Balasa Torozcy beat Jiri Hrebec e~. 6-J, 6·.2 Cor Czechoslovakia's only lou, then J an Kodes ran out the aeriea by beating Hungary's Szabolcs Baranyi S.6, 4-6, 3·6, 7·5, M. StDedett Ohldlla MOSCOW -Bjorn Borg de- feated Anataly Volkovl-6,6-1, 6-0 Sunday. giving Sweden an un- beatable 3·1 lead over tbe Soviet Union in European Zooe A Davis • Cup semifinal tennis competi- tion. The remaining singles match between Alex Metreveli of the Soviet Union and Birger An- dersson will not affect Sweden 's qualification for a berth in the European Zone A final series. WTTRendts S.11 Dl ... 16., So-21 Women -R•ld 181 beat Hunt ISDI 7·S, Young. Hunt <SDI bNtTurnbllll·S.te ..... ns 18) M . Men -v. AmrltraJ <SDI beat Hewitt tBI 6-0; A. AmrltreJ.V. Al\irltral (SOI beat R. Reid-tMwtlt (81 ~. Miked -Steven$·Drake 18 1 beat Cuypen..A. AmrltraJ (SDI 6-2. A·l,02'ijll Bolton. Nlw Yartl tt PMeftla Z2 W--W..S. INYI ~at Dwr CPI W ; Klnt- S<l\allau (NYI beat Durr-Oenwner·Shaw (Pl 7·S. """n -Rodie (Pl bHI Ma.,.r (NY) 74; Mollt--Mr(ar (NYI beat Roelle-Austin (P) M. Mixed -Stolle·Wadt (NY) beat Au1tin-l<envnar-~w (pi..z. A~.~-t St . Louis. Ml~IONJ/IEJO .·, . EARNS 4 SPOTS ' Mission Viejo's American Legion base ball team has three players and a c9ach among the American ~ague All·stars who will "el a sh 'With the National League AU-s ta rs Aug. 17 at Anaheim Stadium .. fofielders Tony Richardson and David Cooper, pitcher Monty White and coach Joe Richardson are members of the American League squad. Graluun's Career On ruse j Oklabom a City's Marvin Graham bu shaken h1I unknown status 1n remarkably short order in the field of drag racing as quali(yine for the ninth annual• Prof eaaional Dr agster Associa- UQO championships gets under way Friday at Orange County In· t.ematiottal Raceway. Graham, ln 10th position for qua.U.rying at last year's MIRA U.S. National in Indianapolis, &t~ed the field with succe3stve· clo'ckings or 6.19, 6.18, ~l.08, 6.18 and6.17seeonds to gailllhecham. viooship. Later at the Springnatlonals, it was Graham again posting im- pressive times of 6.21, 6.23, 6.30, 6.13 and G.19 in the finals against Sbirley "Cha Cha" Muldowney. Since then the Oklahoma City veteran bas, among other vic- tories, picked up the American Hot Rod Association's Wmterna- tionals title in Arizo~. He'll be making his•flrst ap- pearance in Southern Caufonua Friday and Saturday. Joining Orabam in the top fuel category will be Muldowney, OCIR track r ecord holder (5 .95 seconds) Rick Ramsey, James Warren. Jeb Allen, Stan Shiroma and Don Ewald. Competition will also be of- fered in AA /Funny Cars with Jim Terry, Jake Johnston, J ohn Lombardo, Jim Dunn, Roger Garten and Mike Halloran in the field. Pro Stocks and Pro Comp are also featured, in addition to Wild Bill Shrewsberry and Richard Schoedet-and their wheelstan- ders exhibitions. . Leading Pro Stock drivers are Brad Yuill, Gary Dodd, Lee Hunter, Sonny Bryant, Kevin Rotty and Gene McKinney. Brad Anderson. Don Enriquez, Frank Harri s and John Shoemaker are among the Pro Comp hopefuls. Qualifying for the $60,000 event begins at 5 p.m . Friday with all ladies admitted free. Additional qualifying is set for Saturday morning from 9 until 5 p.m. with the finals sc 6. PRAGUE -Czechoslovakia beat Hungary 4-1 Sunday in a Davis Cup tennis series and Area Nines Beaten In Summer ·Loops Fish Report ~ SANTA MONICA 129 anglers: IS SM>d bats, 61 rocJ< coo, ~2 calico bass. 4 white seo1 bass, 2 bar· r.cuo.. t tialibut . Barge 144 anql~s; lSO B A -s· al.k fN(l\ttel,7S rO<k Cod,3calico ooss,6hallbul. LONG E CH IX w $and MALIBU -111 a~lers: 9Hallc.o bass. I halibut, five errors 1prO\'ed t00 costly for 1 Wl'llte M!a bass, 250 rock cod. IMPERIAL uAc;H -79 ~1tts: 1 bonilo,161 the Hawaiian Gardens baseball u lico ba\S, 74 barracud11, 4 Ung coa. 7 white sea team Sunday afternooo in Connie ban. f'ARAOISE COVE . 173 angler\' 6 halll:M, t9 Mack league action at Blair u llco bass. S40 roe k cod. Fi ld D~NA WHARF -3S1 a nglen : 875wncl bats, S e . berTac.uda, ' bOnlto, s haill>Oll, as r<Xk COd, 819 Host Mary Star took advantage mackerel, 11 a lbacore. ~N PEDRO 1s""11s111,..1 -m a11111ers: 2 of Hawaiian Gardens mistakes barr.KUOll, 73 mackerel, 706 c•Uco bass. 314 sea . bass, I yeilo.,1a11, S8' rock COd, • hellbut. U2nll St. and rolled lO 3 7 ·3 WlD. ulldlngl .-1!4 a norers; I barracuaa. 371 calico baSS, 3hallbul, 20s.and baSs;SOmackerel. Hawaiian Gardens scored a PORT HUENEME -IJ9 anoiers: 304 calico run in the first inning 00 V'"'Ce bau, 220 1>1ue bess, 1 w1111e sea bas.s, &9 roci. cod, s · " u• llr19co0. 4 halibut. Bienek 's rbi single which drove in MARINA DEL REY ·-41 anglers;l>ISrockcOd. Tim Funke, WhO had led 0ffwith a ~VILA BA y (PO,, San LUii Sf>oftliJllintl -eo. MIQlen : 3711no cod, 1,200 rock uxl. ' single. VENTURA -70anglers: 78calicobas.s, 818 bhX! bass, 3 llng cod. Th . "to eel t . e el SAN D I EGO -1, u o •no1ers: 1.213 e v1s1 rs scor WlC mor albacore, 360 c•llco bass. 103 t>wra<uela, WI rock in tbe fifth inning. Jack .Upton U d,13wttltesea bass,Jv••lowtall,mack•rel. drove i'n R1'ck H1"bS-....I with a NEWPORT (Ari's Landlfll) -1'3 anolers: 622 u.1. u carlco oass, 6 t>onilo. 804 mack"'"'· 3oM rock cod, 2s single and Ed Vignaroli'smacked blue bass. ! white sea bass. (Dawy's Lodt.,) - 20 attg1ers: J 1>arracude, 2 1>on1to, m calico bass, a double to scon! Upton. 20rock cod, I haltbut, l,020macr.tt•I. H .. G d ns' i 1111> . LONG BEACH lSoortflslllng) ··Ill anglers: 730 8W8lt8n ar e S -V tn calico bass, 2 barracuda, t l>ailb<JI, 120 ~nd bass, league action. ~~~~ CB~ACH -748 angl.,rs: s'° rO<k cod, 270 In Metro League baseball ac-mac~erel, 1.18S sand bass, 14 calico bau , 2 wnlle sea bau, 1 halibut. ear,. -IA'langlers: 18 t:ionlto, lion, the Golden West College Rustlers' bat\ing star, driving in three runs in the opener and two in the nightcap. Funke, lb Alverson, rf Htllberd. SS Bienek, cf Upton, lb HawaliaaGMdtM (l) ab r II 1'i Vignaroll, c 4 t 1 o Mansollno, 2b I 0 1 0 Kut<ackl, rl 1 I I 0 Van Tlghem, II • O 2 1 Paine,p 4 I t 1 Totals S<t'tt • ., lflfli"9S 3 0 1 I ) 0 0 0 J 0 0 0 I 0 0 0 3 0 0 0 28 J 7 3 Ha.-.flan Garde'ns Mary Star r h • 100 0'10 0-3 1 s 101 221 lC· 1 6 I t..e-.ss Houle, cf Richards, 1b Selwood,el> .Joflnson, ( Chapman Goldell West Ltone.ss Houle, of Richards, dt\ Se1-.eb ~.c Nerrwlh, cl FIRSTGAM.E Galdetl Wnl 10 ... , "Ill 3 0 I 0 Nemetll,rf .c 3 t 0 GYlnn, 11 2000 Tolby,2b .C01l Ro-.p .c O O O Totals S<ot• bY I llninp 000 S(JO 002 010 S.ECONOGAME CO.kleft West 14) ab r h bl 3 1 I 0 R~,lb 4 1 l o GYirw1, 21> 4 1 1 O LangWIJle, rf 4 0 I 2 Tolby,'1 J 0 I 2 Bo<i,p 3 O O o Totals ... ab r ll Ill 2 0 1 0 2 0 2 0 3 0 0 0 3 t I 0 21 ". 3 ' II e 0-S 6 I 1-4 8 3 *brll Ill 3 0 0 0 3 t 2 0 2 0 0 0 t 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 30" '4 ,. \<\nO bas~ •• hlllibul, 110 macke<el. Ru tiers d ped a doubleh d REDONDO -3'5 anglers: I bluefln tuna, 1 S fOp ea er r II J black ~"" bass. I Whtie ~a l>aU, 618 call<O bas\, 7 to Chapman, 5.4 and 8-4. Golcten Wu l 220 000 0-4 9 3 S<ort by l11ninrp tlallbut, l,42S blue b.us .. 9.,940 -459 ""!llers: 7SS M •. k e s e I w 0 0 d was t h·e CNoman 400 011 )I • 6 0 mackerel, 3.972 ro<k::~'.:.:o::'.d.:.... ----------=:..:.~:__.::...::..:...:.:...:....:~__;,;_::;.:..._:_::...::........ _______________ --: 4x4 SALE 72 LAMDCIUISlll SOFTTOP w-~l>S.etc. i337FVYI 72 LAMOCIUISR W9000 3 sc>e9d. wtrn hubs, air cond. (4MHGBI '4199 74 1Hn. SCOUT AlltO . ve, alt oond.. oower 11_,no • tltal<l MI s4999 "74 LAMDCIUISH -dtQI). 4 •Pff<I, -II hlllla. r.slG. llMtet.~~FO) s4999 • '11 YOLYO 1 '41 4 DIL O.ino Aulo1ntt1c. air ~onc:t . ~ atM<llllJ, l\M1' M al•to. ~ nmt 1)014 Baseball Standings AMERICAN LEAGUE East Division W L Pct. GB Boston 54 38 .587 New York 48 44 .522 6 Milwaukee 47 46 .505 71h Baltimore 45 4S .500 8 Detroit 42 49 .462 111.'2 Cleveland 41 50 .451 121h West l>lvlslon Oakland 58 34 .630 . - Kansas City 47 45 .511 11 Chicago 4sJs .495 12'12 Texas 44 1 .463 !Slh A.agels 43 53 .448 17 Minnesota 40 53 .430 1811.z . 141(9Ny'sG<tmes Ollcago9-10,Mll ... OllH2·S Dtlroll 7, l<allM•Clty ~ onrancs s, Balllmor• J ci.wland 10, Call!Ornla • ~York 1'·S, Mlllfleso\• J"4 TIMI IO<t, ._._ W C.llfomla (l'I~~ (lt.llcll ~~' Kant.as City (UOftarct S.Sl It O.troll (Lollcll 10.7) • Oelt141nd IHoltrman tW) at...,.._.. (Tonai 10.S) MU--.. <Slaton M) at ~ ~It.I\ 2-4) • HeWYNtl COoi.-t .. t>•MI,...,._~ 7-4) S..... m11111 IM> tit T••• Uenll ... 1t-t0) .. NATIONAL LEAGUE East Division W L Pct. GB Pittsburgh 58 3.5 .624 Philadelphia 53 40 r570 5 New York 46 43 .517 10 St. Louis 45. 46 .495 12 Chicago 43 51 · .457 lS'h Montreal 38 50 .432 17~ West DivlslGa Cincinnati 62 32 .660 Dodgers 51 44 .537 11 ~ San Francisco 44 49 .473 171h San Diego 43 52 .453 191h Atlanta 41 S2 .441 2<Ph Houston 33 63 .344 30 S11"4Jay's c;.,,_ Ptlll'"91tpfll• t 1, Cine Inna ti 4 Naw Yoril 10, HCIV'rton t l..OSAngtlUS,Clllcaool, 171nnl~ All.nta S.S. Montrul .... 21\d game II llWlll'(IS 5a'I Francli.ce t·I, PIUSDUrgtl 1·7 fit, Louil >-10, S.n Ole~ f.2, bt oemt 11 lnnlnos TM8l1oa"'" ' C111<lnnell tO.rey •· I al Ptllladtljll\18 <S<~ ).I) Ati.nt11 (EHterty1-4) et Montreat CWM1hell4'11 HOllSton (Fondl S-7) at New Yo11t (S...,. M) St. Louis Aa$tnU$Mn 0-01 81 SM Ol990 (Strom WI ChlUge tA•uschel .... , •t Lo• A11981H CMe•tlfll(tlt lt-1) AttlOur'lfl (c..no.tarla •·O at San Fr~ C8af'rUl •. • lrvineNiae fJ_A~"e~ ~ J SURE CURE FOR PULLING j ~ 0tpy Collegians Fall, 10-2, 4-3~ i think qlany people pull their shots to · the left without realiiina they arc: doing so. This is because the pull to the left is often accompanied by a slicing action. The ball !.tarts left fo r a few yards and then curves to the right. The dis11nc:tion between a pull-slice and a pure slice is important. The clubhcad must be moving to ward the left of target (illustration I I) lor a pull or pull- slice, while its usually mo ving to the• right on slices (illustration 12). The golfer who is pull-slicing merely accentuates his problem if he attempts a cure that calls for his aiming or swinging more to the left. If you are pulling, or pull-slicing, its because your' shoulders are unwinding too soon in your d ownswirTg (illustration #2). Merely delay this unwinding while swin$ing your arms and legs back to the ball. This will force you to swing into the ball from inside, not outside, the target line (illustration 12). Score in sptl8" of \raps, bunkers. rough and downh11t has-with the help Arnold Palmc.-r olfcr'> you 1n h1'> t>ooklet. "Trouble Shots." A copy is yours for 20c along with • stamped. self· addressed en~elope \ent to Arnold Palmer. 1n care of this news. paper SAN DIEGO-Despite •three home runs, the Irvi ne Collegians dropped the ir second double header in two days here Sunday. Saturday, Irvine lost two games to La Mesa. And Sunday, National Ci- ty beat the Collegians twice, 10·2 and 4·3, in summer 1ntercollegiate baseball action. Steve Morton had a homer for Irvine in the first game. but Natiooal City scored in five of its six innings and rolled to a 10-2 win. Irvine gave National City a battle in the second game before fall- ing in the 12th inning, Tennis, Soccer Standings Racl·ng Entri· es WORLOTEAMTENNIS Eu tern Olv1s1on W L Ptt. GB Pitt)buroti 2s 6 .806 Nrw York 74 1> .900 "' :~ Cleveland IZ IS ."'4 11 119 Indiana 11 17 .414 12 119 Boston n n .m ts 117 WHtetll DivlsiOll GoldenC.te 18 II .611 IENTltlES FOR MONDAY Olac• Colt fLipllaml l'llUT POIT I f'M Black Brother IHarll $2 EXACT A l'llltST ltACE. Winnie Lou <Dreyer I $S EXACTAS ""· ITH AND "" Alt .. rthoughl (Richards) RACES Pappe'Sl .. u s (Myles) FIRST RACE -•OO yards. t t e.ar old ,.,..10.ns. Clalm lng. Purse 51900. SIXTH AACE -lSO ya r.ts. l YMT olds & uo. ClalrnlnQ. PurM! $3200. Phoenix 11 13 ,567 I'. LosA~les 1S 14 .Sil J Hawau 1 21 ,1.SO 101/) Cl•lmlng prlte $5000. 117 Ntootrt See (My In l 119 SanOit90 1 23 .133 11•11 when the hosts came up with a homer. The Collegians were sparked in the second..,. game by Doug Cbard- w ho bad a l wo·run , homer in the firth i°'- rung-and by Bruce Ban .. ning, who slugged a sol~. s hot in the eighth. st. Irvine returns Lo ac. • lion at 8 p.m . Wednesday when it m e ets host San B e rnardin o. The Collegians. then play at home Sunday when they host San Bernardino in a doublehead e r that begins at noon. f<llllSTGAME lrvlneU) &own.lb 5oto, u Tl~n.~I ~in<<Xk, lb C«r>eil,11 S-inQ,C ~rel, lb Norton, di\ Dv<ev, t1 Jfl>\, p McC•llO\lqll, p Total\ •b r • 0 4 I , 0 J 0 l 0 3 0 J 0 J I ) 0 0 0 0 0 78 2 SceNllY 111111111$ ",... I 0 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 I 0 1 • 0 o. 0 ~ 0 6 . s ... r " HYIM 000 001 1-2 s N.OHonal City 110 '11 •-10 a SECO~OGAME Irv ne U I lb r " Brown, 2b 6 0 1 Soto,11 s 0 2 Titldern-..n, ~ \ 0 0 kancoo, 11> s 0 I O><neil. cl ' I I Cllard. JI> ~ 1 I ~ Morton, c ~ 0 I 0 8.tnni"9,dh 4 I I • °'°"· r1 ) 0 0 0 Hlckmatt,P 0 0 0 0 Totals .. l 8 J 5'an lly lnn(019s , " . lrvlM 000 020 010 000-3 • J Nlll•onfl City 010 011 000 001-.. • 0 O alm1"9 0<ke $10,000. Ll.'A8uilel (Hartl Mlaln' Rockel <Brooks) Ollarney (C.111 122 Town Deacon (Cl~rhsel tn Rebel Drum <Wets.on! 119 Ntootrt Flyer <TreesureJ U2 SnlUy DH (Dreyer I 119 Swulay'1Wkllft .------------ 119 s.n Oit90 26, 8o5ton 11 11• New York 32, Phoenla 22 Tru CNc ICtuverl Zip 'N Go IW.is.ol'll Prissy Joy ILloneml LOOltSLlkt II (Tte.sure) Pace'sS.,..r tWarOl Annt•Wln5IOW (Myles) Ficltle Nanette <Clerlsi.e) 119 Rhyltlm Ouster (WilrOI 119 O.noy Eirprus IHarll 119 Mollday'& Matches 112 Los Ange~1 •t H•w•li g; Ptloenla at Pill~rql't 1n Top Tonto Bar\ I LIOfl•m I 119 Mr. Moon Spla~ <Brooks ) 119 Quesl T Bargo (Cu dota I 119 NORTH AMERICAN m SOCCER LEAGUE Nart!Mrn Diwlslo11 SECOND ltACE -810 Yaros. J ~r olos & up. Cle lming, Purse $2800. cr.lmfnQ prl'• usoo. SEVENTH RACE. 400 yarOs. l ~r olOs & up. Allowance. Purse St>OOO. Tile North Hills Jaycees W L GF GA Bf' PU To.onto 9 a 79 13 26 ea ~Ion 8 8 11 16 26 74 ~-8'xl's Lodi (Welker I For 0.vlO ILlf)llam) Judy'' Man (H•rtl Fi[SI Stlufli" (Creag"' I 118 Bl" Canyon I Hartl 119 Nrw York 7 10 33 29 1S '' 11' Rocheslu 6 11 2S ~ 24 60 119 Han toro J 12 1 J 33 13 31 Sunn Rock (CardOta I OI' 0.n <Dreyer I NutherWlllow (Walson I Mel Mahal <cler lsse I 11' Top Explosion <Walker I 119 Flff1 Copy IWarO I 119 EHi•''" Division Ill Tamoa Bay 13 3 3S ,. 40 IOI 119 Re!>i.I Kay <Watson I 111 Miami 10 7 J8 21 30 'ICl 11' Mickey~ Sun Flower <Car001a l 121 Bolo Bob T 1me <Mylu> 119 Wasl'llngton 9 7 JI 37 30 114 Pllilaclelpllia 8 9 ?3 32 13 11 118 THIRD RACE JSO yaros. 3 ~ar ol<IS & uo. ClaiminQ. Purse 12100. Cl•lmlng price UOOO. EIGHTH RACE 870 yards. 3 year olds & up. c1a1mln9 Pur~c UJOO. Claiming price '2500 Sangu1,,.,·s Jet (Cleris~ l S.ltlmore s 10 19 39 18 48 Cetltral DiwlsloA St. Louil 11 8 3.4 ?9 l3 99 Vatt Glau <Treasurt') Hlfalultn I Brooks) 172 Altruistic (Wl l\On) 11• ~~ .. a: ~ 1: ~ ~ g ~ in O.llas 7 11 2s 32 23 t.S 1n Bar Fa~ (Warell 122 Sal\ Antonio 6 10 21 33 20 S6 IWJn O' Glo., <Harl I 172 Dlal CH Ch (Harll 11q wauern Dlvlslo11 Dusi Devil (Car dot al Music Note Miss (Walson I &on..dOCk (Mylesl 1n St~ N Felch ii (lreasur~l 117 Mr.Arroway (CarOotal 119 PaPC>a Wins !0rooksl 122 Portl-u 4 36 20 3S 11' 122 Seattle 13 s » 22 l3 111 l22 LosAnqel"S 19 9 35 31 30 'ICl N!te Trilln (Call I 119 Nahve Twist tL11)ham ) l22 Van<ouv•r 9 10 27 26 26 80 C.11 IWJc (Walller) 119 R>URTH RACE -~OOyards.Jyear oldS. Claiming. Purse ~2800 Claiming NINTH RACE -JSO yards , year oros, Cla lmll•o. Purse UliOO. c1a1mmg prlc.e $6500. SanJ~ 9 10 21 33 2S 61 price $6500. Zip's Son ICar001a I GoAnni""r~ry (llpflam) o.w·• Hairpin (Or eyer ) Rebel Rouu er IWardl 0.nOy'sGo Bid I Rlcho1rdsl Miu J"sterson !Han I Shil51a Ret>i.I (My IHI Happy cet (Treasure ) 119 8yn:l8raln (Clerl»el 117 Oujw's ASl4'nsk (Qll I 1n m 171 119 119 119 119 IU 1)9 Baseball's Leaders 119 t.l>tuned Enriches (CardOuJ 119 Ro$y J oyous (H•rtl 122 LonoAGo <WMOI 111 ALlllleU lle Me 1wauonl 119 Frankie Cotton (Walker I FIFTH RACE -870 yards. 3 year OIOS & up, Cla iming, PUrSt' \J200. Claim ing price SSOOO. Tne Ru\> c;.,wn telebrallon Groovy Grumpy 1ca111 1 n Spikefest All~omen Tra<• at.UC I o ... Pole vault -1. Craig Wilson, IS-0; Long jurnp -I. Doug Jack\ 27·1, Tri· pie jump -I. C1atk Daffnport 39-J; HIQtl 1--I. Paul Viggiano l>-8; Shot Piii • 1. Joe Tosll 48·1. Oi'ieus - I. Kl'nt Pagel IU...c; 2-mlr. -I. f<l<cr· rlson 9:57.0; Mlle -I. FiuqeralO 4:32.6; 440-I. Franco LO<'!kes S2.9; 100 . I. Chris Marlin 10 1; 220 I. J im Walter~ 22.S; 880 -1. Ho.,ard l(«ley 2:03,0. , Hl9'1S<llool Discus -t. Rick Ballesltr tlJ..1; Shol out -· 1. Rick Oalle~rer 40-7; High jump -t. Stev" Co1 6-4; 2-mile -I. Mil(.t Wallerl>ouse 9;SS6; UO I. Milr1t Stlll\l>Ury 2.0S.J. Mlle-I. Mike Wallerhouse C:2S.3; HO I. Smythe S7.t; 100 -1. ~la~k ~avenoort 10.&. Edi' Kttlfay <Cru ger I Bawdon240al Bats. , AMERICAN LEAGUE Pt ayer Club G A e R H Pct. c.arew Min SS 321 S9 120 .374 Standings H<1rtl0r Are<1 8Heball LyM Bsn 84 303 62 101 .lll Flnoil Reg11IM Se•~" Haroro•e Tu 83 288 SO 'It> .333 w L T GB MunsonNY 90 ~s so 113 .m Estancia 11 2 I McRa(' KC 91 3S2 A.( 111 .31S corona del Mar 9 ) I 1., Wllslllr>Qlon Oak 88 34 S2 109 .313 La Qu•nla a • o J•,, 6::~,~~ski Bsn ~ ~~~ !~ :; :~ Fountain Valley 7 6 1 A R.Wlllte NY 81 298 SS 90 .Y» Huntington Beacti 6 I I s Rice Osn 84 332 S7 99 .298 Newport H•rbor 6 1 I S C.ost• Me~ 4 10 o 1•11 Homt R11ns VnlwrsilV 1 11 1 9'h Bonds, New York, ?I; R, JackSOn, , HB 8asl<ell>all League Oakland, 20; G. Scoll; Mil .. au•~. 18; w L c.a Ma.,..,,,rry. Ka nsa s Clly, II; Our· Eslanci• VIII• Park Huntington Be.tell L.,nwood Newoon Harbor Edison Los Alamitos LalieWOOO Fourltaln Vallo Los Ami~ Westminster 'Mhon s o rougtis, Te•:~ .. 1:ao1ueo 1n S 0 -Lynn, Oos lo n , 74 · L. May, 4 1 i Baltimore, 66; Rice, 'Boston, 63; 3 2 2 Horlon, De troit, 63; G. Scoll, ~ ~ 3 Milwaukee, 60; Munson, New York, 2 3 3 60• 1 3 3 Piklll"9 <•Decisions) 1 4 4 l<Ht, Chicago, 14-6, .700; Palmer, 1 4 4 Baltimore, IJ..6, .684; Wise. Boston. 1 4 4 12-6, .'67; M. Torrez, 811111-. u~s. 1 4 4 .667; Eckersley, Cleveland, 6-3, .667, Biro, Kansas City, 6-l, .6el; Bosman. Ooilklano, 6·3, .667; 8 , Lee, ~ton, 11-6, .IM7. FV Paces All-stars NA 1 IU,.AI.. LEAGUE G AB A H Pct. Fountain Valley's Na- tional League champions have six players and the manager on the loop's All-star team, which will play its .Ameri c an League counterpart in American Legion baseball Aug. 17 at Anaheim Stadium (4:30). Chosen from the Foun- tain Valley crew are out- fielders Dave and Vince Bienek, catcher Brian Edwards. infielders Mickey Swenson and Mon. thru Sot. 8:00 Dean Fox and pitcher Rick Woolard. · J oe Benza will coach the Nation al League team. Fou ntain Valley, m e anwhile, readies itself for the District 29 tournament at Anaheim's La Palma Park, which begins Thursday evening. Foun- t a in Valley meets Wes t ern in the first round of the · double elimination tourney. Mad40<k Chl Sangulllen Pgh Norl)llnc ln D Parker Pgh watsonH1n T.Simmons StL OowaPhl • BrocllSIL Ros.e Cin (Ash Pin 13 337 A 1 118 ..350 80 191 37 110 .334 87 300 66 107 ,3«) 82 304 48 102 .336 88 331 45 110 .:m 88 l l2 4.( 103 .l30 ,,, 2" 38 94 .ns ~ 330 SS !OS .l 18 ~ N 60 1'6 .318 93 l94 48 12S .317 Home 1t111u . Luzlnlkl, Philadelphia. ss . S<:llM•dl, Pl'>ileelelpnla, 19; Bench, Cln<lnMli, 19; Klnoman, New Yori\, 18; Stargell. Pitut>urgh, 11. Rull$ Baned In Luzlf\Utl, Phlladelphla, 8t: 8ench, O r>elnnatl, 7•; Watson, Hous1on, 67; SIM, New York, '3; T . Simmons, S\. l.OuiS, 62; Mor1>11n, Clncinnali, 1>2. ,.lk1'1"1 It Declslotlsl H••bfosky, St . Louis, 7·2, .778; Gul,.tt, Cincinnati, 9-3, .750; Seilver. Hotw York, 14-S, .731; 81111ng~m. Cl~ cl.-11, ICM, .714; Klson, PltlSburgh, M, ."2; Monl•fusco. s.an Francl1Co, .-..~ ..M7; R. JOMs, San Oitt!ltO, tl-4, Mt; No4.n, Cinc:tnnall, 9-S, .6'3. four wheel · brake overhaul WITH COUPON drum bra kes for all American cars odd . " f1'r d1:,• ·jro1"l Of(J, ·~'! \• r.egutn· r 'r:c-;;:. · drurr :~1?~ cs:-dr\J<T '719$ We'll replace broke linings on all four wheels. turn and true all dru'11s (rnor h1ne' front rotors for aisc b1~kesl 1epock outer \'>• P81 beor .. 1ngs. refill cmo t ···cd vour hvdro11I c ~. :,f.:•"'l. ChPCk v. re•_· -, "'"1dl'·1( r. ,no_~ 11ront hoses ond 1oor1 :,_: • • 'lll <.Of. /1ooil11Y1nl 1i:>po1·' P•"r whecf. if needed. whPel cvtinders., • 1:? QQ r.::turn spnng~ 3 and front grease seals. ·: 50. Coll tor on oppo1ntmer.1 si:>~·::i1,,• • ,11grv"1(><1I Oio~e~. ~hoC~\. '"ut!le rs lune·11PS t:Jtr!liri' were rhe other~ On rn ')(J COSTA MESA··~ 204t HAllOI a YD': 64M421 ·~, DAlLYf>tLOT For The Record PINNICK ,_,.,,.n IN • .,.., Mn . Sc:oll McMlll .... '70 ""'"'"'"'A..., .• W.Stml l\Ster, OI rl NI• • ..,. Mrt. O.vld Mo•"· ~ ~Rd., SMIJINll\Caplslr-.boJ Mt. end Mn. Oel\l\I~ WUMtl'-tllO F'-*• ""4. A, HIH'tl"9toft BM<I\. tio't J-H,tt7S Mt. tnd Mrs. Anthon'/ AnclenOf\ 2:ll Detroit HUfttlngton 8 .. ch, gif'I Mt. ,;,;i Mrs. Alct\ard Rvhl, • Plete, Newport Such, Qlrl Mr end Mrs. Garon Wltk91\be+"q. "1SS C ... llb St .. Fountall\ v.atey bOy J-n.nn Mr. end Mi's. Jou o.~ ,Q 2'1hStreet. NewpOl't ts.ach, girl J-n.un Mr. encl Mrs. Joa•vln 0.-~i.ln. 14l0 Ne"'llOf't Blvd. No, 7 ~i.Mew,girl ' J-M,1'7S Mr. end ¥rs. J_,.es lkwlS. ¥ 11134 Collonwooo St .. FowtUtl;; Valle\'. boy M.r. and Mrs. Jerry Tuell~ * "'-'St . Cosu Mots., olrl • Mr. end Mrs. Fr-rick Lu..._ 20IJ PnsiOIHll Pf~ Mn•. olrl J-IS,tt7J Mr. and Mrs. Berfterd Bo«a UIO ~11\0 Dr., UO-BeKfl. girt' ""'· •l\O Mt$. Jof.e911 Hweer. e12 RedbWff O r., Irvine, 9lr1 Mr. •nd Mrs. Oe.ne Al~ S21 FU41eorton, Newport Beech. boy • J-2',. 1'7$ Mr. anc:t Mt$..Mtfery e,_ lilt Ellis Ave., No. I, Huntington ~acl\ boy ~. and Mrs. Kyong Kim, 7"1 w, HamtttOft, Costa Mew. g•r1 Mr. and Mrs."Ge~ge Pallo, 14'4 Oval Rd., Irvine, girt Mr. •nd Mrs. Rober·t Oic;,uccio 14632 8eacnAve., Irvine, boy ' .BOATING Tiro Newport SkippfirsH~h In Blue Star WALi.ACE A. PINNICK of Orang11, 0 ., fonnerl, of ~n Clemente. O..te of dHttl July 11, 1'1S. Survlvec:t by his woe Im• Lee Plnnlcll; two c:t•ughten, C:.Usanc:tn L.H PIMICll of Or..,ge, C•. ..,.0 Cynt11I• Pinnick of San Clemenle. Mr. Pinnick w•s • orac:t1Mte of USC Sc'-! of Uw 1•s1. practk~ l•w In ~to 1..0, ~n Clemente 10 197l, 'll!l'ti .cu,,. District Attorne, of Trinity CO<Hlly 191•. At the time of his aea1n Mr. Pinnick wu CN'<Ktlclno •-in Tustin, C•. He wu a member of San Oemtn\e LOOQe•7t F & A MMdtheAI -••ll•h Shrine. ~rved In the US Al'fn'I' In World War II. Gr•veslde _.,,,c.H will be llefd •t 3:00 PM Tun- Mr. and Mrs. Fr!Hf Wiiiiams, 217 Verano Pl., lrvlne,glrl Mr. and Mrs. Stephen 8rue9· geman, 7•22 AmazOf\ Or., No. 3. Hunt· •ft910tl Beach. boy Jllfte27, tt7S Mr. ano Mrs. Peter Nuarian, 19CM Fec:teral, CM le Mesa, gorl Mr. anc:t Mrs. TllOrnas Ectwards 311M't'f'tle, IAQvn• Bea<h,glrl • Mr. a nd Mrs. Robert Rood, 21sa1 Z-a Ln., Hunlll\Qton lletKh,boy Mr. •nd Mrs. PershotJm Pa~•. 10" G olden Nugget, Ho. J , Wrstmlnster, girl Two Newport Harbor Star skippers w~re among the top seven 1n the fifth District Blue Star Regatta Saturday and Sun· day who qualified for the "star Wotld's" to be held OD Lake Michigan out of Chicago ·Yacht Club starting Aug. 25.. . Thirty-one boats turned out ror the Blue Star. Under the Interna- tional Star Class Association rules, 31-35 entries in a district regatta qualifies seven for the world championship competi- tion. O.y, Pacific View Memorial P•rk. ,...~~:;;.-:"'l'~~" '":,IT~} ~ &N<h, C.. Vlsll•llOll ~ Monday 12:00 ,_, to t :OO PM. Tues· 0'*he .. TOM BLACK.ALLER, the cur· rent world champion, placed eighth in the Blue Star but qualifies for tbe "World's" by virtue of .being the def ending $-f. t :OO AM to 1:30 PM. Pacifo< V-.£ r MrwtlWrY dire< tOf'S. SADGER NITA BADGER. resident of~ 9Hclll, C.. O.te of dNlh July II, 1t7S. Sunrived b' her ftephew, O.rwlft 8'dger. 5«,,;CH MoncMy momlng. Ju. '' 21 •t 11.00 AM o,.veslde. Inter· menl, FOf'est Uwl\, Gleno.~. c.. e.t11a-eer9eron, Coron• ctel Mllr Deaths • 1::·.:,~ .• : .... · .: champion. Blackaller, formerly LOS ANGELES (UPI) ol San Fnncisco, now sails for -Funeral services will the Newpor:t Har_bor F1eet. be held Tuesday ror Top qualifier ID the Blue s_tar theatrical agent Freddy was_ former world cham~1on "Dale" De Francesco Malin Burnham of the San Diego whose helped the caree~ fleet. _Bu~nham was a world Mortu•ry directors. . . IALTZ-ltR<HltOH FUHlltAl HOME Corona del Mar 673-9450 of Henry Mancini, Glen champion in 1945. . . Costa Mesa 646-2424 Camp be 11 , J 0 h n n y Newport fleet qualifiers were Mathis a nd Vicki Carr. Ba~on Be~k. who placed second DeFrancesca. 52, died of beh1_nd .Ding Schoon.maker of cancer Friday at his F1onda 10th«: r ecent Silv.er St~ llUHOADWAY MOltTUAltY 110 Broadway, Costa Mesa 642-9150 McCOltMICI MOITUAltY Laguna Beach 494-9415 San Juan Capistrano 495-1776 PAClRCYIEW MIMOIHAl ,AH home (North Amencan championship) · and Skip Elliott. SAN DIEGO (AP) Scott King, 71, a founder ol the TraveLodge motel chain, died at Mercy Hospital Friday night. NORRISTOWN, p~, (AP> -Dr. Charles J. Van RoDk, 87 , an os- teopathic physician re- nowned for restoring Race Won By Hanson Cemerery Morluary ' many professional athletes ft> health, died Saturday in Norristown Ho6pital. Jim Hanson or C-Osta Mesa was the winner ol the second race of the Santana-21 Fleet's five race series. sailed Sun- day off Newport Beach. Chapel 3500 Pacific View Drive NewPort Beach. PUBLIC NOTICE The fleet is prepping for the S-21 Associatioo National Championship regatta to be sailed in Newport Aug. 14-15-16. Cahlorn1a 644-2700 PtHFAMILY COLOMIAL FUMHAL HOME 7801 Borsa Ave. Westminster 893-3525 SMITHS' MORTUARY 627 Main St Hunhngton Beach 536-6539 FICTITIOUS aUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following per-.s a rt dOi"!I bus!· MUH: BELL'S RADIATOR SERVICE, lt1' W. First St., Senta An• Callfomla '270l • Jon F. Burk, 180S S. Park Dr., S... t. Alt•, ~lltomla 92707 Allon Gotoert, 17'41 Lucero W•y, fysll11. ~lllornla n.ao Tiiis bll~lnen is conducted by a gene••• pertnersnip. Jon F. Burk This st•i.ment was filed ""'" the c-My Cler1'. 01 Onnoe eount' on .Jul' IO, lt7S. F~ Pvbll 5'1ed Or aft98 Coast O.lly Pl IOC, .July 1•, 2t, 21, and August•. t'7S 2W·7S Other trophy winners in SUnday's race were Ed Chesner, Fountain Valley; J ack Boswell, Huntington Beach, and Stu O'Guinn, Huntington Beach. Call 642-5678. Put a few wos:ds to work for ou. like To Hear More About the •• !I ., , l• .. ~· !JI 'IC ,,, .. tu IRAllSCEllDElllAL MEDllAnOll ™ PROIRAM? As Taught By MAHARISHI MAH ESH YOGI Free Introductory Lecture • MISSION VIEJO ' nmDAY. JULY 22-1 P.M. ....... ~.._......_ ... ,.a-neaaa.11 ,,...,. · LA~NA BEACH · ,,....,, M.Y ll-7:JO P.M. a....-..... ....,.~ ........ ,,. MEwrORT BEACH lWJ'AY. JULY~ P.M. WEk•••f ••lw&...W HUMllMGTOM BEACH 1UIPAY. JULY Ud P.M. ,......,,.at•~•·• •to w..taT._. IRVINE ..,..., m••~. •Y u-t t.M. .,, • ., .... ~ u.r,._....c:.r..r.-a~ ,_. Wta Mb eel IJJi.mJ "N7Jt Eddl..,,c..., Do.,aarcl · au1m ~• AVTO Ill ...... INSUIANCE . .. Ne~OrllJ~o Tops ·r~~·-· In Hobie Cat Race Ru11 l:ddln1toa ~ -ere• Hiram Downanl ·or_ ~-r\IQ>9rt Beach ttayed oa toP GI t.be Hobie C.t· 18 hlab poln~ 14eedt1'! San· d-.y by Wlnbtq p.e. Del t "" 8•tta ta!!ed at P•a~a cW Rey ori Sarita Momca.Bay. • FAdlniton 11 la a ~-battle wttb Bob and Jana Seem for the high point ~. t.-\be Southern CaUfonala n.t. Tlae Seamaa's fiDUbed ~ID au.. da1'• re1atta. A total of 128 boata Wnaed out for. tbe Del 8ey reptta eo- spomorecl by Fleet 51 -u.e Coast 'Catamaran Aaseci.Uan. WINNBa OJ' t\e Bobie·H divi.sioo -was Warren Walker, Sant4 Moaica. HOBl~l&A. -1, Russ Ed· dingtoo · and Hiram .DowJaard. ~ewporf Beacb; 2, BoJ)-jua Seaman, West Loa Aqela; 3, Jerry. Ki!ig and Sberiy Garris<JD, Newpdrt Beach; 4, .Ron Atwood and Kim·Jae_oba, Lone Bed; s. Nick Sleele and Bob-Mallov, Balboa. . " HOBIE -~f"B -1, BOb' an~ C...,Jopi Off. Santa Ana; 2, BW md ,,-.. Kyrter, 0-a Nnt; 3, Dl~ll aad Lau a Weedaide, · ~ Beacb; 4, Sue Hendei'scie .. Jim Ullecltn .. CGlta Mela; 5. Jaml• and SU• oi... We.t IM ~. llOBIB·ltc -1, Kent and Shelley Seitz, Seal Beach; 2, Georse Coot and Geo« Tcdey, West Loi Ao«ieles; 3, '.John Hallimore and FrandDe Flsher, BiC Bear Lake; 4, Jack Wtllon and Steve Hut, Marina del Rey; 5, Patti and aieb Piper, PacJllc Palisades. HOBIE·HA -1, Warren Walker .. Santa Monleo; ,,z Paul Mayeiki, Spring Valle)':.J, Bruee lleldl, Torrance; 4. Rieb Jef .. fries, ll'Yine.. HOBIE·14B -1, Dean Smith, Hwatinaton Beach; 3, Floyd White, Las Vegas; a. Cbris F'lelds, Torrance. HOBii-u-c .-1, Steve !IJYtter, Dan.a Point; . 2, .Phil 'obna\oo, La Canada; 3, ·ruch Blou.a, Hermosa BeKh. . H9BIE·~ -1, Kelly Lantz, Rancho Pal08 Verdes. ls il some people can e.at aood. notrltlous rood. get a proper balance of rest and ex.rclse, and yet reel nan down all the time? · We put lhis question to Dr, Gary Couture. O.C., of the Couture Chiropractic Office. "'Chances are they're overfed and undernourisheci r eplied Dr. Couture. "The whole key to food to the utmost." Using some of the latest techniques and scientific knowledge. each phase or the digestive process is checked. Diges tion, vitamin a nd mine ral assimilation. g landular and organ functions. ~ elimination are studied individually to determine u1 just where the problem rl • lies. '' good nutrition Is assi m ila - Once the trouble has ' been l ocated. specific v Chiropractic treatments may be administered t~ tion a n d Dr. utilization . H c:-ew..D.C. properly digested and , restore the vital rorce ot ne rve energy to the affected system . If necessary. vitamin • supplements and raw tissue extracts muy also uti Ii zed. you • re b eing short-cha nged at the dinner be used. table." . ., Queen WinS LOser The body is l ike an automobile In that proper care and good "fuel" are essential t.o keeping both Cunctioning properly. But if either your auto or your body gets out of tune. the best fuel available will not give full value for the money s pent . "H you fed that you are eat'ing more an d beneritting less from your food , I urge you to call for an appointment," concludes Dr. Couture. "We are ready and willing to do everything we can to .. help you restore your body Chuck Queen of Pieqioint n.y Yacbt·Club·won tbe LMer a.a in the Southern Callforbia y~. inc ANociation Junior ~au. Balboa Yachtsman Wuis Fresno Race Bob Ball of Balboa YacbtOub topped a field of 36 entries in the ThisUe fleet's Huntington Lake regatta near Fresno &anday. John P.· Jones or Fresno was runner-up and third was Dave Smith, Fresno. Other local skip- pers placing in the regatta were Bob Van T Reil, fourth, and Will Templeton, seventh. bOt.ll of BYC. FREE SAFE DEPOSIT BOXES $1000 MIN •. BAL • be1d at Calif~• Yacbt Club on •ldna clel Rey . Saturday and ''Malnutrition. even among the arnuent, is a growing problem today," explains Dr. Couture . "Recosoizing this our office bas in augurated a new program designed to help patle~ls utilize their lo that natural stale or good ,. h ealth which n ature • intended." SUDday. . Ru~er·UP in the class was ..El;c .. eiplap. Sao Fernando v~ 'Sai)ing-Club, and third WH Carl Schlosser-,. Senta Barbara Y ecbt Club. Dr. Couture maintains • his Chiropractic offices a t ..1 2043 Westclirf Drive, (co•" ner or 17th & Irvine). Suite ,. 107, !\ewport Beach. ·I <Telephone 645-5300>. · 'lbree cluaes turned CIUl for the annual event. Wi.Dnen in .~clus~: WIN'ARD SABOT A -1. INilf.ii~!Mllil Charles Heatherly, Westlake i11111"1lil!MM YC; 2. Kurt Miller, King Harbor, YC.; 3. Mark· Bratton, Westlake YC. WIN' ARD SABOT B -1. Bob ~rtik, SFVSC; 2. Craig Leweek;· CYC; 3. John Tormey, WYC; 4. Jell Berg, Windjammers YC. FREE MONEY ORDERS $1000MIN. BAL n. .. auracthe.free C99to•••ervlCM--d •ore-ue aw.a.We al aA flnt Fe4...a Sawt ... offtcee. Tiley can •••• ,o.·~, .. ~ J0•.11••· or prowlcle way .dvaata•-.. .............. ••Ylnp plaa•. We Invite NEW! Vo• to••., aftnt Fecl•al Savlap effice aoon. Aaddeaa••' Plus·TIM Highat Interest Allowable On Insured Savi119s! Certificate Accounts: ($1000 min.) Six years ~ 3 (8. 06 3 annual yield). four years 7~,.. (7. 791J. annual yield), 30 montha.6%-X. (6.98-X. annual yield.), one year 6~ 3-(6. 72-X. annual yield), three months FREE NOTAH)' SEaVICE NOMl~.Ml.. .. ·j .. • • 1 TELE-MATIC TELEPHONE nlANSfEll SERVICE $5000 MIJlf, BAL · 5%-X. (~92-J. llnnual yleld). Pusbook Accounts (no minimum balance) ~~ -J..(:;.394'{. annual yield). A substantial Interest forfeiture Is required for early withdrawal of fixed-rate. flxecf.tenn certtftcate accounts. ' Accounts.Insured to $40,000 by an agency of the Federal Government. •Check cuhJ.rm not to exceed lewl of cleared funds In savings llCCOUllt. . Member FSLIC. Ant F ...... S.vtng1 a LMn AModlltton o1 s.-. MDntca. ' .g I .. \ .,... P o·I it i ca .. I'.' ·~ I n·f l.·u,e n c.&1 :··. • • .,. . ' . .,, 'Go.West' By LAURIE KASPE!l °' .... 0.lty l"lllCa.ff Because previouSly there was no representation (rom west of the Rockies, two Orangft' Coast women ran for and won n'ational offices in the National Political Women 's Caucus. ' While break in g this eastern dominanc~. they · received the most votes in their respective categories rrom the 2,000 or' so delegates at the Bost.on conven- tion. ~ Vivian llall. an Irvine resident who teaches women's studies al Westminster Hi gh School, was elected first vice-chair. Helen Barrios, a Newport Beach resident who will be mov- ing to Huntington Beach was elected first rt'.'presentali1ve at large. "Because the caucus (head- q u a r l er s) i s located iii. Washington, which is where it should be located, the western states tend to be isolated," Ms.\ Barrios said. As a result, women like Gloria Steinem and Bella Abr.ug, whom IOC'al women would like to meet and who could help Ute IOC'al caucuses raise funds, Could visit the area unknown to the local caucuses. MISSED INPUT . And , Ms. Barrios s<ild, the ri3- tional ca.ucus has missed input from the western chapters. While at the convention,.she re· alized the eastern women "didn't know things I thought thet'd know." Many were unfamiliar with Chicanas as a minority -and asked questions about the-United Farm Workers. for whom she successfully received the caucus' support. Now she, Ms. ilall and a Los Angeles woman, who Was also elected' ..as a representative at large: will serve on the steering committee whi~h'detertWoes the national policie.s to be p'asstd on to sf ate and local caucuses. ' Both county women said they intend to work during their two· year terms to make the western caucuses reel they are a part or a national organization as well ~s provide any assistancelhey C!i'* But Ms . Hall said it also iS im- portant that no s mall or elite group speak for everyone . "We really want to keep it de- moc["atic and r eally g11.assroots," she said . ''l think Lftat's "'hy Helen and l won." ' The two ca mpaigned as westerners . They promoted themselves durin' the con't§.en· tion as th e "affirmative acfidn slate" ... Ms. Barrios as a Chicana, Chris Tripp of Los Angeles as a black and Ms. Hall as an "older woman." Ms. Barrios especially hopes to help caucuses bring.· minority womelt'tnto theiT raQks. . , Ms. Hall wants to help women unde["sland "histqry . Americans, she belie:Ves,. ne·ed to dev~lop a philosophy df''bistory and definite govemin'g ptinciPtes. ·· NEW:FOllMS .. In doing th.is she hopes they don''t im.itate tht?. male oriented structurt. "Maybe we can.. de- velop tome new forms or political action aqd.1 )Vould hope eventual- ly so'~e ~~n WOtildjoin us."· S}te ·.lbes n 't Co nsider t he .cauCul a ".divi:S.ive fprce" but a group.~hich.is "'leadlng the way to help all people· lead e better life." · ~-~· .. .. ~ < 'I , <:'·. ,, ... -' . •""~·· , ..... ; r·. ~ ~, "bect1 use w e really thought worn~· n~_ed to have the ~x­ JM;lriencf. ~rl(lng at aJ'.KI working out pqlifical problems by therilselves." ' ' ,, . .. &o•h office["s belit;ve the ~HC. wbich .was founded na- Ucnitlly iri 1971 and locally two yeSrS· ago,,. it politically mo["e sophistiC;,.te:d and more impor- ~anl today·. . . The ronvcnt1on w;,ts given na- Liond'I pUblicity, including a five- minute segment on the Today show, and attracted several con- tend ers for the Demo<"r;.itic pre- side.Qlial no min at ion. Some otJ the issul's they dis· cussed w,ere or international in- terest, said Ms. llall, because "all issues .affcCting µt.'Ople today arc women's issut•s. Although in some s tates men ANALYZING POWER are allowed to be members, she "Yoiu have the feeling women explained, the county group is as-e rcallY an alyzing where the coi_n:posed onl y or wom en power 1~ and not just thinking ... y,_ i·r . I • . . ')' ~-. ! ; . .,. ~" "' .. " .. ' , ~ .. ,, ' , . ' -' ' "•Jet's substitute a woman in the system '.'' And, M,s. Hall said, the women "we r e not willing to accept crumbs or promises" from the male presidential contenders. Jn lhe upcoming electi~ns, she contended , wom e n will be cautio'us'and take a very careful look at the candidates and de mand that the.y speak up about war" and peace. mino1itics and the people in the world and this country who are und ernouri~hed . .. t\ lot of women don 'l yet re- alize the impact the caucus 1s h'av1 ng, especially across the rountry," said .Ms. Barrios, an .airli"neS·rughl attendant who con- vened the Los Angeles chapter 01 SteW'ardesscs for Women 's Rigtifs. Each year. s he said,.lhe county caucus is getting "more and more powerful." ORIENTATION Politics and women have been ··very forei gn to l'ach other," Ms. Barrios explained, so until now the caucus has ci11lcentratcd on getting wom en oriented to politics. "Wc·re start in~ to develop into things \Ve should be doing.·· Curre ntly. tht• 100-mcmher lot•al l'aueu s is fo cus ing on SP':'C ial dis lr1 tl L'IL•ctions a nd ap- pointnlL'lllS bt•causc they offc[" ··a ch:ince for y,·otnl'n to get their feet \li'et." Ms. I lall s aid . "1'hL•sc thini;s arl' 1n1portant ," added l\1 s. Barr1os, a part-time s tudent a l California Statt· l lni vcrsity. l.on~ llL•at:h who plans to continue on to law school. ··,\ lot <of special d1~­ t1;l'lSJ yit·ld a lot of power " 'J'o prepare ""·nrncn fur sueh positions, the cauc us is planning a full. d ay Yi Orks hop in Sep- te1nber. Vivian Half of Irvine, left, and Helen Barrios, Newport Beach, were elected to national office at the .. " • •• ' " b • • -• •• .. , ., ... , "I •• ' National' Women's ::: Political Caucus convention in Boston. ... •• , -..':f " ·~ " -~ '.1 "'.:.~ ·-· ,.,., ··:~ ~·'.t "' .... 'd l\1s. llall said they are Willini:; to support worn en with campaign:""'' ideas, r esea["cli , money and~,'T, \l.'Omanpower. .. everything w~ can do.'' .1 ,.., Yet s he doesn 't believe the·~ ~aucus · power can be judged juse9J by the number o r women running;~ for office or amount or money:;,i they contribute to a campaign. ' '"I don't sec politics just at thel bnllol box." Many women are f nlaking political statements by "·orking in the backgrounds a nd by changed lives. s he explained. 1 ,\lthouJ!h both "'Omen admit they enjoyed their campaign at the eonventio n, they arc unsure ""hcthl.'1-their future political rolcs "'ill remain behind the scenes or aetuatly up front ru~ l ning for an offi ct•. '"Who knows?"' s aid Ms. lfalr. ··I certainl y "'ould cousider it. .. I 'd love to represent Orange j Count y at a ny level anywhere." i Ed Jill" ... _.._ Jll'-4. t l..C-'ltil,.r~1 ,...I""\.. ~-~.,~'1.,.-·"'"'~' ~ 1 •• uccif-fdHO:fG':'.''~§ Reached .... , i ::&~ -' . ~ ~ ;..~·-... l I I I I I ' ! • • . ' . . - ' _j .. By ALLISON DE ERR ·,-'Oltl'l•l)al!yptlol!.U" ·Mary Mark Zey;en will miss knowing eve["y student and racul- lltynleinber1on a tir~·namebasis . , But in Ieavtfl__g' lmY,aculate 1 l-learl Colle~e tO 6e.sorhe vice pre- sident for acO'delnit'aCfairs at Cal State Fu ll ffr\OI).. s~e hopes to con- _tinue such 1nt'eraclion. She brings to CSUF the skills of a· musician, _tei!:C he( an<t an .ad- ministrator. Before becoming executive vice president at lmmacul ate · Heart and di rector or speciaJ p["O· grams, she was dean of the school of · music and a teacher at ,. graduate and undergrad'uate levels. A nationa ll y known concert pianist and recording artist, Dr. Zeyen taught piano UA,young blind students and authored a book on the subject. "Piano for the Blind1' Child " came about when the family or a blind six-year ·old girl asked Dr. 7.eyen lo listen to the child's play- ing. . "She. could not go any 'further because at that time they did not introduce the Braitle music code until ageei.ghtot: nine. "The literary cotte.was taught at age seven and teachers didn't want to conC use the ch.ild with a code on top_ .of a code," she ex-plained. · ·1 So. D[". Zeyen took her as a stu- dent until she was old enough for other instruc tion . or Sigma Alpha Iota women 's music fraternity. which took the problein on as a nationaJ project, there now. are thousands doing si itlilar; work. Part·tim c ad'Llt education is a more tecent interest. ··Higher education no longer belongs to the 18-22-year-olds. And ,'more and more, the youn!:Cr students are required to \li'ork so they cart attend only on a part- lime basis.'' The sm a ll er private coll eges a nd comJnunity colleges can ad3pt more readily to these changes in student population. she said. -Many have· a<lded Wednesday and Thursday coll eges, allowin g students t!) c..ar (y a ·rull program and attend one day each week. Sa(urday e nroll·ments h ave grown. 1his new mix or olde[" and younger Students has requirt..>tl a change in some academic pro· grams 8nd p["ovided a different kind of educatioQ'al experience ror all concern~d . "Stude.nts have some very cf· rective informal career counsel- ing going on. EspeciaJ ly in the sOC'ial ~c;iences , older stu{lcnts already workil)g in the field can tell yourtterones ~rhattoexpecl. '' OPl'OKTuNITIES DR. MARY MARK ZEYEN VP Academic Affairs, CSU F SOURCE OF HELP • Due in large part to the efforts ,An overall objective is to con- titiue to provide ~ucational op- portunities ror coin munily groups not ["Cached ifl tht;._past-whethcr it be minofity· .g'r'oups or adults lhinktng Or returning to school but unsure of their options. DEAK t\lffl LANDERS: I read a wire s(oq recen~ that taid the students at the University of Texas In Aus tin facetiously aClopted a resolution requiring 4oeds' to '(Vea( a bra if they OUttked the ''ADD Landers .Pencll ,, . Test. ~ ~ ... lt tffmt~toor.di.n,. Lo~ "Oracle of Uft"Mldwest" < rt )'OU, Babe), any Woman w · support a pencil undei:hf! bre l slloUJd wear a bra. ~ -. \ • Well, I"'• 1ot a ~ell ~!!',l IMd.lba-_.u tOsLCn ...,.el! '• '·: ~ ~ ~ and the pencil ·st.ys v~ni~ely yoU. please rer.ui_i. 'that· wonderful u4"9W,• .. u..ul11le. . f under my Jert breast, but no-Way cOIUmn in whitih fhe difrefenee . .lf(•~••U. 'if ·~comp~ by will it stay bnder 'di) 'filtfl ·<111e~ be1ween Love--.Dd;ilir•~a&ion is ~ •'.-,;Ji of"1iltft~ty. Yoo •re What should t cfo a.boµt this e.lfplalned · o beli\Jtilul~y.t_ My t ldinlitel=;likl'! thrilled but not c Q ck e y_ e d id 1·\ em ma,? -Nhmero Uno and J would ap· ~ realltEllfY· Y011,~•re mlk'r•ble KEEPING ABREAST OF.THE i:acciate it very much. -A BIG ~..--it: a-at. Youe:u'tw•lt TIMES · t , • 1.~ FAN ·~"''<t>"-"" ............ iaaW: ieellfmai'lfl. ,: ,. .._ ,-\·~ ~ , -. ·~. ywe be«il•• wltb • teebag of DEAR i.'IJSPIN~.')•~ , ' ·I!.li:AR "FAN'~.Here it is -"f)lb -.rtty. Yoa are warm with a Wear a titS'if61' at-~ -ftQ --p1eaure,;' . , . -._ --'.-1 ~ ol?MI aeaf9eq, evea: WbH Gbv'-i rMMll .1 ~1 L-UC·. '· t 1~ ... \. ~·••>'· Mliefdoao&ll!PA.t•te , ... •·lttU• p1llillll1 • IM\1ibl w-f,p: 0 """ATUAnON? ,..... 'Kou..., •• , blD> ....... Bui .Weto-...-P~i.~t!.tf+,budc:eft ~•· -;!--'?.o',,. nearortar,youUowbe'1youra ·• .lafatliadoa le•pa II.to bloom~ ud )'09 ~u wall. · niAR A~~~ lt'l!l....:.'.~~ "'-""u~ ••~.t" ~ ~ u, .~•1!1.•)*~•J•· ·~wemustr .. ' ' ' eop e I I l BEA ANDERSON, Editor I ~al'.J"ll'll. ltlS She chost• to go in lo administra· lion,:' bee a usc I Ii ke people .'· ll is not , s he cmphasi:r.L'li . a paper job. .. Most of my day-lo-day work \li•ill be interaction \li"ilh f<Jculty, staff and students, just talking lo people.'' 1\lthough she realizes getting to know everyone on the large cam- pus is practically impossible, she'll try to gel in touch with whal makes the uni versity a lively, positive place. "Mo rale is hig h here. Yoo feel that when you first step onto the campus. Fullerton has a rcputa· tionfpr making things happen.'' As a child, Mary Zcyen was con· fined by illness lo he[" home and quiet activity and introduced to the piano to keep her occupied. ''I had a heart problem that I out- grew by age cil!hl . But by then I \\'asori my way." FULl.SCllEDULI-: Ke-eping occupied has hardly been·a problem s1n <:l' 'Shf bolds a doe(or;.rlL' in music t.hOOry from the Eastm<Jn School o( Mu sic, Un1ver s 1ty or ROich~ter. a masters from use 3nd a· BA from Immaculate • • I lfe<lt1. J Over the years she has been i . volvcd in fund-raising, stude services , building plans. allfl served on the boards of the Ut. Casa Confe["e ncc Cente[" in Santa Uarbara. Queen of the Valley 1-lospital, tmmaculateHeartH.igh School and Coll ege, the Im· maculalc Heart Community; and been an adjudicator o( regional music competitions. . Lecture series, television ap- pearances, concert tour.;, writing and recordings have filled ber schedule . A woman vice presidenlisstill a rarity in the state university system althoug h Sonoma State has women as both president and ,vice president. Dr. Zeyen feels quite comforta· blein a man's world. "l like people, that'! "·hy [ chose education. 1 ·vewanted lobe a teacher as long as I can re· member." He[" role at CSUF wlll limit her time for piano concerts, but s.he plans to continue with chamber music, a ravorite ["elaxation, and keep in touch with the Southern California music community • Ann Landers married rig.ht away. I can't risk loslDc blm." Love says, ••Don't rush into UytbJng. You are s-.re of one another. You can plan your future wltb coefide1M:e." lal'ataatlon b11 an element o( sc:xUal exc:lt.er11e•t. Ir you •re boaett. )"OU wlll dlROVtt It ii dlf· ncuJt to HJoy Gal! aDOther unless you kDow it will end iD lot(macy. Lovt' 11 the m aturatlon oC rrteodablp. Vou must be friends before JOU caa be lovers. lnfatutlOa lack11 conRdf:ace. Wbea be'• away you We.de..· ~ he's wJtb aaot•er &lr.l ~ Sometimes yoa even dleck. love mean• tn11t. '¥_• maJ fall Into l•fataal'-, kt yoe aever fall 10· love. bla&.au.a. mil~• lucl , .. to ._ -.S (Go wlll•~ yooo algbt be -.,,, 11at love aever wt.U. Love lead• >'°'I . ._,_It •ab. --111'.li•• ... ,... ...... ...llm1kHJWa-... ~i1 tllu yoa were Wett. I " • ,, 8%• DAILY PILOT World Problems .Ljnked .Tog~ther • The Jun<.•h menu was a b1l un· usual, but the food was delicious: drie<.I soup, crape leaves stuffed with raisins, nuts and rice, a salad of lentils, bulgur and lettuce, und watermelon. m eeting or tbe Southern Ca.U!omia Di vtson ol the United Nat.ions Association of tbe U.S.A. in the Neighborhood CoogregaUocal Church, Laguna· Beach. that It could not lnt.roduce many i.saues because of Ume Umlta· lions and the obvious need to let other countries participate in the debate. However, she noted, the U. S. introduced a resolution, to in· elude more women in the U. N. secretariat and. it was supported. ol the conference (a mee~ ol women trom nooaovemmental or1anl1aUoas). Each talked about what she found most mean· inef ul about lbe conlerence. Diego· newspaper she bad de· d ded that abe would spend her time speaking with the interna- tional delegates. . She said she was told many times by womtn from the de- veloping ceuntriee that U.S. aid is not reaching their people. She was pleased with the suggestion made by a woman from Trinidad that further aid be dispensed through non governmental or- ganizations. toa meeting. •'It was an opportunity to get and give information. All cauaes were talked about," Ms. Ro)'al said. "We have a broader vtewot what wornen'• problel'll!I are, ~d we1aw capable.women." 818TEaHOOD This vegetable lunch, typical of what is eaten in many countries 1n the world, was served to em· phasize the planetary hungt!r \'risis, according to the chef, Nick Robertson. She boped to put the Mexico Ci- ty gathering "in perspective'' for those who did not attend. DELAYS Mrs. Long, wbo also serves as coordinator for women in de· velopment with the U. S. Agency for International Development, admitted it was true that Washington was "rather slow" in announcing the delegation and the Presidentia l commission. and said it was "import.ant to continue the dialogue about the is· sues." The conference w• "exciting but frustrating," Mrs. Long oom- mented. "lnteresUng sensitizing began there." Moet of the women menUoned thin11 like sisterhood, lbe beauty ol the women and friendship as the most outstandine thin1s. She believes tha t s ome changes would be made (in the huma,iistic realm ) if wom~ bad contre1. It also was a p<.'rfect mtro<.luc · t1on to Mrs. Nira Hardlll Lon~·s t·oments about the just completed lntcrnational Women's Year con Ccrencl'. She said s he thought it was helpful for Third World women, and finally, that "the word 'sex· ism' should be put into the U. N. vocabulary." · Elizabeth Wat.son, a professor of social well are from San Diego, aaid the conference "will allow women to work together better. I salute the U. N. for planning it.'' TIRSTWOMEN Lynn Hicks , a free·lance writer. said the most important effect of the meeting will be com. batting oppression. "We all have a part to play," she said, suggest- ing that mothers leach their sons a different role than the "tradi- tional male·female sterotype which oppresses.'' Mrs. Lons. a la~yer and ad· visor to the U. S. de legation lo the IWY conference, addressed a She said the U. S. delegation· from the beginning was aware The second portion of the pro- gram was devoted to a panel dis· cussion with nine women who bad attended the Tribune portion Amalia Willis, a free.lance photographer from San Diego, stressed that the Tribune, which attracted 6,000 women, was an official part of lbe conference. Marge Royal, a coordinator or women's programs for the Navy, said that "just having a con· ference was a re al advance." Some countries, s he r eporJ.ed, had never sent women delegates In representing a small San Modern Birth Rituals Reiected By PATRICIA strapped to a m etal table McCORMACK four feet off the ground." u,.1 ,.muy H .. 1111 uow For three years Ms. If Your fri e nd l Y Arms could not s hake the neighbor hood o bslelri· feeling that s he had cian walks a little less failed -that she lack.ed jauntily these days, it's the faith, courage an<.I understandable . pluck needed to give Those doctors who birth naturally without take care of pregnant the help of drugs and/or humans arc under al· machines. tac k . Ditto Co r the Shelearned,duringan hospitals in which they investigation of birth preside at the birth rites. rites here and abroad, The critics want the that she was not al fault. ritual of birth returned lo The American system the homes or maternity of birth was to blame. centers -except in com· .. An entire s ystem of plicated cases. In alt.en· medical procedures and dance? A midwi£e -un· interferences has been derstanding, kind, com· establistie d to treat ;Jelenl. normal birth as a risky, Ms. Suzanne Arms. of dangerous, painful and Mill Valley, Calif., is one abnormal process in of the critics. which pregnant women When s he was 27, Ms. have no choice other Arms gave birth to Mol -than to submit gracious· ly, who now is 4. She had ly," the photo-journalist p I a n n c d a n a tu r a 1 said. c hildbirth . In the ho sp i t a 1 • s h e got In her new book - anythingbut. ''Imm aculate Decep· Ms. Arms s aid' few Americans are aware of the tact that there exists today at least one in- dustrialized nation with a long history ol simplicity in normal birth and a sue· cessful record of safety and quality which Car sur· pa sses our own - Holland. "A 1965 study of 10 in· dustrialized countries," she r eports, "showed that Holland had an in· Cant mortality rate of 14.4 per 1,000 births at a time when the United States had a rate of24.7. "In that year, 97.4 per- cent of all American births took place in hospitals, while only 31.4 percent oC Dutch births were institutionalized. according to Ms. Arms:· -Take normal childbirth out o( the hospitals. -Develop a bank of fully trained midwives for homebirths or de· liveries at maternity centers -as in Holland and Denmark. -Gel universally good prenatal care. -Have backup car e available via specially equipp'ed ambulances - (birlhmobiles ?) - bOused in Fire Depart- ments. And have on call a neonatologist -for the baby. ~Medical insurance should cover these out- of ·hOspital births. Ms. Arms s aid the system in America today is geared to the belief that the birth will be a problem one. Mos t births, however, are not. It is possible to predict most cases in which masks, gowns, instrµ- complications arc expec· ments, gurneys, stra()f. led. chrome and braces have About hospitals, Ms. d eceived women and Arms said~ doctors alike into believ- "Many have adopted ing that childbirth in Uie as standard procedure American hos pital is the the use of intravenous safest in the world," she solutions, artificial said. hormones, analgesics, "Quite the contrary is anesthetics, Induction of true . M e d i c a I i n - labor, vaginal incisions, terference in birth bas forceps , fet a l h eart c re ated e v e n more monitors, and various dangers than it is de- other mechanisms to signed to prevent." speed up, slow down or .------------ otherwise manipulatethe natural birth process. "All of this technology, presented under the im- maculate protection of sterile sheeting, gloves, llARHY COLDWATER SPEAKS OUT in the DAILY PILOT . JirL A \rcmon·s SPORTSWEAR BALBOAISlAt-t:l 216MaintAve 675-1~ "l was totall y dis· tion" (Houghton .Mifflin satisfi ed , frus trated, Co.) -Ms. Arms takes a angered and saddened loo k a t worn e n and by the experience, .. she childbirth in America. "As the only na tion In the study with bolh low mortality st a tistics and a comparatively low in· cidence or hospital births. Holland is of special interes t to anyone concerned with the qua lity of birth in ,--------"------=------------1----------- America. '' said in an intervicw•in In many other coun- In her investigation of bi rthstyles, Ms .. Arms talked to many American women who told her or their feelings during the hospital birth ritual. Before. During. After. UPI T~le1>110to Ncw York. tries women can choose Susanne Arms rejects American b irth rites in her new book, ''Immaculate Deception." "A lengthy incision to give birth al home or was made, then Corc.eps in ·a maternity center were used. My placenta where profession a l came out in pieces and midwives are the only al- my cervix tore, requir-tendants. ing internal stitching. There is a bonus for this The feelings. included deprivation, fear, loneli- ness, boredom, e ven ter· ror . '·I came out of the de· birtbstyle that differs livery numb from the Crom the American one. waist to the knees, dry Consider, for elample, and sour in the mouth,. infant mortality under flat on my back and "theDutchwayofbirth." What needs to be done to change this situation, Taurus: Finances Comeback Make a ARI ES (March 21· April 19 ): You may be pulled in two directions simultaneously. Key is to maintain balance. to build on solid base, lo be aware of security and potential. · TAU RUS (April 20- May 20 ): You are in bet- ter position to organize than has been true in re· cent past. Money or cash now makes comeback. Messages cou l d go astray. - GEMINI (May 2l·June 20): Mon ey that is handled by special ac- co untant , male· <>r partner figures in .pie· lure . Y o u n ee d "permission " before making certain commit- ments. CANCE R (June 21- July 22): Pace slows despite new contacts, op- portunities. Key is to re- alize that you are carry- ing heavier burde n. One close to you makes some demands, requests. LEO (July 23·Aug. 22): What was an emotional bruise is going through healing process. You're "getting better" whether or not you are aware of it. A signal to that effect will be received. VIRGO (Aug. 23.Sept. 22): Forces tend to be scattered. You have some difficulty drawing bead on main objective. Key is to be versatile. LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22): Wha t might appear a setback is more pro- perly defined as a delay. Know it and avoid panic. Ch eck d etails; r e ad between the lines. SCORPIO <Oct. 23- Nov. 21): Neighbors, re- latives may seem preoc- cupied. Don't force is· sues. Agree to changes without giving up prin· ciples. Dialogue i s opened. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22·Dec. 21): Special C06· : ts, budgets in general ._ J R .,., could command allen- 1 Une heS lion. Dom estic adjust· r T th T Id mtn~~~o.~~.r~ctr~ec. I ro 0 22·Jan. 19): Cycle ls high but care should be taken l lo see as is. not merely I . A weddin~ next June is as you might wish situa-~ be in g p I a n n e d b y tions, persons to be . I Barb a r a Lynn AQ\JARIUS (Jan . Goorevitch and D avid 20·Feb. 18): Be s ure • Lewis Cook. others are handling their I Announcing the news share of• responsibility. ' were 'Miat Goorevftch's Otherwise, you might be Lparents, Mr. and Mrs. considere d a prime '"Martin Ooorevitc h . tariet by those who , Jrvine. would take advantage. The ruture bride PISCES (F eb. 19· iraduated with highest March 20): Don 't get honors from University caught in middle ol dis• High School, Irvine and pule among fri ends. !'now is a senior and Maintain neutra l stance. j mmic maJor al UCLA. What seems permanent J Her fiance, a arad uate could be enterlns its [_al Wllson JU1h School, final pbast. f t.DGc Beach, graduated If Today la Vour Birtll· I with bonon from UCLA day you ore dynamic, re- l where he waa captain or bemous, were on your the a>'mnasl.lc1 team. BAABARAOOOAEVl1Cff own e arly, perhaps due I CUrrt110y he attend.I the to loes of one ol your -PacUlc Unlveu1ty parents. DomesUc •d· CoUe•• oC Optome&.ry, Mary 0 . Cook, Lons juatment, poulble Jl'Clfmt Otove, Ore. lleach and the late Mr. cbante of residence is Be i• the son of Mrs. Glen.n J. Cook. featured this year. • Weddings~· and Engagements To· avoid disappointment, prospective ·brides are reminded to have their wedding stories with black and white g lossy photographs to the Daily Pilot People Department one week before the wedding. Pictures r eceived aft er that lime will not be used. For engagement announcements it is imperative that the story, also accom· panied hy a black and white glossy pie· ture. be subrhiltcd six weeks or more before the wedding date; otherwise it.will not be published. To help fill requi rements on lx'ith wed· ding and engagement stories, form.; are available in all Daily Pilot offices. Fur· ther questions wlll be answered by People Depart,ment staff members at 642·4321. Coos Women Win Tempting baked goods, special preserves and elegant buffet fare won ribbons for Orange Coast r esidents at the 1975 Orange County Fair. Esther Sutter of Mis· sion Viejo took home the prize for firs t place sweepstakes in baked foods and contecti<>n1. Carole Lung of Hunt· infton Beach placed second; Sharon Marshall ol Newport Be ach look third. Sharon also was the sweepstakes winner jp t h e p r e a e r • .r'd foods category. Also cdl· lecting a ribbon for fir5t place in preserved foods was Hazel Courreges of Fountain Valley. An e ntry or hors d'oeuvres, a glazed whole poached salmon ' and a •brlmp tree broupt a blue ribbon in culinary arts to Jean Jemison and Jan Olson ofCostaMesa. Peering Around VOLUNTEERS Helen the Sherman Foundation Bonnett of Newport aardens. Beach and P•t Downey Mrs. Bonnett la a ol Huntin1toD Beach handwriting teacher. were honored u "super Downey' dJrect4r of the voJunteert" by Braille HunUnston Beach Bo11' lmtJtute'• Orance Coun· Club, lnltruded wet.kJ.Y ty Branch du.rinf 8 re-. Judo eluaes at the cent champape tea i.o lmtltuw. • ' ~· .,,. .. i\ GLORIA MARSHALL METHOD OF REDUCING COMES TO SANTA ANITA Calebrati!1f1 throughout Califomi~I Being A WC)(llAn, Glorla Mar-11411 Underatandt Ycllet' Figure Problemt -She 11 tn Con1t111t Contec1 With Her Saton1 Aero.a TM CoY•try. CASE HISTORY And you're Invited to ~P u• celtbr.tt the Grand Opening of the moat modem and relaxing flsiure aalon ever, with the ultimate In reducfng equipment. We can auure you of a pf .... nt way to loH pounds and Inches. ·1 hfNt '""'" f'W/,, _ Ytl ..Jro~ f"JU't I'°""' not '"'P'0•1! ~ HOW THE QLOIUA MAlllHAll I VITEM WOllKI. On your ftret vlelt. loir whldl theft I• no cherge or otjllgatlon, you will receive a compltlt o.tTlonll••tlon •M temple trealment. Vou will ti. wt lglltd anO meeaured (tt.11 d<Mt not require disrobing) end • trelntd •Ptelalltt wlll analyze your figure and prepare a ptnonall1td program tor you. • NOT A IPA 011 A OVM • HO DllllOl lNQ • HO IHOTI • HO ITlll!NUOUI EXEllCllEI • HO 'llll OR ITAllVATIO N DIETS Program IMludM nutrttlonal guldanc.1 8ecauae ln(llvldual figure proo1em1 dllftr, your reaullt may dlller trom thoH achieved by tomtone ., ... MOTHER AND DAUGHTER LOSE 100 POUNDS! I c•n truly JSV tllal my oroor•m wllh GIO<lt Mannell hH rll•"<lod my enrne lltel NOi OfllV Old I tote~ lbl. end 29 Inches, butt no11Qed •new 1ea1 t01 t1vtno. )(HU~~ CALL NOW FOR A DEMONSTRATION ... what Olorla Mar.halt ~thod °"'do for you Alf/llhld ., "'"'"'"ifT ..... "" .. ,,.. --'ftito. ~Z!!.o~Y O,,tn 011ty 8 lo I . Saturdey 910 • '-·-·-·"" -·J··-·-- 20% DISCOUNT DURING GRAND OPENING FINAL WEEK NEWPORT BEACH SANTA ANA I COSTA MESA 1801 WESTCUFF D~. •642·3630 3851 ~!~!!~1 ~~c!'f!i:,56--4786 . "" ARCADIA SANTA ANITA FASHION PARK • 446-8278 e. .. fw ••••••••'-.. ..,..the Gtorfe M......., •~ c• do fw rwt . , ' Ii BOOMER 8ooMt~.8~ 5£~t0U5 ! MA~K>IA6f. 15 A Vf.~'I 5t~OL>5 THING! 1 ~I TUMBLEWEEDS l KNOILl Ir'~ A qeiz10U5 i~ING HOW, ~ONEY .. WE:'P ~fi1ER Lt:AP iHE HORSES iH~H THIS PRAIRIE i:>OO IOWN ... 1lH:v Ml6Hf SIEP IN A HOL-E • by Wa F. lrow11 Md Mel CaslOft .. 8V1 f 5Uizf W~H 1Me.i GAi.ff, A GUY A CMANcf 10 WAflM UP FO~ rr Fl~~T ~ by Tom K. Ryan NANCY SLUGC70, LE T 'S TRY MENTAL T ELEPATHY --- I'LL SEND YOU A TI10JGHT MESSAGE DR. SMOCK GORDO ~.Juty21. 1975 ; . . ., • OAll Y PIL01 fl3 by Gus Arriola COULD <.oo Bl...OlU IT DRQ, PLEA5E ~ CERTAINL<.) J FIGMENTS DOOLEY'S WORLD WATlHINo THE NEWS. THt~E Mll>T SE A "R>RNADO 51.-W.E~OO:! TDDAY1S CROSSWORD PUZZLE .l>C.RQ!,< 1 1011 .,. .. b•.lnC. a. C)O.)N Jfl ••r1 H CJ•• I ;.4 (irp~ ,, •p <:tu•rr 11 <OrnC.-'\Jl\ll 16 fl0<:•l1Sh ~; uu ... Sha•;i I 11\ 010111.ll numb4!• :'Cl s1,1nd w1ae aoa11 ii Hurri~s· .ll•cll.lir n lloot e•roneo11~ ,, s ... mons. An!lr 1l !'Y;UTim11' - W11ti1m' >~ 0..rP Mol./IP" •ult\()( t. AbOYt" Pr.-fq, •I Use r..i1Plf'·,s1y '~ Hprd ol ca•"" If> P l.Yer! 1 q ~II bJll 18 Soll cu'"'"" SO Pie.~ ., Oe11011 "''"'' .. 1ep1>an1 •.l ()t>pflvt ul ~urhlV "MlMOl'I '6 F oll..,1111~~ ~ ~ Ctin~·~·Pd ~ l;ti\mOIOu" C.I Hi!Sn 'ihC•S" Saturdays Puzrle Solved: ,. ~ I) A II It A p s l " [ l ':>J VanCO<J•P• • ,. l IO'H A 0 II I I l 8 KIO E 111~ \~ ~p~IS P A V'A 11 8 l 'l I~ ltlN l )IS ' ) t I A:' U. t • T " ) T [ S ~9 f'.tnO 01 sonntol 61 Sat•.!'" ~General ; I~ 't , -, 11 ~ t ~10 T G ( H 1 l C• 1 A IS II T Quolhlv f,J BrJ~Pn ~I ~ H [ R t I A l I I. 111 'O " l l u ft I ) I u " I I 110t1erv o•e<I' 64 IJe 'l°' •rv 6~ ,.,,,,,,, ••lldl)~ l IO ,. l A IG s l ~ :MIA I £ ) IN l l I" LIU ~IA K I I I" II I l '" l ' 111 re l ') 66 '::>cnnld•lv A 5 SIA I l I r I 0 I I f I l D !Jon•• l lA I I l It Id Tre" ol l•t" T R £ [ r A S A H D T R 1 OrMr Q•••·r 1q Hd.ing .' Oowr.; l\e~11nq ftlj (PllAI Of(J(ln\ I 01 w•n~~ ;>1 l..•~.ileo.l A 4 ft'hj1fPr t '0tlf~ r1CIU'I"' ., c~,. " '""' Amet'Cdl" .,~ f 1ag1.in1 f1,t11an hQwd t IJ.ln1\lle<I }f, 1\1,.0 OI ~3ltoe1 'r""" :>I B•••d ol n.;11 1 ll1esr.11Dl'll 28 r e11 ()Oh CV <l•\!Ji•V•l•Q 8 Vc·rv '""" 1k1ll 9 An1mJ !> rC>P<' 29 Veneral~o 10 Soelel>O.ltds l'<T!!lle<J\ 11 Br~.ic;h on ;)Cl Et1c•I •~lahon. • 1 Marry o)Qd"' 11 f ~ lne .;µ Ma11ne ltoll\I fl'Ollusl. i ) l •r1,...~11011s 37 Got 011 al 01 con1em111 0 fi.irt I'll" S A l l ( I( ( A R 0 s 1£ 0 0 N E II £ It 39 earrtn area ""2 Vancouvet O• 0!>11011 team .. , l1dy 47 "4Cl~I i,nret+n~ 49 F11g1llv<' a11stocr.i1 !>1 loolo. 1nlensett ~~ Adherenl\ Sulhx !.J Posohon '>4 Russo.ln 11.e< ~ Wllere """" t~ughl "'6 Rtf'l<v !>1 W•lt>ovl CIOlll•no 58 Aclren Ann~ 60 Gre6 lellef -; .;.1 MOON MUWNS ? by Dale Hale ·r-------------· -®--OH, Yes •• iHc by Ferd Johnson WOT5A MATTER? NOTHIN' <500C> ON IH' Bo>< ? I LITTl.E KNOB r,_._.,.._,;"ll (;---MARl<ED "OFF". by Rodger Bradfield PEANUTS ANIMAL CRACKERS by Charles M. Schulz -----~---~~~~, : :: . := !e FORGET IT! I TH006HT HE SAID CHICKS ! ~ ~~ JUDGE PARKER by Harold Le Doux WATCHING OOHHA OfWE AWAY IH T.T. All.CE'$ LIMOUSINE, A88EY ATTEMPTS TO CON&OlE THE DEJECTED WILLSON! .n-ER ALL, SHE'S OHL'f GOING TO SPfHD A OA'f AT TitE RACE5! YMf AAf YOU SO ~ A60UT IT ? A FEW MONn45 AGO. OONHA WOULD HAVE NEVER GIVEN UP HER 6RAMMAR LESSOH WITH ME TO GO TO THE RACE$ WITH SOMEONE LIKE T. T. ! r-----.. I HATE TO ADMIT rT, COV51H A&&fY. &UT Al THIS POINT IN TIME, I'M COMPLETELY DISILLUSIOHEO A&OtJT WOMEN! r-,,--..... MISS PEACH by Mell FlA'rfARE 1>0C-'mR~ of AME2tA THE. PAPE~~ .A~E F'IALL O~ N!~ ~eour DOCT01'~, LATELY. 6ES, I WONOE~ IF J COIALD fJE A oocroscr WHY NOT, NOW THAT MAL~ACTICE MA-$ BECOME JCE?PEC.TA~LE. DICK TRACY SO, MR. ALLOID., MAY YO\J CONTINUE TO PROSPER AS AMERICA'S COMJC STRIP STAR. (!\. OrlSre11. lo(50U LC>4 ) THAT~ VERA AUOID, CREATOR OF THE SENSATIONAL COMk: STRtP "THE INVISIBLE by RodcJer Bollen ... AS SCClf-\ AS I CAN SA.\lE OP E~~l-110 SI.>;> A STAMP/ THE GIRLS ... tolJ you Vtrm<>nl wa' '''" ru'l1c-h10k. only one ou1lcl -}'\llJ fl:ive 10 pull the colfce plug to u'e the 1:mll !" DENNIS THE MENACE 84 CA.IL Y PILOT Bicentennial Guide Set Capo District Teachers Get MateriaU B)'ANNECOOPER be decorated in the splril of the theme or the month, und studcnl.l> ~ncouragcd t.u dress in appropriate costume. Of .. o.u, ,....,. ~wit A committee of six Capistrano Unified School District teachers is preparing a bicentennial year !!Wd(• for all dis trict schools and teachers. STUDENTS WILL BE BUSED TO bicentennial celebrations at Disneyland and in San Clemente and San Juan Capistrano, Sisca said. Culmmatiog the year's commemorative activities will be stu· dent participation in the Orange County Bicenten· ruuJ Fair lo be held in May at the Ant1hcim Conven· tion Center . Ac·cord1ng lo Tony Sisca, C'O·chairman and his· tory teacher al San Clemente Hi gh School, the guide "111 pro\' ide m att>nals and suggest activities ).!eared to C'Ommemorallve themes. Each month will have Its own theme, chosen to tie in with blc('nt~nrual events in district com· mumtJl'S <)nd Wlth the bicentennial program O( the '-'ounty Ot'partm<'nt of EducatJOo. "We want lo encourage local residents to bring their exper1coC'e und their skills into the schools this year.'' Sisca s aid. Sl~CA SAID THF. GUIDE IS also keyed to the Socwl SC'll'nl'l'S 1'l'amework, a set or guidelines pre· pared by the st ate Department or Euucatioo for the lt'.IChlO).! or ~Ol'l :ll Sl'l<.'nCC.'S 10 grades one through 12. "We arc looking for people who can de· monstrate traditional American crafts, .. said com· millec member Claudia Krause. a sec:ond grade teacher at Palisades Elementary School in Capistrano Beach. "We want the children to see people s pinning and w~aving as our ancestor~ did.•' ··tisc of lht' gu1dt' will be optional," said Sisca. 4'but we ex peel most teachers. will use at least part of IL., THE TEACHERS ARE ALSO LOOKING for immig ra nts who will describe their transition rrom citizens of another country to citizens of the U.S. School cafl'lC'n as will cooperale with planners and provide lunt hes m keeping with each month's the me. Mus11: a nd drama departments will coordinate programs with the themes. Schools will .. We intend to make this a year our students will remember for many years to come,•• Sisca said. UPI Ttltpl>ole College A<"t Actress Greer Garson will appear in College of Santa F e producl1 o n of play 'Madwoman of ChaiJlot' this fall a t Greeg Gars on theater, named in her honor. She lives in the Santa Fe, N.M. area. Area Hospital Names Grey To Position Saddlcba ck Community Hospital in Laguna Hills has an· nounced the appointment or G. David Grey as assistant ex· ecullve director of the hospital. Grey is the former assistant adminis trator of Coronado Hospital 1n San Diej!o County. He also s~rved as administrative re· s ident a l Vir g inia Mas on Hospital and l ht> Mason Clinic in Seattle. Wa ~h . c.1 nd as ad· minis trative intern a t Scripps Memor ial Hospital m La J oll a. He holds a bachclor·s degn.•(;! in husiness ad m inistration from California Western l.,,_ ersily in San Diego :.ind J master's degree m hospital administration from l'CLA. Grey. his wife and three d aughters '-' 111 II\ c in Mission \'1 ejo, accordin g to hospital spokesmc·n. His Honesty 'Backfired' HOUSTON. T ex. CAP) - Charles Elzie Washington fi lled out an application lo become a Houston police offic er so truthfully he ended up in jail charged wilh robbery. Asked if he had ever been m trouble with the police befor e, Washington replied ther e was that li· quor store he once robbed, but he didn't gel caught.. A detective quickly checked Wa s hington's fingerprints and a rrested him in the police gym. Needs Energizing Church Attendance Decline Analyzed By GEORGE W. CORNELL laP lltlllio.. WnWf NEW YORK -A group or church scholars, analyiang why church members hip and participation have slumped the past decade, say it often is because churches have not con- centrated on their prime task : nurturing faith. They've tended to stress work· ing for social betterment rather than instilling religious premises for it, according lo several of the experts. They say such efforts are fine, but don 'l basically energize church lire. THE FIRST ESSENTIAL lo church vitality i} the job or bolstering coovic1'ons, devotion and a steadying perspective on reality. the theologians and sociologists say, with social ac- tion derived from that prio't rune· ti on. If churches s imply join secular forces in good causes, such as struggles for social j ustice, without fueling the r eligious roots of it. the church is "com· milling institutional suicide,·· says the Rev John Neuhaus or Brooklyn, a Lutheran. He says the h ealth of the churches requires that they be •·distinctive enough lo wanant real £Ul commitment" by de· fending awareness ot ultimate values and purpose. Without that, he says . churches lose their vitalizing core. THEY ALSO ARF. "denying the world the dis tinctive percep- tion and resources of the Chrb · tian community,'' he says. He ·and the othe r church thinkers, participalin~ in a con· ference spons ored here by the United Church of Christ on pro- blems of church growth, all arc advocates of applying relJgious principles in a ction to improve social conditions. But they noted a balancing trend in mainline denominations -those which have been most active on social issues and whose membership has sagged -to restore more emphasis on the · rudimentary ta sk of nourishing or basic concepts and principles. DR. PAUL HARRISON, a Bap. tist and profes sor of religious• studies at Penn Stale, says the "flrst purpose of the church is worship;• which means develop- ing a · "relationship with the eternal" as a basis for viewing secondary issues. However, he says the drama of worship has been "Jost in the modern world," and with that "dramatic enactment of religion being lost, t he heart o! religion b as been eclipsed. "Wh en the black folk watk into the white church they say, 'You don't have anything going )lere, ... he observed. "And I think they're right.'' THE REV. DR. Max Stackhouse, professor of ethics al Andover Newton Theological School in Newton Centre. Mass., ( RELIGION J said the vitality of any group, re· ligious or secular, depe.nds 'on some kind or "doctrine at its core." "That's really what makes it lick.'· he said. He said this is particularly true of Christianity as portrayed in U1e New Testament. "The socia l.political powers are relativ\sed;" he pointed out. "They ar e seen as non·decisive for the ultimate things that affect human salvation and t.be human community. T hese things are to pass away. So why so hot, little man, about all these thin2s?" Dr. Neuhaus of Brooklyn's Church or St. John the Evangelist s aid that the church, to claim a nyone's loy a tty. must be grounded in a "distinctive way" of dealing. with ultimate ques· lions -about human nature, his- tory. God, redemption, eternity. That's the church's reason for be- ing and its source of vigor, be said. Hospital Accredited Saddl ebac k Commun ity Hospital in Laguna Hills has been accredited for two years by the Joint Commission on Ac· creditation of Hospitals (J CAH), a cC'ord1ng to Harold Gano, hospital director. Accreditation is voluntary, Gano said. It m eans that the hospital m eets higher standards than those required for govern· ml·nt licensing. T h e J o int Commiss ion operates with the support of the Am£'ri<:an College of Surgeons. the Americ an College of Physi· ciaos, the American Hospital As· sociation and the American Medical Association. 1t is a Chicago-based, private non· profit organization. ' ANIMAlogic~~ MefzJew Call the Police First Newport Parking Violators Can File Suit Newport n e ach police have i8· suC!d an advisory to property owner.; plaftued wath summer's tradit.Jonal parking "squatters'' and sui;tgcstf'd Ute right way to hav(! a s tranger's car lowtld away. Spurred by several reports of problems encountered with ou~ ot-town towln1 aaendes, police ttreued that a property owner could be liable ln civil court un· · • less the proper procedure is followed. TrafCic Lt. Biil Blue said that a dtiaen who finds • car parked oo private property In lpit. ol ~ ed warnings should notify police fint to arrange for the ~cle to be removed. Current state codes, he said, open the owner to Uabllity tr police are not notified flnt and proper forms are riled. Blue sa.ld that over the recent boUday weekend several proper. ty owners called tow services in· dtpeodently and subsequent pro- blems developed with asserted price gouging a nd dama.ae to a car ln one case. "Tbe surest way to ellmlnate a car that's a nuisance ii to ar· range for nn officer lp help have it towed. It could avoid a Jot ot future problems," Blue said. PUBLIC N0'11CE "ICTIYIOUI aUSINUS NAMe IT&TeMeNT TM IOOOwl"ll ... rMll It clol .. IMI neu •i 11.ANl(liRS OVTL&T OF CX>STA MESA. lUl H•"'6f. CMt. IMM. CA Wuren L. Doe.. 14140 •H<h 8hO , w .. tmlll"tr, CA. l llh bu\lne .. I• <OftOu<lK by tin llt> c:tlv1outt WM,._.L,Oeyo. 'tllh •tel•m.111 w•• 1119d _.lh IN County Clerk of C>t-o-(ovnly on-'- l~. ltl) NiMll Pllbll....., 0r•"9f CH" 0..ly PllOI, J...,.. JO. eN JIA!y 1, 14, l 1, lt1S %VJ.IS PUBLIC NOTICE PUBUC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC ltJOTICE PUBLIC N011CE S1'&TeMellTMWl""MA.-&. •ttOMf'&aT11&aMt1eof'•Mn• UNOI • l'ICTlf'IOUS aU$1NeHMAM• T ... folio-1"9 .,.™If! .... wlU.lllllP •• • O•"ere t p •rtne r tr-lhe Pf'INr\lllp -•Une ..... r .. tic· 1111011) lluSIMU ll•M• el DUI"' PARTNER$; OUIGN f'AllT*!.S. IHTl!RNAflOMAL; THI! SHAHNOff. MOLLIOAY COM,.ANV el Ute ~<Arthur a t.C., New~ h«" Callfonll•~ TM lk tlUOYS boltl,,.\a n-...... -· for .... p.trlMr'.llllP WM fll!M ~ .Mft. >. tt7> '" 111e Co"'"'' of er-. Fl .. H9;JM)t • fl'ull ........ 9'ld Addrt)\ of the Piar.- Wlt....,.wt119; I'~ JANICE ~ANNON, •312 ""°*' "IC'TITIOUS aUllNHI NAMe ITAT•M•NT 0.-lw, Hllfltlnt'on lk•Ch, CA,.,.... f'ICTtTIOUS aUSINU S PIMl..0 Of'.,. C...ll 0.ll, PlloC, SIQfted: JANICE SHANNON .. AME ST&TUllENT Jutyl4,Jl,a,MCIAUQ11•'4, lt1S211W5 ~ Tiie to1io.1no perton I~ ooino bull· NU a~: T1le foUowinQ '"'i.on b clOlno t..W· i-------------I Pl*l""4 Ot-c;..~ O.lly Piiat, ,."••· PUBLIC NOTICE J-JO,endJul'fl. u .11, ttn Jo>.tS PTL ENTE RPRIS ES, H IO H£WPORT C REST APARTMENTS, I ... S..e-tlcw Ai,e., ... ...,..,. llH<ll, C:.tliof'llle .,..., Al'lll•ony cn.c.,.-. 2628 Moll- ,.,..., Pl • Fuller Ion. C.lllornl• ~ Thh tiust,,.u "uindu<ted by en 1 ... dlvl.,.., ~.S.m.Ana. CA.11104 ------------1 PUBLIC NOTICE Anthony CN1<"8r-Tllls tlelemenl WH llled with lhe County Cieri!. of Or~ Co•mty on July 10,m s. I• PUBLIC N011CE Wllll•m E. Centers, UlO Clegrlom, Stnl• ~.CA. Y21CM Tllb tovslness h conducted by.., li.- OM<lllet Wttllam E. Cente" This sl•l•17'tnt wn llled with Ille C.ountv Clerk of Or•nge Covnly on J - 2.S, lt1S. P UBLIC N0'11CE FICTITIOUS aUSINEU NAM£ STATEMENT Tiie follOWlng ,..,_ , ......... "ICTITI~$ aUSIMIHS -M: MAMIE ST&TIEMENT a & I CONST •• 50t W. J~. ~ TM fol fowl ng pe nM Is OOlflO llluslo-la Ma, c.tlf. Y2'101 llftsn: w111 .. m 1..-.--. 511 W. ~. f'ICTITIOUS auSINESS MAMIE STATllMIENT The IOltowlno perSOft Is doing Ill.el· l'ICTITIOUS •USINUS N '.UM : NAME STATEMllNT HOT DOG ON A S T ICIC , LA The f04lOWlft9perSOf1' ere dOiftO_.• HA8AA. No, )0 F•stllon SquM"t, LA ... es: H-•.CA. THE VAN SHACK, 1 .. 11 Mt. Nft044 Ao' MerrooO. U 0022rld5C., u1191ev. Fout1t•ln V•tlo , c.tllfoml• ... .....,, &etch. CA. t2..0 9'210I This ~MU Is (onduclN"'........ .>olln w. KuMS, U?ll Black ~ div~. Ro..Wntmlnster,Calllornlllt2'G N Mtd R. Merriott .,_ e. Kune\, uni 8teck Pllllt TI.ts ste111menl WI $ lltod _.Ill the Rd., 'Wtslmlnstrr, C•lllornla '26'3 Goul'iltY Qer11 of OrellQe c.o...nc1on...,. Tflh bllslnus I\ condu<leCI ..., • ts, tf7S. ' lllt"lf'•I pe¥tl>e~ll1p. '4St79 JoN\ W. K-S P\ltlll~ ~~91 Coatl o.11, Piiot, This ~ment wn flt.cl •* .. ,,_JO,•ndJulp 1, 14. ll, 1'7S 2'7S.1S Couf'ICY Clerfl o4 Or....,. '°"nl'I' C9t.My I0, 1'1S.. PUBLIC N011CE ~ F\ibll""" ~·f\Oe C.0.\1 O.llT IPllet. VERICHEIC SYSTEMS, 2SUS S..AM,c..Mlf.'2107 Cabot~. L~M Hiiis, CA. '26.S) • This ~ Is COftOIKled b'I' en~ 1------------ lllcllerd s. Ellr ..... ld, 31G Mtt dl~I. l'ICTITIOUS9USINESS --------=-----Jul'f 14, 21, It, encl Augvst 4, lt7S Z9-7S Nine on .... LaQUN Nl9"9I, CA. gn William Iverson NAME STATEMENT PUBLIC N~TICE Tl11t llutiMM Is cond\leled lrt en In-This statement w•u meet with the The followln11 pera.ons are dOl,. llull-U afvi-t. ee..inw Clerll of Or•n<Oie C.ovnty on July nus •s: AlchardS. Ehrtnteld I, ltJS. RAECON ELECTRIC CO .. 1250 NOTICE TOCREDITOltS SUPElllOll COURT OF THI! This ~laltment wn tiled wHn the FU* ~\0.10:J,CA>tl•Mew,CA.m2' County Cltrk of Orange County ott July PuOll\lll!d Or•nge Co•st Dollly Piiot, O.vld lllckle Ashl!r, USO Adln"d THE S TATll Ofl' CALI P:ORNIA l'Ott THE COUNTY OF OllANGE. 1,1'15.. ....... JutyJ,u,2t,2',l'1S liQG.lS D-103,COst•MeW,CA.•UU ....,,,._ ROO.rl LoVc:t lasller. IJ!IO ~ PM. A·eltSJ PubllShtd o,.ngie Coast O•lty Phot, l>IGO. Coste MeH, CA. t'2'?6 July 7, 14, n, 21, ms 1-.H PUBLIC NOTICE This buSlneu Is conducttd by• llmil· Estate of CLIFFORD WIL80fl SMITH, Qec,u\ed edpw1ntnhlp. --...,,,.,.,.1CT=1-=T-1o""u,...s,,_,,.•,....u ""s1,....N""'E""'u,.,,---I David lllClle MMf' NAME STATEMENT This. Sl•tement was llled witll the PUBLIC NO'l1CE NOTICE IS HERE BY GIVEN lo"'°' <re<lllMS Of 1111! •bove named de<tdet'tt that all ~sons 11.lvlng ct•lm' ~~ lne wld decltClet'll are required to file lllefn. with the nec.ts~ir'I' voucr.en.. In the Offke of lhfl clerk of the eboft • liltecl court, or 10 pre$e111 them. _.th a... neceswr' YGU<hers. 10 the~ al 23361 Et Toro Rd .. Sir. 103, El T-• l'ICTITIOUS aUSINISS N4'ME ST AT IEMllMT The fOltowlng r>era.ons are dolnO ~ c.unl't' Clerk of Or•nve Colifltr on July '°'"sas: 1. H7S.. TM fOllOwlnQ ~rson Is doing tJusl. ntS$U: VETERINARY Lla80AATORY FUJM SERVICES. 214'S Forbtt Rd., l..egurw P\ltlllshed Orange c oasl 0.11, Piiot, Nlguti, CA. ¥2611 July 7, 11, 11, 21, 191S 2ClWS SANFORD J. COLE CO., 711 W. 111.h Slr .. t, ~\.8 MIM, CA. Y2W S...IOF'd J . Cole, 1Mt C.ommodo•e Rd., Newpe>r1 8e~ll. CA, Thi\ MIMH II ti.Ing <onducted by anlndlv~I. SMfof"Ct J . Colt .JoM c. Powers, tun vi. Aonda, Ml.5Uofl Vle)o, CA. '267S P•IAI ~Is, 28111 De La Lww °"·· MIS$1on Vl9 )o, CA. '2'7S Tiiis buSl ... u Is COf'ldllCted by II ~, .. 119"'-Slllp, JoflftC. PoMrs Thi~ s1*1Nnt WH flied ..... "'9 Counly c .. rk of Or~ C~nty on Jilly 2. ms. CA. ¥2630, Wht<ll ·~ lhe-pie<•°' llUSllW>• PUBLIC NOTICE of the undersigned 1n •II mlllwS pt#• ------------! t.Jl11<119 to the e~l•le ol wid Cle<edMf. flCTITIOUS auSINESS NAME STATEMENT The "'41owiftll pua.on b doing ..,._ NUlH: w11111n lour months •fl•r the flr..t putitlulion of this notice. OilectJune2•, !US. A08ERDEAU F.NEUMAM EiiKulor of I~ Wiii Thb s-. fl..., with t ... c.iurity Cltnof Of'MveCounlyonJ11ty 11, "7S FUMl P\ltllllhed Oren91 Coast Delly Piiot. Jul't'21,22,2t-A119.•, II. t97S 2'1t-7S TIFTUNE, '66 Shady Drlw, Cost.a ~. Clllf. '7~17 F4Sl77 Thomas Grt901'Y Tift, * ~ l>\lbllShed Or•nve Cotst O.lly Piiot. 0r1..,. Cost• Mew c..llt 11n1 ol the ebove t>lmtd dt<edel'C It. f . N£UMlaN ZDI El Te,. II• .• St9. tH Et T-. CA. 92 ... P UBLIC NOTICE -MY)• 14, 21, 29, 1t7S 1'0l-7S Tlllj llu$lneu 1." <~led by on ln-Publh"4td Oran11t CoHI Delly "'"" NOTICE O" TRUSTEll'SSALE "4>. IMI 8 -PUBLIC N011CE ST&TIEMIENTOP&aAMDOftMi!NT O"UHOF flCTfTIOUS aUSIN•H NAME: Ti,. totlowlno pen-s .,...,. .,_. doned u. ~of tN fictitious buslnH& 111me: TRAVEL AFFAIRS, 1'SIS 8rookhunt Strftt, f'ount•ln V•lley, CA. Y210I TM Flc11U-8vslnt$S Ntme ~ terred to atiove _, fllect In Or'e1191 Count• On4·22·74. Nan Hardlno, 1200 Bayport, c;ero.n ~ow• CA. 92..o .Jolln H. Kelly, 10l6S La TeNn9, F0<61tatn V•llt"f, CA. 92708 Thli l>uslneu •es' condutted by a gitNr•I pertnl!rV!lp. /s/Mery H. Ellis Nan H•rdinv by: Marr H. Ellls•s Power of Attorney dh1~I. Tllomots GftC)Of"f Tift Tllk st .. eme111 •es flied wlttl the County Oe<1t OI Or~99 County on July '·ms. ~ PUbllshed O"ft9e Cout Dally Pilot, My 1. t4, :n, 19, ms ,:m.1s PUBLIC NOTICE STATE MENTO" &aANDONMENT O"USEOf flCTITIOUS IUSI NESS NAME Tiit tooowtnv l>tfMIM twtw. ~ dDNd the u~ of the fictitious Duslr>tis '*"'' CONSOLIDATED ARCHITEC· TURAL -E N G IN EE RIN G ~EAVICES, 3141 C.mpu\ Ori~. Suite 211, Nntpot1 8eKll, Cahtornl• 92WO Frederi<k Brown AUoclaln, a C.tifomla <:Mpo'8tlon, 3Me Gtrnpus Drive. Suite 212, Ne•port 8e•<h, c..tlforna. '7..0 J\MMlO,endJuty,, 14,ll, lt7S 24t•1. PUBLIC NOTICE 8'"41 NOTICE TOC.-EDITOftS SUl'IElllOR COUllT 0 .. Tifl[ STATE OFCALlfl'OllNIA flOlt THECOVHTYOFORAJCGIE ...... mu Est•te of JAMES R. COOPER, JR., 0.<Hsed. On Auvust 7, 1'7S, •I ?:00 P.M., SHARON 8 . WRIGHT. Phone no. (213) 37~2674 u duly •ppolnted Trust• un· cler-1>11n uent lo o..ctof Trvsteleled June 1, 1974, uecuted by PHILLIP WAYNE MILLER end ClaNDI A. MILLEA, husbend •nd wife end re· coraecs Junes, 1'114, as. lnUr. ND. 4033, In book 11163, Pillle 14~. OI Officia l RKorO\ In Ille otllce of the Clou11y Re c order ot O RANGE County, Ulllforn1•, Will SELL AT PUBLIC AUCTION TO HIGHEST BIDDER FOA CASH Cpeyable at torTW of i.ale In l•Wful mont'y 01 Ille unltto State•I •• lroot flllrMCe at north sloe of ~•ldor>Q of Ille Or•nge County court"°'61!, 700 C•Y•< Center Drive ~st, s.rta """· u hloml• •II rignt, !Ille and lnlere!>t con~'ft(I to and now Mid by It - !.!Md Offd ol Tru\I In the Pf"~Y Stluated In the Corooa del ,,.r .,.... of the C•IYOI Newport 8each, II\ w.O Coun- l'l'•nd Stew OH<rllled es: Lot 1Slo4 Tr.cl ND.2113U~INO rt<O<dtd In 8ocMt 94, P•gn 4S, 4'-.I •7 of Mlsutl-M•PS. In Ille affiot of the county re<oroer of w lO c.ounCy. This st~ment WH flied wittt ttoe County 0.11' of Oret9 County on July 2. 1'7.S. Al Whitt .. Msocletes, • Colllfonlia ~.,._Ventura~ l'mft Encino. Gel Nomi• 913" NOTICE IS HEREBY GtVEN totM creclllon of Ille •bove nemed deGedof'lt that alt ~r-.s n.evlng clalms ~· the wlcl <R<edent art required to Iii. lhem, wllh ttw necessary -htfs. 1n tile otll<e of 11'1! clerk of Ille 8tlowe e11- t111ea coun, or lo Pfe~nt them, with 1119 neceswry vouthfln, lo the unde•sllli•d at tht offk e ot Stephe11 A. Det1n.e\'>, <tt •7SO IC•lell• Ave., In the City ot lanlhtlm. Calif. 92IOC, wllo<ll Is the p .. U Of buSil'IHS Of Ille ~Ill •" mM\l!rs per1el111f>c.1 to \Ill! ~ of wld decl!Ol!nt, wltllln '°"' monlhl llttd theflrst pubfi~tlono4 Olis nooc ... O.te<l .>uly II. 1'7S. Pll«lllftd °""91 Coast Detty Alot. ThllbusiNuWU<onductedbyac.or. 'Jully21,21,endAl.lgWSt4, 1t, "7S:llla-7S pgr.tlon Sharon L Coopef' Mminlstr•lrl• of tht nt•• of I.lie abow Nmeod ~ Salo Mia will be made, ""'without <.0~ or warr..,iy, e.csireu or 1~ PUBLIC N011CE plll!d, f99M'dl1'9 ltUe. POSMUIOn, oren---------,..----- cumbrllft<.H, to pay the rel'N l.Vr>Q prin--..sJ7 dp;JI sum ol the note secured by s&d SUf'ElllOACOURTOFTME Deed ol Trust, to-wit: 110,31•.lS, witn STATEOFCAUFOIUfl& FOR interest from December 21, 1914, 1$ In THE COUNTY Of' ORANGE said note P<Ovl~ eov•nces If MY .... A-MJ1t ~the term$ ol ~id OHO~ TNsl. NOTIC£0 .. HEAlllNG0f ""'"°" lec-s. chargn •nd opensM OI I~ fOOR l'ltOtaATE 01' WILL ANO "'°" Trustee and of 1111! trusts created by UEnEllS TIHTAMIENT lallY ""ldOeeclof Trust. • £Slate of KATHRYN DOOLAN, The -flc1ary under said Okel of DKHSl!<I. Trust, t>y re.son ol • brtacll or drf8Ult N011CE IS HEREBY GIVEN ttwit tn Ille ollllgatlonl n curtd thereby KATHLEEN ANN POWELL & heretofore t itecuted flftd Otll~ lo MARGARET LOUISE WILLETT N\le 1/>e undl!rSIOMd a written Oeclarallon flied llet'eln • petition fOf" ProbWI d of Oet.tull and Oem•nd tor Sdle, and Wiii •nO for lu11•n<e OI Letters wri111m notltt of bruc ll anCI OI ele<:tlon Tutarr..ntary I• the Petit'-'"• re-10 ca.ne the und\'nlll~O 10 \ell said tertfl<A! t.o Which Is made for fuf1her Pf'oc>er1v 10 sell sty ~Id obll11<1llon$, end pertlculen, and tNt the tlme..OplKe lhf!realler, on Ftb. II. lWS. the un-d ,_,.1og Ille HIM hn be9'I Mt for de<'~JQtlf<I cau~o ~Id nollce Of bre.kh Au11. S, lt7S, •t 9:30 •.m., In the ana of t lKllon to be recorcled on ~ C'OUt1room Of Oel)Wtment No. l of said 11341 p;i~ 3l of w lo Otlltlat Recorch. court. •1100 Ovk Center Drive~ 111 o.iectMeyit, "7S U..OlyOISentaAM,C.111°""6. Sh•ron 8. Wrigtll Oalec!July17, 197S. an aid T r11i tee WILLIAM IE. st JOHN, Pvbllsntd Newport Her~ ~ c.oun1vci.r11 Prl!\s combined •1111 Ille Or•nge CoaS4 FllED IC. WONG Dalt, Piiot, J uly 14, 21, ?t, 197S ~7S •Mel U.. Wey ------------1 &..-.,....._CA. ...,a Tet:l2Ul~t • ..,..., .. : 1'9tlu..n PUBLIC NOTICE Pl.ltlliShed 0raft91 Coast Deity f'llot. Jul' 21, 22, JI, 1'7S 2'9WS ••S» NOTICE TO Cll EOITOllS • PUBLIC N011CE SUPIElllOll COURT OF THIE STATE Ol'CALI l'OllNlla "°" THE COUNTY Ofl'OllANGE PM.A-MIU SUf'ERIOttCOUllTOFTHE E~81t of J RUSSELL MORTON...., STATEOf'CALIPOllNl&f"Ollt J .R. MORTON »kt JOHN RUSSELL THIECOUMTYOFORANOE MORTON, o.c .. seo. ... ...... NOTICE IS HERE 8Y GIVEN to U. NOTICE OF Hll&lllMG Of' PETITION <reelllors of the above named dllcedent POa f'llOa&TE OF WILL laMD FOR thtt •II persons havl"9 clalms lt9111Mt LETTERS TESTAMENTARY t19WllddK.O.ntarerequlredtoflle Est•te ot KA THERIN E H . ttwm, wltll tlle ne<MWr'I' vouchers, In M AUSEY, aka KATH E RI .. E the o411ce of tile <lerk of the 81Jowe en-HlaRKNESS MAUSEY, OeuaMd. tltleelcour1,0f"to prewnt tllem, wlthU. NOTICE IS HERE8YGIVEN1Nt 0 , nteeutry llOUChtt$, to ... Ulldet sl911ed !"RAH K LANGE !Wis flied llefeln. P911· at Ille ottke of Robert M. w..tw.,. •11 tlon for Probate of Wiii •net for l1w.11Ce Oor"Mlt Drlw, Hunll"ll'on 8ffcl\ CA. of Let~ T~181NftlM''I' to the pell· .,.._ wtllell h tlle pl.c• of 11Wf11H °' tloNr fffertnce to .tllch Is tna* tor tlle undertloneel In •II matters~ Mthtr perticul¥S, and INt tlle time Ing lio the ..i.te of wld de<.-.C.....,. Md Pl«• Of heerlog the same hM """ fOuf" rnontns after the Ont .,...ICMJefl Mt tor .Nty H. 1'1S, •t t :JO a.m., In !he altNsMtk e. ~ol Department No.30fMid Det.dJIAly 14, t'1S. __.i,M100Clvk Genter OrtveWnt,.ln Ur4W'11H Haynes & .. Oty of S...ta Ana, Qtllfonlla. IMbel M. Mortoft Deled JUl'I' I, 1'7S. EnaitorsofttleWllt • WILUAME.StJOMN. of tN •bove named~ Cownty C .. 1'11 ltOelUtT M. W"ITE D. l'lt&NK U.MGE _,~~... M2.._.CIC-... llteal .._.,, .... 9Mca,CA.,.... ia.a.-.e..~mn Tei: 11141~ Tel: C1Ml ..i~,. A.,.,_.,fW E1ttcvt9" ~-PY,..~ PubllShed Or•n11t c oast Dally PllOI, PuOll1'1ed 0nnge COMt Delly Aloi. Julv31.U.49ftCIA11911r.U, It, IY7S»Q.1S JulrlS. 1',2t, 1'1S U.0.7S PUBLIC NO'nCE PUBUC NOTICE Fr9derick er-As~ F.R.Bro.n,Cl\alrmllft "nlls st..._nt was lllt!d ~ tM Clllunty o.nc el °'.,.. eo-ty on .iuly M.1975 Fl4'MI P\lbl I 5Nd 0rllfl9t Coes.t Del ty A 10t. JllfyJl,21, end A11911sU, 11, 1'15 21U2•7S ~UBLIC NOTICE nt'.ll"MEN A. OIElllCUM ,,_!Ca_A .. . ........... (.el ... ftlM ._._, lwA-.n!.-litr•trlll PullllW<I Oran91 Cout Deity Piiot, Mr 21, a , and Auvvst 4, 11, ttts ..._,, PUBLIC NOTICE . •....ue ........ ~Ul'ERIOtt COUllTOf THI[ SUf'EltlOft COUllTOf THE STATI! Of' C&Llfl:OltNIA l"Olt STATE Of CALI fl:OllllM IA fl'Olt THE COUNTY 01' O RANOIE THIE ClDUNTY 01' Oll&MGE "9. A ... J7I "9. A-MJ11 NOTICE Of HEAIUHG Of' l'IETITIO.. NOTICE OF "llAlllNG Of PETtTIOM fl'OR PROaATE 01' WILL &NO FOii fl'OR l'ROaATIE 01' WILL ANO f'Olt un1111s TIESTAMl!NTARY unEllS TIESTAMENTAllY Est•le .of ALVINA B , TATE, Est.lie of LORETTA MARY AOHS OtceaSl!<I. .U LOAETTAM. ROHE, Oece•~. NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN lhft JAMESL. TATENsfllt!dhereln•pett. CAROLYN R. TRYER f\esfli..t"'""' llonfOr"'11beleofWlllancltorl-a .-tltlon f-UR PROBATE OF WIU. d '-"tars Tes.u.ment•ry lo the ... u. AND FOR LETTERS TESTAMEN· tloner, refer-en« 10 whl<h 1, miMllt tor TlallY, Aftf'tn<e lo w11lcll Ii,.... IClf' lurlher 1>1rUcu1.,s. and lh•t Ille lime furtllltr penlcul•rs, and Ill.ti Voe time end pl•<e of hffrln9 lhe ume ~ bMt'I -IMKe of hNrl"9 Ille "me has'*"' wt f0< A119. S, 191S, el t :lO •.m., In the WI tor Aug. S. 1t7S, •I •:30 •.m., In tlle cour1-. OI Oeptrlmen1 No. l ot wf<1 ~11,_,., of Department No. J d Mid court, et 7000vk C.11\er Ori,.. Wtsl, In Ct1Uf'1. •l 700Clvic Center Drive Wtst,"' VWCltyof Senta Ana,C.Utomi.. theCllYDf SenlaAna, c~U•~ Deted July 17, 1t7S. Oited Jut, 1', 1'7S. WILLIAM a. SC JOHN, WILLIAM E St JOHN, c.ounty Clet1t ~.., Cter~ CMlllST&NSOM& KllAL.OWIEC SYEN$0N AND GAllVIN cnw.tt...,..M&w., ....,_.,...tuw ............. CA. mJ1 MMINa...-Stnet T .. : (M)1.....,_ VMM..,s,CA.tl411 MWMTtw: l'etltJeMr At-...,Si.r: l'etllt- PIAllllll9d OHnve Coast Deity PllOI Publllhed Or•ftile CotU o.lly Piiot. July21,22. 11. 1ws ~7) J<11r 11, 22. a . ms ~1s PUBLIC NOTICE P UBLIC NOTICE STATIEMENT OF A8ANOONMEJR Ofl'USEO" FICTITIOUS aus1 NESS NAME The followift9 persons "-•'*'- doMO Ille l6e 01 the fl<llllovs b\llSlflftll name: FAMILY MEATS, llS3 Adams """'-. Hunttnotott O.Kfl, CA. n.2' The Fi<lltlovs euslneu .,_ ,.... ftn'ed to allow WU fltecJ In ()r~ County ott IMY I, 1'74, , Hertlert Edward YKkS, Jr., tsll 'Woodl.-n Drive, Huntington 8Na\, CA..,.. H•rrl~ Y. Yacks, ts11 ~ Oriw, Huntl"ll'on S.tcll, CA.~ J•Y 0 . Stout, •s.1 Wood'-~I H1111t1ngton 8 .. c:11. CA. n.- 111• Maro-ret Stout, 9561 ~ Ori ... , HUllllogton 84ecll. CA. fH.4' 'Olis IMniMSs w•s conduc'4td .., 1 general Pff1nel"Vllp. lne M<lrl)Aret Stovt Tiiis st••ment was 111ec1 wlll""' C0unty Cten of Or •"99 c.ow.ty an .Jiil W I, lt7S. l'Jl1t1 P\A)llSflecl Orenoe Coast Dally Pilot, .NI' 1. 1', 11, 21. 197S 2•1t PUBUC NOTICE PVllLIC NO'DCE P UBLIC NOTICE "CTITio.lt avt t•IDI NAM• IT&YfM•llft n. ....... 119 ... ,...a.,..~ ..... MHh; IUN'N $Ultll PltOPUllltES, IN(., •t JM tltt llrwt, N.-.,.n 9"cfl. C..lltonlle~ I .... A. HeUllO!', "4 ti.a ser.,1, lte-.-1 .. ~11. CA. 9166.1 I. IM'I Slnllt, 121 "A" SU., ~ dnltat, CA. '201• l . IMry ( ~e•f'IHn, 20t JIM S4reet, .... ..._, .. e<ll, (A. f'HN This•'"'""' la colldueteci t>y • cer• -••left. Jolln A. Herrl•Ofl Tiii& 1tet.me111 .... 111• '°""' u. ~Y Cteril. 9f Otllfltlf Covnty an Jlll't I, lt1$, Aan ll'lll>lltl!l'd Ol'•fltlt Goe•t 0.llf PIWM, JUlyl, 14,21,2' ltlS 2-.JS NOTICI' INVITING AIOS Noll« la N r•t>• 411 .. en lhet t,.. &otrd Gf Trust•• OI ,,,. C:O.st Coofnm\lflltY C6ti.vt District of Or•19 Count,, NrtlNlt.,. ref~1'9G ton tN o.ner wlll , .. QI•~ to, bill not ltler tMn, 7.00 P.M. Tll~,. Juty )I ltlS M•IH bielo. tor Ule t -ClofCotllrtc.t ' I«-~ For Ille furnlahlng enel lnalAllltt!Otl ot IMU.,,...llo AWi<> T Ill or I el Furniture -Audio-Tutor le I Eltctronlc Equipment .. (ioldtn••~t Community C.Ol~gt. PVBLIC NO'nCS ·~ '°""•tea ()OU• T Of' nt• ll'AT• Of' CAUflO••tA l'Oa THC ()OUlllTY 0, OaA ... C .... ,.... NOTIC8 011 N •••••CJ 0, P&TITIOM POa PaOeATC 0 , Wl\.L A•O PO a L._TT81U fCITAMaHTAaY ltlelt el IOA fltt•DMAH, ~ HO'TICI fl H•1te1v GIVIH IN! LOUii l . Ll"ON NI lllecl "9Alft • .-tHten fer Pl'Mete ef Wiii ellCI tw ''" -·of utten Teat•~twv le u.. "'9UtleNr, refer-• t• w111c11 '' ,..,.. !er hll1Nr tw11tk11len, encl 111M "" UIM ...0 PIMA of htttl~ Ille Wf'IW Ml llltft Mt tor A\19. S, lt1S, et t :J0&.1'11.;ln IN Uillrtt'OOl'll of Otpeftm.t Ho. J crl .,. .. '*"'• e t 100 Chic Can..,. Drlw Wtat, In Ille C.llY et s .. 1ta Ane, c:.ilfOml .. o.t.s ""'" '"' ms. Wf\.LIAM &. St JOHN, ~yCttr1t LUTIUC• LYfllHI uns MttW1111t1ne1wc. Me.11a 9"ff!Y Hlllt.. CA, ftJll Tell (J1JI 11'1·1111 tr V•Pll ~'t tw; ,..lttleMr PllCl41.,,.., Or enge Cool 0. lly Pl tot, NIY11,tt,a , 1tH lff2·1S Sll(ll bkh l!Wlll be rec.etveci II\ Ille Offlu Of the p,,,,,,.,1"9 A411..,t, In the M- frllnlatrt11on ..,he11ne, IUO ACIWroA• .. co.ta ,_.w, 0r-.C.Ounty, c.e11rom1a. ...., w11 t1toeienec1tn41111i.11c1yr..cie1ouoait ,,,. ..... mtNt1tnt. P UBLIC NOTICE Eull 1111.i tn11at <Oflforr11 IOnd w rt"'6MI .. to tllh lnvOeUon, Ille plena, ------------ • .-ClflceUont •~ tll OtMr Oocurtltnlacomprialno Ille Ptr11,.nt cantred do<1>-NOTICC INVITI NO a 1DS ·~" C..lea of Ille Conlrtc.t OK-•re -onllle•nel-n t9puetk lh-NOTICIE IS HEltE8V GIVEN tt\11 --.tlon In , ..... Id •If kn of .,_ 0-r. (Oc)ln ., ........ ..,.. to qvalln.d Eltc. -*" Pf'Ol)tUIS "'"'be re<el..O"" Ille ~=::·~ B~I ~~' s~l~h~t~;~ ':.~::,1;:: =~°: =~nseo~~o:~io:: g:~ ~1t'::'!t~ ~:l~H:::~;1etF~ .,..thin S deY• tlttr bid 0penln9-Otl.,. Cott• Ml .. Ctlllornl• l#ltll IN Lebor Wl4' "'-'ltrl•I• Bono •1111 Peor1onnenct llond •Ill bC' teo®lr~ Of uw "'-·· ot' 11.oo • -' -Jul"..: lf1S et t:ontrector Mlt<ltel ·-· ..... -· ' -· ' • E•CJ\ blcl ...... .:... MecM out ..... "FO"~ 0 .. PRO ...... •L" -~ I ~ -.flkll time tllty .. 111 ... openoel pwO!lcly -""'"" ..... .. """"" -u .... ne-.. MldreollClelOlldlntlleCeun<ll~• , tet of *<_!!~C:.llofla. • ICM' turnlsnl110 ell lebor, meterlela, Eecll ..... shell .. IK(Of'nt*>leel by. ctr1llltcl. Ustllt( 'CllC'<lt ~Y•lll• lo tqUIPIMfll hMUptrtellon oN such 1 ~Owner,O<""tltle<lory Bio Oonotnl•-OI thtOwn•r, uecut.o by llw IMClcMr CM.lier rec:t11't1u H Mey be r"'1!reel ror .. Ptint'9el end t Wltllftctory-tty c~yts-tly, In •n ernounl not ltM 1"" SEVENTEENTH STREET WEIT I'-t.n ,.rttlll lt0'-1 of'"" blcl. Tiit Chtck or 1114 llllencl INll !IC' glwn H • EXTENSION -SUPERIOR AVENUE .,_.MllH l.llet Ille l>IClcHr •111 eitetllle Ille Coonlrecl It II lie --.rOeG lo him.., TO NEWPORT BOULEVARD ANO ConfOf'mlty ... 1111 '"' Contrect OD<-s •nd ..... Pf'OVIClt lllC' llOrety l>ond,., MODIFICATION OF SUPERIOR bands U ~ lfled Ille rein "llllln llV'I de Ji lllltr nolfflytlOfl of tht •w•rel cit tllt A v E N u ( A N D N E. W PO R T Conltect tolllt ll>IOOtr. 80VLEVAlt0 INTEltSECTION. ~01' ltATa1 A s.t of ptens '!lt<.lflu11oM of\d P\lnuenl to the Ltbof COde ol Ult Stete of C..lilomle, C.llfomle Blllldlng <Incl ollltr <cintre<.I d~ument~ mty tie ._ Constrv<tlOn Tr-s Council, 8ulldlnQ enel ConMrllCllon Tr«lu C.Ouncol OI telneel eltllt otllce ottneo City Enol,_r, O.en<19 COllnty, Ult MMCI &o.rel Of TrllSl .. s Nl t Kertallle4 IM .. 11tr•I ptt Y.tll-n Fair Drive, Onie Mew, Calltomle, '41f w ... r•I• of P'r diem ••9" lor Htll er.it or tyi» ol wotkMtn llHded 10 ... upon • non·refun<leblt 1itJmtnt of 4Klllt lht contruta wllltll wlll bt .-rdtd IN wc:GtW.hll bl~rs; end INSC' pre· ,5 00 w lll119 rtlta ttt conttlneel In Mkl ~lflcatlon• ~by lhe Boero, •no ere E•tll bid shell bt made on the - •llUteltltlOw. powl IOfM end In Ille manner provid.ci , My clHelflce tlon not enlltl~ •rd mlOw llsttd SNll ll>e pelO et th" cur· In,,.. contre<t documents enel w11 !IC' ,.nl weoe retes for tilt tPtlllctblt lroOe -clnslflcetlon In tllect w1111 t"9 eccompenlto by a ctrtllltd Of cllVller's ..., 11.C.cl TrtCle• C.OUnclls. If"'' rttu llsltcl tie•-••• not current or •te ••· Cll«k or • ll>tCI &oncS tor not ~u tnen vlM<I by l<tl!Dr •11rMmen1s ourl11g Ille ~lno llmeoM c-lructlClf\ time, well r• l°"-of ,,_ emount of tht bkl. rNdl • ..iaions a.hall be conaldertd •pert Of 1"-ml-ll•led rot••· Any ... •Ith, Villtlf•r-•. peyet>le tttlM City of cos.I• MeM. Ve<etltn, ~OMOllon or other tllnelil~ Y\ell be In ~lllon lo the bel.,. listtcl NOTICE IS HEREBY C.tVEN tlltt .,..,. tultt. "4ltlft nlke• atloll be emplO~ In '°"'onnlty wilh Set ti Ott 1711 'ot tlleo City coun( 11 01 Hid City ll•s , lhtc.tlfo;onle Law O.W "-rttolOf'• utobllsll•d • prtYtlllno Alltfttlon Ii Olre<teel to the Pf'OYllloM of LellDr Codlt Sett ion 1111.~ toncerh-rete erlO ~••of •'99S. In eccordlince "" ~oymtnt ot tpt>renttc.s. It '-''" <m'ltrKlors or sut>c.ontrecton '#lltl ''"'·lo bC' pelel In lhe co~trucllon • ~lno lredesmen In eny ~ktslllp occup.iloft 1o •PP'• to tllC' •llPlk • of the •t>ow enlllled lmprove,,..nu. tilt IOlnt ~r•ntlctalltp commlttw for• c.trtHkeM of ~o-.•1 •no ti.Inv Ille Thet~dratt~sol•••s ..,...l>Y retie., ~•nllces to jOurMymtll u.eo on Ille CMllrM.I. CIM\trtctor m.ty be,.. 119 Clly Covnclf by Ruot11t1on No. 1~ CNlr,ci lo make contrlbutlofla lo epprenhc:ftlllp Pl'ogr.ms. Contractor ono s..t>-on 1,. 1\ll .,., of Jenuer.,, 1t7S. end la <-re<tou wll '''° ,..,,.,, 1"1111Section1m.6 tn IN employmeont ot ·~· an flt• In the Oflk• of 111t Clly Clerk al UOH. F« l11lormellon rtl•tl .. lo ..,_lefthlp Utndent•, cronlecl Director ot Mif Clly. Tiltt w lel rete ond i.ult ~ 1"""'4rl•I Reletlons Sen l'ren<bco, C.llloml•, or Division of A.pprenCkC'INp '-•In referred 10 end eCIOpttd to thlS SlatldtrO• eranc11 Offko. no41U es though fully and <~••v O..r11me sh.ti! bepelel fOf --per~,,..41 In nc,H of the rt911IOI' CS.y's wt for1h herein, end tllal wlel K•I• •• -ll ertelettlltrettofowrtlmefOrtNcralllnwlwel, Mllploel bY wlel RelOlutlon Ii -• HDllCl•o \NII be •II 110lldaY1 ntctQnl1H l11tM C.Olle<tlve Btroelnlno AorH-11trtof this noll<• by reler•nct. ,.,.nt ~llctll>lt to tllt -.rtiwlar <r•ft, cltitllk.911on or ITS-ot wOf'kintn Tiit contr•clor sne11, In Ill• t1T11loytdtt1 Ille Ptolttt. llWforlTIW\Ct of Ill•_,., •nel ,,,...,.,,..,._ It lhtll tit mtndelory '-' e. Contreclor to -m • contrec:t Is •w•rcMO ,,..,." conform to the ubor CoOt of ~upon t ll Sul>Conlrec tors under him, to pey not ins then wiel prevelll11g rtllis INI St.;t• of Gelllornl• anci other 1.-Of of Pff dltMwoghto •ll-rll~emp!OyedlnlhetMC11tlonol lfle Contrec:t. tllt State of Ct lllornl• eppllcoble ILaCTlttCAL HOVIU.Y ltATI. llMUIO, "''"' , ... Uctpllon only Of IUCh Foremen SOllftd Ttc11nlcl•n $11.'11 'ferl•tlOn' H me, be required under Journeymen Ttthnl<l•n '11.6'0 tN ape<lol a1e1111es punutnt to ..tllcll CAR,.a H1'1Y prO(..Olngs hereunder ere tekttl end Cer11tnler l'ortrllan ' 9 ... wtilcll n.11e not l>Mn superMdtd by IN CMpenttr Journeymen ' 1.13 provhlons of the Ltt>or Coelt. Ptt- Tl'lt O....r re,ervn IN prlvlltve Of rele<.tlno ..,., end •II bids or 10 wal.. teren« to ltbOr shell &t glvtll only In _, lr~lerltlH or lnformelltlu In Ml' bid Of In lllt bidding. Tlleo Colltrac10t lht mtnner l)(Ovleltd by 1aw. r fNY not wllMr•• Ills blel fOf • ptrtocl Of 4S Cley' IOllOwlnQ lhe dale of open1n9 of No bkl shell be conSldertd llftltU It la ' lljdt.. ~on• l>lonk IOf'm l11rnla.ntd &y llW BOAR 0 OF TRUSTEES City of Coste Mue and IS mecte Ink• Coe at Gotnmuftlty Collf99 Dhiri< I , cordenc.e with Ille provisions ol t'1e Pf'O- of Or•noe County potel ,..qulrtmtno . Gost• MeM, C.lllornle E•ch &ICS<Mr must be llcent«I end ISi Horman f.. W.t~ •'10 prequelllltd o reaulred by•-· Secretery of lllt &o.nlOf Trwl•H The O ty Council of IM Clt't' of ~l• OPEN; July J1, 197S, 2:00 P.M. lS1G-1S Moe rHtrves Ille riglll IO r~jeCI MJ 06 PllllUIMdOre119t Co.eat O.lly Piiot, Jiiiy I' 21. t'7S •II bids. • P UBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE EILEEN P. PHINNEY cttv C•trk City of Co\lo Mtw, Cellfornl.t PullllSlltd OrMlge COUl O.lly PllOt, July 1'. 11, tt1S 2t25-7S P UBLIC NOTICE 6 4 2 • 5 6 7 8 D A I L y p I L 0 T c L · A s s I F I E ·D 6 4 2 • 5 6 7 8 MQnd!v. Juty 21, 1f75 CAIL Y PILOT 8 § ~ ................ ,... ......................... ~---· ................. ,... ... The~~·"' the cn.-eout DAILY PILOT CLASSIFIED ADS I....,_, "--..... ,.. "" .....-.. ··'°°°'°" ._,,_ .... .__ .......... ... & ,..... ,.,.Mft '-""'" • ....... 'GOO '"" You Con Sell It Find It ( ] One Call Service Trade It With ~ Want Act 642 •5878 Fast Credit Approval i_. ~ ,.....,.....,_ ,,_....... •lllO..W H CMnH For s• ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1002 ·----------l ~.~~••••••••I~~~~••••••• HCMIHI fot-U. Getter• t 002GH•rol 1002 G~ BIOIS: Adorwtf..,... .._.,c1ie-c1&.....-ods cWly -.d report ~ ,..., ............ ..,. The DAILY PILOT .. _... 1-.mty for the flrtt .. c.nct l•Mriioa Giiiy. .............. Moticr. All real estate advmilllld In this newspaper Is sub- ject lo the Federal Fair Housing Aci of 1968 which makes it llle1al to advertise "any pre- ference, limitation, or dlscrimation based nn race, color, religion, sex. or national origin, or an intention to make any such preference, Umlta· t.ion, or discrimination." This newsp•per will not knowingly accept any adverlisln& Cor real estate which is in viola- tion of the law, Houw1 for Sde ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1002 ••••••••••••••••••••••• BACK BAY 2 Story Newport Riviera 3 bedroom, needs loads of TLC, paint, paneling, floor tile & you name 1t! $38,900./$3,900 cash mov- es you in. 962·7788 • KEY . 1 I P.€ALTOP.Sft *CASH* FOR ANY HOME!! f\Jll appraised value paid. Free home evaluation. Back payments OK. Call anytime. Rick Byers Bkr 542-3676 THE BLUFFS Spacious 3 bdrm. 3 bath end unit that provides plenty of privacy plus a VIE W across the luscious greenbelt to the Back Bay. Transferred owner must sell. 646--7711 . Open Eves. 1111 Don't give up the ship! "List" it in classified. Ship to shore results! 642-5678. CLA.SSIFIED HOUIS Advertisers may place lhl'ir ads by telephone 8:00a.m. toS:JO p.m. Monday lhru friday . 8to~Satu~ay ' cml'A MESA OFf'tCE 330 W. Bay &t2·5678 NEWPORT BEACH 3333Newport Blvd. 642.5678 HUNTINGTOl" BEACH ims Buen Blvd. 540-1220 LAGUNA BEACH , 11911 Olenneyre Laguna Beach 41M·9466 SADDLE BACK ~201 La Paz Road Laaun• Hil.ll 581-6310 ' NORTII COUNTY di al free 540-1220 CLASSIFIED DEADLINES Deadline ror copy " kills is 5:30 p.m. the day bef<lte publlcutlon. ex- cept ror Sunday It. Mon· day Editions when jdeadllne la Saturday, 1.~ noon. CLASSIFllD UGULAT101'4S ERRORS: Advertisers should check their ads dally & report errors immediately . Tll ~; DAILY PILOT assumes liability ror the rirst 1n· correct insertion only. CANCELLATIONS: When killini an ad be Stft to make a record or the K I LL NUMBER given you by your ad taker as receipt of your cancellation. Th11 kill numbc\r must he presen· l.ed by the advertu~er in Clllt or 8 dispute. CANCELLATION OR CORRECTION OF NEW AD B Efo'OR E RUNNING : Every erfort •a made to .kill or correct" a new ad that hH been ordered, but we cannot f uaran· t<"l' to do 90 untl the ad has appeared In the paper. DIME-A·UNE ADS: 1llele adt are 1trictly cull In advan~ by mill or at any one nr our of· flcea, NO phone ordcn. Dcadllnc· 3 p ,m , P'rlday. Colla Meaa of· !nee • 12 noon at '11 branCh ome.s. 'THE DAU .. Y PILOT rese"e' Ute rt11ht to clualfy, ~Jl, c.n.or or refU1e any adver· ·ti.merit. and to chan•• Jta raw. • re1utaLlont !wtlhoul prior ,.,Uct>. CLASW.ID ~ADDllSS P.O. Box ueo. ea.ta MM• --.. ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• llGCAMYOH L S I.LY ~ 1\YLOR CO. t<J :J\l.TOH ~ •,11wt· l ~Hfi UMDA ISLE -HIW -LUXURIOUS Finest custom construction in this superb 5 BR home on the bay. H&to' pool, pier/slip, billiard rm, sauna & 51'2 baths. Rich appointments. $395,000 76 LINDA ISLE Open Daily l ·5 2111 S• J~ Hilb Rood MIWPOIT CB4TEA. M.L 644-491 O 11t.a1 &totew.- 1-:xper .. dependable. compullble real estale sale~wom un ror sales &. rentals; full or part t.Jme or open house only Salisbury Real Estate 315 Marine Ave. Balboa Island 673 6900 FAIRVIEW FRONTAGE 246' or C·2 toned property Capture the pnvacy & luxury of ttui; m1Sgnifl• cent 4 bdr111 Broudmorc home 1-·ormcr model with no expense spared 1rt decorating & landscaping. A truly elegant home with every am<'nlty. 646-7711. Open £ves. Walker & lee Heal Estate 1s ready for develop----• ment. Localed nt'ar DECORATORS Ncwporl Rlvu Costa MASTERPIECE M e s a C a I 1 r o r J l listed Beauurull)' partic ulars. Will lease a~~o•nlt>d 3 bedroom G.....-at J 002 Getterol I 002 vr condom 1 n i um w 11 h ••••••• •••• •••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~300,000 . CASH s Pac I o u s m as le r LAKESIDE COTTAGE HUMTINGTOM IEACH DOLL HOUSE t:xclus1ve with: bedroom swte. Near pool •39,950 Ji" Newport II. a nd shopping. Lots. of • -_CjM"3,.~ privacy . Low m ain· FHA & VA 04«>-ISBll ten a n c e d u e s a n d This beaulirul 3 bdrm ANYTIME leasehold. Priced to sell home has been complete &t $68.500. Call 673~ MODOWNG.I. Steps from lake. Entry to great outdoors . Yo ur children will love it. GORGEOUS FOUR YEAR NEW CLASSIC HOME. Garden kitchen. Spaciou1l living and din· ing rooms . Secluded master and childrens suites NO DOWN T O VF.TS! li1ke to beach Call 963·6767 . [~~I~~~EtJ;;:; , __ G_o-~·F·s·s·,·u·~-c-H--1 ( i'l1~·~fal 1111. , Alley 5!c~!s~· boat· trailer camper pad1 f.x otic and lush picni1· backyard! Private enter· tainmcnl center with bar BEACH BARGAIMS Duplex · $59.500' Duplex · $72.500! 4 Units· $79.500 and 11 .B Q . pit --.- / A.1._..... Workshop area' 4 num ,/{~ pus sized bdrms. Fam rm Service porch and formal din<'! Assume FHA 7'2' o at only S24l l>uple'( · Sl 12,000' CALL 67S-7060 HUMT.BEACH 3 BR. I' 2 ba. Cpl. Newly refurbished. $23,450 CALLS5M800 Balboa Boy Prop. OWNER ANXIOUS Highly upgraded 4 bedroom, 3 bath single level home located in the prestigious SPYGLASS RIDGE area of Newport Beach . This quality home has been custom deocoruled and pro- fessionally landscaped. Owner has added a view· ing deck that offers a spectacular panorama of the city and ocean. 3 Car garage. Vacant and re· ady. Reduced to$ll9,900. YOU OWN THE LAND. Open Daily 1·5 PM. 386C Ocean Birch, CdM. call 640-6161 e& COATS&WALLACE REAL ESTATE, INC. EASTSIDE DOLL HOUSE Sharp Costa Mesa 3 bedroom. 2 bath with b ea u tifu l carpets thruout. Large covered patio, dble garage. Room for boat or trailer. Hurry, first lime offered and priced $42,000. Call • ; ; • I ~·HERITAGE • • REALTORS JUST LISTB> Must see this well kept 4 bedrm h ome. Extra large master bedrm w/walk in closet&vanity area . Co n c r ete driveway, lovely patio & much more 1 SSJ.950. ~UPERB f-fO MES 3148 Campu1 N 8 549-1655 "OLD S,AMISH ESTATE" SRORECLIFfo'S: 320 Sea ward . Three bedroom, family room, "split -level" home . paneling. beamed ceil· ings, unusual & interest· ing. SI 10,000. Call 675-55 1 I Cole of Mewporl Realton -------" PIER & SLIP are included with this beauUCul. completely re· modeled to·new 3 bdrm, fam rm + much more. Ask ' g. $149.500. Why don't you volunteer your own terms and pric(' JACOIS REALTY 675-6670 CHARMIMG Q-PLAM BluHs condo ltv1n1' al its best! V ac.rnl. 1mmed. possess. Rough sawn paneling in hvmg rm., exposed beam ce11. in cozy conversation area. 3 Bdrms., 2'12 ba., frplc.; with greenbelt view. $74,900 C. F. ColesworthY Realtors 640..0010 NEW OFFERING 3BR. 2'hba, din, FP, new paint and plumbing. Prkg. boal/trlr. $58,950 HALPIMCHIM REALTOR 2727 r.. Coast Hwy 675-4392 COUNTRY RUSTIC $36,950-save thousands! Assume 5 1f4 Nc annual percentage rate loan. I /5 Acre. Rustic ranch style 3 + den. country kitchen. gourmet dining, hlll'te lot. boat & camper access. Privacy galore' Better hurry·call 645--0.m FOREST OLSON IMC. LOWEST PRICE in Big Canyon Beautifully landscaped, view, Dover . 2 bedrooms & den. Owner anxious. Asking $119,500. VOGEL & BABBITT REALTORS 644·6056 IY·THE-SU Winding brick & cobble stone walkway s enchancc by ivy covered walls . Sunken living room lightened by alcove bay wind·ows. Ca ndlelight dining ~~~~~~~~~ beneath domed ceilings : & separate breakfast nook with built-In hutch. ~OW I S THE TIME Paneled d en. Heavy for joh ~eckers Lu check beam ceilings: Covered the Dally Pilot llclp lanai. featuring Wanted cld5Stfii.:at1on. H flagstone setting with the job you '>':tnt is not 8 .8 .Q. and 2nd fireplace. t.here you might con:.1der Just r educed $7 ,000. offering your sen.ices Sacrifice al '69.900. Call with an arl m lh<' Joh now! 842-2535. Wanted categor} Phone Ol'fN "' 0 . ,, s IUN roH '· ., • 642-S678 [ ••WftH•I ~:.:~"·~~ dD~~~;. r~t.~ , ' -==·-··= -Classified Ad. Phone Classified Ads 642·5678 642-S678. S©\\.JUµ-~t,trs ~ Tliaf Intriguing Word Gome wiflt a CltucklE ------''"•' .. , ClAY • ,O\lAN 0 lteortono• le"tt• of ·•ho lour trroMbled -d• b.- low to form four simple words t 11~ rn "1 1 l _..z_I..._P__,E_,.,__,Rl i _ I' I I I . t r_....L_A_L_I_Y...--4] ! _ I' I 1 I J Arch•eolool~l 1 • person whole c.reer fin in --. , tr -,-N_O_R _G_T_S ___,, I A C~let• ...., chucll<t quoted : I I I I v by "''"'0 '" •h• """'"O -d -• • • • • .,.... ._.. frOl'll lftP No 3 btlo.w. •,.INT NUMaUct> lE1HRS IN r r r 14 r 1 tMHt §Q\lAm . _ . . . · • '¥o~~~~~l tmm I I I I I I scJtAM.&.mAM..,, • ctostffic..._ aoao per mo. No new c·cists' Just hsted ! Cati, be first. 847-6010. Realtors UNIVERSITY PARK SPARKLER NEWPORT CONDO 3 Bedroom , 3 bath , fireplace. overlooking pool . ~u per sharp. an<! only $45.500. w/10'~ down. CALL PRESTIGE HOMES Realtors 645-6646 Must be experienced to be believed A 3+ Fam. home with a fantastic parents retreat added lo \.he master bedroom, air c·ond & a yard large t•nough for small pool Bright. cheery and ml· orful. Over 2000 sq rt. Now reduced to only $59,900 C<ill 644 7211 FREHCH CHATEAU MSIB 2 STORY-BEACH~ POOL-$32,900 ~ Stately entry to elegant ---- Ii v 1 n~ r oom. l.arJ:c WESTCUFf garden view k1tt•hen for R •HCH the gourmet eloquently " serves formal dimng 4 BDR--POOL with courtyard view. SI 03 OOO Stairs sweep to S('(.'Ond • . . story s wtes fcatunng a Entry to formal hv~ng huge hideaway master. and banquel size dtrung 23• Grand ballroom ror rooms . Gourmet. Ji?3.rden the entl!rtasners flurry. kitchen. Fiesta size rum- Owncr bought another -pus r oom with bar. mu s t SACIU.,.ICE Secluded maste r and PRICE l-'Oll SPfo:EOY childrens suites. Lush SALF.! Call 963-7881. ~arden with sparkling ''"N"''"'•' .,,,,,r-1•1• ponds and waterfalls. A [ ~ swimmers parad1st' Call ~. today t o preview ! 963-6767. ; f "JI '.I •,. •,; • 11 1 'J"' t [~ ' : I : : : ~ : ~· •I ' I 'c; ,, SKINNY DIP SPECIALS 3300 BRICKS Two 3 bedroom pool h o me s beautifull y landscaped in the most dt!S 1rable area or Newport Beach. One has a ful l y e qui pped darkroom, private patio and glassed·1n family room. The other is super secluded with giant bedrooms. Priced 1n the SSO's with lOr t down form a la\'lsh entry walk to this 3 bedroom. 2 bath M 1ss1on Viejo Alon· dra. This Sele<.1. Property is only two years'old. but the owners have spent a fortune upgrading. r'ull price $48.600. with a 71 :!';, assumable loan. CALL TODAY. 556·2660 ·~Quail ~ liliilPlac• . C:::SEL ECT I PROPERTIES Praperti•• 7S'2-l9'20 1400 OUAlln. NlW,Otf llACH F ind whnt you want in Daily Pilot Class1f1eds _ Ge-neral I 002 Gfllera l 1002 ·············································~ FUH PEHIMSULA HOME 43' frontage with charming 2 BR. plus conv. den. Large sunny patio, immaculate cond1t1on. hlock to beach & fishing dock SBti .000 CHOICE IM HARIOR VIEW HILLS Fine family four bedroom home with love ly lands caping, warm aut umn colors. <:overecf patio in secluded, sizable yard -instantly appealin~ at $105.lX.lO UMCOMMOM. Impressive 2 s tory family home. 4 bedrooms . 3 baths, family room. for mal dining room. Pool with separate jacuzzi. Situated on large corner lot. $149,500. OWMU PACKIHG University Park -steps to pool & tennis. 3 bedrooms. special ma.c;ter sitting room with atrium. Beautiful fenced yard. Own your own land. Call nght away. $65,000. HOUSI WITH ciUIST 9UARTMS Bright. clean, fresh Harbor View home with separate guest quarters, 3 bedrooms. 21'2 baths an main house. Den. bedroom & bath in guest house. $99,500. MIW?ORT llACH 644-17'6 A COl.DWRJ.. IA>«la CO. I • llfl DAILY PILOT Monday, July21. 1'175 Ho.et Por '* H4MtH•,.,. S. He.tel"°" S. ....,. .. ,._. S-. .._,., f« S4IN --................•.••............•....................................••••.•................. ················~······ ... !~!!!.~~-~~ ...... J~~!~.~~-~ ....... HCMt ... ForW. HovsHF«S• GeMrOI 100 2 Cott•Mtto . 1024 H.HIM)tonleoclt 1040 ................. 1040Lep•Hnh 10.so ... , ........•••.....••...•• •••.•.............•••.. .......••......••••.... . •••.•................. ··••·····•····••·•·· .. !"-.General t 002Gftef'al I 002 GeMf'Of l STO•Y ....,_ mv ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• Ready for Imm occup Is •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• 1002G...eral tOOZ " --~ Owner 2br 2 ba condo. Abmdottedl Story this lov.:ly Cov Bros *WI KNOW* ', ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••• • •••••••••••• SUH SET IEACH New Crpt kitchen frpl 2 G_.. &t.t. home w /3 bdrm, tam & LA~UNA MIGUEL ..... INVESTORS OPPORTUNITY STEPS TO OCUH CIU' gar$29•900· 968-9'7B2 $32,950 TOTAL P!UCE! din r m. $40. 84T·S384 • 1151' • Near new pensontll home ASSUME VA Brina p..alnl & save $$$. trva... -I 044' MONARCll BAY·ExotJc, \Vt! ~ire fort unate to h:J\l' a wide uf prominent contractor Gracious garden entry ••••••••••••••••••••••• Contempor ary home. ~elect1on of DUPL EXES, lo ftll ~lmos t Rental unll Is a large l $222. Per Mo. J:ives wsytoabr<iathtak~ T u r t 10 8 r oad m oor ooe·of·a·k.ind 4 bdrm. 4 any nN·cl. in CdM. Han~ing in price bedroom with modern 3 Lrg. BR + added ram 1 n g W 0 R (, 0 0 1' Twnhso •Br 2~ba FR bths, des111ncd by Chris ( ~co 500 $ "" So k itche n, huge enter· rm w/stone frpk. Lrg. ELEGANCE Gourme t OR $70• 000 'p p' Abel. Ocean view. J~t rom """'· to 124,;J\)(). : me brand tainers livinR roo~ with greenhouse w/plants in· kitchen with entertaining 833-i'lcia ' · · reduced. $179.~. Ol'\\. Plca~c '·all mi for det;uls. slldioR glass wall t o duded. Will not last. can 11erving bar. Large foml· NEWPORT HEIGHTS J\ttru{'ti\'e 3 bdrm .. family rm. & · formu l <l i n in ~ rm. home PLUS 2 car ~aruf..!t.> & hohby rm. The sheltered P\lho is g rc·<it for ~"'nkrta.imn~. $74,900 l•'t•c lund (not leasehold ) VEAR BAY ANO BEACH 675-3000 ;.>407 E C::OA ST H\NV C ORONA D EL M AR TWO AND TWO Two two bedroom units that are cute! One is a stone front, shake roofed home with fireplace and m ode r n kjtchen. The other is over the garage with Ben F r anklin fireplace. Both a re · c-lose to s tores a nd Library. Presented· at $92,500. UMl9UE HOMES. Redtors-675-6000 2443 E. Coast Hwy., Corona def Mw · ~~~~~ .......... !?.~~· ~~~:! .......... !?.~~ G~raj I 002 Ge-Mrol 1002 IRVINE TERRACE -View Lal'!.!(' honw "1111 'll'\\ tif lwrhor. ·1 .. Hnrms . I b~it h..; .~amc nn. Offer ed. $:!85.UOO NEWPORT HEIGHTS ".\l'Wt!-oh :1 hdrm .. :.! haths. famil\' 1·oom 01 fl'n·d :1t :rn1.uoo · ([lrnfllN-Mfl~TIN luc J --REAL TORS -- 644-7662 CORONA DEL MAR ...... , ..................•.....••....••••..... LIDO ISLE Wa t<'rfront 4 BR . ;, ha., rumpus rm. Plt.'r & float . sandy tx.••t<:h. $295,000 lkaut. G BH . 5 Ba. or 4 UR. 4 Ba with 2 H H . I h ;1 • /\ pt. Sandy beac h , t·ourlyard . ~hon• mooring. $295,000 ~pCJ<:lOUS ·1 Tift. family rm .. dinin~ rm, sunny pri,· pt1l10 ; 52 ft lol. 5179,000 BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR 341 Bayside Or, .. e NB 67~·6161 Gen~ral I 0021G~eral t 002 G~ral I 002 GeMt"al I 002 •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ·············•·•····•·· ......•....•.....••...• CULDESAC BEAUTY VERY 9UtET $59 ,500 WITNESSES SOUGHT "F:J~ls1clt: Costa ~1t':-.:1. I lo pro\ e that this j,, lhl' bl•d room roC1my f.1m1I~ b{•st occ·an duplt•x ! R1'nl homt.' l)Jl10 Pwk your 1 unc .ind Ian· in the olh1•r. (l\\O pt•at·hc!<> & :iprit•nl:-. Grt'al 4 bedrm. 2 bath. l\;u lr;.i ff1t'. gr('al family master sualc has privuk . humt• Call 64n il71 entrance and bakon\ Lower 3 bed rm. 2 b;.ith -.s [~ THE REAL ESTATERS ~ SL'PER and \'/\CANT. <X-1•an vit'w:-. from hnlh 11n11 s' Askin)! S9!Ul:;O . Sl'IB11T' Fi•ll out nf t'~t ro" OW;\ER I S ..--------•I ANXIOUS' EARN 546-4141 I 5°'o PER YEAR ·• l.F.T t 'S SllOW \'Ol' /\ WAY TO SELL VOL' R .f lOME. ltEl'El\'E :.~l'. <.'\Sil & .. ;,\ K '\I l P TO t5'. <OH ~WIH.1 PER "YEAR ON YOUR HEMAl :-.1 1"'\C: EQl 'ITY. Ill \I 1•11< .... ~l'I I· l'•li 673-4400 ~ COATS&WALLACE REAL ESTATE , INC. OWNER MOVING ll lJH HY . lll'HR\. II H H \' • Sp a 1· i o u s Corona ckl '1.ar home for ,1l'lt\t' family. 4 Bedroom. 2 f1n•places IJrgc !-edudCf1 l11t. Keys for thr ~c private bt•ac h es. Near "'queslra:in center <ind .---------I surf mg beach. Own<'r is movinJ! :ind has priced PACESETTER HOMES RANCHWOOD CLOSE-OUT SALE!! Selling 4 dl•roratcd mod<'ls + 2 reoo·s at cxtru low prices! ar; Financing a ls o ;.i,·ailablc. Quick sale ('Xlras include : front landscaping a nd sprink l ers. r ear fencin1!. upJ!raded carpe t, oven/r a nge, dishwash er & dis po sa l. J\s k ing fr om. $44.950. l lurry ! ! F or more inform ation. Call 714: 581-2444 ~~~! .......... ~~.~~1 ~~~~~! .......... ~?~~ WARM SPACIOUS SPRAWLING ~catly tucked away 1n a quiet strct•l ncstl('(J un lier a :-.hakc roor and "ailing for you. lh1s 4 l>l'Clroom. 2 hath homt.' must be sold no" :.ince owners. have hnuj!ht anothl•r. Only S46.900. too •~Quail ~·· liilPlac• · Praperties 752·1920 1400 QUAIL St. NlWl"OaT lfACH Eostsid~ Chcrmer Ex<·ellent Costa Mesa IOl':llion. near schools. and public transporta· l i on. Sp:icious 3 bt'<iroom, 2 bath with lots or extras including used bnck fireplact.>. covered patio aod ~arage door opener. Best Eastside bu) al S4 l ,900. Call 54()..I 151 ~HERITAGE • ,. REALTORS JUST LISTED! POOL-GREEM house for quick sale. On- P o l I c s s f cal u r c s ly S86.500. Call tr7:H!S50. --------- dosed pat1oonthC'cor · '"' ,.,, ·n ·' '"" OPEN DAILY MESA YERDE 4 BR Poolltome ~ J)eam t·c1hng <:lose to " r, soft paneling & high [ ~ i Boat slip. + quiet, lux· beach Only s.'>4,!l'i(). . urious. 3 bed.rm, j!ami? on prestigious Clubhouse Dr. A newly decorated, freshly painted, 4 BR, Fam-rm home w-/a huge 42' oval pool. Outstand· room Townhouse. Look n 642-5200 '----__ ___ for the sign. Plenty of ! EASTSIDE UNDER $40,000 3 Rd rm doll housl' on ten "!~~~~~~~~~! m-; 1..'uurl :-.11e lot. As :tn • ~'(Ira honus-an added gJmt· r1111m Our (''( ____ ,.. ____ al t'luM\'l'. Ju..,l lislt.'\I Call On The Bay Beaullful nc\\ 2 story ·I Br. 4 Ra & Gallt•1 y :.! flrepla<:l•c;. wetl>ar OPlu~e kitchen n1Jw 6.Jti iii I. Opl'n E\l'S. -... Walker &lee Aeal lstat11 ·• Pier for Y<ll'ht to60' • - parking ins ide. Children welcome! Open .1·5. 4441 ing for $74,500. Call West Coast ll1J?hway, 644·7211 N•wpo,l Be~:h. ~ ~~ ® herbert hawk ins RE AlTORS 646 ·32SS bpen Daily 1-7 3 05 Broadway, C.M. Large detached studio room w /bath & fplc. Plus 3 BR, completely re· furbished. lge wardrobe p rtvat e court yard. tvduy.5'0·3666 ly11icdliving room witb UNIV E RS IT Y Park· MONA RCH HAY T EK· O wn e r s un it is t1 SECLUDE D PATIO. Deane Home.4 BR.3 BA. RA CE, P resti gio us br~athtaklng world of Sweeping staircase leads U p g r a d ed. A I C . custom home area , 3 e l egance. Gourme t to hideaway masl~ & Pre m ium lot. $77,500 bdrm,3bths,22'xl7'fam kitche n features 30' ft u t:st s u i t es. BKR. Owner .551·2843. rm, wet bar. 2900Sq, rt . isla nd bar for cooking, 0 W N E K H A D T 0 Lnr~e swim pool·Gr eut serving & entertainln~. LEAV E!Call REDUCED BY OWN ER, f~mily homc.$129,500. Enormous living room 540•3666 842-8154 4 BR. 211'.t Ba. Fi il. 0 /R, Laguna NICJllll R.-.Y: with 20' sundeck adjoin· TARBELL bo nus rm, $65,500. 496-4040or ing hideaway master & BY OWNF.R 3 hr. home, 551·6759 _______ 830-5050 • guest s uites. Owner must lg . lot. 1 blk. from ---------PARK sacrifice. Full price only Backbay. Xlnt. cond Ranch FIRST OFFERIMG $85.000. Call 963-7881. $42,900. 642·05tn •~ach-Pool Loe ation * Ri"ht on t.he 12th tee or {1fi/\i'lli.J•H\lt•Nl(.t.f1.""•'• $35 900 <> [ ~ College P:irk. ''Hr, 2 Ba. • Enhances this outsland· Lagun a Niguel Golr bltns, l aundry rm . UNS !o:t.11-;Vi\BLE! ing 3 liR, 2 lla .. with Co u rse . POO i. lieautifully landscaped S3S,900 T OTAJ: .PRl~E! family kitchen. SUPER w /jacuzti. 4BR 2ba, I~ 1 w/l'overcd patio & gas Ranch style Livm~ '" a LA R G E MASTE R din rm. Cam rm. 1900 Sq BU Q . U y 0 w n er, BEAC ~ TOWN. ~njoy . BEDROOM. A good buy rt. A beautiful buy at OPfN 1119• •I ~flJN I ltf r1H('' [~ I I : : . : ~· I .. • I LOCATION LOCATION $41,500 FHA·VA n You can't believe this charm ing 4 bdrm, 2 bath hom e. Lovely f ami ly room w ith fireplace. Nearly new carpel. Call to see this doll house. Call 545·9491. -- r . . EASTSIDE COSTA MESA 3 B ed room ~. I bath. Hardwood floors. lovely home 1n cxc t•ll c nl Eastside location. l\s· s uma ble FHA Loan. Wonderful starter home for t hose that arc price conscious. Nice b:tck yard with a lley access. $37.500. . •MQuail ~ lliiilPlace . Prap1trti•• .752•1920 1400 QUAil St. NEWl"OU HAO• Marlboro Country Cowboys k eep your horses here! Very sharp 4 bedroom. 2 bath home. d ble ga r age, n ew car pets, cool county location. Big 66x.231 n. lot zoned R-4. Full price on· Iy $45,500. Won't last long! Call 540-1151 ~HERITAGE 545 4926 the pnvacy of YOUR at $58 soo $99,SOO. OPEN SlJN 1·5 OWN POOL. Enter·your ' 23932 PaseodeCompo •DUPLEX* ~amily roomthru as~d-RAISOR'S .......... . mg wall of gl.ass while GOLF COURSE 2 br, 1 ba ea. Gd. inc/ y o u e n J o Y a REALTORS lPrms. Prime cond . PANORAMIC VI EW of ESTATIHOME $46,000. J 944 & 1946 t h e g r 0 u n d s . 4523 Campus Dr., Irvine 4 Yrs. old. 3,000 SQ. ft. tri· Anahe1 m Sl., owner. II o m e m a k er • s Campus ValleyShopClr. level 4BR 2ba. huge fa!" 4!>8·2995 or 644·849" GOU RM ET KITCHEN & CALL 8 3)..8600 r~. lovely crpts, bll·tn ---sewing bar. Separate k1tch. A steal at $93,500. C·I Zonin~ 2 Houses, 2 pa r e n t ret reat & CA LL WANDA CUM· RR's. $55.000. 558·5681 or c hildre n 's wine. BKR. VILLAGEUVING MINGS,495·1407 547·4834orli46·008!. Callnow r F ol l ow the li ghted YATESREALEST~TE MODEL Like home on 842-8854 walkways lo pool and 499-2237 golf co urse. Sunshine TARBELL r ecr eation. Enjoy the yellow thru·out. 3 BR's. _______ across-the ·strccl shop- formal din rm, fam rm . ping and the low main· 21" Ba . SSSO mo. or LOW DOWN tenance patio. A 3 bdrm., S72.500 Sall·. Owncr/Agt . FHA TERMS 2 bath, with form:il din· Wk nds orEvt'S 540-7086 Freshly painted 3 BR, in g and u tili t y . Jl's car p e t ed in gold , •MESA vt-:HDJ·.:• added ram rm w/frplc, wallpapered. mirrored R 'R formal din rm, outdoor l.arge3B .21iba,I-bri ck BBQ. W:ilk to &indpricedatS54.~ B1Jt yard. Near Schools Elem. school. Priced lo ""' Owner Hrokt'r 979-3788 sell. SJ9.000. Call 968-444l OWNER MUST CREST REALTY SACRIRCE! JUST LISTED ~~~t'.:' JUST REDUCED 3BR, P4ba. formal din 552_7500 $15001 r m , fam rm, popular • atrium model. Kingsize ~~~~~~~~~ 4 Bedroom . 2 baths, master bdrm. boat gate. sec I u d e d e ntry-to Close to beach. Owner TURTLEROCK P RICE BUYERS-Owner wa nta offer now! Vacant 3B R 2 b a. Priva t e guarded ar ea. $55,000. Enjoy the Good Life 493·2513 499-4584 Spacl·ous s unken 11·v1'ng t f'd I l Ne w o n marke t : 4 rans . Won't ast. on y bd 2" b f M' • V1 • •067 room. Candlelite formal $55,900. Call 968-444l rms . • .,: a.. am. 1ss1on 1e10 ' dininJ? room, separate CREST REALTY rm., din. r m. 2.Sty. Cov· ••••••••••••••••••••••• family party room with e r e d patio; c us to m Aliso V.illa 2 story, 3 m assi ve f ire pl ace . land scapi ng. Cedar Bdrm, l l/2 Ba, upgraded. Garden ·view kitchen. shingleexterior,2frplcs. $33,900. by owne r . Hideaway master suite. Cul de sac. Im mac. cond. 586·4565 Hurry for this excep-$67.950 .,.---rt-B--h--1-0_6_9 tional Costa Mesa Green· DAVID D. CARLSON ewpo eac brook find. C:ill 546·2313. Real Estate. REALTOR 833-9293 •••• ••••••••••••••••••• v"'~'''"'"'""'''"'N•d '~· byNkNAY SEETHl.S!! 8~!!~~!!! DON'T MAKE WAVES 2 Bdrm., fam!IY rm:, 2 BALBOA P ENINSULA JUST FLOAT · bath condo: m lrvme. Excelle nt location on the ihru this La Cuesta Nicecarpetm~&drapes: Bay &only h block tolht.> [~ : 1 r: : ·II : ... · II : I I: . ~ $35,900 French Chald Ovt'rlooks widt' slrelches Qf lush grN·n. bi~ tr~ lo cool. Swim J>OOI for out· doors entl'rt:iinin~. Walls of mirrors. crystal. entry to parlour. candlelight dininJ?. ha nd laid t ile fl oor s. 3 bedrooms. children's xtra bath off parel\ls retreat. BKR .. won't last. call now! . 540-1720 TARBELL · 2955 Harbor Blvd., CM. Will Yours Qualify'! ma~y upgrades. Lar~e Ocean. Each home has 4 POOL home. LrJ? cov'd patio/yard. Beamed ce1 I. b drm s 4 b a th s & patio. Prime condition. m mstr. bdrm.; use of Ga llery' 2 fireplaces Formal dinina. fam rm. pool & re"' "rea A xi t • · " '· ., · n n wetba r ultra modern J. bdrms, 3 baths. Call buy at S32,900 kitchen ' & private pier 968-44G560 1.._, STYLE IRYIME HOMES, t·ee la nd. See at 1200 " REALTORS East Balboa Blvd. or Side yanl for boat/trlr 552-7000 call 675·8120 for more dl' t 'ront & rear cov'd patio. BOB P ETTIT tails . Super location, l ow ------- maint. yard. Step down Realtor·Own"'r BLUFFS PLAN W living rm. For appt. Logunaleach 1048 Endunit-4bedrm,2~~ba 968-44"56 ••••••••••••••••••••••• & fa m rm·pri v yard. REDUCED $4,000 OC~AH VIEW ~a~u~i's. 1~~~ !:u::. 4 br. 3 ba. Wk nds.&eves. CONDOMINIUMS By o wn e r $59,500. only. Overlooking Aliso Beach 644·1360644·7355 Owner 842·3764 & pier. 1,2 & 3 lxlrm. un· its. close t o shopping & A rare U shaped 1 story 5 12 Ilks to Beach bea ch. Starling at $36,500 Br, 3 Ba, 3000 s~ rt, like $38,650 9"· A~ · new. S220.000. Lido Isle, 3 Bedrms. dining rm, ll~u..=l?~ Prine Only! 54().4811 is total commission you corner lot in nice area of rn@&Il~}/ pay for qua li fied real d ownlown. Hard wood 499·2800 Pri Pty wants l o buy estate when you lis t floors. bllns. boat J{ate, ---direct from owner, 'fi xer personally with Charles nice yard. Walk to Lake NEXTTO upp er' h se in Npt Quintard. Realtor for Park. Call to see•! Red OCF.ANFRONT Heights. 548·5041 eves or top-doll ar sales. Number Ca rp et, Re a J to r s Shaws Cove, N. Laguna _e_a_r...c..ly_A_M _____ _ one (#1) in dollar volume 536-8836. white water s pl ashing for listings sold in 1974 by • . rocks, lanai and view other firms. Over 5000 FOR. SA L E : Rus tic decks,pool andjacuzzi.2 salesp eople & a ll 9 a~ch1tec~ure, 2 sto_ry de-Br. adult or bach. pad. Orange County-multiple s1.gn .. C1 rc l~ s ta irway penthouse+ l lxlrm apt. listing boards avaiJable wtth view window leads Use for home or income. at no extra charge. to retreat. Wood & board Zagrodzky Rltr, 494-8611 • w/heavy shake roof + ---------• l' BA's, family rm paneled Wood·Glase·Contemp. REALTY. in r ich , pecky ced ar . s plil·level 2BR. 2112ba, HAR BOR VI EW HOMES 4 Br 2 Ba F.R. Montego on oversize corner lot. Fee larfd. For sale by o wn e r . 1 73 0 P or t Westbourne Pl. 644·<M72 IAYFRONr 1 You may ~c lel't the ~cons1de/Carlsbad R.E. • fint:.hinl-! touch~. <, o n t a c l Robert t;i5 111~0 Sh~parcl . R<>:iltor. 603 ~1 1t·h1ga n, Oceanside. i 22 il\2:1- lnine Hse -$39,990 HUR RY,· P lush newer home. Lge fanuly mov· ing from area . .Features beauliful cst m cpt'g, drps, int, lge pvt yd. H 's a Gem • • REALTORS closets' Jj v rm• dining lliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiili area, top·-grade shag•--------~­ eulntard glass exterior. 4 BR·s. 3 •UP PER 3 ARCH BAy • .s1NCE ~ Brick Cplc , gourmet decks a nd ocean view! 3355 V1G l ido, N.8. S111t~ ~s galley kitchen. All on CALL 831·9411 Pho.-642-2991-Anylnne HUGE irregular lot. J BON D R EALTY INC. ly Owner-he Land * l>OVER SHORES • 4300 sq fl, 4Bdrs, each with priv. bath. Curved Wrought Iron staircase. Lge form al dining room , walnut pan•lg thruout. Visit by boat or mtrcar. No t raff ic. even o n wknds. S315K 20<'/o dn. Open 2-6 J ------ •· ~enual 1002 G~eral 1002 ........•....••..•.••.•..........•.........•.• 1• I ... •• ., . to., f~.;ol .,, macnab I Irvine realty IEST IUY IN THE ILUffS. Owne rs m ovi ng! De li ~h tf u l 3 bedroom. 21 .! bc.tth. 2-level, w /new carpet. Gorgeous greenbelt. S75,000. Barbar a Aune 642·8235. C\Hi7 > DOVER SHORES VIEW. Impressive M('ditcrran ean 4 be d room & famil y room home w /b onus bi ll iard rm or 5th bedroo m C u s t om-huilt 2-story w /room for pool Larry Dyer 642-8235 I M fi8 I IA YCREST IEAUTY. Delightful 4 hcdroom. 2 bath, pool home. Close to ~hopping . .schools & libra r y. $98,000. t<:van Corke tt &t2·8235. CM 69) IA YFROMT -PIER & SUP. Decorator 's dr eam. Guest quarters w/fireplacc. Long view of channel. Sedusion w /lg. patio & beautiful planlmi:!s SJ65,QOO. Gladys R ussell ~823S (~170) Ut41YE•SITY PA.RIC HOME Very J><>r>ul ~tr 3 bedr oom Chancellor w /ra th f.:d r ci l ceilings. Wa lkin g distanc·c Lo park. community pool, school & shop pin~ $.').'>,500.' Chuc k Re-Jrdon 644·6200. < M71) 6 42-U lS tOI 00"91 DflH Cl\M PION &ASSOC. C'1 11 54~HOOI. OCEAN VIEW Rent one. live in the other: 2 homes on 1 ''2 lots in Wes t Newporl 2 Bdrms .. 2 baths. with lge. playroom, wet bar ; vacant & ready to move in. 2 Bdrm., 1 ba .. frplc., patio. leased al $.150 per month. Call for aµp'l. Priced at $135,000 ·owner will finance. 673·3663 548·9673 Eves associated crpts & d rps. Boal or trailer gale on alley. 646-3928. eves 549-1532 INVEST $4,250 DINING ROOM SEATSl2 Step down to 17x20 Cami· ly room wa rmed by c r a ckling fir eplace. Oversized living room. After o riginal invest· ment of $4,250 you wiU be surprised with low mon- thly payments. To see, call 646-7171. ("Y-'fl'l"IQ •ll ,011 f'f ffJN.i f BR01>.ER S -REA lTORS 101'. .,. 8olbna b1 )bb I _ [!fl: SELL 1dll· llem..., with a THE REAL ESTATERS Daily Pilot (.'la:-.s1fil'd i\d. Classifiecl Ads 642-5671! ---- General 1002~al 1002 •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• REALTORS 644-7270 COMDO FOi Sll.500 LOOKS LIKE NEW and no yard work too! Corner 3 bedroom Coodo. Ne wl y p ain ted with upgrade d carpet . drapes a nd cushion kitchen vin y l. C l ose to s ho pping & (reeways. $33.500 1•11 llO•ll •Ot llYl•IJ ''°"''"' wl I U #II' IOf 1¥1 1'11. H ll•N ,.,.,,,, 1• , ... ,, ... THREE IEACHHOMES One block from ocean. 3 To 5 bdrms. Priced from $43.500. Call 8424455 or 540-5140. <___..:-..:... • Walker -s lee Heal Estate lolboa Pe-niMUla •••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• Chann-ftn By Owner in Dana Knolls. Car gar . One yr old. New on the market-$.52.500. Bkr 962·5511. -Walker & lee Real Estate Rare 3BrHome in0 ld Large 3 Br , 2 Ba w/your --------''--- CdM .505 Marguerite. choice of crpt & drps,1---------• Owner 644·6996. Large fenced yard with MUST MOYEI. -----paverl boat, RV. or OPEH SUN. 12-5 trailer storage ar ea. Owner bas purchased 1132 SEA LAME $.'>4.500. 496·06&5. new home and is anxiou1' Harbor View HHls. 4 BR. -to sell. 4 Bed.rooms, 1% with ocean & bay view, Fot.toin Valley I 034 baths, highly upgraded, ~." .. NE DS FAST SAU Walk lo tennis courts, la rge p ool a nd ocean from this tw~story, 3 bedroom, 2 bath home with dining room. plus family room. Located in nice•pri v ate community. $69,SOO • 1963S. Coast Hwy . Laguna Beach * 494-0749 . ..A-Olan REAL fqATE QOO ( ,1,.,..,,.,,. ')1 :•,.i .• 'h~ • I ' l'Y • I I' Sal & Sun. 548·1589 333 Morning Star Lane 1206 EsMx WEST CUFF Opu Sun 1-5 Outstanding, 3 BR, 3 Ba, Din-rm. Fam·rm, Liv. rm w /dual frplc's looks out on pri v. sunny patio. Home r ecently r e· decorate d thru-oul. Perfect for entertaining. $83.950. SOUTH COAST INYESThefr 549-0812. 645-4203 II~ CAHYOH IUY SJ30,000. Spacious 3 Br Monaco. Wool carpet. tile patio, 3 car garage. PAUL W. BRUMFIELD & ASSOC. 549-8505 pools ize corner lot ; •••••••••••••••••••••• excellent neighborhood, beamed ceil .• Cam. rm .: S P A C E M~ KE R I J , minutes to Wcstmiru>ter n ew off.whit e car1) .. Oreenbrook's Finest 5 Mall, schools, shopping drapes. Owner Br. 4 Ba. huge rumpus &freeways. Only $41 ,000. RANGELAND IY OW'ta1 • S92,500 room w /speclal reatures. lllf16f4~(l~:-:: Big romanUc 4 bdrm. on HARBOR HIGKLANDS S57·4112 un.days8·5 $84.950. Owner ~. lf1•-1Mm-t:.:..~-litl·~-~-~~~ r II d t 4Br 2' ... b tt.....t -uw. "" ftlt::.-:.. ..... .,.. ""M u acre, zone or , Tll a.,~'-·-· Eves/Wke nda640-12A7 4 IDRM _.._,, ""' hones. Woodty gst cabin lmmed occupancy. lS24 UMOISTIUCTJD.. 2'/J IATHS lncluded. ll's in Laguna! Sylvl.a Lane.548-7367. • •. harbor.ttoceanview DILUMGM 3-4/PLDIS $15S,OOO HARBOR VIEWHOMES.. Approx. Vii a cre lot. Hold-DP for all average 2·2 Br. & 1·3 Br. 2 Ba. PaJermo 4 BR. 2~ Ba, 2 Corona delMartrontllne pricedbuyers onthis ma. Cpl, drps , bltns, enc. La; aHll1 1050 St1. super lndlepg. tall home ; larae pool, 4 BR., Jest.le Spanish style ha· gar's. $59,950. ea. Ownr. ••••••••••••••••••••••• plncs, hre deck, firepU~ 4baths: 700 aq.ft.enter· clenda residence. Ex· 842-0389 TOWNHO USE (Nur BBQ. You own land. t al nmen t r oom with ten or : Caslilian tJlc It ---------• World) 3 br, 2 ba, cpt•. BROKERS WELCOME. CU5lom pub style bar: arches & luxuriant earth SwlM Spedtll drps, bltna. $31 ,500. 173G Port Marca&e Pl g•rden room. $215,000 ton e a. Fa m lly r oom. Mo•• I• Now 84&·7582 or S81·3822 6"-c887 Owner. COaltM MAaTIM kitchen <'ombo. Ab$olutc 3BR, s uper J.8x36 pool, llALTORS 6~7662 ly ceptlv&tinR lnnds~ap.. i mme d . p oss. Xlnt L,....•HkJ-t IOSZ lla rborViewu...--,38r, Ing. Owner moving. Anx ••••••••••• •••••••••••• '"""'1.11:' ~rms. $46.SOO. OW 2 Ba. Ji'ee. Avail immed. SHORECUFFS lous. 8rln 1nour~un. $400 D11 FHA&YA MD ANXIOUS! $67,toO, O•ner/IJrkr. ~ ,.w_oril.'t ht' fut tonr 3BR T wnhse, walk to Va_c:.ant~ lovely 3 BR. ~819. Charmintc· 3 BR. 2 BA. pool + lovely view of ocean • ca n}'oo. Just listed $139.500. 234 Morn· lntc Canyon Rd. Aaenl 6'1W&OO. °"'-v.» bch h h. Pool garuen 1tOmc. ~n. Ten·r-~~~~~~~~~ '5 op~. sc doll n l~ &c R te. Cent•r . Me. has evcrythnl(. Ap.. .. pr. SZS,250. Gu1mtcd art-a $76,000. tt.ve aomelh1~ want Walker C lee Rmtl I state a. wuu. •· , JNcri'RE~T L·o Ji> un•1.1c11ucil ads do 961-1105 962-1946 63M800 .,. ea:;,., -all NOW. ' ' H--.,.,. s. · Ha•"..,. s. 1..,. Pi r+ ~ooo H &...-1-L..-...1 .. • ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••• NP•™I • ~ ~ ......_, u..._....a.ct ~~~x.:..:~~~1!..:...!1.!"'!1·~---------9~·~·~'.!!P~1~Q.!._I.'~ P,....,.....,......,. •--a.. I " ... t S..e •••••••••••.••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••• . . • g "' . rT"'•~• ~ V9 ~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• _6.~ •• ••••••••••••••••••••••• • a IOIO 32 u~ITS ~.. 3 10 llToro 3232 lnifte 3244 _,......,IMC-nMtsh-Fwwflhed Ape;t .. lth u.fww. Af;at.Hhu.fw-.. ••··················••• ...... •····•··•·····•·•·•·•·• ....... , .............••....•.................. ····•·········•·•······ .•........•.•.•.......••••........•.••••....•• <4r':nR: ·A~~· ~~~d"\!!': . . . CHEA PIE l br, ~ .. utll LAKE F RONT·3 br. UN1V Park Tm' I st Cotto MH a 3724 Co1to MHa 3124 LlllJIMCI leach 3•41 Home . $1~0.000. 8 STEAL! A";.ird ~1nruR1? pnde ol pd, N 8 . Also2 br, Lag. atnum. ct>ntral air, clb Twnh l' 3 br. 2 b4. ,{; ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ··~··•••••••••••••••••• owner. 645 • 9729 Ont' or these 2 bedrm 2 ownership all adult uniU. l:Seach, S22S .• utll pd. privil. S39S mu 581 11181 pool. SJ7) ~125 Maple NF.AT. CLEAN 1 Br. walk 81'.AUTIFUL 2 br Newly both Condos. Veey rt.w Stht'Cluled Inc ome smalcs,pcts.Q!Mlbr+-5527896 • to shopping $175 mo t20ALBERTPl.A\t-: dccord.Blk fromVlctor ly Ow..e~Fe. L..ct left al only $19,915(). lOl'.f SG 7. 2 6 0. P ra c cd at pool, ainalc or couptt>. Foulltaln Vafley 3234 - -&12 71S4 r>toluxe 2 br. lb • adull!I Uugo. beach & dwntown. Uo Sh a.yr Down, completuly re· $470,000. Also walk lowat~rN.8. ••••••••••••••••••••••• LCICJllRa l e a ch 3241 --nopel$ $UIS.Call Adultis only. N~ peb. 548~~9 :res ront furbi shed. A:sk f or Pnncipals onlypkase br,$205.0ceanviewlbr. Presugc nt•i,.:hhorhoml ••••••••••••••••••••••• 3ikm.2Ba,partfurn.de· ~3572 8339781 S290 4971617/IW.2ti636 · eekend11 OnJy 1-'rank. 839-8321 AJ!t, s~zs .. uul pd.p.o. Agt. convcrtl·d 3 ffR, 2 UA. 2 OCEANFRONT $!60,000. lu"C , condo. frpl, pool, nu lhlfft ICl't1'front 4 UNITS Joee. 979 8430 car gar. t'Overed puHo. condo. 3 br. 2 ba. 2000SQ . appl /cpl/dr11. ~ar. <lr LQVgLY new adult l br f.<>;~L~~R1Mb~l~f~bo\I~ By Owner-3 s''. 21, ... HA , Mobile H0111-C d-• .._..._ 3 122 vacant. $37S. pt...-mo. Ask ft. Har, (rpl. Set-"uard. o P or' ad u It"' $345 f''rplc . beam cetlng. pool ,. o a~. t 11 •u Y. in c: ~. lR ~ •u Ol"Ofta ..... .....-ror Kt-th !-'· , Dk $79S I Adul 673 5003645 5'122cvt• 1-'rom $210. 399 Bay '-' .~ .. ....,., outside unit. cust. de<"or. For Sm• 1100 VA assumabl~ lo<in. 10"/~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1 or •1> • r mo. .i.e. l.!i on 646· 1456 Laguna Im mac. $95,000. 67S-66LJ ••••••••••••••••••••••• down. S<>hcduled in<'Oml' 22S POINSF.TTlA, 2 Br. 2 9S2·447 t ly. 544 7678 Ea!>t.s1de smnle, ut1I pd Close to cvctything! ---24' Dual Wide. Beautifully $6.780. Pricedut$SS,500. Ba. Avail. Sept. 15th. 2Story w tfpk. 4 Ult , 2 ~'Sharp ocean vaewcontem· adult. Respectable $150. AOlJt.T 1 BR. rrplc, pool Slovc,refri~&w/wcarp. ' NF.WPOH~SHORES Ind 'sc pd. fenced yd 0penhousedaily-~Hn5. bath, cpts. <I~. bltns. porary home. 2 Br 2 Ba No pets. 511ff.39f;.1. $11SS. mo. 1975 Pomona $200 Month 11 Oncunnl,W-side.Walk t w /ceme nt natio . -------DW $395 mo J\t!v rJc le f bd• · • <.:M Call645-l\ISG Ut\I paidbyownrr beoc.h. Club w / pools & ·sa <'ri fl cc 1 1.~x Int Costa Mesa 3124 963-4567 '003•17~ ~ 0 it• ~v~·11. u~r~lt~x~~J.> s:rrs~~ Casa de Oro MISSION IU:ALTY tenms. 3 BR. den. 3 Ba. !l68-1840. Hunt. Beh. . ••••••••••••••••••••••• u.__..~__. •--L 3 per mo. rl cpending upon ALL UTILITIES l'Al L> MEDITERRANEAN • -194-0731 * " 427 Canal. $74,900. B -3 BR. on CoL Ptc. cuJ .. de· r1111n1.~.on 9C"ULn 240 no. or l ('nants . CaJI VILLAGE - --• Owner.••642·qi(1. S ll.VF.RCRl!:ST 24x60. 2 sac.K1dsok.f'nC'dyd,lg ••••••••••••••••••••••• 4""2109 & knd Compare before you JBcdroom Mewportle adt 3169 ·--_ H0 , 2 8 .... O"n. I ;ken m r 4 4 Sh I r N h I Sh ~ 'I"· eves w s or rt•nt Custom des1i:n1'<l ••••••••••••••••••••••• WAT ER }':~ONT l.:'0'1 ~t~ny x~r:J~" Ca;istrnn';,. a r p ., " t s. a m ·rm. r sc oo s, 11rp 4 Rn. 2 BA. bltns. Mr Rrubaker ut 546 0601 real~rin.:: . 1 Bedroom & Den PARK HEWPORT NEWPOR1 SHORES221 5 Star Adult Pak 6Xcirou . Good creo. shps.$350:mo.M.S-5045 ~4~l~-~~a6$350.mo. dunn~workin~hours. •Spacious k1trhcn with ~:::~~:~\Ol4'Tlhousc A PARTMENTS CANAL RY OWNt-;n 493.7156 r Qua i I PI a ce <E·Side)2 Br. t.'ples only. 28R. Panorarmt· Vu. wlk 1nc1ircct hghtmg 2<100llarborBlvcl nachelorlorZ S3S,OOO CA.LL li4f\.tl657 P r oper t ie s. t 7 14 ) All util. Furn incl'd. Super4 bedrm.2bath + t b h b lb t t •St.-puratcdm'garcJ Co.-.ta Mesa(7141557-8020 S.1droomsand 6am·10am. ·52 Sl'ARTANET'fF.. 35·, 7 5 2-19 2 0 Child ok. 156 Merrill. den. crpls. drps, tt/0 . od c 'we au · a, err s Y •llome like storage Townhou:.~ S 60 1 $310 c:~9 "~33 y . I D • re r r i g. Pr v t t ·pace . nq. s p. 51. 327 ---..... -""' . S350. N r Westminster Re l / l s475 • 1 a e pa ios LG E studio w/loft. pool. fr $229 500pen ~-ti NEWPORT SHORES W Wilson. Costa Mesa * BASTSID~;. Mall 963·4569 Bev or Joe n .. cas t• · mo •Closed gar w1~torage 1acuu 1, end ~ar. uttl pd Daily J BR .. 2-sty. Al-"1-ame. ----RACKBAY/\Rl-:A LOCJUftaleac h 3 148 -494·8749645·8600cxt2494 •MarblepullmJn di Spa·Pools-Tenru.., Per(. cond .. w extr<1s lu~ness Property 1400 3Sharpllouses. ••••••••••••••••••••••• 4 +FAM ILY+ 2, avail :skforJerr. •K1ngsize Bdrm::. ~ 1 ~5 ~~1j 1~2~~1 ~~m,:1 Acros~ from .. ·a11oh111n galore. 2 Lgl'. µalicr.., 2 ••••••••••••••••••••••• $69,950For/\ll Summer rental cottage. 8/14. Lsc. S335. 696~LogunoHiguel 3252 •Pool. llarbequeS ·Sur G4219GO days, 545.441 1 Island at Jamboree on car gar. + pkg. Jre:i PRIME OFACE CAM PION & ASSOC. $175 wk. 1 Br. 1 block to Paula <213 I 2R3 IMS ••••••••••••••••••••••• rounded w tl h plus h C\'t>S San Joaquin Hi Us Road. $69.SOO I BUILDING CALL549-1001 beacb.-494·6419;494--0159 3 BR 2 B EASTNINl!:CONDO best landscaping. 17 149644-1900 CAYWOOD REALTY Sl.050.000 ------Newport l e ach 3169 Dsh.,;shr. &A;t:vC:.'i ci~:~ location on E l Nlguel Adults No pets Extra lrg-spac1ous 1 BR * 548-1290 * $172,000.paslyr income FREE & Cl.EAR ••••••••••••••••••••••• OK. Across from schl Golf Course. overlooks 1 BDRM S2IS apt. Encl gar. S175· No ~xcellent tax shelter . 4 PLEX WINTER -Oceanfront 3 S350 m o. Btwn Noon & luke. 3 BR. 2 Ba, proC. de· 365 W. Wilson642 1971 pets. 642-6500, 673-7489 HEW LISTIHG Great Newport location N r. Loma Lind a bf', 2 ba. $350. mo. 4:30. 848-8322 or 898-1981 corated. Upgraded thru-HunflncJton I.each 3740 QUIET LUXURY Decorator's delight! 77 Ted Hubert & Assoc. Unlverslty · $55,000·trade 675-85.11 art. 5PM out. 493·3286 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Qaiet living in 3 Br, 2 Ba Glorious feet on J.icl<• 675-8500 as down pmyt on large o 0 C h u~·s U-L--!-L.....t F' I 3 BR, 2 B Mission V1' ... 1'0 3267 N INCREASE in sum-apt. w1U1 frplc & patio. South ex posure. wi~h Ce--& ... ry L--&-/ .. ome or Inc. Prop. nuwi es n-._._-1rep ace. A. nu ,.. d b h ...,.,..... vn 8 dd h th ••••••••••••••••••••••• cpts, drps .• .,15. mo. o~v ••••••••••••••••••••••• mer rent. Beaut 1 br furn Garden selling with pool. san y eac . 4 Bdrms :.r C t S c n a cas or o er ""' DC & d I baths; call for an <1pp"t. • ryp s I 00 prop c rt 1 es. R i ck G...eral 3 202 or Joe, 963-4569 3 BR. 2 BA new condo. Atr npts Sl65 $l75· Spanish /\ u ts only $225. $275 000 1••••••••••••••••••••••• AlderellE' Rltr. 547·6469. ••••••••••••••••••••••• -----<•ond'g., frpk. ~ mo. style bldg, pvt encl gar, THE VENDOME · 3 Cemetery Lots. Jt'oresl lt'REE 1''REE We have 2 houscs w/(plcs. 581 -0887 Avl. 8;1 pool, sauna, lndry, adlts. 1845 Anaheim St. Refrigerator. Security. Lawn, Cypress. •Pr~fessional Service• 3 BR, 2 BA, <·pts. drJ)!i. 17301 Keelson Ln. l blk 545·8628. Pool. Jacu2.1.i, Re<:. Bldi LIDO REALTY :u:; \ i.1 I .iclu. ,.n. I Must sacrifice. moving. Deluxe 4&S.Plex t• ..... DLORDS bllns, $335. mo. Hcv ur 2 OR , J 1 • BA. fncd. yd. W. of Beach off Slaler. w /ex: c r c is t! rm. 968·4186Afler5. New units Huntington * ~" * Joe963-4S67 l'ampcr/boat access. 1:142·784R $235Lg.3br.2ba.Lower. Bilhards .Color1V. Beach, tax: sheltered pro-Ho"' e f Ind er s * B 830·1683 or 581·8036 Children OK. no pets lRVlN EAT MESA DH. 1Commercial . rr eau t. $70,0uo home ---Harhelor <e tlel Pad in 557.2593 or 6'1·1·4847 art. i; 545.4855 *673-7300 * Top "'uaPty Home I Property 1600 perty, lst yr write-o 642-9900 formal living, dinin" rm Newport l e ach 3269 Pos h 11 u n t l n gt on -,.. $11M. Open House. Call C l'f · • Larg t I " JI b 1 " I l R C Cstrn3Br,2ba.oncul·dc·••••••••••••••••••••••• a1ormas es ge.ram.rm wet bar&••••••••••••••••••••••• ar our. ~250/unfurn ur , ut1 pt . CrlR.LIDO l 1n1quC' Charm! forappt.536-2579 R t I Serv· e' f 1 ~210 2 13)59 I d lid B "t sac. Lg. lot in Upper -------·-~ __ 1c_._._ rp c. 1 Br. dwnsta1rs. 4 TOWNHOUSE 2 hr. 21 ~ "' • I 2-2934 aun . crp rps. ay.,. Beaut dccor'd 2 br. I~. West Bay. Used brick & OFFICE ILDG. S UNITS S. Ana Sl3S, l Brsngls Br, up. 3 car gar. Custom b a. po u I. b It n s. 549·3804. $170 mo. 831·9276. bnck patio, frpl. 675-6.1.s~ hi-ceil. beams, bit-ms, Air <'Onditioned. 2 Story. S. Ana fi xer-upper 2 Br. land~cap1ni;:. A\a1I. 8/1 wash dry, gar No pct:.. sm. office, garden view Low maintenance. Well Newport Heights. One $525 mo l0·6. 963.4581 • & 675.9188 SMALL BEACll ll<YfEL NEW. 3 BR. 2 &. 1-'rplr . L>eluxe 2 BK. newlyde<·or. 577 900 0 ~144 lrX'ated Lots of parking block from 17th Street. child, yard & Gar. $195.-wknds afl 6. 751.6461 Rooms. $22.50 week f<.'d yrd. paLio. gas BBQ. Lrg garagt· l.ido shop~ · · wncr. Sl75.oo0. · House plus two modem S. Ana 2 Br appl. kids ---BLUFFS CONDO. 3 BR. Apts $100 mo. 536-7056 Aar Nr Hoag llosp. 16th area $275. Yrly G73·2828. BY Owner. Lovely 3 + 2 Roy McC~ duplexes. Hy appoint· pets, patio, fnro, gar. 3 BR, l34 Ba, bltns, rrptc, 21 z BA. Beaut. decoral· & OranAC Adu]ts. $325. --• +ram rm . Assumable 1 _ _.torlllO..._. _ ___:,. mentonly . H8ch$125,1Brappl. 2 car gar .. drps, epts, ed. Partial Back Bay L 8 h 3748 mo.8.'l314J7or870-8800 3RR.2BA.frpl,s.150mo. s12 V/\ loan. No quahf~o. nm ._ .. ,._' Furn; NBch mobile 1 Br block wall, comer house. view. Avail 8/1/75. SS25 CICJUfta eac --l'at10, t•pts. d~. 3 c·ar ing.$7 9 . 500 _ 646 . 7 M COSTA MESA548·7729 ,£ .• Quail ~ Agt/Fee 842-5223 per mo. 979-7422 Mrs ••••••••••••••••••••••• LGE 3 Hr upix·r. cpts, nr gar. P ool Nr. lloa~ · ----Place . HOMEFIMDERS ---King. OCC. SZIS. 1009 "A" Mis · llospt 548 ·9~1 . t:vl':., rhe Bluffs ; early area. OMM"ERCIAL o-..~ ... y. Prap--&.iea · -•642-9900* MEREDITH Gard<'ns 3 --Summer & Winter :.ion, 552·4576 aft6. 646·2848 l ·Sty. 3 BR. 2 ba. • ·~ • WT• br, lg. fam. rm. 3 ba. 3 BR. ram rm. dblefpk, 2 Rentals. 3 BR 1 8 I --·· S57,000. Agt.640·5560 oNfef_w~rt7Pe~nts. St$olr8es900& 1400 OUA~lSS~-~:l~H llACH HORSE ranch 2 Br. New cpl. & Paint. $550. b a ' s • corn(' r -tot. I Blk B<'h & Town. Ocean nuar."\l,'t,'ryth~1ng1~ U4·pppelexr,' NfEdW 3dBH , 2 Ba. f'rBpBIQt·, 1c-=s-uru · . ·· singles welcome, C.M. 968-9518&962·7788 CardenE'r & water paid view. 1-'rple. 4 UNITS. "' " · . " c yr · patJo. gas • income yr-Terms nexi· * * * d b H k'd Back Bay. Adull family $150 lo $350 per mo. $200. + deposit. Ch1ldrcn gar. nr tloag llosp. 16th ble Call Ted T An 2 r. . B.. I s. * * ok S40 Otl57 & 0 a "dull .... x · ressen, JamesAttdns pets, singles. Try this * $435. month . 2298 4945145 wknds or aft 6 _ · · ------ran,..t'." !> • .,,_.,, WATERFRONT j IPS. 639·6700or644-5147 · g1 G. Dettmc.t Hedlands Dnvc. 642-0596 wkdys. Ni'c"' l·RR. oood carp. • mo_ S33· 14:J7 or87Q-8800 ·• 23856 c• HocJar br, $135 .• sm es, pets, .. .,. °' 4 BEDROOM 1Condom1'n1'ums C.M. Also unbelieveabl 2530 SeaYiewDr. or642·4387 s d paint. Stove, refri~ Sl55 Bayfront. 2 Hrl. 2 ..... Pvt. • MlstiOfl Vieio L B h 2 b *'>'>C -----lu 10 apt, i::ar. util rum. J n It 73 62 0 n .. NEWPORT 64 onthewaterwilhnew foriole 1700 Youarethewinneror ag. eac r. ~·· CoronadelMcr NEWPORT CrestCondo3 l st & las t c lea n ·g. ones t.-3 Y i; .-· 1 Reh, & pier. s.5.50 yrly. f private pier & float. A ••••••••••••••••••••••• TWOFREETICKETS ulilpd,petsok.CdM3br. Youarelhcwinnerof br. 3 ba. tenms & l'ool. 497-1236aft8PM. * * * 979·1!!35&644 4510. very charming nautical~ ._.ORTH t•GU..i,... <~13 50 v 1 garage, kids. pets ok. TWO FREE TICKETS S450 mo. Lse. 645-8781 3769 Ph'I. M .... EWPORT MARI ..... & two story Newport Beach " ~ "A "' . u uel And swim pool C.M. 3 br. Newport Beach 1 1p aurer .... ...._ home & way of life. Just C OMDOS RinglilltcJ lros. kids, pets. singles. Agt. <Sl3.5o Value 1 Deluxe <.:ondo 3 Br, 3 Ba . ••••••••••••••••••••••• 325 Diamond 919 Bayside Ori Ye re~u ced 'thousands. Ocean Views-2&3bdrm. larnum&Bailey lo'ee.979-8430 RirHJli1t9Bros. &. retreat. Ul83 sqrt. $40. WK U P. l &2 Bdr & Balboa Island Spacious 2 Br & den vn priced to !\ell. Call unitsfrom$S4,<XX>. Circus Corot1adelMcr 3222 Barnum&lailey rrpts,drps,manyxtras. Bach. Color TV, maid You;irelhewinnerof waterfront. l'vl Beh, ~;~~13 for an introdU<' 1 Call 6 75-7225 July Jlsl to Aug l 2th ••••••••••••••••••••••• C ircus Lsc. $475. A)(t. 894-6435. serv, pool. T HE MF.SA. TWO FREE TICKETS lovely ~arden. mu.st sec ufil<lllQ • I I •If •/P .rl; AnaheimCoownlion ll.V. Homes 4 Br,2 Ba+ JulyJlsltoAugt2lh BA YS ll 0 HES. 2495 415 N. Newport Bl, NB. •Sl3.50Valuel loapprec 67384 r4da~s. Center' 800 WC Kalcll·• · / Anaheim Convention 646-9681 [ I · u 1''. R. Specl view w pool & Crc))t v 1ew Ur. Lovely J RinnlilM'll lros. It~~.,~~ Tickets may be ex· tennisctsava1l.$.S25.lse. Center.800 W.Katella HR.2 Ba.S425.p/mo.yr. OHTHEIEACH .. ., .. ., ' j changed for reserved 644-2877; 830~ Tickets may be ex ly. No pets . (213)799-4856 BarMm &'lailey =~· j seats at the Convention changed for reser ved orfi4f>.6219 1 Br furn. years lease, Circus ---·-11•1:1·•~ Center a head or time 2 BR. den, Crpk. 11 2 Ba. seats at· the Convention Sl85 mo. I03 Mcl"adden~ .July3JsltnAugt2t.h Call 642-5678. ext 333 to pal i o. 1'2 1! a rage. Center ahead or time Ocean Vw luxury 4 hr. Pl. 675-l86S. \nahe1m Corwc•nt1on S335. 3 Rr. 2 ~a. blk 10 Bch. Garagt'.' Yrly w. Newport 642 1003 MESA VERDE , The ltuffs REFURBISHED claim your tickets S395/mo. Child/not ok. Call 642-5678, ex:t 333 t Newport Crest w/sw1m & A ·1 s 1 8 2b l'l'nkr. 800 W Kalella S 11 .tLa _. """ 1 · k ''a1 ept .• g. 2 r. a, 1. b P .. Y~ an Saota Ana. New * * * Avail 8/1. 513' Orchid .. c aim your I.Jc ell.. Len club. l Yr lease. $475 YEARLY $300.Also LA 1ckcls may e ex-Chateau 673-8079. • * • mo. 962-0807. 963-7744 Br & l>t!n. Winter S350 changed for reserved 2 Bdrms , I '"! bath condCJ with pool $3..15 Mo. • drps /crpts/stove/paint. -------t llh Lush greenbelt area 2 Bedrm/2 bath Condos E &STSIDE Steps to ocean. &45·8171 :.t:•a s a c W d I A Costa Masa 3 224 Sparkling new Landmark Big Canyon view,· Ltr:M>Sq . ,. l c l h J i e entry to tota tux-... R . 5000 Neptune. ~.onvl'n ion <'n er a ca1 ury, 12 foot cciUngs sour oo Io v e I Y s pacious IMCot.41: •••••••••••••••••••••• 3 B ' 2 BA, pat.Jo & cov· ft.: 3 BR, 212 Ba., wet nf tune Call 642-5678. ext STEPS TO BEACH 2 BH. 1 ba. unf. szs.c, SEA WINO overhead. ca ndlcli ~ht grounds. Only St9.950. DUPLEX, $47,900. Cull MESA VERDE; 3 BR. er, fe n ~ed yard & bar.SSOO :J:J.J to l'1<11myourt1l·kcts dining room. formal hv· Ask for Frank, 839-8321., price. 10r,;, Down. Owner Ba. Crpls, Drps. bltns, !andscap10g. S450/m~. F;astbluff Rlty 644-1133 A~ents • * * 2 BR. 2 Ba condo$475 WE HAVE SUMMER RENTAL.~ ing room. 1''rent·h doors ~Jn. will carry. fed yd. Kids &smalJ rncl. gardener. Avail • -~ Unfuntished lo master suite. wet bar, O'.K. $395. w/gardener Au~. 1. 839·1237 or Bl(, Cf'N','ON Exec. ••••••••••••••••••••••• S215. New. s pac .. :! br. g uest b c d room , 4-PLEX. N.D. nr lloaa water paid. ~3621 963·6163· home 1~ gate guarded GeMral 3802 bltns. pJl10, garden. gar. associated OWNER . " area. lo or lease, Avl Adi childrens r etreat , S & S Townhou.se.11683 Hos pital. Pride o f FAMILY ESTATE Sept.lst.644-6378 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ts.nop<'ts.&12·1603 $62,950, act now, call G d G Bl d ownership. $137.SOO. Sep. House E-side JBR FR p · G' ----RENTAL REFl':RRALS Q , 1., • BKR. sqarflen2 bTeodvrem dvcn. 160C2''" PRESTIGE HOMES 3 br, 2 ba. range, cpts. yard' 0'ntyat1$03. "01g;~~alllcl WALK to Beach, new 3 br, All types. Pacific Coast -Tuo'.·~n'1102us~ r, plls-onblay, BROKERS-REAL TORS l 01S W 8olboo b11-lobl · .. • ' '1 drps. $325. 548-7437 · ·• · "" · C h a r l e r s Ren l a I . . " · "· l' • 540-1720 I ha., frplc, former model. Realtors 645--6646 968·9518or962·7788. 2 ba duplex. Cpt, drps, Division. 1''ct'. 646_3487 or lilOJoann. S190.~-957:l TARBELL $3000 Under newuru.ts at $190 2Br ch1'ld&pet D/W, ~ar. Yrly. $425· 2 BH 2 h xi th ' · · 3&4 BR, $315 toS350. l./O " Child OK. 675·0642 548-8638 · · a. Pl 1 · on c ----------• $39,500. Assumable7 \h~t SUNITS,oceanview (1)3 Pool, 2 Br, 2 Ba, Appl. s· I h' d • _____ ---2 Bit. N•'W <.'pls. dra(>l!S, bay, 1650 sq fl luJ111Jry .._. rt Condo loan. 638-1769. Br unit. Gross $13.980. leenager , pct. patio. mg es, c ii rcn. pet:. Balboa Island 3806 pa1nl. Li! rm:.. Oce<in cond o . Pvt p!lrkipg, .... ewpo . s ---· 1130 Victoria, Cos ta Sl65,2Br,child,sngls ~k . bA gent , no fees . :AH&01R~Ml~li~IE"; ••••••••••••••••••••••• Hree7.<'.S185 ~15-6375. se<·urily bldi.!. Sll25. (:all 38R. din r m, view. Super Duplexes/ Mesa. 979·5099. Agt. 3 Br. 2 Ba. child. pet. ar a ra' 963 6739 or ay rv1~e s-. n· OELUX t: 2 br on (;rand •3 Hd . 2' ~ Ua. ~tud10. Al 833·9300 nrli73·5'1~ clean, upgraded lhruout. (huh sale · 1800 1-'\Jrn. Bach. $95sngls ulil 673·5744 L c rt a 1 n er s d e I 1 g h t _ Show s like model ••••••••••••••••••••••• FOURPLEX pd.Agt/Fee "'.,pool .& game room. Canal . IJ1lllc Bal.. ls Compl r\'dl.'C'.sha~C'pts. NF.W duplex 1&3bdr111 Beautifully decorated. .....EW 4 -PLEXES HOMEFl ..... ""ERS lrYine , 3244 f' anlast1c new 4 br. 3 ba. Boat dock. frpl , radiant drps, :-.tovt•, washrm. No blk to bch o<'ean vu w1:; ,.. ....., ••••••••••••••••••••••• 4000 !>Q ft custom home. heat. Yrly. $400 Nc1 pct<> S250546 1152. cpts drps bltns frplr Owner moving out ofl ··· near the ocean. Good Excellent Eastside loca· * 642-9900• 3Br, FR, DR. Townhouse. wood ceilings. 3 frplcs, pets/children. 6i3-0'l07 t ' ·' 645 3J.t3 o~ area. must sell. A real tax shelters, apprecia· ·lion. Minimum upkeep Close lo schstpark/pool. many xtras. $1150. mo. ----SP/\C nt•w :! hr lnplex. pa 111 ' gar . · bargain at $69,900. CALLI lion SJ 10,000. &up. required. May assume Sharp Mes a Verde, 3 B.R. $450 mo. 833·27~ 645-7102 or 631-0797 lotboa Peninsula 3807 upper. t>al10. d:.hwhr. 548-8379 NOW ! low interest loan. J::x. 2BAduplex.$335.mo.in-- -----••••••••••••••••••••••• l•nclgarS225 675·1849 IREATHTAKIMG CALL NOW ( iii m c lus 1 ve sa les price «Id's gardener, Peg BEAUT. New Rancho San 3 BR. 2 BA SJOO. Midage BAYFRONT Oceanview. ~ 0) ~ $79,950. Call 545-842.4. As· 546·5880 Agt. Joaquin Twnhome. 2 Br, or olde r cpl. nodogs.1513 lt.1xury 2 br. 2 ba condo. Apt llouse 2 br, 2 ba. frpl. VIEW {//. &J2·8800 _ -== sociated South Coast ES 212ba.2story.Overlooks CliffDr.548-8032 Complete k1tch., pvt. Adults only. No pets S260 llugelBrapthion Brokers. M A DEL MAR Lovely golf course & lake. $600 Marina, full !'lecurity. s 22:;. 413 Ford Rd Back Bay Bluff w /2 DONALD M . BIRO R E AL TY INC. 3 Br. 2 Ba, fam rm, bit 547-7044 /552-0055 Irvine Terrat•e. 3 Bdrm. Adult living Refs. req'd. &46-6832 pnvate bakorul'S, frplr, Auoetotes ... oheo 714/846-1371 Lohforsal• 2200 ins. frplc, cpts, patio.---- ----13• ba.th, carpelinJ!, $550mo.lse.673-3068 HuntinCjf le h 3840 heated pool, load~ o( 8 I • _........ 2000 ••••••••••••••••••••••• · fncd yd, 2 car gar, xtra Turtlerock 3Br, 2ba, FR. draperies, s tove, ref ---on ex closets. 745 Domingo Dr. J Br. 2 a, Pvt. D?<'k, ncome..-ro,......, rm. Water pd, avail 8·1, frml DR, frplc, B-B-Que.' Pool.double ~arage$425. Coronf!1de1Mcr 3822 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Call979·1268 or645-l260 Semi·pvt community.••••••••••••••••••••••• WATERFRONT LOT $340 mo. 545-7913. close t o pool & park. UCB213-614·3267wkdys ••••••••••••••••••••••• lll<ETOIEACH Owner, $134,500. 673-5298. 6 UNITS NEWPORT SHORE.5 221 543-7295 Avail Aug u:.t 1st. Lse . ----l BR + sep. guest rm. & NEAR SHOPPING LARGE 2 br. pvt unit. Eastside Costa Mesa. In· CAN AL By OWNER --$445 mo. 552-1237. HARBOR View 5 br. :l ba. bath. $275 8(.'a ul i (u I new 2 BR patio. garai:l'. Nr b:iy & HV Hillt·C~ng dividua l houses in a $35,000 CALL 646-8657 COLLEGE PARK lo'/R, D I R. pool , tennis. 4!17 :t205 t-:ve~ studio aµts . Frplcs. OCE'an. s_295. ~7·rly lse. 30f Ocl le3anb B2aby v,1ew. lladr~e country setting. By ap· 6am-10am. 3 BH , 2 BA. fam rm, UCNIVb. Pdk . T~rradcc, 3nBl'W view. S650. 640-000l:I _ 2 8 d l ' U bltns. d1s hwa))hers. 2 car 36th Sl._ti75 4·1 R o . r , a. orma in. I I Real &tat bltns d shwhr cov'd am n gt' c1m o. r, rm • • a ' S I k· l''r , . rm. 2 frplc's, Mission tile po nlm enl on: I!-h e atio'. S350/M0. m -3144 2ba, upgrd l'PI. clrp!;. nr Close .by CM. new larf(~ 2 Fi r ep I ace. t•arpetin~. ~~a~e· •. un,f ~ s . om OCEAN ~ 1". W. 2 BR. 2 en l r Y. ram. rm & I' 'Quall ~ 11aC CllMJ~ 2800 P -pool, jacu7.z1. $425 mo Br, 2 Ba. gar. pauo s. g.a ragc. AdulL-., no peH $260 53t> 257!.I_ --BA, bltns. OW. adults, ,1titc h /pantry. Owner. ' Plac• ~ . ••••••••••••••••••••••• 3 BR, Jge lot . nr 17th St 833·1596. wood~d lot, rustic cedar. $300. LARGF. 2 hr studio. enc. $235. mo. Nr lfoag fbp. Appl. only. Mr. Frost Prap.rti•• l~aV~ ~tCondos. l BR. 1 Shopping. Avail. Aug . 1. $275.644-6126 UCB213·614-3267wkdys ~ar, patio & fncd. Jnfunt -~~4~7 • Days; 644 ·4111 , Eves: 752-1920 Fu.II l y. $3800nr Cal Sultale $325. m o.:.. 642· 475fl REHTALS LUSH GAR DF.N Patw' Ch . od 1--' ~ OK & no pet~. $177.50 mo. S U B L I·; /\ S 1-: -p. r k 644·0523 1400 OUAILST NCWPOU llACH er on. · eq ty, Irvine h Bl rr b · 1 b arm in~ r em e .. "'· ' Warner & &··1rh area • ·----------S177.mo.or3BR,H'J 8a, •S HARP 4 BD 3 Ba, 2BR,2 Ba ......... S350 TWhet. cul sr.r4pl r. 2dr.u .at. BR apt w/ ncwkil.$275 847·4440Ava1lr;ow . ~pepwrpoxrtAI ~R1.a~_,/va1I e -3 B R D Et, U XE DELUXE 4-tLEX adlt. security nr So. Cst. Twnhse bit-ms, fpl, FR. 3 BR. 2 Ba... . .. $425/435 ·• P · · en ~1 · Call 497 ·2575/497·3232. -a 0 · u., · ~ mo. Duplexes, steps to ocean. Garden Grove . P laza. $5500. equity. pool. patio, $425 lse. 3 Br, 21,2 ba. l".R ..... 54:;0 Cl?5~ t~4everythmgy ~x· C t M 3824 NEW dclu'\e, h<'och area, Judy._ 644 · 5031 _· ___ • Willtra,deforeq.inhome Fireplaces.pool,l·l,2-2, $187. mo. Will trade 833·1653 NewportBeach ~-~ill 6s mo. ry •• ~!.~ .. ~~•••••••••••• 2Br.28a.closedf:ar.sanClemellff ll76 orT.D. s. 642·3573 1·3 bedrooms, en~I. either for late model car , 3 BR, Monticello Condo 4 Br, 212 ba, wntr .... $800 Off 1 ... at-•......... $275 mo. All ut1I pd. Also •••,••••••••••••••••••• garages. Xlnt apprec1a· etc. of same value. dbl & pool RAISOR'S Santa Ana 3280 "' ..... ..-um 3 Br. 21,2 Ba. 846-1311 or LA RGE 2 Br 2 Ba. all EASTBLUff · lion area. Only 103down 638-1?69 I t. gasr100' N .-;., 1~c ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1· 2 & 3 Br. Adults nc 846·4938 Agt. No fee. bltns while ~:Iler vlew payment. Call 833-3544... Rffll Es as + · 0 ~-·......., pets, dsbwhrs. shag cpts, ----498.Jci97 . .,. • • ~'!'e'::1~n~~~p·:~niM~ Sparling Investment w..=.e 2900 552·3280 REALTORS BT~~~!~se~ dir·ga2ra:c~ closed garage, Crplc, NEW triplexes 1,2,3 Br I - Owner 640·8023 . Open Corp. ••••••••••••••••••••••• 2 BR. gar. Crpls, drps. 4523 Campus Dr., Irvine pvt patio. cpts, drps. PBBQI. Gas & water pd. YDJx 2th00r2uo~ll. ~Liry1;,so.:n~rl Santa Ana 3180 Ca Pet ok. No children. $200. bl 1 K d oL· 00 · u n,,. · · ••••• •• •••• •••••••••••• sat/sun 1-5. 2915 talpa 8 UNITS. 2 Bd, 1 Ba, HOUSE WNT'D HOUSE 546.7506. Campus Valley Shop Ctr. lns. poo . 1 5 " LA MAHCHA ~S :36·4022 or 539-6779 __ 2 BR. 1 lz BA. eye-~vel SL. -----Newport Hts. $152,000. For~losr,delinqOK . CALL833-8600 $295.544·6399-·----778ScottPlace CM NEARIEACH adult Condo. root W tW Owner548·9695 Qw1kCash !67$-8849 2 Br, 1ba.1i acre, horst! C--...1--iniwns 642-CN'J3' * * "pts d t • · ..... RE .... T&LS • -...... ""' All ut1llt1es paid 2 & 3 " .· rps. P. 3 10· I:·•'·. Newport leach Newport C rc 11t Townhomes. S':. down, 81~% APR, 2-4 bedrms, encl gur., pool. tennis. rr. $58,87:> Ph, ~5-6141. 12 Robon Cl. (from Cst Hwy north on Superior, •14 mile lo entrance>. 5-CI•••• 1076 ....................... IJ IUIUMHG LOT MIAlllACH s11 .ooo. C .. 644-721 I Stll ..... e.;.•.. 1011 ••••••••••••••••••••••• •Br. 2b•. JOO aq fl , playnn, patio. lnd~p'd. Lf C lot nr bch. Aak1n« 153.~00. t mmed. oc · o pal'C1· 2&912 Aveni\a Cabrl no, .•H-·JIH or 4113-17$5. SEEK & FIND" ~ov I ETSN I OWAG..,O<"DllH /\ S I S T B L , E B R A 7. F. t, 0 C I 8 S I. A L G R I A I. T 1 N L M M 0 (' ~ A 0 MUAAIRCASACOMROR I NV fo: 0 Z 11 C A E R P T T ll A Z t t. 0 A I Tl ID C0 M(l0CN S DRA8 1 SE LALNOSLEN I TNDRRRAOT TR C ANAD8SCOMTBEAD~U SAT :OUNTRlESLOTZITN ORNAZICLNO U IL8MIB I J El~DLH I O C AZA COU NNNO TAr.AlrlARBCCONAUAUN IDRNAARC~NTINADURAO OK. $275 mo. lst & last + • "' "" Un .... -ish-...1 3425 Be a u l pa r k Ii k UNIV.PARK -.v..-n cv llRCLOFT........_.. I Bdrm s tudio apts, ~· . · ' damage dep. Ref' ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~Y priv .il e )tarag r s ground,.. Ass n. fCQ•pd. 557-0338 3BR,2 Ba ....... $:m/450 Monllcello,C.M.3Hr.E?ar PvtPatio,frpl,lyrlse , . b · S215. Call roll· 1-4~ Back Bay Twnhse-4 Br. 3B~.J~,L~GEP~4~ opener. di ~hwa sh cr. Immediate occupancy ~r::.1;11.:c:., uallms. S275 afl!"i,anyl~eSat/&.Qi Ba, privacy, patio. frpl, 3 BR d 2 b $400 crpttdrps . S285. l~l. la!'il, HAYLOFT APTS TORIN RFALTY 3 B c d • en. a · .. " SlOO cleaning depos N 283 AYocodo. CM ' r on °· pool, pAllo, dshwhr, fam rm. $375 in 4 BR, 2•,1 bn, A/C .... $465 pets. Avail now.548-lJ92 tc46-1311 gar $325. mo. 642-1898 oc clgarcinr&wtr.548-7020. RanchoSanJoaquin -----#>45·0143 ituNT. HOR. 2 br. t ba, _549-3598~Ct_s. __ (E-Side) 2 Br. Cples only. 2 BR. 2'~ Ba ......... $600 ~HH Unfurn 3600 ....... C,_,-M_ bltns. nu drps & pool. No •~ ... nt.._ l!.-.t TURTLE ROCK ••••••••••••••••••••••• ,.. _,.,..irn-. ~ !!"'"' • ~ All util. Furn incl'd. 3 BR. 2 Ba .......... ~25 Pr1·v .. cy + ". BR, 2 BA, CEDAR WOODS -~ts. $250 mo. 581-8844 or Unfurni*d Child ok. 156 Merrill. .. -~ WALNUT SQUARF. fireplace, gar., patio. no 329 Univenity Dr, near CLEAN 2 br. 2 ba, ni<'e ••••••••••••••••••• $3lO. 549-0433. 3 BR, 2 ba ..•..•..• $295 pets $295 CM 646-4414 Back Bay. 2 br & ~en. area. Bllns. Child OK. No ,11·r...:+.. ~ l t'b~ \ (Col. Pk) 3 Br. 2 ba. F.P. ClllNA COVF. . . From S275. Easls1dc. ~ls. $165/mo. 968-917-4 N :')ltt ~-! !!_)I D.R. nr schls & shop'g. Summer Rental 548·7437or&46-1164 DCUlllUlWCOllCm• G_......... :--l .-5 """lO 6 BR 3 Bath~ ~Mo l'iEW 2&.3 BR. D/W, frple. Alllll WLSIDl tlAtc ...... r UK • -· • -,_., • • • CASA VICTORIA Adults only. Agt. 53$-7528 w&u HrumiiilO- CoUeae Dr· 54t-0433. Cost• MH a 3724 1,2 & 3Br, Deluxe Un or 53&-4095 • loc-hek>f 3 BR, 2 BA. ~pt. drnie:. •••••••••••••••••••••• fum/ 1 ' • ...., or Furn. RH/wtr. pd. Large 2. Br, 2 Ba, stove • IR, l 8lt ~~~-~is~~ ~~t. VIS .. N .sf~~~ "tif.::. t ... ~P Adulta-No Peta Sec. gate frig & disposal. Nr. Hunt. • 2 II & o. tlULTY . •TV & Mllld ServAvall Pool. Rtt. Rm. Elevator Center842·7339 from Sm-t bs JBR, E..SJde I«. nr frwy UNIV. PK. T'1'T'. New 3 •Children 5«-tion COsta Mesa's Flnest T.oc. Harbour, ~ae 2 Br, 1tar.. S.0 -1800 _ Ll~ii'Woti°E SS'l-7SOO •PhoneScrv.Hldpool S25Vlctoria,S42"8970 N;w close to HunUngton Metov.rdeEo~I.± on bull line. AdlU, n br, 2 bit Twnhomc Nr 23?6N,.wportBlvd,CM Only lclnd in the art!ll pvt. patio. no pets. ________ ..__ ,.,.,....,_ . ..,,., .. ~ .. "'•"'"ll'i.4.,.le••HMrf_...-.... pet.a, StSS. 673-6372. clubhouse & pools. S38S ~-~645-3967 Quic t ·1arden·llke-adult 714 S.9·3669. THE gxcrnN~ IMc'll••"'· ..................... )' •• l M "" ... ""' ud1 "''" r i L 2 3 Br l . -....... -..... h le ........ ; Lse. o.N-1442 t-:ves. Lge ,.,. 2... IV ng. ae . ' • ·' I & 2 Br 2 Blk to boch PALM NISA t AUDI AAARIA A&.C:P•A <'ANAOA BToro 3Zl2 ------ --Bltns. w /w. df1l8. pnaa•~owbwlt ~rpts, drp~ .i•r. p 0 o ol, very pvt: MINUTBSTON11' NS,AUNITEO~TOAT£8SM ~JB C ARHIDC/\~OBIARBR CO!tltMU!lllSTClUNA !COVlft Ul'llOIOC AaQll:!'fTll"A r •••••••••••••••••••••• I OP A IOMD $200 Ad I u no "' ' no. some wood Adult~. no pe_ts.. From 8CH. ~~~~ns ~~r.:. r~8i',:"' ~ 3 BR. 2 BA home w t fruit ~y, very cle•n 4 BR, 2 642 9$20 '' burning frpl. Beaut SISS. 22012th St. 880-:t91l Bach, lW BR. tram TOMOHO"'' ~a-111 ... .,.,.,.._ • trees 1alore. Close lo. Ba. llv rm. de.n. front lA~pd. heated PoOl & --Adulta No i......-------~"!:"""'-:-:-:--"""'.""'---:----:~ Crw)'. sch ts. a hop"IJ . yard xlnt cond .• rear 1185. ATTRAC. quiet. 1 Allractlve rent. 38r, l /12 ba, Xlnt uea by • . tS•t ~-· ""- F.n"'v m11ch ltu•" •..,r,11 i Find" 11uut" lll'llh 1wtr ·"° ... ...._, I l ante d ( J J f d M ti-* &.a. "' • •-_., ditc'OVtrrt• ~r pinel in •n 111 new ~erlc~ "' l•·1>•af' hookltl•. --mo nc .1 ner. ya r u Y c n cc d n, patio, blt.n5, garage • ... _,....":'.' ocean. ,, ew cpts. S3Z5 (5 81ks £Nt af Newport Toordtr"()lurn••l.llinitlll,-.nd$1fMt1l'h.m•lil.,.rhlC'I" Aa4ml. 894-4648 w /jacunl. $475. incld 1 Adult, no pet. 2ZM 8 . 1mSanlaAnaAve.CM mo. lal/la1l. $100 Blvd.) pe)·•blt '" "SHli •find" 1n c•rt uf rh1• nl'W•paper. gardner. ~twM28 RUTGERS. Mgr Apl U3 648-5542 cleanup. l-~. 541.- • I I 8 DAILY PILOT Monoa . Jul 21 19'15 I Add it ... 8uild i t. .. Diaper I t... Hammer It ... Carpet 1t ... Cement it ... Wire it ... Hoe it ... Clean it ... Move 1t ... Pre!',S. it ... Paint i t ... Nai l it ... Plaster i t .•. Fix JI ... SERVICE DIRECTORY .A.ccCMUtffn.cJ Carpet Ser•i<• C°""'actor G1rdnl119 H_.i"'9 L_.caphtt P ...... /P.,•""'9 P..C hnke Tiie ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• AC'cnt 'i,i & llooktt1,in' Ca rpe1 & Uphnlslcry None 8ettliri l>lck llul'f-YARD CUA.HU, .. llAULING• Lawn M•.lnl It Clean Upe PAPtRHANGING Pool aerviceman, exp. CERAMIC Tl LE. New & 2(1 Yr s ~•P t nCJt'ttnl n t¢, Stcan1 &. ma n £c Son . Add, CompMalnl 6U-0309 YARDCLEANUr Prlces YouC.nAirord Prolu1ionaJ-RN10111abte Quality work. Wkly Remodel.t'reeest.Sml R~·:ri:t aurunt / Con~trut' Sh a n1 poo fo'rl'e t>S l . Remodtl-PatJo $ht'lttr-, , SM·IXM7 ,, ••CALL 833-JlM •• Free est 673~-aft 5 mai nt , SfJ.50 /mo. Chem. jobs welcome. S:JS.3'39. t Inn &t Re I !I • 1 646 7Hl l ~ka . lic /bond.644·1Mll Landscape, Maintenance, only $12.$0. F'ree est. on I M10869/640·SZl"I. Sprklrs , C l eanup, Garage, llouse & Apt. M•MMrf Plosttr/l.,alr acidwa1he1,8'2·2135&n TopSol J oh n 's t..:i.rp c t & l'a\io covers, d ec ks, •TREE Work.542-2773. Cleanoots&Hauliiwa.y. ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••&PM •••••····~·•••••••••••• Add-A~Rootn t JphOl$ler)', On ish01.mpoo fcn\'eS, etc. Campd.ltive 545·M7S & SS1-8481. W J LL 1 A MS & So n 1 PATCll PLASTERI NG . •,T~puSol·h'1,'n~·~= ••••••••••••••••••••••• !SOL i r('lartloa nl s ). pnces .R#28Q29.1..830-~ JAPANESE EXPER M11onry. Brick/Block/ All Types. Free Ei · ··'c;u586~ l.OOK ' 224 Sq n ol ne"'· Ocgrcas1•r.~ & all color , GAROENt:R lndW!.tna.l, College student w/stron1 Slone. Call !WU•1829 timatell. Call 541).682S Propi.+.. Ma t 3 lJl•Ht ronm. C>nly $3J.'IO. t 'ull brl•htent'rS & 10 mlr1 Tom Jones Cons truction Commercial, Re:.iden· back & ~• ton truck . Jef. • •r ' I -.. R Add. U r i-••••••• •••••••••••••••• TrH Sft"'f c• r\1 •"'' Gold ft1edul ("on blei1eh for your wh ite ""~· m •I, pa o Ual. 548-79$8/$48-5182 rey.W ·17JO ' Mo•...., VE RY NEAT PATCH ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1r.1t·tors ll B.8428S)6 l'arJ)<'ts. Sa,·e money by cvrs.fo"ree est.64().1876 ••••••••••••••••••••••• J OBS & R ESTUCCO. .. ........ u-~-1 U b' " t t · Cleanur11, Treework HcMtMcl••lftl!I M i /H Ii Slud 1 Yreeesl 8931439 ~nw: ... ,_, ..... TreeRemova , m 1ng Bu1iness S•r.,ke (_.1i1v1nT· !flC x ra d[ips. Dnlfti"") Rotot !ling. Mino ••••••••••••••••••••••• ov ng a u ng. en · · ' Turntheproblems&joya Shrub cle•ring. Rototill· •••••••••••••••••••••• l'U~ ~v1tl8s~":\ ni ng ••••••••••••••••••••••• Lndscp'g. lOYrsinarea. HOUSECLEANING ii; our ;~;a rg;d.~~·S:,.~ 'f 11ll99 ' or managemr:nt ovtr to lng.642·2624 . W~ pnnt anYthif\11!, Gua ~~1so. 1•0~1.h s110. l'h'!:ir r;;. ARCJJ DRAfi-sAtAN 6"6·2693. B1.11iness . Call Jllf\ice's ry. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Tobin Realty. We have f.i !>lt .:tf'rv1 ce. Quahty 1., ,.,. l'XP is what Tiredof beinJEretired Lawn & garden ma·ont. RaggedyAf\M.675-6M3 ,_ 1, rl JUSTPLUu.•HG? full service avail. H8 '1 Y.11rk lo pnecs. Ciist"y ..-~unt.~!> .. not .mct.boct. 1 do llavepencil-willdraw "9 lpl1'19 Fast Serv ~as hates FY only , $13 . .SO mo, per Ford's Tree Service Experienced Crew. Lie/Insured. 962·7817 Printin1t. 714 968-SJ68 "''Ork myself. Gd. refs. • 842·83'16 • New llil.wns, clean.ups Want a REAL CLEAN ••••••••••••••••••••••• J '"' "' unit. s prnklr inst & repair. HOUSE ? '1'heGingham PrQf Painter, hones! uat OneCallTo: CALLMG-1311 NANCY BARNE.°' f)J..!.._!ll~.3 Garct.ni(HJ 547-1420. Girl" f:st1. 645-SlZJ. work, rea1. Int/ext. rree JUST PLUMBING 1~~~~~~~~~~·1Uphol1tery -----:c-...,-----1----------· I '* 642 4111 • ••• ••• ••• • • • • •••••••••• 1'\•ping St•rv1et". llt•as Cetnfft/C~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• 3 est. Refs . 548 -2159 , -----·-----1 r.itt•s hy lhe pt1,::e or e•••••••••••••••••••••• Quality /!'11aint/Ldscpg GeMr'•Su•lcn •IIOUSECLEANING • 642.3913 L.R.OTISPlumbing VINYl.REPAJRSERV. h , . · _..._.. kl ·1 00 ••••••••••••••••••••••• By Rolo.ableCoup•e R--•o1 & R--' •. ,,, tear> ......... re· Our &I0·588S <1r64().5921 . BR I CK . n L OC K & """• s pr rs. S<K co • ,, .. Gd Water htr11, all alt.es, dis· --wy-r "' ' · ....... , ---s·roNt:WOHK "lean up . 642· 333J I Tl-llNGS . by Moo.1e. rale1/RdsS4!J..6271 EXTERIORS SAVE SS: poaala. stoppages re· ••••••••••••••••••••••• color. Freeest SJS.~ 64., . ....._.., 646·4908. Gen woodwork. repairs, L~ 1 R . L . Sin or S t ·a l e pairs , remodeling' and Cs t m kitchen & balh, Cabin•t MakJ-• '"""""' • plumbing. elc.00·5613 -•cap nq J.icensed Insured Call d · USE THE ··"7 Tree TrimminJ:, Cleanup, ••••••••••••••••••••••• 9'79-333S repiping. New Con3true. Rm l'g, a lterations. Uru · llaulin g. Sprinklers . ~IANDYMAN -l lomes & ROTOTILUNGS2S ---------1 lion. 24 Hrs. lie & bond qtie & un usual work DAILY PILOT A t C · · · p t · 1 ·11 · 1 &42·"'""".. welcom e. Memb n il fr<-c est . 545·2943. p s. onsc1ent1 ous Landscaping.SodSales. ro ess1ona s w1 pain l -;;;-;;;;;;;;-;;;:;;;;-;;;:;--l -~~~~~~---II "F •sf ••••••••••••••••••••••• l'hcllips Cc1ncnt Co. l ~tm Cab1ncti;, b1)a\ Ci'tl mWork 1-'reeest. "'ork, palio l'OVt'r , k1ll·h IH•lbond·7Sl-56S1 ;tfl6. rm1\l , ln tl i<·e <A'o rk ---C rl •«• ft h d d It Bureau 962·8314 " ra smun. &45-........,11 4 Free est. Master charge your ome an o MARV 'S PLUMBI NG RESULT" 1;.\ti·52 19 Patios, Or1ve~·ays, Con· ------1 rrele ""'Or k, Tractor "'ork. Frccesl.837·8832. J a p a nese Co n1pl e tc Days/eves960-211-0 right. Int /Ext. Reas-•&46·980'7 • Gardening Sf.'rv1ce . Remo.,eDri'f'ewcrys Refs.497-3169&751.osM. NOJOBTOOSMALL RoofllMJ SIRVICE P l antini;:/eulting / Incl. Grading . DJltT & Ford's Landscape QU L TY W II . ---'-""--'-'====-!••••••••••••••••••••••• DIRECTORY c lea nup . Free es t . DEBRIS.SJl..2124. Sod/I.awns/Sprinklers A I a covenng DRAIN CLEAl\ED S6,50 _,_,_2._J_10_2_. ______ HauliftCJ Lic /lnsured.962·7811 at Reasonable Prices. Eves/Wknds·SamePrict ROOl"SCHECKED! For Result ;;;,\ YF. & Profit . Custom ••••••••••••~•••••••••• JAPANESE GARDENER ••••••••••••••••••••••• DEEP ROT011LLING Doug Rebard. 645-4l2'1, G4ar 5:i8·1380 Repaired & Replaced Seivice Call Corpenter --__.__ ••••• ••••• •••••••••••••Contractor rt"mod . rep;iir, add.on. F.11.Gerwick&Son · JOyrsexper.allphases HAULING ANYnflNG Soi!Prep&Tractorwork •QUALlTYPAINTING• . DireclFaetoryService 642 5678 u1~ulal1on. t"Tt.'<° est & Add/Remdl #Bl·ll4321 Reasonable/Estimates FullLandscapeServices lnterior &Exterior Any Plum bing -wa~er LlcenseC39-159496 • 1Jes1"nS. 645 -3139. 67J.6(Ml 549·2170 C•ll 751·193'1. Garage cleanup. Relia· 8JO.••-Jo'm llut'-n Call Lee &10-7Z78 11erv-leak S·ma ro11 te PJI : 549-2961 ht. 122 : -----blefast servil'e. 963-6452 ""°"' "' ----------1 enclMu!;'!ei;'~";;e;"';·~832;·;24~68~!!!!!!!!!!!!~~~~~!!!!~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~ ~parlmet1ts fillrnished Rentals to shcre 4300 lt.tsiness Rental 4450 lusiMss Lost & Found 5300 Help W...ted 7100 H.tp WCNtted 7100. He4p Wanted 7100 Help W•ted 7IOO ----- or Unfurnished 3900 ••••••••••••••••••··~·· ••••••••,,•••••••••••••• Opportunity SOOS ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••. ••••••••••••••••••••••• • * * TOP LOCATION •••••••••••••••••••••••LOST : Gold Chain w/ol<f IAIYSnTER CA.S .. ER DISPATCHER Jomes GaUClllJftt"r MESA VERDE •SlS.OOO +Imagination charms. Greal scntimen· W.AMTID Nights, exper'd only. Graveyard Shift. Apply GF.NERA.L 3832 c v St DRIVE PL.Al.A. takes l hismrkt-deliw/ tal value. So. Cst. Plza. our homc·San Clem. Leading N.B. hotel. Call in person. Heeded Mow! o "Y ' f t f" A I REWARD ! 54&-17J.J ,.,,. Need rel•·able & Barba ra, 644·1700 ext YILLOWC•I Irvine or s .orcoro11r('. mp e xlntexposure.Call now! , EOE; ,.. Youarethe.w'inncror ~ark1ng .Town&country Agt.963·440Sor645-4170 LOST: Airdale 75 lb. caring person 5 days a 525. · · · l86E.l6th.Cmla Me11i1 *S.cretarin *Typist• •Clwical •keypunch •Clerk• •PIX Oprs atmosphere. -----. male, curly hai;, blk. & week ror 18 mo boy. NOPHONECALLS TW~r3~5~~~;K1ETS 15251.l esaVerde Dr.E. $1500 dn . Bal. 1n easy tan REWARD! 5512281 492·8'785 Chem /Con Engr to $30K PLEASE Costal\lcsa.545-4!2'.J monthly pymt.o;.from i~· ors46.4970 . . Babysitter for 3 yr old El-l•Te•h St2K ••DISTRIBUTOR want. :: Hr ·ro-.·nhuu$e. frp\r , RilHJlllHJBroS. come. Small s1i;n bus1· ----------1 "• ' COHONA l>EL ~1 1\R from $275. 1 Br from S20S Barnum & Bailey 3 Stores nr. N'pt. Post Of· ness equipped to make Prnonafs 5350 boy . Overnight at limes. Sel'y/Bookkeeper $750 ed, mature. Interested in l'ool, t<'nnis. contincnlal Circ.•.._ tic<'. 290 Sq. ft. ea. $100 plastic & painted sigM. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Refs req'd. 613-8392. Mgmt Trainee '660 earning up toSllOO per oio hrt~akf;ist. so~-e,n& .... 1t1oea.Goodpark1ng Truck w/aeri·J ladder · Accounli ngClrks to $650 p /t.Call 639-6123 . .. ,.. ,... .Jul y Jlsl toAu.f: 12th Agent64f>-24 14 . a . ' PREGNANT? BEAUTICIAN Cor men's Stat Typ/G.O. to $6001 ~---------1':11:1ltna vit·ws .. Close co Anaheim Convention l\dvert1sed 5 yrs .. 1n Caring c onfidential Newport Beal'h .Hsir Secy/Insur. lo$650 DIAFTSMAM/ TEMPO . i;hopp1n g & fine ~ach.1 Cenler ,800W.Katella 18.JOSq . F't. C·2 bldg. 8001 Yell~~ Pages . Write counseling & referral. Salon. Rent space. Good DESIGtra. Te mporary Help n.t4 ·26 1 I Tickets m ay be ex. Holsa nr. Beach Blvd. Classified Ad. No. 48.5. Abor t ion adoption & 'opportunity for YOWlg & IRVINE PERSONNEL 17802 Sky Park, Irvine ~~~~~~~~~~cha nged for reserved Reasonablc.64-1·6172 Daily Pi lot, P.O. Box keeping. ' at t r acti ve gi rl. Call SERYJCES•AGENCY ~:Jhtr ·~o~st~ti:,e5b:lf~~~C~•~l~l5~<....,.~~~~ s~·11ts a l the Convei:ition DELUXE ofri m'I 1560, Costa Ml'sa, Ca APCARE547-2563 646·2716. 488E.17lh (Atlrvine) ol mat'!. mechanical &1- 1<.0ms 4000 Center a head or time · · cc, com 9'2627 Suite224 Costa Mesa 1 tri J t · G>IMEltAL. •••••••••••••••••••••• Call 642.5678. ext J3.J t~ & ~n<~ustr1al spaces. Al~o Drinking problem '! Beautician wanted. ex-Call 6 4•1470 ~eek hl'a d sys ems, n gs, M•H•~•R claim you r tickets. . m 1n1 w a_rehousl'.s _ 1 n IEAUTY SA.LOH Cnll Aleohol }lelplinc per 'd on ly. We furn. ..-ec ar ware req'd by .-. ...,,.. IOO~tS S25. ~·k up with * * * LagunaN1guel &M1ss1on Ol'PORTUMITY 24 hrs aday8JS.3830 cli entele. Ask for Mag ·~~~~~~~~~"".j ex p andi n g cru11in1 Sallboatua... ~ltr h e n . 5-18 ·97 55 or y · · H nd · 6 3 9 ;: YllCht builder. ,...,,,. 1e10 areas. a Y to All set up, ready to go. g1e , 1 ·S llor 968-7167. Sailboat Mrg. Company 1'-15 3967 ROOl\1 ~I ,\ TE to share J San Die1:0 Fwy. 200 to Best Joe a l ion. Costa PROBLEMS'? WE CA Rt: ~~-~'---"-"-"'"'--l •Ct.rical St. $475 C11 ll Bob Poole Subsidiary or 35 year old \ \L. ISL, Sleeping room. BJ? hsc in 11.B, $125 + 2000 sq fl. As low as JO< Mesa. 2 Sh bowls, J sla· ONE WAY !fELP IEAUTY O~TOR Free J ob. Very Lite typ.. Down East Yachts holding company, seeks 110 kit chen. Quiet adult . ut1l Ca11Sueat842·1777. per sqft.831·1400 lions,+ 5 rrn.o;; total to CEN.Tt~R as a shampoo assistant. files, phones, distribute 700l:'.Alton,S.Ana General M;,a na1er. Ex· ~l 10. p/mo. (213) 799-4856 3 • lndMstrial Rental 4500 enlarge into or rent out to 2 _hr llot Linefi4.S.8800 Guaranteed salary. 1'"\.cll mail . 0 .C. Airport area. ___ ....c97~9~·61!50='--~--i perienced In Fiberg l as~ ur 646·6219 Office Rental 4400 •••••• ••••••••••••••••• ~~P Jse~~:{ expenses. Abraxas Massage oo~~~!~"::;ir t'ashions ~~;u~e~:rd"! Personnel Eld erly Lady needs co m· ~aSilhol at n;ian~cturlnl g toom&loard 4050 ••••••••••••••••••••••• NEW BU ILDINGS at · · · · IOa m-12'pm7daysP/wk . Lagun a Hills 586.2770 Agencyoo.6720 panion. Llvt!·in 2 day! a esony n~appy. •••••••••••••••••••••• 150 I W-s~Uff Dr O.C. Airport 2400 to~ M__._nnes, Trvst l.~17~33~f~·ujl .. ~le~rt~on~~A~vc~.~C~M~ll ;;~~~~~::~~~! 333 E. tith Nol5, CM _oe_r_w_•_e_k_._8J0._968 __ , ___ 1 Sequi~,r;:~~':'se ~0~al~b rre· .,.;-"' • sq (t. ;1mple par king. ~De ''f•d"s 5035 * • ...,1.11 •• ----------1 ELECT · · · ·• toom & Board for elderly Nt~wport t'inancial<.:tr SO M E UN I TS FOR B & G"rf C ERK TYPI RONJC P.O. Box 19720, Las J)(>rson $250 n10, :>15--6952 • ••••••••••••••••••••••• WIT"" ESSES oys I s L ST I ASSEMBLERS Vega11, Ne\', 8911 9, attn/ aft .t;l'~t Lea1iftC)OfficeSpoce SA l.E AT 10"((, DOWN. 1"11 t0lo t4 yearsofage.Dai · RECEPTIOttlST Needed immed .. open· President. All r eplies Cal lonSite~1anagcr Kuoll 1c1",i!1e lc,.1'!''1c.,·r~~ LOANS up to 80% SOUGHT ly Pilot delivery routes Gen'I ore skills . Type 5S ings w/connector &c•ble confid ential. (714 )642·3lll cxt Z.16 an ur is. " """"v... wpm •••u•ately. M•·n 1 ex pe r , Good pay &1----------I st TD Lam&-8'/:r0/0 may be avail able in your .... • *""'er Rentcils 4200 ----$95 area. Earn profit for de,, yr exp. Good spelling a benefits CM/NB Phone GENERAL °"'CE ••••••••••••••••••••••• • 2nd TD Locms SEEKING PERSONS liveri es & cash. trips or must. Offers variety & MS-4222. P ftime 2 days wk. Over )("l-~\NFRONT LagG Ikh 400 SQ. FT. Low5e;.f:te~~Co. Wl lO RODE ON Tift.: merchandise for selling _<_h_•_ll_e_ng~e_._.,,.. __ 35_7_. __ 1_E_X_E_C_._S_E_CT_Y_Ch_al-le_n_g_.1 30 . Ar.k for Ter ry or :! r. $250. wk . reat Lnnuna ML-...t r ..... ,. . ' , S E A JI O R S E ' ' new subscriptions. For Cocktail Waitresses ing eareer opportunity llerk . 613·4100. !~~·0~· ~~-O.'t2l___ ./ .,., Cendll-..O -7 •...,.....-. 642.2171 54.>-00ll SP 0 RT i;~ IS H J NG information please call Bartenders for intelligent. ttiolival· GOO D GRI Et' JLK. to Bearh. New C°" ./c-.-,-...•• 8Jl .. f600 Serving Harbor area 24 VESSELOUTOl''DANA 642'4321 · From San ed,organiredindivldual. CllARLJ E BROWN do. J,l,lcuzzi /vo!leybal/. .,1........ 1 -=::::=--:=:--::-::-;---ll 2'.Y~"~'~''-------I (POINT> WHARI'' ON Cleme nte -San J uan TlffAHYS Superior skill$ required. A NOTHE R R E At. Sips. G. ~J 25 wk. 968·5700 :;:~::;-:-., _,_, 2000SQ. 1'"1'. w/3 ofc's 2nd LOAMS WANTED WH ALE W ATCl-11 NG Capistra no area, call Pvt Cl ub &. Discotheque Opportunity increased ESTATE ..ri ..... _. Oran~Cty.Ai.rport WE llAVECASH! CRUISE LlNS!?LN'S -495-0630and MissiooVie. Forinterview:67a.6000 re1pootibi lity.Call Vic ki OFFICE :Olrt \'c r y Speci a l ! _,.__,_ .. ..,....... 963·7818 Buy2ndT.D.'s BIRTllDAY, FEB. 12. jo-EI Tor:o area, call Bush,644·1800 fOl'"appt. I need an even do:en. Comp. furn 'd. I brhoust' .I'..._...,........ 1200 Sq t, 1t1 I /f t Loan on2nc:IT.D.'s 1973. 581-6310. COLLECTION pl us fi ve young, ex· tf!r OJ very particular. office, .lget~e;i; d;:',,.,r~ New Loa ns-2ndT.D. 's Equal Oppor. F,;mployer PROCESSING Female telephone reeep· troverted, aggressive, m.ature cpl ·no pc>ts. t\vl. l-Phase. Unit 16, $185. 629 EqWty Jnvsmt. Div, ALSO SEEKING persons 5Se~vici n&gLoof 2nd TD's. ~~ogn~S:c:~:a~ya~hier. Typ. mo n ey mot t v a ted, JliJy 21· Aug .• Sept. SI~ Terminal Way, Costa BARNt:TTMRTG.CO. who were aboard "Sea av1ngs an exp req. 831 _.040 di vorced/separated , fu l? Wk . Will reduce for l-------.---I M Ho r se•· for ""'hal e 1o•T A I I p • t . d ""'"th, season or vr\y. Sl40 up s.tore-of(1ces cpts esa. Days 540·5110., 645-2134 watching or s~ ... 'ishing ... PP Y n erson 1 me. n e w o r us e f;7J..J Zfi.'> · drps air . hath. 17301 t'ves.646-0681 1----------1 ........... , BUILDERS MarinersSavinjs 495.4949 salespersons.OurofficC!:\ -----·I Beach 81 I-I. B. M2-2SJ..I PRIVATE PARTY wilt within several days of West.Jail Corporation 1515 Westclirr Or, NB 1-;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;j are strategleal/y located 'it:W POR'r Steps 10 ----2500' MI . or 17th & buy 2nd T.D.'s. lr1in. dis-the above date. Has Vacancies For; Equa!OppEmploy m/f I• throu1t hout Ea~t Orange bt'a.-hm00.2 &4 br.$l6S WATERFROMT Placentia CM, 220 eount.Call:642·3513 FOODSERVICE County : lrvlne, Tustin t o $4!10 wk. 642.J-IOO. ~ewport Beoch pwr /prk~/exhst air. _ lZ Announc•metlh/ J~~;:J'!~ati;; i:tr::ti7 ~~: loot MKhmlks C1f~.s.::~~~7;s~t.P~r~I~~ WORKER llills; Tustin. Anahei m ----~.X''""1,., .• -•r,·,...., _ccnts.646·12521644·2228 ,-·-als/ (f'orRelidl Hi\h1 4t. So Coast Plaza l' ... ._ ..,. ~" ..-.-.no cept col\('et cal ls. Call GftcoatT-~ nee. Mr Lyons848-1004 "'0 k 1 h •. ( d Id bel' lolboa Bay Cklb St50-S225 ~tooth Large M-l , .... bldg. :n x Lost & F-·---1 • ..,.. .. ays a wee . Al s iu .. o;. an wou you 1eve A I bl th f n ....,.._, _.... Charles Curtis at (213) MarinEledricimt COO K A I · Hospita l exper, pre!'d. Chino) and now its time v a I a e mon o View of boats & water 66 ' w I ving quarters. ••••••••••••••••••••••• 966-17JG • PP Y in person. A 1 . r-10 · th •. . Augus t. J::xtra .lari::e, 2 BILL GRUNDY f''nr rent or will consider Lost & Fouttd 5300,1_·---------loot Car:p....laa 2.4 p.m. 1262S.E. Bristol, PP Y in person ......,,.ta move in on e 1g11es hr .. 2 ba .. funushE!d wt Re:a llor tns.6161 t rade for house or units. •••••••••••••••••••••••~harp , lone ly, retired, Appll.-anu shot.lid have Costa Me!:a. Mes a M e m o r i a I h8erhe ;Fn ,.~l Valley/ llunt b & I l I T · h h' t I & •· XI 1 ltospltal, JOl Victoria . <' . or show .and tell ay \'1t'w nex o poo ----------1 -~•~r~m~'~·~"~'~·~'6~1~0_. ---I LOST shaggy black med. youn1t1s . no c 1ldren, no own oo s ... ansp. n C . M. Ask ror F ood call : $1500 for mo ~'ill ron· FULL SERVICE dog. 6_30.75 from Irv. problems, r ef's, man l'O. benefits &.top wages. COOKS S . :-.I der 2 week option. Pn COSTA MESA C meet similar lady. Photo Apply To Er.per. only for busy Cof· er vice Supervisor · Jim •tG:ty l':art ~· Call 645-:uit (nH 1 EXEC. SUITES HOW LEASING ~£~..\Ro. ~~1• S.:~ please. Let ·s have run. Security Guard fee shop. Must know esa1~E~O~E~.~~~~~~~ 963-9777 ~nd 644·24~ (homeJ_. _ FROM SI 80 Deluxe induslriaJ units hefore 10 am or 673-6429 Write ad no40'J, Dai ly Z7S McCormick, C. Mesa & broiler wo rk. Beneflts.1. IMch....., -OALBOA PENIN. l'T, Airport Arch 83J. with offices : 1380 lo6000 Pilot, P.O. Box lMO Apply .in person, Mon Find what you wa nt in 18964 Ira !Mwst ---ft 64? 4463 "A" 7"""' LOST /FOUND Costa Mesa, Ca 92626 thru Fr i, betwn 2 & 4pm, Daily Pilot Classified,. Ot-:11ir<_1b le duple"· upper, Cd~f 200.1750 sq. n. Cpt. ~~ · on~·pre~~J~ A PE.,.? 22'18 Newport Blvd, CM .1 --~----~--"-i ---F'-'ou=n~t=•=;"c-.:.V=•l=l•~Y'--- fipa c 1 o us .. til_<'. c pt , IJrps, Air·r'IJnd 'd .. elev., 960-2900Adoplion.Law Employment& BOAT A!kforoffi ce. dshw_!i!hr · di sPC15al. W-;ek· prkg. 673·41 20 -1-7-th_S_t_._c_ .• _l_. _____ I Cost Spay /Neuler Info. l'reparatlatt I ~="-"'-'"'-"'-----l ~~r.~!'_t~•~•••••?!!~ ~~!~:':'_~.~•••••?!~~ Ly. Sun1mer or longer. -Lease lOOO sq.ft. w/office. ••••••••••••••••••••••• DECORATING '7l-2039 -----NEW plush off\ec bldg,'.! 110-220 voltage. I feat, hot l..OST vie. Spy Glass Hill. Schools & BUILDERS COMSULTAMT .r;L°ROA l'c run . :! br to 6 r m s uit('s . Con· wal<'r . New bldg. Good small black,long haired Instruction 7005 Exp'd sales penon for • Olk l 1 • fer e ncc rm, xerox loc.645·2244. male cat w/ flea collar.••••••••••••••••~•••••• retail salesorwallpaper, nOUSC. 0 la)' .,.. ,. •••.••. N•. oc A•~rt. ----------1 ... 8433 d beach i\\'I July.c\Jso2 br 8,13.3640 ' •.-v '*COST.A MESA* .,. · Harbor View Pre·Sl'hoot carpets, rapes, elc. tP\ a\ I Isl 2 ~·ks Sept. . Lost : Pear l & Persian now acl'epting Fall regis. Experienced Salary + commission. Sl2Sw k.962·Af31 EX t:Cl lTIVF. swtcs cin ~-(:~·11$l8S. & 25(1()s.r Turq uoise Rin~. Gold 21h·Klnderga r tcn . Apply nt T HE COLOR )iCE/\NFRON1' Lower 2 2N2eowopo,•ql lfllar~2· .',"',,,u~ Natress Rily 979·6.S71 setting. Vie :·· Mi Casa. 640-8820 Mechanics ~OB, 9122 Adams Ave .. u.. C~1 . SenlimentaJ value. -Jobs--W-... ---.--7-0-7-I WANTED 1--·-·--------1 ' !k: ~;~a~~ftg1~~f~ UlC 645·4405 . · luFIMnes1/ln•nt/ 7 /12/75. Reward. 832-024 ••••••••••:;:" ......... ~ Deli Help, 21 or ovr. Must i "Oft.. Lynnor675·11'11l. w • 1 have "••h re'"• ex per HEWPORT&••cH 1----------1Young man would like le CP•Y op wages .. ..-. · ti\odern J br, rear hou.<;e • ~. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Excellent ro. benefit.! Sales &/or waitress elf· on occ:in . Com p! ~40 Sq rt .dhcswte lusiness REWARD! Lost fa mily work . Afternoons or b 1 r 1 F il' t w-nished, $250. ~·k. W~I .~111 pd . ~~9S/'.\1onth Opporlvnity SOOS pet, lrg grey male cat w evenings. Versatile. Call ~~=:~::~::ufe8t:s :=;m. eC~llu betwn ';"~ 1'iewport 646·1'.171. Avail Rt'alono~•t:'i 615-6700 ••••••••••••••••••••••• wht spot on chest. Vi Jim 613·3821. for our employ~. 7pm,675·3407. , 1 26 A 2nd & A Spyglass lli lls mdl u..i-w~ 7100 .. u y -~~ • ug • 1 !\fO f'Jc f:E RENT • Janitorial-SJOOO per mo h PH "A~ 1497 ,..,,.. -~ PACIACA BY Z3f'd -Sept6th \-2 :i Rm . offil'es rrom gross. Will sell all or Orne!. :.,..... • ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~i-:-vJ BR in China il3~ pi·r mo. Near part. Inquire P.0 .Box Lost : t'emale Golde n Accounts Payable. R.E. KIPPER YACHTS Cove. Weekly ratei. alrP"rl No lease rcq. 101 , H.B. 92548. Retriever w/choke chain eonslruction co. Call Mr. :_ 613.;fi(l\ l\gent f1:1J.:122J9Tilnoon Nr. Santa l\na· .Rive Thomsen, Wiiliam Lyon m w. tithStreet Deliverymen ovr 21 perm p/l early rrtom LA Times dcliv to NB homes. $250 per mo. 642·4800. _ trail. Reward.SS1·36.13. Co,N.B.833-3800 Coata Mesa DIMTAL :¥1£.ANF'RONT new 3 br. 800' Ofr +-~oo· w:_i.~e· Uniform M ~g. f'OUN O Airedale male -A:;;;~~ifff;;Dj;:;;;t.;;--~~~~~;;;;.;.~~d Ortho As1lsl., Olain lde. i :b •. Aug. l'aJM:ellalion . houst·, r pt · ht«! ceil g, Drapery M 1!· Act• ••Director Expa oded duties. Full or ~edul'ed t o $400. wk . 1>rk~ :\1 L zone~ mo 1.iquor Slores puppy vie. Coasl ·Jlwy, P /time. Bayview Conv. loatC•FwlllS p /time.5"5Z·7ll00 813-80M 64$i·l252.644Z_z_'ll ____ 1 Others Ne wport Beach. Brown Hospital, 10 :30·2:30. !'i lo.tHmd••• N WeSt:LL Busines!ICS collar. 640·00Z1 day! a wk. $2.SO hr . . & DENTAL ASSIST. IK.tiOn Retltds 4250 1 rdl>.L~.rAirport, !st f~.oor. HOLLAND IUSIMESS FOUND : Male. l.ab, geld. 642-3505. l'I_... 1 Periodontist nffds · ex · -·••••••••••••••••••••• g o .o;t r <'{•t par 1 n~. 6454170 SALES54G-0608 Must have extensive ex-d 1 . llJ\~~fOTll S ierra Crptrl .drpd.•li.r cond.& Leather collar. Vic. ART IST fo r paste-up perience.alongwithlhe per ' /lime assl11tant. M 1 . r'·sh hike furn 3 l)rflccs $110. ea. E lden Ave.CM.646-6458 work ; la miliar w/type & ability & dfflre to do Ex panded duUes oppot. oun illns, 1 · · 548-fi l24 fo'OR SALE-Beauty.Salon. preferably w/ mail order cu1tom q uallly work. Xray cert reqd. 8'2·6&31, ~~~: ~1';· !i~~.t=: _. -SS• PErt -5-Q-FT--·11 stations. Beautiful de-t~00%~i?~ie~~IJ"Ca"!'i'~ exp. Call Mr. Jones, KPa1clflc D Tr~~l erM. 3$0 1_11_·_8_· --------I do, sleeps 6. Sl.20. weetc:. 1617 WF:STCLIFF-NB cor. Reasonable. \..l:lca t-identify 847·8760 532·2S8l a mus r. """"''• esa, DENTAL ASST/Control 536·6446 AGT. Ml-5032 ~ldarbon ur ~. 1:!°tn1i ~.·~~1"1 l·F~O-Uc....N-0~, _M_•_l_•_C_0<_k-.-.-.1 ASSEMILY BoaUng Club need.a man Nurh"·1 H.appy, exp"d .. r'.""-h ad De t ..,. .,_ •1 & Wht Brwn & LIT& to repa ir & pilot 20· ent us a trc, moti vated ._e ArTow e . au a.Mntts Rental 4450 Be tty &46-5000; W\:nds eo"""1i °\,":Y N..,,.; Bl d: MANU FAcnJRING 30'power boats. Call Ind ividual wanted ror ~e for tent, wk °'i,·~·~·;·~·~·~·~··~·~·~·~·~··~·~·~·~··~·~·~·1 , ... ;;;;:·~53>8;;;~··-.R.;:;taJiol ar, 1c. ~,.... v . p 1 67s-3866 pr ogressive ofc. Sa l. •d rates! owner. & Mon te Vista, CM. oe lion11 open. 5 D•)'I, · H 7•u 1o 3p•• F A I Repal ~3M S2 h lo 1 -.,.__.... open. ra. ""'" m. orgn u o War... Ms-6528 afl 3:30 r 8 a ..... ,.._. BOOKKEEPER, P a rt· 152·1~ :i!iW s '. Lake Ti1ho THE COLONY c;r:~:,~~{ite~~ FOUND: Siamese, small. Asaiatant Bookkeeper, lJme, 20 hn p/Wk. Hounl-'"-D-'-EHT=-,.-L-RICB'T _____ , fJabin in trees. s1Jl5 II. 30 RETAILSHOPS Deli-Beer-Wine'14.ooo. lite belie. bm ears & Restaura nt up belplul. arra n1ed. Call Cindy, $;1$0 /w k. 714·'994·2245. Prime reasonable spact: J,iquor Slorefl0.000. legs. Lovable !W6-1775 • C1U BllJ 4M"'1.'8 642-2256 want~a~Jxr;:;J;:''d. ttwa11r :,~dilable1~•riie & 5m~~ Jewelry Mt i . $28,000. Loll : Sun or Mon, Mans OYS/ GIRLS to Helpl:--:---o-=="'-='----• r wor I ,.c~"' Rest.&PleSbop t&,000. Id th I ,. Sp o rt 11 A th le t ic D'f!NTAL ASSISTANT, iB G BEAR Cabin-2 1:Jlt. Frenc h w n.......,..,., ••blet Chl cken l>ellght.18.SOO. go w a c w w e AVON Organlr:aUon Hi.I Ue.keta exp'd e.hJlrtld e , en· ' frplc. crpt~ SIP88. It l re es. Adjat'ent la llambu:raerl23.500. leather band. Girard (Of' Sportini Event.a. _ Untsiastlc. Call548-IM4. wit or Wknd. 714/67.S-f' e' t i v a I or Ar l s Piiaa $28,000. Perea aux. Sentimental mol!ali rv + Bon,.. On!~-, J,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; 0""'""' w Mt -M valu~ 648-IMS. Let n.. ~Do ·' •...Ws to...__.. 4 S80 BROADWAY ood Pallet I ·........, 1---------neat appe•r1 ng apply. ~··•••••••••••••••• LAGUNA BEAOI Security Ouardt:JSM FOUND: 1112 Sbrt·ha.lr TIM Hww•tc SM-2100 for lna.t:rvlew. DISH MACHI .. •A LE 0 R r1::MALF. Ca r Rentalt80.000. cat. Wh t. undenlde, Olk. Tiiis Sc:aca: Mr. Fox . OPIUTOR Mal'hlneShopl150.000. & Grey &triped back. Vic. l--~-------1 Heavy llft ln1 p /time f¥~·-:~RT l&e ~ 49 4-7915 Corp. SMll$IOO. RaleiRh &: Wit'°'!> CM~ Get oot & meet.people, Cweekenda • eYfll). App-.J!!!!:__ '~ Uniform Mf11t 548·3177 t1dd new lnluat. e•m , l)t In per.on. c.c.t.a Neaa :J;'M I\ L E Rm ma t c . Le1thar J•ckl!l Mt1. money s~l llng quality You don t ti ted a 1un to Memorial lf01plt.al; 301 ted. 2l·2t yrs. Slrid-T H E FA CT O R y ,. Atlifor SAMCIA.MI FOUND : S m . 11hag1y produett. lntere11ted r "draw f1tt" when )IOU VictortJt, CM. A1t for ~ buainf'.ls. Cooed. N Newport. Ideal shop Holland BusineuSa\ee white & tan male doe Call: MG-7<Ml Of' Ztonttb place an ·~ In UMI J>lily P'ood SetvlceSU:Pet'Yi.Jor. )lpl. complex. 87'9-SSJO a'lall. In lbe mall. $140. ITI60ral'l&eAve.C.M. w/111. lie. on Se•ward 7-I359 days. Pllot Wanl AdslCallnow £Ct . fllA.l.97._6538 IJl0.111·980I &U·41TO 540-0ll18 Rd.CdM.173-2838. fU.MT&. \ \ AUTO SALES TRAINEE SALARY BONUS CAR • The leading Buick dealership in pranCe County Is otferin1 a sales training pro- gram second to none. We are interested in younc men or women who are Inter· ested in a sales career, Ideally you will hlYt some salts experi· ence not In the automotive fitld. While In tralnin1, you'll be on s1l1ry + 1 company car. Upon completion of trainlnc, rou will graduate to our profts1ion1I 11le1men compensation plan. In addit ion to our outstandlnc tralnlni prol'r•m, we offtr a complete frln1e benefit packac•: demonstrator. Insur· ance proe_ram, paid vacation, factory incentive, manacement opporfurlfty, securfty and more. To team more about how you can )oln our !tom, apply to Air. Jim Chamberlain. BAUER MOTORS hhik., 0,..1, ...,_, Tri*""f'h, MO ..... ,. 979-2500 MOfllOA't' lhru WIONllOAY llTWllN8AM& ta NOCM H.t,W•t.d 7100HttpW..tM 11oetw,W~ 7100lWpW..tH 110o' HatpW..t-4 •. 71ooH.t,w ... ~ 7100 .......................................................................................................................................... Mond!)',Juty21. 1975 DAILY Plt.OT 81. D $ 1040 Horses 8060 Mlsullaneous 8080~ . JANITORIAL . MAINTENANCE P~omanent ~ewport Clothing Store Wishes To 1 llrc A Maintenance Man Of High C~uality . Thl' Hours Would Be 1 :30-4 Monday Through Friday & 8 : 30-12: 30 on Saturday. Additiona l Hours Available, Jf Qualified. Starting Wage is $3 Per Hour Heply To Class1fiud Ad No. 420 .C!O Daily Pilol P .O. Box 1560, Costa Mesa. Ca 92626 Help W ant..d 71 00 Help Want•d 7100 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• Hair Or.sset-Insurance Agenc:y Girl t->cperi<•nrt'<i " ... nm1• Commercial Lines. Un· folio\\ 10µ C.11151!1 !Ht I I derwriting & Rating. Ex· H-"IRDR£SSE.RS per necess. Sal open. "' ii; lle allh & retir e ment Call 645 7337 plan. Fred S. James, 494 1087 or 54~3058. (Ask HAIRSTYLISTS for Mrs. Bradley.> With l"ollowtnit --------- Hewporterlm Salon J an1tor . f !time. Apply 644_0661 or5"Q..8S82 Mesa Ve rde "Conv. Hosp, • ____ 661CenterSt,C.M. JIAlR STY.LIST-Ma ll'. J A-NITORS· EIT~-ar-ea-. ~or Established ~auty p/timc eves. Ci>ls ok. car S~lon nr. Oran~e County & phone a must. Call Airport. RcdKl•n orient · 532-6558 NI hE'lpful. (.'all for in ·----- terview, 833-<)J(>I. Leqal Secrdcry Hatf Day Nice Pay Some ex pe rience re· 9,\M-JP M or IPM·SPM quired. Mission Viejo. Start SSOO mo. 496-9695. or 5PM 9PM f:arn $100 ----+ + per wt•ek doi ng en Mai<I, l<'ull time. good pay JO Yabl c work 1n our & Benefits . Apply 31755 bra nd new ofr ol'X'nini.: Coast Hwy. So. Laf!una. near O.C. Airport. Xlnl -- opportunity for llO~tltVl' M Al D. part time. minded inrll\' F or HARBOR INN MOTEL personal inlc·n IC\.\. CJll 675-3463 833·8095 --- JI OUSEK E EPEH Cook MA INTENANCE for couple . Engl 1 ~h OFFICE speaking, Live 1n, Newport Beach. 5 1 2 BUILDING d ays. DriVl'. Satar) open. Write ~lut ing agc. MAINTENANCE up &ref's Wt:ite ad no 471 , Daily 1 Orange County Pilot. P.O. l3c?x 1560 Building Maintenance JUNIOR SALESMEN Ages 12-lt. Earn $20·$40 per w<>ek getting new subscribers to the OA lL \' P ILOT after school and Saturdays . No d e liv e r ies or collec tin g . Transportation furnished. Huntington Be ach-Founlaln Valley areas, call 8'0-lZlO Equal Opportunity Employer SECRETARY For ~oclal sen ice 1•1i«'n· cy. Assis t exec. dnector In adm ln dut1~. t'R & fund rai1ung. Sh & typ1n~ req 'd Call R.18 4700 for appl. E. 0 lo: • • • Soroh Hedy 129 Ladcnl Ln San Cl....,..• You ur~ lht' w1nnt•r or TWO FREE TICKETS !Sl3 :><> Vd.lut'I ltht9ll~ lrot.. Service Sta. Attendant. larnum & lalley p /llme. Exper'd only Circus Avail eves & wknds Julv 3l!lt toAUJ.? 12th Neat a p pear . & handwr1thll(. Apply 2590 Anuh1•1m C'omt'nt1on Newport Blvd, CM Center, 800 W J<alella -----Ti cket s muy be l''< 09 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••• •••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• •PET WORLD• Mora an F1llv 4 yrs t-:'<"rt·..,l St.111d.1rrt rn.111•111. be•ut ronf1rm~ll on typt•\\-rttt'r t\trn Cockcr s .• C h1h uuhuu . JlPntlC' Must .,<>II Valul' chJr,1«tN" ~~ C.1">tl Poodles. Sh1h·l1u, Dox1t. $950 Make ofr ~18UI C'ond t ;ill 1,..12 i:J:..'I• l>l "n • Doble , Pit Hull :; IOJ\Mlu :!f'\t r o 1· k :1 po o P ,. k 1·" • HovHhold Goods 8065 \\ l'~' I(':., 100 mixed f)Ufl •••••••• •••••••••• ••••• !'.! /\ ... L I'~ ( h I' .. I .. II r pies Stud svs nwi.t ('ar1ct•llt>d ('ontr ct 2001 d r ;i w c r '>. $4 11 f•ot· brt•t:dl\ 2S2S W 17th at yd:. t'urpt't bc•lr11A mill t>0th :.t.·~ $25 & S2fl 1\nt11. fo'a1rview SA. Opcnevcl\ r~l 1nstJll ~7 Ki29 rnlll. r;rn $25. Man1•11'(" ~31 5027 1·hord 11r)ta11 S..>v unl<l. J•w•try 8070 nuck S:>-0 •llll•t rcwkn~ RASS F.T llOUND Male. H ••••••••••••••••••••••• dir $45. ~1hl M'h<iol 1hk.. mos AKC, papers. Wht WA~ED S:!5. & tot.; or m1-i•.' wigold & brown spot.' 1""11111 !>4H 7K4111orf'4J lllt•I F1ncdog SlOO fW1 5731! T O P C'/\Sll UOl.l.A H IROMIS> Ser vice Station Atten· changed for rt>sc rverl d ant , exper'd. Day & seats ut thl• Convuntion HetpW•tecl 7100 HelpWCMtH 7100 eves.Full &p/tlme.App· CentPr aht:'ad of lime FrutoYou 8045 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ·-·•••••••••••••••••••• ly Shell Station, 17th & Call 642 5fl7fl, 1•'<l 333 to ••• ••. ••• ••• •• ••••••••• l'AlD ron YOlllt J EWELRY. WA'l'CHl-:S. AttT ouH:ers. tm1.D. S I t. V Jo: H S f ; It V I C t-:. I-' 1 N 1': fo' U H N & AN Tl~l11-:s 1\45 22(10 A.:t· uJ1krlo\A.ll doulll"' ""l'. ll1•adhciJ1tl i 1 · fn:l . htj!h , (1111tho.111I :~ fP1'L,. htgh Mt"t11I r.01 ... l!l.1'1,v. to rd1111 .. h &· ~1 5 uO, I' h 11 n t· !I 7 f> II :1 l ! " C tl7S !i'Jl(>I MASSAGE TECH Plumbing. Drain & Sewer lrvin.!:.._N.n . claim your lu·ki•t.; KITTENS 3 rno·s I \.\Ill , I . .. • * Yo~~g lad y (18-28> fo_r men wanted. Will train. Service Sta /\tt ... ndant n 1ht.·o. I hlk ·wht. 2 v1 le~1t1male full llme pos1 Must have own truck & wantt'd. f'ull ~ p/tlme. Merchandise t.· ..1I1 co. I 'r t •t b h v ttond. No experh. n1ec. We handtools 558-7381 Browns Shell. 900 E. ••••••••••••••••••••••• tl6012~t 1.1 C••rat Ut:imnnd ~hnile ytoou lsecamo~/\.pp~8y ~~ Re al Es tate, licensed _Coast llwy. Nil Antiques 8005 '1 KITTENS 2 &>blJtl Mhtmrl' ~ Band <;u.-r I Wh t h u.1• Bar~all) Pr1C'r' 675 2312. person any afternoon or salespeop e. Y no SharpA-sh·e ••••••••••••••••••••••• mot l'r m.ini.. "', eve. 2112 Harbor Blvd, work,an the hottest .area G"'71 -· VICTROLA trained /\ft 5 1'~'M l ST :-\f:l.I. .rnt1qu1· C t u 1l unt1ngton Beach I f oun o L · · h 1 2 642·7462 h ,, ~ 1 -08 3 "!.!!!:___ t a1n V"lley. Call 'Phil To m ana~l' ve..i.. active-,.,°1rd.:ce. 1 ~}5 .. ·~d· 1;., e P4 J amet Y"1 " "t.<t: pear .. ·~ .. " ~ rwt·klac·c·. 14K. nrea 1850 Mech a n ic . Cl ius A . Mc Nam ee at Village women·s bouuque. Must Brunc;w1ck !Brunswick· R EG I ST ~ HU M 'n 2 Ant1~ue I'" hr.1ct'lt!b•. F/time. Wilting to work Real Estate9634567 have tolal relaJI expcr & Blake-Collcndar Co .. French Poodles MothC'1 2 141\ J11vendar J..ldl' JUNKWAKTED for .. «r.1p 1111•t..1l I 111> doll;JI pJtd rur JUlO' OC'" 1><.Xltt"' """ ,1pplt.JOI '''• t•H· h.1uh'tl a1.1.,1v frt:c. t-:d St urw •.11;11 :ll!Wi wkods.Comm.w/guarn be able t o t ake full Put. l!H81 Prc-ele<.'tnr. & Daughter fre(! tu gd r1n~::.. iont· "/d1a Apply 3190 Ha rbor Bl, c h a rg e o f rl'~P00 · wind -u p v1ctrola hume.545·305" monds> Allrl'a .... 0'4ner CUSTOM CAKES CM REALESTATESALES sibilities. Xlntoppor. for MahOtlany f1m~h Ila!> Furniture 8050 5flll2~19 fo r l.'ver•; o«t:a..,1on, ------HACIB4DA right person who IS in· fivl' but It 111 stora~l· ••••••••••••••••••••••• m:isterfulh 1 rc•;itl1i fnr' Mechanic Wa nted fo r REAL ESTATE. INC. t er ested in a perm.. •Estate Diamonds * N.8 . area. (Class A !/time position.Salary+ spaces. Plays excellent Great Sa\otnl(sonL'se..I ~ou Thl· umN1.1l •~my Sm ogLic.req'd)Qdlfor Opens Office #4inC-05ta greatprofltsharin"plan ly Ready lo refin1::;h !-'urn Appl.J &M1..,i· 15l; \ 112 C 481 C !>Pl'l'tal l ). Pr1ct'd n·-Mesa. Self starters, free "' ~"'000 Phon 6750J.12<>r \"I ··. R · N. k l'lu \"hi •"'m" l>l r ..... >n .. bl .. "'llh ···t1 .... r:w· appt.,S8l·8764afterSPM thinkers.trueindep.con· lf you qualtfy, call for rums c ·~~0~\:~~~1~~10 ~low:hi...17.'"Gl.appr'll: t;~n "g~a r~1nh<t:d C'~l! MECHANIC, cxpe.r. pre· tractors. Best comm. in appl. . · Gold i\nlq. Imp .Jade Jh·len nnw ror your ferred. Top pay , in· town.Call THE LOOK Appliancu 8010 BED. king s 11e mallrcss, obJl't.'l D 'Art Color CU!>tmn 1h:n•r.1t1'll l"Jt.e ~u;;1~ce~t ps~~~1 .s~;~n\ 2'~o5hF~~~e':1!~·:af~r ---~~4-6500 ·~~~·~~·~~·,··(;;~·~~::<~ ~~~P;~i7f~·c~:;'~: ~~~ ~~;~~14 ~;;~1/·\u'lr~ nt 979 s1l:1 • 1 1 · N R 549.9511 Sitter Needed. My llome. l:klxt.':;. Will p~•Y ca:-.h (\al. S525) Queen. $l!k5 . Bu1 lctt•1 ... 1-:.1 -..y L ift, rvm e, · · -Heavy athletic program. 673·7202 nr !>62 t\:31).1 (\al. S425 t ndivt•ry 1n M11cellaneous 8080 l111u ... t.>hvlll 1ll'1 n~ de\:, Mech. mgr . for .service RECEPTIOtollST Fu n job. rare finrl. l'l.d 631 ·048R ••••••••••••••••••••••• plumht n~ lumhl'r, sta tion. Very Good In<·. Good te lephone voice. 673-2793. .Kl'nmorl' t; a s Dryer S75. WA ll....ITED ft1 rn1tun1 &· mud1 mul~ salary+. M usthavcexp. m ust type 50 wpm. ap· T-E LEPllON '" S/\L"'S Kenmore Washers sso & DllLTBLE BF:D. xlnt rond 1"111 1111..,c-5~8 1s:r; Send r es um e. 7302 pltcations can be filled , . I!. "" • S65.Guar& l>l'I 546-8672 & clean Matt, ~p~s Ai TOI' Ci\SJI l>Ol.L/\lt Oceanfront N.H !YdGG:i out a t 32518 Caminci 1-~xperienced preferred. fram1· Sli."i R42 323-1 I' i\ I 0 F CJ R Y 0 t • H Medic al Assistant, main· ly b»ck office. Jlunt. Heh. physician. Write ad ~481 Daily Pilot, P .O. Box 1560, Costa Mesa, Ca . 92626. -----Medical..,.. Exper . A/R, A/P. Clerk for Radiology prncticc in N.B. Full time. Send re· sum e to Ad #380, Daily Pilot Box 1560, Cost a Mesa, CA 92626. --- Capistra no, Suite 205. E::irnas_muchasyouhkl' Cameras& . JEW~l.RY. w,nnn:s. San J uan Capis trant. by tal~ini: to people all Equtpment 8030 Mus t Sell .Japanese & ART URJ E\TS, c.;m J> b tween 8:45 am.5 pm. over Southern Oran~c ••••••••••• •••••••••••• Chinc"l' rurruture Call s IL v EH s 1-: n v 1c 1-· e -~ -County from an air con 210m m Schneider Sym :ll3 431 ·26f.O f' 1N1': FL' R '\ & 1\ :--; RECEPTIONIST ditioned office. Two mar lens, synchro <'Om . TIQt:f.S f>l5 z:!flO Newport Ctr ofc. Good shifts-lOam to lpm or pur sh. Mint cond 6300 Linn~ Hm. Set. Top personalily. Lite typing. 5pm to Spm. Monday 493-3857 Quality. New. Beautiful. heavy phones. Call aft through Friday. /\pply at --Moving. 968·8822 250 E 17th St Costa WANTED · used mm . 3pm ,979·1614 Mes a. or c ali T~nv enlarger Prefer Besler Wr~t Iron t bl w 4 chrs. RE SALESPEOPLE .,_. ·' t 646.4100 · or0meua.Call9682-1G6. ced ar c hes t . dresser . . . ..:x:1m1 a a · " babv furn rl>dwood sw lned~~dd. C1 otntgeruu.· al ore. Tcleph~ning & Fllin~ 8 CANNON T.l ... 55 mm t 4 mg ·set . chopping block n 1v1 ua a en on · 1 . l k ... •4 2002 CALL 968-4405 hrs wk. 2 days. $2.50 hr. l'ns. w I case. ..1 e ne"' Q't • • H.B. area. 963-5647 Sl40. 833·0342 -AH BEY RENTS FURN. MATTRESS *MADNE *ALL SIZES * Priced to Move! 833 9625 & 646 &;w. • • • Mark Beckett 70 5C~Jo~ S eal ~oc.h ,.,,u .trt• 1 ho·"' tnnl•r of TWO FREE T1CKETS 1$13 5jJ\ .. .1lu1 I R i n«Jliltt] Bros. Barnum & loiley C ircus .Jul~ 3hl lo \u~ t_'\h 1\nahl'tnl l"11t\\l'l1l11>11 Costa Mesa, ta 9'l626 _ Engineer position avail in our office building l•---------HOUSEWIVES-$ TOY &GIFT PARTIES division. Position r e· MOLD PRESS • • OOCJS 8040 1~25 HARBOR BL CM ••••••••••••••••••••••• CALl.'7141645-4772 TELLER T('nn1!> ~1l'mhc•r!'h1p lor sale immt•d. Pn· .... 1ti::l· local duh >j.1:1 :11;1.1 581-7800 t' t•nt1·r. ~041 W "·•It'll;& Tll·l-.t•t ... m.1\ 111 ,.,. <'h<ingt•d lrn · n·"·n 1•1l M:•als al I h1• Cor\H•OllOO C't>nter ;tlw.1d "' t11m•. <'all 1;1:~ 51;7!1 .... ,, :i:u \\; Gifts 'N c;adgc·ts will t r ai n inc•xpcrirnccd hous ewives to 1•arn $2000 by Oe<·. Isl dcmon!>trat· ing beautiful hnl'S nf i!•fls & toys. No drltv no col- lect -free hostC'ss gifts .Need c ar. Call 979-4307 Gifts 'N Gadgrts .. Our 25th Year" Jn a Social Whirl \f SIZES 9 240 818 int 11T t"'\ i i..t 1Tf f.w\-r. .. :"'.\t'l'V t\1\0'1 11 •ft1 h '1' fhf"et ••''"''"' •hitl11 ~·\11 •' to flw ""'"' uhn\•• n \\hhlln .. ,1111 """"' thH 1 .. t11tf11li• II• ltclltful •II•''"" In ''"''"" I•,, ... \, 1~1tol .. 41 1'1\lfffft\ u:4o : 1111 ........ •"•'"• ~. 10, I I 11 ..... 1• tlll'" 1! 1b11•1 ll) lllkt•• :t ) •t'1e ~~. hu•h l1<hrh. Scond SI 00 fo1 l'afh pl\llatll Add :s trnl• 1111 CIH h ''""'''" for ltr•I •la'' rn111I ~nd .,.....tal h•lldhn• nlh~rw1~11 lhirll "'"' !Ill" nv will 1 •k" lhr•••• "'''' k<e nr ,.,, .. ,,. "tnf1 In ''·•''"" "·"''"· 117 the-11.111\ !>tint l'•llt1n 11r111 il2 "''' l••h .... ,, .... ' ... ~ '' 1111111 1·nn1 ,A\1 1". \lllllH'-" I ll' :-11.t ~nd ~f\ I f' 'l \I 10 H fl'ff ftl~ f l'\·1-r~ H'•'''"'" •hn•tr 1 .. vntl fllf '""',,..,I'"' ic-rn 1n•tttr '~ \\ 'I' 111 '': , ,, \I \1 ~ 11 I' \ 1 I r. H /'o l ATi\I 114• llllhl) h' ull \Ill'• 11"1'1• l'-lllf In \ t>Up<tll ........ 1 7'" """ '' ~ • K '11. 1\1111~ ""llh b.'•I< ll~'IWP;alh•rl!\ •l l' ln•l•lll ~ 11•111011 l\o... $1 uu 11u1a111 St ~1n1 II•••" ti UO qwres 3.5 yrs building •ATTENTION PF.TS' MOV ING'. t'ew pieces of ma intenance engineer· OPERATOR mg exper ience. Th.is is a Restaurant· Part Time COOK· Omel<'t exp. UTILITY TELLER Hoarding & Groom1n~ l'Xqu1s1te furn. left l"ree pickup . P oocll1' IJamL· 11r dining st·I. l'ups for sale.!'>'6·~'8. match·i.:. China rahnt **IBUY** claim }11ur lh'kl'I " technical maintenance position & we a re not sec king a degr eed m~chan1cal or electrical cn~ineer. Please Call Lois THE IRVINE CO. 644-3317 9A M 't il Noon Equal Oppor. Employer --------- To place your message before the reading public, phone Daily Pllot Classified. 642·5678 Eye-Catcher! ,, 11•t JtH k• 1 Of \•'·\ l•tt t " f11•,tl' AJUt hU 14\\ .~\ 1 • , ' l.t.i')' ntvt •f'lltl •~'"''"" lttt llt l1t11 ilt•IH1tf •ft ........ (,I~ t ltt I J.lf "'''' t•( \ 1-...l, t.'I ~ •tt.1rul" tu•1t 11t•'·''' f"t1tton nr tlh't1· 1tll1"ftil Of ,._p111 I \Ht U l',1tl•'I Ii ;11.J1 t'tlt11t hti-16 toi. I. Sc-nd SI 00 ror eodl pnltcrn, A11<1 25' for u rh 1••1t~r11 fM llr•l·<'l•U rnall 11nd 1~lal 111ndll1111. So.Ad to Allee Rroob. 1os, lh~ally f'llo4, Nc-cdlrt•,.O fl1'!'4 • Rox 163. Olll C'hcl~u Stal\oll. N•w 'orll . N. Y. 10011. Print Naml'. Aildrrs•. 7.1p, V•ll«'rtl Num~r ""'• d!lllar•' C'rf•l c 111'0•11tlh1t lhln1t• !'c'fKI lor NfW un~ ~l'f'(llttr11\ <'•••loc ! , lll'Jlllll prln&td l"-'kl" ?$' ;\rw' Nin\ r tny Qlllll~ SI 00 l'tw • Rlppll' t'rothrt SI 00 ~"' 1 1\1111 llonli SI ~ ,_M'dlfl'Olllt Rnok , . SI 00 •iowtr t'rochfl &ell. SI 00 t111rpl11 l'rochtl lJool>. St UO ln•lllll ('tMhl't 11<,.ill $1 00 IMlantM•c-ramt~"°* SIOO ln-1a11t M!ll'lf) ltooii SI 00 l'ompll'lf (ill\ lloolo $1 00 ('ompliM Aratmu.u1 • $100 ta Prll• Artth•n• 112 !IJ' 8oolt 11'11 Q111ll•" '!lf.'f MllH\1111 Q11lll llooll 12 ~ I& Qullh for TNll' 93 YI lkloti of Ill Jlfty Rull~ ~ Montgomery Ward Life Insurance Co. SALES HOSTF.SS. OISHWASl-li':R Call 640-8120aft2 PM . RN-CCU Ni~hts. full or p/time. Differential pay. Xlnt benefits. Contact Mrs. Bales treri . 642-2734, Costa M e mo r ia l Hospital. 301 Victoria. C.M. EOE. RN's /ICU Full. p/t 11·7 M~/Surq 7 .3 weekends Ward Clerits SAN CLEMENTE GENERAL HOSPITAL 496· 1122 ext 214 OR SALES. full/part lime. Curr e nt pos ition available for on-call Utility Teller to work part-time, as needed, in ou r Laguna Hills branch. Must be able to attend savings courses i.n Beverly Hills for 1 w eek . A pplicants should have good ap· pearance & personality & have banking or c ash ie r i n g back - ground. FlexibiUty in working h ours r e - quired. • Please Call For Appointment Bill Mitchell 5S8·6000 ext 317 GREAT WESTERN SAVINGS SUPERVIS high commission. Paid Immedia te openings for wcekly.898·3500___ 24100 E IToroRd 3 Sales Super visors in the SALESLADY Laguna Hills O r a nge Count y a r~a . , . Equal Opportunity Heavy recruiting nccess. Exper d women s re~dy Employer M/F Income & growth polen· to wear. C.M. location.---------• lial unlimited t hru Phone 213 /747·2C&t, ask -------__ s a lary, overrideii & eom· _for Stan. The Girls Club of La1tuna missions. Full Company Sal I d £-'d offers part Lime position fringe benefits pro~ram .es a Y• ii;.aper to an adult w/recrea· available, as well as fully Clothing shop. No eves. tio n a l or school ex· paid '76 Confere nce in Call 548·5383. perlence. Must drive and SAN J UAN PUERTO haveaccess tocar.Tcm· RICO for those qualified. SECRETARY por a r y pos ition from INT E RESTED? Musl be good typist. 0 .C. /\ug. to Oct. Send letter Call Mr. Walker. Airport Area. 549-0068 of introduction to Girls at 547-TI49 SECRETARY Club. 1470 Temple Ter· Stat Typist for PA ofc in ra_c_e_, _L_.B_. ___ _ West ll1szhland Tl•rrier C'off. this Go~d & Ma_rbk Pups All malc-s /\KC'. 5 e ntry tbl China, <'r)~lal wk s, C hamp lt n l' i s t e mw a r r. s erv ).! 1·734-5-084 1 pieces. l a~ps, m1sr C'ash only 536 :!lJ,.') German Shep pups, AKC Champ s1rt.'d. top qua1.1Horses 8060 s how & pct. 43().4115. • • • • • • • • • • • • • • ••• •••• • • IFYOU ErtC). Show Sadcle SlOO 55R 1818 ha\C a sen1retooffcr11r Flashy Hl•g. Chestnut ~oods lo sell, pl.ice <.tn J1l Quarter Geldini.: 15 t 1 n the D a 1 I Y P 1 I u t hands. 5 vrs. well hr~ liood u~ed furnttun· II.· apphanrl'..,. or I \\Ill St•ll for You. MASTERS AUCTION 64l ·8686 & 833-9625 GOIMG FISHING? B'S WORM FARM Open Daily 7Am tofiPm Nile Crawll'r.., Meal Wormi.. Afnt·an Night Crawlers & Red Worms 17362 Gothard llB C'ALLM7 5141 Class1hed Section · · Nice confirmauon. Aft 5 Phone 642-5678. call 554-0620 ---------· ••• W.1t1•rhl'd '"' \o\111111 tc .une, Ktni.: S1 \l ,il l r.·..,~ n..:Jt n1•w Sti5 I 'h m ;1 :l'~i:.: SCRA M-LETS ANSWERS H11nk1•r P n1<• \I ilia "troni: -m ·1-.;:-, /\n·hat•ul11J.! •~t .1 1w~l!I whose 1 .1r1·1·r Iii·:-111 Hl.l'\S Find Your Name Win Tickets Worth $13 50- CH -11 .B . Bkkpng exper W"ITRESSES NCR MA ...,...ft I he lpful. Sh not reqrl. "' AccotnttingjlkkpnCJ F/llme perm. 536_4161. F.xper 'd Only. Interview·, P er m . posi.tion for ex· ,cJ6.""93 ing Tues 1·3PM, Sam's ·• .,, Seafood JI, lrol E. Coast per'd m achine operator. - ----A /P , A IR & payroll. lm · SECRETARY Hwy, Co~onadel Mar . m edia te opening. Co. Ne w port Bch R ea l WAJT RESS. Day s hift, be nefits & advanceme nt. 1-:state Lending Co. seek· apply in person. 2·4pm. Apply In Person, inf. highly skilled sec'y. 1262S. E . Bristol, CM. IACK STREET Tvping 60 w.p.m. Sh min ---- 65S 8 St. T ustin 11>o. Pleas ant personali· WAITRESSES , tv. Pr efer 2 yrs expcr. Cocktail Waitresses NURSE LVM Salary ncgo. Please ~cnri Waiters/Bartenders . resume & salary rcq rl to Cashier-Hostess Opening for LVN Team Classified ad no. 429, c/o Full & p/l1me I:eader • meds ror :io pa· 1 Daily Pilot, P. 0. Box Expericnct..'<i Only ti~nts & supervision of' 1560. Costa Mesa. Ca Apply In Person A ids o n t e a m . L ~e 92626 Equal Oppor. Mission Vicjolnn Rehab. :ffosp. Xlnt salary E mployer 26742 Oso Parkway & benefits. 532-6848 -Mission VieJo SECRET ARY EX. No Phone Calls Plc;ise NURSE RN We arc looking for an RN t h a t has p r ove q leadership & erticicncy, who Is able to organize & follow up on quality pa· tient c are programs. t-'or l a r ge Con vale s cent Hosp . t h a t ha s new R ehab . depts . Many challenges. top pay for qualirled person. S32 ~ Nurses Aides, mature. All s hifts. Call 642·0593 Office girl needed Lt. bkkpg. & t yping. S o m e r el)l es t a t e knowledge helpful. Hrs. 9-3, Mon. t.bru FTI. Start Aul l a t. Call Pam , &40-0020 PIX A111w.n..a SerY 14 Locations. All shifts a vail. F ull or p/tlme. E .O.E . s.40·1962. --------- P erson 21·40, trn for mgmt. 1150 wk RUarn. Co l pref . M r t .. ~v I M8·1004. rttoto Lal» ............ WANTID Profeulon al Blk/Wht Photo Lab. Tech. Must have recent c\lllom print exper. No t ralnffa. MPS l'hotoaraphlt Services. Newport Center. To $750 -- mo. Ve ry dem anding $100·$250 weekly, stuf~mg employer . 2 Girl ofc. enve lopes, 1 hr daily. Net'<! xlnt sh & typing Rush stampro self ad· l'lkills. Send Resume to d r es s e d en v el o Pe Classified ad no. 437. cto McGannon & Associates, Daily P ilot, P. o. Box 305 S. ~late ColleJ(e Blvd . 1560 Costa Mesa. C _Anahe~m. Ca.~ (OP> 92626 WHO WANTSTO WOHK? DRIVEACAB! SECRETARY CHOOSE your hours. Sh & good typing ability wor k for yourself, be rcq·d . Pleasant N.D. ofc your o wn boss. Men or near O.C. Airport. Raub, Wom en. Can be sli~hlly Bein. 1''rost & Aissoc., ha ndicapped . Neat · l~O_l _Qua_!!~_:B·~·~_!-Clea n Appear a n ce. Vets .. retired. A/f.e 25 to * SICUllTY OFCR 10. Supplem ent your In· Graveyard shift, 32 hr come. D rive a cab 6 hrs wk. Man over 45 or re· or more a day. Apply in tired pref'd. Phone &car person, Yellow Gab Co .• r eq'd . U n iform fur n . l86 E. )6th St., Costa Plant In Irvine. Call Lt. Mesa. Warre n, 833.3000 ext 191, ---------- 10am ·2pm, Mon. T ues, •WIMDOWTIMTIMG Wed. INST Aust <fC'Y-ltlCB'T Bxper. p rcf'd or will ., To S600 train. Starl S2 .SO hr . Raises to $4.50 within t Hours 12·9PM a.-P/l 'til yr 'Beg. sat. accordlna to 9PM or wknds. 3 yrs exp exper. Must t>f' ovr :n. req'd Animal hospital, II•-""""" ..... 94 N.8 . Write to Clasaifi~ ttt "'neut.~-·""-- ad no. 441. c/o Dally Young man to work 1n Pilot. PO Box 1560. Co.ta frowlne tool ~tal bus•· Meu. Ca. 92626 ness . Musl bt ntat in •P· --· -p e ar. & very ntal IF YOU handwrltlna 8 03y wk. hove a service to offer or Prefer m arrlt'd man ror aoods to tell. i>l•ce an ad perm. resp. po1ltlon. F.x· In lh e Dally Pilot per. ool req'd. Apply Clasaltled Section m orn• JHO Newpor t Pbone 642-567&. Blvd. C. M. · • P•Nlul"'1 by IRVIM r£lO 1'1d KEMMl IH ftLO • 5110.cl 1nd 0ttKl9<1 bf RICt<A RO ll4RS 10 W COMING TO . ANAHEIM CONVENTION CENTER Thursday, July 31 to Tuesday, August 12 PHONE 635-5000 . ' \ f I ' JO OAJL V PILOT Monda .Ju 21. 1975 rwk• 9560 4Mfot. ;.,~ ....._ lMp1rW A.tu. l•port9d ...._ .. UHd · Awtot. 'Ut-4 ......... .. eeeee•••••••••••••••••• ••••••••···········~··· eeeeee•eeeeeeeeee•aeeea eaeeeeeaaeaeeeaeaeaeeee eAe••••••••••••aaeeaeee•eeeaeaeeaee 9951 • bc•llaneout 8080 loah. ,ow~r 9040 Moton:~•/ '73 1-'0RD F' 100 ..... ckup. I!!.--.! 972'11 cr.-.-a... 97~A v_..___ 9770 C ... wot.. t920 ......... •.• •• • ••••••• : •••••••• ••• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •• • • • • • •• • • •• • • • • • • • • •• •• • •• • S t I SO ,-, .. ~Uf"""ll ~ ~ .v ~ ~-••• • • • • • •• • • • ••• • ••• •• • • 'd I ..... -..a rOJ..ift arnl ""•UI-.' ~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• I I •· ~'"' 63 Clll!:V onvert e v '~ENT 2 s tdl' rooms out 28'T (' .... 1-... ...• .,. coo autom1tl1c, power st~r-••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••. ~ C i bl '"6 M USTANG. New iii 1 e po e . 1!11uu cond l.<.af">lrukt' Rt'bll 210 llP • , . mg , <>w ma~ ... ...,.,;arv ' •'68 330 GTS V l2. new SAAB I ooa1~ G··---£---' 32'7. cngln~ & body tine'. palnt, tares. Good cond u~20$45. 962 015!1 v g Cray, :to hrs L>mdte. 6 ~0 TR I l 1\1 P II 7 3 ~ lop, brakes. tWled, perf ?V ....--..-v $45<> 4 .f>493 $7SOor offer.• 536-3103 \' Osrthi. monomat ie Chopped. '<Int cond Theod0ttllobWn orig $1S,500.646-S398 Dll!MO P_.,&Lcilaor. · --... ' T eJ earl, bru!\S, 4 \\ht•t>I!> VIII" 1-· th T •. k ti k • Sl900 Cull 9f,() 25&1 FORD '69 VW Bus. 40.S79 mi. '* * * '65CONVERTIBl.r. 'J (1.la s lie r!\ ~'O 962 t>:l08 Hnstol ·~n~d '~1 "~; .72 \'AMAJlA 2060 tfarbor Bl d Flot 9725 SALE wke new Mu& see lo Marti._..,. Needs fhung op. Make ,. , •C~t <-id• Bst ofr 7H '6ID-1168 or co. ... ta Me!>a ~-0010 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Prlet'drrom belltvt. $1895. XTC743 ofter. Ph: 558-1818 __ ....,-~ 549 H875 360 M x Nt".V ~ng o• ·MGE cou..rrv~ $4 I 90 Dir 700 Udo ... Dr "#24 • NYLO SHAG PLL'SJI & C'luh·h 1973 I T FORD Truck. All """' 5 "'' ~ MANY OTHER VW Mewporlleach '&8 Mustng. 289 eng. auto. 280 Yd-. HU!\l N f~W l'u:-.tom ~· Fbgls i•,·rr i·onrl S.~ 675 3342 power Has everythm~. NEWEST & lARGIST <#~) BlJCS & l"AS'l'BACKS You ere ltwwinnerol only &7,000 mi. S79l5 orol Ri·~ s7 95 rww $I ~Ml yJ l>t•t·r> V L>1t>st.>I cruiser •73 tlON DA sooCC. '1Cy l $4200 A ft S. 67>-0353. 1 1M>EMLEIVD~ARTYE leoeh 11....,.fl TO CHOOSI!: 1-'ROM TWO FIEi TICKETS fer. 842'6269· Sll~,>!n:s I NT.ElllOltS Live abo..ird 96', com : "" ·....-) ...... ~--... ii 9955 640A\onSt NH l 6800orl~n11 $l l7Sorbt.·~l Van1 AllM<>del!~&Colors 848Dove '62 VW BUG ZAPS27. ($lJ50Value vwva...-e ... , .. ,. , & : . . . P t'lt'. Nov. rl'ady for ofrcr 89'' fl''llH t M Arth RI II •-••••••••••••••••••••••• •1 t>ll .. ::!5;.i U46 ~"i u w 111• r t' us tom 1 xi n .: · "' "' • ••••••••• •••••••••••• • • a ac ur Runs good $595. DLR ftCJ ftCJ ~ 1-i f>46tH 2J ·7z l\AW/\SA"'J ''"')L'·•.3 1g· MOTORHOME. 1 D1ckMtller Moton &Jambor~.N .8. 556·7S73 IOl'Mlll&IGHey SalesandSer v1ce !'ng S1 lkcl Nc1.1. 1•om "' ....,. r " 752-0900 OLDSMOllLE ph-t.o :-.till µk,.:d Xtt . "YI. fa~t . gd 1·oncl. best of C:ht!VY con verted sh.• ,.. .. "9~ Vol•o 9772 Circus firm St!IO IWllrth S..ll5I WA.MTEOTO IUY fl'r over ssoo !lli:I <!29H van. ,80'1< completed. ,,.. .. ~ .. Shih 9761 July 3htto Aug 12th GMC TRUCKS 15 to 20 ft outboard w/or $llSO. ~93·2449 ••••••••••••••••••••••• •\n"h"'lm Convention HOMDA CARS ·qn $1 $170 11:-.ually horlh• '7ll II " s I' " 1''0 W \.V:i • ••••••••••••••••••••••• ' .. ~ 1nl'I dt•I 835 22(i:J w (I u l l' n g . J' r (' r c r .., . portsh•r .!,11\10, • --. -. r nt•r OIAMGE COUNTY Cenlt!r. 800 w. Katella u I ity a. ~ r tt:ulcr. Nt•c<ltn~ work m t. Mu ~t !'ol'I' to Ap 7'1 _0odgc Van. Cstm ml. ·''So ;\1 ;1111 EXCLUSIVE VOLVO Tick et s may be ex· n vers QLOl':lt Mx:J:> t'Jb1n i:.ty h OK Ht•;1:-. 492 R7R."i prC'ctatl' . ."i·l5 :.lC}.111 ~'t>iio'r~r:•c~~~~~ ~anl<1~11a .\.)i :!l.i:! 0 FOi EXCLUSJVELYYOLVO sceha~~gaeld thfeorConrcvs~~tv1.eodn Cos~~~~rbor 8~9640 ,l ra t l t.' r \\ a t t J (.' h c I • • ~ Hond 9727 rann c ty ... .... rabana Lm·ah'<1onStal•27 ll..r 1~ ~raft <.:ab, a '7e OUft LargulVolvoDealer Center ahead of tirne.•70 OLDS 442 Convert ownt.•rl g round P<)e;sr lHh ~rw ser. r. S • "Int iynct ••••••••••••••••••••••• <M in Orange County! Call 642-5678, ext 333 to New thr u·out. Sell or I) of :.tJ~ rn " tncl··fantl"I\ Slµs. 4 foully crpt d & Honda 73 Crvic. 4 s prl, 'f1 BUY or LEASE 1 . t' k t J " ' ' d .. ., •w"' '"--k ~• r ad ia ls. cassette dk. DIRECT c aim your IC es. trade fo r Van. P IP 'Malun· ..idult-. ~1>::1~1 t:overc · ""'·~· ..,.,._. t." · • • afl rent S74 mu S9.50 ful rn Nc1.1. port 675·8638 '70 Kawasaki 500 Mac·h 1 '66 Dodge Van. 3 speed, 18•5 O O m 1 · 52 • o5o * 556 · 7573 or 5 36- 9480 · 6 ···~:: .. :~:: tii:~~::ti;:pl~:~~·cJRt&r ~~l~~~;~~tFF.~h~-~~~~ ~r1';~~g~M$975. 9609·526~ ~;~::~ ..... ~?!.~ • .:!;r... ~~, 11~G~/~~~:;;;; ;;;;.;~;;·;;:;·;!!~~ W t d 808 "' ·1;1 HONOA 350CB New Autos W..ted -rv .............. 2025 S M .__...., """ 39"9 """1201 Xl ond an e I fndrs . Maritn r hn . 72J•GU•R _.&Sw-.k • anct~ler .....,. ~,eves........-· Many ictras. nt c · ••••••••••••••••••••••• Bris tol eond, bst ofr ~~;k~u;~2~1~~~~ dist•·;~·;~·;:;~~·;;~·~ • XKE2+l DAVE ROSS Anaheim 750-2011 '65 1mpala.2dr.AM/FM8 S2595-bstofr.SC8-2.698. Will Buy l l.;ed Electnc 675-5319 or t-528-8569 FOR TOP USEDCARS Less tha n 17,000 miles. P'OMTIAC·STVT'Z track, m ag whls. Bestof·1'71 . •74 PINTOs, 2 doors, Manrl'unng MachlJ\c!>. 25 fo't Owen!-. 1965. Good J-'OREIGN, DOMESTIC V-12 e ngine, ctulomatic 2410 H..t»or lhd. .Annl•ersary ler 893-6688. runabouts. wagons, \'$ E ~·a~::~~~l' I s I-=.~~-~~;:11 • Movin~ Mst!i~~e':~s. 9 160 lfyou~~;;~'~clea ~r~~~n~i~s i~r':tke~~7aec~ eo.t.Mnca 5464017 • SALE! ·~!ci'!~':.~ .. ~~~t::!~: r~r~~i:~;~~g~ ('7I r:QL'IP!\1 ENT. Rollt'rs lo ••••••••••••••••••••••• sce us first. tory air conditioning, Toyota 9765 •75 VOLVO power s t eenng &brakes, Th.odoreRobins • •1ct· htkl·:-o. di-. (.';all Mr:,, oh. Rent/ 22· ISLANDER. xl11t 1·ond. IA.UER BUICK stereo, et c. <833FYW > ••••••••••••••••••••••• 164 E 4 Dr. $2254 (ll9EOH> r FORD -+iriffln ,•fli; t>.iHl~ml Chart•r 9050 st"lf l'nn la1nl•cl , $7250. 2925 Harbor81vd. $6495 A i I 060 11 borBI d i:.r •••••••••••••••••••••••• 846-l>-Hti Costa Mesa 979-nn Yersm"Y Demo. automatic, air Th•odore Robins • 2 · ar v · .J ''lll p.i~ t'a :-.h fur L.lbh 20 30 New Boats for • ---SALE cond.. power st eering, FORD I 642·00lO__ ~ta Mesa :-O.J\\ " 1:! · hlarlC'.and nr rent hv dav Call Trall~rs, Travef 9170 TOP DQLLAR Mab9rs Codlllac AM · FM 8 tr a<' k . 2060 Harbor Blvd. 72 Pla..JTO 1orntl·r I'll •I!~ 715:! 67S·R&'>ti. ....................... 2600 ......_ •& $ 1500 h eadlight rims, floor Costa Mesa 642-0010 ~I SAV t-: mont·v th1~ va<'a PAID , __ ...,. __ uA ti-DISC mats #3614 · W Bo · ..._ ... ----OUNT.". · · Squ1·~e nn~. SS CASH SS FOR oh, Sail 9060 t111n w th1:-. :-.potl l'ss. IMMEDl.ATEL y Was $8190 1966 Chevy Novu Wagon, -,, Gvod usl•cl furn rcfr1g...; ••••••••••••••••••••••• mint t·ond "Prowler" from d eale r windo\\< 5 1 good cond. thru-oul. $400. Automatic lransm1ss1on. t-'rm ' !>lm't•:o..54ti0768 SCHOCK SABOT. xlnl lr<.1\'el trailt•r. Sips 6 FORA.LL Lambor9hini 9736 pnceonthis nearnew av "CJ5 SI004 714/962-5471 air conditioning, radio, Off' f,, ·~ & 1·ond. Gd racing rc<"Ord New w1dt• lr ark ~las:-. FOREIGN CARS ••••••••••••••••••••••• TOY OT A • HOW $7186 Ch-sler 9925 healer, less than 18,00C ·~'c! rn~ 8085 S400673-0336aft 6PM. t •rt.'" 1s t S!IUO l <.1kl•s CA.LLORCOMEIM 75LAMIORGHIMI ., actualmiles!(7llGXZ) ,..qwpm~n • • -552 5897 TO SEE US •URrtACO Sport C~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• Only $2395 ,;~··••••••••••••••••••• Krle 1200 : ltkC' n.:w Automatic, power steer D. .l Brand new '75 Cordoba, r.:\c :-.vi t'hrc; S1513S, -.cy Unsinkable! Pleasure . Auto Servic~ & •ESPADA tni!. air. ~ond .. AM·FM llUI Al~ & all extras, silver w/black Jim SlenlOllS chrs S12 24 , dt~ks. nftg ral·in~ C'ham p . C'ost Parts 9400 5Speeds orAutomalics radio, viny l top. No (I""" WJIO interior.494-2260cve. :HI <; I d k s. ex l' cl k <; Sl600, i.cll $850. b75-6l6l ••••••••••••••••••••••• IM STOCK MOW 11476. ~~ COftff.....t;;---9930 Imports Prer<'l' 867 W. 19th. CM Two U.S Spri-nt mags for 1·MMEot•TE Offer Expires 7·22·75 :.,'<.~ VOLVO · &&5·741 1 • * * Chevys~ 14 by 7 'z with " 10 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1970Harbor,C.M. Jim Cowan tires S75 545.9120 . DELIVEAY p.m. 1975 Mark IV. All the ex-631·1Z76 ~A RGAIN ! Oncycarold :l Jr. Ex<'c desks & chair!>. one· e xec sec des k & chair 4 rlcs k noor p<idi.. low t·redenza. mail r ack all wa lnut ftnt'ih, lt•ss1 tllan ha If nnj?inal C'ost. 33932 Granodo AUTHORIZED ' · _ 1966 Hosbor. CM. 646 9303 tras! Cust inl. Take over -.. --..&.L \hnt to buy . 1965 F.I 3100W.Coa.stltwy.NA DEALER 'l\lllllLA•~l lsepymnts .640-7898 •• ,mVWTn 9960 You are l hewrnnerof or '65 El Camino right 642 -9405 LEASING ~. ,: TOYOTA '72 MARK IV. XJnt cond. ATLAS Dana Point Camino for parts or 1964 SALES -SERVICE fl""" lAllW BRAND HEW ••••••••••••••••••••••• TWO FREE TICKETS door. 1965 Chevclle or El -~ 1975 YOLVOS Fut I powe r . 33,000 <St3 50\'aluel Camino dash. Must have Orange County's JIM careful mi, $5.D> firm. Chrysltt 191.-A RiftCjlin<j llroS. fa<•tory arr. 1::1 Ca mine H ighHt s Buyer MARINO 1966 Harbor; ( M .646-9303 luy or Lease . 645-1621. aft. 4. Open Daily~ ~~7tii'10 Barnum & Bailey d~or p~ncls As.k fo r on lmporls MOTOR CARS ---VOLVO DE.ALER '73 Mark IV, Silver blue, PM • 6 4 4 6 0 5 6 & I l' .J \' ,_. Circus Larry· 968·4971 af~6Pm Bill Max.y Toyota 1200 w. Coat Hwy. TOY OT .A SALE SINCE 1956 lo mi, all extras incl Quad 2929 Harbor Blvd .. Ur.SKS. t'h.Jtr:-o. Uraft1ng July J lst to A~ 12th Autos for Sal~ Call Roger or Bill 645-1102 Mew '75 Pl-ln-s WILLIAMS sound system. Just rcvd Costa Mesa • 'l'bl..,, Xt.·rox, Walt>rlx'tl. Anahl't m C'onventrnn •••• • •• •• • • • •••••••• • • • 8iJ7 -85.55 Acrou fr0tn lht SllllN B•r Club ~ my 1976. so must sell 5 46-1934 752-0777 C.:l·nter.SOO W.Katella Antiques/ LARGE. IMPORTS now. $6100. 898-2671 & T 1c kl'l.s mav tw l'X Classics 9520 FREE APPRAISAL · 846-6020. _____ ·73 Plymouth f\rry Ill. 2 Pianos & Or9ans 8090 c hun~C'd for· r e!'a•rvcd ••••••••••••••••••••••• W e b uy used cars & Mmda 9738 SELECTION EXCLUSIVE Corv•H.. 9932 Dr. ~rdtp. Vinyl top. Air. ••••••••••••••••••••••• s·t · t lh 'l'(l\V"l .50 ,1 C h trutks . Ci1 ll GROTH ••••••••••••••••••••••• "'"' R d a is Vnry clean St.cm1.1.ay 5 '7'' (;r:Jnd. 3 t•as a I I ... nwn . l USSIC t'VV CllEVROLET fora free Buy or Lease VOLVO ••••••••••••••••••••••• a I ' • ... • Center ahc:id of llmt'.I Oelivi•r y \.'an. New cng. apprai·sal.· .75 V lt 8000 .. . Best Offer. 581-4131. ~ old. Walnut. SSOOO C II f42 51}7!i 333 MOW! e e, ong mt. ------- J 6 3 { P H • • ext to rad, st artl'r, ).(en., w1nn~ GROTH CHEVROLET DEALER Many xlr as. Mint cond. '68 PLY 4 dr. to mi·, a1·r . V"ffi 7 -0336 a I tl M . da1m your tickets. & tires. $9!>0 or offer $ T ff 0 M ,\ S Tr t "n '' n * * • s:JG-3459. 18211 Beach Blvd. 8011 Commonwealth 7850. 631·08820wn. -xlnl cond. S795. 646·2022& "'~yboarn Organ as !'>l:'t'r 73 C L ........L: ·57 1' Rtrd C.:la:o.:-.rc car .,. .__.., -on LawrC'nrl' Welk s h11" ' o_._a ftllll '911~ I ••••••••••••••••••••••• 74 PLYMOUTH Satellite 968-3555. 43' MK Ill Xlnt cond. P vt ply. SELLIMG YOUR CAR? """ lAllW FINEST 70 COUGAR. low miles. vinyl roof. automatic,' 847.60Hu8n7t inglon Be54a~h3331 el l Buena Park 521-7000 C-ar 9933 548-7482 ______ _ Call 493-22&1 ( -~ Ou l!I tan cl 1 ng o c e :in TOP PRICES PA.ID · SE'·ECTIO~ only $1954 951EPW> power steering & brakes, Sporting Goods 809 racer , w xlnt racin~ re· Rec:r~ational . For Imports JOYOTA. .. " Th•odonRobins a ir, only 8,000 miles, •••••••••••••••••••••• cord 17 Sa1b. full eqwp. V•hicles • 9530 Paid for or Not or FORD $3454 (051KYT> KNEISS F:L Skr:-. :.•os Hcd for long dist ance races ••••••••••••••••••••••• Dean Lewis l~s 1966 Horbor. c.M _M_6 93_0_3 U sen 2060 Harbor Blvd. Thf'Odor• RobiM S l ar. S20 Surfboard Heplare menl value . Earl y ModC'I JEEP .. .,. Cos M FORD Swe1llowta1I. G'2''. SIS S90 M. T ry offer Sb7,500. ~eeds f1n 1~h1no. S350. 1966 Ha rbor .. M. Toy. Corolla '69Sta. Wag. VOLVOS ta esa 642-0010 ""6 1729 P/P 5"7 4448 J " 646-9:ll3 good cond owner leav'g . COUG . 2060 Harbor Blvd .. "" · J • _____ 548·1537 anytime -------' · · 72 _AR XR-7. Light Costa Mesa 642·0010 S860or ofr. 752-6960. 10 blue with dark blue TY. !l<!dio. SA BOT. racing cond., s~ ...... s Roe-TOP CASH! Oranc.ie I th . . ·- H Fi St 8098 d n • "'• F I ed & v~11.SWOCJ'"'n 9770 ea e r 1nter 1o r "' . ' , ereo yar dolly. $365/oHer . Rods 9540 or c ean us cars """ "' t h . I l ••A••••••••••••••••••• Also kite d olly avail. tru c k s ! 'H owa r d ••••••••••••••••••••••• County ma c tng v tny op. C~t m . Orlt•d Walnut 548-7116. •••••••••••••••••••••••Chevrolet. Dove&Quail REl'AIRS-S8tVICE Sharp & re ady to go. st l' r l' o c ;i b 1 n ct -. -Shelby 68 GT 500• convl'rt Streets. nr. MacArthur, Exchange Is Rebuilds (Choice of 301 <977FNG) $3l!l5. Jotlf'iK>n Economical 6 cylinder with wrth o ut rnmpo Boats, Shps/ 4 spd. Leavmg country J amboree and Bristol. BROOKLYN BUG CO. It Son Lincoln-Mercury, n e n t:-. :!n .. ·1 r TV •• Docks 9070 ~ust Sell ! ()fr. b"73·306ll Newport Beach. 8.'13-0555. ALL 197 4 Estimates 548-9141 '69 Thrv '74's 2626 Harbor Blvd .. C.M. r::. s::~r·c~i~~o~~;: 17 I Plymouth Duster walnut eon~ok ,._, .. ~2 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ---RX 4 --.-----All With 540.5630-· ------radio. heater. low miles -• SLIPS Newport Beach Trucks 9560 Autos, Imported • 1962 VW B aja Bug Air Conditioning DodcJe 9931 &clean! (834DER> .~AGNJ\VOX c·onsoll' Sailor Power •••••••••••••••••••·-· ••••••••••••••••••••••• Pas~Cars '72-211J()cc engine. Weber ALL ••••••••••••••••••••••• niG.s 1<· t•entcr w 1•nltir 673·5253 645-8506 T RUCKS-VANS-4 W D's G~•ral 970 I carb. Dual port heads. "11 Charger, P /S, P/SB, Only $2395 TV . Ma hol!anv. $550 Wanted . Clean. I ale •••••••••n •••••••••••• "Oyno" ignition. cam, PR' ICED A. d J• S .<'! • w NTL' 1r,n ssom e bodywork. im letm..,..ns tH.0·5296 A S::L> on shore moor· Mdls. Cash! 675-8849 SEE EUROPE <'rank and oU pump. Oil As is. $950. 549-9770 ....,. ·-.!.> in~: Ba lboa Island. Will filter . oil cooler. AM-FM TO I ort Boats & Mari~ buy bnat if nee. 673-2746 '56 FORD PICKUP BY CAR 8 track stereo plus more . Ford 9940 mp s · Equipm~nt S d t r 25 t 30. !:·000 mi_les 00 1 cnhginc Purchase any European Musl See! SlSOO/offer . SELL ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1970 Harbor. C.M • • ,"•••••••••••••••••••• ~ e re or · 0 • urakes, ltres, c ute ex Ca r fo r d e livery in 645·946lJ WILLIAMS '69 LTD Brougham. 1 631 ·1276 G.efteral . 9010 Sallhottt. ~t ain B ay. cellent. $550 fa rm. Ca11t Eur~pe &letus plan yo - - ----Owner.40Morig.mi.full r---------- -,.,••••••••••••••••••••• Newport ti757lJ3. 536·5014aftcr5:00P M individual tour . From '72RX3. Facloryaircond. '73 VW Bug, 14.000 ong. IMPORTS pwr incl i\/C & cruise 7 4 p Ly M 0 UT H ROY SCOUT!) nl·t:d boats. Boats, Sp~ed & TRUCK & CA MPER take-orr lo home-landing, Xlnt cond. Whole s ale m i M rnt cond. $400 & VOLVO control. Pe rf. cond. DUSTER. Like new. only ~N'S & a1rplan~. Tax <1d Ski 9080 -61 Chev. 34 Pickup. v.a. ~u'll be in the hands o ;bluebook Sl 175. 963-2746. T.O. P. 536·7880afl 6 DEALER $1399. 979.4923 15,000 miles, factory air vantai.?eS.546-4990 •••••••••••••••••••••• 3spd.new valves,clutch. ex'perts.Alsolease &ren M-d I -9740 '67VW MICROBUS $1400. 8011Commoowealth --conditio ning, power 25.-01-'Jo' n llSk ,,.h . fronlend .shocks.Helw1 a t a l car s . EURAUTO, ..-c~ ~s ~M 23 windows & sunroof. Buena Park 521-7000 . 5'!RF~RSP£CIAL s t eer in g, vinyl top. •PutTh<>SparklcRaC'k• r () a . I LACWP· " Lrdo V ill age. N B ........................ 58 Stal1on ~agon. in· (222JSB ) Only $3090. Experl poh:-.hm,:: & tit> me n.I ~l MESA BOA overl oad ~prrn~s R 673-4550 . AM/1-'M + 8-trk.646-~l Autos,Us•d----terceptor engme,hvy du· Johnson & Son Lincoln· tailingon yourftht•rgla:-.s ~ENTER.646·0539 __ Overhead camper. sips OVER 100 l t I h't h L 4 , clec. waler pump. dual •tfa Rom•o 9705 '73 VW 412 Station Wagon, ••••••••••••••••••••••• Y r r t c • many new Mercury. 2626 Harbor boat. C'l us dC"an & paint . b S 2 ,,.. "' MEW & USS> re b 1 t e n g . A / c . •MC 9905 tle ms incld. paint job. Blvd .. C.M. 540-~. your enctr nes & brl"e In Tr P rt...a.:on allery system. I 00 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ,,.. S t . --------... · ' " ans 0 un 772-064laft 6 <Anaher m > MERCEDES i\M/FM/8·lrk,xlnt cond . ••••••••••••••••••••••• ee 0 a ppreciat e . the water or out Call ••••••••••••••••••••••• Alf R 645·8290 POfttioc 9965 MESA ROAT CENTl';R, Campers, Sal~/ '70 Ch evy ~ .. Ton VS. a ~ OM DISP'LA y $2950. 499-2927 or 497-1040 '69 JAVELIN SST. fully ..................... .. • ~or Pa ul 646 0.SJ<J R~nt 9 I 20 3spd. $1800 Bs t ofr Demo House of ~S 1 or W 3> 357·327l equipped. S89.5. 69 FORD LTD 2 dr. H.T.. '68 FIRE BIRD . 6 645·611 0&833-9914 * ... * 545·S43S vinly r oof. automatic, cylinde r gas saver.· JArt us sell :vour boat. an.\'.••••••••••••••••.••••••• $ALE AUTHORIZ D '" po e t · •· b k . 71 W k d ,. .___ CodiUac 9915 w r s eenng "' ra es, automatic, power steer· Ritr, for fa:-.t rC's ulls <'.Jll l'C' en er ... amper. Tow T--k W-"'.......i MERCEDES DEALER J•rry T~ $954 <ZLJ912) u SIC Int cond Xtras • --..t:Q Priced from M h ••••••••••••••••••••••• ing & bra ke;;\ $1454 1111 j;SA BOAT c.:t·:NTi-:R. • · '< • • •70_.73_ ,, •• 4131 6862 anc ester. 2225 Pacific #C Theodon Robins (VZS729) 646-0539 1'147 1><!51114-i p.m.) .,..... $6 799 Buena Park C CADILLAC . -.---523-7250 ostaMna fPRD Th•odoreRobins 2t>'·, Hull. No motor , 0 73 VW Pop Top <;:amper '59ChevTruck,2T,dump (#7502) Youarelhewinnerof Over 70 t o choose from. 2060HlfrborBlvd. FORD T 1 I f g d 1 bed w/ 2 s p. axle. $775. I h I rt OntheSantaAnaFwy. TWOFREETIC9r.-S F c ca\nn. llull only. Mak<' en . air. e ec. n . ua Aft S.SSl ·39S t. eac mpors "'"' rom $1995. G MAC oslaMesa 642·0010 2ooo HarborBlvd. offer. 646-72\l. ball. a~n1n g, st er eo. 848 Dove I 9 73 ($13.50 Value) Financin & Leasing. 68 FORD C . Costa Mesa 642-0010 :io.ooo mi. Perfect. s.s.ooo. 197A GMC 3/4TSuh h at MacArthur Ri11911-•~ ~ ount.ry Sqwre _______ .:...___ SRS-5702/673-6971 .. ~3800 ur an Mercedeir-Ben• 8 ••-:JI&:=.. ......... Ca;tll'••= Wagon, Automatic, air, loots, MalntftKll'ICe/ ·s;rvice 41020 ···'··················· if~ct rical· Woodwork in I! Pwm bi nft · lnstallauon & Repair. lntxl Enl( re pe11r. FirC' system install & mamt Scorpio Ma nn<' 548"0704 '°41ts, MariM £cpiipm..wt 9030 ........................ SWORDRSH '1.AMK Wooden, 2S ft. Good cond REASONABLE Cj~ll 645-7744 afl 7 PM Joimson 18HP O /B Motor wlltras 'Very c lean. $200. 493 2449 . -----looh,Pow..-. 9040 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ELCO 27-good Chrysler . Super A OF bait pump, all Ma rlin eqwp. Rec. ~ur vey. Orig. Owner. $.CSOO 6 42 -6472 /eve 673-346R . -,-- F'or lhe best Trailcrablc Boal buy in Town. See M.-s a B oa l Ce nt er. 646.o539 )Id 25' Cabin Crum:r +- trlr. Rd hull , lots of wk. Nds e ng '25-0 S4G 4922 . .. CLASSIC" JI'' C hr 1-. C rofl SUpers Port J9fl4 St•nd. 32'7f>' V 8 EnRme ONLY •OO Hr~ <..:nmp'l..t:.. re linJt hed. New uplt»l., cUJtom l'ov~r by Baxter • C1rero Con1ostently ~aintaincd & truly In ••JlfN'T" cond thru.-out. A a kinJr $4300. Wkday e v~•. 67S 3880 or 213· ·1291 ' "' &Jamboree,N.B. ;r-• arnum _,....., .....-........ ~"' roorrack,powersteering 74 P:OHTIAC a· CA BOVRRCAMPER 673·4717 _____ 75_2_-0_9_o _o __ 450SE Sedan Circus ,_Ill.a..:.-. _,.""':., & brakes. $854 <WVT845) LE MA~S Jkalclean.$450 c E y 1 c · ... .u......H al .July 3lsttoAug l2th -~ ~ ....._ Theodore Robins " ~,48 l5.3'7 72 H V E amino. ~us""" e rt 9709 Su f ____ a utomatic. vinyl top. •••••••••••••••••••••• n roo . only 21,000 ac-Anaheim Convention FORD COUPE .. 72 INT '•. 4 rir. fully power steering&brakes, '59BUG·EYESprite ne tual miles. & Priced to Center,SOOW.Katella 74 Cadillac 2060HarborBlvd. eq111p'd. "'101 ~· Cmpr a ir. low miles &sharp! pnt.Eng.xlnt.Rollbar Sell!(809HSX) T ic k et s may be ex-Costa Mesa 642-0010 SJ354 C03621R> J•m Slet changed for r eserved Coupe S57!1S !lll2703S . lop $900 . 646·4059, I 4110l'IS seats a l the Convention Tlt•odon lalMns 548·6480 d v·ll Motorcycl~s/ FORD . Imports Center ahead of time . e I e Scooters 91 SO 2060 H bor Bl d Austu~ Jlealey :.>oo. xln Call 642·5678. ext 333 to Beautiful powder blue ••••••••••••••••••••••• a r v . running cond & body 833-9300 claim your tickets. with luxurious blue cloth ·74 K.rwa ... ;ikr 900, '72 Costa Mesa 542-00lO new p ai nt. SacrifiC"e! 9744 * • * interior. & less than Su111 k r 4011. Both xl nt 73 DATSUN' Stake Pack up, 644 7912. MGI 20,000 actual miles!~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• •VW BUGS -~ c·nnd 5Xt 2497 aft6pm 4 speed, air , low miles, IMW 971 .71 MGB-GT,$2800. (685.JLO) l::>-:1:-.PORT v./'73 Honda $29S4 (Pl9SlAl ...................... xlntcond. '68 THRU Jim Sletnons 1:;c1 l'wr unit. This is the TlModor. RotNns ORA.MGE COUNTY'S Call 499-3475 :1 whc·1·l1•r that banks int FOID OLDEST ----·14 ·s Imports ;1 t u r n . c 0 m p . 2060 Harbor Bl vd & '64 MGI $725. 20 1970 Harbor, C.M. w rodcl-.tc·r top & side Costa Mesa 642·0010 646·2022orS48-7482 631-1276 <'Urt:.un~ S2.9SO. 64S-l746 '66 ~ ~on Stak e berl Opel · 9746 To ChoowFroftl 73 TORINO COUPE Automatic transmission. air conditioning, power steering. radio. heater. less than 16.000 miles. & Priced lo Sell! (577K.HE) Jim Slemotts Imports 1970 Harbor. C.M. 631-1276 Automatic transmission, a ir conditioning, radio. heater, less than 20,000 miles! C718HFV> Only $3695 Jim Sletnons Imports 1970 Harbor, C.M. 631-1276 71 FllHIRD ISPIRIT •71 l\A\\ASAKJ F -7 En· T r u c k • 3 s Pd Sales·Serv1cc-Leasing ....................... Garden W..tYW. duro. 175cc.Street & Dirt. w /overdrive. runs super. RoltCCll"'Yer, lllc. 7 I OPa GT 2 Blks W. or Beach Blvd . 7600 Westminster Ave. $350. 493 2449 $995. DLR. 556-7573 Rolls oyce BM Less than 36,000 miles. 4 Westminster 638-7880 Less than 45,000 miles. vinyl lop, automatic transmission, factory air -------9-9-5- 0 -r conditioning, radio. heater. white sidewall tires. (522DLT> 234 E .17lhSt. s peed, radio. heater , Costa Mesa WSW tires. rantasic con· dition. <896ErY> CREVIER On $2895 835'3171 &I ST • HOADWAY SANTA ANA ~ Ul.f'lllAH DIWVIHG llMCMJNS ParsCh ----------· ··· ................... . D.,_ 9720 911T. 1972, full equlpl. a/c. •••••••••••••••••••••• lo mi. $8300. 64$-1515 or WILL BUY YOUR eves. 644-7315 DATSUN, TOYOTA, OR VOLKSWAGEN lols loyc• 9756 PAIOFOR OR NOT. TOPOOLI..AR CALL SAL BERNADENE !MO>OMZ ••••••••••••••••••••••• *1 DUUR IN U.S.A. ~~~VIR IOU.S·IOYC£ HAl.17tUt. '72 uoz. air, .. s pd, COl'TA MISA Am /trni m•1•. red. ,._ __ __.., ...... ,, $4000. Wl I cteal SG...alO. Q.OMD "'"°"YI • ~ vwc •• ..,. AND IUSIS 71 PopTop 727Peu.. 707P--. 71 S..loof. Specltlly lriad .... a1A6Yfw 1~~~~~~~ VacatlORT'llM. Gard•WetlYW 2 Blk" W. ol Beach Blvd. 7600 Westminster Ave. Westminster 638-J880 ·71 VW Su Pt'r Beetle. marine bl~, auto, 43, mi's, AM nd. Beautiful cond. 4M-Z314 all 6pm or wknda '68 VW Sq\lattbad:, 1ood condllJoo.. 136·0Cl82 COH-.a. CHIYIOUJ SALES & SERVICE 2121H.._.lh-4 COSTA Mm.\ 146-1200 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Onl $2898 \ 1 17 ·---·-----~~--=--- Laguna/South Coast .......... __ ., - ; Toclay•s Clo., Ing .Y. Sto •ks VOL. 68, NO. 202, 2 SECTIONS, 22 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA MONDAY, JULY 21, 1975 TEN CENTS -.JFK F r d . ea e 'Target' of Assassins WELLFLEET, Mass. (Al!) - President John F . Kennedy said two years before his assassina· lion that he feared attempts to kill foreign leaders would make him a tatget, a former aide says. The aide, Richard Goodwin, quoted Kennedy as telling him in Noveipber 1961 : "lf we get into that kind of thing, we'll all be targets." Goodwin, reached today at his summer home here, confirmed a Washington Post account in which he said the subject of as· sassination first came up in a conversation Kennedy had with a newspaper reporter. The reporter asked the (orrner president how he would !eel iC the United States assassinated Premier Fidel Castro of Cuba, and added that he thought it was a bad idea. Kennedy replied, "I'm glad you !eel that way because s ug. REPORT URGES NEW RAC DEATH PROBE, AS gestions to that ef!ect keep com· ing to me, and I believe very strongly that the United States should not be a party to political assassination.·' Goodwin, an adviser on Latin American aCfalrs, said Kennecly did not tell him who made the suggestions. Goodwin said !orm er Secretary o! State Dean Rusk also expressed fears about as· scu;sination after Dictator Rafael Trujillo o! the Dominican Republic was killecl on May 31, 1961. Goodwin said he is convinced that Kennedy did not authorize plots against Castro. ..There is not one piece oC evidence that demonstrates anything like that at all," he said. Meanwhlle, John J . McCloy, a member of the Warren Com· mission that investigated the 1963 assassination of President Kennedy, says he is convinced Lee Harvey Oswald acted alone. "I went down there (to Dallas) convinced, well, not convinced, but thinking there must have been a conspiracy," McCloy. 80, s aid Sunday in a television in· terview. "It was a s trange sort of a thing," he continued. "But when we got down there, I couldn't ftnd any connection.'' McCloy described as .. Just non· sense'· theories that there was a conspiracy involved . CosmonaUts Land on Soviet Soil In Laguna Grove Man Held On Drug Charge Routine leash law enforcement by a Laguna Beach police officer early Sunday led to a fight and arrest of a Garden Grove man on suspicioft of a ssault on an officer and possession of marijuana and dangerous drugs. The baffling sequence of events began <lt 1 :42 a.m. when $1 a Gallon For Gas- Sen. Jackson By United Press lotematiooal Sen. Henry Jackson, CD· Wash.). predicts $1 ·a ·gallon gasoline by 1976 and a catastrophic effect on the economy if President Ford goes ahead with a threatened veto to a bill extending price controls on domestic oil production. Jackson. in Tampa, F1a. to organize his Florida campaign for next year's Democratic pre· Officer Michael Davis stopped and cited James G. Watson, 28, for allegedly walking his dog of! leash near McKnight Drive and South Coast Highway. Davis reported that Watson was cooperative, signed and ac· cepted the citation and walked away. · Davis said the man walked about 20 feet, then abruptly ripped up the ticket, ran back to the police unit and pWlchecl him in the right eye. A fight developed near the police car, Davis said. Watson was subdued and taken to South Coast Community Hospital for treatment of a scalp laceration and later booked into city jail. A small amount of marijuana and pills were found during booking, police said. Watson was transferred lo Orange County J ail where he is being held in lieu of $2,500 bail. He is scbed'uled to be arraignecl Tuesday. Davis missed his regular shift today, due to minor injuries re· ceived in the fight. He is ex~t· ed to• return to work later this week. sidentia1 primary, told a news Gems, Clothes Gone conference Sunday that a Ford vetooftheoil bill "could leadto$1 Men's jewelry a nd clothing a gallon gasoline sometime in worth $1,129 have been reported 1976," stolen .from Darryl J . Deayn, .. I'm flabbergas ted," Jackson 254·D Granada, San Clemente. said ... The Pres ident has t.J:trown Deayn told officers Sunday, down the gauntlet. It will be the theft occurred sometime our· catast! ophic. It will lrave a de: . -·lrig .. tlie._last week." ·nte )ewefry vaslatmg e ffect on the economy~ was stolen from a case on his <Sec GAS COST, Page A2> 'bedroom dresser. · 250-pound Machinist Held; Carney Beate_n A six foot, fivc·inch. 250-pound Garden Grove machinist was jailed Sunday evening, charged With brutally beating '8 partially deaf carnival game con· cessionaire at the Orange County Fair in Costa Mesa . David 0 . McBride, 19, of 13272 Blue Spruce St., was booked on a charge of assault and bat~ery following the incident in which his companions allegedly tried to t ear down a carnival booth. 11; John P. LafCerty, 23, of ~an Diego, was treated at Costa Mesa Park Avenue ' Canyon Tract Under Study La.,una Beach planni.n.g com· missioners will continue de· liberations Tuesday night on a proposed 2S home development in a canyon area or Park Avenue. The colJlmission first dis· cussed the proposed tract in May but delayed the matter pending submittal of new information or the geology or the area. The 28-acre parcel is located between the existing end o! Pacif\c Avenue and Park Avenue 11ear Mysllc Hills . The developer has proposed to extend Paclfic t.o Park to provide access to the .homes. • , • Th'""'16 plannina .WC has ~­ -commended that th.e coannilllJion approve the tract and send It on to the City ,COU.JiCU t'Br' ~l~ lion. The commlssion will meet at '1:30p.m . otClty Hall ... . . Memorial Hospital for facial laceratigns and advisecl to seek X·rays for possible head injuries, police said. Investigators said they arrived al lhe carnival midway to check a r eport o! a light about4:45p.m. and found Lafferty sprawled on the ground, bleeding profusely Crom the nose and mouth. . The victim's employer, Steve Brugoto, of Smead 's Ferry, N.C., claimed La!ferty spotted the hulking youth's group of compa- nions trying to steal a stu!fed animal toy from an adjacent booth's prizes and intervenecl. McBride, however, claimed the partially disabled carny worker had struck bis female cop:ipanion in the face and he re- t.allated to.protect her. fnvestigators said that as a re- sult or the row, McBride's group or friends started lo demolish one otthe carnival concessions before police arrived. The incident was one of the rew which marred the lo-day lair, which ended Sunday. Special Session Set for Trustee& Trus tees or the Saddleback Community College District will · 1neet ln 1peclal HNion tanlaht to review the college's proposed $18.3 m.DllonlubllcaUon budaet. The bu get 1eulon ls sc~eduled for 7:30 P..m. ln roosn ~ ~'"tfi• wllei•·IJ~~. ~ Marg6ertte Partway~ Ml'*'°" Viejo. Slippery Travelers 0.011r Polol Photo Dr Ule Payne Young bodysurfers David Grolhus (left) and Denny ·Cole slide along the shoulder of a crystal-clear Balboa peninsula wave Sunday afternoon... Denny, who is sHding right on the wave, has met up with David. who looks a little surprised lo sec so- meone else on HIS wave. Traffic Jam lnLagwia Spar~Alert Vallerga's Trial Under Way Today The firs t Laguna B~ach sigalert of the s ummer season was called Saturday afternoon after beach and art festival· bound traffic backed up for miles out Laguna Canyon Road. The sigalerl was put into effect at 12:45 p.m. arid was cancered four hours later. Motorists were advised to use alternate routes to Laguna Beach. More than 25,000 persons fl ocked to Laguna beaches on Saturday followed by 22,000 on Sunday. Lifeguards made 47 rescues over the weekend. Beaches Crom South Laguna to San Clemente attracted 55,000 persons over the weekend. San Clemente lifeguards made 100 rescues. New York Teache r s NEW YORK (UPI ) - Teacher 's union chief Albert Shanker says he will be seeking wage increases "in excess of 20 percent" when contract talks begin next week, despite New York City's p recarious fiscal situation. Shanker, president of the Unit- ed Federation o( Teachers, re· jected a freeze or cutback on wages of city workers being con· sidered by Mayor Abraham Bea me. By GARY GRANVILLE Of'"• Oallr P'llot su.H VENTURA -Orange County Assessor Jack Vallerga was in Superior Cour t here today pre· pared to defend himself against seven criminal charges. At mid·morning, Jack Kahill, Valleq~a·s attorney. and Deputy Dis tric t Attorney Michael Capizzi were meeting in chani· bers with Judge Robert L. Shaw to discuss ground rules for what is expected to be a two week trial. At issue is Vallerga's role in the sale of a computerized ap· praisal system to Spartanburg AD PAYS OFF; 'SOLD BOAT' "An ad in the Daily Pilot really does pay off. I sold my boat." That's the success story told by the Huntington Beach man who placed this classified ad in the Daily Pilot: 16' GLASSPAR, w /75 HP Evinrude. No trlr. m s. Priply. XXX·XXXX If you have a boat to sell, call 642·5678. It only talces a few . words in the right place to make a sale. Along the Orange Coast, the right place is the Daily Pilot. Wedding Set Switch for Christina ATHENS (UPI) -Christina Onassis, one of the world's richest women, will marry Alexandros An - dreadis, 30, youngest son of Greek banker, shipowner and business tycoon Stratis Andreadis, a member of the Andreadjs household said today. The announcement came as a s urprise. Sbe had been expected to marry Peter Goulandris, 27, scion of another Greek shipping family and her constant com- panion ror months. He was at he~ side wllen her father was buried in March on the family b land of Skorpl09. The wedding will take place Tuesday In a sub· urban ,\thens church, the f amily spokesman said. CbrlaUna, 24, who was married briefly at the age oi 21in1971 to Joseph Bolker, 41, a Los Angeles real estate-dealu., p~ Onassis before be dJed she wouJ4 m.-ry Goulaodrir, ~es close to Uie Onassis l•mi11 •a.ld. .. County, South Carolina. When. indicting the assessor the Orange County Grand Jury charged he was guilty of a con· flict of interes t because he later accepted consulting feels related to the sale. The jury also charged his ac· ceptance of the consulting fees and expenses was embezzlement and grand theft. In interviews before the indict· ment was handed down, Vallerga pointed to state codes which speci!ied that a public official may not consult with private firms. He pointed out the codes do not say one public official cannot perform consulting services for a fee on behalf of another public agency. That is expected to be the ma· jor issue in the trial that was transferred to Ventura Cou nty because of the vast amount of pre· trial publicity. The openin~ of Vallerga's trial today is the first round in what is expected to be his long legal bat· tie to a void conviction on criminal charges as well as acts of misconduct the Grand Jury charged him With in a separate accusation. Along with R ep. Andre w Hinshaw, Vallerga's name was added lo an indictment that charged employes in the as· sessor's office with illegally cam· <See VALLERGA, Page A2) Crash Victim Service Held Funeral ser vices were held for J ohn F . Mason of Dana Point Saturday in Laguna Beach. Mr. Mason, 19, died as a result of an automobile accident Wednesday near San Juan Capistrano. Survivors are his parents. Mr. and Mrs . Robert E . Mason : thrtt brothers, David, Robert and Jerry, all of Dana Point; grandparents, Mrs . Kenneth Britton of Pittsburg, Calif., Mrs. Anna Furlong of Jacksonville, Florida and R oss Mason of Akron, Ohio. Interment was at El Toro Cemetery. Arnngement.<J were directed by McCormick Laguna • &•ch Mortuary. ' Apollo's Crewm.en Still Up HOUSTON (UPI) -Russia's two Soyuz cosmonauts landed gently and triumphantly in a cloud of dust on a central Asian prairie today, carrying five Unit· ed Stales flags to symbolize their historic meeting in space with three Americans. The world could watch on television as Valeri Kubasov, 40, and Alexei Leonov, 41, emerged s miling from their scorched spaceship after it came to.rest on its side in the middle of the wheat belt or Kazakhstan. Moscow con· trol said they were in excellent health. "This is wonderful place," Kubasov said after he climbed from the Soyuz capsule and greeted rescuers with a bear hug. "It is a happy place of landing. I wilt remember it always." Leonov, obviously tired from his six days in space, staggered . slightly when be emerged and said ... It was difficult, very dif· ficult. We ace a bit Mbaky due to tiredness and to happiness.'' U.S. astronauts Thomas Slaf· ford, Vance Brand and Donald "Deke" Slayton remained in or· bit for three more days of scien· tific work. Their Apollo, 3,450 miles to the east at the lime of the Soyuz landing, is due to return to a Pacific Ocean splashdown Thursday. The astronauts were aslcc:p when their comrades returned to earth but later radioed con· g ratulations. One of the Apollo experiments planned for today -a scan of the sky with an x.ray.detector -was delayed because of trouble with the instrument. But the pilots went ahead with plans to make earth ovservations and measure dust particles in the atmosphere. The Soyuz was eased to a gen- tle landing at 3:51 a .m. PDT by a big parachute and the cushioning of four rockets fired a few feet off the ground. The thrust from these rockets kicked up much of the dust. The Soyuz came down only six miles from its bullseye 33 miles from the tQwn of Arkalyk. The site was 310 miles northwest of the Baikonor Cosmodrome from which the Cosmonauts rocketed Tuesday. Television cameras aboard two helicopters followed the big orange and white parachute and the capsule swaying below it for five minutes before the landing. described as a "thumpdown" by U.S. Qfficials. It was the first <See LANDING, P age A2l Or:~:a.:·· Weatller Night and morning low clouds but sunny after- noons Tuesday. Little tem· perature ch ange. Highs from the 70s at the beaches to the low 80s inland. Lows tonight 62 to 65. INSIDE TODA l' ror the first time, the Wt~t fJPS repre3entotion in the Na tlonal Political Women's Caucll.f. Two Orang« COQ.ff women now hold notional of· fices. See Pogt 81. Index 9N!I"' All ...,,_,... L.M...:r AJ ,.._ IA• rt C..I a AS ..._.,n .. at.It ............. __ DJ ., At M Q.ttilfletl QllNn ., ....... aH 0-Uweff ., :::-.. ,.. .. , Al .. 11 DHGI :ttlc9• AU ·" t.•Wf IP ... A• TMritllM Al ... ~ .. , Al ,.......... Al ~-At ~ A4 ~ ... lltt~ ,.,, WWNNewt A• .. 2 OAIL Y PILOT L/SC Mond!J, July 11; 1 If& I Post Office to Open San Cleme nte's new main post office at 520 A vcnida Pico is s theduled to open Ju- ly 28. The old post office on Del Mar will remain in service as a substation and will continue to off er all postal services, ac- cording to Director of Ma ils Marion Crowe ll. Four Plane Victims Still Listed 'Serious' Fro• Page Al VALLERGA paigning on Hinsbaw's behalf in 1972. Victims of a Friday night plane crash in hilly Anaheim territory that killed the pilot were listed in improved but still serious condi- tion at Canyon General Hospital today. Army Chief Warrant Officer Thomas Gambrill, 35, stationed al Fort Ord, was killed when the Piper Cherokee Six slammed in- to Nohl Ranch Road. Investigators said the plane Pair Hold Up_ Coast Marine A 20-year-old Camp Pendleton Marine was robbed at knifepoint Sunday by two men in San Clemente. Ronald Moore told police he lost $25 cash after being accosted by two bandits at about 11 p.m. ·near Escalones and South El Camino Real. One of the two produced a k:n.ffe and demanded "give me your money,'' Moore told police. He turned over his wallet and the two fled. The Marine then climbed on his motor cycle, went to the bus d epot downtown and with a friend attempted to locate the m en who had tak~n his money. They were uns uccessful. Buggy Driver Hurt in Crash A 42-year-old San Clemente man was injured Sunday when his dune buggy collided with a sedan near Pico and North El Camino Real. Darrell H. Metheny or 2815 Via Montecito was released after emergency a id at San Clemente General Hospital. Police identified the driver or th e sedan as Wi lli a m D . Mc Master, 57 , or Santa Monica. Extensive damage to the dune buggy was reparted. Police said the accident oc- curred when McMaster who had been waiting in the center north- bound lane of El Camino Real to turn left turned right tnstead and collided with M etheny's vehicle. ORANGE COAST L '.C DAILY PILOT "' Or·~ Cw• I C> .. •IV P1tat 'tllll1ll'\ wrwcn 1• '""" ntrwd '""" N•wn Prfl" .. , t pYClt Ntf by ,,._. 0.-M'lql c,,...\1 Puoh\.hi"O Con1ch•,,V • c "'"'' • 1.Jll10f',. .,,~ JMbU~ ~l'llO°'Y lhtnuQh ._,HM't' flJ' t.D\f• Milr-w P'ff•OO'' h• •th Huntl~O"\ t-\r ..,.,. F-oun '"" v-ury ,,.,,,. ... !:u•ddlrto-4<• v .. 11.' •'"1 l ,_Oltn•• lJ.• drn C,O.Ulh C.o•\I A \•l'l(Jlt-'"O'n,..1 f'ld1hM '' fl\lhl1 ·"'"' S.turd•'f' ..nd un<\.1..,, T"' ~t-V•Pftl oonfl\ftlnQ Ol•"t '' •t ~ Y-' ·,I I _,, ,,,, .. t, ,,. .. , .. M-... , c.1uorn1• .,~~~ Robert N , Weed P>Hl<l""I •M "'11>11:.ftff Jack R . Curley v", I'•••'°""' •nd c;.,,..., w~r Thomas Keevil Edll0< Thom as A. M urphine IM"•0•"9 (dltll' CharlPs H . Loo<. Richard P. Nall "'~'''"'' M~M9'"9 E l)OOt\ u9un• Buch Office .... ~··•S.'"' ,,.."'"' A.dd~ .. , ,. o 9'1• .... mu Other Offices c..\1• ...... lJO '#nl -.Y ~­_,,.. .. «.. )l.JJ ,..._, ...,.._d "'"'' .............. "''' ....... ....._.. .. ., ._14M<k V•fl•y UJOI Y ... , llio .. "1 $.In O,..o ,,_., Te .. ,iihone 0 14) "42-4321 Cl•n ifi411' Adv•rtisinq Ml-5471 L•qun• S.•<h All 0eJNr1ments: T~~t.,~·!:6' 4tS.0630 Ceti'l"f'"· ltli Ot•'I ... C.•f\t •wethll•~ c..n-v Ho l'e••tl ... _ '"""'.'""'' edtlOrl•I '"111tf•t •' •dwett1 •,,..*'h r.ere•fl' "'"• .... ••l>•H•C .. ,.11"°'11 ,,.,-,~1 ""'""'"" 01 'oPYt •ON.,.,.,. S.co<W ctn• po•I ... °''" •' C:Mt• "'•••. C•t110tftl• •.ittw""""''"' ,.,,,.,I.) 00-"1'· .,. .......... Of_ .. , ... ,. n-111•¥'1 cllltl•""'-., 00 ,...,..,,,,, lost power and theorized it was possible Gambrill descended out of an overcast, briefly mistaking Nohl Ranch Road for the Orange County Airport runway. A similar plane crash several years ago in which a small com- muter airliner crashed on the Newport Freeway near Dyer Road was blamed on visual pilot error in heavy fog. Hospital officials said today that survivors Mrs. Lucille Gam- brill, 25, wife of the pilot, Steven Jensen, 12, and Jay Ba rto, 15, both of Palo Alto, and Steven Spleen, 29, of Menl.o Park, were all in serious condition. They bad been listed in critical condition following admission to the new Anaheim hospital Friday night. The four survivors were pulled from the wreckage by Anaheim Fire Department personnel from a station less than a half-mile away. Firemen heard the impact of the crash and al first believed it was an auto accident. Sever al witnesses looked up when the plane's engine coughed and sputtered and then watched the aircraft on a flight from the San Francis co Bay a rea lo Orange County Airport plummet to earth. Those charges will be subject or a separate trial. Additionally, Vallerga must answer to five counts of miscon- duct stemming from the Grand Jury's accusation. Adjustment Panel Okays Two Projects An oceanfront view site and a neighborhood basketball court have been approved by the Laguna Beach Board of Adjust- ment. The view site will be construct- ed on c ity-owned property at the end of Ruby Street in the city's south end. It will feature a mean- dering textured walkway to the bJuff's edge where viewers will take in the ocean view from a s mall landing. The half-court basketball court will be constructed on an unused s treet right-of-way in Ar ch Beach Heights near the intersec- tion of La Mirada Street and Summit Drive. The project is to include landscaping and installa- tion of bicycle racks. 3 Pendleton Crash Victims Identified Three Camp P e ndleton Marines have died as the result or a headon coUision al the base a t which former President Richard M. Nixon personally directed r escue efforts. Nixon and his party consisting of daughter, Tricia, her husband Edward Cox and Secret Service men happened upan ~efatal_mis· hap about two minutes after 1t oc- cured Thursday evening, and before military police arrived at the scene. . . One .Marine was dead at the scene. One was dead shortly alter bis arrival at the Camp Pendleton Naval Medical Center and the other died in the ho6pital about five hours after the acci- dent. The men were identified as Sgt. Larry W. G rlse, 24, of 343-A David A . Vandal, 28, o f Oceamide; and Cpl. Ramiro A. Delgado. 20 of San Antonfo, Texas. San Clemente Junior GuanU Plan Supper The San Cle m ente Junior Lifeguards w i 11 sponsor a spagbetU supper from 5 to 8 p. m. Wednesday at lhe Elks Lodse. lSOS N. El Camino Real, to raile funds to travel to Santa Cruz for national com~tillons in AuausL The supper menu will Include s paghetti, bread, salad and punch. Price ls $2.SO for adult.I and SU50 for chaldren under 12. Tb~ NaUonal Junior Ufeguard Compellllona will be held in San- ta Cnl1 Aug. 1-3. More t.han 100 members of the San Clemente prognm want lo attend. Further loformation on the aupptt and the compet.it.lona may be obtained by calling San Clemente LUeauard Head· quarters, 492·0750. Cause of the accident was still under investigation today by military authorities. · Nixon and his party were re- turning to his San Clem ente home from the Camp Pendleton golf course when the contingent came upon the accident. Cox said the Secret Service agents intended to pass by the collision because their first con- cern was protecting Nixon. ·•But, the President saw the ac- cident and said right away 'Stop, stop the car."' Cox told As&«ial- ed Press in telephone interview. He said Nixon took charge at the scene ordering Secret Service agents lo call for a medivac helicopter and everyone worked at getting the two badly injured Marines from one of the cars. An ambulance helicopter is s tationed at the medical center about six miles from the scene of the collision on Las Pulgas Road, about three miles east of ln- terstate S. After the last victim was transported, Nixon turned to the military investigator, Sgt. David Smith, and asked him if he had .everything under control. Sgt. Smith said yes, and Nixon said ''You've done a fine job" and departed the area, a Marine Corps spokei;m an said. 81,000 Worth Of Gems Gone J ewelry valued al more than Sl.000 was s t olen durln1 the weekend from Uie Sn Juan Capistrano home of a restaurant chef, Orange County Sbettft Of- ficers reported today. Depulea 1aid buralan re· moved the screen from an u"' locked window ol C'bef Robert r..ee Thomas, 32, ol l0808 Anaida De La Vista and toot the Jewelry from a drnser In the bedrcom. They said the f amlly wu out· side the bom• watdiinl a train when the theft occurred. • OC Fair Cleanup· Begins Only the echo of whoops and shrieks of delight and dismay from scary carnival rides, the lit- ter of trampled cotton c andy con- es and the m emories r emain to- day at the Orange County Fair- grounds in Costa Mesa. UlttT ......... Gates closed at 10 p.m . Sunday after admitting a steady stream of huma nity that numbered 222,385 persons according to the toll kept by the turnstiles. Fair Publicity Director Peggy B}lyless said the 1975 attendance was up by about 10,000 persons more than the previous year. COSMONAUTS DOWN -This map shows the loca tion of the landing site for the Soviet cosmonauts, who returned to earth early today, on the plains of central Siberia near Karaganda. Credit was given to weather which was temperat e and sparkling during much or the rair's 10-day run-neither too hot nor loo cool-and the overall planning and staging or the giant exposition. One othe r element may have contributed lo the Orange County Fair's success in a ddition to a one-night s tand by comedian Bob Hope that attracted well over 10,000 persons, more than the total fair attendance on several days. The fair's theme was "The Good Old Days," and fair pro- moters theorize this influenced a large number or Orange County residents or visifors to attend. "Many people returned again and again." remarked Mrs. Bay- less, adding that the 1975 fair bad literally too many things to see and do all in just one day's visit. Cleanup operations began t<>- d ay at the site, where carnival roustabouts began dis mantling their gear late Sunday night.for the trip today lo a new town and a new fair. Fairgrounds Ma nager Jim Porterfield estim ated it would take 72 hours lo clean up the site and prepare for the facility's next attraction. Mr. Pinnick Rites Slated Funeral services for Wallace A. Pinnick, a former attorney in San Clemente, will be held at 3 p.m. Tuesday al P acific View Mortuary in Newport Beach. Mr. Pinnick died Friday in Orange County Medical Center. He was a resident or Orange. Mr. Pinnick practiced law in San Clemente from 1960 lo 1973 a nd was dis trict attorney in Trinity County in 1974. He was a member of the San Cle mente Mason's lodge 671. Survivors are his widow, Ima Pinnick, and two daughters. San- dra or Orange and Cynthia of San Clemente. Coast Strip Rest Stop For Cyclist,s? A misshapen piece of land le.ft over from a realignment or San Juan Capis trano's Del Obispo Avenue may become an official rest stop for bicycle riders. Members or the City Council recently appeared ready to let the half-acre strip go back to its former owne r, Harry Falklam, until Councilm a n Doug Nash rolled out his bike stop idea. He said the land is localed on top of a grade leading from Dana Point Harbor and an ideal place for a scenic rest stop overlooking the Capistrano Valley. "I see no good reason lo allow this lo go back to the property owner." said the councilman, ad- ding that the strip already is be- ing u sed as a rest s top by bicyclists, including Nash and his wile. Mayor James K. Weathers described Nash's idea as "ex- tre mely commendable" and joined him in as king for a de- tailed study. Public Works Director W. D. Murphy noted that the city stands to r eap no Immediate f1J1ancial benefits by allowing the s trip to revert to its former owner. Guards to Vie At PentBeton Lifeguards from four Orange Coast departments will do battle on the sand in the sea Wednesday evening during the Orange Coun- ty Games al Trestle's Beach at Camp Pendleton. Events wm begin al 6:30 p.m. They will compete in dory relays, s wims, paddle r e lays and a beach "chariot" race. Lifeguard s fro m Sa n Clemente, Laguna Beach, Newport Beach and Huntington Beach will compete. F ro• Page Al L ANDING. • • telecast or the end of a Soviet spaceflight. Three hours after landing, th'\ cosmonauts a rrived at tho Ccis modrom e and thank ed engineers and technicians who prepared their rocket a nd spaceship for flight. - "We are grateful to them Cot their vast work," Kubasov said before he and Leonov went by bus to the hotel "Cosmonaut'! where they also stayed before launch. · Leonov, an artist as well as veteran s pace pilot, said, "Mother Earth took us in its fold, There is much greenery here and the skies are blue." , Russi a's leaders quickly radioed congratulations to the spacemen and praised the joinl project as a major step in cementing peace and furthering cooperation bet ween the two s up e rpow e r s. Leonov and Kubasov re plied in a special message to Russia's officials: "In this space flight, iinportant for the cause or peace and pr<>- gress or all the peoples or the world, we were inspired by the high assessment or the work of scientists, designers. workers, cosmonauts and the warm words or greeting by Leonid Brezhnev. "The crew or the ship is ready to fulfill new assignments or the Motherland." Fro•P~A J GAS COST I pre d ict it will bring the economy to a new bottom." Meanwhile, Sen. Edward Ken- nedy, (D-Mass.),has proposedup to $46 billion in tax cuts next year to counter ''recessionary shocks" that might follow an oil price in- crease. Kennedy wa nts to extend the $1.5 billion in this year's reduc. lions for small business, increase by $4.5 billion this year's tax cuts for individuals and increase by as much as $40 billion reductions for consumers to offset the ef- fects or a possible oil price jump. ·• . Mar1n~rs gives you up to a si,soo tax deduction this year. •• ... AND EVERY YEAR UNTIL YOU RETIRE! NOW YOU CAN BUILD A TAX SHELTERED RETI REMENT FUN D AT MARI NERS , W ITH "IRA " -THE INDltlDUAL RE- TIREMENT ACCOUNT. M ariners Individual Retirement Account is a personal tax-sheltered retirement plan. "IRA" was devel- ·oped by Congress to give you an effective way to build your own retire- ment fund. You can save as much as $1500 or 15% of your wages . whichever ts less, and you r savings wlll be a tax deduc- tion during your working years. If your spouse works, your combined tax-sheltered savings can be as much as $3000 per year. Come In to Mariners and start your own Individual Retirement Account. You'll be saving tax dollars now and building a much brighter future. For more Information, come in or call any one of our convenient locations. HERE'S HOW FAST YOUR MONEY GROWS IN A MARINERS '"IRA·· ACCOUNT lnd,.mJval Rf't1111mont Accounls are pre&ently earning 7-1-• •4 per rur whttn plac.cl 1n ii 6·y111r c.flll1cale Yovr 1nnu11 v111ld 11 incr11a11d to a 01g 8 06·~ wflen mlf'r.st Is add~ 10 th• account oa11nct1 Ind comoounded da11v With a m,u1mum 1nolv1du11 conlrlbut1on 01 S 1500 each v1•a1. fletC' s ~""' ~our montty will grow· WITH TAX WITHOUT EXTRA SMELTEReo TAX MONEY IRA SHELTERED FROM TAX AFTIEA Pl.AN PLAN OEFEARAI. 5 yrs. $ 9,510 $ 8,730 $ 2,780 10 yrs. 23.540 15,750 7,790 20 yrs. 74,640 44.080 30,580 30 yrs. 185,550 95.030 90,520 'At>ove llQ1.trt1 are based on 2S*• income Or11tk111 Feoorat rt0ul1111Qn1 rtc1ul1e subltan11al pen1111es lor N•ly w1tll<lr1wlll1 from cert Ille.It• aa;ounts ~Mariners Savi1' ~ and Loan Association .._,.,. '""' (Moll'I Off tea) 1$1~ We11chll Or. (714)6.42 4000 He.,orta..ch (loytkte Center) t 014 loytlcH Or. (71.t) 6.42 4000 L•t11"• le4Kh IMI ... d 1 .. ,,.,., Hlllt let A"JM I !tlOOl•M•yrt 5t. (lelt11re World) (7 14) •••·7506 138~ SMl teocfl l lvd. (oPENtNG SOON) (213) 598 7626 380 So Beve rly Dr JOpp.Mt Slnoi Ho1pt1ol) • ('13) 5$3-3000 87'7 leverly Blvd (213) (>$7 -41.tl } ) I ) I J ; j l J Beef on Rise C/#cken, Pork Down LOS ANG~LES IAP) -Beef pnces are on tbe "ay up Jg•m 1, li s hvpptng survey shows ALL CUTS WERE EXPECTED to be artected by the prlcl' hike that supermarket executives al· Lnhuted to increased wholesale costs The average price for top sirloin at 20 southern Cahfornia tsupcrmarket cha1ni; was $2 81 per pound compared to u P'"!,CO or $2 27 per pound at the same time last year fhe pnccs of chicken and pork. howfjver, were ex· ~·cted to dl'chn~ with the pnce or whole fryers at 62 ~~~und, up from 13.'>t year's average pnce of .50 per LAMB WAS EXPECTED to continue to be ex· pensiVP, While the pnces Of salmon and turbot fUels were expected todropthlsweek Absol11ti011 Needed Can Sister Help Gulf O~ Corp.? . By MILTON MOSKOWITZ Pittsburgh based Gulf Oil Corp , which e lected a nun to its board earlier this year, knows what it is doing Gulf ap- pears intent on setting a new high.water m ark for corporate 1rres pons1b1hty a nd 1t must be useful to have a director who nught be CJble to give · absolution for past sms ~ Sister J ane Scully c Gulf s new director i.s ... r ~ Money pres ident of Carlow ' College in Pittsburgh Tree and if she 1s to g1 vc lh.Js absolution, s he must have a p41tu:nt car HardJy a week passes without Gulf bemg implicMl!d 1n .l nefanous scheme It's a worldwide com pany with a worldw1dc record for wrongdoing YOU MAY KNOW GULF only for the thousands of servl( e stations "h1ch ny its fl ag But that's only the tip of this corporate 1et:berg It's one of the giants on the business scene In Hl74, only sevcm companies had more sales than Gulf s $16 5 billion And only four U S comparues (AT&T Exxon, IBM and 'J cxacol ha<l more profits than Gulf's $i b1lhon ln its lust ror profits -what it calls getting an "ade· quatc return on its rnvcstment -Gulf has neglected the rucetic~ of mo1 a l behavior When the N1xon re election cam pa1gn wanted money. Gulf s aid "sure," even though 1t re· ahzed such contr1 but1ons violated a federal law When pohl1t:1ans tn Bolivia and Korea said they needed }.>rotect1on money, Gulf s aid ''sure" More than $3 milhon went down the Korean i athole -a big sum for you and me. a pittance when placed against Gulf s super earnings At other big U S corporations top offtcers resigned in the wake of r cvelatwns of illegal payoffs Not so a t Gulf Oil The leaders have not been unseated by the board THE LATF.ST CHARGES lcv<:led agamsl Gulf allege 1J- lcgal h1kmg of prices They come from two sources -The ·Federal Energy Adcrumstration < FEA) and the Virginia Electnc Power Company ) ou re me mber the 011 embargo imposed by the Arab nations in 19731 As a major pumper of Middle East oil, Gull "as affcc:t cd by lh1s embargo but its subsid1anes m West Afnca, where: 1l h.,s extensive holdings, wer e not So Gulf sharply mcre:.is('d tts imports from West Afnca However, the FEA charge~ lhal Gulf, dealing with Afncan companies that 1t owns overcharged itself for crude 011 to the tune of at least $45 m1llw n B} sctt111 g a higher pncc for its Afncan crude -higher than lhl' rntirkct lcvds then oblaanang -Gulf could pre. sumablv pass on this mc:rca!>c to us This is precisely what the V1rg1ntJ 1111111~ is Sa\ mg ll claims tha t Gulf over charged 1t S2 m il hon for fu el 011 between1973 and 1975 It s all m u day's work for Gulf 011 Corp and one won <ler:s huw Sister Jane Scully is deahng with these matters at the Gulf bo.1rd m eetings Food Hike Blame Due to Agencies? OAKLAND, Calif (UPI) - The preside nt of the nation's largest retail food chain says the prohfrralton of govern ment agencies designed to protect the <:o nsumer 1s con· tnbutmg to hi gh food pnces ''ll 1s m y personal feeling that the Occupational Safety ~ind Jf eulth Administration, the F ederal T rade Com mission CJnd the Food and Drug Admin1slrahon are 1m· plementmg all kmds of rules that m ake our operation less flexible and tend to run our costs up," said William S Milch e ll, president or Safeway s tores "THERE IS NO end to it The agencies get more BP· propnat\ons, hire more peo. pie and make more visits to us .. It adversely effeds hula· tion in two ways It taJces tax dollars lo support these guys and lt costs business to deal with the m -costs that have to be passed along to the con· sumer.'' sareway. which traces its roots to a 1915 Ameracan Jo~aus, Idaho, !ltore, has been the nation's lop grocery ro· tailer smce 1972, when it sur- J!8Sscd the Grcot Atlantic and Pac1(1c Ten Co It expects to ~11 $10 blllion worth of food this .)enr to more than one b1lhon customers M1lche1J nld the tndldtf>' h3S b een •'t oo uoco m · municaUvc, too rloc1le and too defena\vo ror loo lon~" ... Al the company's annuRI mectlng 10 Ba ll\morc, Md .• Uu!I sprlni.: Mitchell wartied stockholders or "distorted oJ. l cgahons" bc1n& made by politicians and government agencies who, hr ~aid, "s~m to want us to ue a highly regulate d industry or be broken up, or both " SITl'ING IN A modest of. rice at Safe way head · quarters, a former coffee warehouse an an industrial section of Oakland, MitcheW s aid he is worried tllere will be premature government re gulat1on of computerized check·out system s Under the unaversal pro- duct code system , every grocery store item will have a patch of stripes on its label. Many of these computer. readable codes have begun to show up on grocery ~terns from frozen s pinach to potato ch1ps As the product passes through a scanning deVlce at the checkout counter, a com· puter will read the stnpes and pnnt out a bill with the pro- duct's name and price Supermarket chams hope the process will ehmm ate costly pnce marking ol every item and the system is ex· pected to allow them to raise and lower their pnces easJJy. CUSTOMERS WOULD be able to determine the cost of a product and eompanson shop only through price listings on shelves, a fact which bas aroused con sumer aroups and has resulted In drlves for local, s tate and fed eral laws requinns price labeling or every Item. ·'I don't think the consumer is 38 concerned about the lack o{ individual prtce mlU'kings as the cons umer activists think he ls.'' Mitchell said "We arc much clo!'ler to the con1umer than the COMumer activist." ho asserted, noting his store constantly truces sur· veys of consumer opinion. Mouday's Closing Prices NEW YORK ~e:w YORI( • 1v•11 Follow!~ ••• jttlc•' on the =-YOr Stock U<l••noe ., S.IH Nel P E ~":~IOM °'II .t.bbolll .. I « It .s.. 7t .... -lh AbClcitll b wl ' .a·-+ -., ACFlnc! 1 60 f H 44111 v. A<meClv so s 3 hi+ \lo AClmOr 02b t 4 :If'. Aclhpr &lb •4l 10"i AOO!m• Molll 17 S'-\lo Ad<!Ogrpll 11 St 7t.-'lo Advlnv :IOb 4 1 ' -\lo Attln.\l.I I OI 11 ,,. l~ "tlll•lf pl , I 49 -'II Aovlrre Co Jt 10 4 + v. .-.1wmon lO 1 12 11 + ""' A11Mn 1ncp t 110 4~-,._ Alrbl"<hl SO t 22 11\1 Air Pro 70g 11 9) 11~-1~ Alr<olnc 90 • 110 JI -h A J lndll•lr\ 1 60 3Ytt ~. A.II,_ 1 103' 21 1•14. \.. Ala C.H I 11 s 10 14v. • lh AleP pf I 2t 1100 71:\1.-~. Al•WI• lnt1ct 11 27 Ut. t ~ AlberloC 36 110 2 7~ , Alberhn to 10 42 ~ + -. Alon Al IO 1 1)8 2$ ... + ~ Al<o 514 41 S '* 13 + ~ Alcon Lb 24 26 » 2• + v. Ale .. n 160 I 20 •llo-\4 AllM>MI 4M» U S'h + \lo ""911'9 200 I -0 • "" -\I• AllgLud I IO J Sl 2S -~. Allg luor.t l 4 3Stl> t-Yo Alli! Pw 52 9 •1 1·~-~ .-.11enGrp .a 13 sz I I~+ \lo AllldC/'tllO I "" 3t -VJ AllCSMAn S4 I 130 IJ~-~ AllltCSPrOd I S 27 141"> • \4 Al lltCISI I SO 9 1' 401/o-\I• Alld ~1-.t 14 1~ , AlllJ 0.. 26 & 1 U~l>t-Vt AllrQl'ttA S6 1 .,.., AISIN pt 12 S ? 11•• • Alcoe 1 l4 1 11 44 ~l~SS91~ 1~~ ~ -IV• A~c 60 1 II 14 Amcord 2• 1 13 Sit.+ ""' Ame•e< I lO S 1 17 .. 1 , A""•l>f 1 60 ll I S2 + V• AmHU lOQ S SU 22 -'lo A HU Pl J \11 17 54~-~ AmAld·I <M 13 SI zot.-~ Am Airline• 33.4 t -•111 Am B•• <IO 11 U -\lo ABrenel 2 68 I 60 41'B-~ AmBrut eo 1 100 nn-....,, Nn BICl9 3' 9 J.4 12~• + ~ AC..n210a • 18 ~ ... \lo A C.n pf I~ J 21~ Ameen MIQ 13 ' ~ A Ol•ln 1 20 6 10 11v.-V• Am<:yen 1\IJ I 170 27~-I/• AMOsll 121169 l1 I'\\+ V1 AOlll'hl S2 12 S6 24~•-'h AMOual Vsl S O't-Vo AmEltPw 1 ' 3S6 191/o 1/tt Af:emlly 24 1 111 10 -1~ A FlnSys 2012 18 Ot-~ A Fin Pl l•n 1'0 131,11 A GnB I 14b , .0 23\.-'.'II AC.nSc 1 32 •31 16'1) + v, AGn IM l>O' 71 IH't+ Yo A GI\ Pl 1 IO 33 2141-\lo AMHolll 10 6 2S U Y>+ \lo Am Hom "" SJ.4 31 + \lo AmHosp JO 24 71 )IV. .,.. Am 11wes1m I 4~-Ir\ A ~Oki 11 8 AS 6V• -V. A Meelltorp 1 238 71/t • ''• Am Molors 211 6~' 'lo .-mNC. 2 \4Q 7 110 lA ~~~:~'';f ~~ ~~ In~! ~ .Am Sina eo 1 131 1s4, t AmSIClp4 4~ 32 SA'• ' ,t1mS1e11I 28 12 Ill I , + h Am S1ores 8 32 ?IV.+ ~. Aml "T 3 40 10 6S7 SO\lo-', ~~-l:tlr'i.! ~ ~~: :~ ~~w~~r' ~ s 1i ~1:~ ·· AWlr pr I • llOO 131 • .. WlllfDI I • Z130 12:\1•--I<. Ameron In 1 S >t22 19 + lo Amt:\St IOtl 6 6 Sii> Arnl!I~~ In I 8 H II~•-'" AMF In I 14 IS '12 20h .. 'o Arflla< Inc I 3 31 II •-~ AMP Inc J7 )0 424 )4' •-h Ampco oo 4 3-4 12 •1 -1'1> Ampu Ca 1 141 •'"-V. Amup Corp 32 l f..mslar 1 40 19S 79"' •, A\l<lrpl 1 &S 1 41' •-\I• Am\led 3 l>O 1 S1 .. ~,; ~-Anoltl In J1 4 76 7 'I> • Anotncla l>O S 161 lft AnchHc t 10 9 6 22 1 • Af!Oer(lay I 1 91 30v.-1<.. AnQel•<a I? 9 10 7~ Ansul Co 41 4 42 16\to-"-AP<Kt>eC SO 10 11 IJlj, • Vt .-pe.o 0.1 Ao II Ml 21 + ~. :~,r~°'~ 1 ~= I~~;. :1: APLplC 0. 1 "°" . ~Ph~O MQ 7l 31 , + • • " P A Sv<s IS 47 SS • I \'t Atc•lilN 31> 1 18 10¥t + It Arc.I ~I C 2 12 23\<w + lf1 :~~ffc E~% 16 5jl >~:;-"" Anstar Inc 11 l"-t '• Ariz PS I)(, 6 128 1S\o I. Arlt 8" llo I 1·~ + •;. ArU~G I 70 S JS 21 -'A Arlen All Ov • 2'1 3'~ Armaoa Cp 1 11 S~ •, Ar"l<O I 60a S ICM 11\.4 \, Arm pf 7 10 7 ,,..._ ...., Armurpf 4~ LIOO 41111-\, Arms C~ 80 12 ISO 24' •-'4 Armll Rubb 11 U 13~,_ ', AroCorpln I 6 1 13V. Arvin Indus 27 4lt 71.-"' ASA Lie! 80 •24 42 i> t >,, Aurco 1' 1 s 118 18\o AshlnOtl 11 1 S I U 24~ • V. AsOryG I •O 13 S9 31 Al Spr9 I 40 1 11 241't .,, Alllton~ •o J S'I I '• Allco M ISO • 3~ '• AllC1yEI I > JI 11~ '• AllCElpf S • I 6S I AU Aichi 2 '> 13 1111~11.-'l'I At Re Pf 1 80 11' '9~ V. AUACll pr! J I 171 -2'.4 Atlu Corp 143 314-V. ATO Inc 20 6 108 8~ V. Aul Oat I Ob 34 21 62'• \• Auto"ll lnOs b 91 S~ 1 o Avco Corp SJ 6~-~ Avto Cp wts 47 I'•-11o !~~~~~~p f6 24 ~~ ~!t:1~ AV•l lr>e:orp 10 S 71, Avnellnc 40 S 1' • ...._ ,._ AvonPr 1 48 24 ...0 4~ ''t AlleCOC. 10 II 14· 2H.-Y, -··-Bab&Wtl 80 9 140 2•'h-'I• BdcheG 20b 13 118 •'• Baker In 10 11 62 IOV,-VJ Baur011 41 22 42 S2'• • Ba1ow1n llO • 1 10•1, 8a11Cor p llO 9 11 19 8a11Gas I '6 1 SS 71\,.._ ·~ BllGS pt 4''> iJO Sl\.-1 BanC•I I 34 I 6 16'• v, Bendag Inc 26 36 37' ,_ '1 011n90r Pn S8 4\ • '• 8""9rP ptC • 11'1> • \~ 8nk NY 1 20 • 8 33 • 'i-B•nk v a 88 • 6 llV. 8ankTrusl l S 92 39'•-v. BarbOll 1 l>O 111 18">--I/, Bard CR W 16 118 14~1 Bastclnc 60 3 1 II',.._ •111 Btt•s Ml 10 3 '8 2~ ~ B•u\CllL l>O 16 312 37~-1'111 Baller l. 19 J3 196 4311. 1•111 B•ySIG I IO 1 IS 11 •-I/• S.ru•Cg 14 9 4''> ~ '• 8HrlnQS 3110 I 21-"°" &eet Fas 1111 32S 11~ • II• O.c1tn1n w t4 Jl ~ "° lleclonO •O 19 24S lS-''• a.ecllAr 70 • ., IJ-V. Beker In 18 4 1.ci 2~•-'I• 9tl<OPI 30b 3 SI :IO -1/tt Belden I 70 8 1 161~ • Ill Bell Hwl M 9 101 10~1 t~,• .. c~ ~ ; ~ ~; =1v. Bendlw f' l 1 611,.._I-. O.n Cp 7S 111 18¥.-~ llenCppt 2 " 120 24.... • 'I> e.nC pl• JO 3 so• ... -11> Ben SICS Mlg 17 4 t-Yt O.no-8 17b ' S6 1' l Berliey PllO 4' 3~ :.,. Btlt Prodcl 14 1'12 10 -VI ee111s1"1 2• • 211 ~ .,, 81g Jlnel 4'l0 4l ~. ~ 81Kk&O 4011 9411 17\• -1'111 Bl1lr Jlln 32 31 19 ste ... ~ BllULg I 10 S 2:1 IS''°' , BlockHA 4010 503 U'h-"' Blue114111 llO 9 }7 31"'> • ¥. 8oO«H~ Brits 17' l''H "' eo.111g 80 9 137 2'~ ~ 8ol .. 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Yi I .,.. co 6011 u ~"' 9"<1CPpf 60 , j -.,.l"rQ12010 16 ~•11/o MOYeW 20 12 .tt 7~ flunllrH 1.. , JIM• Yo ~R 40U 11 ,.,.._...., ll<lflR pf 1\1\ , I~+ 14 llurllnd I 20 12 S2 ~-i.. 8'1r1 No I 70 7 UT ~ 14 MIN pf SS , 'It 6~ -.irMY 71 11 JO Jlllh "' lkit1'91'• ~ ~IOl--1~ ~b~ , M,, 21 ..... -.... <t Ind 3 + loo\ r\ Wd I 1 SVr-\ii Fin.on, ,. l\lt 111 $2 1 UIS -41:' 1Nn >Of 1' 111 It._+ ~ on er .ti 2Vt-lo\ RL .0. ll , .. 2' ~I 2' 11 41 llY,-~ AC. 8'b • » IS + "' (Mltl A 1 10 I .S ti emu c u 43 o 1~ Id )4 1$ )1, 24~ 1"o o tnv IJ 2~ \Iii Co I 10 6 21 44'--\It ~ru,i. • s • ll Si#~ Nt I >)4'\ l\lfl pi 1tldl) C. (l'Q P t \I•)\ (h, (1'9 C.Olf'rt .JO .. d 1 + 1. Eibn&r 1 4' 10 • 41~ '• CMoPL I Ml 1 Ut 1•\ot + \, EG a. G 12 11 J.,. 11~-h (MP on"7 . II IS\o + \, Ele<I AHO< 1) 1'. ~r Te< I to 4 1$ U + ~ EOS Srs so 19 t 11 CMrlerC; Sl 42 1) 10'--~. Elect Memo U '1 ,_ v. ~c pf l \4 r)Q 2'\11 I. ElcMpl )Oc 10 .... _ lo H•le .tO 14 H 14 E191n Hell 17 s.t ll'h-V. IH•l llf J n 4111-1, Ellxlr 1no n 1 ' -v. C:..n W•l .40 • 11 I~ EIP•\C 1 10 • 261 u~-.... CM<NGI t1.. S l \r,-\, EllrtCp I~ 1 S6 )4 --\Ii C.,llCk t0o 6 S4 ,,..._ t \, Erner El 1) 23 317 »''°' !/• C.lerlr 1.IO IJ l:IO 61~ 1 ~ EmrvAlr •• 2• 93 d ""• l/.t C ll $ l 44 ll 301 491'> • .,, Emetyln 40 10 IS tO\ot-~ C C I C«p 21 2\11 + I• Emllrl I )0., • la tt•1o-11> OKo CP I IS S .) 17'1> EMI Lt lft> 12 44 4 + o,. (al-J IO 11 lt'I 11-11.-~ Emc>Ol I t• t 4 UYtt-\lo GelMspt 4Yl l S01r1-•. En1plre Fll'I i. 1' 1•1• (;efll.,. 11 Jt 24t 10to \. Eme>c..s 20 4 t 13 "' C.nHud 1 n 1 l 171• Englh•CI IO • JOI 71 '. Cell lllL 1 60 t 13 16\, E11n1>8F 32 4 11 \ t Cllll PS I JO 10 51 IJYt + h Enif• In 110 I 37 zs ... -Vt Ctnl.aE 1 2t I It 11\olt + "• Env1ro1ec11 I& ve 11V. + ~. CllN.Pw I s.t 10 II W,._-h Equlmri. 81 S 8 11\W--'h GenlSW 1 14 10 ·~ 11 + I. EquGas 2 60 & I )I CenllSoy 60 12 .. s 1S • \, Equll. I S4b 10 7l t~I? 14 CenlT•I 1 20 t 2.. 1'\1 Esmark I 40 It 9" JA~ v.. Gtnlrno 0. 13 ti tu·. IV. Esqu1r~ 32 1 11 ~ Cerro C 1 70 I U U~.-h Eslerlln J7 13 J1 l 'At; Yo Certl! tel 60 2' 12'e-~, Ethyl C I 30 4 ll> 33 -VJ C:.nn11Alr I ... 111'.-'• Ethylpf , 40 4 O V·-v. CN1Y¥>ln111 JOI 11•.-h Even~ P•oa JSI It',_ 14 ClllU pf 1 JO 2J 1t~ Ea C..11 0 I • t 15'•-~ OlmpSP to ' 100 llh-h E1tclv I..... J II-14 Clllrte• Co • 300 •'• Euon 1V.b lo SSO •'.-'• g::~;,.:vJ 7 Jl 2~t;: + ~ F•twrge -;o-fo "iii ,_ '• Clli!MM 2 20 lCM 311, 'n F•irC•m 110 I~ l5S S."7 2''• 01$Mtg 1311 41 4t,, Fborc Ind SO 11 21 91,, •, Chtl ... 4()jl t l •~-'• FalrmtF ., I 11 11~. Chemtr 1 10 • 161 o~. • ~. F"'1steel 40 ., 10 ~-v. CllmNY 2 .. ' 70 ., .... _ ~I Far Wst Fcl 3l ..... a.., c I IOa 4 d ~~.-'"' Farell M fg ,., 9 ChesPd I» 21 72 61V1-1, Feeldert Cp 54 S-I• ChH&le 2 10 7 \OI 361/, '• FedrlCo I •O 1 4.3 19'1> 1-_... 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Huill en 1• JO 101 "''• ..... !1!.'CP 1 2 1 m ~ ! \to HUttOl'I o 1J ~ u 11 ~ ~J"S: IO~~ : '4 ~ ~ Huy0(9 40 It •SJ I W> ~ Pc•d NI' ?in It ""' • ., Hl'dfml 74 b 24 l h + "' Mondey.July21, 1975 DAIL V PILOT A 9 STOCK EXCHANGE 111 14 ) ) I 3/ 1\ • ~ . '• • '• . \ .. ,, J • ·' ,. 1 . ., 6l , I Retail Clerks J.OS ANGJo:LF.S WT'll $' )) . Th<' Food Em p Io)' e r s (' o u n c II and nine l!Upl'r1lu1rkct relu1l cl<'rks unions have 3s:rec-d to t•'(lrnd their present contracts one month so both sides could hov!' rnorr ll me to t1<'J{ol 1 ull' 1, '• • '· • '• ' I. '• , ; . U Pl Te lep"°'o Rene Haus man, wife of Milwaukee Brewers pitcher Tom Hausman, displays nif- ty form in delivering a s ingle during Sunday's game with Chicago wives. The latter won, 4-3. Figueroa To Battle Cleveland CLEVELAND (AP) - Cleveland Indians manage r Frank Robinson was s o dis- -mayed with the Tribe's dropping a doubleheader Saturday he de- cided to find himself a new cen· t erfielder Sunday. He moved rookie Rick Man- ning into centerfield and veteran George Hendrick to right and the A •,,eb Slate "" G•mes Ofl k M PC 1710) July ?I Calllornla •I Cleve lclnd July21C..lltgmia•t Baltimore .J\lfy 23C•lllfimlaat Baltimore ~·1Sp.m. 4 1~P m. 4.1~P m.- Indians defeated the California Angels 10-4 to break a four-game losing streak. The Indians and Angels finish their four-game series tonight Fritz Peterson, 4-7, is scheduled to start for the Indians against Ed Figueroa, 8-5. .. I've been thinking about do- ing this for a long time," 0Robinson said, .. and the losses on Saturday made up my mind." Robinson s aid that it was not done because Hendrick wasn't playing well. "George says he's a natural righU'ielder and that he'd prefer that position anyway.'' Robinson said. · Manning said that he didn't know about the change until he saw the lineup and "it made me feel great.•• Manning collected three hits, including his second home run, along with John Lowenstein and Oscar Gamble, leading the In· dians· 15-hit barrage. CALll"O•NIA • ., r 11111 Remy1b 2 I 0 0 .........,.ona o 1 o o R.wncl ~I 2 1 ColllMdl\ .. I 1 l StantClft rt .. 0 2 O 0.."'lb 2 0 0 0 Meolllb I 0 0 0 Li.n.~111 l 0 0 0 El. Rodri9uelC 4 0 0 0 a.Mill 4 000 Mlley\S J 0 0 0 ~p 0 00 0 tvul«P 0000 er-rp . o o o o CLEV£LANO all r II bl ~nsl-lt sol o k"'per 2ll ) 1 O o Mannlr19ct S 2 2 t -10.rf 2 0 I I SOlkesrt 2 I 2 O CM1y Ill 4 2 ' 2 Gamllle dh .. 1 l 1 8 Belllb 4 , , 4 AJN>y c 3 0 I I CrOW.,u .. o o o Hoodp 0 00 0 J .6nlwnp 0 0 0 0 JI 4 6 4 Tol•I~ 38 10 IS 10 100 000 030 .. 024 301 OOa-10 IP H "E• a& SO ...... ft.,).:I) , • ., • s s 2 0 ... ui.r 4'? e s s t '1 ··-1 10010 Hood IW, J•SI 8 6 4 3 • 7 .J. 8'-1 0 0 0 I) 0 WP_...•lt:r 2. f -2: H . A-10,C2. Monday,Ju!y21, 1975 Martin's Fate on .Line Tuesday DALLAS (AP> -Billy Martin Jost and then regained his job as manager or the Texas Rangers while bis American League club and the Boston Red Sox were splitting a twinigbt doubleheader Sunday, according to a report in the Dallas Times Herald. Quoting a source identified on· ly as one close lo the situation, the afternoon newspaper said to- day that al one point during the evening Rangers majority owner Brad Corbett -al the urging of several minority stockholders - decided to relieve the fiery Martin of his duties as field boss. After a series of talks with some or the other Rangers owners. Corbett told reporters that Martin's future with the club could be resolved at a big board meeting Tuesday. He confirmed there was opposition to the Texas manager within the organiza. lion. • .. All phases of the operation wiU be covered at that time," Palmer Wins Open Hard Work Pays For U.S. Champ NORTHFIELD. N.J . (AP) - Sandra Palmer has placed her name alongside those of such famed wome n golfers as Babe Didrickson Zaharias. Mickey Wright, Patty Berg and lktsy Rawls as a winner of the U.S. Women's Open. Rut the tiny blonde from Texas says frankly : "I've never felt I was really in that class." The 34-year-old veteran count· ed five bogeys with five birdies for an even-pa r final round 72 Sunday and a 72-hole tol<"ll or 295, seven-over -par on the Atlantic City Country Club course. She coasted home with a four· stroke edge over 18-year-old amateur Nancy Lopez and pros JoAnne Carner and Sandra Post. Palmer took the lead for good on the ninth hole, but insisted, ··1 was fighting for my life out ther e. When you get a lead, you start feeling protective." The 5-foot-l'h blonde from Fort Worth earned $8,044 lo boost her season 's earnings to nearly ~.000, tops on the tour. Palmer, who shot 78 in the firsl :round but followed with 74-71-72, attributes her success to bard work. "I was not a good player when J came on the tour. In fact, I was terrible. It just shows, what hap· pens when your're conscientious and you work r eal hard," said the former .College homecoming queen-./ Lopez three-putted the 18th green for a bogey and a 75 to lose sole possession of second place. The powerful Carner also finished with a 75, while Canada's Posttiad a76. Lop'ez's finis h was the best for a n amateur since Catherine Lacoste won in 1967. She insisted she was not nervous on the 18th green, but admitted, "I really wanted lo birdie it pretty bad." · He r parents, Domingo and Marina Lopez, flew out from Rosewell, N.M., to cheer her on the final round, and sbe said, "[ could hear my father back in the crowd." Float n hole \cores In tile 30th annual U.S. Women·~ Open 0011 champlonSh1p 5'Jnddy .st the C>, 16!>-yud, par 11. Atlantic City Country Club: Silndr.J P•lmtor, '8,044 78-74·71·77-:rlS ~nora Post. ~.044 7'·73-76-76-2'1'1 Jo Ann<& <:Arner. ~.044 73·77·74·7S-m A·Nancv Lopet 73.74.71.1s-m Su~1e M tAlll~ter, \7,44' 19-75-14·11-300 SUndrd Haynie, S1,744 74·11·1'·76-301 K~thy Wll llworlh, S7.~ 76-76-7HS-30'Z O.Obbie Auston, Sl,944 16-71>-71·1'1-303 Sally Lottie, Sl.744 ll0-7C>-7J.81-3G4 Judy Rankin, Sl,74'1 72-71-79-76-304 Jcx.elyne Bour11H~. Sl,144 77-76-74·71>-3G4 c.t>roa Boykin, Sl,494 78-78-7>H-lOS M<lroa Astroloc;ies. Sl,494 lil·73·79-n-JOS uur• Bau<,ah, Sl,319 76-74·76-80-306 Jane B••loelt, Sl,319 7S.7f>.80.7S-306 01.Jne Pdllerson. SI, 194 7>7•·79-79 307 PJI Bra41ev. ll,194 11!-11·18-14-307 Donn• Capeno Young, i 1, 19• 81·7•·77·75 -307 Amy Altoll. Sl.019 7S.76-1HIJ-X18 M<Jry LouCrocll.er, $1.019 79-7c.-7J.8C>-X18 0e111 !.1one. 51.019 11r1>11~3'1& UPI Telep._.. JUBILANT SANDRA PALMER AND HER TROPHY. Golf Tourney Results SUTTON, M•ss. -Fif\Cll SCOl"llS ...., .._....,. """"'"9 S..nday 1n the Sl00,000 Pte_,I V•tt•y golf ctonsic on the 7, 119-yucs, ~· 11 Ptea~""t V•lley Country Club course: Roqoer M4llll1e, S40,000 MAC Md . .endon. U2.IOO BenCfeMMw, S•,7SO Miller 8¥tier. S9.7SO e..a Allin, S',7SO Jom Simof>s. $9.]SO Ge~ KnudSOn, S6, ISO ltt Trevino, $6,ISO ~ .Jonmon. $-4,600 Lee Eide•, Sol.600 Roel ~1. '4.600 Hate Irwin. "4.600 Al Geltier99r, $o4,600 Chu(lt Courtney, Sl.400 C..ry M<CMd, $3,400 Steve Melnyk, \3.400 Nllrl< H•y~s. $2,.00 n.,, .. ,..._11• 7()..61.71).4'1 17' ''*" 10-271 '1·14...... 111 1Q.41.n .. , 11a 69-7().74-65'-271 c.t-4>t-n 10 ,., 10-66-14-10-280 ,,_...n .n 111 .-..1.1).13-111 ... 71-7 1 73-111 7~73-70-211 1C>-11-1C>-10-11t .._,,.,e>-73 m 7C>-7H9 .. 1>9-28? 71·71-lo-49-1'1 09-11-12-71-213 Jorn ~uerlo. U .600 Brute Cumoton. s?.600 Ari W•ll. U ,600 Peter Ooslerhuos, U ,600 lynLotl,Sl ... 7 Larry Nelson, $1,667 Muon Rudolph, \l,.1>67 Moll.eHoll, $1,667 OAnny Edwards, Sl,t.67 Gr~ Jon~. Sl.667 08 ve Stockton, Sl,667 T•"-•shl Murall•ml, $1,661 Lllnny W•dklM, $1,114 Oeve Elchel1>er9e1r, $.4, 114 . Eel Dougherty, '1, 114 Fr1n11 Beerd, $1,114 tloOSte,,lon, '1,11• 8ot> Murphy, $1, I U Mike R .. JO<", '1, I 14 Jom Wltchers, '1, 114 0811 Sikes ll, 114 Leonefd Thompson, $1,114 n.70-69-71-183 7 >49-69-70-l&J (>9-}1·74-49-183 71>-7.t-71.._213 7.t.70..71>-70-184 71>-71·74-69-214 73-6&-14-69-1&1 69-7~7s-.7-2M lo-68-60-77-2&4 n .11-11>-11-?M 70-69-7'.J.72-284 13'71>-13..._?M n-67·73-7l-21S 71>-71>-73-72-285 n-11-12-10-m 73'71>-71·70-?tS 71>-11·14-10-US 7:M7-74-71-2tS 11.1u9-n-us 7Hl·J2.71-18S 77-71-7J..69-28S 69-74-7~2.eS Corbett said or the board meet· iog, "and 1 think ll would be ac- curate to say that a deciaioo will be made regarding Billy's future. Al another point ·the majority owner, who is expected to make the final deciaion, said, "We have not been winning the way we think we should, and we are go- ing to do whatever it takes to try to remedy the situation." One of the latest problems con· ceming Martin and the front of· flee arose last week, when the Texas skipper sought to acquire catcher Tom Egan. who was re- leased by the California Angels. Rangers backup catcher Bill Fahey is on the disabled list with a broken hand. General Manager Dan O'Brien opposed the Eian move, and Corbell stepped in Suturdu,y lo decide the issue in O'Brien's favor. There were reports that Martin new into a rage and engaged in a turbulent session with Corbett alter the game that n.ighi. "It got pretty sticky," Cor~lt said, "but I bad another meeting with Billy this Sunday afternoon and be had cooled down con· siderably. •' On being informed of Corbett's statements after the doubleheader ended, Marlin said, "This is all news to me. As a matter of fact, the last big meet· ing I bad with them they told me they were going to extend my contract two more years." UPI Te...,._.. PETER SCHNUG (WITH ARM IN AIR) LEADS THE U.S. ON t:AST BREAK AGAINST SPAIN. Rookie Was Thinking Hoine Run LOS ANGELES CAP) -John Hale, a 21 -year-old rookie out- fielder for the Los Angeles Dodgers. admitted he was think- ing home run in the 12t.h inning of the game with the Chicago Cubs. "It's the first time I've ever gone to the plate actually looking for a pitch to hit out," Hale said of his two-run homer that broke a J .J tie Sunday and sen l the Dodgers to a5-3 victory. The Dodgers will try to sweep the brief series tonight when An- Dodge rs S late All 9•mH on k"BC (7901 July 21 Chiuoo at Los An9elt) 7.2Sp m. 7·?S p.m. 7 ,1Sp.m. July 22 SI. Lou•~ at Los An9eles July23SI. Louosat LosAn9cles dy Messers mith, 12-7, makes is fifth try for his 13th victory. op- posing Chicago's Rick Reuschel, 6-JO. "I got the pitch I was looking for -a breaking pitch out over the plate -took a good cut and out it went." The victory e nabled Los Angeles lo clip one game off Cin- cinnati's still-impressive 11"'2· game le ad in the National League West . It's the first time since July 3 the Dodgers have gained ground on the Reds. Bill Buckner. injured most of the season, had his biggest day witb three singles, a double, two runs batted in and two stolen bases and afte rward he said: "I'd have to s ay that we've bot· tomed out. We have played the worst baseball we could possibly play. It's got to go up from here." The Dodgers missed many scoring chances. Finally, in the 12t.h inning, Buckner got to first on a two-out infield single. Then Hale nailed loser Tom Dettore. CHICAGO IC.es.slnou ll CMden.1111 M4IOIO<ll3b Je.Mor•IHrf Monday cl Thornton 111 Trlllo2ll Swlstierc Summerspti Mltterw•klc Bonham p Knowle\p eenore p • ., r It Ill s 1 t 0 • 0 I 0 S I 1 2 ~ 0 0 1 '0 0 0 ~ 0 2 0 .. 0 I 0 3000 I 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 4 I I 0 0000 ' 0 0 0 L.OS ANOE LES nr11111 l.Jlt)l'S 16 6 I 2 0 ~·" 414 2 M•let f S I I 'l Garvey lb 4 I 1 0 W.Cr•wfordrf 4 0 0 0 M.MoUPfl I 0 0 0 l.Ky2tl 0 0 0 0 C.ylll 4000 Ruuell SS S 0 1 1 Yff9trc S 0 0 0 Hootonp 3 I 1 0 I.Mph 0000 PIK lorell Pf' 0 0 0 0 Ma~llp 0 0 0 0 Wynnpfl 1 Cf 0 0 Totals OllU90 LosAnoeles 42 3 I l TotelS 42 S II S 002 000 010 ooo-3 001 110 000 002-S '" H • Elt aa SO 8onMm 'll3 49 kl>OWlfl 1 I 1 0 0 0 0 Dettore IL, J.l) n, 2 2 2 O I HootOfl t IJ l'lS Manl>all IW.~1) 3 I 0 0 I 1 WP-8o~m. T-l : 17. A~l.800. Sta r Sus p e nde d Asch,.less Yanks Tied by Spaniards CALI, Colombia (AP> -The United States, weakened by the suspension of its captain and best player, Peter Asch, tied Spain 4.4 Sunday in Group C waler polo competition at the World Aquatic Championships. In other games, Jtaly 6, Canada 4 ; Yugoslavia 7, Cuba 4; Hungary 11, Australia 5; Russia 13, Iran 2; West Germany 4, Bulgaria 3: Holland 5, Mexico 2; Romania 14, Colombia5. Asch and Alexandr Dulgushin of the Soviet Union were baMed Crom the two remaining pre- liminary rounds after a brawl at the end of the US-USSR game Saturday night which wound up in a 4-4 tie. The International Water Polo Committee, after a hearing, im- posed the two-game suspension. Asch apologized to the commjt- tee late Saturday night for his part in the fi ght, which occurred moments after the Soviet had ·tied the score at four with only five seconds left in the game. He said there were no hard feelings between him and Dulgushin. Peter Cu lino, coach of the Unit- ed States s quad, all from California. said, the tie with the Soviets "proves that we are the equal lo, if not superior to, the Russians. It proved we're in the top class of the world in water polo." The Russians are the Olympic champions. Without Asch on Sunday. Spain tied the game for good in the fourth quarter on Juan Jane's f ourtb goal. Jon Svendsen scored two goals for t he Americans and Jim Kruse Cex -UCI) and Peter Snugg scored one goal each. The top teams from each group move into the semifinals. Al this point, Spain has four points, the United States two, the Soviet Union one and Iran none. Spo.1;9ts in Brie f . OdJs Favor Rams; Title to Russian RENO -The Pittsburgh Steelers and the Los Angeles Rams are favored lo meet in next year's Super Bowl, according to odds posted by the Reno Turf Club. The defending world champion Steelers have been installed as 8-5 favorites to win the American Conference title, while the Rams are a 9·5 pick to win the National· Conference. Minnesota, 15·2, a picked second in the National Con· ference, while Oakland, 12·5, was picked as the American Con- ference runnerup. So"iet F irst CALI, Colombia -Irina Kallnina of the Soviet Union won J.be first gold medal of the World Aquatics Championships Sun- day, winning the women's spr- ingboard diving with 489.81 points. was stricken late Saturday. Four-lime USAC stock car champion Butch Hartman drove his Dodge to victory in the stock car race before running out of gas after taking the checkered flag. Terry Ryan's Chevrolet was . second. 23.8 seconds behind, with Bobby Allis on third in a Matador. Ofricials found it hard to believe Hartman was able lo run more than the last half of the race without a fuel stop, while others gassed up at least three times. Hartman said be coasted. across the finish line out oUuel. Co.,.o• Pa.t porae Armed Soldiers Guard Athletes Teammate Tatiana Volynkina was second with 473.37 points, and American Christine Loock took the bronze medal with 466.52 points. NEW YORK -Pele's injured left thigh has forced postpone- ment of a New York Cosmos ex- hibition tonight in St. Louis and has left up in the air the Brazilian super s tar's s tatus for the Cosmos' North, American Soccer League game against San Jose here Wednesday night. Prof. Julio Mazzei, Pele's ad· visor and trainer, said millionaire Cosmo suffered a puUed muscle and a bad bruise of the upper left thigh when he was tripped from behind early in the second half of a game at Toronto. CALI, Colombia <AP> -This sport.s·experienced city is taking no chances. deploying a heavy number of soldiers and policemen to protect some 700 swimmers and their delegates. When the s ports people or 39 rounlries began competition, the security measures intensified, from a veilelhprotect1oo ol the days of pracUcing. From Saturday on it was olive green and lcha.ki days. Thit1 country has been under a state oC siege for tOme weelts. To aomc ol lhe compet.ltors lhc display of men in uniform bas been a shock, for others it was something hardly noticing and still others probably have seen some relief that •'nothing wiJI happen here.•• Jorge Herrera, chairman of the second World Aquatic tCham- pionships, said Sunday that the display is a measure of precau- tion. ''Many will say there are too ·many soldiers. But what if something happens , .. on the other hand." he added, "if a low number ls displayed. and something happens. people will say we should have known bet- ter." The idea of another Mun.lch here is remote, but until last month student groups had rioted and the swimming organizaUon had to rush to get accommoda- tions ror the visitors when the students refused lo leave the dormitories during the summer vacation period. The delegations had to be housed in hotels and a seminary. The buses carry at least. one soldi.er or policeman -the 1 soldiers dressed in khaki and the policemen in ollve-greenfaUgues and while helmet and spats. The only incident so far was Friday night at the inaugural ceremoniea when a group ol persons began heckllne but were drowned out by the rnore than 50,000 people fathered for the event. Organliing committee charirman Herrera says he is ex- tremely happy with the way thin•• are aoln1 and hopes that the event will not see any inci· d~ta. FOfltl'f~iorlotls BROOKLYN, Mich. -A.J. Foyt swept past Tom Sneva on the 87th lap Sunday and sped to a S~-aecond victory in the In- dian a polis-type half or tbe $100,000 twin 200-mile race at Michigan International Speedway. ' F°"" dropped out ol the U.S. Auto Club stock car race, the second halt ot the double-header, after challeneing for the lead through 50 laps. Foyt then rushed olC lo Houston to vlsll hJa crtUcal· Jy ill dauahter, Terry L.Yon. who Pele remained in the game which the Toronto Metros woa: S p•ln Q-tlel BARCELONA, Spain -Spain moved into the final of the ~ pean Zone A Dav ls Cup tennis series Sunday, edging Romania J..2 at the Royal Barceloaa Tea- nls Club. Romanla·s No. 1 player, JUo Naatase. beat Manuel Orantea Spain's top player. 6-2. 6·2, 8-i I ' ~ l Saddleback EDITION Today's Closing .V. Sto ks VOL. 68, NO. 202, 2 SECTIONS, 22 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALI FORNI A MONDAY, JULY 21, 1975 TEN CENTS Ho1neowners An unexpected assessment tor "P.keep and lighting or their pnvate streets has Ranchwood Homeowners in El Toro up in enn~ and seeking a change to public street care. ~e tract, bounded by Serrano Ortve and Trabuco Road, is lfta!l8Jed b)'. a community as· 10C1ation wh1ch levies a monthly ree ot $9.42 per homeowner. This monU. residenl" received Cor the Cirst time a new assess· ment or $5.50 to cover street maintenance and lighting. "We want to know why we ha v e to p a y this , " s aid homeowner Anna Collins. "Further, we don't want private streets and we want to be accept· ed by the county in the public street system." Petitions asking for the changeover were signed by about Slippery Travelers .. Howl SO residents of the tract, which was finished last summer and has 100 homes. The petitions were sent to lhe Orange County Road Depart- ment, where Art Hoelderlin, sub- division engineer, said the mat· ter is being studied. "The county has approved private designation of streets in many tracts,'' Hoelderlin said. "I'm sure if this switch is ap- Young bodysurfers David Grothus (left) and Denny Cole slide along the shoulder of a crystal-clear Balboa peninsula wave Sunday afternoon. Denny, who is sliding right on the wave, has met up with David, who looks a Ii tUe surprised to see so· meone else on HIS wave. Plan Stymied Valley Trustees Mull lmurance Trustees of the Saddleback Valley Unified School District will try again tonight to get a de· dsion on a district insurance plan which stymied them al a special meeting last week. A meeting to hear from in- surance agents who want a chanee at the district's business last week ended with no action alter a s eries o r motions by various trustees died for a lack of seconds. hi bit. -Consideration of summer school busing routes. -Approval of the annual budget hearing for 8 p.m. Aug. 4 at Los Alisos Intermediate School, Mission Viejo. -Approval of a contract with Anaheim Convention Center for the 1976 all-district music festival. Viejo Club Safe Rifled Burglars wbo broke into the safe at the Mission Viejo Golf Club early today pocketed between $5,000 and $6,000, Orange County Sheriff's officers said. Officers said the theft from the office safe at the country club, 26742 Oso Parkway, was discovered about 2 a .m. when club of- ficials went to the office to depos itthenight'sreceipts. They said damage to the safe indicated the use of a crowbar. There was no evidence of forced entry. Other items scheduled for ac- tion or discussion al lhe 7 p.m . meeting are: -A resolution to borrow $6.5 million through the Orange Coun· ty supervisors lo meet payments for operating expenses until tax income for the current fiscal year is received. The loan would be repaid by April, 1976. Vallerga's Trial Under Way Today -Approval of bicentennial contests a nd the district 's participation in the 1976 Orange County Fair Bicentennial Ex· Bus Driver Charged With Manslaughter Irvine police obtained a misde- ineanor manslaughter complaint foday against Carolyn Conners, ~.the driver of a day camp bus involved in a fatal collision in ~orth Irvine June 23. By GARY GRANVILLE Of Ille O.lly Piiot st.ff VENTURA -Orange County Assessor Jack Vallerga wis in Superior Court here today pre· pared to defend himseU against seven criminal charge$. At mid-morning, Jack Kahill, Vallert:a's attorney, and Deputy Dist rict Attorney Michael Capizzi were meeting in cham- ben with Judge Robert L. Shaw to diseuss ground rules for what is expected to be a two week trial. · At issue is Vallerga's role in the sale of a computerized ap- praisal system to Spartanburg County, South Carolina. When indicUng the assessor the Orange County Grand Jury charged be was guilty of a con- flict of interest because he later accepted consulting feels related to the sale. The jury also charged his ac· ceptance of the consulting fees and expenses was embezzlement and grand theft. In interviews before the indict- ment was banded down, Vallerga pointed to state codes which specified that a public official may not consult with private firms. He pointed out the codes do not say one public official cannot perform consulting services for a fee on behalf of another public agency. That is expected to be the ma- jor issue in the trial that was transferred to Ventura County because of the vast amount of pre·trial publicity. The opening of Vallerga's trial today is the first round in what is expected to be his Jong legal bat- ti e to avoid conviction on criminal charges as well as acts of misconduct tbe Grand Jury charged him with in a separate <See VALLERGA, Page AZ} Over proved it would start the snowball rolling in getting many or the private designations changed." He said the road department will present an analysis of the situation to the road com- missioner within a week. Homeowners maintain they are paying twice for road and lighting services, since they also pay a County Service Area Six Street tax for other roads, lighting and park development. Mrs. Collins said most homeowners were not aware their streets were private until their purchase was well under way. She said she did not realize it until she signed escrow papers. The residents will meet al 8 o'clock tonight at the Sun and Sail Club, 24752 Toledo Way, El Toro to discuss the issue. Costs George Medrano, manager or the Lake Forest Two Master Homeowners Association serv- ing the Rancbwood Homes, stressed that the private designa- tion as well as the possible escalation of cost was clear io • papers all homebuyers are given. "l don't know bow the salesmen handle it. but 1 do know <See STREETS. Page A%) Soyuz Lands In Dust Cloud Apollo To Orbit 3 Days HOUSTON (UPI) -Russia's two Soyuz cosmonauts landed gently and triumphantly in a cloud of dust on a central Asian prairie today, carrying five Unit- ed States flags to symbolize their historic meeting in space with three Americans. The world could watch on television as Valeri Kubasov, 40, and Alexei Leonov. 41, emerged smiling from their scorched spaceship after it came to rest on its side in the middle of the wheat belt of Kazakhstan. Moscow con- trol said they were in exceUent health. "This is wonderful place," Kubasov said after he climbed from the Soyuz capsule and greeted rescuers with a bear bug. "It is a happy place of landing. I will remember it always.'' Leonov, obviously tired from his six days in space, staggered slightly when he emerged and said, "It was difficult, very dif. ficult. We are a bit shaky due to tiredness and lo happiness." U.S. astronauts Thomas Staf- ford, Vance Brand and Donald "Deke" Slayton remained in or- bit for three more days of scien- tific work. Their Apollo, 3,450 miles to the east at the time of the Soyuz landing, is due to return to a Pacific Ocean splashdown Thursday. The astronauts were asleep when their comrades returned to earth but later radioed con- gratulations. One of the Apollo experiments planned for today -a scan of the sky with an x-ray detector -was delayed because of trouble with the instrument. But the pilots went ahead with plans to make earth ovservations and measure dust-particles in the atmosphere. The Soyuz was eased to a gen- (See LANDING, l'ageA2} AD PAYS OFF; I 'SOLD BOAT' "An ad in the Daily Pilot really does pay off. I sold my boat.'' That's the success story told by the Huntington Beach man who placed this classified ad in the Daily Pilot: 16' OLASSPAR, w/75 HP Evinrude. No trlr. $775. Pri ply. XXX·XXXX If you have a boat to sell, call 642·5678. It only takes a few . words in the right place to make a sale. Along the Orange Coast, the right place is the Dally Pilot. \ SOYUZ lANDING AUA F~~--o,,NI{ cJea-'"-----' C:upia,, I cf'," --+---+ UPIT• ....... COSMONAUTS DOWN -This map shows the location of th~ landing site for the Soviet cos~onauts, who returned to earth early tcxlay, on the plains of central Siberia near Karaganda. 250-pound Machinist_ Held; Carney Beaten A six foot, five-inch, 250·pound Garden Grove machinist was jailed Sunday evening, charged $1 a Gallon For Gas, Says Sen. Jackson By United Press International Sen. Henry Jackson, (D· Wash.), predicts $1-a·gallon gasoline by 1976 and a catastrophic effect on the economy if President Ford goes ahead with a threatened veto to a bill extending price controls on domestic oil production. Jackson. in Tampa, F1a. to organize his Florida campaign for next year's Democratic pre- sidential primary , told a news conference Sunday that a Ford veto of the oil bill ·'could lead to $1 a gallon gasoline sometime in 1976," "I'm flabbergasted," Jackson said. "The President has thrown down the gauntlet. It will be catastrophic. It will have a de- vastating ecrect on the economy. I predict it will bring the economy to a new bottom.'' Meanwhile, Sen. Edward Ken- nedy, CD-Mass.}, has proposed up to $46 billion in tax cuts next year to counter "recessionary shocks" that might follow an oil price in· crease. Kennedy wants to extend the $1.S billion in this year's reduc- tions for small business, increase by $4.5 billion this ye.ar's tax cuts for individuals and increase by as much as $40 billion reductions for consumers to offset the ef- fects of a possible oil price jump. wilh brutally beating a partially deaf carnival game con · cessionaire at the Orange County Fair in Costa Mesa. David 0. McBride, 19, of 13272 Blue Spruce St., was booked on a charge of assault and battery following the incident in which. his companions allegedly tried to tear down a carnival booth. John P . Lafferty, 23, of San Diego, was treated at Costa Mesa Memorial Hospital for facial lacerations and advised to seek X-rays for possible head injuries, police said. Investigators said they arrived at the carnival midway to check a report of a fight about4:45 p.m. and found Lafferty sprawled on lhe ground, bleeding profusely Crom the nose and moulh. . The victim's employer, Steve Brugoto, o!Smead's Ferry, N.C., claimed Lafferty spotted the bulking youth's group of compa- nions trying to steat a stuffed animal toy from an adjacent booth's prizes and intervened. McBride, however, claimed the partially disabled carny worker had struck his female companion in the face and he re. taliated to protect her. Investigators said lhat as a re- sult of the row, McBride's group of friends started to demolish one of the carnival concessions before police arrived. The incident was one of the few which marred tbe lo.day fair, which ended Sunday. Or:•~;a:-~ Weatller Issuance of the complaint and a citation for failure to yield the right-of-way was delayed to give the Santa Ana Heights woman an bppOrtunity to retuperate from Jnjurles she suUered in the }Wugh Riders Day Camp bus ac- cident, according to police Lt. );ugene Norden. John Ramming, 6, of Jrvir.e waa killed and 11 at.hen lnjured Jn the collision be.tweea the camp but ~ a gravel t~ at the in- tttseet1on of Barranca and Jef. .JFK Feared AssaSsin's Target Night and morning low clouds but sunny after· noons Tuesday. LitUe tem· perature ch ange. Highs from the 70s at the beaches to the low 80s inland. Lows tonight 62 to 65. frey Roads. I Boy, 14, Drowns RIVERSlDE (AP> -A mem· 'tally retarded you\b who couldn 'l twlm has drowned in the Colorado Rl ver near the RJviera State Campcround despite lhe ef· fbrts of bJa lather to save him, a\IUlorltlea 1ald. A sberUf's •l>Oknsnan ~entlfl~ the victim • 14-yur-old Guy Lee Walker (I( Beaumont. WELLFLEET, Mass. (AP> - President John F. Kennedy said two years before his uausin•· tion that be feared attempt. to kill foreign leaders would make him a tar1et. a former aide says. The aide, Richard Goodwin, quoted Kenned.)' as telling hJm ln November 1961: "Jr we get lnto tba\ ki~ of ~Ing, we'll all be w:.eu.f"~ Goodwift , reached tod1y at his summ tlome here, conflrmed • Wasblngton Post account in which be said the subject or as· sassinaUon tlrst came up in a convenaUon Kennedy had wltb a newspaper reporter. The reporter asked the former president bow he would feel if the United States auaaainated Prem.let Fidel Castro of Cuba, and .Sded that he tbougbt it was a bad idea. Kennedy replied, "I'm glad you feel that way because sug. REPORT URGES NEW RfK DEATH PROBE. A5 ,.ilona to lbat eftect. keep com· tn1 to me, •d 1 believe very st.ron•b' that tbe United States should not be a party t.o poUUcat assaaslnaUon ... Goodwin. an adviser on Lalin I American aff alrs, said Kennedy did not tell hlm who made the ~uggestions. Goodwin said forme r Secretary of State Of!an Rusk alto expressed rears about as- s&Qioation after Dictator R.atael Trojillo of the Dominican !Upubllc was 'kllled on May ll~ 1961. Goodwin said be la ccmvlnced that Kennedy did not autborize plots aQalnsl Castro. •'There la ool oae plece or evidence that demonstrates anythlna like ~at ~t au:· he said. Meanwhile, Johll J. McCloy, a member or t.be Warren Com- mission that investigated the 1963 uuai11adon o( President Kennedy. says be is convinced. Lee Harve')' 01,,ald Kted elooe. "I went down there (to Dallas) ~ well. not cioavinced. but thiiitnr "e"' mU1t have been a con1piracy." llcCloy. 80. said ~ay in a tetev\skin ln· tervlew. , ... Jl WU a lt.rallp l«t ol a thtni ... he continued. "But wbtn we got down there, I couldn't fmd adl connect.ion.'" MeCloy dtlcr1be4 as "Just non· sense" theortes t.bat there was a complraey involved INSIDE TODAY For tM firlt Umt, the West boa rf!Ftuntotin in the Na- ttonczl Political Women's CaMcul. Two Orange Coast women notO hold natioftal ol· fica. See P.O{le 81 . l•~x ., ' ) • £11 OAllY PILOT · SB DMVSeu New Hours The State Department or Motor Ve hicles will remwn open every Thurs day from 8 a.m . to 6 .30 p.m. in order to better serve the public, OMV Director Herman SWas announced. All state otrices will re main open the extra one and ooe.balf hours on Thursday. The pilot project wtll run until Christmas week.· Sillas said. Normal service hours are 8 a .m . to s p.m. Mondaythrougb Fnday. 3 Marines D ie From Auto Crash Three Ca mp Pendleton Marines have died as the result ot a headon collision al the base at which former President Richard M . Nixon personally directed rescue efforts. Nixon and his party consisting of daughter, Tricia, her husband Edward Cox and Secret Service men happened upon the fatal mis· h ap about two minutes after it OC· cured Thursday evening. and before military police arrived at the scene. One Marine was dead at the scene. One was dead shortly after his arrival al the Camp Pendleton Naval Medical Center and the other died in the hospital about five hours after the acci· dent. The men were identified as Sgt Larry W. Grise. 24. of 343-A David A . Vandal, 28. o f Oceanside; and Cpl. Ramiro A Delgado. 20 of San Antonio. Texas. Cause of the accident was still under investigation today by military authorities. Nixon and his party were re· turning to his San Clemente home from the Camp Pendleton golf course when the cont.in.gent came upon the accident. Cox said the Secret Service agents intended to pass by the collision because their first con- cern was protecting Nixon. "But, the President saw the ac- cident and said right away 'Stop. stop the car,'" Cox told Associat- ed Press in telephone interview. • He said Nixon took charge al the scene <Jrdering Secret Service agents to call for a medivac helicopter and everyone worked at getting the two badly injured Marines from one of the cars. An ambulance helicopter is stationed at the medical center 3bout six miles from the scene of the collision on Las Pulgas Road, about three miles east of In- terstates. After the last victim was transported, Nixon turned lO the military investigator, Sgt. David Smith, and asked him if he bad everything under control. Sgt. Smith said yes, and Nixon said ''You've done a fine job'' and departed the area, a Marine Corps spokesman satd. lnde ntification Of Body Made Orange County Coroners office today identified a body found in the Orange area July 12 as that of Nancy Jamann Jiacoma, 27, whose last known address was in theSoulhgate·Lynwoodarea. Deputies additionally con· firmed that the partially clothed woman died of a drug overdose. They said she was dumped near Chapman A venue and Santiago Road shortly after she clied. ORANGE COAST • s DAILY PILOT ''" Ot.,.Of (o• t 041ly i:·1lot '<l•oth wn. "' • tYn fll"'-.\ ,~ N*"" p,,' ''rot>'•'""'" t1~ ... t ,, 1 .,, ( O..t4.r ''•t'~hV\•n'l (om" .. "" \• f'-H ·t• 1 11 .o ., .. f~•\l\it'd MonrH• tPlit'' 1tJ' f'r•tMv •oit (~'• Mllt\A Nf'WPG"'I bf' 1tCh Hvt'e1n~CW"1 tv"' ,, , rlun tA1n V•lh ~ lrv'nt. \Ad'1h t111 • \I-etlr" .n•t l.1oun.1 Hr~· h !.ov"' (.o.n1 /'I n.,, .. ,,.~,, ti f'd t1on • ,JUf)t; ~·o !.•l''"•·•t• "''' 1it1t1•• ,.,. pr1nflU·'' tNb'•~•f"lf\ pl.iUU 1\ ••• lY ~ I I •IY :ttrrt·t (.O\t.A Mt•a ( al1forn1• ?ltr1J• Robert N Weed Pr""'°'"' •f'WI P\,bh~r Jack R Curle y \ltc,. Pr1\1cte,,t 4n0 "-f\f'41 M.4t\otvi-t Thomas Kcl.'vll Editor 1 f'lomas A. Murptifn(' _,..o,nq Edllor Charles H Loo<. Richard P Ndll A hl\l•nt ~"1ftO{O"•tW' S..ddlebAck Valley Office .S70• • • P•t ll•••t ~" C>~~"'(W4f OtMr Of flus "9\ ... -.. ))O*f\IJ\jly!,trHI t w-1 6*«11 Jl)) N~~'I ~•MO ...,.,.,,._.~ k•Cll 11•1\ ""'"'fl 8'1ulrvaro """""' ... , ....... c,,.,_, •• sc ... 1 T .. fphOIM C7t4) '42~S71 C~sslfitd Advertising .,.M,71 .. dcll•~O Yf<flr(N-()lto1" 511-4310 Jf'Om .... Clo,.,...nl~ 4'S·0630 Mond!y1 July21. 197& No Pe~· . lsra~I, Egypt . . rDeny Agreement By United Press lntematloaaJ Israel hinted today in state· menlS by government officials and through its newspapel"S and caclio that the Israeli and Egyp. tian positions on a new interim peace settlement in Sinai were narrowing towards agreement. But both Israeli and Egyptian E'ro• Pap 1\J LANDING. • • tie landing at 3:51 a.m. POT by a big parachute and the cushioning of four rockets fired a few feet off the ground. T he thrust from these rockets kicked up much of the dust. The Soyuz came down only six rl)iles from its bullseye 33 miles from the town of Arkalyk. The site was 310 miles northwest of the Baikonur Cosmodrome from which the Cosmonauts rocketed Tuesday. Television cameras a board two helicopters followed the big orange and white parachute and the capsule swaying below it for five minutes before the landing, described as a "thumpdown" by U.S. officials. It was the first telecast of the end of a Soviet spaceflight. Three hours after landing, the cosmonauts arrived at the Cosmodrome and thanked engineers and technicians who prepared their rocke l and spaceship for flight. ··w e are grateful to them for their vast work," Kubasov said before he and Leonov went by bus to the hotel "Cosmonaut" where they also st ayed before launch. Leonov. an artist as well as veter<in space pilot, said, .. Mother Earth look us in its fold. There is much greenery here and the skies are blue." Russia's leaders quickly radioed congratulations to the spacemen and praised the joint project as a major step in cementing peace and furthering cooperation between the two s uperpowers. L eonov and Kubasov replied in a . special message to Russia's officials: "In this space flight, important for the cause of peace and pro- gress of all the peoples of the world, we were inspired by the high assessment of the work of scientists. designers, workers, cosmonauts and the warm words of greeting by Leonid Brezhnev. "The crew of t.he ship is ready to fulfi,ll new assignments of the Motherland.·· * * * government. sources denied that u final agreement had been re· ached. The Beirut newspaper Al Anhwar reported !n a dispatch from Cairo that all major dis· pules bad been settled and lhal there was general agreement in principle on a new three-year Middle East peace plan which the Uni.led States would s upervise w ilb sophisticated electronic early warning de· vices. A government official in Jerusalem said Israel is past the stage of seeking clarifications from Egypt on a new troop withdrawal line in the desert and is waiting to hear from Cairo whether it accepts the n e w Israeli proposals trans mitted Sunday. The lalest Israeli proposals were transmitted to Egyptian Pres ident Anwar Sadat and he ml't today with two government officials to study them. He was expected to announce Egyptian acceptance -or refusal -in a major policy s peech Tuesday. The Isr aeli national radio-quot· ed ••Jerusalem circles" as say. ing lhere was "no foundation" to the Al Anh war report that final agreement had been reached. Egyptian government sources dismissed the Beirut report as "pure and unfounded specula· tion. ·· The well·informed Tel Aviv newspaper Ha'aretz said the Israeli proposals transmitted to Egypt have received the support of the United States and, in a dis· patch from Washington, said U.S. Ambassador Herman F . Eilts had bee n instructed to favorably recommend the pro- posals to Sadat. F ront Page A l VALLERGA accusation. Along with Rep. Andrew Hinshaw, Vallerga's name was added to an indictment that · charged employes in the as- sessor's office with illegally cam· paigning on Hinshaw's behaH in 1972. Those charges will be subject or a separate trial. Additionally, Vallerga must answer lo five counts of miscon- duct stemming from the Gr and Jury's accusation. 'Cloud of Dust' As Soyuz Lands By HARRY F. ROSENTHAL SPACE CENTER, Houston (AP > -Americans come down with a splash. With Russians it's more like s plat! Heroes of space and international chumminess they may be. Dignified, their landing isn't. · Soviet Mission Control, monitoring today's return of Soyuz cosmonauts Alexei Leonov and Valeri Kubasov, called their near-target thumpdown "a soft landing." Obviously, soft is a relative term. . THE SOYUZ CAPSULE DRI Fl'ED THROUGH the sky, suspended from a single parachute girdled in red and white over an area reminiscent of western Kansas in the Dust Bowl days. The leatureless plain below spun by as helicopter- mounted cameras broadcast a Soviet landing live (or the first time -not only internationally, but also for tbe Russian people. Television showed the last five minutes of Soyuz' 2~-million-mile IB.~~}iJ~.st as it had the ( J T!te capsule_. bal! 0 ' NEWS ANALYSI S the f1rst·ever mterna- tional spaceship called Apollo-Soyuz. now was nearing the ground. It was partly cloudy over Kazakhstan, a wheat growina re- gion. THE SOIL LOOKED ROILED. NOT furrowed, like sand dunes. Indeed, the landing site was at the edge of the Russian steppes. From space, the earth looked inviting, blue and brown illld white agaiAst the blackness or inlinity. Here, on the Russian plain, terr a firma looked blah. Down, down, the capsule drifted. Suddenly there at:ose a fearsome cloud of dust, com· pletely obscuring the manbullt meteor. When it cleared, the spacecraft looked like an acorn tylnl'On lls side, t01sed Crom an invisible, giant oak. WITIUN 30 SECONDS, MEN CAME runnlos. The hatch was opened. They helped oul, ll~l Kubasov, then Leooov. The cosmonauts embraced . "Alexei Leonov and VaJeri Kubasov fell well,'' sald Moscow Mission Control. "The OJibl procram of the manned spacecraft Soyus 19, t.be jolilt American Soyuz. ApoUo program, w u fully perlormed.'' Thursday the three ApoJlo astronauts wlll speed · lhroush lhe i kies and be dumPed lnlo t.be Pacific near Hawall, a landing equally undJgnlfied . THE COSMONAUl'S WE•E Pf<ZED off the around like a ripe potato. The astronauts are fished out like tlotsam. It seems there ougbl to be a cl&Hier way to wind up such adve.nlure5 or eJCplontJon. But then, Christoph« Columbus dJctn 't ex~ a brm band either. Weddin-g Set Switch for Chriatina . ATHENS (U Pf) -Christina Onassis, one of the world's richest women, will marry Alexandros An- dreadis, 30, youngest son of Greek banker, shipowner and business tycoon Stratis Andreadis, a member of the Andreadis how;ehold said today. The announcement came as a surprise. She had been expected to marry Peter Goulandris, rT, scion of another Greek shipping family and her constant com- panion for months. He was at her side when her fa th er was buried in March on the family island of Skorpios. The wedding will take place Tuesday in a sub- urban Athens church, the family spokesman said. Christina, 24, who was married briefly at the age of 21in1971 to Joseph Bolker, 47, a Los Angeles real estate dealer , promised Onassis before he died she would marry Goulandris, sources close to the OnasSis family said. Four Plane Victims Still Listed 'Serious' Victims of a Friday night plane crash in hilly Anaheim territory that killed the pilot were listed in improved but still serious condi· lion al Canyon General Hospital today. Army Chief Warrant Officer Thomas Gambrill, 35. stationed at Fort Ord, was killed when the Piper Cherokee Six slammed in- to Nohl Ranch Road. Investigators said the plane 'Mattress' MusiccdSet At SaddkOOck Student actress Beverly Sparks is cast in the lead role of "Once Upon a Mattress," a con- temporary "Princess and the Pea" fairy tale fantasy to be staged at Saddleback College Ju. ly 24-26 and Aug. l a nd 2. Performances will begin night- ly at 8 p.m . in Building Ron cam· pus. Tickets are priced at $2 each. C<k..Starring in the musical are student actors Gerry Littleton. Larry Prawdzik, Jill Van de Verre, Colleen Clark. Glen Vec- chione, Doug Le Clair, Mark Wtuting, and Ron C~deleria. The family musical plays un- der the direction of H. Wynn Pearce with student Heidi Heide as stage m anager. Glen Fick directs lhe chorus and Peggy ·Griffith-Mains is in charge of choreography. For reserv(\tions, ·call 831-9700 or 495-4950 Ext. 263 between 8 a.m. and 5 p.m . weekdays. lost power and theorized it was possible Gambrill descended out of an overcast, briefly mistaking Nohl Ranch Road for the Orange County Airport runway. A similar plane crash several years ago in which a small com· muter airliner crashed on the Newport Freeway near Dyer Road was blamed on visual pilot error in heavy fog. Hospital officials said today that survivors Mrs. Lucille Garn· briU, 25, wife of the pilot, Steven Jensen, 12, and Jay Barto, 15, both o( Palo Alto, and Steven Spleen, 29, of Menlo Park, were all in serious condition. They had been listed in critical condition following admission to the new Anaheim hospital Friday night. The four survivors were pulled from the wreckage by Anaheim Fire Department personnel from a station less than a half ·mile away. Firemen heard the impatt of the crash and al first believed it was an auto accident. Several witnesses looked up when the plane's engine coughed and sputtered and then watched the aircraft on a flight from the San Francisco Bay area to Orange County Airport plummet to earth. Sp ecial Session Set for Trustees Trustees of the Saddleback Community College District will meet in special session tonight to review the college's proposed $16.3 million publication budget. The budget session is scheduled for 7:30 p.m. in room :212 o( the college library, 28000 Marguerite Parkway, Mission Viejo. '>--. ·OC Fair Cleanup Begins_ Only the echo of whoo~ and shrieks of delight and dismay from scary carnival rides, the lit· ter of trampled cotton cand>: con- es and the memories remrun ~<> day at 'the Orange County Fair- grounds in Costa Mesa. Gates closed at 10 p.m. Sunday after admitting a steady stream or humanity that numbered" 222,38.45 persons according to the, toll kept by the turnstiles. Fair Publicity Director Peggy Bayless said the 1975 attendance was up by about 10,000 persons more than the previous year. ' Credit was given to weather' which was temperate and. sparkling during much or the- :f air's 10-day run-neither too hot nor too cool-and the overall plannjng and staging of the giant: exposition. : One other element may have. contributed to the Orange COunty- Fair's success in addition to a · one-night stand by comedian Bob: ' Hope that attracted well over. 10,000 persons, more than the. total fair attendance on several; days. • The lair's theme was "The· Good Old Days," and fair pro-. moters theorize this influenced a· large number of Orange County. residents or visitors to attend. • "Many people returned again~. and again," remarked Mrs. Bay- less, adding that the 1975 fair had. literally loo many things to see· and do all io just one day's vi.sit. From Page Al STREETS • • • that a final subdivision public re-: port must be given to th~ homebuyer to road," Medrano said. The report. dated May 1, 1974: stated that "expenses of oper~ lion are difficult to estimate in~ itially and even if accuratelr t:'Sti mated t e nd to increase sub- stantially with price increases and the increased age of the facilities." He said he knew the additional assessm ent for road upkeep would come about. "but we didn't know when or how much ... Occidental Land, Inc .. de~ veloper of the tract, could hetv~ levied the assessment from Ute time the first home was sol~ Medrano said, but instead de· cided to wait until the start of the current fiscal period. "So Occidental has been pay; ing for it until now," Medrano said. He said an engineering firm hired to estimate what the road assessment would be was far of( in its prediction. "We still can't figure out how the engineering report could have been so far off," he said. . . . ,. Manners gives you up to a s1,soo tax deduction this year. •• . .. AND EVERY YEAR UNTIL YOU RETIRE! NOW YOU CAN BUILD A TAX SHELTERED RETIREMENT FUND AT MARINERS, WITH "IRA •' -THE INDIVIDUAL RE· TIREMENT ACCOUNT. Mariners Individual Retirement Account is a personal tax-sheltered retirement plan. "IRA" was devel- oped by Congress to give you an effect ive way to bur Id your own retire- ment fund. You can save as much as $1500 or 1 5% of your wages, whichever is less, and you r savings will be a tax deduc- tion during your working years. If your spouse works, your combined tax-sheltered savings can be as much as $3000 per year. Come in to Mariners and start your own Individual Ret irement Account. You'll be saving tax dollars now and building a much brighter future. For more information, come In or call any one of our convenient locations. HERE"S HOW fAST VOUR MONEY GROWS IN A MARINERS .. IRA .. ACCOUNT lnd1v1dual Rtllrtmenl Accounts artt prfnntly urning 1 ', -.. per yttar whvn placed in a 6 year c•rt1f1ca1t Your annual \llfld IS incrHstd to a big 8 Q6•., when •flltrtst Is add11d to ,,,. account balanc. and compoundfd da•ly W•lll • maximum 1na1v1dua1 coritr1bu11011 01 S 1500 Hell year, 1rert's how your money w•ll grow WITH TAX WITHOUT EX TA A SHELTERED TAX MONEY IRA SHELTERED FROM TAX AFTER Pl.AN Pl.AN DEFERRAi. 5 yr•. $ 9,510 $ 6,730 $ 2.780 10 yrs 23.540 15,750 7,790 20 yrs. 74,640 44,080 30,560 30 yrs. 1~,550 95.030 90.520 ·Above ••our•a trt bHed on 2!1 o income brac~I. Fe<)ertl r90u1111on• r11qulrt 1ubllant1al penalties for urly 1Nlll'tdrawa111 Ir~ ~·••f!Qlf llCICOVllta .llie\. Mariners Savings \~I and Loan 1\ ·. iation \~• ,..w,.rt~ (Moln Olfi<•) Hew,.rt hoch {8oy•lde Cent•t) 102• loytlde Or. (71 •)6A2·•000 lo911n• hech 310 Glenn.yr• St. (71 .. ) .. 94.7506 (OPENING $00N) helhech (le11ure Wotld) l e vetty Hilla lo• A111•'" 380 So. le.,erly Or. (Opp.Mt. Slnol Hoapllal)· ('113)"3·3000 87•71eYtrlyllvd, : 1 $1S Weatcl1fl Or. ('1•) 642 •000 , 13810 Seal leoth llvd. (113) 599·76'6 (213)657·"" l ( ·f . l ' ' Irvine EDITION VOL. 68, NO. 202, 2 SECTIONS, 22 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA T oday's Closing N.V. Stoeks MONDAY, .l\JL Y 21, 1975 TEN CENTS h·vine Awaits Zoning A1nendment Irvine's nine.month-old moratorium on commercial of. lice buildings in the Irvine In· dus trial Complex will become permanent if the 13th amend· menl lo lh~ area's zoning is ap- proved. The omce butlding ban in the research and light industry sec- tion or the complex south of the San Diego Freeway is the main feature of the amendment. The zone amendment was in· 1lliated b)' city]>lanoers. It wtll bt considered at a public hearing before tbe Irvin"e Planning Com· mission tonight al 7 : 30 p.m. al ci· ty hall, 4201 C11mpus Drive. No action is expected at tonight's bearing, sit.id Assistant Planning Director Claudette Donatella. The matter ls set primarily for discussion, with a vote to come Aug. 4 al the earliest, she said . Present zoning for the in· dustrial area allows constnJction of oUlce buildings if developers obtain conditional use permit.S. But a n urgeflcy ordinance declaring a moratorium on office building was passed last year because of fears that a large number of permits would be sought. lo city council discussions, the main objection ta office buildings is that they generate more traffic than do industrial buildings, ac- cording to city traffic Informa- tion. ''The complex traffic condi· lions are pretty poor at peak hours," said Miss Donatella, re- ferring lo statistics showing that nearly half the city's traffic acci· dents occur in the industrial area. The provision allowing office buildings was put into the 12th re· vision of the industrial complex zoning ordinance, she noted. Four permits were granted. Two went to telephone company billing offices and a third to a telephone exchange, all or which generated relatively little traffic. The issue heated up when the Alex Robertson Company asked lo build an office park on land held by Dana Labs. The permit was granted despite protests by the Irvine Company that the dev· elopment would add lo traffic congestion. Subsequently. the agreement between Robert.Son and Dana Labs refl tbrougb. The 1.0oing lapses in September. The council then passed the or· dinance barring permits until the whole industrial complex traffic situation could be reviewed. The ordinance was ext.ended for eight months in February. A s sassination JFK 'Feared' lroirw Growth Pattern Told During the 1975 calendar year, Irvine's population is expected to grow 24 per- cent, according to Assis· tant Planning Director Claudette Donatella. Soyuz Lands He Was Target The new figures, based on projects in progress, ap- proved zoning and applica· tions for zone changes, pre- dl(,1. a population of 40,281 by Jan.1, 1976. Al the first of this year. the population was32,459. In Dust Cloud WELLFLEET. Mass. (AP) - President John F . Kennedy said two years before hi s assassina- tion that he feared attempts to kill foreign leaders would make him a target, a former aide says. The aide, Richard Goodwin, quoted Kennedy as telling him in November 1961 : "If we gel into that kind of thing, we'll all be targets." Goodwin, reached today al his summer home here, confirmed a Washington Post account in which he said the subject of as· sassination firs t came up in a conversation Ke nnedy had with a newspaper reporter .. The reporter asked the former president how he would feel if the United States assassinate d Premier Fidel Castro of Cuba, and added that he thought it was a bad idea. Kennedy replied, "l 'm glad you feel that way because sug- REPORT URGES NEW RFK DEATH PROBE, AS gestions to that effect keep com· ing to mf;, and I believe very strongly that the Upited States s hould not be a party to political assassination.'' Goodwin, an adviser on Latin American affairs, said Kennedy did not tell him who made the suggestions. G o o d W'i n s a i d r Qr m e r Secretary of State Dean Rusk also expr essed fears about as· Sjissination after Dictator Rafael Trujillo of the Domin ican Republic was killed on May 31, 1961. Goodwin said he is convinced that Kennedy did not authorize plots against Castro. ' ·'There is not one piece of evide nce th al demons trates anything like that at all," he said. Meanwhile, John J . McCloy, a member of the Warren Com- mission that investigated the 1963 assassination of President Kennedy, says he is convinced Lee Harvey Oswald acted alone. "I went down there (to Dallas) convinced , well, not convinced, but thinking there must have been a conspiracy," McCloy, 80, said Sunday in a television in· Irvine Play Program Shut The city-sponsored summer playground program at Turtle Rock School in Irvine has been closed because or apparent lack or interest. An average o( six children a day have taken part in the pro- gram. according to Community Services Director Paul Brady. "Apparently, the Turtle Rock community does not desire to have a playground program. The staff does not Intend to provide programs if they are not de- sired," said Brady. YearlJooks In For VniHigh After a lengthy delay by the publishing company, yearbooks (or the 197S 11raduat.ing class of University High School in Irvine have arrlved. Copies or the Odyssey lb1t have been ordered will be ~· trtbuted to graduates at • party at the bJCh school Friday rrom 10 a .m. to 10 p .m .... Two ba.nd.s have been blred to provide llve music. AddiUonal copies or the yearbook are avalloble on a fint come. lint. eervedbaah. terview. "It was a strange sort of a thing," be continued. "But when we got down there, I couldn't find any connection." McCloy described as ··1ust non· sense" theories that there was a conspiracy involved in Kennedy's death. By 1981, the ~ity should grow to 103,856, she said. Vallerga's Trial Und~r Way Today By GARV GRANVILLE Of tM 0•11'1' Pllot5Uff VENTURA -Orange County Assessor Jack Vallerga was in Superior Court here today pre· pared lo defend hiJ11SelI against seven criminal charges. ' At mid-morning, Jack Kahill, Vallerga's attorney, and Deputy Dis trict Attorney Michael Capizzi were meeting in cham· bers with Judge Robert L. Shaw lo discus~ ground rules for what is expected to be a two week trial. At isaue is VaUerga's role in the sale of a computerized ap· praisal system to Spartanburg County. South Carolina. When indicting the assessor the Or ange County Grand Jury chareed he was guilty of a con· flicl or interest because he later accepted consvlting feels related to the sale. The jury also charged his ac· ceptance or the consulting fees and expenses was embezzlement and grand theft. In interviews before the indict- ment was handed down, Vallerga pointed lo slate codes which specified that a public official may not consult with private firms. He pointed out the codes do not say one public off~ial cannot perform consulting services for a fee on behalf or another public agency. That is expected lo be the ma· jor issue in tbe trial that was <See VALLERGA, Page A2) Wedding Set Switc~ for Christina · · ATHENS (UPI) -Christina Onassis, one of the world's richest wolben, will marry Alexandros An· dread.is, 30, youngest son of Greek banker, shipowner and business tycoon Stratis Andreadis, a member of the Asidreadis household said today. The announcement came as a surprise. She had been expected to marry Peter Goulandris, 27, scion of another Greek shipping family and her constant com· panion for months. He was at her side when her father was buried in March on the family island of Skorpios. The wedding will take place 'Buesday in a sub· urban Athens church, the family spokesman said. Christina, 24, who was married briefly at the age of 21 in 1971 to Joseph Bolker, 47, a Los Angeles real estate dealer, promised Onassis before he died she would marry Goulandris, sources close to the Onassis family said. Slipper.g Tra"elers I Apollo To Orbit 3 Days HOUSTON (U PI> -Russia's two Soyuz cosmonauts landed gently and triumphantly in a cloud of dust on a central Asian prairie today, carrying five Unit· ed States flags to symbolize their historic meeting in space with three Americans. The world could watch on television as Valeri Kubasov, 40, and Alexei Leonov, 41 , emerged smiling from their scorched spaceship after it came to rest on its side in the mid die of the wheat belt of Kazakhstan. Moscow con- trol said they were in excellent health. "This is wonderful place," Kubasov said after he climbed from the Soyuz capsule and greeted rescuers with a bear hug. "Il is a happy place or landing. I will remember it alway~." Leonov, obviously tired from his six days in space, staggered slightly when he emerged and said, ''It was difficult, very dif. ficuJt. We are a bit shaky due to tiredness and to happiness." U.S. astronauts Thomas Staf- ford, Vance Brand and Donald "Deke" Slayton remained in or- bit for three more days of scien· tific work. Their Apollo, 3,450 miles lo the east at the time of the Soyuz landing, is due lo return lo a Pacific Ocean splashdown Thursday. The astronauts were asleep when their comrades returned lo earth but later radioed con· gralulations. One or the Apollo experiments planned for today -a scan of the sky with an x-ray detector -was delayed because of trouble with the instrument. But the pilots went ahead with plans to make earth ovservations and measure dust particles in the atmosphere. The Soyuz was eased to a gen- (See LANDING, Page A.2) voJng bodysurfers David Grothus (left) and Denny Cole slide along the shouldet' of ;11ci;,ystal-clear Balboa peninsula w.Ve Sunaay afternoon. Denny, who is slldina right on the wave, bas met up with David. who looks a lltUe surprised to see so- mepnc else oo 1ns wave. . . \ \ SOYUZ LAN DINO AHA UPI Te......,_ COSMONAUTS DOWN -This map shows the location of the landing site for the Soviet cosmonauts, who returned to earth early today, on the plains of central Siberia near Karaganda. Israel and Egypt Near Peace Accord? By United Press International Israel hinted today in stale· me.nts by gov~rn ment officials and through its newspapers and radio that the Israeli and Egyp- tian positions on a new interim peace settlement in Sinai were narrowing towards agreement. But both Israeli and Egyptian government sources denied that a final agreement had been re· ached. The Beirut n ewspaper Al Anhwar reported in a dispatch from Cairo Ural all major dis· pules had been settled and that there was general agreement' in principle on a new three-year Middle East peace plan which the United States w o uld supervise with sophisticated Bus Driver Charged With Manslaughte r Irvine police obtained a misde· meanor manslaughter complaint today against Carolyn Conners. 23, the driver of a day camp bus involved in a fatal collision in North Irvine June 23. Issuance or the complaint and a citation for failure lo yield the right-of-way was delayed lo give the Santa Ana Heights woman an opportunity to recuperate from injuries she s uffered in the Rough Riders Day Camp bus ac- cident, according to police Lt. Eugene Norden. John Ramming, 6, or Irvine was killed and 11 others injured in the collision between the camp bus and a gravel truck at the in· tersection of Barranca and J ef· frey Roads. AD PAYS OFF; 'SOLD BOAT .. An ad in the Daily Pilot really does pay of!. I sold my boat." That's the success story told by the Huntington Beach man who placed tbia classified ad in the Dally Pilot: 18' GLASSPAR. wns HP Evtnrude. No trlr. $775. Pripty.UX·UU l! you have a boat to sell, call &12·5678. It only lakes a few words lo tbe. ri&ht place to make a sale. Alon1 lhe 0J'8Dle eout. the rlpt place is lhe Dally Pilot. electronic early warning de· vices. A govern ment official in J erusalem said Israel is past the stage of seeking clarifications from Egypt on a new troop withdrawal line in the desert and is wailing to bear from Cairo whether it accepts the new Israeli proposals trans mitted Sunday. The. latest.. Israeli. proposals were transmitted to Egyptian President Anwar Sadat and he met today with two government officials to study them. He was expected to announce Egyptian acceptance -or refusal -in a major policy speech Tuesday. The Isr:aeJi ~atioQ.al radio qµot- ed "Jerusalem circles" as say- ing there was "no foundation'" to the Al Anhw ar report that final agreement had been reached. Egyptian government sources dismissed the Beirut report as "pure and unfounded specula· tion." The well-informed Tel Aviv newspape r Ha'aretz said the Israeli proposals transmitted to Egypt have received the support of the United States and, in a dis- patch from Washington, said U.S. Ambassador Herman F. Eilts bad been instructed td favorably recommend the pr<>· posals lo Sadat. <See MIDEAST, P ageA.2) Or::<JJ:•t Weatlaer .Night and morning low clouds but sunny after- noons Tuesday. Little tem· perature change. Highs from the 70s at the beaches lo the low 80s inland. Lows tonight 62 to 65. INSIDE TODA\" F'or the first time, the Wesi baa rtpreaentation in the No tionol Political Women '• Caucui. Two Orange COO$t women now hold notional oJ flcts. Set P09e BJ. • • .1\1' DAILY Pll.OT Grove Man U~ld J ' Carny Worker I Beaten at ·Fair A six foot. five-inch, 250-pound Garden Grove machinist was jailed Sunday evenm., char1ed with brutally beating a partially d eaf carniva l game con >cessionaire at the Orange County Fair in Costa Mesa. David 0 . MeBndc, 19, ol 13272 Blue Spruce St., was booked Ob a charge of assault and battery following the incident in whk b hi5 companion! allegedly trl~ to tear down a carnival booth. John P. Lafferty, 23, or San Diego, was treated at Costa Mesa Me morial Hospital for faci~J lacerations and advised to seek X-rays for possible head injuries, police sa.ict. Investigators said they arrived at the carnival midway to check a report of a fight about4:45 p.m. and found Lafferty sprawled on the ground, bleeding profusely from the nose and mouth. The victim's employer. Steve Brugoto, of Smead's Ferry, N.C .. claimed Lafferty spotted th e bulking youth's group or compa- nions trying to stew a stuffed animal toy from an adjacent booth's prizes and intervened. McBride, howe ver, claimed the partially disabled carny worker had struck his female companion in the face and he re- taliated to protect her. Fro• Page Al VALLERGA transferred lo Ventura County because of the vast amount of pre-trial publicity. The opening of Vallerga's trial today is the first round in what is expected to be his long legal bat- tle to avoid conviction on criminal charges as well as acts of misconduct the Grand Jury charged him with in a separate accusation. Along with R ep. Andrew lfinshaw, Valler.ga's name was added lo an indictment that charged employes in the as- sessor's oto~e with illegally cam- paigning on Hinshaw's behalf in 1972. Those charges will be subject of a separate trial. • Additionally, Vallerga must answer to five count.a of miscon- duct s temming from the Grand .Jury's accus ation. 'Mattress' MiuictdSet At Sadtlle"back Student actress Beverly Sparks is cast in the lead role of "Once Upon a Mattress," a con- temporary "Princess and the Pea" fairy tale fantasy to be staged at Saddleback College Ju- ly 24-26 and Aug. 1 and 2. Performances will begin night- ly at 8 p.m . in Building Ron cam- pus. Tickets are priced at S2 each. Co-starring in the musical are student actors Gerry Littleton, Larry Prawdzik, Jill Van de Verre, Colleen Clark, Glen Vec- chione, Doug Le Clair, Mark Whiting, and Ron Candeleria. The family musical plays un- der the direction of H. Wynn Pearce with student Heidi Heide as slage manager. Glen Fick directs the chorus and Peggy Grirrith-Mains is in charge of choreography. For reservations. call 831-9700 or 49$-41950 Ext. 263 between 8 a .m. ands p.m. w r ORAi •·J!11•h ~~;~~~~:\·'r .. r~;~. ~;~.~~ .. ,,.. {M " Pu«M•Jl't•n.o <.o"10erw Sf"tt111•.-1 .-.01t.....,~ •' -·-· Nll>ncl•y '"'"~9h ~...... ,., '°'''" ,...,.., ,...,_, f,.. .... """""<11"" """'" '""" ••• n V•H•Y ltv•"•· """''fl•·~ VAllfo y ~~ \ .tQVf\o4 fXM h Sovt• (U \1 A 1•11\11• ft C) Ot~I f"tt1MW'I h pubh'hf'd S.1v1t1e,, ,.,..,, ,_,,,_, ..,, '"• C)f"1Ml~I p.wblt,,,l"f Oleftt I\. ·•t Wr. I f, h S"""'· C.O•I•-'•· C•llle•nl• .,.,. Robert N. Weed "'"'°""' .... ,,_,..,,.. Thom•s Keevll ll•ll•t 1 riomas A. Murpnlne """',..,,,.9 £111• Chari~!. H Loo~ Richard P. Nelli A•\l~l•~I ""*N91 ... ~•IOH T•tepftofte (7'4) .. Mn1 CIHSlfled Adlfertlslnf '42·5'7• ~-· YtJI .. ,.,,-,PW• 511~11 ,,_..,.°"_ ..... 4ts.e6H • Investigators said that as a re- sult of the row, McBride's sroup of friends started to demoli•h ooe ollbe earnlval concessions before police arrived. The incident was one of the few wh!ch marred the 10-d~ fair, which ended Su nday. Three Marine Crash Victims Now Identified Thre e Camp P e ndleton Marines have died as the result of a headon collision at the bas(' at whi~h former Pres1denl Richard M . Nixon personally directed rescue efforts. Nixon and his party consisting of daughter, Tricia, her hus band Edward Cox and Secret Service men happened upon the fatal mis- hap about two minutes after it oc- cured Thursday evening, and before military police arrived at the scene. One Marine was dead at the s cene. One was dead shortly after his arrival at the Camp Pendleton Naval Medical Center and the other died in the hospital about five hours after the acci- dent. The men were identified as Sgt. Larry W. Gris e , 24 , of 343-A David A. Vandal, 28, o f Oceanside; and Cpl. Ramiro A. Delgado, 20 of San Antonio, Texas. Cause or the accident was still under investigation today b~ military authorities. Nixon and his party were re- turning to his San Clemente . home from the Camp Pendleton golf course when the contingent came upon the accident. Cox said the Secret Service agents intended to pass by the collision because their fi rst con- cern was protecting Nixon. "But, the President saw the ac- cident and said right away 'Stop, stop the car,'" Cox told Associat- ed Press in telephone interview. He said Nixon took charge ctt the scene ordering Secret Service agents to call for a medivac helicopter a nd everyone worked at getting the two badly injured Marines from one of the cars. An ambulance heUcopter is stationed at the medicaJ center abol.lt six miles from the scene of the collision on Las Pulgas Road, about three miles east oC In- terstates. After the l a st victim was transported, Nixon turned to the military investigator. Sgt.. David Smith, and asked him if he had everything under control. Sgt. Smith said yes, and Nixon said "You 've done a fine job" and departed the area, a Marine Corps spokesman said. Jury Indict$ Top Execs At Grain Firm NEW ORLEANS (AP> -The Bunge Corp. of New York, one of the world's largest grain com- panies, and 13 of its present or former executives were indicted by a federal grand jury today, ac- cused of 12 years of systematic grain thefts. It was the latest development in a federal probe of a grain ex- port scandal alleged to involve millions of dollars in s hort weighting or misgrad.ing of grain shipped to foreign customers. The 13 named in the indictment ncluded Wilton F. Mulloy of Kansas City, Mo., vice president and bead or the company's Kansas City office, and Clayton Eugene Wilcox or Hinsdale, Ill., aHiJtant vice preeident and re- giona l manager. They were accused of conspir· lng from August l~l to June 1973 tn systematic thefts of export grain in roreign commerce by short weighting s hips laking on cargo al arain elevators in Dntrehan. La., and Galveston, Tex. False weight certificates would be ussued lo cover up the lhefts, with lbe short wei,hting accomplished by manipulating the elevator scales. the indict - ment said Special Session Set for Tnuteee Truatees or the Saddleback Community College DllUict will meet ln special HHlon t.oni'lht to r eview the colleae's propoaed sie.3 mUUon pubUcaUon bud1et ... The budget senlon la ldM!dt.lled (or 7 30 p.m. ln room 211 ot the collt1e library, 28000 Marruerlte Parkway, Mission 'Viejo. NewHoiln TIM State Departmtnl ol ~V-oln will NID&lD ..,_ evV)' Tbundl.Y ttom 8 a.m. to 8:30 p.m . ln order to better terve the public, DMV Director Herman Sillas announced. All state offices will re- main open the extra one a nd one·half hours on Thursday. · The pllot project will run until Christmas week, Sillaa said. Normal service hours are 8 a.m. to S p.m. Monday through Friday. $1 a Gallon For Gas- Sen. Jackson By United Press lnternaUoaaJ Sen . Henry Jackson, (0 - Wash. >. predicts $1-a -gallon gaso lin e by 1976 and a catastroph h~ e Cfect on the economy if President Ford goes ahead with a threatened veto to a bill extending price controls on domestic oil production. J ackson, in Tampa, Fia. to organize bis Flo~ida campaign for next year's Democratic pre- sidential pri mar.y. told a news conference Sunday that a Ford veto of the oil bill •·could lead to$1 a gallon gasoline sometime in 1976 ... "I'm flabbergasted," Jackson said. "The President has thrown down the gauntlet. It will be catastrophic. It will have a de- vastating effect on the economy. r predict it will bring the economy to a new bottom." Meanwhile, Sen. Edward Ken- nedy, ( 0 -Mass.). has proposed up to $46 billion in tax cuts next year to counter "recessionary shocks " that might follow an oil price in· crease. Kennedy wants lo extend the $1.5 billion ln this year's reduc- tions for small business, increase by $4.5 billion this year's tax cuts, for individuals and increase by as much as $40 billion reductions for consumers to oCfset the er. feels of a possible oil price jump. , FrontP~AJ MIDEAST •.• The basic propouJs were that, (1) Israel would withdraw from the Milla and Gidi passes in the Sinai, (2 ) Israel would give up the Abu Rudeis oil fiel~. (3) the U.N. peace-keeping mandate would be extended, (4) Egypt would sign a peace agreement one step below a pledge of non- belligerency and (5) the United States would use modem elec- tronic techf¥)logy to oversee the truce. Ha'aretz said that if agree- ment is reached between the two countries Secretary of State Henry A. IGssinger can be ex-· peeled to return to the Middle East in mid-August. Defense Minister Shimon Peres. the m ajor hardliner in the Israeli cabinet and a member of the team that negotiates with Kissinger, has agreed to the new proposals and thus has paved the way for parliamentary support of a new pact with Egypt, newspaper reports said. Indentification Of Body Made Orange County Coroners office today identified a body found in the Orange area July 12 as that of Nancy Jamann Jiacoma, 27, whose last known address wu in the Southgate-Lynwood area. Deputies additionally con- firmed that the partially clothed woman died of a drug overdose. They said she was dumped near Chapman A venue and Santiaao Road shortly atter shed.led . Sheriff's omcera said foul play was not involved in the death. But they are continuinf to seek· the victim's companions in the Jut hours of her life. Diners Skip Out on Tab A quartet with bll appetite. but a •mall bankroll dined at Deno.Y'• restaurant In Cotta Mesa amday n.laht, then fied without paytn1 the S17.7Staboreven leavtnaalip. WaJtre11 Reva Ramot t0m· plained to police f ollowtni the in- cident at 3170 Harbor Blvd., that two In the poup went out and warmed up tbe 1etaway car before the other two nect. She ufd the diners including three m en .and a woman. all in their carl1 20I, cotrswned two or· den ot "Steak and e10, two or· den of trted cJame, a tt.a.k and shrimp dinner, Coor l)uaes ot mtlk, two c upll of hot chocolate and two cup., or coCCee. \ '• P....i..,,..AJ LJ\.NDJNG •. • Uelandhur atJ:ll a.m~~ big paracliu~ and U.. ol lou.r rocket.a ftNd • ftw feet tbe around., The thrust Crom tlMee rooketa ~eked up much of the dust. Tbe Soyuz came down only six miles from Its bullseye 33 mUes from the town of Arkalyk. The site wa1 310 miles northwest of the Baikonur Cosmod.romo from which tJle Cosmonaut.. rocketed Tuesday. Television cameras aboard two helicopters followed the big oraoae and while parachute and the cap1ule swayln1 below it rot rtve minutes bofore the land.log, described as a "tbumpdown" by U.S. officials. It was the Clrst teleeast or tb4= end ot a Soviet spaceru1ht. Three hours after landln1, the cosm onauts arrived al the Cosmodro m e and thanked engineers and technicians who pre pared their rocket and spaceship for fllghL . "We are grateful to them for their vast work." Kubasov said before he and Leonov went by bus to the hotel . "Cosmonaut" wbere they also stayed before launch. Leonov, an artist as well as veteran s pace 'pilot, said, "Mother Earth took us in its fold. There is much greenery here and the skies are blue." Russia's leaders quickly radioed congratulations to the spacemen and praised the joint proj ect as a m ajor slep in cementing peace and furthering cooperation between the two s uperpowers . Leonov and Kubasov replied in a special message to Russia's officials: "In this space flight, important for the cause of peace and pro- gress of all .the peoples of the world, we wer e inspired by the high assessment of the wotk or scientists, designers, workers. cosmonauts and the warm words of greeting by Leonid Brezhnev. "The cr ew of the ship is ready to fulfill new assignments ot the Motherland." Jellyfish Invade SEABROOK. N.H. <UPIJ -An invasion of jellyfish drove many swimmers out of the water Sun- day and sent at least five to area hospita ls 'Cloud of Dust' . . As Soyuz. La:rids .By HAllRY F. ROSENTHAL SPACE CENTER, Houston (AP) -Americans come down with a splash. With Russians ll's more like splat! Heroes of it pace and international chumminou they may be. Dignified, the ir landlnalan't. Soviet Mlssion Control, monltorinJ today's return or Soyuz cosmonauts Alexei Leonov and Valeri Kubasov, called their near -target thumpdown "a soft landing." Obviously. soft is a relative term. THE SOYUZ CAPSULE DRIFTED THROUGH the uy, swtpended from a 1ln1le parachute girdled In red and white over an area reminiscent of western Kansas in the Dust Bowl days. The featureless plain below spun by as hellcopter- mounled cameras broadcast a Soviet landin& Jive for the first time -not only Internationally. but alao for the Russian people. Television showed the last five minutes or Soyut' 2~-mllllon -mile n.tght, just as it ha d the first five. The capsule. half of the first-ever interna- , NEJr'S AlV.4LYSIS tional spacest'tip called , ____________ ,,~ Apollo-Soyuz. now was nearing the ground. It was partly cloudy over Kazakhstan, a wheat growin1 re· gt on. THE SOIL LOOKED ROILED, NOT furrowed, like sand dunes. Indeed, the landing site was at the edge or the Russian steppes. From space, the earth looked inviting, blue and brown and white against the blackness of infinity. Here, on the Russian plain, terra firma looked blah. Down, down, thecapsuJedrifted. Suddenly the re arose a fearsome cloud of dust, com- pletely obscuring the manbuilt,meteor. When it cleared, the spacecraft looked like an acorn lying on its side, tossed from an invisible, giant oak. WITHIN 30 SECONDS, MEN CAME running. The hatch . was opened . They helped out, first Kubasov, then Leonov. The cosmonauts embraced. "Alexei Leonov and Valeri Kubasov fell well," said Moscow Mission Control. "The flight program of the manned spacecraft Soyus 19, the joint American Soyuz- Apollo program, was fully performed." Thursday, the three Apollo astronauts will speed through the skies and be dumped into the Pacific near Hawaii, a landing equally undignmed. THE COSMONAUl'S WERE PICKED off the ground like a ripe potato. The astronauts are fished out like flotsam . lt seems t here ought to be a classier way to wind up such adventures of exploration. But then, Christopher Colu mbus didn't expect a brass band either . Plane Victims Serious Victims of a Friday night plane crc-sh in hilly Anaheim territory that killed the pilot were listed in improved but still serious condi- tion at Canyon General Hospital today. or an overcast. briefly mistaking Nohl Ranch Road tor the Orange County Airport runway. A similar plane crash several years ago in which a small com- muter airliner crashed on the Newport Freeway near Dyer Road was blamed on visual pilot · error in heavy fog. both of Palo Alto, and Steven Spleen, 29, of Menlo Park, were, all in serious condition: They had been listed in critical condition following admission to Lhe new Anaheim hospital Friday ni ght. Army Chief Warrant Officer Thomas Gambrill. 35, stationed at Fort Ord, was killed when the Piper Cherokee Six slammed in- to Nohl Ranch Road. Investigators said the plane lost power a nd theorized it was possible Gambrill descended out The lour survivors were pulled from the wreckage by Anaheim Fire Department personnel from a station less than a half-mite Hospital officials said today away. that survivors Mrs. Lucille Garn-Firemen heard the impact of brill, 25, wife of the pilot, Steven the crash and at first believed it Jensen, 12, and J ay Barto, 15, was an auto accident. -------:------------------__;.____________ ------ • • Mariners gives you up to a s1,soo tax deduction this year. •• ... AND EVERY YEAR UNTIL YOU RETIRE! NOW YOU CAN BUILD A TAX SHEL TEReD RETIREMENT FUND AT MARINERS, WITH "IRA•' -THE INDIVIDUAL RE- TIREMENT ACCOUNT. Mariners Individual Retire ment A ccount le a personal tax·shettered retirement plan. "IRA" was devel- oped by Congress to g ive you an effective way to build your own ret ire· ment fund. You can save as much as $1500 or 15% of your wages. whichever Is less, and your savings wilt be a tax deduc· tlon during your working years. If your spouse works, your combined tax-sheltered savings can be as much as $3000 per year. Come In to Mariners and start your own lndlvldual Retirement A ccount. You'll be saving tax dollars now and building a much brighter futllr• For more Information, come In or calf any one of our convenient locations. HERE·S HOW FAST YOlJR MONEY GROWS IN A MAR/NEAS "IRA .. A CCOUNT lno1v1dwl Rt11r•me111Accounll1rw P~Ulllly Hrn111g '"',,,. ptr yHr ,..,,e,. p11eea In • 0 year cenlfrcete YOllr ennu11 y11ld11 111crH1~ 10 a blQ 8 C>e"i\ wh1n lnl•r•sl /s ·~ 11 lh• 1ccou111 b1t1nc• 1nd compou11a1c1 a111y With I m11/mt111t 11101v1clu1I conlrtbul1011 ol $ 1500 ~•ell yHr. 111re·1 how your money 111111/ grow WtT.-. TAX WITHOUT EXTRA IH!LTERED TA)( MONEY l"A SHEL TEAED FAOMTAX Al'TI!" PLAN Pl.AN DEFU"~L 5 yrs. $ 9,510 s 6,730 s 2.780 10yra. 23,540 15,7~ 7,790 20 yrt. 74,640 44,060 30,560 30 yrs. 165,550 95.030 90.~ • Abov• tlg111" •r• ~ on ~5~ Income t1rec1te1. Ftd•r•I r9011l•tlon1 ltQulre t11btt..tn11a1 pen.1111'?. for e11rly w11hdraw1l9 fro'" c.rtlllca19 ~ntt Ne~,, ... ~ (Moln Olflc•) ISISWe1r<llll Or. (114)M2 4000 .. ~'""' (loytld• Center) letVM ..... le.t .. edl hverly Hiiie let A11telet 1014 l•y•ld• Dr. (71•)6d·t000 310 Olef'n..,re St. (l•iaure Wotld) (71•) •94 7506 13120 Seol leoe:PI llvd. (OPENING SOON) (213) 5'9·1626 , . 380 So leverly Dr (213) H3·3000 (Opp.Mt. S1no11toipltof) 1147 le11erly llYd. (213)6S7·41•1 t ! t l ~untington Beach · ·Fountain Valley EDITION --... ' .. . . Today's Closlnlf .V. Stock · VOL. 68, NO. 202, 2 SECTIONS, 22 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA MONDAY, JULY 21 , 1975 TEN CENTS Schools ' Slash Budget, Gain Revenue By TERRY COVILLE Of UI• Pallr ...... SY" Trustees of the Huntington Beach Union High School Dis- trict h ave ordered $972,000 cut from the district's proposed 1975-76 budget. During a special board meet- ing Saturday, trustees learned $870,000 in additional revenue has been found for the coming school year. The cuts and a dded revenue totaling more than $1.8 million are part of a major financial overhaul ordered by the school board to keep the district from facing bankruptcy in the near future. None or the cuts involved the firing of any personnel. However, some jobs which had been budget- ed will not be filled. The ordered cuts came from two major sources: -An expecte d $300,000 in- crease in fringe benefit costs was eliminated and district ad- ministrators were told to come back to the school board later in the year when, and ii, the higher costs for insurance and other benefits come abouL -Trustees knocked out several items which totaled $672,000. Some of those cuts included not hiring a n e xtra custodian, anothe r g r oundskeeper or another senior clerk-typist for district h eadquarters. Also $78,000 in reserve funds for extra school supplies were cut. School officials said the money may never be needed,· Owen Miller. the district's edu c ation a l planner, said trustees ordered administrators to come back during the year for any e m ergency purchases , rat.her than budget lump sums of money for them. The extra $870,000 in revenue was found principally in two places: -Adminis trators had un- derestimaled the e nding balance of this year's budget by $270,000. -The di s trict als o un - derestimated its enrollment {based on average daily atten- dance) for the past school year. so it will pick up an extra $300,000 from the state for the year just completed, and another $300,000 for the coming year. <See BUDGET, Page A2) Cosmonauts Land on Soviet Soil Counly Laborer Wounded A Mexi~an farm worker was listed in satisfactory condition to- day at Orange County Medical Center following a shQoting Saturday night at the Gothard Labor Camp in Huntington Beach. Police said today Juan Paul Martinez, 29, was shot once in the ('best and once in the groin. A third shot missed him. Rafael Gonzalez, 38, was ar- rested and booked into city jail on suspicion of assault with intent to commit murder, possession of s t o l e n p roperty (th e .38 automatic in his possession) and possession or a d eadly weapon by an ex-felon. · Both men wer e Mexican na- tionals and residents of the labor camp, police said. A group of farm workers was sitting outside the barracks at 18291 Gothard St., when Martinez approached ·them and began talking to the group. For n o apparent reason, Gonzalez pulled a pistol from rus pocket and began playing with it, other farm workers told police. Wh en Martinez asked him to put it away, Gonzalez allegedly fired three shots at him, hitting him twice, police said. The other workers wrestled the pistol away from Gonzalez, then carried Martinez next door to the city fjre station and training facility. Police said there was no ap- parent reason for the shooting. Gonzalez is still in city jail with bail set at $25,000. Bus Driver Charged With Manslaughter Irvine police obtained a misde- meanor m anslaughter complaint today against Carolyn Conners, 23, the driver of a day camp bus involved in a fatal collision in North Irvine June 23. Issuance of the complaint and a citation ior failure to yietd the right-of-way was delayed to give the Santa Ana Heights woman an opportunity to recupera~ from injuries s he suffered an the Rough Riders Day Camp bus ac- • cident, according to police Lt. Eugene Norden. John Ramming, 6, of Irvine was killed and 11 others injured in the collision between the camp bus and a gravel t"'ck at the in- tersection of Barranca and Jef. frey Roads. Wedd ing Fracas ONTARIO (AP) -Nearly three-dozen policemen were called to quell a disturbance alter arguments led to fist.fights among guests at a wedding re- ception. Officers· said abotlt 20 persons were arrested following the fracas at the weekend recep- Uon. AD PAYS OFF; 'SOLD BOAT' · "An ad in the Daily Pilot really does pay off. t sold my boat." That's lhe success stoey told by the Huntington Beach man "'ho placed thl1 clasaifled ad in the Dally Pllol: 18' GLA.5SeAR. w/V& KP Eviru'ude. No trlr. rrm. Pri pl)I. XX 1Ml llXI lf you have a boat to sell, call 642·56'18. It only takes a few · word• in lhe rlthl81ace to make a aalt. Alona the rqe Coast, the rl•ht place la the Dall.Y Pilot. '• 04lly Pllol Pllolo by l.H P.tyM Young bodysurfers David Grothus (left) and Denny Cole slide along the s houlder of a crystal-clear Balboa peninsula wave Sunday afternoon . Denny, who is sliding right on the wave, has met up with David, who looks a little surprised to see someone else on H1S wave. Pair Held In Shop Burg lary Two suspected burglars were captured by police Sunday night on the roof of the We Shop, 221 Maio St., in downtown Hunt- ington.Beach. John Anthony Clure, 22, and Thomas Dale Workman, 23, both ,of 9095 C~rritos Ave., Anaheim, were. booked into city j all on charges of burglary, possession of a gun without serial numbers, and being armed during the com- mission of a felony. Both men are still in jail with bail set at $10,000 each, police said today. They were arrested about 10 p.m . when officer Robert Moran, on downtown patrol, saw a figure · inside tlJe We Shop and SP.C?tled a rope banging from the skylight. Moran called for back up help from officers John Suttle and .Robert Jeffrey, and all three . men went up a stairway of an ad- jacent buildine to get to the roof of the We Shop. Police said the two suspects were caught crouching on the roof. About $3,000 worth of rare coins, antique clocks and jewelry was recovered, as well 8J .22 caliber and .38 caliber pistols. 1,500 Entries Laid to FBI NEW YORK (AP> -The F8l in recent years broke into about l ,500 foreign em ba5$ies and mis· sioo.s. criminal h•ngout8, and of· flees of such gToups as the Ku Klux Klan and the Americart Communist Party, Newsweek maaulne reported Sund•Y· · -A1eo11 posine aa prMie col· 1ectors one Ume lll\ed an enlil'e codioc machine lrom the C1echo1lovak emba11y in Washington and on another OC· casioo met Israeli agenu ins1de an Arab em bany, saluted .uld walked away, the ma,uine said. V allerga' s Trial Under Way Today By GARV GRANVILLE Of ll\e DolltJ Pilot Slo1lft YENTU RA -Orange County Assessor Jack VaJlerga was in Superior Court here today pre- pared lo defend himself against seven criminal charges. At mid-morning, Jack Kahill, Vallerga's attorney, and Deputy District Attorney Michael Capizzi were meeting in cham- bers with Judge Robert L. Shaw to discuss ground rules for what is expected to be a two week trial. At issue is VaUerga's role in the sale of a computerized ap- praisal system to Spartanburg County, South Carolina. When indicting the assessor the Orange County Grand Jury charged he was guilty of a con- flict of interest because he later accepted consulting fees related lo the sale. The j ury also charged his ac- ceptance of the consulting fees and expenses was embezzlement and gran~ theft. In interviews before the indict- ment was handed down, Yallerga pointed to state codes which specified that a public official may not consult with private firms. He pointed out the codes do not say one public official cannot perform consulting services for a fee on behaJf of another ~ublic agency. That is expected to be the ma- jor issue in the trial that was transferred to Ventura County because of the vast amount of pre·trial publicity. The opening of Vallerga's triaJ today is the first round in what is expected to be his long lekal bat- tle to avoid con viction on criminal charges as well as acts of misconduct the Grand Jury charged him with in a separate accusation. Along with Rep. Andrew Hinshaw, Vallerga's name was added to an indictment that (See VALLERGA, P a'e A2) . Wedding Set Switch for Chrilltina ATHENS (UPI) -Christina Onassis. one of the world's richest women, will marry Alexandros An- dreadis. 30, ~oungest son of Greek b8Jlker, shipowner and business ty~ Sttltif_Andreadis. a member of· the Andreadis ~a..-~y. The announ~e-ment came as a surprise. She had ~ ex~cted lO marry J>.oter ~and.rls, n, scion of another Greek .shipping f amlly Md her constut com· penion for months~ lie was at bet~ when her f atber was buded in II arch on tbe f amu; t.l~ of Slcorpios. ~·~IM wedding will take ~ace 'Nefday in a sub-~ ..... clnlrcb, the f-..iaUY,..,t1'man said. am.tllta, M, .._, -..~ llrilft1. •t tbe age ol 21 in 1971 to J oseph ll>lier, T, a l,o.,i.Ancela n&l estate dealer, promised Onassis before be dfed she would marry Goulandrls. sources cloae to the Onusls family aald. JFK Fear Of PW~ R evealed WELLFLEET. Mass. (AP) - President John F. Kennedy said two years before his assassina- tion that he feared attempts to kiJl foreign leaders woul d make rum a target, a former aide says. The aide, Richard Goodwin,. quoted Kennedy as telling rum in November 1961 : "If we get into that kind of thing, we'll all be targets." Goodwin, reached today at hjs REPORT URGES NEW RFK DEA TH PROBE, AS summer borne here, confirmed a Washington Pos t account in which he said the subject or as· sassinati'on first came up in a conversation Kennedy had with a newspaper reporter. The reporter asked the former president bow he would feel if the United States assassinated Premier Fidel Castro of Cuba, and added that he thought it was a bad idea. Kennedy r~plied, "'l'm glad you feel that way because sug- gestions to that effect keep com- ing to me. and I believe very strongly that the United States s hould not be a party to political assassination." · Goodwin, an adviser on Latin American affairs, said Kennedy did not tell him who made the suggestions . Goodwin said former Secretary of State Dean Rusk also eX))ressed fears about as- sassinatlon after Dictator Ra!ael Truji llo ot the Dominican Republic was killed oo May 31, ,1981. GoodWin Hid be ts coovinced that Kanedy did not authorize plots .,a.inst Culro. .. There is not one piece or evidence that demon4tr ates anything Ulce· lb at at aJl," he said. Apollo's Crewnten Still Up HOUSTON (UPI) -Russia's two Soyuz cosmonauts landed gently and triumphantly in a cloud of dust on a central Asian prairie today, carrying five Unit. ed Slates flags to symbolize their historic meeting in space with three Americans. The world could watch on television as Valeri Kubasov , 40, ·and Alexei Leonov, 41, emerged s miling from their scorched spaceship after it came to rest on its side in the middle of the wheat belt of Kazakhstan. Moscow con- trol said they wer e in excell ent. health. ''This is wonde rful pl ace," Kubasov said after he climbed from the Soyuz capsule and greeted rescuers with a bear hug. "It is a happy place of landing. I will reme mber it always." Leonov, obviously tired from his six days in space, staggered slightly when he emerged and · said, "It was difficult, very dif- fi cult. We are a bit shaky due to tiredness aod to happiness." U.S. astronauts Thomas Staf- ford , Vance Brand and Donald .. Deke" Slayton remained in or- bit for three more days of scien- tific work. Their Apollo, 3,450 miles to the east at the time or the Soyuz landing, is due to return to a Pacific Ocea n splashdown Thursday. The astronauts were asleep when their comrades returned to earth but Jater radioed con- gratulations . One of the Apollo experiments planned for today -a scan or the sky with an x-ray detector -was delayed because of trouble wi th the instrument. But the pilots went ahead with plans to make earth ovservations and measure dust particles in the atmosphere. The Soyuz was eased to a gen· Ue landing at 3:51 a.m. PDT by a big p arachute and the cushioning or four rockets fired a few feet off the ground. The thrust from these rockets kicked up much of the dust. The Soyuz came down only six miles from its bullseye 33 miles from the town of Arkalyk. The site was 310 miles northwest oC the Baikonur Cosmodrome from which the Cosmonauts rocketed Tuesday. Television cameras aboard two helicopters followed lhe bi,; orange and white parachute and the capsule s waying below it for five minutes before the landing, described as a "thumpdown" by U.S. officials. It was the first <See LANDING, Page A2) Or:~A7:ast We at•e r Night and morning low clouds but s unny after- noons Tuesday. Little tern· perature change. Highs from the 70s at the beaches to the low 80s inland. Lows tonight 62 lo 65. INSIDE T ODAY For the /ir1t time. tM West , bol representation in the Na- tional Political Women's Coucw. TlOO Orange COQ3t uiomen now hold national o/- /v:ea. See Page B 1. I ... •• ., "' AC .,,, ···~: • •• "' •• •• ~2 DAIL V PILOT H /F .. LANDING •.. c~ash telee~t of the end ot a Soviet ~ :.-pa~ght. Thr~e hours after landing, the ~osmonuut s :i r r1 ved ttl the Cos rnodroml' and lhankt•tl engineer:> a nd lechnictillls who prepar ed their rorkPl a nd 2>1>aeesh1p for Chg ht Accident Correction Vi.;tiins Improve ··w e are .:rateful to tht'm for their 'a$l work.'' Kubasov· !>.ml before ht• and l .eonov went by buis to the hote l .. Cosmonaut .. wheN' they <.tlso sta) cd bt'Core Jaunr h Lt-onov. an artist a~ well as v e t eran space pllot. said, ••Mother Earth look us in its Cold There is much greenery here and the 1>k1es are blue.·• Rus s i a 's l eaders qui cltly radioed congratulations to the spacemen and praised the joint project as a major step in cementing peace and furthering cooperation between the two superpowers. Leonov and Kuba sov re plied in a special message to Russia's offi cials: "In this space rtighl. important for the cause of peace and pro- gress of a ll the people-; of the world, we were inspired by the high aSSt>Ssment of thl' work of .sl'icntists, des igner:., worker~. cosmonauts and lhl' warm worm. Q( greeting by Leonid Brezhnev_ ·'The crew of the ship is ready t o fulfill ne w assignments of the :Motherland." E'roMPageAl BUDGET ... Miller said the financial pre- sentation was made by the dis· trict·s new superintendent for business, Dr. Charles Hess. Hess pointed out that just un- der 75 percent of the district's budget is for salaries, so any greater cut~ in the previous $38.1 million l"x penditures budget would st art to affect employes. From Page Al VALLERGA ~barged employes in the as- sessor's office with ulegally cam- paigning on Hioshaw's behalf m 2972. Those charges will be subject of a Separate trial. Additiona lly, Vallerga must answer to five counts of miscon- duct s temming from the Grand .Jury's accusation. Valley Center To Host Dance A teen dance. for seventh and eighth graders, will be held from 7 to 10 p.m . July 25 al Fountain Valley's new Recreation Center. The dance will feature a live band, dance contest, games and food. Admission is 50 cents. The center is on Brookhurst Street, north of Warner Avenue. For more information call 839-8611. Bicycle Motocross Slated for Valley A Bicycle Motocross Club is be- ing s ponsored by the Fountain Valley Boys Club. It meets Wednesdays from 1 to 3 p.m. and Fridays from 2 to 4 p.m . Details may be obtained by calling 968-5252 Wrestling Classes Summer wrestling classes m eet Tuesdays and Thursdays from 6:30 to 8 p .m . at the Foun- t.a.in Valley Boys Club. Interested youths should call the club at 968-5252. ORANGE COAST ,. r DAILY PILOT 11't' Jt tni)I ln ,, .. ,,v I ,. .. , ..... " ~ 'I bfrwlt lf•• ~,, .... f•,. I 1•1f f.-.#11.,n t'1 (.10 ff f h ,. 111 I I'll ., •• t •' •1 I -1f• ~·~ Nv vf•' U1r •'' I 11(.l•r IM l.D't• lt/'fl"'•'• N• WP-•rl t' .~t It• tit\lltl'>" llt .~1 f ,..,,, '"" V.t!I•' ,, ',,, ~.11Ht I I • ,, , • , .,.. t t'l11nA f • If f ''"'" lit'\\ /, ' 1'i t• I ' ti '"'1ih"ft 1 J•1t •l•f·f'0 ... oAIUtf1_.Y ioti u it>• tr.1 Of•~·P••' out>h .,,1'\I'') r>IAnl " .... \:' ..... I ..... ., ~'''~ 1,C...o'\t,.,,.,.~ C.1tlttorn•"tne.,t. Robert N. WP<><J Pt,.S1dl'nl iAN) P\lb'•V,.' Jack R. Curley VI« Pr~IMnl •rw.I OellH"' Mlf'fO"f ThOMcl'i Ke~vll EdilOf Thomas A. Murphine 1Nn.t0111Q EOil~ Q\arlrc; H. Loo"' Rirhard P. Nall >·I ,,.f\t~IU•'1•*''•'"''°'· Terry Covlll,, ..,.,, o'""O" c&1,~t• r tttttW 0,l)e,. OffiCM l •QIU"'t• (\. ., " , , .. (.. ... ., ... ,,,, ,,,,.. , ... , .. -. )Jt-\11\.o•'Ol-H#"W,.,..,,., ,,_._. t ,)1) HI *OO't ~ •• ,. dCUttfMt' Vo<11tt11y ~H\t l -""' flo-1 ,., ~~ o.,,.on.._, •• ,,.. • ., Telephoot en•> Mz.,.121 Classttied Actvert11l1t9 642-5671 .---"'°'-(011"'•~1•\ s.40-1220 In a· picture caption lut Wttk, the-Dally Pltot erTed in reporting ao accider1t in· volving Jonatha n Brick of Huntington BC3('h and a Laguna Beach purking meter mmd. Bril'k, ~· L ag un a Ufeguard, was not d:nv1ng without a li ('cns~. He wa::. on his wa~· to hfeguard du· ty .rnd rluJ not have his driver's ll c~n sc 1n his possession at the time of the crash. The report also erred in indicating young Brick was about to be cited for failure to yield the righl-0(- way. No charges have been filed. The case is still un- der investigation. The Daily Pilot regrets the errors. Beach Aide Suspended After Arrest Bill Reed, Huntington Beach public information officer, has been suspended from his job for 30 days without pay in connection with his arrest July 14 on a drunk in public charge. City Administrator Dave Rowlands s uspended Reed last week and also ordered a reduc- tion in Reed's pay scale amount- ing to about $100 a month. Rowlands said today he also warned Reed if it happens again. he wiJI be dismissed. Reed was arrested about 11 p.m., July 14. when pollcc found him poundjng on the door and windows of a home in the area of Edinger A venue and Graham Street. Reed had previously been sus- pended for six months without pay following a •·drunk in auto" charge one year ago when .his ci- ty vehicle was involved in a minor parking Jot accident. Five Quakes Hit Solomons From Wire Services HONOLULU -Five major earthquakes with m agnitudes up to 7.7 wer e r ecorded in a 12·hour period in the Solomon Islands area, but there were no reports of deaths of injury. A separate quake measuring 5.4 on the Richter Scale shook Taiwan early today, but no damage or inJurics were re. ported. The National Broadcas ting Commission of Pcipua New Guinea said a tidal wave trig- gered by the quake destroyed the village of Torakina on the west coast of Bougainville Island. Virtims of a Friday night plane erP':ih in hilly Anaheim tenitory that killed the pilot were listed in improved but still serious condi- t11m :ll C:.inyon Ge neral Hospital loclay Army Chief Wa rrant Officer Thomas Gambrill, 35. stationed at Fort Ord. was kilfed when the Piper Cherokee Six slammed in- to Nohl Ranch R oad. Investigators said the plane lost power and theorized it was possible Gambrill descended out of an overcast, briefly mistaking Nohl Ranch Road for the Orange ounty Airport runway. A similar plane crash several years ago in whieh a small com- muter airliner crashed on the Newport Freeway near Dyer Road was blamed on visual pilot error in heavy log. Hospital oUici als said today that survivors Mrs. Lucille Garn· brill , 25, wife of the pilot, Steven Jensen. 12 , a nd J ay Barto, 15, both of Palo Alto, and Steven Spleen, 29, of Menlo Park, were all in serious condition. They had been listed in critical condition following admission to the new Anaheim hospital Friday night. . The four s urvivors were pulled from the wreckage by Anaheim Fire Department personnel Crom a station less than a half-mile away. Firemen heard the impact of the crash and at first believed it was an auto accident. Several witnesses looked up when the plane's engine coughed and sputtered and then watched the aircraft on a flight from the San Francisco Bay area to Orange County Airport plummet to earth. Vandab Hit Jewish Temple SARATOGA CAP)-Vandals caused several thousand dollars worth of damage to a new J ewish temple here and left otr s cenities scrawled on the walls. Members o( Congregation Beth David arriving for a meeting Sunday found the desecration of numerous religious artifacts at the temple. which had been <le· clicated last Fe bruary. 4 Opium Killings BANGKOK, Thailand <AP) - I\ caravan of 100 well-armed Ch.inese and Burmese brought at least three tons of opium from Burma into Thailand over the wee k e nd , and four Thai policemen were killed trying to s top them . Thai narcotics authorities said today. Police Asking Aid In Narcotics Fight There hasn 't been much talk in the past two years about the drug scene in Huntington Beach and Founta in V a lley, bul narcotics officers from both cities s ay it is still there and is still big. The chief narcotics in- vestigator in Huntington Beach says 406 juveniles and 616 adults were arrest· ed during the first six mon- ths of 1975 for various narcotics violations. Jn Fountain Valley, the total arrests were 138, run- ning about 3·1 in ravor of juveniles arrested there. Fountain V a lley in · vestigalors h <1ve gone alter the on campus pro- blem more. whale Hunt- ington Beach police are concentrating on adults pus hin g cocaine and heroin. Police already know quite a bit about the drug scene locally. One of the more popular drugs among Fountain Valley youth-is phencyclidine (youths call 1l cannabinol ). an animal tranqwlizer which gives a high kind of like LSD, but more controlled. Huntington Bt>a ch or- ficers say there has been a s lowdown in marijuana and cocaine lately because of some Jarge seizures made at the border by U.S. and Mexican authorities. Last month, 20 people were arrested in Huntington Beach for arrowing t.h~r ov.--n marijuana in small J>Qts. Huntington Beach police believe the use of mari- juana is on the decreB.M, Sec:rel Witness but the use of hard drugs is on the increase. Even though they know a lot about what is happen- ing in the local drug world, police need a lot more in- rormation to nab big de- alers. The Daily Pilot's Secret Witness column offers cas h re wards for lips which' help police crack a major narcotics ring or ar- rest a major dealer. And the t.ipster needs no in- \'Olvem ent through the police. Police will never know our tipster's identity. Tf you have some solid ln- formation, phone the 24· hour Secret Witness line, 642-0700. or writ~ to: Daily Pilot, Secret Witness, P.O. Box 790, Hu·nlington • Beach, Ca. (92648). And to maintain the secrecy of your identity, atuch a simple six digit • code to your inrormation, such as A BC123. IC we need more Information, we mi,ht use the first three digit.a in the column to r~­ qu~l ll . In addlUoo to Secret W\t. nea, there l• also a COUD- t)'Wtde pro•r•m called We Tip, '23-1~. .-hlc.b ac· cepta lnlormaUon only oo narcoUca violations. I Adventure \ 1 Area Gets City Eye \lf'IH•,._,..., The now closed Ad venture Playground was to be Ute mnJor topic at today's 5:30 p.m. study session of the Huntingtoo Bc~ch Ci ty Counci 1. COSMONAUTS DOWN -This map shows the location of the landing site for the Soviet cosmonauts, who returned to earth early today, on the plains of central Siberia near Karaganda. The city's ins urance earner, Ins urance Company of lhl· Pacific Coast, forced cl~ure or the popular playground by refus- ing to cover it in the city's s tan- dard policy. That same insurance carrier has now offered to insure the playground on a separate polic)' if certain changes are made lo eliminate what the company con- siders major safety hazards. 'Cloud of Dust' As Soyuz .Lands · Ry HARRY F. ROSENTHAL SPACE CENTER. Houston (AP) -Americans come down with.a s plash. With Russians it's more like splat! Heroes of s pace and international chumminess they may be. Dignified, their landing isn 'l. Soviet Mission Control, monitoring today's r eturn of Soyuz cosmonauts Alexei Leonov and Valeri Kubasov, called their near-target tbumpdown "a soft landing." Obviously, softis a relative term. THE SOYUZ CAPSULE DRIFTED THROUGH the sky, suspended from a single parachute girdled in red and white over an area reminiscentoftbe DustBowldays. The featureless plain below spun by as belicopter- mounted cameras broadcast a Soviet landing live for the fi rst time -not only internationally, but also for the Russian people. Television showed the last five minutes of Soyuz' 21h-million-mile Pacific will insure the park, in the Bruce Brothe rs stone quarry al Gothard Street and TalbeJ:t Avenue, for $4,600 a year. But in return, the city must: -Use cakes of c hlorine lo lower the pb level in the lake. -Put a qualified lifeguard on lhe grounds. -Eliminate a cable ride whlch youngsters ·had used lo swing over and into the water. {;rade oul a smaller pond and rebuild the rope bridge over it. -Use snow fencing to mark off boundaries for the forbidden areas. -Close the Gothard Street en- trance, with its steep cliff path, and put the entrance on T albert Avenue. Wr~~?.J~.st as it had the ( J The caps ule. hau of NE"'S ANA LY IS . the first·ever interna· » · ~ -Put in fresh dirt al the bank or some cliffs which will become a "no\1'1an's land." tional spaceship called _ _ Apollo-Soyuz. now was nearing the ground. It was cloudy over K~zakh.stan, a wheat growing region. THE SOIL LOOKED ROILED, NOT furrowed, like sand dunes. Indeed, the landing site was at the edge of the Russian steppes. · From space, the earth looked inviting, blue and brown and white against the blackness of infinity. Here, on the Russian plain, terra firma looked blah. Down, down, the capsule drifted. Suddenly there arose a fearsome cloud of dust, com- pletely obscuring the man built meteor. When it cleared, the s pacecraft looked like an acorn lying on its side, tossed from an invisible, giant oak. WITHIN 30 SECONDS, MEN CAME running. The hatch was opened. They helped out, first Kubasov, then Leonov. The cosmonauts embraced. "Alexei Leonov and Valeri Kubasov fell well," said Moscow Mission Control. Thursday. the three Apollo astronauts will speed through the s kies and be dumped into the Pacific near Hawaii. a landing equally undigrtified. THE COSMONAlITS WERE PICKED off the ground like a ripe potato. The astronauts are fi shed out like flotsam. ft seems ther e ought to be a classier way to wind up such adventures of exploration. But then, Christopher Columbus didn't expect a brass band either. -Put in 20 feet of t>hain link fence to discourage use of the old Gothard Street path. In addition to the $4,600 annual insurance f ee. a city hall spokesman said it would cost the city aboul $3,200 lo make the re- commended changes, but the staff is recommending council approval of it. Adventure PlaygroWld, which opened last summer, had been one of the city's most popular at- tractions with as many as 500 youngsters visiting it in one day. The. children. with moderate s upervision, we re allowed to cr eate their own world of ra!l'> • s hacks a nd slides. Old tires, pieces of lumber, hammers , saws. nails and other items were there for their use, as the children saw fit. The city had written to Lloyd's of London for special insurance on the park, but a city hall spokesman said Lloyd's refused to give an estimate of the cost without a guarantee the city would use Lloyd's. • • Manners gives you up to a s1,soo tax deductiori this year. •• . .. AND EVERY YEAR UNTIL YOU RETIRE~ NOW YOU CAN BUILD A TAX SHELTERED RETIREMENT FUND AT MARINERS, WITH "IRA't -THE INDIVIDUAL RE- TIREMENT ACCOUNT. HERE'S HOW FAST VOUR MONE: V GROWS IN A MARINERS ••tRA ACCOUNT tnd1111d11al Re11remen1 Accounts are pl'eu ntly earning f\~0• per ytar wnen pl11ced In a 6·year cer11l1cate. Your annual v1eld 1s mcre.tsed lo a b1g 8 ()6•4 when Interest is tddeO to tne account tHlanc. and compound8d daily. w 11n • mu1m11m M ar 1ners I ndiv1dual Reti r ement Account 1s a personal tax-sheltered retirement plan. "IRA .. was devel- oped by Congress to give you an effective way to build your own retire- . ·ment fund. 11101111du111 conlribut1on ol Sl500 Heh ye.,. here's hO'lll your monty wlll grow. You can save as much as $1500 or 15% of your wages, whichever is less, and your savings will be a tax deduc· tlon during your working years. If your spouse works, your combined tax-sheltered savings can be as much as $3000 per year. Come in to Mariners and start your own Individual Retirement Account. You'll be saving tax dollars now and building a much brighter future. For more Information, come in or call any one of our convenient locations. WITH TAX WITtiOUT EXTRA . SHELTERED TAX MONEY IRA SHELTERED FROM TAX AFTER PLAN PLAN OEFERFIAl 5yrs. $ 9,510 s 6,730 $ 2,780 10 yrs. 23,540 15,750 7,790 20 yrs. 74,640 44,oao 30,~· 30yrs. 185,550 95,030 90,520 'Above f1ourn are bas"'CI Cl"! ~·~ '"'om" bf11ei{11t F.O.r1I reoullltO<ll require 1ubslA11fll l 0 pentltttoi IOI .. rly Wl1hdrlwlll lrom ~rtlltcale ltCCOunta • Ma-riners Savi~s and Loan A~soclatiOn Newport leech ..._,.,, leech (Moln Office) (Boy•lde Center) 1 ~1$ We••clllf Or, 102• loy,fde Or. {'14) M2·4000 (7a.) 642·4000 ( la911ne leech 310 Ole,,,,•yre St. (714)49~ 7506 (OPENING SOON) S.-1 h 9Ch (l•i•ur• World) 13820 S.al 990<'h llvd. {21J) 5'"7616 le1A:n .. let (Opp.Mt, 51nol Hospital) 8147 lev~ly llvd, (213)657·•141 l } I 's e ll t y '1 w • -...... Orange Coast . EDITION \ VOL. 68, NO. 202, 2 SECTIONS, 22 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALI FORNI A MONDAY, JULY 21, 1975 T oday's Closing N.Y. Stoeks N TEN CENTS Ford Vetoes Oil Price Rollback Bill 'WASHINGTON CAP> -Presi· Sent Ford this afternoon vetoed a bill rolling back the price of new U.S. oil to $11.30 a barrel. He arged Congress lo approve his plan for gradual decontrol of oil prices. Ford said he was vetoing the measure "because it would in· rrease petrole um consumption, tut dom es~ic production, in· rcease rehance on insecure pe4°0leum imports and avoid the issue of phasing out unwieldy price controls. In a statement, Ford said that unless Congress accepts his plan for gradual decontrol of price and allocations, "I will have no choice but to veto tbe simple six- m on th extension of these authorities now being considered by Congress . ., In addition to clamping a ceil· ing on new oil prices, which cur· reotly stand on the world market at about $13 a barrel, the vetoed bill would have left the price of old oil -produced from wells in existence prior to 1972 -at $5.25 a barrel. The next round will come Tues- day in the protracted and com· plex baUJe between the Ford ad· ministration and Congress over energy policy. That's when the House is expected lo reject Ford's proposal to raise the average price or all U.S. oil from about $9 a barrel to $13.50 a bar- rel over the next 30 months. R epublican congressional leaders came from a breakfast meeting with Ford today ex· pressing hope a compromise de- control can be passed before Congress recesses in August. Sen. Paul J . Fannin (R·Ariz.). said Ford indicated a "great de- sire" to work out a satisfactory bill before the recess. Fannin said members of Congress are getting pressure from people back home to do something about tbe energy situation and that he ·felt the B"Senate Finance Com- mittee had ''a chance to bring out a good compromise bill that would be satis factory to the President.·• • • WlUte House press secretary Ron Nessen told reporters who talked with the GOP leaders tbat Ford contemplates no major change in bis own decontrol plan. Nessen said Ford sees his decon· trot plan a s a reasooable com· promise. Ford sent his $13.50 plan to Congress last week, but it cannot go into effect if either the House (See VETO, Page AZJ Cosmonauts Land on Soviet Soil Vallerga Trial I Begins Apollo's Crewnten Still ·IJp f By GARY G RANVILLE Ot Ill• Olllf Pllol SQf1 VENTURA -Orange County ~sessor Jac k Vallerga was in Superior Court here today pre- pared to defend himself against Jeven crimin al charges. · At mid-morning, Jack .Kahill, VaUerga's attorney, and Deputy District Atto r ney Michael ~apizzi were m eeting in cham- )ers with. Judge Robert L. Shaw :o discuss gro.und rules for what ~expected lo be a two week trial. At issue is Vallerga's role in he sale of a computerized ap- )raisal system to Spartanburg :Ounty, South Carolina. When indicting the assessor .he Orange County Grand Jury :barged he was guilty of a con· lict of interest because he later sccepted cons ulting fees related .o the sale. The jury also charged his ac· ~eptance of the consultipg fees tnd expenses was embezzle~nt and grand theft. In interviews before the indict- 'flent was handed down, Vallerga ;>ointed to s tate codes which ;pecified that a public official may not consult with private arms. He pointed out the codes do not 1ay one public omcial cannot ;>erform consulting services for a lee on behalf of another public agency. Ri Slippery Travelers Young bodysurfers David Gr othus· (left) and Denny Cole slide along t he shoulder of a crystal·clear Balboa peninsula wave Sunday afternoon. Denny, who is sliding O.lly Piiot Pi,c,10 lly LAt Payne right on the wave, has met up with David, who looks a Little surprised lo see someone else on HIS wave. That is expected to be the ma- jor issue in the trial tha~ was transferred to Ventura County because of the vast amount of pre·trial publicity . The opening of Vallerga's trial today is the firs t round in what is expected lo be his long legal bat- Ll e lo avoid con viction on Hearing Delayed For Mang New Trustee Used To Be a Teacher JFK Fear Of Plots Rev ealed <See VALLERGA, Page A2) Dog Clinic In Neupon A low cost anti-rabies vaccination clinic will be held Crom 7 p.m. to 8:30 p.m. Tuesday in Newport Beach. The clinic, sponsored by th e Kiwanis Club of Newport Beach and the Southern Ca lifornia Veterinary Medical As· sociation, offers inocula· lions for dogs at least four months old for a feeof$2 . Location of the clinic is at I.be Newport Beach Fire Station on Santa Barbara Drive just off Jamboree Road. · The public bearing set for to- day to determine the competency of Corona del Mar teacher Michael Mang was cootinued to Oct.9. Attorneys representing both Mang and the Newport-Mesa Unified School District agreed to postpone the proceedings to al- low Mang's attorney John S. Williams more time to prepare • his case. • Mang, 30, South Laguna, was suspended from teaching his gov- ernment classes at Corona del Mar High School in May , and re- ceived a notice of intent to dis- miss. Mang demanded tbat the 34 charges lodged against him be made public and requested a public hearing -the fll'St such hearing to be held in the unified school district's history. Wedding Set Switch for Christina ( ATHENS (UPI> -Christina Onassis, one o( the worl<J's richest women, will marry Alexandros An· dreadJs. 30, youngest son of Greek banker, shipowner and business tycoon Stratis Andreadis, a member of the Andreadis household said today. The announcement came as a surprise. She had been expect ed> lo marry Peter Goulandrls, 27 , scion of another Greek s hipping family and her constant com- panion for months. He was at her side when her fa~ber was buried in March on the Camily tsland of Skorpios. The wedding will take place Tuesday in .a sub- urban Athens chvrcb. the family spokesman saJd. Christina. 24, Who was married briefly at the age of n in 197 \ to Joseph Bolker, 17, a Los Anaeles real estate dealer, promised Onassis before be died she would marry GoulandrU, sources close to the OnassJs family saJd. \, By IDLAR Y KA VE Of tll• D.Uy Pli.t Staff Because she has worked as a teacher, Carol Martin believes she can strike a balance between the teac:Pers in the Newport· Mesa Unified School District and school trustees. "I have shared the teachers' experiences and have great respect for them," says Mrs. Martin, who was appointed last week to fill the trustee position vacated by Dr. Arthur Thompson . "But, I also have great resped for the trustees and for the hard work they've done," she added. "I'm in a good position to see both sides.·· Mrs. Martin, 37, takes over her new post Aug. 26. She plans to s.pend the next four weeks poring over old school board meeting minutes, budget documents and other data that will aid her in the new job. The new trustee has lived in the Newport Beach area for 30 years and is currenUy residing at 1824 W. Ocean Front, witb her h usb and , Bill, a research engineer for McDonnell Douglas, and three children, ages 7, 11, and 13. All ol the children are enrolled i n Newport·Mes a schools. Trustees picked Mrs. Martin from among 12 applicants. She wUl serve (or the remaining por· Uon of Dr. Thompson's term, which ends in 1m. Mn. M•rtin said she applied foe tbe job because she is in-~~ ln and cares aboul local scbooll. "l care about wbat happens to the schools and l appreciate tbe Um~ the board has put in. t feel I bave someUdllc to oiler, tao," the exptalnW. Mn. Martill brtefty ta~bt fW.l. Ume at !f ewport Elementary School ln t• and since bas sub- 1Ututed in the Newport.Mesa and other achoo\ dlatticta. When , nou.tMd of Iler pew Job. 0111, ..... SUff ~ NEW SCHOOL TRUSTEE Newport'• Carol Met11n Mrs. Martin withdrew her name from the Newport-Mesa sub- stitute list and said she will not have time to substitute ln other districts, either. Looking ahead, Mrs. Martin 5ays the biggest problem that wiU confrOftj. J.tie school district will b e the large influx of families in the coas tal area between Corona deJ Mar and Laguna Beach. The Irvine Company land is ex· pttted to be developed in coming years, and Mrs. Martin said that many of the new residents wUJ be part or the Newport-Mesa Sc:hool Dlslrict. ·•ow-Job wUl be to maintain blab quaUty educaUao, while ex· pancliq a.o tll tbe needl ol these new people," 11'e Hid. Strvioa tb• communit y ls not.bing new So Mn. lbrtin. who baa. do°' volunteer ~ for the CSee MABTIN, hie A2) . ., WELLFLEET. Mass. CAP> - President John F. Kennedy said two years before his assassina- tion that he feared attempts to kill foreign leaders would make him a ta rget, a former aide says. The aide, Richard Goodwin , quoted Kennedy as telling him in November 1961: "If we get into that kind of thing, we'U all be targets." Goodwin, reached today al bis REPORT URGES NEW RFK DEATH PROBE, AS summer home here. confirmed a Was hington Pos t account in which he said the subject of as- sassination firs t came up in a conversation Kennedy had with a newspaper reporter. The reporter asked the former president bow he would feel if the United States ass assinated Premier Fidel Castro of Cuba, and added that he thought it was a bad idea. Kennedy replied, "I'm glad you feel that way because sug- gestions to that effect keep com- ing to me, and t believe very strongly that the United Slates <See I FK, P age.\%) ADPAlS OFF; 'SOLD BOAT .. An ad in tbe baUy Pilot really does pay off. 1 sold my boat. .. That's the success story told by the Huntintton aach man who placed lhls classified ad in the Daily Pilot: lf' GLASSPAR. w /7S HP Evtnrvde. No trlr. ms Prt pt,y. JtU•DXll · It you have a boat lo seJJ, call MZ~S678. It only takes a few . Words in lh~.rint pl•~ to make • sa.1e. Atone the o~e Coast.. .the rfih~Jaee Is the Dell)' PUot. HOUSTON iJPI> -Russia's two Soyuz cosmonauts landed gently and triumphantly in a cloud of dust on a central Asian prairie today, carrying five Unit- ed States flags to symbolize their historic meeting in space with U1 ree Americans. T he world could watch ·on television as Valeri Kubasov, 40, and Alexei Leonov, 41 , emerged smiling from their scorched spaceship after it came to rest on its side in the middle of the wheat belt or Kazakhstan. Moscow con· lrol said they were in excellent health. "This is wonderful place," Kubasov said after he climbed from the Soyuz capsule and greeted rescuers with a bear hug. "It is a happy place of landing. I will remember it always." Leonov. obviously tired from his six days in space, staggered - s lightly when he emerged and said, "It was difficult, very dif. ficult. We are a bit shaky due to tiredness and to happiness." U.S. astronauts Thomas Staf- ford, Vance Brand and Donald "Deke'' Slayton remained in or· bit for three more days of scien· tific work. Their Apollo, 3,450 miles to the east at the time of the Soyuz landing, is due to return to a Pacific Ocean splashdown Thursday. The astronauts were a sleep when their comrades returned to earth but later radioed con· gratuJations. One of the ApoJlo experiments planned for today -a scan of the sky with an X·ray detector -was delayed because of trouble with the instrument. But the pilots went ahead with plans to make earth ovservations and measure (See LANDING, Page A2) DOW RETRE4TS, CLOSES AT 854 NEW YORK (UPI) -Prices closed lower today in slow trad- ing on the New York Stock Ex· change when investors retreated to the sidelines in tbe face or some news developments. The Dow Jones industrial average, ahead at the outset, lost 7.67 points to 854.74. Declines led advances by about a nine·lo-fi ve margin (tables, A9) Prices wer e lower in moderately active trading on tho American Stock Exchange. Orang• tJ Coa•t ..... ?~ Weatller Night and morning low clouds but sunny after· noons Tuesday. LitUe tern· perature change. Highs Crom the 70s at the beaches to the low 80s inland. Lows tonight 62 to 65. I NSIDE TODA~ For the first time. the We.rt has representation in the Na· ltonat Political Women's ~. Two Orange Coo.st t00mm now hold natiotlol of- fict1. See Page BJ. l•tl•x .... ,,.. All ..._... IJ ~=-AJ ........... " ., AS __.,T,_ At OtnlHIM ·~,. ............... A• QliMln eJ ...... ••4 09•--•• ~ :::-....... A,._U DHltlNetk.s All A!, R._.., ..... M ,....,,..._ Al 1£~1 M '"""*rs Al "-· At ...... M ....... ~ AU ....... .. . Al OAILVPILOT N 3 'Marine Victims' IDs Told Three C amp Pe ndlt!lon Marmes have died as lht! result or a head-011 col1Js10n at the bu:-.e at whic h form e r Preside nt Richard M. Nixon Pl'rsona lly directed rc:scue efforts. Nixon and has party consisting or daughter. Tricia, her husband Edward Cox a nd Secret Service men happened upon the fatal mis- hap about two minutes after itoc- cured Thursd a y evening, and before milita ry police arrived at the scene. One Marine was dead al the scene. One was dead shortly after his arrival at the Camp Pendleton Nava l Medical Cenle r and the other died in the hospital about five hours after the JC('l- denl. The men were 1dt.mtlfied as Sgt. Larry W. Grise. 24 . of J43·A D a vad A . V:Jnda l. 2 8 . o f Oceanside: and \pl Ramiro A Delgado. 20 o f ~<1 11 t\11lon10. Texu~ Ca use of the :Jl'Ctdl'nt was still \lnder invcs llgat1 on toduy by military authorities. Nixon and his party were re- turning to his San Clemente home from the Camp Pend.Jet.on golf course when the cont.mgent came upon the accident. Cox said the Secret Service agents intended to pass by the collision becaus e their first con- cern was protecting Nixon. ··Rut. the President saw the ac- cident and said right away 'Stop, s lop the car .'" Cox told Associat- ed Press in telephone interview. He s aid Nixon took charge al the scenP ordering Secret Service agents to call for a medivac helicopter and eve ryone worked al getting the two bad.Jy injured Marines from one of the cars. An ambulance helicopter is stationed at the medical center about six miles Crom the scene of the collisioo on Las Pulgas Road, about three miles east of In- terstate 5. After the last victim was transported, Nixon turned to the military inves tigator, Sgt. David Smith, and asked him if he had . everything under control. Sgt. Smith said yes, and Nixon said "You've done a f'ine job" and departed the area, a Marine Corps spokesman s aid. Front Page Al VALLERGA criminal charges a s weJI a s acts of misconduct the Grand Jury charged him with in a separate accusation. Along with Rep. Andrew · Hinshaw, Vallerga's name was added lo an indictment that charged empJoyes in the as- sessor's office with illegally cam- paigning on Hinshaw's behalf in 1972. Those charges wiU be subject of a separate trial. Additionally, Vallerga must answer to five counts of miscon- duct stemming from the Grand Jury's accusation. FromPageAJ MARTIN •.• H oag Hospital Auxiliary. the Newpor .. t Bea c h Citizens Transportation Study Commit- tee. the Balboa Philharmonic, Brownies and the Newport Harbor Junior League. Mrs. Martin received her BA from UCLA and did pos t - fraduate work at Stanford in public school administration. ORANGE COAST •• DAILY PILOT lrt< Or.tntlt ( t I (>.ut" J.•t,,t wt n ""n '"' t ,. Detwd fhll Nt-"" I It DUI t \t'-Cl br It .. ll'·' " C..o.~ P\fOh ,,.,, ., 01' r, ' -t ro.r.-t• rd1h n .. o PWDI*""""' Mona \r th• .)V'I" ••tit.Aw ''r 1 t.• ,,,,."'' ,.,,,...,..P'-rt,,,..,.,.. •tu1·fl1tot~1 h•'' • "' IA1+'\ V•th t l•v1n• \.100H t ''lo \ • f ,., 1 LA~ Ju t t ~UH\ (..4,,,-,1 A •••11 1111 d f'CJ1111,r1, °"ot1U,..O !:.--.tu rd•¥' ""'9 "' 1 • Jn Dfl"' '°"'' pwt)t1\l'lf"0 Ul•f\l I\ .ti •11 iN1 t h•t' ~,,,, • c~t .. "1N , c._,.,1110"", .,,.,,. Robflrl N . W ef'd PT~•lelo>nl ~"" P110ll>Mr J ack R. Curley Yo<• PrMi<Wnl """ """""'M W~r Thomas Keevll l.o•lor T hom .1<, A. Murph1n1· M "\4flU\Q ( dii0t Charle~ H l oo-. Richard P, N"" .11>•>1•1•"' M.tn.tQlnQ[ClllM• ~wport Buch Off1c~ Jll t ,..., •oor t ttth1lt••'O _,.,,_. A<td'"' I> 0 81'• lll •f'"' I Other Offices ,,. '"' .._.. " l>O..,.,,,.~• tu•~.,.,., I •o.-llu c II, 11 .. C.-•• ~,,.I .. ,.,.,.,...,.,,,,,_.,.,"' ,,_. &--~"-.. ·••,;•.., ~ooh r....,. • v ... 11,.. HO••• r~u RoAd •• ~" O••llO f , ... A"I TelAtpfloM 17141 64?-4l21 Cl•~tlflt'd Advertisint '41-5671 , ... ,,,,,,, '"s o ....... c .. o ~11t•h•11,.. c;.mp-. HO"••t •tor•n 10,.>tr_.-., .. 110.1•1 fft•I••• nr •d•otlt~..._,. .. Mrelfl ,..., M n •r edtiOft •llM"I _,,., "rlfti.tl•fl Of -•IQnl o .. rwr. h cei1• r 101 po••• ,.,_ •t C.sl• ,_,.,.,.., ('allfof'•H-S,.M(f10l...,llo\OC.Wriff tJ ID-lllT, Of,,..,, )A Oo/ monlNJ; MUll~Y dnUMO-U 00 """"'"'' Monday,July2t, 1875 DMYSetA NewHoun The State Department ol Motor Vehicle. will remain open every Thuhday ftom 8 a.ro. lo 6:30 p.m. in order to better serve the public, OMV Oin.•ct or Herma n Sillas <.announced. All s t<ite offices will re- main open the exlra one and one-half hours on Thursday The pilot proJl'l'l will run until Christmas week , Sulas said. Normal service hours are 8 a.m . to 5 p.m. Monday through Friday $1 a Gallon For Gas- Se1i. Jackson By United Press loll'matiooal Sen. Ht•n ry J :.i c kson, (0 - Wash. ), predicts $1-a-gallon g a·s o I i n e b y t 9 7 6 u n iJ J catas trophi c effect on the economy if President Ford goes ahead with a threatened veto to a bill extending price controls on domestic oil production. Jackson, in Tampa, F1a. to organize his Florida campaign for next year's Democratic pre- sidential primary, told a news conference Sunday that a Ford veto of the oil bill ''could lead to $1 a gallon gasoline sometime in 1976,'' "I 'm flabbe rgasted." Jackson s aid. ''The Pres ident has thrown down the gauntlet. It will be catastrophic. It will have a de- ,·astatjng effect on the economy. I predict it .will brin g the economy to a new bottom." Meanwhile, Sen. Edward Ken- nedy, CD -Mass.), has proposedup to $46 billion 10 lax cuts next year to counter ·'recessionary shocks '' that might follow an oil price in· crease. Kennedy wants lo extend the $1.5 billion in this year's reduc- tions for small business. increase by $4.5 billion this year's tax cuts for individuals and increase by as much as $40 billion reductions for consumers to offset the ef- fects of a possible oil price jump. Fro• Page A J LANDING. • • dust particles in the atmosphere. The Soyuz was eased to a gen- tle landing at 3: 51 a. m. PDT by a big parachute and the cushioning of four rockets fired a few feet off the ground. The thrust from these rockets kicked up much or the dust. The Soyuz came down only six miles from its bullseye 33 miles from the town of Arkalyk. The s ite was 310 miles northwest of the Baikonur Cosmodrome from which the Cosmonauts rocketed Tuesday. Television cameras aboard two helicopte rs followed the big orange and white parachute and the caps ule swaying below it for fi ve minutes be fore the landing, described as a "lhumpdown .. by U.S. officials. It was the first telecast of the end of a Soviet spaceflight. Three hours after landing, the cosmonauts arrived a l th«:! Cosmodrom e and thanked engineers and technicians who prepared their roc ket and spaceship for flight. .. We are grateful lo them for their vast work," Kubasov said be.fore he and Leonov went by bus to the hotel "Cosmonaut" · where they also stayed before launch. Leonov, an artist as well as veteran space pilot, said. "Mother Earth took us in its fold There is much greenery here and the skies are blue ·· Crash V . . 1ct1ms Improve Vactims or a l''riday night plane cnish in hilly Anaheim territory th at killed the pllot were listed in improvt'd but still serious condl· tion nt Canyon General Hospital to<lay Army Chief Warrant Officer Thomas Gambrill, 35, stationed at Fort Ord, was killed when the Piper Cherokee Six slammed in- to NohJ Ranch Road. Investigators said the plane 106l power and theorized it was possible Gambrill descended out of an overcast, briefly mistaking Nohl Ranch Road for the Orange County Airport runway. A s imilar plane crash several years ago in which a small com- muter airliner crashed on the Newport Freeway near Oyer Road was blamed on visual pilot l'rror in he avy fog. Hospit~l officials said today that survavors Mrs. Lucille Gam- brill, 25, wife of the pilot, Steven Jensen, 12, and Jay Barto, 15, both of Palo Alto, and Steven Spleen. 29, of Menlo Park, were all in serious condition. They had been listed in critical condition following admission to the new Anaheim hospital Friday night. . The (our survivors were pulled from the wreckage by Anaheim Fire Department personnel from a station less than a half-mile away. Firemen heard the impact of the crash and at first believed it was an auto accident. Several witnesses looked up when the plabe's engine coughed . and sputtered and then watched the aircraft on a flight from the San Francis co Bay area t o Orange County Airport plummet to earth. Front Page AJ JFK .•• should not be a party to political . assassination." Goodwin, an adviser on Latin American affairs, said Kennedy Cid not tell him who made the suggestions. Goodwin said former Secretary of State Dean Rusk aJso expressed fears about as- sassination after Dictator Rafael Trujillo of the Dominican Republic was killed on May 31, 1961. Goodwin said he is convinced that Kennedy did not authorize plots agains t Castro. "There is not one piece of evidence th a t demonstrates anything Uke that at all," he said. Meanwhile, John J. McCJoy, a member of the Warren Com- mission that investigated the 1963 assa ssination of President Kennedy, says he is convinced Lee Harvey Oswald acted alone. ''I went down there (to Dallas) convinced. well, not convinced", but thinking there must have been a conspiracy," McCloy, 80, said Sunday in a television in· lerv1ew. "It was a s trange sort of a thing." he continued. "But when we got down there, I couldn't find 3Jly connection." McCloy described as "Just non- sense" theories that there was a conspiracy involved in Kennedy's death. From Page AJ VETO •.• or the Senate votes agaimt it. That Ford program reflects the Administration's emphasis on higher prices as a means ot cutting gas oline consumption. Many congressional Democrats, on the other hand. prefer man- datory conservation measures. Birthday Boy Paddkr Capune Resting Up From Wire Services Balboa Island's marathon pad- dleboarder Larry Capwae, now <'oursing the Atlantic seaboard, says he is having trouble with sharks anjf peanut butler sandwiches bn his long distance paddle to Corpus Christi, Tex. Capunt-laid over for bis birth- day today al EHtham. Mus. Also he said he took the dayoCfbecouse he is llred. The Balboa lsland paddler told interviewers that all he brought along for food was peanut butt.er and jelly sandwiches and they seem to be bn.nging him poor luck. One day while holding onto a buoy and munching on a Hl'Jdwich, an tmpo1ln.g oil tanker passed within yards. He pused iL atf u one or those thlnp. But just a few days 110, Capune said, he ripped his finger open while holding onto a target sh.lp lo steady him whiJf'· h ate , his sandwich. "I didn't want to give up my sandwich," he said, "so I sat oa my finger. But it didn't work, the bleeding didn't stop. l collect- ed quite-a few s harks. "1 think I'll come to shore to e8l my peanut butter and jelly, It's safer." When he resumes paddllnf, Capune says he plans to drop io at the Kennedy family compound in Hyannisport, where be saJd be stopped ror a couple Of dzjrs in 1972 enrout.e via paddleboard from Boston lo Miami. "When I tell, Eunice (Ken· nedy) Shriver said to stop ln nut time I paddle by," a.id C.puM., "I think 1 wtJI. I don't know the phone number otherwtse I'd call and let them know I'm COID· ln~apune bu cba......_~ MS . latest lon1..ctatance =-trip ea "a penooal ceacennlal celebration." • .f u,. ... __ , COSMONAUTS DOWN -This map shows the location of the landing site for the Soviet cosmonauts, who returned · to earth early today, on the plains of central Siberia near Karaganda. 'Cloud of Dust' As Soyuz Lands ByHARRYF.ROSENTHAL SPACE CENTER, Houston (AP) -Americans come down with a splash. With Russians1t's more like splat! Heroes of space and interoational chumminess they may be. Dignified, their landing isn't. Soviet Mission Control, monitoring today's return or Soyuz cosmonauts Alexei Leonov and Valeri Kubasov, called their near-target lhumpdown "a soft.landing." Obviously, soft is a relative term. THE SOYUZ CAPSULE DRIFl'ED THROUGH the sky, suspended from a single parachute girdled in red and white over an area reminiscent of the Dust Bowl days. The f ealureless plain below spun by as helicopter. mounted cameras broadcast a Soviet landing live for the first time -not only internationally, but also for the Russian people. Television showed the last five minutes or Soyuz' 21h-million-mile w~~}iJ~_st as it had the ( J The capsule, half of NErTIS "N "LYSIS the first-ever intema-w· rt ,.... tional spaceship called _ _ Apollo-Soyuz, now was nearing the ground. It was cloudy over Kazakhstan, a wheat growing region. THE SOIL LOOKED ROILED, NOT furrowed, like sand dunes. Indeed, the landing site was at the edge of the Russian steppes. From space, the earth looked inviting, blue and brown and white against the blackness of infinity. Here, on the Russian plain, terra firma looked blah. . Down, down, the capsule drifted. Suddenly there arose a fearsome cloud or dust, com- pletely obscuring the manbuilt meteor. When it cleared, the spacecraft looked like an acorn lying on its side, tossed from an invisible, giant oak. WITHIN 30 SECONDS, MEN CAME running. The hatch was opened. They helped out, first Kubasov, then Leonov. The cosmonauts embraced. "Alexei Leonov and Valeri Kubasov fell well," said Moscow Mission Control. Thursday, the three Apollo astronauts will s peed through the s kies and be dumped into the Pacific near Hawaii, a landing equally undignified. THE COSMONAUTS WERE PICKED off the ground like a ripe potato. The astronauts are fished out like flotsam. It seems there ought to be a classier way lo wind up s uch adventures or exploration. But then, Christopher Columbus didn't expect a brass band either. ~ OC Fair Cleanup Begins I ' Only the echo o( whooP5 and shrieks ol delight WJd diSJD ay' from scary carnival rides, the hi· Ler or trampled cotton candy con·• es and the memories remain l<>- day at the Orange Col.Ulty Fwr grounds in Costa Mesa. Gates closed at 10 p.m. Sunday afteT odmlttiiag a steady streanf of humanity that numbered 222,385 persons according to th<!. toll kept by the turnstiles. • Fair Publicity Director Peggy Bayless said the 1975 attendance was up by about 10,000 persons_ more than the previous year. Credit was given to weather which was temperalte and" sparkling during much o( lhe, fair's 10-day run-neither too ho! nor too cool-and the overall planning and staging of the giant exposition. , One other element may have contributed t-0 the Orange County' Fair's success in addition to a' one-night stand by comedian Bob, Hope that attracted well over' 10,000 persons, more than the. total fair attendance on severa1 days. The f air's theme was "The Good Old Days," and fair pro-, molers theorize this influenced a large number of Orange County\ residents or visitors to attend. "Many people returned agai.r\ and again,'' remarked Mrs. Bay~ less, adding that the 1975 !air hact. literally too many things to see and do all in just one day's visit. Cleanup operations began to- day at the site, where carnival roustabouts began dismantling their gear late Sunday night for the trip today to a new town and a new fair. Fairgrounds Manager Jim Porterfield estimated it would take 72 hours to clean up the site and prepare for the facility's next attraction. Guards to Vie At Pendleton Lifeguards fro~ four Orange Coast departments will do batUe on lbe sand in the sea Wednesday evening during the Orange Coun- ty Games al Tresue ·s Beach at Camp Pendleton. Events will begin al 6:30 p.m. They will compete in dory relays, swims, paddle relays and ~· beaoh "chariot" race. Lifeguards from San Clemente, Laguna Beach, Newport Beach and lfWltington Beach will compete. Jellyfish Invade SEABROOK, N.H. (UPI) -An invasion of jellyfish drove many swimmers out of the water Sun- day and sent at least five to area hospitals. • • Mariners gives you up to a s1,,soo tax deduction t'1is year. •• . .. AND EVERY YEAR UNTIL YOU RETIRE! NOW YOU CAN BUILD A TAX SHELTERED RETIREMENT FUND AT MARINERS, WITH "IRA" -THE INDIVIDUAL RE- TIREMENT ACCOUNT. M ari ners I nd1 vidual Retirement Account Is a personal tax-sheltered retirement plan. "IRA" was devel- oped by Congress to give you an effective way to build your own retire- ment fund. You can save as much as $1500 or 15% of your wages, whichever is less, and your savings will be a tax deduc- tion during your working years. If your spouse works, your combined tax·sheltered savings can be as much as $3000 per year J Come In to Mariners and start your own Individual Retirement Account. You'll be saving tax dollars now and building a much brighter fut ure. For more Information. come In or call any one of our convenient locations. HERE'S HOW' AST voun MONEY GROWS IN A MARINERS 'IRA·· ACCOUN I lnd1w 11ual l?et•l'f'mf'nl Accounts are presently earning 11.•. per yelu when placed,,. a 6·y<"ar et1"ft1f1cate Your •nnual yield Is 1ncreaset1 10 a b19 8 06"• wllM 1nt1trest 1s added 10 the •cr;ounl bal&nce iMd compounded rJa•ly With a m•x1mum inalvldual contribution of SI !>OD ••ch ytllilr. /litre ·r floM( vour mon•v w111 grow: t ' WITH TAX WITHOUT EXTRA SHELTERED TAX MONEY fAA SHELTERED FROM TAX AP'TEA ,LAN ,LAN DEFERRAi.. 5 yrs. $ 9,510 $ 6,730 $ 2.780 10 yrs. 23,540 15,750 7,790 20 yrs. 74.640 44,080 30,560 30 yrs. 185.550 95.030 90,520 • At>Ovt hg1.1res are l>Med O" 15 • tl'COmP N l(>.pl Feot•rll rtgulallont requlr• subsl.nt••I Pf'O•ll••• tor u 11v wll!ldra..,efs from t tll'ltl•cate eccouota ~\Mariners Savin.vs \~I and Loan A !;OelatlOn Newt*' IM<h He.,.rt hMh l .. Uft ...... leweflf Hiiie Le• A1t .. IM ' \ (Moln Ofllc•) (loytlde (eflt•r) t~S Wntdift Dr. 1074 lloyaid• Dr. 310 Glenneyre St (714) 494·1506 (OPENING SOON) ~~ (leisure World) 138'10 SHI leach 81vd, (213) ~·76?6 380 So Beverly Or. (O~MI, Sinai Hotpltol) I ,,. 3) .SS.3-3000 87•7 ll-~ly lll11d. • (714) 642·•000 (71•) 6'2 4000 (213) M1·4141 t L Beef on Rise Chicken, Pork Down LOS ANGELES (AP> -~ef prices ar~ on the way up again, a shopping survey shows. ALL CUTS WEllE EXPECTED to be aff~ed by the price hike that supermarket ex~uUves at- tributed to increased wholesale cost.9. The average price !or top sirloin at 20 southern California supermarket chains was $2.81 per pound compared to a price of S2 .27 per pound at the same time lut year. The prices of chicken and pork, however, were ex- pected to decline with the price of whole fryers at .62 per pound, up from last year's average price or .50 per pound. LAMB WAS EXPECTED to continue to be ex- pensive, while the prices of salmon and turbot filet.s. were expected to drop this week. Aflsolut lon Needed • ·can Sister Help Gulf Qil Corp.? • By MILTON MOSKOWITZ Pittsburgh-based Gulf Oil Corp., which elected a nun to its bo~d earlier this year, knows what it is doing. Gulf ap- pears intent on setting a new b.igb·water mark for corporate :irresponsibility and it must be useful to have a director who might be able to give absolution for past sins. Money Tree Sister J ane Scully, Golf's new director, is president of Car low College in Pittsburgh and if she is to give this a bsolution, she 'must . bave a patie.nt ear. Hardly a week passes without Gulf being implicated in a nefarious scheme. It's a worldwide com· pany with a worldwide record for wrongdoing. YOU MA V KNOW G.ULF only for the thousands or service stations which fly its flag. But that's only the tip of this corporate iceberg. It's one of the giants on the business r>cene. In 1974, only seven companies bad more sales than Gull's $16.S billion. And only four U.S. companies (AT&T. Exxon, IBM and Texaco) had more profits than Gulf's $1 billion. In its lust for profits -what it calls getting an "ade- quate" return on its investment -Gull bas neglected the niceties of moral behavior. When the Nixon re·election cam- paign wanted money, Gulf said "sure," even though it re- alized such eontributloos violated a federal law. When politicians in Bolivia and Korea said they needed protection mDney, Gulf said "sure.•• Mor e than $3 million went down the Korean ratbole -a big sum for you and me, a pittf,J1ce when placed against Gull's super earnings. At othel' big U.S. corporations top officers resigned in the wake of revelations of illegal payoffs. Not so at Gulf Oil. Tbe leaders have nol been unseated by the board. THE LAT EST CllARGES leveled against Gulf allege iJ. legal biking of prices. They come from two sources -The Federal Enern Administration CFEA) and the Virginia Electric Power Company. You remember the oil embargo imposed by 'the Arab llations in 1973? As a major pumper of Middle East oil, Gull was affected by this embargo but its subsidiaries in West Africa, where it has extensive holdings, were not. So Gulf 1barply increased its imports from West Africa. However,· the FEA charges that Gulf, detllng with African companies that it owns. overcharged itself for crude oil to the tune of at least $4S million. By setting a higher price for its African crude -higher than the market levels then obtaining -Gulf could pre- sumably pass on this increase to us. This is precisely what the Virginia utility is saying. It claims that Gulf over- charged it $2 million for fuel oil between 1973and1975. · It's all in a day's worlc for Gu lf Oil Corp. and one won· dens bow Sister J ane Scully is dealing with these matters at the Gulf board m eetings. MARKET HIGHLIGHTS NYSE Index ASE Index Dow-Jones Ind s & P 500 Stocks INDEXES 49.68 95.34 854.74 92.44 off off off off 0.39 0.33 7.67 0.76 G~ti11•~rs nnd l .. n ser• New Yori< IU Pll -Tiie fOllooltllQ llsl Qlowl lhl slocks tllet h •w 991Nd mo~ lllld IO)t Ille most ba...O on perunt ot cnenoe on Ille New YO<tt Stock Elr<llA~. ,...l el\O ~rcenteoe c.hengn .,.. the dltter .. 110 bet-11 The preVIOuS <10111\Q prlc;• and the e .. rrent c!Oslnv ~lee. GAIN•IU 'Oty Inv wts iv. •M• Upp SJ.I , OOttlnl Mtge 1 .,. + \4 v~ 2S.O 3 ~ord M I~+ 114 VP 1 .. 1 • e .. lrJIWI .:n ""' • '" US> 1u S K•neMll .14 U t'i+ 1~ Up 1U 6 GIWIV 2.92b O V.+ S Up 12.~ 1 HtrOMS Fd I + ~ Up lO.~ I QueitOf' 2k 7"' + ~ Up 9.6 9 Cltr&CrAsif t l \lt + ~ Up t .4 10 Wtlblll Cp IV)+ Vt VP t .t ti TelCOll Nat 31A + v. Up 8.3 12 eonn-11• In 3~+ V• VP ILO 1l Mtot Tr Am 3~+ V• VP 1.0 /\ 1P1r l 'ork I :> Most A r l i ve H M°OST ACTtVa STOOCS NEW YOlllK (UPI) -The U n'OSt actl-. stocks traded on the Nlw Yortc $10<ll Eachenge ft\onday. S.IH C:-.. (lie, Pen Am Alr ... , 29.S,700 3V• -"'6 S.ertt GD •••• llolt,?H ~.v. -1 Hild Ftnenc. .... 1~.300 IS~ -~ Int Flv Fr •••• 141,500 U -1 Xeroa Corp •••• us.ooo 6S -2v1 Hetl'll: co ••••••• 121,lOO A6 -,.,.,. ~rt LYll<h .... 11127.200 19'" + "'° Pfidf fl\( ••••••• 124,500 27"' -1\lt f'Ol•rold .. • .. • 125,200 40¥. + ~. llvdlr sntm .... 124,600 ~ + ~ Fie Pwr Lt ... • IH,200 24'1/o + ... Citicorp 123.~ 36 Wells Fargo t 11,500 1111\ L.evhr Fum IOS,200 6'to Sc.haring Pl 91,SOO 52'"-14 ~ Ct11tr 1llt+ "-VP 7.7 '5 )twitlCOt tn SI~+ ~ Up 7.l 1---------------1• OM'~I ... wt ''•+ \t Up 7.1 ,, GrnGI• 1.111 "'"'• t11o up 10 A 111-rl-n11 11 Sonesta Intl Jh+ \• Up 6' ~ ' ttLMI tnwstt 7 + ~.Up 6 7 fllll -f•.uf A-fi••-~USGypf IAO U V)+ W1 Vo 4.5 ""• "~ ._ ,.,~ LOSE~~-., Off ll.I NEW YORI( IUPI) -TM 10 41tll,,.. • 1 ~11 Arn Air .. .,.. -stotH tttded on Ch• Amerk.en Stoci.. 2 AFa"'llY .24 ~~Vi= ~~ g:: l~:j Eathallllt NIOl'IO•Y· l•lt• 0.. ~· ! =r~ .. ~ 6 1A -~ Off 10.7 CrtlQ Corp .U,'4!0 ~ ..., ~ s AV(O Cp wU 1146-Yt gi: :·l c1rci. I( Cp ~:: J: ~ ~ , 6 "4tnlble Cp S -YI 1•1 ~tell Corp ""',700 1'VI -"' ~ 1 .._.•Y p~ J"8-_. Oft ·et Pat °'"' .. . . -...... ~ ·-2 ..... -"" Off 1.7 ..... Oii 16.100 27\4 + 31/• • ~lil( co;r. .. -• ... .. ft • • • • • • • .... '"" A 14 + ~ • 118r ,..,_ lYt Off 1.'' Am tnl Pie •••• -.-.. • . ,o •..-< A.wt 2'1.-v. Off 1.'i w •ll• ,ay 21.100 • + ..., H (.oflllMt t • .0 >cU~ ,,_. Otf 1!'1'111111 Pl'( K ,900 SYt + "'° AltHn lr>CP 4---Off 7.t Attec Coro 25,100 1\AI + V• Glllf~W. •• 1 .. -~ Off 7.1 Tedi TaPt 2S.SOO 2Vt + V. u A 1'11\Sn .10 't:-"' 1.1 ,_. lA11 Val lr>d 1~-Vt e 1•1 L-------------- b 1~f.c.. "1.1 ~\Q= ~ 00 f :l /tfark~f Tr~nd l =.~~ .:~ .~ g:: ::? ~~.,.. :~.~~~ .. ~~r·~ ~ ::..:.:.:,:..;.;------------:'! Ot<llnt\ •••••••••• .. ••• ttS 7SI Nftr l'ork 1JMllMQ9d ••••••••••••• 319 tl' Tout ................ 1111 l I . "inl~• \'of Hiii~ ~· MAH&T lR•NO~ ....... , ~-...... , ...... "' 1Z 1 • .-.000 Oe<illlll• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • : m ,.rw UllCl\enll'd • • • -• •" • • • • '41 "·'"·"° Total • ••••••• i• · •· ··• • 21,a .100 CPnllmtnary <-• • 20.!ll·"o L------~--:-----'·p;:U: b I ,,~.sto Stltll *' " 1...,,1-.m Crl $alet in t~I OIVl~EN~· Art 2,nt,'20"'2 <ti'"""' Y"'IH\ ott'lf'r ~ •Otntl}ed· 1:~ o•w. •••r• Ill oecl .. r.O Of pe)lv M> • ltllt\ .,.., · "° '''" .. ' ~ cc rex....mc-n Oil '•----------:::-::---! acc .. i'r't1lllled c11vt , IOI d11d ~ri1l ,, I Y,"'; c411 'r" ~~ ,~ ~' ,~r..1 ~l· 111t1e r lc-an Sn P• 111 '.''",..f,1"p1', ~·~11 ~v nli \! ohuM ft ~"fl 'll\l~.ri·~~·r•\:\i .. ., 11 1t~1" i 5 1 ~\ 11'1 •t0<~itr,~ OS; 141 'n l'lllrvo(<"·'Ktlvt IP ,_~nl,. IOI'!; 01 c .. 11.1 •W• Ion; c ... 411¥ 1411llO; I wl) Wltttl tl<WitO; (wt ""ar • '~111 r•1te• TM swlol CIC A it«=• 11 ~u11T111e ol per ,,,.,. Hril~l-MI Dy 1tldfl'IQ M IAIMI. I?· Ill Nm "9' oure 11110 IH I ,,,. ~ ca. • • -. . .. N DAILY PILOT Al Monday~s Closing Prices NEW YORK STOCK EXCHANGE NEW YO .. K • IUltn • - FotloWt;:.t .,. ('.'"' on 111e ~ Yor !>toe •XCNftl" •I $41.. NII P·E lbO.tl ''°" Cflo, -··-A.beollL I .. II Sol 7'V,-l'I A.DelotlLDwl.. • 40~+ '-ACFlllCI ! 110 t 1' .,.,._ ~ AcmtCtv 50 i 3 t\lr+ V. MmOr .Olb t 4 3~ ••• Mll!tQW .'7b • • .., 10..... • •• Acllms M1111 . 11 s~-"" ""'°"9rp/I 71 5' 1'1-\<\ Aavlnv 1()C) • • 41 <I -';It IW!nelt I DI 11 ~ ,,~ ... .... ttl.Lt pt 1 . I 40 -4-4llulrrt: Co,, 10 6 + \4 Al\msot\ .JO I ti 11 • '<It A1l..-i 1ncp • 116 4""-"-NrbF• hi 10 • 22 11ll'l ••• Air Pro .20o 11 ts 11iv. 1~ Ai~Olnc .~ 6 170 21 -~ A J 1nou1trs 1 60 3Vt-"" iu.ione 110)9 11 1'V. + v. Ale Gel I 11 S 10 U V. + V. AleP pf 1.21 . 1100 71~-~. Al•~ lnl&l ti 11 1Sl'I + "' AlbHtoC .» 110 2 7\to ••• AtbenSll .60 10 "'2 ~+ " Atcan Al .IO 1 t1t u .... + .\\ Al'o Sid .41 5 9t 13 + °" At''" UI .2426 38 26 + V. Al•un .160 8 20 4"'-\lo AllMIMI ,4tb •• t2 SI/>+ \lo A•i.oco 20CI 1 4J '""-v. Allglud t.IO J S3 U -14 Allg LudDI 3 • • Ullt ~ V. Al'9 Pw t~SJ ' " '•"'--:\It Al~p . .ta tJ S2 11llo+ V• Allld 0\ I.Ill I 1.. 38 -.,., AlldN\en .S4 I 130 13~-~ AllledPl-od 1 S 21 Uth + V• Allle4St I.SO t 7t 40Vt-V. Alld ~kt • • 14 2\> , •• Alli• Cl\I .21> 4 146 12'11 + Vt Allr1!fltA .5' 1 I 7\1) •• , AIC>IWIPt .72 S 2 lltlt ••• Alcoe 1.)412 111 44 Amelg~ 3 S II )I • . AMAX US t Ill 51 -H • AmbK .60 1 II I• •.. AmcorO .U 1 13 S14 + Vt ~ec 1.20 S 1 Ute •• , Amupt t .60.. ,., 32 + v. A.mHn .lOQ 5 S9S 22 -.,.. A HU pf 3V. • 11 ~~-"' AmAlrFI "13 511 20~1-" Am Alrllnu . 334 9 -'At Atn Bek .40 . II ,. -.... A8r•nd168 8 60 •1'--"-Atnerul IQ I 100 .22'•-Iii Am Bldc;i .36 9 l4 1n1 + '1-o A C.n 1.20<) • 78 :IO,._+ Yo AC.npl 1>1 .. 3 21~ ... ~~:rn~~ 'i l& 1~v.= ~ AmCyen l'h I 110 21~-V• Atn!hfl . Uh 69 27 8'141 + >;, AOisrTel .S2 12 S6 24~-YI AmOWI \/st .. S ·~-~ AmElcPw 2 9 ,,. "~-\<\ AF•mlty .U 1 111 10 -t\\ A FlnSys .20 22 18 0'1-" A Fin pl 1111 •• Z40 tl1h •., A Goe 1.140 •• 60 '23'14-"' AGenSc 1.S2 •• :ir.31 16'h + v.. A Gn lni .60 6 78 12411+ \Ill A Gn pf 1.80 .. 33 21Vo-~ AmHolst.70 6 2S IS\'l+ "' Am Hom .812S S)4 38 + 'h ArnHoSP .30 24 71 31~-"' Am lnveum . • 8 •"'-'h A Mtolel .tl a o 11v.-"" A Meclkorp 7 231 71Ji + \• Am Motors. 217 6\11-•,. AmNG 2.S4Q I 110 34 Am SHtlno 18 4l 91/o + '~ AmShlpB 7k 1S 17 ti~+ .... Am Sino iO 7 2l2 1s•. ', AmSldpf t >. J2 S4'" I. ArnSterll 28 12 Ill 8''4 + 4, Arn Stores 8 32 28"1 + ~. AmT&T34010 657 SOI•-'• ~~,.r:,a~ ·: ~ !;~ ~ i: AlTpfB 311 , 11 o •, 1 '• .AmWa1r ~ s 6 9• P.Wlr pr1•. 1111() IJ« AWotrpl 11. lllO 17~. ~. Atl'\Clron In 1 s A?l 1' + V• A~sSI toe ~ 6 SV1 • A~lek In I 8 7'1 18~-'• A.NF In 1 ?•IS 92 10•• '• Am•CK Int I l J2 18 ·-.... AMP Inc 37 30 424 34•,•-'• Ary>pco .40 • l4 121/1 Ill) Ampe~ Cp 1 141 6'1i.-Vt Amrep Corp.. 32 3 •• An1~tar? 10 2 1qs ,.,,._ 11• rularpf 2 6S • • 2 •H•-~. Amsted 3 It() 1 SI 68'1<· t "' Amtetln .31 • 26 7tn •• An.Jenda llO S 1a1 18 •• MchHe 1 20 t 6 27 -'·• ArlderCte• I 7 '1 JOl~-1~ Afl9ellea .12 9 10 1~ • An~ut Co •I • 42 16'1'1-"ti Ae>t<lleC .SO 10 18 13'1< + t;1. Apeo OU •• a 641 21 + v. Ap«o Coro.. 78 31 1-"1t APL Crp .ltll 1 '9 12\ot \I• APLP!C I Ob • • I 19'11t ••• ""e>tl..O MO . • 73 )\: + V. A ~ A Svu IS 47 5S -1\1. Arul•N .3" 7 11 10"41 + '• Arc.et pf c 2 .. 12 23"" ...... Arcrwo .uo " soi 32"'•-Yo Arc lie Enif) • • 2S 3>,o\t ••• Arlst•r Inc • 21 3\t 1 •,, Arlt PS 1.36 6 128 1S:W.-'• ,.,._ est . no .. a 1v. + v. ArH .. G I 70 5 JS 28 -V• Arltn AllOv .. 2•1 l~ ... Armede Cp 1 I 1 S,._ 1il Armco t.'°4 s 104 27~-~ Arm pf 2.10 . 1 17~•-v. Armur·pf ,.,4 . i 100 .. 111,._ 'h Ar"'sCk 8022 ISO 24''•-'M Armsl Aubb 12 16 1311'>-1/i AroCorptn I 6 2 1311, ... Arvin Indus 21 46 1"1-'Ill ASA Lid .80 . • 624 411h+ :V.. Asereo 11•1 s 118 1~ • AshlnOll " I " I IS ,.,.. + ,,. AsOryG I •O 13 s• 31 .. As Spro I •O 1 11 24'-~ At ti lone . •O 3 S9 I~• ... Atlco M ISO . • • ~ •1. A11CtyEI t•n 1 37 11.\1.-~. AllCElpl H1 . • t t>S -t AtlRlchf 2''> IJ ,21104'...,_ ~ Atftc pf 2.80 .• 118 &9-'I• AtlRCh prt 3.. I 171 -21/• Alles Corp.. 143 ~-'At ATO Inc .70 • 10I ~ .... Aut 0.1 . IOb 34 21 62\'•-'• Automt t ncls 11 '17 S>I.-'"' A1t<o Corp • • s.3 f>~-~ AlfCO Cp WIS •••• , 111<-"" AvcoCorp ot • • 2S 2'"'•-\I> AveryPr .3-0 2• 3S ~-IV. Avis lncorp 10 S JY, ••• Avnetlne •O s 79 ~ •'o A--.Pr 1.48 24 ~ 45*-'"° ArtecOG 20 18 14 21t.-'I• -··-. Bab&Wil IO I 140 2'1fr-V. BachtG 700 13 121 6'• •.• 8a-er lft .20 11 61 10''1-Y, B•-trOll 11 22 12 S2"'• , • , Baldwin .60 I> 2 10'/f , . Ball Corp .6-0 9 ti 19 •. BallGes I qi> 1 SS 21',._ 'tit :~~.r\4;; ·a l.32 t!~";:"1,,.- aanoa11 inc l6 36 37 •-b eltft90r Pn • 511 41'> 1. 8«1orP plC . 4 12YH .... Bn!l NY 2 70 6 8 33 + V• Bank Va 88 6 6 131,.. •• Banlt'T rusl 3 S in 39'1•-V• BarbOll t.60 . 1 ti 28'1>-'f• Baro CA .10 1• 11e W h .. Basic Inc .ltll 3 1 111,._ v. Bain Ml .?O 3 41 2S~ * Baus<hL .60 16 312 37-Hil e.tirte' L .19).J N 43V•-tliil Be.,stG t.80 1 t 5 17\lil-y, BaY\lllCO .?1 • • ., 411l + •,;, Bearings .32 10 1 21~ ~ BHI Fds .n 11 32" 21"4t+ v. Beckmn .so 14 31 ~ ~ BectonD .•O 19 2•S ~ V. 8"c11Ar .70 6 .. I,_._ .... Beker In .28 4 190 n:¥o-V. BeleoPt .30b l Sl 20 -'"' Belden 1.10 I I 1 ... + 1111 a.ti Hwl .M 9 101 20'AI ••• aemts Co to • u 16 -v. Benc1111 1 .eo ' ~ 4'l -1 Bendix "'J , . 1 62\h-t~ 8en Cp f.2S S 111 I~~ 8enCP9f '"' • • l20 24'i'J+ .... BenC pf 4.30 •• 3 j()•Jo-V) Ben SIO MtQ • • 17 4 + '<It a.noes .11b 4 .s6 211> •• eeruy Pno • • 69 3-~ lleJl Ptockl 1• 101 10 -\o't Be111Stffl 7• 4 117 ~ V> Big 3ll'IO .41 JO '3 ~ • ~ Ble<k&O .~21 M 7714-1\.\ e1alrJlln .32 31 .. 5!/o+ ~ BllULQ 1.10 S 23 IS1t'lt • , • Blo<ktl R .•O 10 S03 1SV.-Vo 811198ell .80 9 S7 31'1>+ 'I'• Bobble Brk• •• 114 31/w+ V. Boeing 80 9 U7 2ftll-~ BolwCas 6S • SM 2S ••• 800I< "'° l'"I 1 3 ~ ... Borden 1.:io • 1111 ~ ~ BorgW1 35 9 90 l,._11'> 8or~ni In 1 39 >*+ "'° 11ot1 E o 2 A• I 39 21.,...._ ,._ eoneof 1.11 • • •2 10'h ••• ertnlff .Ub & 47S 7~ 'lo 8rlgJS 1.llOa 14 • 4NJ .. '"' eris My 1.60 16 .. ~ ~ BrlJ M., pf 2 • • 67 '4'h-_. BrttPat .260 I 102 11~+ VI 9rcllwy GI I 7 1J1 20 -\It BfUl'IGt 1.72 4 SI IS"--YO erown COftl J • tO'h + V. BrOnll> 1.20 ' 60 u -\t!I em St\rp .20 1 f 7"' ... err:.rrls .20 11 "t: ,--= erui!Jk .40 ' 1 • ~ eru w .40 1 i taYt-"" Bl .JOO • 16 ~ V. ~e1;~ 1~~~ 8uclQ>of :g .. I r.-... 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U:!. ~ Sytirvn .14 11 ts• JIM• ~ .,.. ,,.:_ 162 (l"' 1~i=·· ll ~·'Al ~1t111t'iid'1>0 11t tn.-'\A yatf'Oft -':: T-~+ \'lo ._" Ind ..l2 14 71 .1Jfli Retail Clerks LOS ANGELES <UPI> .:_'lb4) Food Employers Council and nlne supermarket retail clerks unions have •llftd to extend their PftMDl • cootne!U one month ., both aldei l'OUld bave more time to necoti&te. • UP1Te__.. Ren e Hau sman, wife 0£ Milwaukee Brewers pitcher Tom Hausman, displays nif- ty · form in delivering a single during Sunday's game with Chicago wives. The latter won, 4·3. Figueroa To Battle Cleveland CLEVELAND CAP > - Cleveland Indians manager Frank Robinson was so dis· mayed with the Tribe's dropping a doubleheader Saturday be de- ~ided to find himseJI a new cen- terfielder Sunday. He moved rookie Rick Man· ning into centerfield and veteran George Hendrick to right and the A•geb S late All G•mt'\ on KM Pt (7101 Ju4y21 C.lllomoa .ll Clrvrland • 7Sp.m. July22 C.lltgmla at Balllm orr .>uAy 13 Callfrirnoa •I Ballomor~ • 2~11.m. •·7~11 m.· Indians defeated the ·eauromia Angels 10-4 to break a four.game losing streak. The Indians and Angels finish their four-game series tonight Fritz Peterson, 4-7, is scheduled to start for the Indians against Ed Figueroa, 8-5. "I've been thinking about do· ing this for a long time , .. 'Robinson said, "and the losses on Saturday m ade up my mind." Robinson said that it was nol done because Hendrick wasn't playing well. "George says he 's a natural ,Jightfielder a nd that he'd prefer tbat position anyway," Robinson said. Manning said that he didn't know about the change until he 11aw the lineup and "it made me feel great." Manning collected three hits, including his second home run, a1oog with John Lowenstein and Oscar Gamble, leading the In- dians' 15-hit barrage. CAl.JflOltNIA ••rlll>f """'2t1 2 I 0 0 ~-0100 tttwncf .. 1 2 1 CIMIM• " 1 1 3 ..,.....,. .. 0 20 CN'ltJb 2 0 0 0 MM412D I 0 0 0 LJeftHt" l 0 0 0 E ........ 1'" 0 0 0 aMNH • 0 0 0 MtffU 3 0 0 0 Ui19P O 0 0 0 .... p 0 00 0 ...-rP 0 0 0 0 J I 4 It ' CLEVELAND •• ,.11w ~n~telnlf .S 0 l O Kuiper 7t> .S 1 0 0 MIMlnQd .S 2 2 1 Hendrick rf 2 o 1 1 $PkKr1 2 1 2 0 CMty lb .. , 1 2 c.m«>I• dh .. , 3 ' 6.Belllb .. ,,. Aihby( 3 0 I I (:nKby~<. .. 0 0 0 Hoodp 0 000 JBr<>Wfl p 0 000 Toi el\ 38 IO I ~ •0 100 000 OJO ' 014 JOI OOa-10 I~ H It Elt 88 SO &,Mlfe(l •• .).l) ,, • " s .s 1 0 ....... •~> I S ~ I 1 .,_.. I 1 0 0 10 ..-cw.>.s> • • • ..l .. 1 ..,.,_ I 0 0 8 0 0 ,. HWtw Z. T-2 1'. A-10,AIO'Z. Monday,July21. 1975 Martin's Fate on .Line Tuesday DALLAS (AP) -Bill.Y Martin lost and then regained bis Job as manager of the Texas Rangers while his American League club and the Boston Red Sox were splitting a twinigbt doubleheader Sunday, according lo a report in the Dallas Times Herald. Quoting a source identified on- ly as one close to the situation, the afternoon newspaper said to- day that at one point during Uie evening Rangers majority owner Brad Corbett -at the urging of 5-everal minority stock.holders - decld•d to relieve the fiery Martin o/ his duties as field boss. After a series of talks with some of the other Rangers owners, Corbell told reporters that Martin's future with the club <.'Ould be resolved at a big board meeting Tuesday. He coo!lrmed there was opposition to the Texas manager withi n the organiza· lion. .. All phases of the operation will be covered at that time," Palmer Wins Open Hard Work Pays For U.S. Champ NORTHFIELD, N.J . (AP) - Sandra Palmer h as placed her name alongside those of s uch famed women golfers as Babe Didrickson Zaharias. Mickey . Wright. Pally Berg and Betsy Rawls as a winner of the U.S. Women's Open. But the tiny blonde from Texas says frankly: "I've never felt I was really in that class.·· The 34-year-old veteran count- ed five bogeys with five birdies for an even-par final round 72 Sunday and a 72-hole total or 295, seven-over-par on the Atlantic City Country Club course. She coasted home with a four. s troke edge over 18-year·old amateur Nancy Lopez and pros JoAnne Carner and Sandra Post. Palmer took the lead for good on the ninth hole, but insisted, "I was fighting for my life out there. When you get a lead, you start feeling protective." The 5-f oot· 1 'h blonde from Fort Worth earned $8,044 to boost her s eason's earnings to nearly $65,000, tops on the tour. . Palmer, who shot 78 in the fi rst round but followed with 74-71-72, attributes her success to hard work. "l was not a good player when J came on the tour. In fact, I was terrible. It just s hows what hap· pens when your're conscientious and you work real hard," said the former coUege homecoming queen. Lopez three -putted the 18th green for a bogey and a 75 to lose sole possession of second place. The powerful Carner also finished with a 75, while Canada's Post ti ad a76. Lopez's finish was the best for a n amateur since Catherine Lacoste won in 1967. She insisted s he was not nervous on the 18th green, but admitted, "I really wanted to birdie it pretty bad.'' · Her parents, Domingo and Marina Lopez, flew out from Rosewell, N.M., to cheer her on the final round, and she said, "I could hear m y father back in the crowd." · Flnat 72 hole scortt in the 30lll annwil U.S. Women's Open golf championship 51.nday at tne It, IM-yard, par 12, Atlanllc Clly Country Out!: 5.tndra Pelmu, \1,0« 78-74·71·1l-2'S !iandra Po~•. $4,GU 7H 3·71t-76--299 JoAnnr C<lrMr, $4,0« 73·77·74·7S-299 A-Nancy Loper 73.74.77.1s-m ~·• McAlli~trr, U ,444 n 7>74·72-300 ~ndra Haynie, S2,7u 74·77·7•·71>-JOl Kdlhy Whitworth, S1,044 76-76-7~7fr·J02 Oebt>I• AuUin, s I, 944 76-7fl.n·79-J03 !.ally Llttle, Sl,7•4 8().7~73-81-304 .Jua>, Rank on, S 1.74• n .n .79-16--30.c .Jotelyne Bouru~a. Sl,744 77·76-7•·71>-3')4 ~rcsa Boyl"n, S1,4'U 78-78·7>74-JOS Maro4 Astrologes, Sl,494 81·73-79-n-JOS I.Aura Bauqh, Sl,319 16-74·7~ JOI> J ane Blalock, Sl,319 H·7(>.l().7fr '.l06 0 1anr Paller~n. s1,1q~ 7!>-74-79-79-JOI P"I Braaley, SI, 19• 18-77·7'·74-307 Donna Caponi Young. SI •~4 81-1•·11·1S-301 Amy AICllll, $1,019 1!>-76-74-13-308 Mary Lou Crocker, \1 019 79-76-7J.80-J08 0.-lhStonr. Sl,019 /(>./~71-80-308 UPI Te ........ JUBILANT SANDRA PALMER AND HER TROPHY. GoH Tourney Results SUTTON, Ma ss. -F inal SCOl'H Md -y 111riMing ~ • ., In the U 00,000 Pl-I Valley 90lf cla~lc on Ille 1.11<1-yard, Pil• 11 ~.s ... 1 V•li.y Country Club cou"P ~ Mallbie, "40,000 ~c McLrndOn, S21,900 BenCrr~Nlw, S9,7SO M•lltr Barber, S9,7SC Buel Allln, S9, 7 SO J1,.,,s1,,_,s, S9,7SO ~Knudson, \6, I so LH TrtYlnP, \I>, I SO Georllt! John.on, M,600 LH Elder, "4,600 ~odCiwl, M.600 Hele Irwin, "4,.00 Al Geibffver, "4,600 0-k Cllurtney, Sl,400 Gery McCord, '3,.00 Steve ~lnyk, $3.~ Mir• Ha~ )2,600 ,,.,, .. ,..,,._,,,, l«Mtl-T.,..9-711 6 ..... 7"70-711 61·14*61 271 10..T n•'I 278 6'1 7().7•'6S-2/I 691>9-n.10-21D 1~14-10 280 """'·n ·n -211 6'-01·1J.1J-211 f>lt.71·11 73-181 l().6&.TJ.10-1$1 70.11·7~70-1'1 6f.11·1~7J-411 1g..1~.._m n n.10-.• 712 ltHt-IHl-Ja J im MH SUio, U,600 8ruce Cr•moton. U . .00 NI Wall, Sl,600 "-l•rOoslerhu1s, \2,.600 Lyn Lott, $1,667 ..... ",, Nel-., Sl,647 Mason Ru<IOll>ll. '1.667 Mike Hiii, Sl,667 Denny E<hw•ros. SU61 Ciroe< Jones. Sl,'67 Oe w Sl<Kklon, Sl,667 l •kaShl Murelteml, Sl.661 LAM,. Wadldn6,S1,114 O."" Elch«lberger, $4, I H Ed00ueh9rty, $1, t14 Frenlt Beard,$1,414 OobStenton, $1,\U 8obMUf"Phy, Sl,11' Mike ReMOr, $1, 1 I• J im WIKMrs, "·"" Dan Sikes,. $1, 11' LeananlThornc>ton,$1,114 7J.7Q..6t.71-213 1~9*10-213 •"-11-1......_m lQ..1•11..._213 , .. ~~70-2$4 1().71-74.ff-™ 73 .... 7 .... -184 6'1-73-7~7-l&A ,~,,_,... n.11.1().11-™ 70-49-7). 71 -™ IH~TJ.tl-™ n _.7-7J.7J ru l~IO.IJ..11 ·2U n -11·1H0-21S 13-lCHH0-28~ 7Q..7H •70-21S IJ-47-14·11-111.S 11.1~n_,95 71-11·17-H-21S 11·11·1U'l-28S 6'1-14-14-6&-'ZU Corbett said of tbe board meet· int, "and l tbJn.k it would be ac· curate to say that a decision will be made reeardlng Billy's future. At another point the majority owner, who Is expected to make the final decision, said, "We have not been winning tbe way we think we should, and we are go- ing to do whatever it takes to try to remedy the situation." One of the latest problems con- cerning Martin and the front of· fice arose last week, when the Texu skipper souabt to acquire catcher Tom Egan, who was re- leased by the Calilomia Anaels. Rangers backup catcher Bill Fahey is on the disabled list with a broken band. General Manager Dan O'Brien· opposed the Eian move, a.rad Corbett stepped in Saturday to decide the issue in O'Brien's favor. There were reports that Martin new into a rage and engaged in a turbulent session with Corbett alter the game that night. "lt eot pretty sticky," Cor~tt said, "but I bad another meeun~ with Billy this Sunday afternoon and be had cooled down con aiderably.'' , On being informed of Corbett s statements after th e doubleheader ended, Martin said, ~·Thia js all news to me. As a matter of fact, the last big meet- ing I had with them they told mo they were going to extend my contract two more years." UPI Te ...... PETER SCHNUG (WITH ARM IN AIR) LEADS THE U.S. ON f.AST BREAK AGAINST SPAIN. Rookie Was Thinking Hoille Run LOS ANGELES CAP) -John Hale, a 21-ycar-old rookie out- fielder for the Los Angeles Dodgers. admitted he was think- ing home run in the 12th inning of the game with the Chicago Cubs. ''It's the first time I've ever gone to the plate actually looking for a pitch to hit out," Hale said of his two-run homer that broke a 3-3 tie Sunday and sent the Dodgers to a 5-3 victory. The Dodgers will try to sweep the brief series tonight when An- Dodge r s S late All !l•meson KABC 17'°1 July 21 Oloc•oo ~•Lo~ Angele~ July27SI. Lou1~al Los Ano;!IO!S 7·?5p.m, 7:25p.m. 1;2Sp.m, July 23St. Louis at Los Angele~ dy Messersmith, 12-7, makes is fifth try for his 13th victory, op- posing Chicago's Rick Reuschel, 6-10. "I got the pitch I was looking for -a breaking pitch out over the plate -took a good cut and out it went." The victory enabled L os Angeles to clip one game off Cin- cinnati's still-impressive 1111-2· gam e le ad in the Nat ion al League West. H's the first time since July 3 the Dodgers have gained ground on the Reds. Bill Buckner, injured most of the season, had his biggest day witb three singles, a double, two runs batted in and two stolen bases and afterward he said: "I'd have to s ay that we've bot- tomed out. We have played the worst baseball we could possibly play. It's got to go up from here." The Dodgers missed many scoring chances. Finally, in the 12th inning, Buckner got to first on a two-out infield single. Then Hale nailed loser Tom Dettore. CHICAGO Kewnoeru CMdetlelll ~O(lilb Je. Moreles rt Monday ct TMrnlonlb Trillo lb Swlstierc Summersph Mltte,..aldc Bonnamp KnOWIHP Ott1ore11 ••rll M S I I 0 4 0 I 0 s ' 2 2 4 0 0 I 4 0 0 0 .. 0 'Z 0 4 0 I 0 3 0 0 0 '0 0 0 1 0 0 0 4 I I 0 0 000 1000 LOS ANGELES M r llM loclft 1b 6 I 2 0 lluUnff II 4 1 4 2 Halecl S 1 I 2 Ger..wy1b 4 1 2 o w. Crewt11rd rt 4 O o o M.MOteptl t 0 0 0 LA<y2b 0 0 0 0 Ceylb 4 0 0 0 Rusi.enss s O 1 1 Vff9er< S 0 0 0 Hoolonp J I I 0 LHPh o 0 o O f'WclOrO pr 0 0 0 0 Merv..1111 o o o o Wynnpl\ 1 000 47 3 I 3 Totels 41 s 11 s 002 000 010 OOC>-l 001 110 000 007-s IP H It Elt 99 SO 9onhem ~ IJ 3 4 t ~ '' I 0 0 0 O Oettore IL, J..l) 1' .J 7 ? ? O 1 HOotell 9 1ll2 S ~rst\111 CW, 6-1) l 1 0 0 I 1 WP-llonNm. T --': '7. A-.2,IOO. Star Suspended Asch-less Yanks Tied by Spaniards CALI. Colombia (AP) -The United States, weakened by the suspension of its captain and best player, Peter Asch, tied Spain 4-4 Sunday in Group C water polo competition at the World Aquatic Championships. In other games, Italy 6 , Canada 4; Yugos lavia 7, Cuba 4; Hungary 11, Australia S; Russia 13, Iran 2 ; Wes t Germany 4, Bulgaria 3; Holland 5, Mexico 2; Romania 14, ColombiaS. Asch and Alexandr Dulgushin of the Soviet Union were banned from the two remaining pre- liminary rounds after a brawl at the e nd of the US-USSR game Saturday night which wound up in a 4-4 tie. 'J1le International Water Polo Committee, after a hearing, im· posed the two-game suspension. Asch apologized to the commit- tee late Saturday night for his pa.rt in the figbt, which occurred moments after the Soviet bad 'tied the score al four with only five seconds left in the game. He said there were no hard feelings between him and Dulgushin. Peter Cutino, coach of the Unit- ed States squad, all from California, said, the tie with th~ Soviets "proves that we are the equal to, if not superior to, the Russians. It proved we're in the top class of the world in water polo." The J;tussians are the Olympic champions. Without Asch on Sunday, <Spain iied the gam e for good in the fourth q uarter on Juan Jane's fourth goal. Jon S vendsen scored t wo goals for the Americans and Jim Kruse (ex-UC!) and Peter Snugg scored one goal each. The top teams from each group move into the sem ifinals. At this point, Spain has four points, the United States two, the Soviet Union one and Iran none. Spo~ts in Brief Odds Favor Rams; Title to Russian RENO -The Pittsburgh Steelers and the Los Angeles Rams are favored to meet in next year's Super Bowl, according to odds posted by the Reno Turf Club. The def ending world champion Steelers have been installed as 8·5 favorites to win the American Conference title, while the Rams are a 9-5 pick to win the National· Conference . Minnesota, 15-2, a picked second in the National Con- ference, while Oakland, 12-5, was picked as the American Con- ference runnerup . So1'1et First CALI, Colombia -Irina Kalinina of tbe Soviet Union won the first gold medal ol the World Aquatics Championships Sun- d ay winning the women's spr- ingboard diving with 489.81 points. was strick\.!n late Saturday. Four-time USAC stock car champion Butch Hartman drove his Dodge to victory in the stock car race before running out ot gas after taking the checkered flag. Terry Ryan's Chevrolet was . second, 23.8 seconds behind, with Bobby Allison third in a Matador. Officials found it hard to believe Hartman was able to run more than the last half of the race without a fuel stop, while others gassed up at least three times. Hartman said he coasted across the finish line out of fuel. C'o•••• r .. tpone Armed Soldiers Guard Athletes Teammate Tatiana Volynkina was second with 473.37 point.a, and American Christine Loock took tbe bronze medal with 488.52 points. NEW YORK -Pele's injured le!t thigh has forced postpone- ment of a New York Cosmos ea- hlbition tonight in St. Louis and hu left up in the air the Brazilian super star's s tatus for tbe Cosmos' North American Soccer League game against San Joee here Wednesday night. Prof. Julio Mazze~ Pele's act- vhor and train er. s aid mllllonaire Cosmo suffer ed a pulled muscle and a bad bruise of the upper left tbfgb when he w• tripped from behind early in Ute second ball of a game at Toront.O. CALI. Colom bia CAP> -This ~xperlenced city is taking c1Nmca, deploying a heavy rl.mber of soldiers and 1el'D"' to protect some 700 ::t.men and their delegates. WJMD the sports people of 39 ~-began competition. the ~tJ m easures intensifi~. fn1D a veiled protectJon of the ••YI oC practicing. From ~~ oo tl wu oUve green _. d•YI· ThLs country ha!' ..-1111*.r a 1tate ol alege for ........ ~ IOlll• of tbe compel.11.on the • display of men in unitonn has been a shock. for others it was something hardly noticing and still others probably have seen some relief that ''not.bing will happen here." Jorge Herrera, chairman or the second World Aquatic Cham· pionshi~, said Sunday that the display is a measure ol precau- tion. "Many wl11 say there are too ·many soldiers. But what H something happens . . on the other hand ." he added, "if a low number is d isplayed, and , aomethin.a happens, people will sa.y we ahould have known bet- ter." 'The idea of another Munictb here Is remote, but until last mooth student groups bad rioted and the 1wlmming organization had to rush to get accommoda· Uoos for tbe visitors wben the 1ludent1 reCuaed to leave lhe dormitories during the summel' v1c•tion period. The delegatJons . had t.o be housed in hotels and a seminary . The bu.sea cany at least one 1oldler or pollceman -lhe 1 soldiers dressed in khaki and the policemen in olive-green fatigues and while helmet and spats. The onl,y incident so tar was Friday night at the inaugural ceremonies when a group or penoo.s began heckling but were drowned out by the more than 50.000' people gathered for Lbc event. Organising committee charirmon Herrera says he ii ex- tremely happy with the way thine• are aolna and hopes that the event will not gee any inct- ~t.. .. ..,, v•~terle• BROOKLYN. Micb. -A.J. Foyt awept past Tom Sneva Oil the 81tb lap Sunday and aped to a 3'h-second victory in the In· dian1polis -type half of the $100,000 twin 200-mile race at Micbi1a n International Speedway. Foyt dropped out ol the U.S. Auto Club 1~t car race, t.be second hall or tbe dauble-headu, after challeoiini for the lead through so laps . .royt then rushed off to Houston to vt.&it his crttkal· .1¥ ll1 dauahter, Terry Lynn. who Pele remained in the game, which the Toronto Metros won. Spal• QuaBlla BARCELONA, Spain -Spalb moved into the final ot the Euro- pean Zone A Davis CUp tenms series Sunday, edging Rom• 3-2 at the Royal Ba~elona T•- nis Club. Romania's No. 1 playeT, lie Nastaae. beat Manuel Orant .. Spain'• top player, 6-2, 6-2, &-of: I I I ~ ( I J , Orange Coast ED ITION VOL. 68, NO. 202, 2 SECTIONS, 22 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALI FORNI A MONDAY, JULY 21, 1975 Today~s Closing .Y. Stoeks c TEN CENTS Ford Vetoes O.il Price Rollback Bill WASHINGTON CAP> -Presi- dent Ford this afternoon vetoed a bill rolling back the price of new U.S. oil to $11 .30 a barrel. He urged Congress to approve his plan for gradual decontrol of oil prices. Ford said he was vetoing lbe measure "because it would in· c rease petroleum consumption, cut domest ic production, in- crease reliance on insecure petroleum imports and avoid the issue of phasing out unwieldy price controls. In a statement, Ford said that unless Congress accepts bis plan for gradual decontrol of price and allocations, "I will have no choice but to veto the simple six- m on th exten sion of these authorities now being coosidered by Congress." In addition to clamping a cell· lng on ne w oil prices, which cur· rently stand on the world market at about $13 a barrel. the vetoed. bill would have left Uie price or old oil -produced from wells in existence prior to 1972 -at $5.25 a barrel. The next round will come Tues- day in the protracted and com- plex battle between the Ford ad- ministration and Congress over energy policy. That's when the House is expected to reject Ford's proposal lo raise the average price or all U.S. oil from about $9 a barrel to $13.50 a bar- rel over the next 30 months. Republican congr essional leaders came from a breakfast meeting ·with Ford today ex- pressing hope -e compromise de- control can be passed before Congress recesses in August. Sen. Paul J . Fannin CR-Ariz.), said Ford indicat ed a •·great de- sire" to work out a satisfactory bill before the recess. Fannin said members or Congress are getting pressure from people back home lo do something about the energy situation and lbat he ·felt the B"Senate Finance Com· mittee had "a c hance to bring out a good compromise bill that would be sat isfactory to the President. .. White House press secretary Ron Nessen told reporters who talked with the GOP leaders that Ford contemplates· no major change in his own d econtrol plan. Nessen said Ford sees his decon- trol plan as a reasonable com- promise. Ford sent his $13.50 plan to Congress last week, but it cannot go into effect if either the House CSee VETO, Page A2l Cosmonauts Land on Soviet Soil New City Panel Set To Meet. A first .step o r ganizational meeting-the first s ince appoint - m ents were announced-is scheduled for t he new Costa Mesa Community Redevelop- ment Agency tonight in City Hall. The formation session, at 7:30 p.m .. will include designation of regular meeting dates and times, plus progress r eports from Bill Dunn, assist a nt city manager for community development. Dunn the c ity's p la nning director for 20 years, is the chief officer or the five-member panel whose m en will convene in formal session for the first time tonight. Coqimunity Redevelopment Agency members are c harged with guiding redevelopment of .downtown Costa Mesa to r e·; furbish the central business dis- trict. City Ma nager Fred Sorsabal and Dunn have presented two alterna tive plans, one a $3 million project and the other taggE>d at $2.8 million, each cen· tered around Lions Park , formerly known as Co~ta Mesa Park. Dunn says tonight's meeting will essentially b e a get . acquainted session for the five· man panel taking over the task of redevelopment from the Costa M.esa City Council, which served as the redevelopment agency un- til recently. <See PANEL, Page A2) D e lay Given In H e aring On Teach e r The public hearing set for to- day to determine the competency of Corona del Mar teacher Mi chael Mang was continued to Oct. 9. Attorneys r epresenting both Mang and the Newport-Mesa Unified School District agreed to postpone the proceedings to al- low Mang's a ttorney John S. Williams m ore lime to prepare his case. Mang, 30, South Laguna, was suspended from teaching hi s gov· emmcnt classes al Corona del Mar J-Ogh School in May • and re - ceived a notice of intent to dis· miss. Mang dem anded that the 34 charges lodged against him be made public and requested a public hearing -the first s uch hearing to be held in the unified school district's history. Dally Pllo4 SUH ~ NEW SCHOOL TRUSTEE Newport's Carol Martin New School Trustee Ex-Teacher BylDLARYKAYE Of tM Dally Piiot SUff Because s he has worked as a teacher, Carol Martin believes she can strike a balance between the teache rs in t he Newport· Mesa Unified School Dis trict and st-hool trustees. ''I have shared the teachers' experien ces and have great respect for the m ," says Mrs. Martin, who was appointed last week to fill the trustee position vacated by Dr . Arthur Thompson. "But, l also have great respect for the trustees and for the hard work they've done," she added. "I 'm in a good position to sec both sides.·· Mrs. Marlin, 37, takes over her new post Aug. 26. She plans to spend the next four weeks poring over old school board meeting minutes, budgetLdocuments and other data that will aid her in the new job. The new trustee has lived in the Newport Beac h area for 30 years and is currently residing at 1824 W. Ocean Front, with her hus band , Bill , a research engineer for Mc Donnell Douglas, and three children, ages 7, 11, and 13. All of the children are enrolled in Newport-Mesa schools. Trustees picked Mrs. Mart.in Crom among 12 applicants. She will serve for the remaining por· lion of Dr. Thompson's term. which ends in 1977. Mrs. Martin said she applied for the job because she is in· terested in and cares about local schools. <See MARTIN, Page A2) Wedding Set Switch for ChrUtina A THENS (UPI> -Ctnistina Onassis, one of the world's richest women, will marry Alexandros An· dreadis 30, youngest son of Greek banker, shipowner and bu~iness tycoon Stratis Andreadis, a member of the Andreadis household said today. The announcement came as a s urprise. She had been ex~cted to marry Peter Goulandris, 27. scion of another Greek shipping f amity and her constant com- panion (or months. He was at her side when her father was buried in March on the family island of Skorpios. The wedding will take place Tuesday In a sub~ urban Athens church, the f amity spokesman said. Christina, 24, who was married brlefly at the age or 21in1971 to Joseph Bolker, 411, a Los Ancelet real estate dealer , promised Onassis before he died s~e . would marry GouJanclris, sources close to the OnasslB family s aid. Fearful . Of Death , Plot-JFK WELLFLEET. Mass. (AP) - President J ohn F. Kennedy said two years before his assassina- tion that he feared attempts to kill foreign leaders would make him a target, a former aide says. The aide, Richard Goodwfn, quoted Kennedy as telling him in November 1961: "[( we get into that kind of thing, we'll all be targets.•• Goodwin, r eached today at his REPORT URGES NEW RFK DEATH PROBE, AS summer home here, confirmed a Was hin gton Post account in which be said the subject or as· sassinalion first came up in a conversation Kennedy had with a newspaper reporter. The reporter asked lbe former president bow he would feel if the United States assass in at ed Premier Fidel Castro ot Cuba, and added that be thought it was a bad idea. __ / Pi~king It lfp Oa1ly Ptlol SC.ti Pholo Kenne dy r eplied , "I'm glad you feel that way because sug- gestions lo that effect keep com· ing to m e, and I believe very strongly that the United States should not be a party lo political assassination." Dave Cowen (left) and Ken Petersen of the Costa Mesa Street and Sanitation Department heft a discarded chair into a truck during the first day of Costa Mesa's second annual trash pickup. East side hom es were covered to· day; on Tuesday the trucks will cover Mesa Verde and , College Park ; Wednesday the west side south of Fairview Hos pital, and Thursday Mesa del Mar and Mesa North areas. Goodwin, an adviser on :...atin American affairs, said Kennedy did not tell him who made the suggestions. Goodwin sa id f o r mer Secretar y of State Dean Rusk also expressed fears about as- sassination after Dictator Rafael Trujillo of t h e Dominican Republic was k illed on May 31, 1961. Goodwin said he is convinced that Kennedy did not authorize plots against Castro. Vallerga's Trial ·Under Way Today • "There is not one piece of evidence that d emonstrates anything like that at all," be said. Meanwhile, John J. McCloy, a member of the Warren Com· mission that investigated the 1963 assassination of President Kennedy, says he is convinced Lee Harvey Oswald acted alone. Mesa Driver · Trapped in Free way Crash A Costa Mesa motorist was listed in satisfactory condition to- day at Orange County Medical Center from injuries suffered Sunday night in a spectacular freeway accident in which he was pinned beneath his own vebi· cle. • California Highway Patrolmen identified the injured driver as Joseph P. Bourbeaux, 32, of S30 W. WUson Street, Costa Mesa. · By GARY GRANVILLE Of tM O•lly Pilot SUH VENTURA -.Orange County Assessor Jack Vallerga was in Superior Court here today pre- pared lo defend himself against seven criminal charges. At mid-morning, Jack Kahill, Valleq~a ·s attorney, and Deputy Di slrt cl Attorn ey Michael Capizzi were meeting in cham· hers with Judge Robert L . Shaw to discuss ground rules for what is expected to be a two week trial. Al issue is Vallerga's role in the sale of a computerized ap· praisal system to Spartanburg County, South Carolina. Wh en indicting the assessor the Orange County Grand Jury charged he was guilty or a con· flicl or inter est because he later accepted consulting fees related to the sale. The jury also charged his ac· ceptance of the consulting fees and expenses was embezzlement and grand theft. In interviews before the indict- ment was h anded down, Vallerga pointed to state codes which specified that a public official may not consult with private firms. He pointed out the codes do not. • Also freed from the wreckage was his passenger, Betty L. IHJW RETR.E.4..TS, Fulford, 43, of the same a~dress. Mrs. Fulford was t reated at Sad-CL01~ES -"T 854 dleback Community Hospital for o:J. ...._ minor injuries and was released. NEW YORK (UPI> _ PriJel> Officers said the car driven by closed lower today in slow trad-1 Bourbeaux was northbound on the San Diego Freeway near the ing on the New York Stock Ex· intersection with the Santa Ana change when Investors retreated Freeway when it a pparently to the sidelines in the face ol l some news developments. failed to make a ane change at a Tbe Dow Jones industrial hlgb rate of speed and over· averaae, ahead at the outse~ lost turned. 7.87 points to 8$4.74. Declines led They said Bourbeaux· was advancelJ by about a nlne·to-fiv~ burled from bis car and pinned to the roadway when lbf auto marlin (tabla, A9) la.oded on top. of .him. Mn. ,rices were lower ln Fulford was trapped In ~e moder••b' acU'(e \J'adlng 00 the .wreckaae ot the vehicle. ·~cu StQC:ll &Jcbangc. . . l-·'' . • ... ' say one public official cannot perform consulting services for a fee on behalf of another public agency. That is expected to be the ma· jor issue in the trial that was transferred to Ventura County because of the vast amount of pre-trial publicity . The opening of Vallerga's trial today is the first round in what is expect ed to be his long legal bat- tle to avoid c·onviction on criminal charges as well as acts of misconduct the Grand J ury charged him with in a separate accusation. Along with R ep. Andrew J-Onshaw. Vallerga·s name was added to an indictment that charged cmployes in the as- sessor 's office with illegally cam· paigning on Hinshaw's behalf in 1972. Those charges will be subject or a separate trial. Additionally, Vallerga must answer to five counts of miscon- duct stemming from the Grand Jury's .accusation. . Diners Slap Out on Tab A quartet with big appetites but a small bankroll dined at Denny's restaurant in Costa Mesa Sunday night, then fled without paying the $17. 75 lab or even leaving a tip. • Waitress Reva Ramos com· plained to police following the in· cident at 3170 Harbor Blvd., that two in the group weot Out and warmed up the getaway car beforetheothertwoflect. She said the cllnen including three men aod a woman, all in thelT early 20s, consumed two or· den ol steak and eas. two or- den ol fried clams, a steak and ahrlmp dln,ner. four gl•nes or milk, Cwo cups ol bol chocolate ad two cups ol coffee. Apollo's Crewmen Still Up HOUSTON CU PI) -Russia's two Soyuz cosmonauts landed gently and triumphantly in a cloud of dust on a central Asian prairie today. carrying five Unit- ed States flags to symbolize their historic meeting in space with three Americans. The world could watch on television as Valeri Kubasov, 40, and Alexei Leonov, 41, emerged s miling from their scorched spaceship after it came to rest on its side in the middle or the wheat belt of Kazakhsta n. Moscow con- trol said they were in excellent health. "This is wonderful p lace. • Kubasov said after he climbed from the Soyuz capsule and greeted rescuers with a bear hug. "It is a nappy place of landing. [ will remember it a lways ... Leonov. obviously tired from his six days in space, staggered slighUy when be emerged and said, <>Jt was difficult, very dif- ficult. We are a bit shaky_ due to tiredness a nd to happiness." U.S. astron auts Thomas Staf· Cord, Vance Brand and Donald "Dt>ke" Slayton remained in or- bit for three more days of scien- tific work. Their Apollo,. 3,450 miles to the east at the time of the Soyuz landing, is due to return to a Pacific Ocean s pl ashdown Thursday. The a stronauts were asleep when their comrades returned to earth but later radioed con- gratulations. One of the Apollo experiments planned for today -a scan of the sky with an x-ray d etector -was delayed because of trouble with the instrument. But the pilots went a head with plans lo make earth ovservations and measure dust particles in the atmosphere. The Soyuz was eased to a gen- tle landing at 3:51 a .m. PDT by a big parachute and the cushioning (See LANDING, Page A2 ) T hir d Grain Firm Tells Soviet Sale NEW YORK (AP> -Conlin~n· tal Grain Co. said today it has completed an agreement for the sale or 5.6 million tons of grain to the Soviet Union. A Continental spokesman said the company would receive "somewhere in excess of $640 million" for 4.5 million tons of corn and 1.1 million tons or barley. We at•er Night and morning low clouds but s unny after· noons Tuesday. Little tem- peratu re change. Highs from the 70s at the beaches to the low 80s inland. Lows tonight 62 to 65. I NSIDE TODAY F'or the first time. the West h4s representation an the No· tional Political Women 's Caucu$. Two Orange Coast women now hold national of- fic~6. See Page B 1. I ' • t\2 DAILY PILOT c Mondey1 July21, 1975 SOYUZ lANOINO .... U Pl NeWHl'\otP COSMONAUTS DOWN -This map shows the location o! the landing s ite for the Soviet cosmonauts, who returned to earth early today, on the plains of central Siberia near Karaganda. 'Cloud of Dust' As Soyuz Lands By HARRY F. ROSENTHAL SPACE CENTER, Houston (AP) -Amencans come down with a s plash. With Russians it's more like splat! Heroes of s pace a1td international chum mtncss U1ey may be. Dignified. their landing isn't. Soviet Mission Conlrol, monitoring today's return or Soyuz cosmonauts Alexei Leonov and Valeri Kubasov, called their near-target thumpdown "a soft landing." Obviously, soft is a relative term. THE SOY VZ CAPSULE DRIFTED THROUGH the sky, suspended from a single parachute girdled in red and white over an area r eminiscent of the Dust Bowl days. The featureless plain below spun by as helicopter- mounted cameras broadcast a Soviet landing live for the first time -not only internationally, but also for the Russian people. Television showed the last five minutes of Soyuz' 211:?·million-mile flight, just as it had the firs t fi ve. The capsule, half of the firs t-eve r intema· I\. E JT '.'-' A .:VAL YSIS lional spaceship called '"------------" Apollo-Soyuz. now was nearing the ground. It was cloudy over Kazakhstan, a wheal growing region. THE SOil, LOOKED ROILED, NOT furrowed, like sand dunes. Indeed, the landing s ite was at the edge of the Russian s teppes. From space, the earth looked inviting, blue and brown and white against the blackness of infinity. Here, on the Russian plain, terra firma looked blah. Down, down, the capsule drifted. Suddenly there arose a fearsome cloud of dust, com- pletely obscuring the manbuilt meteor. When it cleared, the spacecraft looked like an acorn lying on its side, tossed from an invisible, giant oak. ' WITmN 30 SECO~ MEN CAME running. The hatch was opened. They helped out, first Kubasov, then Leonov. The cosmonauts embraced. - .. Alexei Leonov and Valeri Kubasov fell well," said Moscow Miss ion Control. Thursday, the three Apollo astro"llauts will speed through the s kies and be dumped into the Pacific -near Hawaii. a landing equally undjgnified. THE COSMONAUTS WERE PICKED off the g round like a ripe potato. The astronauts arc fi shed out like flotsam. lt seems there ought to be a classier way to wind up such adventures of exploration. But then, Christopher Columbus didn't expect a brass band either. 250-poundMachinist HelJ; Carney Beaten A six foot. five-inch. 250-pound Garden Grove machinist was jailed Sunday evening, charged with brutally bcalinf? a partially deaf carni va l game con - cessionaire at the Orange County .Fair in Cos ta Mesa David 0 . McBride. 19. of 13272 R lue Spruce St., was booked on a charge of assault and battery following the incident in which ms companions allegedly tried to tear down a carnival booth. J ohn P. Lafferty, 23, of San Diego, was treated at Costa Mesa Memorial Hospital for facial lacerations and advised to seek ~-rays for possible head injuries, ORANGE COAST ( DAILY PILOT ft-n, "'°"' <o • t (l "'• P11nt ¥W••P\ •'. ,. 1 •1• t ,. •t t• ~._I .. 0 f f I t 1r !'\o t "t I • \f I t t ,f fl .l\•flU ( l)n I '' t \.. I ! I • I I pvb41~·1 N'o')'d IY tr f 1r1h • •tJo· f" (•..,,IA ,,.,_ • 1 '••'NM'' t 't<fl ttv· ''""' • !~' t ro,, '· '" V.UI•., 1t-.1f1' ,,,.,,,, •' .... "I. I ti l , •If'• 1 t\.f •' n ·..nu•" ( ·• .1 A • • ....... • ~''' .n \>Vr II Md \4f v• il·h fllf1 • • " f ,.. ,,_ •O·•' 1111r·ll,ht,,_.J "t~"f ,1 • \\o• t I 'f '''' 1 t l)t.t.1 M 111 .,, (..fthlt)• n, t W••• Robert N . We"<J P1••\10f't\t And Publ1~' Jack R. Curle!y V•4 ~ Pr•\•dent •nd Gent!'t'.,, 1'.•n.Q"t Thome1s Keevil l'<111or Thomas A. Murptline M<INIOl"O Ecl!tor Costil M•H Office l!O W.•I ••Y Sl•..-1 ~·"~ Addt•'' P 0 fto• 1....0 ,~,_... Other Offlc.s ...,,.-1 ... «,. J)l) .,. • .._, nou•-.•"' l.•OuM .. 4.Ch 11 .. (,, .......... yt,.'l'~'t Hunt1nql0f'I ~¥Pt tlU \ .._,.,,. """''''"'4 ••'1 ~--btt• v.u,v 1\.')t 1 ..... , 11-.. 1 tt1)4tnD•t0 ,,_.,. • .,. TeltphOM (714) '42·4321 Cl.nsUled Adverlislnq 642·M71 opyr•Q"t. t•I' 0t41t9'fl' to•\t rwbtntt•"O :...,._...,ny. M$t'I'"'' "1""'W' 1llU'\ltAt1ta>n\ """tlOt•At •tl•t O,. •ctvrrh\•m· nt f\ft••f\ "'•Y lt,,. •t•dtH90 Wi,,,OUI M)flC 1.tl """''"°" Of ytl , .. , ...... , <IH\4 (18 U ~·~ p.< d •I CAii .. Mt\A, '-lllCl'l'fll• ,,.,."'" ..... "' <•ffll't w 00 ...... , ... ,. .,. ,... .. ,. Otl montftty; """l••r ""'"MtlOtl· ~l 00 """""'" police said. Investigators said they arrived at the carnival midway to check a report of a fight about4:45 p.m. and found Lafferty sprawled on the ground. bleeding profusely from the nose and mouth. . The victim 's employer, Steve Brugoto, of Smead's Ferry, N.C., claimed Lafferty spotted the. hulking youth's group of compa- nions trying to steal a stuffed animal toy from an adjacent booth's prizes and intervened. McBride, however, claimed the partially disabled carny worker had s truck his female companion in the face and he re- t aliated to protect her. The incident was one of the few which marred the 10-day fair, which ended Sunday. Front Page A J MARTIN ... "1 care about what happens to the schools and I appreciate the time the board has put in. I feel l have something to orrer, too," she explained. Mrs. Martin brieny taughtfull- time at Newport Element$ry School in 1960 and since has sub- stituted in the Newport-Mesa and other school districts. When notified or her new job. Mrs. Martin withdrew her name from the Newport-Mell sub- stitute list and said she will not have time to substitute in other dJslricls. either. Fro•PageAl VETO ••• or the Senate votes agalnstit. That Ford program reflects lbe Admlnlstrallon'1 empbuts oo higher prices as a means of cutUng gasoline-consumption. Many conRre~siona! Democr1ts, on the other hand, pref er man· da_;tory conservation measures. ;· OC Fair Cleanup Begins Only the echo of whoops and shrieks of delight and dismay from scary carnival rides, the lll- te r or trampled cotton candy con- <'S and the memories remain to- day ut the Orange County Fuir· grounds in Costa Mesa. Gates closed at 10 p.m. Sunday after admitting a steady stream of humanity that numbered 222.385 persons according to the toll kept by lbe turnstiles. Fair Publicity Director Peggy Bayless said the 1975 attendance was up by about 10,000 persons .more than the previous year. Credit was given to weather which was tern per ate and sparkling during much or the !air's 10-day run-neither too hot nor too cool-and the overall planning and s taging of the giant exposition. One other element may have contributed to the Orange County Fair's success in addition to a one-night stand by comedian Bob Hope that attracted well over 10,000 persons, more than the total fair attendance· on several days. The fair's theme was "The Good Old Days," and fair pro- moters theorize this influenced a large number of Orange County residents or visitors to attend. "Many people returned again and again," remarked Mrs. Bay- less, adding that the 1975 fair had literally too many things to see and do all in j ust one day's visit. Cleanup operations began to- day at the site, where carnival roustabouts began dismantling their gear late Sunday night for the trip today to a new town and a new fair. Fairgrounds Manager Jim Porterfield estimated it would take 72 hours to clean up the site and prepare for the facility's next attraction. Fro• Page Al LANDING •.. or four rockets fired a few feet off the ground. The thrust from these rockets Jticked up much of the dust. The Soyuz came down only six miles from its bullseye 33 miles from the town of Arkalyk. The site was 310 miles northwest ol the Baikonur Cosmodrome Crom which the Cosmonauts rocketed Tuesday. Televis ion cameras aboard two helicopters followed the big orange and white parachute and the capsule swaying below it for five minutes before the landing, described as a "thumpdown" by U.S. officials. It was the first telecast of the end or a Soviet s paceflight. Three hours after landing, the cosmonauts arrived at the Cos mod rom e and thanked engineers and technicians who prepared their rocket and s paceship for flight. "We are grateful to them for their vast work," Kubasov said before he and Leonov went by bus to the hotel "Cosmonaut" · where they also stayed before launch. Leonov, an artist as well as veteran space pilot, said, .. Mother Earth took us in its fold . There is much greenery here and the skies are blue." Russia's leaders quickly radioed congratulations te the spacemen and praised the joint project as a major step in cementing peace and furthering cooperation between the two s uperpowers . Leonov and Kubasov replied in a special message to Russia's officials: "In this space flight, important· for the cause of peace and pro- gress of all the peoples of the world , we were inspired by the high assessment of the work of scientists, designers, workers, cosmonauts and the warm words of greeting by Leonid Brezhnev. ·'The crew of the s hip is ready to fulfill new assignments or the Motherland." E'ro•P~AJ • PANEL ••• I le said he will make several progress reports to the new agen- cy's directors on expansion of Lions Park, widening of 19th Street and relaignment or 17th Street, plus d iscussion of of pro- perty on Park Avenue. Agency members are each ex· peeled to off er comments and l"uggestiona at the close or the meeting. which will be patterned after city council sessions, with a period for public comment or crilicl!tm toward the conduslon. Project.I to be developed .-nd controlled by the Qew qency will be financed largely tflrouah gov-. ernmenl grants, with some private capital invested as well. . A Craeie bu been imposed on new or drastic zonl.nf or •true· tural changes wlthlo the affected downtown area . Slippen.1 Travelers D•llY Polol Pllol.O l>y L.tt l'a'y.-. Young bodysurfers David Grothus (left) and Denny Cole slide along the shoulder of a crystal-clear Balboa peninsula wave Sunday afternoon. Denny, who is s liding right on the wave, has met up with De1vid. who looks a little surprised to see so meone else on lllS wavl' Mesa Businessman Assails Sign Law Businessman Keith Priest, backed by a nationwide firm, says he is prepared to challenge Costa Mesa's relatively new law governing commercial sig_ns, in court if necessary. Priest, owner of Cort Furniture Rental. 1877 Harbor Blvd .• made the com men ts recently before the Costa Mesa Chamber of Com- merce Board of Directors meet- ing. He spoke in impromptu fas hion when called to the podium lo ac· cept an award. Basically, Priest believes the city's rather strict new or- dinance governing size and number of signs -based on size of the structure housing the firm, AD PAl'SOFF; 'SOLD BOAT' ''An ad in the Daily Pilot really does pay off. I sold my boat." That's the success story told by the Huntington Beach man who placed this classified ad in the Daily Pilot: 16' GLASSPAR. w/75 llP Evinrude. No trlr. $775. Pri ply. XllX·XXXX If you have a boat to sell, call 642-567~ It only takes a few words in the right place to make a sale. Along the Orange Coast, the right place is the Daily Pilot. in part -is inequitable. He also maintains a city that regulates local signing to that degree is working at cross- purposes with its Chamber of Commerce which has conducted a long, hard campaign to attract new business. ·'One of the first things you ask when you go into a city is 'What about your sign ordinance?· ·' Priest said. · His firm which started as a local business and is now part of the Mohawk Carpet corporate chain recently initiated plans for new signs but company represen- tatives ha\'e been told verbally the signs are unacceptable under the law. Priest said he and company representatives have requested a written explanation from the city Planning Department, which has not yet been received, outlining s ign Jaw violations as proposed for his property. Mohawk Carpet corporate lawyers have also studjed the or- .dinance and Priest ·says he believes it can successfully be challenged. No legal action has been taken and no formal sign variance re- quest has been filed with the city at this time. "IC I can spend $5,000 on a sign to beat my competitor's sign of the same value, why can't I?," says Priest. "I think it is com- pletely inequitable." $1 a Gallon For Gas- Sen. Jackson By United Press International Sen. Henry Jackson, (0- Wash.), predicts $1 -a -gallon gasoline by 1976 and a catas trophic e ffect on the economy if President Ford goes ahead with a threatened veto to a bill extending price controls on domestic oil produclliqn~ Jackson . in Tampa, F1a. to organize his Florida campaign for next year's Democratic pre- sidential primary, told a news conference Sunday that a Ford veto or the oil bill "could lead to $1 a gallon gasoline sometime in 1976," • "I'm flabbergasted," Jackson said. "The President has thrown down the gauntlet. rt will be catastrophic. It will have a de· vaslaling effect on the economy. I predi c t it will bring the economy to a new bottom " Splash Night Set In Estancia Pool Teen Splash Night in Costa Mesa will be held July 'l7 from 6-9 p.m . at the Estancia Hi gh School swimming pool . The event costs 50c per person. Barefoot deck dandng, exclusive use of the pool and refreshments will highlight the affair. The event is limited to 150 persons. • • Mariners gives you up to a s1,soo tax deduction this year.~. .AND EVERY YEAR UNTIL YOU RETIRE ! NOW YOU CAN BUILD A TAX SHELTERED RETIREMENT FUND AT MARINERS , WITH "IRA" -THE INDIVIDUAL RE- TIREMENT ACCOUNT. f Mariners Individual Retirement Account is a personal tax-sheltered ret iremen t plan . "IRA" was devel- oped by Congress to give you an effective way to build your own retire- ment fund. You can save as much as $1500 or 15% of your wages, whichever is less, and your savings will be a tax deduc· tion during your working years. If your spouse works, your combined tax·sheltered savings can be as much as $3000 per year. Come in to Mariners and start your own Individual Retirement Account. You'll be saving tax dol lars now and bu ilding a much brighter future. For more information, come In or call any one of our convenient locations. HE Rf s HOW fA S T YOUR M ONn f;Rows IN A MARINERS IRA AC<~OUN T l'1<1•111cJ•JJI HPfirrrflM•/ Accounh iftl> presently c.1rninq 7' • pl.'r Vl'Jf wl'len plJcr,1 '" a o yeJr cef/l/1Cdfe Your annucir yield is increJ~ea 10 d O•Q 8 06 • wl'len interest 1s dcJded 10 '"'" i1cco11nt 0.11.mc<' ;mcJ compounrJl'cJ dd1ly W1tl'l ii mdtimul'n ina1wdu1tl ronr,,01111on of S 1500 c.icl'l ye.u. here·s how your money will qrow WITH TAX WITHOUT EXTRA SHELTERED TAX MONEY IRA SHELTERED FROM TAX AFTER PLAN PL.AN DEFERRAL 5 yrs. $ 9,510 $ 6.730 $ 2,780 10 yrs. 23,540 15,750 7,700 20 yrs 74,640 44,oso 30.560 30 yrs 185,550 95.030 90,520 ·Above llgurea •rt tlAJed on ~·. oncomp br11clcet. Feoer•I regul<attons reQu•ie r.untt.1n11e1 ponalloes lor early w1•hdr1w•l1 lrom c.ert•l•~l• A<.co.1nt• ~ ;7i' 1•\ Mariners Savings.... ; ·\~I and Loan i\e~iation ~~ ...... l Hew~rt hoch N•w,Ori hedl (Moln Office) (loy1ld• Center) '''' Wemlllf Dr. 107• loy1ide Dr. (7 t;) 6-42·•000 (11•) 6-4,-4000 lo911fto leech 310 Glonneyre $t, (7 14}•9·'"7~ (OPENING SOON) S..lhech (lelture World) 13820 Seol hoch Blvd. (213) $'8·76:16 lewetlr Hiiis lot Angelo1 390 So. hwerly Dr. (Opp.Mt S1nol Hotpitol) (21 3) SS3 3000 8747 S.vetly lllvd. (213) 6~7 4141 I·