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1977-05-27 - Orange Coast Pilot
ari@F FRIDAY AFTERNOON, MAY 27, 1977 VOL 7', NO. 1'7, 4 SfCTIONS, 44 PAGES • Kids Freed Terrorists Still Hold 59 Adults ASSEN, The Netherlands (AP) -Gasps oC relier and quiet reu- nions with parents marked the end or four days' captivity for 105 Dutch children held by armed . t As ian extremists in a village schoolhouse. The mass .release occurred after half of them came down with a stomach virus. But five South Moluccan separatislc; continued to hold four Carter Rides Nuclear Sub Los Angeles CAPE CANAVERAL. Fla. <AP> -President Carter, a onetime career submarine of- ficer. slipped beneath the surface of the Atlantic today aboard the nuclear·powe red. hunter -killer sub Los Angeles When the Los An~eles began its dive at 8: 15 a.m . POT, Carter became the first president lo cruise in a submerged undersea vessel since Dwight 0 . Else- hower dove in aboard the nuclear-powered Sea Wotr 20 years ago. By coincidence, Carter had been senior naval officer in charge during the construction or the Sea Wolf. The Los Angeles look two to three minutes to complete tls dive in waters about 35 miles off the Florida coast. Carter had begun his Atlantic cruise some three hours earlier, eager to take the helm or the Los Angeles and perhaps willing to let wife Rosalynn take a tum in the "driver's seat." Aboard nuclear subs, the in- dividual who mans the helm is said to be driving the ship. Accompanied by Adm. Hyman G . Rickover, "father of the nuelea( Navy," the President and Mrs. tarter boarded the at- tack sub Los Angeles at Port Canaveral for the eight-hour cruise. Carter, an Annapolis graduate, joked to reporters that when he was a career submarine officer, the undersea craft were called a>oats. He said they've grown so large they are now known as ships. .. Do you have any last words?" t reporter inquired s hortly before two Navy tugs began <See sue. Page AZ> LA Budget OK'd LOS ANGELES (AP) -City Cowlcil members have 1pproved tbelr firat SI billion budaet, f Janina a pe>saible lour-cent 'in the clt.y property tax rat.. teachers today, including two women, in the school and refused to surrender . At least 55 other hostages remained the captives or seven other separatists on a train 15 miles north of the school. The South Moluccans, who want the independence of their Pacific island from Indonesia, have demanded the release or 21 fello)V extremists jailed for ter- rorist activities and a jumbo jet to take them to an undisclosed location. "It was fascinating to see the reaction of the children," a Red Cross spokesm an said. "Only three or them cried when they s aw their parents again.'' He said while m any mothers had tears in their eyes or were openly crying, the children were shy for a few awkward moments before breaking lnto hugs, kisses and "just happy children's talk." The Red Cross said one litUe girl's first words were: "Mum- my. I left my coat in the school.·· One girl said she and her sc hoolmates were never threatened by the extremists but were restricted in their move- ments ano n ad trouble sleeping on the cold hard floors at night. She said they spent much or the time playi n g games and watching television. Ambulances rushed the ailing children to a hospital where 26 were admitted. Another 79 children and a teacf)er -also re- leased -were reunited with families under the watchful eye oC Dutch psychiatrists. Hospital officials declined to disclose the condition or the hospitalized children, but uncon- firmed reports said they were "reasonably well." The children <See TEBROR, Page AZ) Sex 'Rater' Sm pended • l\Z@S arine Guilty of Murder In Stranf1ulation Case • • ~· APWl..,._liO Woman Heists $134 Brandishing wbal was ap-- parenUy a pistol wrapped in a yellow kerchief, Orange County's • bandana bandit struck again Thursday night in Huntington Beach, taking $134 from an ice cream parlor. Tbis time, the trim, petite armed robbery artist who favors a dirf erent-colored scarf for •every holdup. hit a Baskln- RobbinS 31 Flayors ice cream store during the supper hour. Clerk Chris Marriott was on duty at 5971 Warner Ave., alone before the busy after-dinner in· flux of customers picking up dessert, when the young woman walked up to the counter, police said. "What can I do for you'?" Mar- riott asked the woman, who wore huge, mirrored, Lolita-style sun- glasses. LNG TANKER TO BE DEDICATED IN SEA OF CONTROVERSY OVER SAFETY Ship's Cepactty Gives Ala• to Concer" Over Poaatblllty of Glut FJrea ' "You know what you can do for me .. .," she replied, brandishing the apparent weapon swaddled in a yellow kerchief matching the scarf that tied down her brunette hair. "Pardon me ... '?," the young clerk stammered. Controversial Ship Goes to Work Today Va., arid New Orleans. The ~Coot-long s blp, which cost $100 milllon, wW be operated by Burmah Oil Company of England to carry au from ln- doneata to.i-.,an. The giant, black-bulled shJp carries its cargo ln liquid Corm ln five globe-shaped tanks. The tanks protrude above the •eek. (SeeTANKEa. Pa1e A2) ~Finn Faces (]barge Toro Marine Found Guilty Of Murder "Glve me all the money!," she snapped. · Detective Dick Nolen said at that point Marriott quickly grabbed a white paper bag from beneath the counter and stuffed it with bills. He said the bandana bandit re- fuaed to take any silver coin change. Two stunned customers stood (See BANDIT• Page At) One of two El Toro Marines · tried in ()range County Sul)erior . Court tor the strangulation kill· ~· ---------- ~:;:, c:;td~~:,::3e;~ Orange Ttwriday ~ leu than thr• &ours ot'.juf)r 4ellberaUotts. Coast The jury returned that verdict ln ,Juge Kenneth WOUams' co_.r(.io-Oom alter b earihl testimony that Marine Robert Jones, 1.2, played ~ active part in the ki.Wn1 of Marine Patrick Michael JlcCooe, 20. Co·deCenda~t Terry Alan Corftel4. 21, wp aentenc9d to alx yeart in state prison earlier \bis month after ~g found guilty of 11econd dearee murd•~ in a aeparate tnal before tbe aame judge. Juclge WllliaMS _.t Juia,,~ao u the dlte N wtU semence Coifiijd to what could be life In pn,.; It was aoccesatully allesfd m bo\h triab that Jones .aDCI COrfi .. d k:illttit llecGne tut NOv. · 17 after a dlapute ov r a urC<JtiCI sale •IMI~ tMft dUID1*! • 'lUI bOd.Y in tbe Sl Mocteii• area; Increasing low cloudl· ness becoming more ex· tensive tooiaht and conti- n u inc through mid· morninl Saturday. Mostly · sunny lrom late Saturday· mor'nlnl· through after-. noon. Lows tonight SO to 57. Jtiahl Saturday 66to10. INSIDE TODA" Memorial Da11 W11keftd morb #le btOftaning of wm- mer .ol Ofang• Cosint11'• . om""""'9d parb. For. a look at tMiaf ,...,,., ploaning, IH . P.a~ Cl of U.. WHkc'ndn. · , r .... --. - • s ~ld!y. Mer 27. 1W7 .weighty P• O bese Sub Crew Bilks Fro~ Ca rter .. CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. <AP> -Five crew members of the submarine Los Angeles said they were barushed from the boat today, while President Carter was aboard, because they're too fat. The five reported they were as· sl.ned to temporary duty aboard the submarine Spadefish here aqd were kept aboard, out of sltht, until Carter and the Los Angeles left port. , 'Only one of the five, William Darrendorf. a fire control specialist, said he was wilting to be quoted by name about the inci- dent. Down t o E art h The men claimed five or six other Los Angeles crew mem· bers also bad been deemed over- welpt but were not banished becauae they were needed to hell) rua Ute boat. ObviOU!lY angered at bein4 de- ni ed an opportunity to meet Carter, the portly submariners -one said he weighed 260 pounds -said they bad been . working long hours and get.tin& about three hours sleep a nlJbt preparing the Los Angeles for tbe presidential visit. Capt. Lawrence Burkhardt, a s pokesman at the submarine base here, said the Los Angeles Amateur mountain climber George Willig and his g_irlfriend Randy Zeidberg lea\•e New Yorl(City police sta- tion after being booked on charges of trespassing for scal- in g the quarter -mile-high World Trade Center. (Story, PageA4. I Pizzeria Plaster Placater Puzzled GLENS FALLS, N.Y. (AP) - The owner of a local pizza parlor has had to contend with com- plaints about both nudity and racial d~crimm1tt1on since-he put a repbca of Michelangelo's David in front or the shop. Lorenzo Amato said he was surprised when he started re- cei v mg complaints nb<>ut the four-foot nme-mch statue "People started to make caJl111 telling me 1t was obscene. that they were going to knock 1t down. that it would hurt my business. so I painted black pants from the waist lo lhe le.net>~." Amato said. But painting the statue result- ed in 150 complaints that 1t was discrimination to paint the statue half black and half white. "I didn't know what to do after I painted it black and people started to complain,•· said Amato. He said locul police told him· the statue wa11 not illegal and a priest told him It posed no re- ligious conflicts. pie realized the MicheJangelo's- statue was a wqrk or art. Amato replied: "Apparently not. They think it· 1 obscene.•· Amato's next worry ia a at.atue or the Virgin Mary he wants to place in front of the 1bop. "Mary bas half of~ bust ex- posed," said Amato, "but I re- fuse to put a bra on her because 1t would Look funny. but before J do anything else, I'm aoing to late anoth~r poll ... SU8pect Nabbed EXETER <AP) A Navy recr uit. Allen Raymond Casselman, 23. has been arres\ed for investigation of murdering 1 Lancaster man whose badly de· composed body was found in a re- mote area east of here. Tulare County authorities report. Casselman was already being held in San Diego on wife-beating charges. bad a lar1er crew than was re- quired for the Carter mission and ··we wanted to present a good ap- tearanee" so the crew members udaed moat overwei1bt were re- ev.S fOf' the day. When a reporter told Burkhardt that the relieved men seemed rather bitter, he responded, "Then I would sug- eest they lose weight ... * * * E'...-r.,,eAl SUB ••• nudging the Los Angeles into a narrow channef leading to the acean. · "No," •aid C.rt.er, laughing heartily, "because they won't be last words.,. 'l'~ President was whistled - .dot piped -aboard the sub- marU. &Qd, u be disappeared down m open batch, the pre- 1icl.,.Ual en.sip wa.os raised from tbe cOnnlng tOwer. Aa soon as the Carters got in- side the sub, the President shucked his blue.gray suit coat and donned a tan nylon Tt'indbreaker he carried oft Air ·locce One when he 1b'ri~ here trom his holiday weekeecf.ietreat at St. Simons Island, Ga. The President ancl First Lady were taken first to a wardroom •here Rickover briefed tbem on the status of his beloved nuclear Navy, which boasts 108 sub- marines and six surface ships. The admiral told Carter the Los Angeles required refueling only every 400,000 miles. com- pared to 5,()()()..6,000 on the con- v en tiona l s ubs on which the President served. As the tugs pulled the Los Ao9eles away from the pier, the President and Mrs Carter emerged from the top of the con- nlng tower, where they waved to people on docks nearby. Mrs. Carter wore a gray and white striped pant suit and sneakers. Tot Takes Family Auto For Joy Ride HUBBARDSfON, Mith. (AP) -The sheriff's deputy leaned in- to the smashed, upside-down car. Spotting only a child and a dog, he ukecl the liWe boy where bis motberwu. ''I was drivint:• 3-year-old Michael Delbert Ward res ponded indipanUy. The Hubbardston lad had grabbed a car key when his mother wasn't watching, loaded his dog into the family auto Thursday and took the wheel, tracine an erratic two-mile pat.ch tbrough rural Ionia County, the sheriff's offl~ said. MichaeJ inanaged to drive by hopplbe from th• seat onto the accerer•tot' Ud then jbmping baek onto1 • seat to steer, re- pot'ted de~ Terry Jung et The ~ar veered ln and out Of a ditch, '-eadlna down the road for about 15 minutes at roughly 10 mlles ber hour. Mlcbael'a father' theorited the drive was triafted Wednesday nilbt when b.e told his SOil be should belln aeting Uke a big boy •Ince he would be going to school soon, the deputy said. Michael emeried from the wreck unhurt as dld his dog. Junget sald the auto was heavily damaged. No charges were med. Suicide Ruled SAN FRANClSCO CAP) ·-The· death or a San Fnncisco man who was found beneath the Golden Gate Bridge with a knlfe in his chest has been ruled a suicide. Then Amato acted with results from a s traw poll and whitewashed the statue. which is tbe way it remains. Asked whether he thought peo- ORANGE COAST DAILY PILOT TM 0.•"0I Co.t\I 0•11• Pllt>I "''""""<II" co"" btt'f(t tl'lr Nt#\ Ptt" I' pUbtl"""O by'"" ()r .. COa" P\Rtftsf'llno Comoany 5eoiM'ait fd;t~' •f'• p.ubtl\""-4 Mondty l"r""O" frt~Y lor (o\t• .,.,_. ..,..._. A<'•<• """'i..cio"" !It•<• "°""" tt•"' Veit"• tritil'\t S1dOl•o.<ti:. V.t11ttaw a"'d IA<iun• &.ec:• Sout• Co"' 4 ''"'II•,.,,_, •C!• tlotl I• D\ll>lhl•td ~•tu•d.,, -\""°ti" n..t Cono1Jand Tops ~laub Geu Big Po•t ~~~~~~!'.1.~:,~~' .. ~.,~~lO W.•t llty. .... ,. .. _ p,,., .... ,,, •nd Publl""" Jtoa.c ... i., VIC• P•t\letnt tl'O Ot-tl ~ Tll-ttlC .. •11 ldllOf TIMfM•A.M ........ ~ ... ,"'9 01111• CIMlf'H1 It. I.-~ "· .... "'"•llenl M<tnt9l11Q l!d!IOf\ Offlctt c.tt. Mt.. llO WHI .. , '4..,.. U.-luc~ 11M r.t~$4'"t ~r ............. 1111111e.oct1111e1_,., ~"'-' VAiiey 211111 Ul "NII ... ·•-01_,._ Tef'.'"n• (714)"2-4ttl CIHlffled Advtrtttf"IM2·5t71 1-1et1tU llalle,.,_.Oftlce lt1.a10 ,..... ..... ~ •tt.ouo "'--°'-~~·M0-1220 Af'Wlre!IMto PRESIDENT AND MRS. CARTER ABOARD NUCLEAR SUB Familiar Territory for Former Nava} Officer Tie -in Possible Attempted Assault, Burglary Probed Newport Beach police are in· vestigating a n attempted burglary and an attempted rape to see if the two crimes are re· lated. Both Cclses occurred early Thursday morning within three blocks in Central Newport and both cases involved break-ins through bathroom windows. The first case was reported shortly after midnight when an 18-year-old UC Irvine student told police she fri~htened off a would-be intruder by screaming. About five hours later, a 19- year-old woman reported a rape . attempt inside her apartment. She told police she w as awakened when a man put a T· shirt over her mouth, but she squirmed away from him and screamed. frightening him off. As the man ran out or her apartment. she said she noticed he was naked. Police said the man apparently got into the apartment by open- ing an unlocked bathroom win- dow and climbing in. E',...PtapAl TANKER ••• and from the air, the ship looks like a long. narrow canoo filled with eggs. Boston ls the only U.S. port where Uquetted natural aas is de- livered. Tbe Cout Guard con- 1ld•n the taken so danieroua that an .... tr.mo Ii halted when u.ey ... t.be harbor. Other docklD( factutles for 1uch carcoea art belnl prepared In N~ York, Providence. JU., md COin Point, Md. One of the IJ)Olt ou ta.poken critlH cl pa t.anten ta James )lacktllde, a director of the· tJnl.QD of ~c.erned Sclentlats. .. U .S when e accident oc· curf, there w<>uld be an enormous conflaleratlon wltb people being injured for miles around.•• MacKenzie said. "It would be a devastation. There would be a huge fireball in the sky visible froP> miles away." . ''It bu a potential of being very buardous under certain conditloos,'' said Robert Reid, a natural gas expert at Maasacbusetts Institute or Technology. "But if it's handled rl&ht, it's about as safe as anything. There are lots of other dangerous gases we handle on our waterways." Rolf Glasteld, the chief de· velopment engineer for the new tanker, said he believes the ship is a safe way to transport fuel . "No que•tion about it," he said. "And no effort has been spared to make it so." Fro• Page Al BANDIT ... by during the holdup, after which the young woman scurried out the door or the ice cream parlor which is located in a busy sbop· ping center. The victim said she jumped in- to a waiting car described as a 1974 or '75 domestic sedan, dark blue, driven by a second , male suspect. A third man sat in the back seat, wearing apulled-down hat. Marriott told Officer Jim 'Austin the bandana bandit wore a matching blue denim jacket and pantsuit outfit and was about five feet, four inches tall, weighing about no pounds. '"This gal has been hilting all over the county.·' Detective Nolen said today. lnvestigators say she has r obbed small businesses such as liquor stores and markets in at least five Orange County cities over the past few weeks, using the same method of operation. The woman said she was dry- ing off after a shower when she saw her bathroom curtains move and a man's hand come through the open window. After the man ran orr. the stu- dent and police found bricks stacked up outside the s ix-foot high window. The suspect in the rape at- tempt is described as being rive reel. 11 inches taJI, and weighing about 175 pounds. The woman said he had shoulder-length, cur- ly blond hair. F r om Page Al Victims describing the scarved gunwoman indicate to police that • she selects a different color scan to wear as an accessory before BankA H i ke I.nan Rates By the Associated Press A number of major com- mercial banks raised their prime lending rate from 61h to 6~ percent today. Among banks increasing the rate were New York's Citibank. the nation's second-largest com - mercial bank. and Chicago's Continental II· linois National Bank & Trust Company, the seven· th-largest bek. Bert Lance, director of the federal Office of Management and Budget. said he sees no reason why banks "Should be rais ing their prtme rate Lance said that banks "are awash with cash." T ERROR ••• had been suffering from vomit- ing and diarrhea. The parents of children return· ing home were told by the Red Cross to give them hot baths and send them to bed. The children were also told not to drink or eat too much at first. Dutch television said one 12· year-old asked his mother for pancakes but was refused. Issu e Worsens SAN DIEGO CAP) -Police were called to deal with unruly pupils, 800 teachers stayed out sick and the San Diego school system gave in Thursday on a stumbling block in contract talks. School Supt. Tom Good- man said the district is withdrawing a plan to restruc- ture the salary·step scheduled for the system's 5,800 teachers. every armed robbery. . Witnesses to the Baskin- Robbins ice cream parlor holdup which occurred al 6:30 p.m. were unable to obtain descriptions of her two male partners. Bandit Hits Coast Market A gunman who threatened the female clerk with an automatic pistol took $60 in cash from a. Capistrano Beach market Thurs- day night. Orange County Sheriff's Of- ficers said the robbery occurred at Paul's Market, 26891 Camino de Estrella, where the clerk was ordered at gunpoint to empty the cash register and put the money in a paper bag. Officers described the gunman as a male Mexican-American, about 1S to 16 years of age, wear- ing an olive green military jacket. dark blue slacks and a dark blue watch cap. KALEIDOSCOPE Our showroom is a virtual kaleidoscope of colors. The reasons are vaned-: We know that color coordinating is the primary target when buying carpet. Quality is usually second in line, and because we have such a vast selection of qualities, 1t is easy to coordinate color and quality to each individual's taste. · However. we know that a volume of samples looking at you can seem very confusing -but we feel tl;iat showing just a few samples 1s not a fair representation of the carpet business. Our huge selection gives our salespeople every possible option 1n working with people, helping them to find the perfect "Choice. So 11 you are in the market to select your carpeting - select Alden's to help you. that's what we're here forl t I I ·DEN'S :iiisiillatiij,;:·custom draperies ---or.linoleum • wood floor--- COSTA MESA, CALIF_. 92627 • ,HON! 6-'6·4831 -646·23'.S f ................................................................. - " ' . ,.. I I Orange Coast EDITION ... 'l;oday' Closing N.Y.S...,ks IOL. 70, NO. 147, 4 SECTIONS,~ PAGES ORANGE COU~TY, CALI FORNI A FRIDAY, MAY 27, 19n c TEN CENTS . -. 1Jury Eyes Diedrich-Conrad Land ~ink ·: By GARY GRANVILLE Of UM D•llY ""°' Slalf The Orange County Grand fury's probe into political cam- >aign practices swept out Thurs· lay to delve into real estate ransacUoos allegedly involving ederal indictee Gene Conrad ind county Supervisor Ralph )iedrich. ~ut Diedrich's attorney today .aid the Fullerton supervisor had no part in any of Conrad's real estate deals. "As a matter of fact," Fullerton attorney Michael Rem- ington said, "Ralph ref erred Conrad to me with a warning that I watch my wallet. He (Diedrich) said he didn't want to get in- volved in any way.•• ••Unfortunately,•• Remington added, "I did get involved. And it cost me a few bucks." · Conrad is the former paid eat LONG, LONG TRAIL A-WIOING AT SAN ONOFRE PARK All Available Camping Spaces Snatched Up Quickly Camp Fills Up Cars Wait at San Orwfre lt was first come, first served · al San Onofre State Park today and the first came last night and 5lept in front or the gates. Sex 'Rater' Suspended CAMBRIDGE, Mass. (AP) A student editor at the Ma ssac hu se tts Institute oC Technology was suspended and three other students were put on probation for publishing an article rating the sexual performance of 36 MIT men. The article. which creat· ed a furor on campus. rat- ed the sexual performance of 36 male students on a scale of zero to four asterisks. The authors said they rated the men on the basis of their own experiences with them. Trud~aus Split t OTTAWA, Canada (AP> -I Prime Minister Pierre Elliott Trudeau's office announced this 1 alternoon that he and hi~ wife .Margaret have separated. He wUl have custody of their three sons. 'IR4SH PICKUP NIXED MONDAY l There will be no trash plc~ ln Costa Mesa on Monday, emorial Day. Trash pickup tor the week will be one day later than normalty acbeduled ln all areu, a~· to clty ofticta.11. . . This morning when the gates opened to the newly refurbished park. 150 cars. campers, trucks. trailers and other assorted vehicles were in line for the 290 av~ eamping Sf)&ee~. Parks omcials expected all the available camping spaces to be taken quickly. Camping spaces in the two .o l her s tate parks at San Clemente and Doheny were "sold out" under the state's reserva· lion system a month ago for the Memorial Day weekend. Although camping spaces are gone. day-use spaces were still available. police informer who turned political financier last fall when he dumped more than $53,000 into various campaigns. Early this year, Conrad's ac- tivities and those of the Irvine- based firm he beads, Pension Funds of America, fell under the scrutiny or a federal Grand Jury as well a.s the county Grand Jury. ln April. the federal jury in- dicted the burly ex-Chicagoan on seven fraud related charges re- Penalty Measure To Brown SACRAMENTO (AP) -The California Senate sent a death penalty bill to Gov. Edmund Brown Jr.'s desk today for acer- tain veto. The 27-10 vole came alter lengthy debate that focused more on charges or political motives than on the minor amendments which were the only issue technically before the Senate. The vote was the exact two- thirds majority required in the 40·seat house. "l am convinced the punish- ment should not be the death penalty. I am convinced a better punishment would be life im· prisonment without possibility of parole," said Sen. Milton Marks or San Francisco, one of only two Republicans to oppose the bill to restore capital punishment for treason and 1$ categories ol murder. Sen. John Briggs of Fullerton, a Republican candidate for gov- ernor, said Brown's .. heart bleeds not for the attacked, but the attacker. He continues to speak out for those who commit crimes. "Every day in California, over five people are executed -not by the state, but by the criminals,·• Briggs said . Briggs also charged that the Democratic governor made a deal with Democrats in the legislature to override his veto to prevent the political embarrass· ment of facing a death penalty in- itiative on the ballot next year. Democratic floor leader David Roberti of Los Angeles angrily replied to Briggs: "No deals have been made." ··I· m proud of the governor on this auue," Roberti said of Brown's pledge to veto the bill as a matter of conscience. "Sen. Briggs, you are running for the governorship. You want the headlines." Roberti satd. Tbe Senate approved an earlier draft or the death penalty bill on a 29-10 vote March' 31. Today's vote approved amend- ments made by the Assembly to s implify trial procedures and limit the manner in which prior records can be brought before the jury. The Assembly gave approval on a 54-23 vote Monday. <See VETO, Page A%) lated to $1.2 million worth oC loan fees for loans allegedly never made. Like Diedrich, Conrad has de- nied the two were ever joined in business ventures. And Remington today em· pbasized that point. .. Naturally I 'm concerned because anything Conrad was in- volved in spooks me a little. But. that's hindsight now that I've lost. a few dollars. However, .Ralph had nothing to do with any~ the so-called transacUops that never were.•• Remington said. He admitted that Diedrich has had past dealings with two wit- nesses who appeared before the jury Thursday. The two witnesses were real estate brokers Stephen Berck and Bart Rainone. Diedrich, who is out or town and was not available for com- ment. showed on a recent conflict . . ot Interest statement that be re.- celved income from Derck and Rainone's firms last year. · · "Yes," Remington said, "that's true. So, big deal. Ralph's a wealthy man with extensive holdings and you would expect him to do business with brokers.•• . Remington said, "The jury ob- viously is following whatever Ralph did whether there's a re- (See PROBE, Page AZ) eto een .. ,. ........ 59 Still Held by .TelTorists ASSEN, The Netherlands (AP) -Gasps of relier and quiet reu- nions with parents marked the end of four days' captivity for 105 Dutch children held by armed Asian extremists in a village schoolhouse. The mass release occurred after half of them came down with a stomach virus. But five South Moluccan separatists continued to bold four teachers today, including two women, in the school and refused to surrender. At least SS other hostages remained the captives of sevep other separatists on a train IS miles north of the school. SEN. GEORGE DEUKMEJIAN FLASHES VICTORY SIGN Death Penalty Biii Author Puts Brown on Spot The South Moluccans, who want the independence or their Pacific island from Indonesia. have demanded the release of 21 • · fellow extremists jailed for .ter- rorist activities and a jumbo jet to take them to an undisclosed location. Controversial Ship Goes to Work Today i•tt was fascinating to see the reaction of the children, .. a Re<i Cross spokesman said. "Only thr~e of them cried when they saw their parents again." He said y.tbile many mothers had tears ih their eyes or were openly crying, the children were shy ror a few awkward moments before breaking into bugs, kisses and "just happy children's talk." QUINCY, Mass. <AP> -The first of 18 American-built natural gas tankers is being dedicated here while controversy s till sim- mers over whether such ships" are answers to the energy shortage or potential sources or flaming disaster. The ship to be put into service ·today will carry 125,000 cubic meters of liquefied natural gas. Supporters say that's enough to serve an American city or 500,000 people for a month. But critics say it is also enough to cause a catastrophic fire 100. times the size or the wreck of the Hindenburg, the hydrogen-filled German dirigible that burst into glames in 1937. The greatest damage could oc- cur, scientists say, if the ship's tanks were ruptured during a col- lision at sea. The liquid gas would pour into the water, and ir it did not catch fire Immediately, would evaporate into a colorless, odorless cloud of gas. That gas, they say, would noat close to the surface. IC the wind eventually pushed it to land, any flame, even a cigarette, could ig· nite it. The new ship, called the LNG Aquarius, is the first of 12 li· quefied natural gas tankers be· ing built by the General Dynamics shipyard in Quincy. Six others are under construction atf shipyards in Newport News, Va., and New Orleans. The 936-foot-long ship, which (SeeTANKER, Page AZ> Teens Admit Mo-pe d T h eft s ~ In Huntington The case of the mobfte mobsters known as the mo-ped bandits who specialized in bit and run strong arm robberies of women pedestrians in Hunt- ington Beach today has been solved. .. Detective Dick Nolen said two teenagers, 15 and 16, taken into custody on burglary charges have admitted to the several purse· snatching incidents. Cases includJng one in which a 'woman. 73, was knocked down in an alley and another in which a lady leavinl a bank lost. her purse and $185, were reported. Detective Nolen indicated to- day others.apparently went.un· reported to police. The Red Cross said one little girl's first words were: "Mum· my. I left my coat in the school.•• One girl said she and her schoolmates were never threatened by the extremists but were restricted in their move• ments and had trouble sleeping on the .cold hard floors at night. She said they spent much of the time playjng games and watching television. Ambulances rua~ the ailin~ children to a hospital where 26 were admitted. Another 79 children and a teacher -also re- leased -were reunited with f amities under the watchful eye of Dutch psychiatrists. Hospital omclals declined to disclose the condition of the hospitalized children, but uncon- firmed reports said they were "reasonably well:" The children had been suffering from vomit· inl and diarrhea. Co::ist . Weat her Increulng low cloudl· ness becoming more ex- tenalve too.l&bt and conU· nuing through mld- mornlng Saturday. Mostly sunny from late Saturday. morning through after- noon. Lows tonight so to 57. Highs Saturday 66 to 70. INSIDE TODA W .. M crmotia& Do.fl W c.kend He said m8D7 cltben Ups sup-. plied after newspaper coveraie of the incidents led him to SUS· pect two local youths. Confronted about the recent . wave ol purse snatch robberies, the youthl, who fit the ban· dlts' descriptions perfecUy, ad· mittedtheirrole, Nolen aald. marks the btginning of sum.- ·mtr .al Ora nge Count.,•1 .cmuacrment parb. For.a look .at whal thq're plomting, tee • P.agt CJ of tfMt Weelcimder. ~ They are now awalUn• Oran1e County Juvenile Court beartns on tl)e burglary charges ror which they were originally ar· rested. · But. Nolen said, slnce victims ot the mo-peel bandltt pu.na anatcbinl esca"pades cannot pe>11ttlvely ideoUft)' the two as tbelr blt and nlll rohben. lMY will not face armed robbeO' chars• . &•ex =•n-lefWklt "" ..,,._ ~ ........ .. .......... "'' CM........ At Natl.,I.._. M,,M Q~ l»-M °'*'9tc:i..t1 Alf CMlllC• u ..... . .... , C>Mltlft aJ ·----°'' ......._ AW lfMt""'9r AU ............. ...... ..., ell\.-1" AM CH Metll ....,.._ AU.11 ,.._. Ata.u.~......... a ,rw-.hcltN AM... ,...._. CM .......... .. ......,,-:-... ,._..._ a..,,_._. M.M ~'--" • -....-~a.e _ .... ·"' ••• T"' • ._ Scrubbing (Jp · Costa Mesa-Newport Harbor Lions Club members (from left) Eric Johnson, Lou Yantorn and Conrad "Shorty" Schaefer scrub deep fry cookers in preparation for club's 32nd annual Fish Fry and Carnival, slated June 3, 4, and 5 al Lion's Park in Costa Mesa. Lions members have set a goal of $100,000 for this year's event, which raises funds for local youth·oriented groups and services to the blind. Command Tops Singlaub Gets Major Post WASHINGTON CAP> -Maj. Gen. John K. Singlaub was named chief of staff of the Army's big- gest command today, less than a week after being re- lieved as U.S. staff chief in South Korea for publicly ·challengi ng President Carter's decision to withdraw American ground troops from there. Singlaub's assignment as chief of staff of the Army Forces Command headquartered at Ft. Mc Pherson, Atlanta, Ga., was announced a day afte1 Carter said the general would be given a job of "equal degree of responsibility and stature'' to the Korean µost. Singlaub has returned to Korea to clear up personal matters and will take over his new job on .June 'l:l . The Army Forces Command is responsible for training, equipping and insuring the combat readi· ness of all Army troops in the continental United St ates, Hawaii, Aslaska, Puerto Rico and the Virgin Is lands. lt is also responsible for supervising the training of the Army National Guard and the Army Reserve. TANKER ••• cost $100 mllllon, will be operated by Burmab Oil Company of Eaatand to carry cu from In- donaia to Japan. Tbe atant. black·hulled ship carries Ita cargo in liquid form in five globe-shaped tanks. The tanks protrude above the deck, and from the air, the ship looks like a long, narrow carton filled with eggs. Boston is the only U.S. port where liquefied natural gas is de· 11 vered. The Coast Guard con- siders lhq tankers so dangerous that all other traffic is halted when they enter the harbor. Other docking facilities for such cargoes are being prepared in New York, Providence, R.I., and Cove Point, Md . One of the most outspoken critics or gas tankers ls James MacKenzie, a director of the Union or Concerned Scientists. •'If and when an accident oc- curs, there would be an enormous conflagration with people being injured for miles around," MacKenzie said. "It would be a devastation. There would be a huge fireball in the sky visible from miles away." "It has a potential of being very hazardous under certain conditions," said Robert Reid, a natural gas e xpert at Massachusetts Institute or Technology. "But if it's handled right, it's about as safe as anything. There are lots of other dangerous gases we handle on our waterways." · Rolf Glasteld, the chief de- velopment engineer for the new tanker, said be believes the ship is a safe way to transport fuel. "No question about it," he said. "And no effort has been spared to make it so." Drug Firm Faces Charge MILWAUKEE <AP > -A pharmaceutical firm was charged in U.S. District Court h e r e with manufacturing Laetrile under unsanitary condi· lions. Federal prosecutors said the Laetrile, believed by some to be eff ective against cancer, was adulterated and could have been contaminated at the Mosinee Research Corp. plant in Manitowoc, Wis. The charges said the substance was prepared, packed and held under un- sanitary conditions. 'Weighty Proble1D' Obese Sub Crew Hides Froni Carter CAPE CANAVERAL. Fla. IAPl Five crew m embers or the submarine Los Angeles said they were banished from the boat today, while President Carter was aboard. because they're too fat. The five reported they were as· s igned to temporary duty aboard the submarine Spadef1sh here and were kept aboard. out of sight, unhJ Carter ltlld the Lo6 Angeles left port. Only one of the five. Wilham Darrcndorr. J fire control TONIGHT ·' EQUUS" South Coast Repertory Theater, Tuesday. Sunday through June 11, 8 p. m. OCC PLANETARIUM -7 .30 and 9p.m. OCC LECTURE "South America." f<'ine Arts 119, 7·30 p.m. MOTORCYCLE SPEEDWAY RACING -Fairgrounds, 8 : 15 p.m. ORANO! COAST DAILY PILOT ~~~.~~.~:~·r. ::.:::::-...: ~~=- r ..... 1 .....,.1"''~ C•..,11••• -... f'dl1-.-flvbh~l\f"O ~"4•f' tl\tou-qf'l I"~ IOf (o\f4 INVI Ho•-• Buell H....tlOQI"" .... ,,,r...,.. .•. ., v..... '""''"• \•ddltb«.' "•' .. ., •rwt ~.:~ ::::~:.~~::~:~J~';::. l"l"'IOAI """''"'I ... ttl""I h •I DO Wttl 9., ~''"I· c.\I• MllW. C.il,_,111~ -·-... -...... ,.,,,_"""'_ Jec•ll,C....., \110 Prnld•nl •n<I C',._.i ~ '"--'•""" lldllo< .,_. "· Mtl<1llllM ~11~1..,1.i .... °""'" M. l.Ht ~I'. "41t A\tl\llf\1 ~MOlno Edllan Co.teMeteOMce llUlll"9A~~:I :·O~M ti.?t OfflCH l •QVMl\4>•<11 II.,,(",_..\.,,... t< ... 1 • ...,1 ... 0 ..... '"" ................ .. Motl"'°"'' v., ... n10u. .. ,.., ,._ '"'s... Olttt '"·-·· Tef-hone (t1C)~ 0Htlfted Adv•ttt-toa7I a... .... , ,.,, Or-c...-"""~ e.... ~ H• ... , '""'-' ii~•••-Mtterlll :~·::v~ ·:::.:::.r=~~ ... ~:.:.~ = ,_.,I_, kc:-tlHl '9(l~ .. ~-' °"'••ta. c.ilfffl'lll ................ ..., urri.r " ,. -"'It; II• -II h .JI -!Illy, Mllll.-y ---u~-"''· s pecialist, said he was wilhni! to be quoted by name about tht.> inc1 dent. The men claimed fl\"(' or six other Los Angeles t•rew mem bers also had bcl'n deC'med 1ln-r weight but wer<' not banished because they were needed to help run the boat. Obviously angered at being de nied an opportunit~ to meet Carter. the portly submanners one said he "e tli(hcd 260 pounds said the} h<td heen worki.ng long hours and getting about three hours sleep a rught prepanng the Los An~cles for the presidential v1s1t Capt. Lawrence Burkhardt, a s pokesman at the submarinl' bns<' here. said the Los Angele ... Haldeman Plans Expose LOS ANGELES <AP> -Those wbo enjoyed the published and televised inside s tories of Watergate by John Dean, Jeb Magruder, Charles Colson and Richard Nixon have a new treat in store this fall -Watergate "with the gloves off and no bolds barred" by H.R. Haldeman. Haldeman called a news con- ference on his front lawn Thurs- day to say be is dissatisfied with Nixon's televised explanation or the Watergate cover-up and has a book coming out to outline his version. Tools Taken From Costa Mesa Cycle A Costa Mesa man told police Thursday someone stole tools worth $235 ft-om his motorcycle trailer which he left parked in front of bis house at 336 Hamilton St. William Akins, a 35-year-old CalUornia highway patrolman, told police he WH loo tired to put the tools away after a day of dirt blke riding. and when he r~ turned to the bike trailer later, the toots wer-e missing. More Coverage Add.I don al stories and 0pholas ot actt'fities-in Newport lttaeh ad Costa Mesa appear today on Page.AB. ... - had a larger c rew than was re- quired for the Carter mission and "we wanted to present a good ap- pearance" so the crew members Judged most overweight were re- lieved for the day. When a reporter told Burkhardt that the relieved men ~eemed rather bitter, he responded, "Then I would s ug . gesl they lose weight." Groups Urge Smoking Law WASHING TON (A P> -Two former U.S. surgeons.general and 10 organizations opposed to c igarette Mnoking-have peti· t1oned the federal government to regulate cigarettes more strictly than saccharin and to require doctors' prescriptions for cigarette sales. The petition filed with the Food and Drug Administration Thurs- day asked the agency to assert jurisdiction over cigarettes on the ground that tobacco contains drugs and therefore is under FDA's authority. The FDA has proposed rules that would ban the use of sac- charin as a food additive but permit its sale as a single lngre- dlent, non·prescription drug. The FDA is soUciting comment on the proposal and may make the rule effective in July. · Banks Hike· Loan Rates By tlae Aaoclated Press A number of major com- mercial banks raised their prime lend.in& rate from 6~ to6~ percent today. Amone banks increasing the rate were New Vork's Citibank, tbe nation's 1econd·largest com-. merctal bank, and Cbiugo'1 Continental JI· llnols Nadonal Bank & Trust Company, the na· lion 'a aevenlb·larteat bank. Bert Lance, ·d.lr«tor or t'1e federal Office of . Maaaaem.i and Buqet; said be tea no reuoo why banks abOuld be ,raJlin1 their prime rate. £ance 1ald tbal l>aaks ,.are awashwUhcisb.'• ·- 1,nspection in Blue D•ll• .. , ..... _ • ..., 111•"-.. K .... , •• Costa Mesa Police Chief Roger Neth (left ). Mayor Norma Hertzog and City Manager Fred Sorsabal ins pect uniformed officers during open house activities at the police facility this morning. Tours of the 10-year old police station at 99 Fair Drive will be conductea through 7 tonight for Costa Mesa citizens. Phantom's ActiVities Probed by Deputies By TOM BARLEY DI I"'° Daily Pilot St•tl Orange County Sheriff"s of. ficer~ are becoming increasingly convinced today that the so. called Phantom Rock Thrower who eluded capture after stab- bing a deputy may be responsible for ;t number of other bizarre in · cidenLc; in the general area of his anti-auto activities. They believe that the man who was challenged by deputy Dave Allen Wednesday night may be the intruder who has carried off the carcasses of several dead goats in recent months from a goat ranch in Santa Ana Canyon. And the rock thrower who has terrorized Rivers ide Freeway motorists for the past eight months -smashing more than 35 windshields may be the same man who bas smashed bee hives in the canyon and who has broken into the pro shop at the Green River Golf Course on several occasions, they said. Investigators believe the man confronted by Allen may be Jiv. mg orr the land and making his headquarters in the rough ter- rain near Featherly Regional Park and the Green River Golf Course. They believe that his periodic bouts of rock throwing along the Riverside Freeway may be in- dicative or his need to vent his frustrations at a civilization that may have driven him to loneli· ness and exile. The attack on Allen, who is now recovering from knife wounds on his right arm and neck. has gi ven them their first real description of the rock thrower. The Mission Viejo deputy described him as a s hort, bearded black man, dressed in dark clothing and wearing what appeared to be Army boots. Allen told his fellow officers that the man repeatedly warned him to leave him alone and em· phasized his demands by tossing · rocks at the deputy while the pair scrambled through brush and scrub at the side of the freeway. Allen said he spotted the rock thrower while he was driving home from duty Wednesday night on the Riverside Freeway. The deputy said the man he described and s ubsequently chased was piling rocks on the center divider or the freeway. apaprently preparing for another session of windshield-shattering attacks on passing cars. Fellow officers rushed All en to the nearby Canyon General Hospital after the chase ended with the hunted man slashing the deputy in the neck and arm. Other officers and the Anahei m police helicopter took up the pursuit of the suspect in vain. Investigators believe that the · rock thrower may be the same man who has set a number or fires in the canyon area in recent years. A man answering the rock thrower description was hunted for three days in the summer of 1974 while firemen fought a number of fires deliberately set in the bone dry Santa Ana moun. ta ins. But sheriff's officers working on a new plan conceived since the attack on deputy Allen believe the rock thrower's days are num· bered. "I can"t tell you a thing about it,'' a senior officer commented today. "But we believe .,.e can track this man down and end what has been 10 frustrating months of nonsense in this general area · · KALEIDOSCOPE . . . . . Dives in SubU l CAPE CANAVERAL. Fla. · <AP> -President Carter, a onetime career submarine of. fleer, slipped beneath the surface of the Atlantic today aboard the nuclear-powered, bunter-killer sub Los Angeles. · When the Los Angeles began · its dive at 8 : 15 a.m. PDT, Carter became the first president to · cruise in a submerged undersea vessel since Dwight D. Eise- h ow er dove in aboard the nu~lear-powered Sea Wolf 20 yearsaao. By coincidence, Carter bad been senior naval officer in charge during the construction of the Sea Wolf. The Los Angeles took two to three minutes to complete its dive in waters about 3S miles off the Florida coast. Carter had begun his Atlantic cruise some three hours earlier, eager to take the helm of the Los Angeles and perhaps wiJling to let wife Rosalynn take a tum in the "driver's seat." Aboara nuClear suos, Ute in- dividual who mans the helm is said to be driving the ship. Accompanied by Adm. Hyman. G . Rickover. "father of the• nuclear Navy,"• the Pre1ident. and Mrs. Carter boarded the at·: tack sub Los Angeles at Port! Canaveral for the eight-hour. cruise. : . Carter, an Annapolis graduate,: joked to reporters that when he. was a career submarine officer, the undersea craft were called' boats. He said they've grown so large they are now known as ships. "Do you have any last words?" a reporter inquired shortly before two Navy tugs began; nudging the Los Angeles into a narrow channel leading to the. ocean. "No," said Carter, laughing : heartily, "because they won't be last words.'' ' The President was whistled _; not piped -aboard the sub-· marine and, as he disappeared' down an open hatch, the pre-: sidential ensign was raised from: the conning tower. Fro• Page Al VETO ••• State Sen. George Deukme· jian, author of the bill. met privately for about an hour with Brown Thursday to try to con- vince him to change his mind about his pledge Jan. 6 to veto any death penalty bill "as a mat- ter or conscience." Deukmejian said the meeting was "constructive" and hinted there was still a chance that Brown mi ght reconsider. But in a pre-recorded television interview broadcast a few hours later, Brown repeated his intention of vetoing the Deukmejian bill. Brown said he still intends lo veto the bill, even if politically damaging, and even though capital punishment may be re· instated anyway -either by a veto override in the legislature. or a ballot initiative. ··1 think it would be better not to have it. I think at each point where it can be stopped, we s hould try to stop it," the Democratic governor said. Our showroom is a virtual kaleidoscope of colors. The reasons are varied-: We know that color coordinating 1s the primary target when buying carpet. Quality 1s usually second in line. and because we have such a vast selection of qualities. it is easy to coordinate color and quality to each ind1v1d uars taste. However. we know that a volume of samples looking at you can seem very confusing -but we fe el that showing just a few samples 1s not a fair representation of the carpet business. Our huge selection g1ve&'our salespeople every possible option 1n working with people. helping thAm to find the perfect choice. So it you are in the market to select your carpeting - select Alden's to help you, that's what we're here tort l I t • ·DEN'S : iiiSiiliatioii: ·custom draperies linoleum • wood floor • COSTA M!SA, CALI~. 92627 • Pl-fONf 6'6·•838 -646*2~55 ( I •• AP WlrellflOIO THIS WAS THE MODEL T -THE CAR THAT PUT THE WORLD ON WHEELS IN 1908 Fifty Years Ago Today This Classic Auto Was Put Out to Pasture 'Lizzie' Goes Strong At 50, Model T Still Revolutionary DETROIT (AP) -The last of the Model T Fords are 50 years old, but the simple black ·'Tin Lizzie·' still stands out as the most revolu-. t1onary of automobiles. There was no door on the driver's side of those earliest Model Ts. The accelerator was on the steering col- umn. The brake pedal was on the right, a re- verse pedal was in the center and a pedal for shifting gears -from low to high and back - was on the left. It capped the industrial revolution, in- troduced the world to mass production, made SS a day the standard wage and drove the llniled States toward a lifestyle based on auto ownership BEGINNING JN 1908, Ford turned out more than 15 million Model T's, and the car's popularity was unchallenged until 1927, when General Motors· Chevrolet took over first place. Affluence was spreading and Americans wanted a choice. THE FOUR-CYLINDER engine could push the car to 45 miles per hour and could run for 22 miles on a gallon of gasoline at that speed, but few people went that fast because the car would vibrate violently. Besides, roads were in no shape to support such breakneck speeds. Model T production was halted by Henry Ford's order on May 26, 1927, at the principal plant in Highland Park, Mich., and a few months later at two other plants. The Model T was gradually refined, and by the 1920s it had an ignition key on the dashboard and a starter button on the floor. It also had one gauge -an ammeter to measure electric current. But fuel levels were still measured by a stick. Speed and distances were guessed at. The 19-year total was 15,456,868 Model Ts. a record that stood for 44 years. In 1971, the Volkswagen Beetle became the new cham- pion, but only after 26 years of production. Beetle output now stands at about 18.7 million. MODEL T POPULARITY bad peaked in 1925. when Henry Ford's assembly-line pro- duction facilities were turning out 2,000 cars a day, permitting the base price to drop to $290 and daily wa~es to rise to S.S. His manufactur- m~ innovations put a car within the means of millions of Americans. It was cheap. reliable transportation. FROM THE START, the Model T came only in basic black, be<:ause that was the paint that dried fastest -important on an assembly line. Henry Ford once said people could have the Model T in any color they wanted "so Jong as it is black." In December 1927, Ford reopened Highland Park to produce the Model A. But the new car never approached the success of its predecessor. In its first 10 years. the. Model Thad to be started with an often-difficult crank. Uncount- ed broken fingers, hands, arms and noses wt>re dispensed when the crank snapped back. · The Model T is far from extinct. Ford Mot.or Company officials say there may be 100.000 Tin Llzzie owners around the country. It's obvious that some of them tool along, because Model T parts still are listed oc- casionally in automotive catalogues. Prosecutor Raps Yowiger SAN FRANCISCO CAP > - California Atty. Gen. Evelle J . Youof.er "is very much mis- taken • if he believes Patricia Hearst got a more severe sen· tence in her federaJ bank robbery trial because her parents are wealthy, US. Atty. James L. Browmngsays. "If he <Younger> is criticizing the federal prosecution. I think he is wrong." said Browning, who added that he has written Younger a letter taking issue J;ith the attorney general's re- inarks. Younger was quoted as saying )f Miss Hearst had an alcoholic ' welfare mother. she would have· served less time in jail. Aid Boost Asked ~ SACRAMENTO <AP> -The Clew optimistic economic forecast for California Is prompt· bl g state s chool Supt. Wilson 'iles to call for a $500-miWOft in· ·~rease in state school aid. NiXon a Surprise Guest at Luncheon Former President Richard Nixon dropped in on a women's club hmcbeon in San Clemente Thursday to thank the ladJes for sendlng his wife a painted rock Inscribed, "You're wonderful." Nixon stopped in before his golf game to greet th~ San Clemente Women's Club, which had heard Nixon aide Col . Jack Brennan talk about the Nixon family and his own interest in the California Aneets baseball club. the 74 women were meeting at the Estrella GoU Club. fonn.-rlv the Shorecllff Golf Club, where Nixon plays three times a week. "He really looked happier to- day than I've seen him for a long time\" said club member Mrs. Vern Haugland. After Brennan's talk, the women gave him a painted rock to take to Mn. Nlxon. Later, the Nixon party drove by the club meeting room in golf carts, abe said. Nixon, wearing a black turtle-necked sweater and black-and-white golf. trousers, waved then turned around tbe carts and returned. "He came barging right through the open door and said 'Hi.' Everybody jumped up and said, 'Hi, Mr. President' and ran up to shake hands. He said, 'I wasn't sure you'd all be of voting age,' looking around at all the gray heads." No Holiday ForHiglumy Patrolmen :Health Care Gets The three-day Memorial Day weekend will be a holi- day for most Orange Coun· • • tains but not for the 190 California Highway Patrolmen assigned to county freeways. Patrol spokesman Jerry Maxwell said all officers will be on duty at some time over the three-day holiday watching for speeders and for anyone driving erratically. • t ' ·tost-cutter Review Three ways to cut the costs of health care will be examlned in ~unday's Daily Pilot. PRIMARY NURSING -When :\be nurse /patient raUo is one-to- one, the hospital stay is likely to be shorter and less expensive. '.Bea Anderson of the Daily Pilot istalf checked area hospitals for J:>er report that leads off the YOU &ctioo. SILENT KILLER -Wheo •,high blood pr~surri1 "di•· -covered" at a,e '° or 50, t.bt .;ftypert41Miqn h• reaJtr-nisted lor a lantet time. Another YOU tory will tell bow h ls eulernow to monitor your own blood ~ressure. FALSE TEETH -Le'11Jllti0ft ~Joa that would permJt' (sUNDAY'S BEST) highly trained technicians to make dentures for dlr~t tale to the public. Other aspecta of den· turism and the Orange County Dental Society's response will be pres en~. B~ DECLl.NJNG -Mid· die 1-.d managers and skilled •orten who value. family life AH lh...i.nt area Jobi because of ti.. cost of bouaiq and the need for two lncome1 to afford tM Orqe Cout lifestyle. Thom LecoCl aftbe Daib' Pilot ataa eur-Ye11U.~1urclty ol ex-ecuUvm.. Maxwell noted that 63 people died in traffic crashes ln Callf omia over the Memo ria l Day weekend last year. It was the hiahest tbree·day de· atb tolf ln four years. Four of those deaths occurred in Orange County. "We hope we don't have a repeat this year," be added. Maxwell aa.ld duringlul )'.ear'• Memorial Da weekend, patrolmen as- alaned to the Santa Ana dlvision. wbiola..ooven tbe bulk of Oranae County. ar- r .. t.t 10& drinking driven and •lt.d abou 1,40~ 1P4*1era. ff'ld!y. May 27, 1977 DAIL V PILOT .tf -. 'Corru~tion'AllegOO Grindle Asks P-ublic Funding By lllLAllY KA YE CM Ult INtly ,..._. ""9 Shirley Grindle, former Oranae County planning com- mlaaloner, says she's convinced campalcn fund-raising ln Orange County baa reached the level of "outright corruption ." To combat that, Mrs. Grindle suggested Thursday during a talk at UC Irvine that local cam- paigns be financed primarily with public funds, rather than private dOftations. "Let's take the game away· from the fat cats and return tt to the local people," argued Mrs. Grindle, who served four years on the commission including two terms as chairwoman. Mrs. Grindle says she's con- sidering ninnl.ng for a seat on the Orange County Board of Supervisors, now that districts have been redrawn and she would be battling Ralph Diedrich, not Ralph Clark. If she decides to run, she says she would utillze a grassroots campaign, where she would not rely on contributions from tbe de- velopment industry. According to the former com- missioner, there is a "close aJ. llance" between supervisors and members of tbe development in- d ustry, which includes de- velopers, architects, labor un- ions, cootractors, engineers and others. "It's no secret that the de- velopment indUst.ry ln Orange' . County ii the primary source ol. : • funds for tbe campaigns .• .land "' development la the bt11est came :· in town,'' Mn. Grindle aatd. "Developon are totally depen--~ dent on favorable decision.a by ~ supervisors, particularty in the ~ south end ol the county where there are vast areas of un-· developed land," she added. . Mrs. Grindle adJDltted that not all developers or . supervisors : are happy with the situation, but : that it ls part of the current • system. -~ Mrs. Grindle explained that contrib4ting to supervisors' cam· paigns doesn't necessarily insure "yes" votes. "But it lets the developer avoid being on the 'didn't contribute list•.'' she said. "Persons on those lists can be assured that their projects will be mysteriously delayed or they will be subtly harassed because they aren't playing the game, .. Mrs. Grindle asserted. Mrs. Grindle bas been involved · in current secret Grand Jury testimony related to citmpaign practices concerning the board of supervisors. On tbat subject she comment. ed only, "What I told the Grand Jury won't bang anybody. But what came out later may hang quite a few." $200 Monkey Suit 'Big Foot' Admits Hoax- VANCOUVER. Canada (AP> -A bus driver a nd several .Passengers who reported seeing the legendary man-beast Sas- quatcb were tricked by fo ur prac- tical jokers using a $200 monkey suit and shoulder pads, accord· ing to the hoaxsters. "It was a just a good practical joke, we thought It might fool a few people," said Ken Ticehurst, the S-foot-11, 165-pound man who dressed up in the gorilla COS· tume. "I was .running like O.J'. Simpson." For years, stories have persist- ed that the gorilla-sized Sas- quatch, North America's version of the Abominable Snowman, lives ln the woods of the Pacific Northwest. From Ume to time sightings are reported and there is at least one photogt•ph of an ·alleged Sasquatch, although it looks more like a blurry picture of a gorilla. Several books and articles have been written about the beast. The pranksters said the hoax· took three weeks to prepare, in- cluding buying the suit from a costume shop, manufacturing a foot to make a footprint, check· ing bus schedules so enough ~ pie would see it "to make it more believable," and planting a phony witness on the bus to make the first move and get passengers excited. SEMINAR SLATED ABOUT MONSTERS-A9 The reported sighting occurred May 15 as Pat Lindquist was· driving a Pacific Stage Lines bus westbound on the Harrison Hot Springs, British Columbia-to- Vancouver run May 15. He and several passengers saw what they thought was a Sasquatch lumber across Highway 7 about 35 mileeeastofVancouver. Lindquist stopped the bus and pursued the creature into the bush. "At first, we thought it was a pran kster in a fur suit," said Lindquist, a 28-year-old reserve Vancouver city policeman, at the time of the incident. "It had nat, nared nostrils like a monkey and large white eyes. It didn't make any sound except heavy breathing." Lindquist was unavailable for comment on the hoax report. Ticehurst, 24, of Port Co· quitlam, revealed tbe scam Thursday in an interview on a radio talk show along with Don Ticehurst, 26, and Rene Quesnel, 19, of Port Moody. The three said they planned the stunt along with GordonJacobi,26. They said the·( based their pat- tern for a resin-cast Sasquatch foot on a book about the creature by Don Hunter and Rene Dabinden. Ten Grand Fora Drink NEW ORLEANS CAP> -"I will drink it," said wine dealer. Addy Bassin of Washington after paying $10,000 for a bottle of rare wine, top price at an auction here. "It will be worth every cent," Bassin said Thursday. Connoisseurs said t he 1929 Chateau Mouton-Rothschild is the best claret on earth. Memorial Al 1 I: Day Weekend~~ PETUNIAS GOLDEN LONG LEAF ARBORVITAE ACACIA Plant these now for a Arching branches. color bonanza that will Bright yellow folia.rte loaded with yelooW' last tit fall. over 30 h ig bll~ht s thi s blossoms in spring. varieties to choose troub e-fre e. make this tall shrub or from. Pony pack /6 drought-res is tant screen a dilitinctive plants. Reg. 89" conifer. One Gallon la ndscape highlight. Beg. $2.69 One Gallon Slze. Reg. $2.69 SALE SALE SALE 49c s12' s11' NEW INDIAN MARIGOLD ZEALAND HAWTHORN Add dau llng red, T REEFERN CSPRINGTIMF.l orange. yellow and gold Deep areeri lacy fronds Th is drought-tolerant, bues to any sunny low growing 11hrµb location. Over lS adorn this compact bfossoms bright pink trouble-free varieties to firowing lroplca l hair of the year. s choose from. 4" Pot avorit.e. 5 Gallon Size Reg.7S1 Reg. Sl0.99 Gallon Slr,e, Reg $9.99 SALi SALE SALE . SJ99 s3" 39c DC:UllNt ,.._ CAltl OUAllANTtl •• , llnvttt Ytv C•ll ,. ... fllf ~ '" • 1,a -,.. I ! ' J; I ii J I I\ ( II s f, t l I I C) ' 1 f . t I J • ( 8 J .1 l t . .4f OAILYPlLOT OFF a &UNNING: These ap- pear to be the days when the more any eventa are sta&ed in our restca and elsewhere. Last ni&bt It was chili coottna. Tomor· row it may be mule rid1og. Indeed, only last evening, the Balboa Bay Club in Newport Beach, home of luxury )'achts and luxury apartments for those who lead the good life, became tbe headquarters for chili- maken. Thia was the California State Chill Cookoff, which draws chili cooks. from all over our Golden State. Each cooker and bis team of experts is convinced they brew up the best chill around. And they all get to try their band at it dur· ing the competition. THOUSANDS ALSO gather at Newport's club by the bay to do chili testing. This chili making is no joke. A lot of hijin.ks surround the event but not for those cooks who are sweating over chili pots. The chill-makers were posi· tioned out on the Bay Club's back parking Jot so they wouldn't be distracted by such events as celebrants attempting to walk a rope stretched across the BBC's swimming pool. Few made it but many participated. A prestigious panel of judges was assembled to do the chili· tasting and select California's grand champion. Such notables were on this panel as television personality Ralph Story, an to racing person Carroll Shelby. not ed Orange County juris t Calvin Schmidt, Daily Pilot Editor Tom Keevil, Santa Ana Register Editor Jim Dean and a character garbed in monk's cloth known as Father Duffy. I would like lo report to you who won but there was so much celebrating on the grandstand it was difficult to determine. I can report to you that one winner, in a highly emotional mom e nt , grabbet,i the microphone and testified to the-- assembled: "IF MY PARENTS are out there somewhere, l want to thank them for m y college educa· tion ... " Despite what you may suspect that chili does to your digestive processes, I defy you to attend an event like the Balboa Bay Club's chili cooko£f without succumbing· to the temptation or at least test· ing the chili. I don't know whose chili I test· ed. I wouldn 't malign that fine person if I did know. The suspi· cion here is, however, that his product placed about 94th in the. competition. Mind you, it tasted fine. Trou- ble is, I expect to continue tasting it through the Memorial Day weekened. This brings us to mule sktnn1na. Don 't ask me how. But you can move from chili to mules iJ you want to travel up to the town of Bishop, where they ore holding Bis hop's Eighth Annual Mule Days. THE ONLY CONNECl'ION 1 can think of between th• two· eventa la a man named Dee Cook. He used to be a Newport Beach city councilman and now serves on the Bishop City Council. Maybe Cook will be rldine a mule during the celebration. If we could set him to eat a bowl of chili while dolna It, we'd have a celebration from the mountains to the sea. • WOMEN DEMAND JUDGE RESIGN Feminist Anne Gaylor (foreground) Lead• Demonstration JuJge's Rape View Has Women Stewing MADISON, Wis. CAP) -A county judge who says rape is a normal reaction from juveniles exposed to provocative clothing in a sexually permissive society is under fire from women de· manding hi s resignation. Sixty people picketed the city. county building here Thursday, protesting comments made Wed· nesday by Dane County Judge Archie Simonson in the case of a 16·year-old girl raped by three boys in a school stairwell. At a disposition hearing fo r a 15-year-old boy who in J anuary had pleaded n o contest to charges of seeond·degree sexual assault, Simonson said the boy's reaction was understandable. COMPLAINING ABOUT pro- vocative women's clothing. Simonson asked, ''Should we punish severely a 15 or 16·year· old who reacts to it normally?" Asst. Dist. A tty. Mery~ Manhardt called the judge's courtroom remarks "particular· ly sexist.·• She said the rape was the most serious crime in tbe his- tory of Madison public schools. The judge said in an interview Thursday that it was "normal for impressionable juveniles to react violently" to som e women 's clothing because they are "grop- ing to decide what is proper con· duct in this world." "THEIR SEXUAL juices real· ly start to flow at 14, lS and 16," said tbe 52·year-old judge. "It doesn't take much to provoke a guy. Whether you like it or not. a woman's a sex object and they're the ones wbo turn the man oo, genetally." Sim~ found the youth de· linqueat and ordered lilm to re· main at home for a year under court Sllpel'Vision. The boy must be _tutored a.t bom• and cootlnue receiving treatment at a nearby youth centel'. A 14-year-old accused ln the case was sentenced to one year at a lf'OUp home in Milwaukee. A third boy was given immunity from prosecuUon in exchange for teatimooy against the others. SIMONSON SAJD hi.a remarks should not cause women to tear ON HOT SEAT Judge Simpson appearing before him in sexual assault cases, but the women protesters disagreed. "Rape is a violent crime, a ter· rible crime, and here is a judge calllng it a normal reaction," said a statement issued by the protesters, wboee acUon was sponsored by the local chapter of t he National Organization of Women CNOW >. '"Slmonson 's usefulness is over as far as his continued judgeship is concerned." NOW said. "What woman would ever believe that she could receive fair treatment from him?" THE PROTESTERS, includ· ing women dressed in bikinis and parkas, said they objected to Simonson's courtroom Temarks, not to the punishment ordered (or the youth. Elena Cappela, one of the pro- t.at&rs, said women were or- c an l dn& around the city of 175,000, home of the University of Wi sconaln. She said they would try to have Simomon recalled and would work to def eat b1m in elections next April. Great Plains Drenched High Winda, FloOd!ng Damage Reponed Te..perat11re. Albll'que Alllfll• e lrmlllf"-m 91sm•rclt Boise 90Slon Bl'OWM ¥111• 911ff•lo C~lst!ISC CIMrlttn WI/ Chic ... Ontlnn111 Cl_._ Del-fl,,Wltl Qeflwr DnMolnM ~l'Olt ...... .......... *",till. ... Le~ 1S •S I) ., ·" ,, 65 .Ol ... J6 •s " .u ., '2 '° n " )\ to 70 .4' IS 60 n to 14 jt 1' 41 ., 67 lS AJ . .. IO $\ 6) .. , ... .., .,, tt n Nortll o.otll ft L.,.,Cllbllrf tlnd QUiii of 60 mlle per llOur wer•Htlmattd In Wlchlt• ....... Telt • "'"• toriwoon w.r• slOlllH -llfl'ee lft "*e!iU, two In Olllatlom• ~OM-""' NOf'tll ~. Tean, A••eem•MdOtoftla. ltoe wMdO Ill Al•Mfll• ••s •t Otllw• jMWc:_.Md ml-dlf'IMl99· 9'elnl•lla l\t'4 bMft .... -. '" por• ,....,, 1tf ti-. Pl•IM w 9rtlltaster" United S4Met. 111 • ._.hour period TllvrsMY •Yefllno. e IOC.I Of ...... lr\Cllet of •al11 tell It Edgefield, S.C. 1.0•l•llCI flOodlllQ wet r~CI 111 ... """'*"· , ... ' .. ' • WDU1'1 climb lllo left omclala WOnderlna wbaf • else could be ln store for tta tallest~. the aecaod ~ ln tb• country. . · • NEW YORK CAP) -Tbe city made peace wtth its newest hero today, d.rapptn,a the threat ot a $250,000 ault a&alnlt World Trllde C*Gter CllJDbeT Geo1'1e Willla and aettlina ltw a flu ot Sl.10 -a penny per floOr. • M~ AbrahaJD D. Beamo metrwitlrWUJls at City Hall to work out the amicable aoWement and then accepted a doUar and a dlme trom tho 2T·year- old cllm.b9r'1 lawyer at a packed news conference. Fnmcb aertalllt ~line Nit three rean qo · l!f•llted from one ol the World Trade Cenler.J i.MO·foot towen tO another' on a U,bb°OP.e. ~ about a year later Owe Quinn became the flrK-i man to *•chute ott tho trade cencer. 8oUl were., promptly arr.tecl. · · · W1W1 In tum aireed to pve the city some tlps on bow to prevent a rub ol attempted cop1cat climbl. • "It's been done, 10 Jet's leave it at that:• said the •mlllni WiWf, who works as a toy desiper and climbs mountains for recreation. TODAY THE new hero. "Human Fly .. Willi&, was atbome recelvf.na cocaratulattona. · • Th1I time. be 1alC:fJ.n a eopyrlabted 1tory ta the New York Daily Newt, h will be rock-climbinc. "l • flnd ltmucb scarier than cllmbblg the World Trade BE 'rOLD 8 BPOKTEU that Thursday's as- cent .. was like climbinc a laddfll'" and the oo1y pro- blem he suffered wu blisters on his bands. Thousands watched and cheered below as WUUc, of Queens, cllmbed the quarter-mile-high ak)'ICJ'aper in 3'At hours. Even police who handcuffed bim toot time to shake his hand flrat. Center,"saya Wtllfg. -, What made WiW1's quarter·mll• ascent so. easy wu a small· piece of equipment he de&lfned himself and hopes to patent. The T·lhll*f dntee fit• into the Anger-sized grooves that. a o up the aluminum corners of the towers and whicb are used, by window washers. The device, secured wttb a twiat. bolds a slJ.ng for the climber's foot. :-.. Angolans Claim Victory :~ Many Said Slain· in Cnah of Attempted Coup ·· JOHANNESBUnG , South Africa CAP> -Angolan Presi- dent Agostinho Neto said today his forces had crushed an upris· ing by extreme leftists after a s hootout in which there was heavy bloodshed. "drastic measures" would be taken to prevent another upris· ing. He provided no details dur· ing the 11-minute broadcast. for the Yugoslav news · agency Tanjug quoted one of the Cubans • as saying, "the reaction bas,: been overcome, what else." ·' Many men and women died, Neto said. He gave no further de· tails. ' In a broadcast monitored in · J ohannesburg, the Marxist presi- dent said those reponsible for the revolt would be punished "with utmost severity.•' Earlier, the government said it had put down the uprising after the rebels seized the radio station and attempted to storm the pre- sidential palace, army head· quarters and tbe. prison where purged dissident leaders were t?eing held. ALVES REPORTEDLY op· poses Neto'a plans to attract Western investment, reinforce ties with tile former colonial Power, Portugal, and for the gradual withdrawal of the 10,000-15,000 Cuban troops who remain in the central African country. The Cubans helped Neto's group defeat two non-Communist liberation movements 1n the 1975 Angolan civil war. A Luanda-based correspondent It was not known whether the Cubans or Neto's Soviet advisers ' played any role in the day's events, although Tanjug said the Cubans were checking identifica- tion papers in the capital. TRUCKLOADS OF. heavily armed Angolan troops were seen rushing toward the presidential palace, and witnesses said the streets were largely deserted ex· cept for troops. Witnesses said the shooting began about 3 a.m . local time. Long 'n Short· SHOOTING AND heavy ex- plosions were heard in the seaside capital in the early morning hours but subsided at dawn. Sheet,s Law Repeal Backed l . Neto identified the leaders or the attempted coup as rormer Inte rior Minister Nito Alves and Jose Van Dunem , a former political commissioner or the Angolan army . Both men, regarded as pro- Moscow hardliners, were purged from tbe ruling Polular Move- ment for the Liberation of Angola -MPLA -lastSaturday. Neto said the two bad "mis· represented" his views and that SALEM. Ore, (AP) -The Oregon House tossed a~d turned but finally voted 50 to 7 to repeal a law that says in- nkeepers must have bedsheets at least nine feet long. The bill to repeal now goes to the Senate. . The bedsbeet bill was sponsored by Rep. Nancie Fadeley <D-Eugene,), who can't say why the law got on ~he books in the first place. It's been there since 1909, along with a penalty of $50 a day for violations. · . Dissident Rep. Milce Ragsdale CR-Beaverton), ~ SlX· footer, said that tall people need Jong sheets. He s~~d h.e would have sought •'vigorous enforcement ot the hlw -1r be bad been aware of it. Special Advertising Opportunity I ORANGE COUNTY LIVING SUMMER . RECREATION ISSUE A special tabloid section i.-...L.ll wlll be published In 1 the Dally Piiot on Thursday~ June 16 Thia special section wlll provide an Ideal opportunity to ·advertise all the Items and services that go with the events and enjoyment of summer. . ORANGE 'COUNTY LIVING sections · reach 90 ,000 homes along the Orange Coast Along with your ad, the section will contain a stoey or picture about .vour firm or .protluct. .. -. r , \ Marines 111UIUJiw fnSuit 'SANDIEGO (AP·)~A judge 1ay1 a $21 million a-ult by parents of a )larine fat.ally lnjured in pb1ll stick training can. not be beard because the military la immune from •uch lltigtt.ton. The rUf.lng Thursday came In a suit stemming from the death of Pvt. Lynn E. McClure of Lufkin, Tex .• who was In· jured while undergoing bout after bout with tbe sticks, or wooden staves. • THE £ASE trlgeered in'VelUgatiom at the U.S. Karine Corpa Recruit Depot that led to court· m artlal proceedings against a series of of. flcers and non~oms. McClure, 20, received serious head injuries in December, 1975, and died three months later 1 at a Veteraps Ad· ministration Hospital in Housten without regain- ing consciousness. U.S. District Court .Judge William B. Enright said the suit by M'r. and Mrs. Hubert Calhoun or Lufkin, McClure's mother and stepfather, is ineligible for hearing because of the 27·year·old Feres Doctrine, wblch says the, military cannot be sued for the injuries or death or a member or the armed forces. Drinking Age Drop Proposed SACRAMENTO <AP> -Another proposal to ldWer the drinking age frx>m 21 to 19 -this time ' through a vote or the peo· pie -has reached the Assembly floor. The measure by As- semblyman Lou Papan, <D-Daly City), won an 8-2 vote of the As3embly Judiciary Committee ..Thursday. IF IT PASSES both b-uses, it will go on the ballot next year. The legislature has voted down numerous at· tempts to lower the drinking age. ,"I don't consider d(inking any greater r•ponsibllity than vot- ing for president or get- ti~g married," Papan· · s~d in an interview after the vote. PAPAN SAID he set the age at 19 rather than lit because many 18· year·olds are still in high sc'1ool. A~WI,..,..._ RIVAL PROPERTY REUEP TAX BILLS APPROVED IN SENATE Sen. Jerry Smith, Left, and Sen. Nlchola• ~· Authored Plana Police Arrest 40 I In UC Denionstration F!!d!r· M!y 27, 1971 OAllYPU.OT Two Tax -Bills Backed Third Property Relief Bill Al«lita Debate BJ STEVE ~WUNCE for renten ln ltl flnt year, 1918-79. A third bW. by Assemblyman Wlll1e Hrown U>· SACRAKENTO CAP>-Two.rivalpropertytu San Franctaco), la still ln an A.ssemb&y committee. relief bUla have been approved by the state Senate, It is awaiting amendments that would boost itts tax but the votes were little more than ritual. relief from $850 mllllon to over U billion. The real showdown on what may be close to $1 billion a year tn tu cuts ii sun weeks &ft'•Y. and it TBE PINAL PLAN will probably be a com- wtll occur ln a special committee that bun't even posite ol those three measures, )Vritten by a six beenformedyet. member tenate-Alsembly conference committee which can be (ormed to work out differences after ON TllURBDAY, Gov. Edmund Brown Jr.'s each measure passes each house in a diUerent property tax relief bill aurvived a cloee Senate vote form. and was sent to the Assembb' after lengthy debate. The Pet.rt. bill aims more money at low·income A few minutes lat.er,· a rival meuure backed by homeowners than the other two. liberals and labor was also sent to the Assembly. Brown's bill, carried by Sen. Jerry Smith (D· . TO HELP PAY for the relief, the Petris bill Saratoga), cleared the upper house on a 27-8 vote -would raise income taxes for the wealthiest six per· the bare two.thirds majority needed for passage in cent otthe state's taxpayers and limit capital gains the 40-seatSenate. allowances, especially for hiiher income persons. Petris said, however, that this would cut the THE OTREa MEASUllE, by Sen. Nicholas number of additional income tax brackets in the bill - Petris ID-Oakland), needed only a simple majority. from nine to four and make up the difference by us- It was approved without a votetospare,21·13. ing up more of the budget surplus. The bills differ mainly In the amount of direct aid they would provide and their sources of re· SMrl'll'S BILL contains no tax increase, while venue. But both authors said they planned to make Assemblyman Brown's bill contains a smaller in-cbanges in the Assembly that Would alter dollar come tax h.l)ce. figures now in tlie bills. Tbe · Senate also approved a constitutional amend.meat that would activate another part of the By The Aaocla&ed Pren ebarges or trespassing. Supreme Court ruling SMl'l'll'S BILL, as now written, would provide Smith bill. That provision would enable owner- Pollce arrested 401 sit· They also were released. against the university's $435 million in direct homeowner property tax relief occupied homes to be taxed at a different rate than in demonstrators before pending court ap-special admissions pro-and$l'°mlllloninrenteraaslstaneettsfirstyear. • otherproperty. dawn tod ay at the pearancesJuneL gram for minorities. At Butbesaidbewouldboostthosetotalsto$500 . University of California .About 200 student.a at Santa Cruz, students also million and $250 million becapse of a projected in· THAT WOULD BOOST homeowner relief after at Santa Cruz, after stu· tlie Berkeley campus demanded improve-creaseinthestate'sbudaetsurplus. the firslyear of the bill, Smith said. The constitu· d d ted ta eel tw hour it ,.. tional amendment, which cleared the Senate on a ents emonstra at s g a o-s •_.. men ts in the campus PETRIS' BILL would provide $660 million in 27-12 vote, would have to be approved by the voters several UC campuaea at Belliamin Ide Wheeler Third World studies pro-prope~ tax aid for homeowners and $465 million· in 1978 before taking effect. where demands included Hall without incident. aram. ____ ..::...:.._:__ .. _:_"'---------_.;_~-----------=-----------ending university ties The Santa Cruz de-' with tJ..rtns doing busi-monstration was the neisoW~u;'!~11~'!; de-~~rug3!~t!tt;~~ge 1~T. ~~ o o ~~, • monstrators cooperated. ministration building ~ with officers and no one d u r i n g t b e d a y . was hurt. Demands included a stipulation that tbe de--I D • Mosr OF THOSE ar- rested were cited for trespassing and re-. leased on their promise to appear in court June 2. Some 40 policemen and five vans moved up to the adminlatration build- ing at Santa Cruz late Thursday and began ar· resting students inside the building. ~~~:: ;:::~: ..-e111or•·a a~ bad circulated among .J... Y"'. __ _ the demonstrators, ~~~-A=~~: pee· I-als SALE PRICES EFFECTIVE MAY 27 thru MAY 30 ONLY! THE SANTA CRUZ ar- rests began about four hours after some 20 pro· testors were arrested at UC Dav~s. also on rests were not made un· til nearly 10 p.m. The demoostrators on all the campuses were 1>rotesting university in- vestments in firms with financial interests in South Africa. They also were demanding over· turn of the Alan Bakke Decision -the state Panel 'Startled' In RFK~ Hearing LOS ANGEL~ (AP> -A witness who un- derscored his "second gun" assassination theory by pulling out a revolver startled county supervisors looking into the 1968 slaying of Sen. Robert F. Ken· nedy. Theodore Characb, a journalist who wants a presidential commission to investigate Kennedy's death, was testifying loudly at the bearing Tbun· day when be drew the gun and pointed it at his head. THE TBBEE supervisors, nearly doling dur· ing the long bearing, jerked upright In their seats. A security officer; Lance Harper, rushed up and grabbed the gun. Tbe revolver was not loaded and Cbarach had a ~it for it. The session was the last of public bearings 00 a report by special county investigator Thomas F Kranz, oo the assassination. Kram concluded there was no proof that Sirhan B. Sirhan did not act alone in the 1.968 abooting of Kenned)' in a bot.cl pantry. Foster Grant sunglasses 347 J=oster Grant presents the latest in styles. Gold tone and silver tone frames. Features the classic aviator design . lffch TOWlll ••••.•..•••• 3.99 Hawllfl-Coca-' ~ on ••....... ··· '·'' 8 oz lrom Ha~·• ''Lltffe Getftsu . •• polsh /Sl ... 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The new KD-15 has add~ a timer/recorder feature end dual ba:t bearing cassette hold system for easy cassette placemtnt and access tor hea~ cleaning. ~ • 20 • tf 000 lrf<lllwY rupo011e • SIM 11110 Sii ft "'11111ut Oot0y •. 1*. _,,.,., nd U t r Last years model Salt S200 was S250 Price .c auoetuwl r• 3/SI 12/~1 -ChooM from 0 aeeort9d 3~ lb. YICUU"' pec)(ed Fresh dellolous snecklng fruit flMn 1n 1-5119 oz. ..,..,.., peanuts. any time. dtrf or night. S*)~.· 2" 4/51 ... 'PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE . • Joh md for l"outh Jt•s a chronic sign of our limes that summer jobs for youngsters are hard to come br.. Acconling to re- cent forecasts, it won't be any different in Orange County this summer. However. federally sponsored ·youth employment pr oerams will bring about M million worth of part- t 1m e jobs to county youngsters this year. County government will administer one $540,347 youth employment program for itself and seven c ities. · With good logic. county officials decided to e a rmark 150 of the 525 part-time jobs the program w ill generate for disadvantaged youngsters and youngsters with problems. Unfortunately. last week a local radio commeQ· t ator incorrectly babbled that an the jobs were to be handed to young people who have had trouble with the Jaw. Jt was, he said , s ome sort of a reward for mis- behaving. Bes ides being incorrect. the commentator's words did a d isservice to an effort to make sure some kids who need a helping band receive one. Postal Solution? The word is that. once more, there'll be some changes in the postal service. Probably elimination'of Saturday deliveries, probably another boost in mail rates. But the re al news seems to be that in the not-too- d istant future there may not be any postal service at 4:111. It will ha ve bee n replaced by other forms of com- m unication. Al ready the Social Security Administration is bypassing the mails by using electronic computers to d eposit payments directly into bank accounts. Other ~overnment agencies that. mail out funds plan to follow s uit. Businesses that have used the mails for advertis· ing arefanding it bet\er to have their brochures insert· cd in newspapers and magazines. Some magazine publishers are finding it more economical to dla~Jay their wares in supermarket racks than to solicit mail subscriptions. Utili~ can havemeterreaderadellvertheirbWs. And, as many a parent knows, we already have produced a generation of young people who feel more comfortable chatting on the phone than writin& long, newsy letters. So perhaps "postal reform~· is just a matter or time and technology. Safe Hiking With the first big holiday •weekend of the season coming up, mountain rescue squads once more are braced for the inevitable-lost and injured hikers . Last year in the Angeles National Forest they logged 439 rescues, m0stly bikers. And of 39 fa tali ties in themountains, 30werehikers. Most of the accidents involve falls from cliffs, often caused by the instable rocks and soil hikers en- counter when they leave established trails or try to take short cuts. And most of the victinls are inexperienced hikers who wander off into the mountains without adequate protective clothing and equipment. The rescue squads have a few suggestions : -Wear boots . not tennis shoes, take along a warm jacket for protection against sudden weather changes, and carry water. -Always let someone know whe re you are,going and when you expect to return. -U lost, get out into a clearing and stay put so rescuers can locate you. Happy hiking! Shut Out by Carter? Brilliant African Maneuvers Dear Gloomy Gus Military Discontent Simmers ( ART HOPPE J .. Sil down. General Am in, ol d friend. and ha ve another Coke. 'Tell me, whal brings you to Zaire'..'" ··w ell. fra nk h. President Mobutu. old buddy ... your conduct o( this war here m Zaire ha s won the r espect a nd adm iration or Hll US third w o r I d le ad ers And 1 · m look 1n ~ for a p1et'e of the action. ln fa ct , I J USl told the reporters at your airport that I was sending you 41 tons of food and a suicide squad.·' .. A suicide :.quad·> Wh at's 1t do'..'·· "f don't know I suppoSc it <'O mm1L'\SUIC'lde .. ·And they bough t it" Amin, ) ou·re a real c·ard ' ·· .. Thank s. Mobutu. old rhap Rut level with me. Tell me how you brought the who It• thing off. ste p by step." "WELL, 1f I do "a> so myself. ii was bnlh ant First. or coun.e, you have lo gc•l ) ourself invaded I decided t o be invaded by Cuban-led Anl(ol<tns. F'or somt> reason . Amer i c a n s a r e hy&terieally uftttid of Cubans." "Today, Cuba : tomorrow, the world'..'" .. ( suppose. Anyway. we said t tlere were 5000 of them ~uipped with 'Stalin organ' rockets. Don't th e y s oun d r rig hteniog " Whatever they a re ? So the Americans sent me a million dollars." •'A drop in the old bucket.·• "Right. So we doubled the in· "asion force. included Russians along with the Cubans and s aid they were ·advancing swlftly · ulthcyugh Mutshataha was still Let President Carter grant a UAW-demanded 50 per- cent imported car tax. l"ve o wned foreign and dom estic . Discounting Mussolini's Revenge , vin- tage 1967, foreign cars are a joy and a bargain at any price compared to Detroit, U.S.A. schlock. M.G.B. Gloomy Gus commeflls ••• 1-neo lly r•<l4en and •on .. neceu.trily reflect tM lllew\ ., tll• "."'" ... "'· Send '(OUf' ,., _,..toGtoemy Gw~. D•11ly ~let b r avely held by us." "Where's Mutshatsba ?" .. Who knows . Anyway . the Americans said they·d send us $13 million in ·non-lethal' aid to help kill the 2000 invaders who were now only 50 miles from Kolwezi. And within two days would you belie ve il --our 1500 Moroccans were a ble to drive the 5000 invaders back 15 miles from Kolwezi." ·•A great vi('tory." "EXACTLY. Thal enabled us lo throw ·a crack urut' of 300 pygmies. whom we described as ·excellent bowmen with a tugh combat ability' into surrounding Mutshatsba which we had been bravely defending." "Pygmies" .. ··Americans a re alw~ on the s id e of the ltllle man Un · fo rtunately. a pygmy expert told Newsweek that pygmies hate violence and ar e the world·s worst shots.·• "MOBUTU. you're a riot! One last thing. why did you ask the Americans foe a cargo plane full or Coke'!" "Because -oh. this'll kUl you -the State Department said that diet eola didn't qualify u non- lethal aid." ''Oh, my sides are· split.tint! , But, serioosly, don't you feel guilty exploiting the fears and taboos of these backward peo. pie?" ''You mean the pygmies ?·· "No. I mean the Americans." Exile in New York . NEW YORK. By .Anthony Burgess & the Editors of Tlme- Lif e Books. Time·Life Books. 200 Pages. $8.9S. If, as Brill sh author Anthony Burgess contends, New York "is a displaced person!s camp,•• then what better})el'son to write about a dty Cull of strange~ than Burgess himself, .. a writer al•a,ys in exile. an Englishman whose grandmother was a Fin· neran ... a paradlam of displace- ment." And write about "my preferred city," Burgess doet. In near lyrical prose, he aoes back to the becinnin•1 when Glo•anni da Venanno first sighted the ter- rain in 1S24 a.pd n1naes Into lbe tuture, stating flatly that •'New Yor1t will survive. Jtis an aspect of America that America cannot do wltbout. Nobody can do 'W i U.OUtit." today.''Ibere is much about New York that Buqess tindl plea.· ing, its many etbllic groups, its cultural life, its parades. itt rivers, bridges, churches~ akyacrapen. But bis account is balanced, Burgess is not writing a cbamber- of commerce puff. 'J;here is alto much about the New Yorl( • Burs-does not like -its dlrt>' streets, tts violence, its cornip- tion -...cl be d1sc\aues tbeM 1-. favonble aspects u openly as he parades the clty'f virtue•. What really putl the :ictnl on lhi• lar1•·format. 1'udaoa. book are the do1en1 ol photo- 1rapbl -mHy '11 them 1-.. · and in colol' -thJt not only U • IN BETWEEN, between the· lui'trate Burau•• l••t but put and lb f'Uture. Burg s amplify it. ta.Iles the reader. on a hfithJy .. ---·~tour of the c•ty aa lt is WASHINGTON -Just as President Carter was publicly re· buking Maj . Gen . John K Singlaub, resentme nt among senior milita r y officers was given a stronger impetus when the Joint Chiefs of Staff <J CS> belatedly le arned about the latest SALT proposal. 1 T he JCS was briefed only last week on tbe new U.S. strategic arms limita· lions (SALT> plan some two weeks after it w as s ub - mitted to the Russians. The new proppsals e mbra ce bas ic qlles - tions of U.S. militar y strength, including r~larded de· velopment of the cruise missile. That has generated rising resent- ment among senior officers that rea('hes into the JCS itself. This is strikingly similar to both the cause and the underly- ing meaning of the Singlaub af· fair . Hia clearly out-of-order public criticism of Korean troop withdr a wal s r e fle c t e d widespread frustration among the generals for not having been consulted in shaping that policy. So. in both Korea and SALT. the mllitary's complaint is not so much that it disagrees with a policy but that it is ignored in policy formation. Herein lies an unhealthy silua· tion not fully comprehended at the White House. While nobody questions civilian su.premacy. .-en1or OUlcers bitterly g ryinble that they are given no chance to submit \belr views but are simp- ly handed the completed policy -MOil& witJ\ a_ rouzzJe_ ODDLY, the chairman of the JCS, Gen. George Brown, plays no part in this simmering revolt. He pt at hit poet by sufferance of President Ford and now Presi· dent Carter after his strlni of in· discreet public remarks, Brown wants to serve out bis term without further trouble. But other senior officers, including members of the chiefs. want a greater polloy voice.' Gen. Bernard rogers, Al'ID)' cblef of staff, has pushed particularly . hfl'd for• military role jn SALT policymakine. The Army is at the center o( ( EV ANS-NOV AK J P e ntagon dis content mainly because of special concern with Korea. When Mr. Carter entered office. he did not ask the Pen· tagon·s advice on whether to re· move troops from South Korea but merely requested their com - ments on the best way to do it (just as he did on his plan for drastic mutual reduction in long- range missiles). THE TROOP withdrawal bad been decided on by Mr. Carter long before he became Presi- dent. Admittedly a novice in foreign affairs, candidate Carter based his decision more on the hilperatives' or pres idential politics than any exhaustive study of the Korean s ituation. Singlaub·s view slated lo the Washington Pos t that Mr Carter's Korean policy will lead to war is nearly unive rsally shared by other U.S. generals, as well a s many o r the mos t politically sensitive Japanese. Since the unders trength U.S. 2nd Infantry Division is obviously not a sigoi.6cant military factor, the question is whe ther its de· parture, along with U.S. support troops, will be interpreted by Communist North Korea as an invitation to attack,. While the de- bate clearly has two sides, the generals resent not having a chance to argue their case. THAT r esentment was in· tens ified by the President's dramat.ic order of Singlaub to the Oval Office. O}d hands in Washington with no particular interest in Korea were aoiazed that the President had chosen public humiliation (!f a dis - tinguished officer by the nam - boyant summons when a quiet reprimand and transfer would have sufficed. To some officers. Mr . Car ter, his eye on style, was seeking to emulate Harry Truman's his- toric sacking or Gen. Douglas MacArthur. But MacArthur was a major political figure who re· peatedly defied his President; Singlaub is an anonymous sub- ordinate <third-ranking officer in Korea> guilty of one indi~reet. interview. Actually, senior of· ricers are even more concerned a bout the sudden exclus ion of the mllitary from SALT policymak· ing. While the Pentagon helped prepare Secretary of State Cyrus Vance·s negotiating position in Moscow, it had no part in devis· ing lh'e new, softer stand m Geneva. The possibilily or a p a t- tern here 1s suggested by the downgrading of military in- telligence units, putting the CIA in a monopolistic status. Wt)He deprived of a full advisory voice before positions are taken. the of· ~ ficers are barred by the ConsUtu· lion from commenting aft- erwards-as John Singlaub has learned. THE GAGGED condition of the military contrasts starkly with the rest of the open-mouthed ad· ministration, most conspicuously Secretary of Labor Ray M arshafl c ritic iz ing the Pres ident·s economic policies and UN Am· bassador Andrew Young saying whatever comes to his mind. At a time of U.S. military decline in r elation to the Soviet Union, this anomaly breeds angry frustra· lion among the military. The People's Business Two members o( a school board have blown the whistle on a recent me~ting held in "executive session" charging violation of state laJNI which require all meet- ings of public bodies to be con- ducted in full view of the world. Unfortunately the significance of their revelations appear in danger u ~ng lost-in the ex· change* which have:resulted. Jn brief, alter their disclosure the board president promptly de· nied the mis· doing., ex · plainina to the press the meeting dealt with student personnel matters and employe neaotiaUons. Tbat ezplaM· tion was de· nounced by the two board mem- bers wbo declared the explana- tion a flat lie. Sillce the members were only recently elected to the Folsom·· CordOva School Boi~ it mlaht be Uaou&ht that .the nap was a mis~ of the law on their pm:t. But '*•ute both are •ttarneJa UM aaumptioo mU&t be Uult tae)' -:eact the law well and their~ are ••lld. · What threatens to be over- lootecl 19 that it palnts up OMe again the error tn tllintill• when the la• wu drafted. The pro"f11lon1 go•ernlnr meet!qa ot public boclles. state and local, are to be found in the Government Code commenclnc with section 54950. ... ( EARL WATERS ] worthy of reciting in all of its nobility. Sta Una that public agen- clu "exist to aid in the conduct of the people's business," it pro- -vtdft-spedfic11lty:-~'1i-ts-tbe'1n· tent of the law that their actions be taken openly and that their de· liberation~ be ~0-nducted openly.". · So that there would be no mis· understanding aboUt it, the sec- tion reads further, "Tbe people of th.1sstatedonotyieJd theiraov- ereianty to the agencles which tet'Ve them. The people, in de· Ieaattna aulhorit&', do not eive their pu.blle senants the right to declcJe what ii good for the people to taow and wbat is not good for them to know. The ,people inltst on remain.int informed so that they may retain control over the inauument; they have created.·' Cb•rehlll mliht have written it better but that aectlon leaves no ·• room for doubt tbat it wu in· tellded tbat boards and eom- mt11lons would meet In a fi•h· bowl. Jn the dralUnft Brown went on ~ to •pell out specifically ticnv meetlnp nre to be eooduc:ted. tnductmc tbe at•in& of ~uate ~ce befariJbUd to th&publlc of the time W place of such m.,.t. tnp. tamperini bas extended such private meetings to include those on "national security" as well as threats to the security of public buildings. Time has provided expei-ience. such as the Folsom casey which casts grave doubt.s ·as to the wisdom of permlttinf any acep- \1ons 1o Ute open meebnglaw. All too often they have been used as a convenient curtain for the handling of matters-whicb clear· ly belong in public view. Wllbout board members such as the Folsom two, tht!le violations go unnoticed. With the knowledte gained by experleJ>Ce it is time to review the need for any eumptlons. Na- tional security hardly .figures in state and local meetin11J As for hiring and· f'uiQf, tbele are not. the private employes of the board but the emplQyes of all the public. The opening sectlou of the Brown Act should be reread . ORANGE COAIT DAILY PILOT Friday, May 27. 1tn OAlLV PILOT ,f.f WWiama eouJdn t help noticllll that there wu no •blenc. onn~ys. !'EverybOdy w.nted to beirivolved,'' sbeaaid. • • MENTOR, Ohio (AP> -When a bunch ol third -craden de<:lded to aet up a chocolate factory in elUI, they bad a few probleIUS Jetti.a& under' WQ. David Stenu, for example, had trouble deeld.i4g whether to be a chocolate poorer or a vice presi- dent. ..We wanted t.hm to beliD to learn about economics and bow the wide system work.a,•• 1he added. A BOAAD OP DIBECl'OU WAS picked, in· cludiq some teachers and parents, and after re-. vtewtnc job appllcatJons the board picked 8-year- old Ken Koleszar as president THB CANDY WAS SOLD IN tbe eommunlty, • · and It did very well. However, the kids may have had their fill of chocolate. 1hey decided to spend their pJ'Oflts on a pJual*'lY. But the chocolate -and the project -turned out fine. What started as an attempt to learn aome prlnclplea of economic• ended up wtth a profit o( ... lt. "WE WERE TRYING TO find something the Kathleen Boan~. another tea.Cher, said, .. We gave tbe ltudeata aom• bulc ideM. bUt tbey toot it. from there. They sot ,.ery involved aDd came up A~ ........ YOUNGSTERS IN MENTOR, OHIO, FIND A YUMMY WAY TO LEARN BUSINESS From Left, John Burgeaa, Pat Burk and Sandra Baughman Create Sweets Job selections came next, and David stenu evenw.lly decided to pour, He aatd vice president was his leCOOd choice . Tbepuplla were paid ror t.belrwort in currency ... ,J///f///j _______________ , -called "aumt>a'• -printed for the project. Worken earned five gumps tor 30 minutes' work. TllBBE WAS EVEN A CASE of gump coun- terfeltinl. One pupil took a 1heet of aumps home "and ran off lots more on lib father's copying machine,,. litra. Fletcher said. . "We discovered tt immediately,.. abe added. ·'The copies were clearer than our originals.'' The candy was manufactured each Thursday moruln& for three weeks, and teacher. Wendy ·NO EQUITY ING4RB4GE SACRAMENTO CAP) -People in California have m million tom of ·garbaae hauled away for ~ mUlim a year, and some people pay much more than others, a legi.slativestudy says. 2630-C Avon Stl"Ht NewPort BHCh • 675-3310 (8"111.,,.i TaftdY LHth9rl Ollell ,,.. • °""SW.. "IMfo. • STMr wm4 I oz, JIM 8EAM, NJO ~Ol ~EfN CREME OE MENTHE. Pl.USA SCO()POlf VANlu.A ICE C~~AM. 1'0040%. SOD" "-"'TE.A, MIX IN l!llEl'fOER ANO f~! Beam. Sening . 1he United 1tshts of America. The Assembly Com- mittee on Labor , Emplo:v.ment and Consumer Affairs said in a staff report that the Los Angeles County resi· dent pays 91 cents a month and those of Marin County pay! Sl 7. the lowest and highest in the stat e respectively. KENT\JCaY SllWGHT IOORIOtl WHl$K£Y. IO PROOf OISHllEO AHO BOT II ( 0 Ill JMIES B lfAlll OISTU.LINC CX) Q.CRMONI BC.W tff Navy\Vives''~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Tra11mas Described SAN DIEGO (AP> A psychologist says Navy wives who traditionally are apprehensive. even afraid, when their sailors leave for sea are ~ I ~ ~ ,~, ' . '-~~ 4 ·1~~~ f ,. ... -. •' "·~. ~· .«~f \-··i ; -----------=---- •COSTA MESA I t7SO NEWPORT BLWD. (71'16-1>3'00 E • ANAHEIM I BUENA PARK 2636 LA PALMA Ut NEAR MAGNOLIA (71•) 821 -8900 (from L.A. cfl•I (2131694-SJllS • PUENTE HILLS MALL We've got if ... when you need it! City of lndu1try (213) 965-lllS UPOer lenl l\tlt to Su" now often experiencing -li!~~~~~~~!~~~!~=~~~~~!5~~~~~!::!!::~~=~~~~~~~==~~~~~~~~=~~~~~~i~ ·· the same trauma when the ships return. The wives , s ay s Stephen Pfeiffer, "ex- perience m ost or the things we would think of as as inappropriate for a time of reunion " It Is mainly the result of hav· tng to adjust to a sharing outlook after learning lo run things alone I ® r.~·..:.,• SWPS USUALLY ar c gone for seven months. Separations and divorces, espe cially among younger couples. have increased in recent years. In an interview. Pfeif· fer said children also are . filled with stress, suffer- ing a "revolv'\og daddy" problem. He urges wives and older children to write frequently to their sai l or . disc uss ing personal changes which are laking pl ace In his absence "THE BIGGEST def· lclt in our proble m,·· said Pfeiffe r . who counsels Navy families in cooperation with chaplains, "1s that the men are not similarly prepared, except an a few cases wh•re chaplains deal with this problem aboard ship .. It's hard to get to the m en. In our culture . it ts difficult for men to ap· · pear weak -not the con· sistent f am Uy leader and this is particularly trueintheNavy." M~GE .. RECEWED BA'111, N. Y . (AP) -A citlaen1 band radio 1i1nal interrupted a · tolemn moment during a .. ~hurcb service in thJs up- state New York com- munity. Tbe Rev. Austin Miles bad just told the con- gre••tlon of the Aa· sembly <A God Cbiarcb' 'that "God will answer YOGI' prayers," when a deep male voice crackled over the publld address system: .. That's a big 10·.t, •oocl bpddy ... I UWS UM SUMUNll a.m smrs • • .... $15.SO .......•.•......••• 1&1 tm sum PUii &STllBlmll S7f7 SM7 .... SIS .... $'9." ......... f & .- ~ ITllPE & PL.111 smm .... S1S. ... Sl7.tt .......... . GRANT /~ SOYS W9U.BE~I OPEN EMOAIAl. DAY ,?} ., • • 1n lml.lm.l'llllKB CIBlml!IUTW ...... $12M ••••••••••••••••••• umE-.s' wu•aaamr ... $7.00 •••••••••••••••••••• ALE .. 7 s311 unu-.rWllJINn s5"' ...... _,_ .. ... '''·'°· .................. . SM:rwnD ---llZISll $OIE1111EDll.nJJJf ' Bone-eruneher at the Wedge Bodysurf er slides Jeft along good·sized wall at Balboa peninsula Wedge Wednesday afternoon. A storm in South America brought waves· in four to eight-foot Academia Receives Summertime Boost In addition to the us ual roster o( standard academic classes, sum- mer school students in the Newport·Mesa Unified School District will be able to dabble in other subjects, including electronics, television production and statistics. District trustees have approved a list of 11 classes to be taught at the four high school campuses this s ummer, offered in addition to the academic classes selected for each campus. THE LIST INCLUDES ad- vanced television production: awareness of our city, county and stale, I and 11 ; energy and en- vironmental studies; explonng electronics; fitness for hving ; in- troduction to photography: in- troduction to the social studies, or how to survive in high school, physics C: mode rn physics; the r evolutionary experience : America and China, and a seminar in probability, statistics and computer programming. Trustees expressed some con· cern that elective classes like the type on the list would displace needed academi c subjects. but ,_i9jtrtct officials assured them ~1at no academic classes would be dropped to make room for the new ones. SUPERINTENDENT JOHN LfHik of Fut.ure Nicoll said there would be no added expense to the district in offering the classes. He pointed out they generate' student interes t in summer school, and increase attendance means increased state revenues to the district. Strangulation. Motive Probed FRESNO CAP) -The body of a young woman found along a de- serted road west of here bas been identified as Deborah Jean King, 18, of Kerman. authorities re- port The Kerman High School senior apparently was strangled but a final cause of death won't be determined until an autopsy is co mpl eted. a coroner's spo1'esman said. Mi~e DWfin shows o~f Qne of solar beating system~ on • • Find Accord . ~ . . · Two presidentlal obaervera from oppoel~ end.a ol tJae poUUcaJ' spec. trum assessed the flrat 125 dayw of President .JlmloY Ca('ter'a ad• IQinistratlon in a pro1ram at Anaheim. · Deepite vleWlnt the Prelldent from dlfferenl vantac• JOIDtl, Theodore c. Sorensen and James J. Kllpatrtck qreed men than tbe1 disagreed on Carter'• Job performance. ~ • BOTH SOllENSEN and Kilpatrick gave Carter pusinl mark.a on hi.a hand1ini of forel.p affal.n, fOI' example. And both men said it's unllkely that Carter will be able to reduce the federal bureaUcracy u be vowed to do in last year's cam- paign. moral standards on otbers. But be want.a to bold our standards • out so that others see 1'e are wbat we aay we~.•' Sorenae.naaid. In turn, Kilpatrict pralMd • •Carter fer .. opeinly aupPortlna Soviet dlaaldenta" and said be "Coe& alooa with'1'most of what ' : Soreoaen bad said. ' Sorensen and Kilpatrick ~ ed apart ~ thelr debate at the Disneyland Hotel on their~ ment.s of Carter'• energy pro- gram and his SUPPorf of the establishment of a consumer pro- tection agency. BUT ONCE THOSE dlf· f erences were aired, Soren.sen atnd Kilpatrick fell back into agreement on bow the nation's ·new president ls going. Sorensen was Carter's original nominee for CIA director, an ap- pointment that fell through when Congressional critics made lt ob- vious confinnatlon would be a tougbbaWe. · BUT, T8B NBWSPAPE& eol· umnlst warned. Carter must be· caref\al not to ralae ~"false bopea" ·amons dlllidents in Iron Curta1D countries. . . ''On the whole. Uao.agb. rm very sattsfted with what Mr •• Carter baa done (in foreign af- falra ), .. Kilpatrick said. However, bl.I appraisal of the President's enerty conaervaUoa program was far less flattering. Kilpatrick predicted much of Carter's proposed program won't make it through Congress. category to Orange Coast, and lifeguards say excellent surllng conditions might .last through weekend, making·it . In the so-called Camelot years of the Kennedy sdminlstratian, Soremen was a \eoilfldant In tbe Kennedy Inner clrde and me of the Praldent'• chief apeech lliB Weapon Neutrtilized By Policeman· no holiday for the surfers. writers. - 18th Street No Insults ON '1'11E OtiiER hand. syn.. dlcated columnist Kilpatrick la a leadine spokesman for con· servative causes. • Sllnpbob"wlll get )'OU ln f.rou..' ble every time. WUlening Plan W~th Injury Kilpatriclt's column appears In 322 newspapers aod both bls face and debate techn14ue is known to viewers of TV's 60 Minutes, a weekly network news feature. That's what a hungover Hunt- ington Beach man must be think· lng today, after a visit from police Wednesday nlgbt ln response to neighbors.• com• plalntaon the cl~' a north alde. Nixed in Mesa Costa Mesa city councilmen kicked around the idea of mating 181.b Street an arterial bighway -atleastonpaper. Then they tossed the sugges. tion back at Public Services Direct« Jim Eldridge. telling him tlJe ICheme would probably be met with lees thu:lentbnstasm by cltyresicJenn, . .. THE QTY JS looking into a re- alignment of 18th Street at Newport Boulevard. which cur- renUy dividea Eaat 18th from West 18th. Eldridge said the realignment would cost the city about $1 million, which he said could come from gas tax funds or downtown redevelopment funds. since the project falls in that sec· ti on of Costa Mesa. Or, be said, the city could get 18th Street put on the county's master plan of arterial hisbways. ''BY DOING THAT, the county would match dollars for the re. alignment," Eldridge said, which would mean Costa Mesa"ll cost would only be about $500,000 for the project. But what about the at.retch ol 18th from Placentia Avenue to Orange Avenue? Wouldn't the county inalat the city begin buy· ins up property for the wldenina of l8tb. dty councilmen uked. Eldridge reassured coun-. cllmen that the city council ii the government body that decides when the widening would take place, if ever. "IF YOU APP&OVE getting 18th on the map u an arterial hl&bw~. we could start work~ the realignment part by summer at 19'18," Eldridae aaid. But Mayor Norma Hertzoc balked at the suggestion, 1aylnf that, even If the preseat councll- never intends to actually Widen the entire stretch of 18th. they couldn't speak for future city councils. Councilmen decided they dld.n 't, want 18th tumecl into • hlchway, even on paper. Rabies Clinic SetforMeaa An anti·rabies clinic for dogs wUl be held 1\aesdaj from 1 to 8:30 p.m. at the Orange Counly FairlfOUDds. Pet owners will 1>e cbarpd $2 foT tbe vaccination. All dop fbw' moot.bl of a1e or older may re.- celve the shot. Tbe cUnlc 1J ~ spOmOl'eC! by the Southern Callfomla Veterinacy Medic.I Association. tht North Coeta lteaa Kiwaaia Club and Costa Mesa•s animal control service. STOCKTON (AP) -Getting stuck in a courthouse ·elevator isn't much fun, but for David Adamaitdid.haveltarewards. Adams, 22, who was stuck ln tlie elevatar for almost a halt hour, found an overtime parking ticket on bla car when he was finally freed. But Frank Dean, deputy San Joaquin County district attorney, • came to the rescue aod nulll.t1ed the citation. . _.--___...-~ The ruddy-faced conaenatlve had little opportunity to alt Sorensen down in debate~ however, as the two men agreed on most issues discUssed at ~ National Comamer FiDaDce ~ IOCiatlmconventtoa. · SOltENDN PIWSBD Carter "for leW.ng the world know that America once again la ftandlng 'on moral issues ... "He doesn't intend to force our One woman alle1ed that lie was shooting missiles at • chlldren. but there was no Jll'OOf of th1I. police said. The proof of the beYerage be'd been imbiJJlnt. however, bad made his aimmartt errant thaD unerrtng. So Patrolman Arden Fick j1llt • broke bls ·~ and suggest.. ed he Jay olf the sauce. .................. POMONA 9CHOOL STUDENT .YOUN~ LIE LINDS A HAND AT COOKING " He'a P8lt Of Fourth Grade Cla .. L•aml"I About -itpan l'Jlvough FOOd Japan Comes Alive By JOANNE &Enff>LDS ·-~ ......... Twenty seta of small bdds etuteb the JltUe dite plutic bowls and $Uualewith the rebellious atlcp. One lfrl succeeds ln scooping a Clob of rice bUt Joen control and howls wbeo the rice ~s down the froot ol her dren. · Learn disPlQ: at Ne"'J>()rt Ilarbor Area Chamber of Commerc .........___.. Olficye, J>laplay includes domestic S)lstems for use m heating water, homes and swimming pools and will be ,......_,,.een-nmllilld op .. en !or public viewing through June 1. ' .. I FLAT EARTH EXTENDS INFINITELY IN ALL DIRECTIONS? So a.ya Man WhoH Auatrallan Wife Never Hung Upside Down Cult Likes It Flat Experrence Shows ~Pancake' Earth LANCASTER (AP) Only 10 miles from where scientists are working to perfect a space shut- tle to expand man's frontiers. Charles K. Johnson steadfastiy teaches that the world is M flat as a pancake and that the apace program is a multibillion-dollar hoax. "People treat us as if we're some sort of radicals -as if the flat-earth theory is a radical, ec- centric idea and that there's some vast body of proof that the earth is round," explains the SJ.year-old Johnson, president of the International Flat Earth Research Society. "WE'RE ALWAYS ON the de- fensive," he says. Nonetheless, he is confident that his teachings will soon ~riumph and bring an abrupt end lo the four-century reign of those who contend the earth is a ;pinning ball hurtling around the >un. "Our beliefs are based on ex- perience, not on mathematical >cribblillgs,'' Johnson insists as Ile leads a newsman around his literature-cluttered home outside this sleepy desert community. ··we do not accept theory, which is imaginary." JUST OVER THE cactus- 1trewn horizon from Johnson's rickety llWe house Iles sprawling Edwards Air Force Base Flight rest Center, where the first ipace shuttle is to be launched in two years. But the rugged, white·haired Johnson sees no need for space ?xploration. The proper view of :he univene, he says, can be jrawn from a literal reading of ~e nesis : "God created the 1eavens above and the earth below, and there should be no further doubt about the matter " TVShow Delays Jail Tenn SAN ANTONIO, Tex. <A P> -Entertainer Chad Mitchell, founder of the Chad Mitchell Trio, has won a two-week delay in starting a prison sentence for poesesslne marijuana. Mitchell was to have begun a five-year sen- tence Tuesday, but hia lawyen won a <Selay 10 that he could pefform ln a television )frogram next month, court of· flctals aaid. The earth itself. Johnson's society teaches, is flat and ex· tends infinitely in all directions. although the known world is saucer-shaped because it is hemmed in by an impenetrable, 150-mile-bigb wall of ice that forms a South Pole around the rim of the saucer. THE SUN, BE SAYS, is a 32· mile-high "spotlight" that moves in a circle 3,000 miles above the North Pole at the cent~r of the ---~ ,,.....,. e1a1 ..... tlae plaoto11raplt• P•,.portedl9 •e•t IJaek 1.-... .-paee are lakes Cllld ao oae •as e~er IJeea to the ..... known world. However. he con- ceded he wasn 't quite s ure whether the stars were sta- tionary or mobile. Johnson, who was born m San Angelo, Tex .• the son of a cattie rancher, says he began doubting the world was round while he was in grammar school. ·'The first time I saw a globe, it 1ust didn't make any sense," be says ... But it was years before I could prove why.'· TO PBOVE THE earth was not round. Johnson claims. the flat- eartb society used suveyors' equipment to Sff if there was a curvature in the 61-mile Kiel Canal linking the Baltic and North Seas. There was no curve, he says. Besides, claims Johnson, who also rejects the theory of gravity as ··absurd,'' if the world were round Australians would be hanging by their feet as they spin through s pace. And his wife, Marjory, an Australian, bas never bung by her feet. he says. To Johnson, the 16th «ntury Copemician Revolution, which upset the traditional flat-earth theory of the universe, "is just a dusted off version of an ancient Greek mytb." "THERE 18 NO evidence whatsoever to support the theory that the earth is hurtling through space,'' says Jobnaoo, echoing Samuel Shenton, bis British pre- decessor as leader of the flat earth ' ".lety ... But the world ls run on this belief, so it must be maintained." A ship that seems to be disap- pearing over the borbon la mere- ly becoming smaller to a viewer as it moves into the distance, Johnson claims, while the photo- graphs purportedly sent back from space are fakes and no ooe- has ever been to the moon. Johnson concedes that rocltetJ have been senl aloft, but says their orbits am0unted to no more than flying a level, circular pat- tern around the earth, not \Dlllke a plane clrcllni an airport. ALTHOUGH HIS SOCIETY claim• only about 200 dues· payin1 members worldwide, Johnson -who's been soclety president for ftve years -ccm- tends be bu •"thousands and tbousa.Ddt'' of followers who keep their beliefs secret for fear of being persecuted as heretics. However, aa an lnd1caUon that people may be becoming more open about their beliefs, Johnson points to the movie "Capricorn _ One," due for release this fall, which tells the story of a mlsaion to Mars that was faked by the Na· lion al Aeronautics and ~pace Ad· ministration on a movie set in Hollywood. . Lone awmmed beautiet. Many colon • Flori.It wrapped. Mitchell waa cbar1ed with possession of 400 pounds of marijuana, which federal acents said they found in bis car I IU}I) Doz. outside a motel in Sep----- tember um. 1bru May 29 Tbepostponementwu .... ______________________ _. ________________________ _ granted by U.S. District H ~·~. Judie Richard Owen ol UUl~llSl-S New York after consult· inC with Judge Adrian Spears:. wbo pra\ded a\ Mltcheu'a noo-Jucy trial. The U.S. Supreme Court refused to bear MltcMll'a appeal. To Place your .. J"ut Result" Seritce Olreetory lid ••.• Call Now HYDROPONIC GARDENS ·--.:0:642-1671 _ _. "!Iii·-------~--~~-~~ Id.JU Frld!y, May 21. 1 en OAU.YPtLOT Monsters Go To University VANCOUVER, British Columbia (AP) -The Abomlnable Snowman, Bl« Foot and other world· famows moaat.en will 10 to colleae next spnn,. The Univeralty of British Columbia, coovinced. that .. it's time the academic community came out" of the closet,.. plans to bold an international seminar oo moutere Ud reports ol their activities. DR. llAIUORIE HALPIN, CUJlATOR of the university's museum of anthropotoo. says belief in monsters has become too widespread now "for the academic community to say there is nothing there." Halpin saya funds have been raised to provide lramportatloo for Canadian scholars, but more money ls needed to bri~ in experts from the United States and the Soviet Uruon. THE 'l'llREE·DAY CONFEJlENCE -exact dates have not been set -will consiat ol a series of academic papen Oil "'~estioo of Sa.squatcb and other monsters,•• Dr, H aaid. • Sasquatdl. or Bil Foat. ls an enormous. hairy, man-Ute creature reportedly spotted from Northern California into westeru Canada. Dr. LGalle Jdet ~ of the psychiatry depart· melU at Vancouver Generalffospltal will lecture OD the psychological aspects of Sasquatcb belief. DR. RICHARD PRESTON OF McMaster University in Hamilton, OnL, will discuss Wiitiko, a spooky creature seen by Cree Indians. . Dr. Frederick Aldrich ol Memorial University in St. John's will describe the Newfoundland giant squid, the existence of which was denied by zoologists until several were found. The conference "will force us to stretch our minds."' Mid Halpin, by focusing serious academic attention on research that.. unW now, bas been car- ried on only by amateara. .. WITH ANY un11n 111-1• (NO MINIMUM) IM COSTA MESA ~H_A_M_IL_T_ON~......,~~---tO COSTA MESA ~ AUTO WASH •----tex> 2059Harbor Blvd 645-1039 IN FOUNTAIN VALLEY . , I ) ••LetAt 1 r-------------~~~oe:::-~~ ' ~ ; • •OUHtal .. YAt\.f ..... ,, ... -· WE HANO WASH RECREATION VEHICLES, CAMPERS& TRUCKS. ••••••••••••••• GREAT BUYS in ColorTrak and Famous XL-100 ••••••••••••••• Save S lodag uuilh RCA! 1'' XL-100 21" DIAGONAL WITH ACCUMATIC IV PUSH-BUnON CONTROL 1 Family size table model with all ~-~ the fabulous features of XL-100 • ... plus AccuMatlc IV. ACM IV automatically brings color, tint, brightness and contrast within a normal preset range with one ;iiiliilil!!E!!~button. Model FASOI __ "9 ..... _ I • McNlef 'l'M76 11''. DIA80NAL COLOR PORTABLE You get excellent color petfcifmance and X~100 ,..._blllty with thla com· pact valu•prlced portable. 100% 1otld•tate cha11la. Accullne bleck matri)( picture tut>e .•. automauc fine tuning and automatic Chronta controt .. , '· "' ·1 .~ . . •• Al• DAILY PILOT Friday, Max 27, 1977' • • GUHNIE By Phil lnterlandi PVBUC NOTICE ---01•--UT NOTtcaw..ueuc•••--.... 0.f.Ain.i'iti'Mt,'OM ., ..... ,,.. an ce .. CIL l"vWk ~ .. ........, ""-tllet -.-~ •• tMOMAS J. SUI.AS. W fi'tllt HVOH CtTY ... ~VMU''I' Orange County motorists have been slowing down a bit on the freeways this month. according to California Highway Patrolmen. CHP oificera believe it may be the result of their campal&n du.ring May urling motorists to complywitb the SS.mile-an·hour speed limit. PATROL SPOKESMAN Jerry Maxwell said Gliders Mulled Escape Country Still Padlocked UUlltSIN Ml1Nfllle .._ llUtlMU MOTICl 1$ etftM--~ ..__ ~-• Uftdff"'9f~twn..._ •• tylt ,..,...,.,,,,,,., ....... : .......... aver.,. ._._ay .,,_,_ ln tbe county W been 61.S· ., c..._,... ~ c.w s.Mtt, _. .. c.-11 ~. ~ mU• m ~before tbe 11te•mlna with us for aaf~ "" ~11ce111'11, City •• C•••• •w-. ,..,...._ ~'------tua ..... _ .. ,_ ............. , Me11, CA ~t•f?, C•¥111Y 61 ,_et~-·---:r "..u~u·.._~, ~ ...... SU. ... Clll~----f11tt11-.__,. , SurVeyt taken on freeWaya by CalTrans thili -...,.,...,, ttn,t1YW11Mr.,..1, a. ... 0:--.... ~~ moo•a. _.__ tho aver••e a--'• have slowed to· •10•'"'' "" ~· tMl'tttff111'• ~ ~!i\::-"' .!!..~ _ -~ --.,.._ l .,,... ........ , , ........ _._. ... ---_ ........ -about eo mil• an hour, Muwell Hfd, Ule speed: tMre+ft. ...... • ... .,~flt'll,,,., ......... .. goal the---' had•forOr•"'-Couoty 1 ~...,... '" .. tutw. wot w '' •""••' ""'""'' ff•• ••• • .,...... _... • 1 Clflef11c:.,..._,TMOMAIJ.IUL.Al,wt1o .-.,1cvttw. .. ,_., .._.. ,....., .. • wllt pey lftll --~ tll llWllMlff ~ M&...,.,. •• 6AID while the 15-mlle-an-mw; ...... "' .. '"'.,.. ,.,..,.. .,. •· ....._.. ...... =-~~ ~...,___, ' --~lthftt'l'n, • IM .K ....... C4 :: !.'.L,\. -aver-..e •PMd c!rop "may not seem worth talldna '""'*" •1ct •• l'llttW ,,_ ""' , ...... ..,. ._"' .-about" lt lbOwa that some motorists wbo bad been1 """"*'11111td~1t• .. f'ltpO!ts111i.1 -NUdl::1N1•1!•• an. .u haul .... -~ u-•ta vol ..... n... 1....1 ........ ,"'9.yt11,ftlt ... ., .... lfttlolllllo ,._ .......... ,. ......... lt'lll '"so .... ,,-. ..-.-~ ere un...u•v a ...... -.1 e11,,......,._..,_,"111 • ._'*Mw t11e ,, ........ ~ ., .... ~ ... ., down '"thtl\lmt111tC11111"". c.i,._... ~ c... --~ ,; I Oet.deteo.teMIM.Qllltorlll .. M ~, ...... ,....._., We think a lot Ol them are reapondln1 to our1 '°"' .. "°'Mlv.'911. °"''~"".._°'~1 reqtM;lta," Maxyell aald,t addlnc otbera may be ,.,__J,Sulef 1"'._. .. ...,...,.. ...... growtna more fearful of ~vine apeed violation Mot~':=°'.,.. eeat 0111.,Jtttot. :i:::i:.::-.= ... ~-= tickets. • tt•'7 lle11t, • T""9 *"""'to _,., ...... .,. STATEWIDB, Maxwell cc.tlnued, speeds have Pl1BLlC NOTICB . :"'..:::=::' ::::'",::.:: drop .,, •-··.,m el an~. w.u .-~""""-o .. .,.. ............. =-....:.-..6 lit u ..._,_ -t--......;;....~_.,.------11onMtloft ........... .,... -y CIMMt The padlock remams on Escape Country near c deaths dUJ'ina tbe first two weeks of 1u,.•toacouaTOP'TM• 11t~ A..-.. P'woc w.uo...,;. Live Oak Canyon, but Orange County Supervisors May also droDDed. Mowell aald. althoulh tt is too ITAT• o..CMJll'OttNIA "°" "'4ftt111 ~~,.:::!;.. have indicated they may let hang gliders again soar· earlY to ten fft.be drop wu a result of the speed-nt•C:O:.~ORANOa v.u.q overthecanyon. cutUnteampaj&Jl. NOT1c1 OP' sua ol' •IAL • I understand he's one of the very youngest ever to A tr..1.... t d fth • ._ tio Ptt0Nll'TYATNIVAT91A&A s o.u&U6s s an now, use o e pnva...::i rect'ea n • '" t"• ~ ... of tlll l!s'"' ,, pa r k is limited to DBATBB DUIUNG the ftnt two weeta of May MARGARET a. MAU\.wooo, •M ;uautY·" motorcycl e riding on the ban on activities last,..,. totaled 173, MuWell said. COlDpared with :.!!:.:.1tu E. Hasu..wooo. Escape Country's were the motorcycle 1S3durln«lbeflnttwoweebtldsyear. 1 NOT1cE1sMuu~evo1vaNtt11t ----------- southernmost acres. races promoted and held Thoae figures followed an 11.5 percent increase· ::,.~:i~:....:...-:"':!,!1n1~:~M~ • ..£:..:::r::::.::::;::;;::11:;=:::::21mi;z::i:.;Q!!ti£:?:-:"""~;~ For the Record . ~AS VECiAS Marro1tqe licenses l\~ed llere 1ncludt' I M04 f IACHAl'lO PEIJ8USH Clyclq " 81rcharcl 10 of MMIOO Y•tll\. "" Sutdnll<' P1t11)t' AcuDu\11, tb. of Et T a NOAEWS ROS'>O K~nn<'lh Af <.h Pr A"ctriw ~ 20 . DI ~.,_,,.,,.,,q,' ,,nd Ro\tt.tr1n Ofllor1111\ ~'.') 1'1 "' Q1dq.~rt \t fin\ert I •bove I May7 l ETER'iON BALDWIN OP""'' I( Kirk P~l•r\O'I )I dnd (MOI Et abell\ a .. 1dw1n ,. both of N oorl Beach ATEAS OE CASTRO Jim H~olcl W'11i<r\ )t. dnCI OoMd O•le o d\tro JA.bol"o• N•wPOr1 B4rach UTNAM VAN EIMER EN - H ard c. P\.otn.tm ti Mel Jill Ann v EI merer>. 1', boll! o• Hufttll\91011 8 '" OVETT·FALLON -Terrv Edwin L t-tl. 34 •nd J11,,11a Lou•se l'a11on. 31 boll! of Hun1111qton ~~"· LAKE MCCULLOUGH Sloven w rrt,, 81dk•. ?S. and Kay A M cu11ouq11 )1. botll of Hun11noton 8 Cll OO RE-JOHNSON •\ Ellls Moore. s1, .,.., Pe9ov v rnell Jollnsoro, •o. bolll of W \tmi~I .. AZ0-8RUST -Abtl Rel'O, 10 ol N •walk ...ct Helcll Louise Bru<.I I I ofEost•Me.a A\IAGE OHLC -Aob,.rl W S· "9, 23. of Corona Otl Mor, ano Debra L Ollie, 1'.ol Costa Mn •. That limitation was in-by operators sub-letting in traffic deaths throu&bout California in the of tll• utete·ot MARGARET I!. v o k e d e a r 1 y 1 a s t the southern reaches of January through April period. compared with, ~:::!":'J0:,· H·~;:L~~~7 ~ ~-""' February when canyon Escape Country. figures for tbe same pertod in1916, Maxwell said. 1 cused, w111 se11 at ,,..1v1te nie to tN STAftOPCAUNHt&Nll residen~ and law en----------------------------~----~~..,.~~~~~-~~-~ ~•~"~,~ ( • ductlOl'lol,,,,.,tWqUHttdbrok•r'•<---........ , forcement 0 ficials COm· mlsslOl'l,Uf)OlllM"'""'lndcOftdltl-NOTICE 0 .. SAL• Ofl ....... 80ICE·801CE -Lynn Ady 8ooce. plained about mob a nd ~lllilftw ment~. end w'le« ~ .. RO .. a•TY ATfl!ltfVAftSA~ 37 nm1rrled Marilyn A. Boice, 31. traffic scenes Created by conflrfftltloq by tlle lbcl.., ... lltltlff lft tlll Mettolrof tlll,ht9tl of Cf .. bo::;6':';'~"'C:'N~~"·-IWb"'' unauthorized S unday af. OKIEN'ltlh ~:;:~~;C:tw1!'1'!.~~~!':!!: L~:.~a~~~~t!Mt Conr44 M«Ke, «. dnd Fave Fr.ance~ k ortllereeft..-wlllllftll\ftlme•llowedby Ille llflde~ Edw1ra L Luc.s, es BtnnPll «.bolholWestmln\ter. ternoonroc COn Cer ts. 1-. at IN office ol lht Public Acl• E•tcutor Oftl\t est.CeofCler .. l.obo,, CAATY-SELVIOGE -l'lon.oldJonP YR~ mlfthlretM, 1300 Soutl\ Grend AWfluo, 11'0 k!'ow•usCfitl'a R. Lobo,~ Cartv.,6.ol Corona.andAprllJoy INCLUDED t'n the RUG GAit. Sa11t1 AM,C.lflMlll1t21'0S,allrlOht.tl· wlllMll atprlvftetelOtotMlt~t Se1v1dqe, 17. of Los Alamitos tie. f ftterut •ncl es la II of ufcl end best,,. ~ddtr, •f\tr dtduc.tlOll If May. scen es depicted by those MARGARET E. H4ZELWOOO. 1190 •nv ~ed broQr's COMmlssloft. CARPENTER-Kt NG -TMm... who complain e d was · · • ' 11 now n as MA RG A A ET f!. upo" t11e terms •"d conditions Carpenter. 33 •nd Hazel 0 . K1n9 J6. HASELWOOO,dKfftecl.1tthetlmeof IMf-tlNftw mente-4, ettct subject to bolhol El Toro. teenage drunkenness, ob-SALE ...... dtltll. In~ to thet Cet>t.ift , .. , COftflrm1lffln by the lbo ...... ftlltlitd ROME AC> BRANAM -Arthur o va·ous drug ... e a nd young "'°"rtydtscriblclesto11ow1. towtt: &lpeflor OMt, °" """'5clrt. ~ t. Aom~ro 10 and L•sa Jan BrM•m. 18 ..., AN UNDIVIDED ONE·HALF (~) 19n. at tl\lllourof tw.lw o'c;IOCk"°9fl, l>Olh of Hunt11>91on 8HCh. women stripping during Enti I t INTEREST IN: Lot i.1" IMoc:ll "O" of 06'11-Mftlrwlltllft"-llfMIJl°"9tfby May• a wet T -shirt promotion. 25°/o OFF on re nYen nrv_ -''Thi ..... Trett'',"'"" City of s.nt• .... It ""Oftke of "" Pubtlc Ad-ROBINSON·KAUGEA -l'ran~ --: , Al'll, c-ty of Orege, Stat• of ml11lltrMclr, t30l>-SeuttlGrMd A ..... O•noel Aot>l'l'IO'\ 2~. and Mlcl'l•ll v or. Those tales, s upported Cellfomle,esPWmec»thffeofreconMd Slnt•AN.Clllfom'-tt10s..Mtrftht.t!. IOrol l(rugtr. 24. llOll\ Of Hu11tin91on by photos ot the canyon Of Oriatal .... C.,.tt.g a Ort...eal .. I •cHw '" llook 23 Pegit. of MIKell-ti•. llltwt lfld ..... fltl said CW• 8's·~~TT-ST LEGER -O•rrv1 revelry, were enough to Sale Sia ll1og FriclllJ, M., 27-S•.,. • .._. S ~~,!~ °' '"°' AflOlf• Countr. t:'..;::.c;:'~~=:u:! JomwiScott.lO.an0c.t1111'!Ell...,St. prompt the board of SUl.\.IECT '° 111111CQC1t\oftc, QOfldf. erld '"..,.._ ew.t said_...."" ec- Ltcie•. 71. both ot Westminster. SUpe""'conrs to revoke the 0,. ............... .,., UOl'S, t"HtrlCllOftS, elMIMfttS. ••· Quired, by oper•tk>n Of law or F48EC·BL4CIC -Larry JoHoh • •&QV CIUMOl\S, NMFV•l'-. tleftl, rigllts. Oltlefwfw.CICllWU-« lfteddltloftto Fati.c 11. TronlOad ColO ·and Kim U Se permits COVering 1ndrltt'holw1y,ofrecofd. ..._certllftr ... Dr--1'f*9crlbeda Mer1t81«k.7S Ol lrvone. operations at Escape 3617 E. Coast Hwy, C.a.a cW..... CornrnotllV k-ft as: •26 WUt tonows,towlt: M.ly 1' W•lnut,Slnt1Anl.C•Ofomle. AN UNOl"'OEOONe-MAl.P CVl) DE .AMBAOSE·OAV1osoN -Country. • 1 """':::._.~ IJ.SIM J a1chorotNr1¥•lrwt1edtMJA!dpro-IN'TERESTIN: MICl\ffl 4\IMI Jon 0e Amb<ose. JO and 67~ ..i730 -:;:" pe<1yendmustbllft-ltl"'eftdwlllbl Lot 10 !ft BIOck ''O'•of "'Tl\e Heil M•"t C. 0.¥lchO<'I, 2'· botllot Ntwoorl ~ rectl\led llt Ille offlc.e of,,... P\tbllc Act-Tract". lfttlltCltyof S...Ce Ma. Counly B•·icll. EXEMPTED FROM mlftlstrllor,IJOOSoutl\GrenclA11tnue, ofOranee.St1t1ofCA11foml•.es~ SH 0 ffLOS.MELENOEZ -l'lona•o Sent• Ane. CelllMftll •vos. or....., be ~ tMr'flOf r'KOf'dtd ift 8oolt 2l P99e Jo\eoll Sl!lelds. 16 """ 8,.flncl• ------------------------------------------------~flltd wlll'I the Clerk Of slid Superior tt of Mttceti-e Reconts fl/I Uls Marl Ina Mele<tdel 11. t>ot~ of CD\I• Court, °"may bl ~llV>tred to seld AO. A"IJ'lneovnt.,, C.llfoml1. Mesd mlftlstretM Pl"'°""'ly, It ll'IY time SUBJECT to •II ·~lan.s. con· ~v 1 t after first ll'lb!ICA1llon of 11111 ftOtlce 8ftd dlllons, restrlttlOl'ls, easement&, ••· MOOAl!·CATLIN -Rl~harcl Witty blforethemekt119ofstidM1•. c1u,10,,s. rewvauons. lleM. rlgllts. 8e .. c11 uSll, ~fltd cMclt or money onter W1lnut,SlntaAlla,Clllfoml1. Moor!' lO dnd ""d Martt"""e w II TERMS OF SALE! c1s11, lawful 1ndno11tsofwn.otrecon1. MCAieer (Allon. 46. botl'I of L•quna Q papec':/' rn-yoftlle\JllltedStltttS.$1,000.0011'1 ~ty--m: t24 llfest must eccompenyeectt wrlt1en bid or of· Bids oroffersarelmrhedtorseldcwo- fer, with the Nianc• of Ille purcl\esl 11111v ll'ld must 111 lnwrltil'Q alld wlll be orfte to bl Plld uPOn conflfm•tfoit of rteel"'ed « tM offlQ of tile Pvbtlc Ad· D lu Els he J Wit bY SlidSUlleftorGOun. mlftllb'ltor, UDO Souttl Gnnd A-. eat ew •n 1, All bids or°'*"' must be sutnnltt8d s.nte AN, c.!Heimie t270S,or ftlay be • c;;. tO 011•fMftlfuml5Md11Vtheselh1f'. Httd with tN Ctenc of said Sllperfor I PALM SPRINGS (AP> t Lela E. Rogers, 86, mother of actress Ginger 1'ogers a nd a noted ~riter, editor and pro- dµcer. <lied Wednesday . go TllerlQhtto,.ledM'faad•tlbldsls COur1,or1'118'1bedlllWt'9dtosald Ex ,.~ • .;i 111,.by~ ecutor ,.,_ily, et 111'1 time alter She had a career as a Dated: Mlv 13, ,m, first OUbllcatt°" of t111s notlQ 111)4 S 0 m a n JAMESE.~IM beforet .. ~lllOOf!Mtldsale. n e W W • .., f'UbllcAdlnl11lstrator• TERMS OF SALE: C•sll, 19Wful playwright, magazine ftMmll'llstntorof -vofa.unttffsu..s.st.ooo.001n ed ·tor and stage pro wloEstlte ceSll. certified dlecll or ,_Y Of'dtr I • A OlttA N KUY ... R. must ICCllt'flMllV etc:h written blO or ot~ ducer COUNTYCOUNML fef:. wlttl thl --of thl pOrdla$e .... JOMNlioL ... TT•RSOtt • ork• to -Plld ~ COftlll"IMt'-of IJeadt Notl~e• CONNELLY f'i08EL T CONNELi. Y rttlde111 ol •ocwoort 8"•cll Cdlolornl.t Pa•\eG ·-v ,,,,_~ 1• "" Survowd bV ,,.,. ~bdlld Jo..,, Connell• Servltt\ •r• ·•·1>dln9 di Smoth Tutl'llll lamb v.-.1c11H CllAO"I Mor1u .. y ......... • HALEY JOHN w HALEY, re\lderol of ~-l•nd tt•ICl'>I\ C•llfornoa Pauect -v M•v 11>. ,., 1. 5ur¥1veO bV Ills wile >d!'otl!V L Hale\I ,on Ml<llatl H•lev lQWl<tnd HMqhl\ Cd , cNllCJlller Llnd<t ''~"on. Yorl>d Linda. C.. , IM'-rt lrY•llt T Haley Ol\lo. Cll••I~\ • IJl•v C.Xt• ~\ •. Ce. E Rlche1'11 •-\1-v. Fla .,.., Paul O. H1111v. Yor~ •'ld<t Ca S"tl'f' Marv lou Smock. ••rooro C TAVIOr, bOlh ot lndlana 3nd 'ther Cro\\, Wl\llller Ca Tllr~ •randcllold•"n· PatrlCI<! 8rvto11. Alt htllt Bry\O,, ... d ...... Hall'V 4neret '•rvlc•\ lo tw h•tll Sal doPM, &II Bra.tlwav CMP<'I with .,. Rev. c;..1'14! Sw.an..on olfl<o•ttnq 111 LOS ANGELES CAP> -~ctor JJ.m Boles, 63, best k.nowa for his characlel"izations of Abraham Lincoln, died Thursday of a heart seizure at Sherman Oaks Community Hospital. H e appeared in more than 1,000 radio and live television s hows during his lifetime. MIAMI CAP> -ArtlHIJ' Chalk. 88, founder of the Chalk's International Airline Inc., died Thurs· day. .,.,,.,,, al HMbor Roi Memor1o11 I------------·• •.trk. Frt•n<I\ m"v <•II •t Bell NOTIC•D'l"VM..ICH•AlllNG PUBLIC NOTICE ,,..ddwey Mo!'IUM• on Fri 'OOPM lo NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN 1 ... 1 1QPM Bell Bro•Oway Morlu•ry Ille Or....,. C-l'f Pl1tflftl1'19 Com ·•ttrlon ml.-. w•U<GfWllKt e ..,..k M•rlnq "•nl! on p,~....._-No. 11.210""' J'l'ILLlt\M l'~ANCIS PEET(. Clrc.uletlOro !!...._..Of 1"9 <-•Y ot -d) .~ -rt Mev n. it:n Mr Plet• 0r"'9e ~at Pl., , • ., am-t. ~·' • membfr ol '"" 1Crolo11t1 of •-•no Ille CountYol OrMQOt M•\t• "'"'ai Pe~"• LOdQt No lt -p1_,. of 4'1tr1AI HHJltw•'I' ••P tl 't'"••\ -.•1110 w•tll h t Truit •"" Tiii\ pU\111< ,,..,."'! wlll ~ <OftCllKted ""'"O' Ba<lk ot Pf~"• Survl....,bV '" ,.,. Pl....,."9 C-•n!Of\'\ .,..,1"' ,, wit• t\llct M PeetP N•WPOrl -lk••.., -C-'V E"9'-1+c" Cl d•UCJhl..-Elel"f C Jtl lnq Bulldlrog. 400 Ctvtc Cent .. Orl"'f rlf\ ,_,,, Wrn I" PfftP Jr \l\ler\ 10. WUI Cll'f of Sef>C• A"a C..llforftle °" ._. 11-M Sl•ber1 l.llll•n Rane II. T M & J-• ,.71 91 t·OO p M tt '!""• ~. •nd Marcµr.t O••tl\ W:1c11 ,:""' tfl lnterest«i PilrtJtl wlll lie tll•tr Edward PHI• •"d l"rte llte<'d r ndclllldrtn Private wrv•C• w••ft ..,.._.,... Clttlll.Mlefl e'-t ,......,.. t'fd Lemo F"""r•I Home PAWOtna -t n -t ·•<lor\ IUHllMAN • Tiit \ub1..-t ·~l'llt!"' lnvo1 ... , " I IN A lllJHAMt\N S.-rvfCP\ dnd In ....... ( ..... ,to Ille County ot 0•-Muler Plen Of Ar1 .. 111 HIQllw•n lro •lm@nl .,,. P'!l'IOlng at Stletter L•oune .,.. unlM~MM _,,tor .. s 1n ellCI ,,.., "Monu••y erouncl R_._ Mfuic,,, v1elo Ceftl .. IM<• Wtttl Ille C..fltarltl.I lllo 'ACltllC YllW MIMORIA&. PAIK Cemetery Mortu•ty 1 Chapel ' 3500 Pacll1c View Onve Newport, California 644·2700 McCOINICI MOtr\IAltU L11gunli 8elld'I 494-9415 l-oun• ... Ills 788-0933 San Juan C.pl•trano 49~1778 IALTZ.-.. OM ...... HOM& def Ml( 873"9450 Costa Mesa 8..e-2424 -.a.ll'OADWAT MOITVAIT 110 Broadway Costa~··• 642-9150 J SMllM 1VnlU. LAMI WISlCUfP CHANL 427 E. 17th St. Cotta Mela• tMM888 1.~~~ Santa Ana• 547~131 Vlrtll..,..lll Ollilltlty Act ttem cl\ftfon wlllllft ,lie 1u11111tt •l'lllel>d-t ... dllCllSMd lft Ille finllt Eftvl~ll lmoect ~I 1._\f1, Soutlle••I Or-Counlv Clrculetloro Sludy (SEOCCSl. cerllllltd lly Ille Oran" COllntv BofrdOI Suoervltorioro J11ne lO. 1'76 !re Clrculetloro El- AmellCllNftl 7._11. °" July 11. 1'7• <re s•occs1 anc1 °" AUQVSt 1e. ttn ,,. TICMAP) ttllt Envlronmentel lmt11c:t •tt141n wtll 119 ,."'--d by Ille Plan• l'llno CllMMlnlon tor •wova1•t1 leter 11Mrl119 on-•uttl~ ~ment. ~., man lnfllr~IOn, CGll'ltect tlle T,an,port8110r1 Pl_,,,lt!Q 8r -II of Ille a11vt-i.t ~Jnlnt Attflet. att Nerti\ eroaowev, S.l'te All Ml~ 17W .,._un, ~IMllflilto:Clrtnte OtMt Deity ~llet; Mey27,I~°" ~n COMFORr WITH FWWERS BUNDLE CLEARANCE SAVE FROM • • • FRIDAY SAWRDAY Sl:JNDAY MO~DAY • • ODDS AND ENDS • DlSCONTINUED PATIERNS • FLOCKS, FOILS, VINYLS, O~IENTAL TEXTURES AND MOREi • MANUFACTURER'S CLOSE-OUTS • SPECIAL PURCHASES • LIMITED TO STOCK ON HANO • OPEN MEMORIAL DAY PLEASE NOTE: All merchandise offered In this sale ts flm qualtty. We never sell seconds or Imperfects. All 'Sale merchandise Is prepackaged In room-size bundles consisting bf from two to slx\slngle rolls. Merchandise must be sold qs packaged. Shop early for best selecffonf First come. first served. No dealers. No lay-aways. All sales final. Open Monday, Memo- rial Day from 10am untll 6pm. Ol!PUn salebyseld~Coun. 8y,,...... M. ........_ Alt bids or Offen MUSI Ill SUllfnlftld A""'""ter ,.....llktntw Oft•'°"""'"""'" b¥ tlleseli.r. 61SCl'lkClttltwDt1wew.st Tiii rftl'it 111 rtlect MY Md.ti bids lw P.O....... lltnt1'P .-wet. Sffta AM. CA ttnt Dated: ,,,._., 17, tm Ttt: 17'41JM."6t EDWARDL.LUCAS Pul>llsMd Ol'lftOll Cont Delly f>flot. EllKuto.-ofsalcl Estate May20.11,llld27,lt17 215'-77 JAMISl.aM.Tl!S "' Ntf'tt!Mc"--..... ~-...CAftlMt ---------T ....... :<7Wla.1M9 CE A....,fWhlc1ltlr PUBLIC NOTI Pub11s19t er.. co.st~"""'· -----~~-----1MeyJQ.2lllld27.1t71 CNt .. NOTICl10C1tlDl'l'OltS • SUNRIOlt coun o~ nt• STATeO..CAU~NIA~lt THaCOUN't'VO~OtlANOa Ne..4-91247 PVBUC. NOTICE at1te ot AMELi• ETCMANDV, ·------------DecHsed. "'°*2 NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN to the SUNltlOltCOVltT> : credllors of Ille lbow nemed decedent' 711Clwfc~DnweWtttt,se.ta-. ltllt ell perSOM 11•...t"O c;lelms 191lnst. Pl1lritlft: AICHARDCECILHIL&R tl\e said dKedlllt .,.. l'IQUl...S lo flt• Oeftlldlnt: JUDITH KAYE HILllt them. with the necestll'V ~.,.,.., I" SUll'aOMS the office of the cltr11 of tt11 above •n-c......,.o.tnen tltledcour1.Mto.,,_lthem,wltt'ltl\e. NOTte&f Yw....,. .._ ..._ Ttt. MCflSlf'VOIOUC.hen,tottieundtrsl9Md '*'" .....,_.........,.,.. ........ etttlll-oftlc:eofJ-sE.Wllllelmof .,.., W. .._,......,. ,_,,..... KINDEL a. ANDERSON, 1020 Nortll .,tt9tla. *"° ..... -........... 9nldw1V, Post Office eoir m. sent ..... _. Aftl. c.tlforftll n102. wtnCll ts tlle AVISOI ............... I ...... pllteof ~of the~ In 1WMMI ,_..-..., ....... M 1111 '"~~-to-•••.~ .......... ........ sald~wtttlfn'-'~eftw __.. ... .._~111•w ... ffrlt lllitif Qtiofl ol 0111,..,.lce. ~ .... . OltldMllv2, "17. t. TO THE OEF'ENDANT: 4' chW JOSEPHM.PACHECD • ~plelftt._...,ftleclb'IH\Ul-.m Eacutorlf tt.I Wlltef ... I Mt"°"" ~..,,_.MINddlcadlllt. 1. If 'IOUWISfttDd9fllldtlllsa....it. ,.._. L.....,.. .,.. must. Wf111111J0tfeyslfternt+s...,_ IUNNLaMfDtUttDM _ • "'°"'Is..,._ on Ytll. .... -"" ttH ........ ..........,....... COllYt•~ ......... "' ...... . ~ .... C:...... Jiii COfttPfelnt. flf I Julti« Clowt. '/Oii q,.,~ . ft!Ustffl•Wllll .. c.rt• ....... ...... A*'*"'WI...... lflt OI' CIUW M ...e ......... te ba-""9tllhld Or.,_ Olllat Otlty Piiot., we4 In tt1t dotJM lit ,...,_ w h Mt'l•, IJ,20, 27, f'77 ......,., ~plllfllt Wlllllfl • _,. ..._, 19111 ---ISIWV9dOllyOU ... ·-------------1 .. UfllHI.,.,., l'tlCIOfld..,.,.. ~ •ffl be ..... """' ..Clcllt!M flf ... p1tlll1lff _, ttll• eOVl1 in.., ~ • PVBUC NOl'ICB -----------,~ .... ,....,.., ................ P'ICTITtOUS •UstN&ta • ~ In tlll c~. ~could NAME STAT•MINT ~t In 91"11.,.,_. f/f W19tt. t•lflo nit fOltowt"O person 11 dolflo bulf., Clf,,._yor~voroltlwt'911el~ ~M: _.,Mdlfttllfc.ompf .. flC, RHS CONSULtANTS, 100' ~.ltywwtllt .. Mtll ...... ~elf ClHt"ffood Cir~ Hllfttfng!Oft Beec;ll, CA enentty!Alllh"""",feltlll...,. .. ..,._ . •'•"'"'-.. '"•' , .. r wtltttla 1ttch1rd ff, s. .. 1 .... de, lO•tt ,.....,!f~"" .. .._,...,_, C!Mrw60d Glrcte. Huntlnoeon llHcll, • wiWAMl!'.ltJOMN,Clef'll C4.,... lf.tt,W.eA~Otcluty Tiils ~It cOlldllc:ted 1rf M-. l'S84U dMw••· . MtcttaLO.llltMlo9M RICflMdM, Setui'ltdt ·==-•-.at&.a'r Tiiis ~ .,, .. fMM •1111 tlle. & CotlflfY~of0tlfl9ICMIJtVOllMIY ............ . ,,,m. ) . ca• PPS1lt • ' • ,, Pllbl""'4 °"""' CMlt Olll"1 "'°". , ... °""* cee.t ~..... • -..,1a.io.v ..... .1UMa.,.,, ._.a.-.11.-.....~-. mt·11 ~ ' PVBUC NOTICE • .... "Stay away from the car while Daddy 5huts its mouth." ... ·• &fJ \?@(!!][[ ~j~®l?WO©@ · "Got a problem? Then write to Pat Dunn. Pat will cut red tape, ~tting the. an~s and action you need to ~olw wqutttea In government and bu.ttness. Mall your question.s to Pal Dunn, At Your Service, Orange 5_oast Doily Pilot. P.O. Box 1560, Costa Mesa, CA 1171626. As many letters as pouible will be aMUJffed, but phoned inquiries or letters not including the reade-r's /ull name. addreu and business hours' phone number cannot be considered. Thi& column a~ars dai· Ly e.rcept Saturdays." D~ Bretm•fl Tl"etlMe DEAR PAT: I have a Mr Coffee machine. I must have missed the notices, but a neighbor said · some models are being recalled. Which ones? . A.J., Mission Viejo The recalled cortee makers have a letter and number code on the upper rtgbt-band portion of Ute back cover plate. Look for Ute single Jetter, G U:tr~lh L. followed by tbe nmnber 75. If you have a recall model, write to Box %2132, Cleveland, OH 441%2. IDdade your name, -addnts, pbone number and the code number of die coffee maker. Worma· tion about free modlflcatlcias will be malled to you. More tbao three mlllJon of the 1975 Mr. Coffee machines ar~ being recalled by the manufacturer <North A11',r=1c'11 Systems Inc., Bedford Hel«hts, Ohio) due!:, shock and fire hazards. The manufac- turer urges consumt>rs to use precautions when as· Ing tbe recalled coffee makers prior to modlflca· tlon. 1be machine should not be left unattended while In use, and should be turned off when not In use. Turn olf the brewing switch when the brewing cycle is completed, and tum off the warmer switch when coffee ls not being warmed. Do not try to fix the maclllneyouraell. H.,._teadU.11 Protft!t• Heme DEAR PAT: What are the limits on a -homestead declaration? I understell'd that just a portion of one's equity is protected by a homestead exemption. E .G., San Clemente You can prevent forced sale of your house by filing a S3 notarized boO"testead declaration with the county recorder. This will protect a large po'1Jon ol your .equity, wblcb bas probably lntteued.' A mar- ried couple, single bead of boasebotd or single person over age 65 can protfft the nrst $31,tM of equity by a homestead declaration. Tile Umit for a slllgle person under age 15, not beading a household, ls s1s.ooo. Even u your actual proftt UP· on a forced sale ls over the Umlt, the chances ol a creditor lilll1tln1 upon a sale and being able to col· lect~an limited. A homestead does not protect you from mortgage payments, tu bills or lleas by plumbers. painters or contracton. You are re- quired to llve in the house when you rue. but a move does not alfect benefits. . You ore c:or~ invittd to ott MEMORIAL DAY . ,SERVICES MONDAY, MAY 30, 1m 11:00 A.M. . ~~ Cdr. Robert F. Pomeroy Chaptoln R.M.S. qu..,, Mory • I '" • I .... The Voices Of Huntlnston V•U•Y· Soll1t, Verne Rez IObt .... ot ~--SlM~EMORIM PAIK and MORTUARY • Couple ~tthlg 1'11 on liottery PITTSBURGH <AP)-Tbe Penn· 1ylvanla lottery jl.D&le 1aya 0 You haver to play to win." But lottery folks never li&J,Lred. Tom and Pbllomeoa Draft• would tab It ao seriously. Tbe couple have sold almmt all their penonal po11eesiona for a total ot $20,000 and are buytnf 200 lottery tickets at $1 a day. all in hopes of 1trtkin1 it rich. uwE THJNX THE lottery is fun, but we don't think it's a good investment," 1ald lottery spokeaman Matthew M aclorkoski when be heard of the Drakes' efforts. The Drakes say they're 1ambllng on a second chance at llfe. "We're going to invest everything we have until we win $1,000 a week for life,'' 1ald Drake, a 30-year-old cealtor from nearby McMurny. "WE'&~ SEILING EVEaYTHING except our clotbea and our furniture and enoqgh to pay the rent and the uUllt!es. If we so broke, we'll 10 back to wort. "When we win the million, we'll do what we want for the rest of our lives." said Drake. The odds ot any alngle $1 Utlcet in the Instant Blneo eame wlnnln• the mUllonalre drawtne are 35 mlUlon to one. Even the 20,000 tickets the Drakes say they will buy won't improve the odds greatly. CARNEGIE·MELLON University mathematician Ken Kortanek calculat· -- 11 •• ·,LAND~APE SPECIALS \ ./_ ......__ - • AGAPANTHUS, ARALIAS, AZALEAS, CIJRUS, BOUGAINVILLEAS, CLIVIAS, BOXWOOD, CYPRESS, DRACAENAS, EUGENIAS, FERNS, FICUS, GARDENIAS, IVIES, HIBISCUS, JUNIPERS, LANTANAS, MARGUERITE DAISIES, OLEANDER, PALMS, PHILODENDRON, PINES, STAR JASMINE, VINCA, HONEYSUCKLE AND MUCH MORE. ed thffdd.s ol U..Drakee wlnnine the top prll• at about one in 1,eoo uswniq lbe)' buy200tickets a day for lOOdays. Tbe Drates started aerate~ blnSo tickets at a auburban mall on alonday, and their winninga W edneaday after 500 boards totaled ... No Ucket bu paJd more than $5. .. We're still learning,'' aald Mra. r Drake, who gave uP a Job with U.S. Steel r\ Corp. topartlcipate. SHE SAYS HER HUSBAND bu come up with unusual ideas in the put, but ''nathing this big or this cruy:" SWl, she's sticking with hlm and hoping for the payoff. "I feel It's crazy enough to happen," sbeaaid. I PON·Y PACKS AND QUART COLOR PLANTS • VARIETIB Of PETUNIAS, MARIGOLDS, CELOSIA, SAL VIA, Al YSSUM, VERBENAS, COLEUS, BEGONIAS, IMPA TIEMS, MARGUERITES, FUCHSIAS, DAHLIAS, AGERATUM, MUMS, DIANTHUS, LOIRIA AND MOREi SUPER ~SAVINGS ~~~~J ON PO TIE RY DIRECT FROM MEXICO WHISKEY BARRELS $6.88 c Ea. lST QUALITY INDOOR FOLIAGE PLANTS IN 6'' POTS. CHOOSE flOM: • BOSTON FERNS • DIEFFENBACHIAS • PIGGYBACKS • DRACAEllAS • POTHOS • PEPPEROMIAS . ·"' t I "' I I \. •I f ,. A PERFEa TIME TO GREEN UP YOUR LAWN • SCHEFRERAS • EPIKIAS - 6000 Sq.Ft., 35 5/8 lb ., Reg. $1 S.9S • 4000 Sq.Ft., 23 ~lb., Reg. $10.9S 2000 Sq .Ft., 11 7 /8 lb., Reg. $S.9S GARDEN SHOP HRS: Saturday 9..00 AM~:OO PM . Sunday and Monday. I I I · s12" NOW •••• sau NOW •••• '4" NOW •••• -. • RUffY RUFR.ES · 1• • llEPHTHYTfs . AND MORE •1 Reg. to $6.99 · .. ..... ·-.. clJI DAILY PILOT Frld!X, M!X 27, 11T7 Grumman Opens Plant Irvine Facil~ty BuilJs E'lectronic Gear Grumman Aerospace Corp.. the firm that cl-. 1lped and. bu.1Jt t.be Apollo Lunar Module that landed men on the moon, bas opened an operaUOll ln Irvine. Although Grumman employes have been work- in& a\ tho new facUity since the first of the year, a grand opening ceremony was delayed unUl this week. · Facility Director Art Bertapelle said the open· ing waa delayed until the complex laboratory equip- ment inside the building was completed. Bertapelle &aid the new faclUty will design and build electronic gear to be used In aerospace crafts. About 35 Grumman employes are already working at the new build- TAKING STOCK ing, located at 28S2 Kelvin Ave., but Grumann of· ficials predict that number will quadruple by this time next year. THE COMPANY JS HEADQUARTERED in Bethpage, N.Y., and includes 24,000 employes, ac· cording to BertepaUe. At this point, the Air Force is the sole customer for the products to be designed an dbuilt on Kelvin Avenue, although the director said the number of customers will expand with time. "We're leasing the building, with an option to ·buy, but we've made• substantial committment In equipment to remain here and rrow.'' Bertapelle said. . E•n'fltO Departme11t epe.. Newport Equity Funds, Newport Beaeh, baa opened an escrow departale:nt ~mporarily housed at the firm'• Ml11ion Viejo office. It ia responaible for title searcbes, lnluraoce certificates. credit re- porta and other documents related to the wuan~ of aecood truat deed loans. Betty L. Farri5 baa been appointed to manaae the new department. She is former escrow supervisor at Newport Escrow Company, Newport Beach. WTC ....,.,. Ga il• WTC Inc .• Newport Beach, bas reported re- venues for the three months ended March 31 ol $23,648,000, compared with $21,259,000 in the first quarter ol 1976. The company bad a net loss of $155,000, or 7 cents a share, in the flrlt quarter of 1977 compared with net income of $17,000, or 1 cent, in the first quarteroflut year. . Following our record fourth-quarter performance in 1976, the first few months of 1977 were dilficult and dJ.sappolnting, a cooditioa very much aggravated by severe winter weather·condl· tions over a large part of the nation.'' said Harry M. Baker, president. Pacific Gas and Bectric and the energy trend · The West Coast branch of Yankelovich, Skelly and White, Inc., a market and social re- search firm has ex- panded its branch in Newport Beach. Albert J . Y esk, senior vice pre- sident, heads the ex- panded branch. Pacific Gas and Electric Company ~erves 48 coun- ";·;:.. ties in north and central California. Its historical growth trend far exceeds that of most ut1littes. Yet today finds many investors trying to weigh the circumstances which rould affect the per- formance of PG & Estock. To help an this evalua- tion. Kidder, Peabody has just completed a timely 23-page analysis of the utility. The report penetrates the more publicized sub- F lr.M°"e. Burlington Northern Air Freight, domestic air freight forwarding firm, bas moved its corporate headquarters to Koll Center Newport, Newport Beach. It previously was located in Inglewood. Ag~Blred A zurData Inc ., of Richland, Wash .. has selected BassoJ Boatman, Inc., TOUGH TO TRAVEL John B•rdMn TAUGHT A LESSON W•H•r 8 '8ttein ONCE SCARED Wllllam Shockley Industry Honors Trio Nohel Winners See Maturing of Br ainchild SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -The three scientists wbo won the Nobel Prize in physics for invent· ing the transistor have been honored by the electronics in- dustry spawned by their brainchild. "There are few men who can say their work bas caused a pro- found change in our world. These men can," said Philip L. Gregory. president of SEMI. the nonprofit trade association for the semiconductor industry. "THEIR INVENTI ON BAS improved the lives of people the world over," added Gregory, re- ferring to Ors. John Bardeen, William Shockley and Walter Brattain. The trio developed the transistor at Bell Laboratories in the late 1940s and were awarded the Nobel Prize in 1956. Bardeen is on the staff of the University of Illinois, Shockley is at Stanford University and Brat- tain at Whitman College in Walla Walla. Wasb. AT A NEWS CONFERENCE before the banquet, the three were asked how their invention bad changed their lives. "It taught me a lesson," said Brattain. "My first conclusion about one year afterwards was that no publicity is worthwhile except your name on a scientific paper. and the rest is nonsense.'' "I used to be scared of the press," said Shockley, who has become a controvetsial figure because of bis well-publicized thesis that intelligence is a racially linked genetlc trait. "Now I don't know if the reverse is true," be added, smiling. BARDEEN SAID BIS fame has brought more correspon· dence than he wants to deal with, and when he travels it makes it difficult for him to talk science with fellow scientists because· curious lay people show up who want to hear him speak in more general terms. Keynote speaker Patrick E. Haggerty predicted the semi- conductor industry of the future will have a major impact on in· creasing productivity in in- dustrialized societies. T ab Cans Banned SALEM~ Ore. (AP) -Sale of metal beverage ·cans with de- tachable flip.top openers will be prohibited in Oregon aft.er March l, 1979. The measure expands Oregon's 1971 beverage con- tainer law, which required de· posits on beer and soft drink bot- tles and cans and which prohibit- ed fUp-t.op openers on carbonated beverage cans. 1ects-drought conditions, and the supply of nJt urJI gJs and fuel 011. And it goes deep into less visible but s1gn1ficant problems and the ways PG &. E plans to meet t~. It discusses complc mentary supply !iourccs, including nuclear, to meet future dcm.:ind, the r.:i1sang of expansion c.:ipital. both internally and extern.:illy; the rcc.:ipture of p.1st outl.iys through rate relief; relations with the C.1l1fornia Public Utd1t1t:s Commission; its dividend policy and many more detJ1J... for your copy of this in-depth analysis by our Research DcpJrtmtnt, mail the coupon. Newport Beach, as its advertising and public Over T h e Counter n Kidder, Pea body--------------------, "' • I~~ <'_R r 0 r I\ Tf n h 10 'I'" port r 1·nt1•1 Ori\ .. ,, '\\ rort n ..... h ( ·\ 11_'.!ht,0 I ~ C'~ Co ·\ttn· Stephl'n L 'ih1rlf'\. R"~td<'•11 '\1.:ina~"' I "'" • "'. • • '. ' l ti l; H h44 7040 (If ~ l\ h8 7 •h \-, . I I I I I ~ntlf'mt'n Plca~c ~md mt your rtport on raciftc Ga~ and Eltctr11 (.ompany. ', currtnll~ ~<'ll1ni-: Jround s~=·S2.$ per shar" I I I l':dme__ I l Addre·'-I I Ctt)' St.ite Zip Tri · __ I L--------------------------------J ' • A SPECIAL CALIFORNIA PACKAGE PACKAGED FOR ROAD HANDLING • PNclllon handll,,O suspension • Steel belted radials .. • T-blr iiutomltlo trenamlaslon • LMthet-WNpped steering wheel • Body-contoured bucgt Mal& ; ~ . ... -, And we priced it to make ·calif ornians big winners! Buy or lease at the ·sign of the cat I -• 7 relations agency. MASO UstirMJS Aflftlcy Okaged . .__. ... ~~----~--............................. _. ........................ ~ Cron Co 27l<, 21'"> !.u1>tr El Lawrence Alan Stern Public Rela tions/Ad· vertising , Newport Beach, has been elected a member of the Western States Advertising Agen· cies Association. Olllce Open• We stern Title Insurance Company has opened its eighth office in Orange County at 180 Newport Center Drive, Newport Beach. Office hours are 8:30 to 5:30 Monday s through Fridays. Off ice Lecued Hitco, Inc. has leased 4,695 square feet of office space at 18662 MacArthur Blvd ., Irvine. A gency Picked Greenecastle, Inc., Norwalk, manufacturer of women's apparel. has appointed Lawrence Alan Stern Public Rela- li on s /Advertising. Newport Beach, to han- dle its nationwide pro· motional campaign. Pm L a aufed Muldoon's Restaurant and Irish Pub, Newport Beach. has won the first annual award of merit from the Southern California Restaurant Writers. Nominated for awards in 14 categories were 163 restaurants in Orange, Los Angeles and San Diego counties. Bonus Set Direct.ors of Standard Pacific Corp., Costa Meaa, have declared t.be regular semi-annual cash dJvidend of 10 cents a common share payable July ~ to shareholders of record at the close of business JuJy s. OfllceSet Harbor Leasing, I.De., ha opened a aervice of- flce, at 160 N-.wport Center Drive. Newport Beach. Executive of· ficers include Jim Watson. president, and Pau l Reed, executive vice president. Celtter Flnbhe4 The Koll Company bas reported completion of construction or All ln- d us try Center, a u.aoo.ooo multi-tenant induat.rial park in Costa Mesa. NEW VORIC !API IC.11\!otl pl 10'9 '°""' PeW!>Of' n~. 2l"• 4''• S"• ;; ~"!!,:~~~!'," Cuttr FM! ,,,, 1'1 Ka•v•r 1>.lo , ... Pot'dmt A •14 S' • TIME OC s>. •''• llp • and Do1Dtls O'nly M 11~. 12:\li l(aman 4 1t\.. 12•1i P1nkttn ?8 78'-it T11mpu li>\, ""' <Of\Al !ie<IK\tll'S O•t• ~" l'• ··~ K.<'lm'i 4 1~. 8''• Pion HIB 2l'4 ll'• Tt'(ll Pub n 24 Outer\ A•\n • ove' 0•1• t 6~ 6'• IC.ate r• ... 1 .. Pl•llfln ,, 1 l' 1 T~cum P 61 6) NEW YORK !AP) -Tiie foll-Ing llsl IM covnll!t' B"nk. o .. vtM•I 27 ta·~ IC.anam ,, . . " Po\,i\ Cp 1• .. 1'i Tl'11nanl JI ll sll<>W s Ille ()wr • 11\e • Counter IMU•~'l<"t & lndu\t• Decor In ,,,, , .... l(l'ar Tr ,,., qt·· ;~':,'!r~c "· , . ., T1fnv Co 1111,. 1,11,. \lo<ks and warrants that Mve QOnt vp ,, •• \tCK.k\ 0f0l(lb Aq 21 13 l(elly Svc 13 13•· ,,, • 1l' , 10,coCo •'I S'. 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" •.,., Per1i~. former HDlor 1 :: U1 Ht I ' 11 ,. u •,.L ~ 1 ~ '""Jbiii u ~ • ':.".!a ~· 4. ' ::.":.~ 1~ ,~~· art direc:tor for Bauo, IQ.ft.-'Ji r~ ~ l ,r, ''J.~~.,,.. = ~~11: UJ a;r.-. WM l"' I. .... Bo~tman Advertiaincr. , ._, ,.. : • .L IC Tr " • •• ~ • a.o tl: =-~ -.... i:ot.~ • ; C.::-S ~\"' . , . ~ -. - COMPOSffE --------,, DAILY PfLOT AJ~ ·u.s. Sel & u.ed Property By SYLVIA POBTE& .. People In tbe market for a used car, aircraft. plumbing and be~ equipment, a typewriter or office macb.lne. medieaJ Items. textiles, hat-aware, fu.rnlture and other ltelP may ftnd the covemment bas a good b~ ln store. A variety ol personal property ls contlnuouab' offered for · n1e by the federal sovernment. with the G~eral Services Admlnlstntlon ·<GSA> and the Depart.mm of Defense the principal qe.ncles eoaaaect in aelllna it. THE OONDMON OP ftlB P&OPEan ran,. from cood t.o poor· it may be new or used and eould reqtilre re- pair. Some la not even salvageable, bavln& oaly scrap Yalue. Sales of clvU a1ency penonal prope~ Include a ·tong list ol con.sumer items. Eacb ot tbe 10 GSA regional offices conducts sales and each office maint&lns a maill.nc 11.st for the geographical area it serves. To obtain a maWng I""'-------""""" Ust application ror the GSA list, write to the • GSA, Federal Supply Service, Person al Property Department, S55S S. Eutem, Bell, CA.90201. . Money's Worth · The Defense Department handles sales of tts own pro- perty, including large quantities of commercial, industrial and consumer merchandise. PROPEllTY DESIGNATED AS military surplus is sold through defense property disposal sales offices. There are five: Columbus. Ohio; Portsmouth, R.I.; Memphis, Tenn.; Ogden. Utah, and Pearl City, Hawaii. A centralized mailing list is maintained for sales conducted by these offices. To obtain a mailing list application, write to DoD Surplus Sales, P.O. Box 1370, Battle Creek, Ml. 49016. When the classes of property specified on the applica- tion are placed on sale in the geographical areas designat- ed, the department mails invitations for bid that contain description of the property, specific locations, dates and times for inspection as well as other detailed information about the sales. Notices of sales to the public also may be in newspaper; radio and TV announcements, trade journals. notices in such public buildings as post offices, and through announcements in the Department of Commerce publica· · tion, Commerce Business Daily. SUBSCRIPTIONS TO TIOS publication, at $75 a year. are obtained by writing to the nearest Department of Com- merce f'leld office or the Superintendent of Documents, Gov- ernment Printing Office. Washington, D.C. 20402. Personal property is sold on•a competitive bid basis, in quantities to encourage participation by individuals as well as businesses. No priorities or preferences are given. Property is frequently sold by sealed bid, with invita· lions for bid mailed lo prospective buyers. SPOI' BIDS ALSO AllE USED, with the bidder submit- ting an otter during the aaie. Awards are made item by item as the sale progresses. TbOse on mailing Usta receive in- formation on tbe property and instructions for placing bids. Proviaioo may be made for bids by prospective purchasers wbo can't attend the sales in person. Public auctions are another vehicle used by the govern- ment. 'lbese follow traditional commercial auctioning : methods. Catalogs are provided. Government.approved. . auctioneers are in charge. Mercury Savings Seeks Two Listings Mercury Savings & Loan Association, Huntington Beach. has announced that its applications for listing of its stock on the American Stock Exchange and the Pacific Stock Exchange have been filed. The association's stock is currently traded over the counter. Dow Index Drops Under 900 Rarige NEW YORK (AP) -The stock market slumped again today in a sLeady decline that pushed the Dow Jones in- dustrial average below the 900 level for the first time ln 16 months. The closely followed avera"e of SO blue chips was down ' 9.24 points t.o898.83. Losers outnumbered gainers by about an 8·5 margin among New York Stock Exchange.listed issues. Trading was slow on the eve of the extended Memorial Day weekend. The Dow last clos~low 900 on Jan. 7, 1976, at 898.69. Stqrlu In Tlae ST!f ~~!'l!:!LIGHT . NEW VORIC IAP>· ~I~. A Pm. price tnd net ,,..~ ol tilt llftffn most ~live NtW Y«lt Stock E•c~nqe ""'"· tr.tdll!Q lllllloMllY at more U.~ SI. E11\t Koes.tit... • 3U,600 SS1t -?l't Twent Cent... 311,400 IS -t I Am Home •••••• 111'9.100 u~ -v. Ba~t Travnt. .. . • IH.300 291• -"' "Texaco tllC..... • 111.'°° 2•v• -"• 8eat FOOd. .•• •. . t6•.~ 73111 -.\\ Emery Air.... • 1S6.800 37'to -''11 K mart • • . • •. • • 1S6,200 26~ -~ NEW YORK fAPI· S.11'1, f p.m . prtte ~ net ch.tfl08 Of th• ten most 11tllv8 A,,,.rlt.n Stock EJCl\artQe Is~. ~::C:.~;r~'.'~ ttt l'l<\':s.~" :~.;. +2'1' USNal Ile\... •. . SA,100 s·-+ l''I HouOllM . . . • . • • 64.600 50.V. .... Ill• • MllCl911CO In... • 4S.300 12 + .... HU\kY otl. •• . ••• • 47,800 2S -!Yo Svntt• COl'l>.. •• •• 00,900 11~ -t .. • 018H ~t .• ,.... 311,300 9'41 ..... A\amer• 0 . •• • • • 37,'IOO 11'111 -"' CPMtmp Ho....... 33.,00 211, -v, ~y Corp .••••• : uo . .oo 9 + v. MMWY f'..... 14,400 20~ -I"-t Monroe E11..... 14,100 11'" +'It r----------------Fed RHIU. • .. .. 30,600 '°" . ., .. lfllTelTel , .• • • 13'AOO lTilt -14 Levi tr Fmlt ... •• 132.JOO • -'141 C~t OH.. ...... 114.tOO 3?.\li -'14 _ , .. .._, wor1... •. 1'1,100 1"' • " • ~i S toc1" Did New YORK CAP) Aelv•llC.O OecllMCI u ll<Mll\Ofd Toi.al ISwt\ Nrlw ttn lllOPI\ New i.977 !OW\ Prelf. Tod•Y 6ey 50i "21 I 8'1 7H ' Sit • 4,. ' lt1A lllt II t1 97 100 ,., .... Todlf .S.y ,,, ,JS m 2'C> 311 )31 u1. •~ 13 " • ~ . 1 SAN FRANCISCO (AP> -Attention Anita Bryant: the sheriff la after you. · Sheriff Richard Honaiato said Thursday be Is going to Miaml this weekend to campaign aealnal Mias Bryanl and her campalp oppostni a Dade County 'Ol'dinance probibit.lna discrimination in housing and employment against homosexual.I. HONGISTO, WHO WAS ELECl'ED and re- elected 1berilf with strong gay support, said Mias Bryant was "telllng a very large and fundamenlal untruth. "The implication ts that gay people are child molesters, et.c. I think that's about the same as say1 ing all black people are thieves," be added. · THE SHERIFF SAID HE would take a week's· vacation to.make the Miami trip, where a June 7 voter referendum to repeal the ordinance is scheduled. He will accompany San Francisco state Assemblyman Willie Brown, who earlier an· nounced pl~ to bead for Florida. Miss Bryant has said she opposed the or- dinance, contending that homosexuals recruit minors to their ranks. u•w1,... .. . Stuek Squaflflle Sinatra Tiff Settled SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -A con· troversy between singer Frank Sinatra's attorney and the manage- ment of Del Webb Corp. which threatened to disrupt the annual shareholder meeting at Scottadale, Ariz. bas been resolved. At issue is a move by attorney Mllton Rudin, Frank Sinatra and others to elect Rudin as a member of the board of directors of Del Webb. The entertainer and bis counsel have acquired 560,000 shares of the com- pany, a 6.5 percent interest. DEL WEBB, A HOTEL-CASINO No Co•t~t owner and real estate development John Ehrlich man, and contracting firm, asked a federal former counselor to judge for a preliminary injunction Richard Nixon, will aimed at preventing the attempt to t t t h gain a voice in management. nS o t con e 5 , de By stipulation between both parties u~reme Co~ 5 ~-and in an order signed by U.S. District cfSlon upholding his Court Judge William Orrick, the mo- 1975 Watergate con.-tion for a preliminary injunction was victions. withdrawn. • • -· • f'I 'I \ I\ 1 t I 11\ I \llllHI( 1111 \ll I 1;1111 Ill 1:1. I 1:11 Ill \'Ill 1; ... • .. ' ... , , , • ' ' • "" '" 'I. I • I ' I • I I ~] ()()() H E B .\T E ;~\ L . .\Nt:I. \ 1 I .1 , • ••I.I 11 ,,,,,, ' ' ii I '' I' '"" Hiii• •! I \I 1 , I ,I , I I .t ! •" 1 °111 • ~opens tomorrow in Orange unt}t One Antique Guild (three . acres full in Los Angeles) should have been enough. B:ut it wasn't. So we made another one. In Orange County. One and one- half acres stacked to the rafters with antiqµity. Yesterday in all sizes, in all shapes and eras invites you. Tomorrow. For a Grand Opening. Join our celebra - Santa Ana Fi ~ tion. We promise .., h al f tf· :~ t e speci sort o ~ memories you'll ~ ~ YU t not want to forget. ~ Dyer Rd. East Ever. ..-Sa•n•0ieg-0•F•wy·.-N Our exciting new store: In Orange County, ·Newport Fwy. and Dyer Rd. F.ast. OUr exciting old store: In Los Angeles, Venice Boulevard between Robertson and La Cienega. Both open 10 to 9 Monday through Saturday; 10 to 6 o~ Sunday. I • - League members listen to supervisors' aides. BEA ANDERSON, Editor Friday, May 27. 1977 81 Old friends were among those having lunch with Supervisor Thomas F. Riley, who greets Ruth Ralston with a kiss (above). Above right, Riley gets his lunch from Lynn Hicks as Jessica Dean watches. Below right, Supervisor Ralph B. Clark talks with constituents. • \ County Leaders All Out to Lunch By JUDITH OLSON Of ttMt DallY .-....1tat1 Supervisor Thomas F. Riley got an attractive lunch plate from Las Marineras Auxiliary's Coffee Garden in San Juan Capistrano. Supervi s or Laurence Schmit's lunch of a sandwich. ap- ple and other items was handed to bitn in a pink box. Swiss cheese and ham was Supervisor Philip Anthony's fare, which he didn't have time to eat. It wasn't a fancy restaurant but a turnabout day in which the Orange County Supervisors were treated to lunch by the League of Women Voters. ' In return tor the meal, the s upervisors talked to league members from their districts about local and county problems. The occasion was the League of Women Voters• Day With Or ange County Government Tuesday, attended by nearly 8> members of the seven county leagues. The day was designed to offer league members an opportunity to see county government in ac· tion, to meet the supervisors on an informal basis and to see the county f acillties. ABOtlr TWO.TWRDS of the group lunching with Riley had never talked with him face to face and many of the women at· tending bad never beeirr to a board of supervisors meeting, so- the day probably could be con- sidered a success. . Since the lunch was a "brown bag" affair, and the league mem- bers bad brought lunch to the supervisors, there was much kid- ding about the food. • "They told us you usually grab something out of the machines for lunch," said Jessica Dean. of- fering Riley the plate of food. "Are you goin& to auction these boxes of lunch off?" Riley want- ed to know. "Usually you get the lunch and the girl." When Ms. Dean introduced the supervisor, she said informally, ''This is Riley,'' which got a lot of. laughs. Ms. Dean ·apologized, saying "that's the way we usual- ly talk about you." When all the kidding was done, the 20 or so league members in Riley's group fired questions at him for nearly an hour. THE MOST important topics were housing, the airport. water and energy conservation, solid waste disposal and preservation of agricultural land. Riley said speculation in boos· ing is "one of the piost pressing problems .. in Orange County. "Many people feel that free en· terprise should swing with supp· ty and demand," he added, in· dicating he opposes government regulation. On water and energy conserva- tion he said, "There is a new task force. l was kindly nominated by my fellow supervisors." About solid waste disposal, Riley rei>:erted that a "number of discussions" have taken place over the last few years about the problem in Orange County. · "We would like to take advan- tage of recycling but it is not working out," he said. "Land fill now is the best. But recycling is an item that's very much alive." A league member asked the • supervisor if Orange County Airport is going to become '•another LAX.'' "IF I HAVE anything to do with it, it will not be an LAX," be asserted, adding that be favors development of the Ontario Airport and some sort of monorail system to transport passengers both there and to LAX from Orange County. "We do everything there (de- velopment, tourist bureaus, etc.) near the airport contrary to the philosophical concept of the- airport,'' he said. The day, which also included attendance at the Board of Supervisors meeting at 9:30 a.m. and a panel discussion by the supervisors' aides, concluded with a talk by Maxine Maniss, administrative officer of the County Administrative Office and a tour of the historic Waffle House. The supervisors said they thought it bad been a worthwhile day and indicated they would be open to a repeat. · "It's a good thing to"do.'' said Philip Anthony, supervisor of the fr·st district. "I picked up several good ideas and sources today." Newswomen's Impact Broadcasted By MARCIA FORSBERG Of,,,. Dally P'llot SI.tit He was introduced as "gentle and personable," a description most of the audience agreed with, judging from the applause and nods of recognition. Within seconds, his winning behavior established him as an easygoing man, as comfortable in person as he is on camera. Jess Marlow, anchorman on the 5 p.m. KNBC Newscenter 4 program, demonstrated that con- versational knack as guest speaker for the May meeting of the American Association of University Women. The tri·branch function was sponsored by the Huntington Beach, Newport-Costa Mesa and Westminster-Fountain Valley groups. The amiable Marlow presented' a serious side of the impact of women in the news media, nudg- ing the topic with humorous touches. He noted that over the years women have been etnerglng and ma.tm, "an incredible impact" in the field o r broadcast journalism. THE APPEAJlANCE of , women ln the news may be at· lributed to the feminist move- ment. which has been partly responsible for the rush of women to the business world .. With more women making news, they also are reporting it. ''I'm just now developing a re· al sensitivity to women's issues," Marlow admitted. He added that acceptance of equality of the sex- es -emotionally, legally and in- tellectually -is becoming more pronounced. When the women's movement was new, "we didn't undenland it and we didn't take it seriously for a long time." He recalled an incident with feminist Betty Friedan. "She blistered me. She said, 'You can't read a story about ltomen with a straight face. You s mirk.'" The Equal Rights Amendment also gave newsmen an opportunl· ty to banter jokes around. Marlow remembered on e newscast when be commented, "Maybe we could have separate but equal restrooms. That's something even the most mill· tan~an won't stand for ... " NOW, HE BACKS the ERA u a means for a woman to have her own Identity. ''l can't Imagine ) not having the ERA, but we used to joke about it.'' While he is "coming around,'' women are appearing on the news scene all over the country. As a man in the business, be quipped that be now finds himself "a threatened, if not en· dangered, species.•' Marlow recalled that in the past, it was "okay for women to do commercials, the weather and an occasional feature, but it wasn't okay for them to do the news. "It w~ partly the audience's fault. People bad been condi- tioned to hearing men read the n~w,a. ... "But now that we've been dra11ed kicldnc and screaming into the 20th century, a Jot of men show a disgusting preference for women reading the news," he kidded. After the laughter died down, Marlow turned to a soberlna aspect of women in television news. "l'M NOi' SURE the problem 51 ours aa males, or u ~ casters. l thlnk part of the pro- blem ls 7oun, (aswomen)." He was referring to the aga.ald practice of fe male. usinc their womanly wiles to get ahead. He illustrated with an anecdote about certain women in broad· casting who walk into parties on the arms of network executives. "That shows you still have a: long way to go, baby," he said. •'Until the day when those women have the courage to say 'no thank you,' they haven't really arrived.'' He remarked that "the real im· pact of women in journalism wur come from the type of person who does ber job and does it well," rely inc on her strencths as a reporter rather than on 1lFr sex. He cited aa an example Chan· nel 4 's Heidi Schulman, • 'Uie best political reporter-in broadcasting in Southern Callfomia. People have almoet stopped caIUna he:r a •woman reporter.• " Often, K.atlow asks Ms.' Schulman questiol)s on tbe air that pertain to her news reports. Her expertise at answering lives the viewfnc publlc •·an op· portunlty to see that she lsn'tjust u attractive woman who reMI well. She can think on her leet. '' MARLOW ALSO mentioned KNBC's Trttla Toyota as baYinC a "remarkable impact OA television news. Sbe came to ... work with all the credentials and experience, yet she suffered ter· ribly because sh e's such a stun- ning beauty." Her looks were "an incredible handicap, because she was re- jected by the public. It took a long time for P.eQple to take her seriously.'' Marlow suggested that 1 Barbara Walters is a ''clusic ex· ample of a woman who's made it" in broadcasting. He believes that her strength is in her interviewing techniques rather than in reading the newscast, "but there is much that I admire about her work." Her compelling commodity, he said, is her peraonality. "I think she has become news at times, and I'm disturbed when we as re- porters become the news.•' . Marlow poln~ out that "five :Yean qo you (women> were a novelty. Now you aren't.·· WOON OOlllNG INTO the broadcutJng In university· Ud: OeJd ••are golng to bave to flabt coUeae· facilities aa well as m for PQeltlons widl tbeli qu'aWlc• amaUer stations. . • tJon.a, ~ce ad cteterinlna-~ ,But the main quality Jess tieft," arloW loOb for in a reporter He advlaed a broad educa-1Jbo )Ult happens .to be a woman tlonal baarroand, a ~ollese it independence and the courage dearee that need not be m to mate it on ber own -wltbout journaliam and experience ~~ .making dates with the bis shots. ..- ... DAILY PiLOT Theo Horton models winning evening hairstyle by John Lantow D Weddings~ and Engagements To avoid dlsappotntment, prospective brides are reminded lo have their wedding stories with black and white glossy photographs to the Daily Pilot People Department one week before the wedding. Pictures received after that time will not be used. For engagement announcements lt ls imperative that the story, also accom· pa nied by a black and white glossy pk· lure, be submitted six weeks or more before the wedding date; otherwise it will not be published. To help (ill requirements OD !>nth wed· ding and eneageme_nt stories, Cormo are available in all Daily Pilot offices. Fur· ther questions will be answered by People Department staff members at 642·4321. (Ann Landers ~ Interference No Solution DEAR ANN LANDERS: My brother and his girl friend have been going together for over seven years. Mary Ann is a devout Catholic and Mark is Jewish, but not very devout. They are both in their late 20s and Mark is well off finan· cially. The problem is bow they will raise their children. It isn't that Mark la so dedicated to Uie Jewish faith, be just says be doesn't want bis children to be raised as genWes. Mary Ann feels this is very unfair under the circumstances. Please don't tell me to MYOB. Mark and Mary Ann are as eaaer for a solution u I am. - CONCERNED DEAR CON: 8otTY, bat I AM gotag &o tell you &o MYOB. Thls la not yoar problem. U Mary Ana aad Maril are ID&erea.d ID m7 oplllloa. &lle1 can write &o me and get It. If you were to go to them with "AD Laaden eald," It would be considered ln&erfenaee by at leaat .e of the parties and be (or she) •oa.ld be right. DEAR ANN LANDERS: I smoke and intend to continue. Within reason. The problem is that some people forget. this is a free country. I belong to a bridge club. One woman who la a.ho a long-time member gets on my nerves. The minute a cigarette comes into sight, she says, "Don'tsmoke. It hurts my throat." lfitburtl her throat, why doesn't she drop out of the club! Whenever there is a ··problem" the smoker ls always expected to bow to the non-1moter. I think this is terribly unfair. Will you p&euedo all of us smokers a big favor and comment. pleue? -N.Y. SMOKER DEAll N.Y.: Wiiy ll tM smoker always n· pected &o bow to the noa·•mGlrer? Beeaae ff IS a free coantry. The air beloep to nerya.e. No o.e baa the rt.Pt &o pollute It. U an lndlvldaal wtahee &o tmolle, be lhoakl be permlt&ed &o do so, bat oaly lmolar a1 be cleea not Interfere with the righu of odtert. Labol'a&ory tests have produttd evidence that noa-smoken who breathe tb~ alr polluted by smokers for extended periods of time (meeUngs, card partla, cocktail bubes, etc.> ·are advenely alfec&ecl b7 U. I use all my readen &o Rmmoa the coange ••ea IOGleGee upu a cqareUe ud asks, "Do '°" mbld ll I 1mokef" &o •111, "Yes, I 00 mlnd. DO u IMl6 a favor ud pat tt.t." DEAR ANN LANDERS: J've asked thla quaUoo of aevenl people and have gotten· ~al different answers. No ODe seems to know for 1ure. Please consult with your authorities aod 1et me the col'MCt information. ll means a lot to me, for reuoos I won't «o into. Ia it possible for a dark·lklnned (Caucasian) brown-eyed couple to have a fair-skinned, blue- eyed~d? -NEEDTO KNOW DEAR NEED: I cll~ked wftb a Nobel Prbe-wlmlnl gaaedeld. m. anawer wu, .. It ••...-all Ute Ume. •• So &bere'• your answer - rt,p& tn. tM top ol •~ OlJmpu. .. Even lf drtnktng ls the "ln" thing in 7our crowd, it needn't crowd )'OU out. Learn the fact. from Ann Landen•s booklet, •0Boo%e and You - Por Teenaaen Only." Send S> cents ln coin and a ~C:,.~ aelf ·addressed, stamped envelope to Ann ss, P.O. B6z 11995, Cblcqo, m. 606ll. · RUFFEll'S UPHOLSTaY · .... ,.w .. ...... 1'2JNnw~ ......... -..21t . . College Te~rri · St~les Grana-slam It's U1f1 to see that Golden West College's four-member cosmetolol)' team ii cut ou.t for the hairatylina proleuion. The oranee County students proved they were a a¢ above other contestants from 10 Junior colleges at tbo Southern California In- tercollegiate balratyllnc competiticxa at Santa Monica City Collese. By wlm1lnc flnt place ln four possible categories, the team also wu awarded the team trophy. Categories, stylilta and. models, respective-ly, are: • -Daytime: Crall PhlWppl and Deann Cl'Owe. -Ewnlng: John Lantow and Theo Hortan. --A.rtlaUc: Fran Brendel and Dealree Corderre. -Halrcuttin1: Jym Genesta and Julle Gcosa.lee. All modela and eontestata are GWC stU· data majoring in coemetoloo, with tbe excep. Uon ollla. Hortoo, a formerltUdent. Gary Black, styles di.tector at the college. picked the facult1·approved team aDd trained all elibt entrants for the competition. Judling WU baaed OD all hair-dos followiq the naticinaI trend style, know u "the acoop, ·•ex- plained Black. "The daytime style la soft, simple, cuual and easy to maintain, wblle the evening style is • little mon elegant with a mON formal, detailed look," beaaid. The arUstk coiffure la a .. creative ud exotic halntYle. but lt baa to ftt the model and be wearable. AaaiD, lt follows the feeling of 'tbe scoop,• " added Black. In the haircutting eateeOl'J, .. tbe Judges were lootln• for the moat w-.11. uecuted 'acoop_, • r. beaaid. . Competitloo was sponsored by the Asaoclat· ed Cosmetology Teachen of Southern Ca!ifornla. I , 'Daytime' winner (left) is modeled by Deann Crowe. Stylist is Craig Phillippi. Willner of haircutting (above) is Jym Genesta. Model is Julie Gonzales. Scorpio: Stand Firm SATtJaDAY, llA Y 28 BJ SYDNEY OllAllJt barmOQJ wilhiD home situation. Fran Brendel touches up 'best artistic' style worn by Desiree Coderre. Youth Sewing Fashion Show c:>r.ioe Co. contest finats tonight at 7:30 p.m. and Sal at 1 :30 p.m. here at · Huntington Center. Girts wlll demonstrate • their sewing and design skills and delight vou with their charm. Beach at Edinger off San Diego Fwy. Huntington Beach. e °'"" 7cfeJS Whee the mo•ie'• ewer the show's just beginning at The Maile Pan ARIES (March 21· April 19): Don't buck the odds. Go slow. Accent on need to make IDtelllaent COOC'~. Partner or mate waata you &o "pro-. Ye" • paUst. Be thoroqb. A void palnttn1 Joune1f lntoccmer. CANCE& (June 21· July 22>: Seek beat ways of preserving ••If· esteem. Do not reach for· aometblnl that is either not present or de· Uberately deceptive. LEO (July 23-Auc. 22): 22): Go ahead, not backwards. Make de· cialon independent of past fears, doubts. Highlight originality, peraodality, confidence of worth, value. Get to beart ol matters. SCORPIO (Oct. 23· Nov. 21): Be a self· starter. Assert needs. Hi&hlight peraonality, personal appearance. Eatabllsb your • 'ter- ritory." Means refuse to be puabed ulde. 22-Ja.n. 19): You cet to top now by accepting - and assuming -added responsibility. Go out of your way to nail down as· signments. Get familiar with homework, basics, key terms. AQUARIUS (Jan . 20-Feb. 18): Key now is to be analytical. Piece together bits of inform a· lion. Do some private de- tective work. Look beyond the immediate. Open lines of com- munication. Crepes Beignet ••• T AU&US CAprll 20· lb1 20): Queltiom are answered 11 you ask ID articulate, confident manner. Ye1, member of opPMl&e ea does play role. Yes, too. you can ellpeddumge, variety. GEMINI (May 21.June 20): Welcome opportuni· ty to travel or embark on holiday adventure with family. Strive to restore ~ Frozen Yogurt ...., to..... 21J 170I ~-C-.Nea ~ ~ .. 4.nFpi"" ,,.,,.,,.. ...-.,1 """' You can lea! aareement involving clole neilbbor or relative. Key ll to 1ive and receive, to accept retpoalibWty, authority and reward. VUlGO CAug. 23-Sept. 22>: You complete tut. Accent OD finances, col· lectlcms, credita, debits and payments. You locate what bad been "miulng." Check ln· structlons, directions. UBU (Sept. 23-0ct. 8AGl'ft'MUU8 (Nov. 22·Dec. 21): Business and friendablp may not mlx. Know it and keep the two at arm's length. Accent on being social without scattering forces. CAPRICORN (Dec. Cellfomla'a belt·aelllng car geta even better. New limited Edition models are specially priced dnd speclal\Y equipped with extras llke ••• PISCES (Feb. 19· March 20): Involvement ia featured. What had been a mild association could become an intense relationahlp. Know It and don't play games with emotions. A taatalldnc des••rt lor two. Delicious! sz.95 Coeta ..... , 9outh Coast Plan, &18-1225 I Open until 12 00 mi.tnight F rld1y • Saturday 11 :00 pm Sunday ·Thursday ArHdie: l1nle Anita fethlon P1rtc, 445-3715 S.Wrly H1ll1: Camden Ind Brighton W1y, 274·5223 Glend111: The Gellerl1, 243·3181 T0tr1nc11 Del Amo Fuhlon lquirt, 142·1757 WICHftelMI Hiiie: Tltl Prom1Md1, 114-7225 8~er1Uld-MMI• O...,.-AMe1U11 £•--Ill-C'Mt • Fllabt bench aeat • White sidewall tlrn Calilornia's- bes~selling car. • Vinyl roof • More, much more .• AM/FM atereo t . • ' I I - Southern California Ford Dealers --..: --_ - IOOMER IJooMe~. w~~ MA.Z~160 ~~ '4tJO ~v6e .. INSIDE WOODY ALLEN FUNKY WINKERBEAM weu..Af 1.~ASf UNitl- t7eA'T'H ~LJ$ PA~! by Joe Mm Ho by Tom Batiuk Record Roundup- One of the mterlook geniuses of our day :is guitarist Ernie His relative obscur-ity is partly due to the fa.ct that he re- fuses to cater to ma$ preferring instead to pursue hisunique style of foot st.omping Gospel Music with a Latin beat! Lint! tastes ... TANK McNAMARA ~==----------..........,'""'"" ···AND I~ CRDGR ID ~ll~V FOR TH£ ~E'7 'iPLlf·7fA%lJ PL.AYITT ?~Tt::M I -rnf !<ATS MU7T U1Jf 7Ct.JIG'-\T'5 GM1£ NANCY TODAY'S CROSSWORD PUZZLE ACROSS 48 MonQr•I dog UNITED Feature Syndicate 49 Full ol l1tty 1 Overlies tiaau• 5 Greek letter 50 Bicuspld's t 0 Applies ne1ght>Or sltlches 53 Former 14 "That's ···· midah•P·· ol rubbish'.. man 15 New·····. Abbr Conn 54 Not 16 Cantata 1nto11c1ted solo 58 Commit a 17 F0<mer camera no- fashion no designer 61 Lowland 18 Totallty between 20 Vagabond hltls Brit. 111no 62 Expreas 22 River to lhe 63 Very 01nube strange 23 Extent of 64 Atrhne knowledge abbrs 19 Fishing lure 42 Ltght 24 Hurts 65 Ending with 21 Running purohsh 26 Negative oft or pret taah1on blue correlative 66 In reply to 25 ChQue 44 Plays 1 role 27 Making an your wire member 46 C1rd game opening Abbr. 26 Get······ 30 Comforted 61Be 1 tenant Accomp11s11 4 7 Perth na- 34 Rias nothing t1ve lnfor· 35 Indulge In a DOWN 27 Fish organs mil aport 28 Negattvely 49 Horsv noise 38 John.... 1 Bounders charged t0n Arctic 2 Came down 29 USNA 50 Change In explorer 3 lnlerior freshman poa1tt0n 37 w11 4 Out of JO Distress 51 Heating ap· untruthful money: signal paratua 38 Flerceneaa Informal 31 Ultered of temper: 5 God: Prefix IOudly 52 Camera part lnform11 6 Poueaalng 32 Tidal flood •O Indication 7 Levala 33 French 53 Foll's rela· 4' 1 Tennie allot 8 Sea bird parton ttve <42 Entrance 9 Even one aaln1 : Var. 43 Reateurant 10 Oeaert 35 Small porr or cefe 11 Clay pipe lion "5 Not to be land 39 Free 5501mlnish 56 Enthusaasm 57 Snooze ·-·-·-11 12 tce hockey 40 Remain 59 Dryness· 41 Roofed player another Pntfht peuage-13 Aromattc day: 2 way plant worda by Ernie Bushmiller GORDO TUMBLEWEEDS Plf'llf{! 1M! SHIJU'1JS HllH1MROWN FROM HIS HORseu '~3 v : i~~ i I~ 1--.,,_......, . i I PEANUTS MOn.EY'S CREW THAT WAS A 6000 CALL VOU MADE EVEN TMOU6'-' IT LOST ~OU THE MATOL --r; Fnday. May 27. ptn DAILY PILOT p by Chcwlts M. Scliili .-----~--------, ~AT'S TME' ONl tr' WM 10 PLA'( .THE 64M€ 8EStDE5, 1 KNEW IT WAS ~TTIN6 ~ NEAR SIJPPE~TlME ~ i l ... .. ~ • I ii by Templeton and Fol ftHll •• WHEN "46 ~is it> Mll-WAU\<EE I! . ' DOOi.EY'S WORLD MOON MULLINS ... OIJR ANNIVERSARY·· PL.i;ASJ:, WILLIE-·c,AN WE l<F;CAPTURE: Tl-4E TMRIL.t. OF OUR EL.OPEM!:NT ? -1M£ WAY YOU ALWAYS ReTREAT lITT<> THAT BOX OF )t)U~ WHaJEVfR THl~GO WRONG! •· J know you hammer°" TV sets and kick vacuum cleaners when they won't start, !tut I thint. :ywu haw to iwaten automobiles:· I DENNIS THE MENACE P-<--~ . S·'l1 > .~.-t-!" •I "• -1~~~~~:5) __ _ S"<itT ' O·'----------& MISS PEACH . ., PINALDUll•H 1!'11 '*'~·· 1 ~01\M$, JMll O • .ild ... nr'I' W : 'l:ASftl!RS, Alk• M 9lld Mlc"-•1 A : Jl!NHN, AoOIH't M. ~ L'f'lld• M : ~U910N, LH An" Mid ft•lrlO rie; COOttl"-111, 8oC1111 Jo •"It Ila"' A.; c:QONS, Ma.._r .. B •"4 .!¥; H4Nl(,~f($, OMollly A. •lld• 111 J.; Mll4NI, _..,IKOft<•llCllllll t Gllft Awrlll; RODRIGUEZ, R• Guel •I'd Jote Lula; CRAWFORD, OWllM. Md ""•nlllln4. McCARTNSV, Donne Jo•n alld ~"' o-..; MASHIKI!, 1u1 .. Ollie; THOMPSON, Mtrtlla A. 00...IGO,; KIRSGH, lrtlM L..aultt Steven Curll\; HARNED, rlcl• """ •Ml Wiifred Wll,on; =TON, CKllla end Jolln Lt•: INSON, Cltttorel O. and Edn• L.; WARDS, ErfltatlN L. end Jeue 0 .J HUNZIK£R, e.vtrl..,. E. encl Jey M. • aURTOff, DINYt Burtewl and ~L. :-;1;.&V4LO, Chrhtln• AM end ~••4 l'raftk, PRATT, O«otlly'll. l 'l'*"' 9.; MILIGAN, Sandra rl• end Aanetd Eugene; ILAA. JOH Lula and Vlolt lollt; JOHNSC>fC. Meu,.... Ann 0-91 8 1tl'Cl\ard; HARMANN, e L.. and Slrtfl T • SCHMIOT, tY LA Yoo-. el'4 Qoftald Leroy; INA$.JA ,s.ndreL and Ruben; l!HNER, Jlmtt F. Md Vivian I .; COHR, ~· J•MH •llct All- i ll•IC•y. 01 N, WlllllM IC. lllld S-L..; lf. l!:lv• J. and Donald A • WI! llS. ErN$1 L.. eftd 4nne C : ~ZARAAG4, Louis and lrenu U!>tt: GUNTHER. Welter P. •nd VUglnle M.: OUTSGH, lllse encl lttQ'old 'Llrtd: MILl.llilG, RirjPll Jr. IC...O Idell N.; liLM&R, Joan F. •I'd ""11•"1 A ; BLUMEA, llOnnlt W. end l'fttert P ; WEOEBRANO, Pelrtcle Ill": and Lyle E.; PAITCHAAO, ~•rir>e A. and J1mu R.; EL· TT. Ric hard Prttion 1nd llbtlh Ellen; HUSSEY, Jam!\ dPrlck and B•rbue J•n•; e I SCH EL, Kevin t..e• end Kelly ~n • ·MACCARATO. J•ll•fY L. •nd 'iliM>ecca Ann; MC GANN, Oen• •nd ~tl•m E • GOOO•LL. J.tnlct S. •ncJ lltOlleld W • RUSSELL. El•lnt •net L..,ry· MC NABB. F•Mn\ ll•ctorl• •r>O L•nc• Timothy; STRICl(l.ANO. ~rah R <lftd H•nrv Urry; VINES. M•r lon F. •nd ltlch erd, CRAWFORD, Ellul>elh A. and 8r•dley D . ZOLZER, Alla J and ~oro• N.; PAQUETTE, Wllll•rn Ed••nl and Donn• Marie. GR4F. Lind• LH Fl•mlnio end Wllllam Patrick· MILLER\ Sullll J. And John V , JOV. Mlldr9d HHtl and FIOVd Wllllem; FLEMING, Llv11 °'· and w1111...-JOIUI; SE£Ll!V, Ell•llf and Jo\""'. 8EISHLINE, Rtw Allfn ~ PatrtCl.t Ann· VAN LEUV(N, e ........ c. and Jl<lc N ; BAIO, Joan ~ and Aon<tld J: REED. Err.t •no Marla INGAAM, 01v1d Arnold •no c.;01 E lltabtth, WRIGHT M4ry LCH.llte 4nd R11 Monr.,.., BOER BArlMr• Ann •nd John Adrian, OOVLE, Carol" A and LawrenceW FlltdAprllU SIMMONS Joseph Cl•rnen' and J•n Loul"9, MOULD, Palric1a C and Ron•ld 8 ; CODDING, R1ctwrd M Jr •nd Evelyn L.; HOLT, Greoory Allen dnd M•rv Anne; PAWLAI<, LorralM> 1nd Stanl•v L · WHITE, James 0. .. nd J.tmle E ; SCRUGGS. Barbara A. ~nd J.O Sr ; MC AOOO. JOhn L. •nd MMY: MOORE. Cynlllia M. •nd Howard B ; STEINBERG, Nancy M . .. nd Rlc~rd L. SH 4H Svl>tslnl 0 •nd Oinesh M RR EACH. RONldW •nd Lynene E WAMPLER. JU<11th E and AOO.rt G Cl\J;N'>H4W, Br.01.., J. l'ld Ola"" l GRAEBER. Donn• JHn •no C~orop Wtlllam · BLANCH4RO fl\ervl """ and R•cnaro Jr l l\UI rT Charin L. Md KOba A ROME"IO. Mary SuMl<O •na R.t1P'1 DION J•e"'11f M l'ld ltocl\drd H BEEMAN, Judllh Ann Ind Rabi-rt rt4"',.nc• HORNBACK L• .. and a..n .. tt Rav OUC..AN B••bM• L .. f end P•ul Mtlc h"I' GHAEMMAGH.t,MI, Rf'Qtn.i "•t"c ,. and Hamid; '>EAGROVES 1 •nd.; Jov 4nd John,,y ROf\ald MARllE y Ptlrr c Jr .,,., Su\ln L t Oii o e Adel~ 4no M•cl'tael P POH NE R John Pel•• •M JudY K•v. C.oR~VNSl<I. Olrl\llM El•IM and "<ymondAnthOny Friday May 27 1971· Refusal Anger~ Indians STA T•M•NT Of' WITMD•AW4L MOTIC9 TOCtllC»Tb•• S'TAftOl'CAUftOANtA ,._ftARTit•lll~lft tUNlllla.t COUtn' Ofll TH• O,lttCe Ofl TM•ITATaAtlCMITtCT Of'C.llATIMOUttO•• ITAftOflCAUllCMlHIA'otl 08 .. AITM•MT Of' OINCIU~ PtJBUC NOTICB PUBUC NOTICE PVBUC NOTICE "'e'" ltlCTIT10U1aUMNUtMAM• TMaCOUNTYOflottAMO• w•v1u1 U.S. Won't Join'Last War' Celebration Tnt fOl--1'0 W10ft 11411 wl1114rtw'I -. A.-tt AMaWTIMMSMT f'OA .. DI u a 1a11eu1 p.,tner frern tha 114•1• et ""niUR 0 4PPt;L. eke ""9UCNOTICI Mf\nt'1i'llO ooef•llllO undllr Ille 11" A.0.APPli..tUARTHUROTTO A,._ Sl!AU!D ftROPOSA\.S WILL. ••· 11111111u."'~'""111tot "'•L Oecaetef. 1tace1veo •N It..,.»~. 1011M1t11 From AP Dllpa&ebes The tribe that lost the nation's last Indlan war: is bitter over the government's refusal to take part in the centennial eelebratlon or a rare Indian victory. "We feel the U.S. government should pay some respect to that historic event," said Alan SUckpoo, tribal councUman for the Net Perce Indians. "To us, tt's something like the bicentennial." The National Park Service had scheduled ceremonies dedicating a tribal information center on the battlefield al Whitebird, Idaho that was the site of a Nez Perce victory on June 17, 1877, but can- celed the plans this week. • President Carter declined to say be will not do what other recent presidents have done alter they leave office, which is to draw on their presidential experience to make money. "I can't close the ----------.... door completely to what I ( PEOPLE J will do after I am out of this office," Carter said ---------at a news conference. ffe said he could not predict what his financial circumstances will be when he is no longer president. "I might find a need on occasion to derive some fin anci&l.benefit from wri ling or from appearances of some kind," be said. * Roy P. Brophy of Sacramento, last year's vice chairman of the state University and Colle1es Board of Trustees, is the organization's new chainnan. Brophy, 56, a land developer, was elected to replace William 0. Welsslcb, who remains a board member. * Loretta Cardosa went door to door in her small Florida migrant community asking neighbors to give money to help bury her 4·year-old daughter Lorie Ann. The girl died while hospital personnel in three counties tried to find a bed for her. Mrs. Card06a collected $91 lor the funeral while soliciting in Ruskin, Fla. An autopsy report attributed Lorie Ann's death to brain damage from loss of oxygen aft.er she was trapped in a refrigerator. * Officials estimate that Washington state in- vestors might have plowed $1 million or more into the questionabl~ enterprises of Barry S. MarUo, who has been indicted on charges or security fraud. Pierce County prosecuting Atty. Don Herron has filed fraud charges against Marlin -but pro- bably will have to get in line behind dozens of suits against him in Los Angeles. Herron charged Marlin, 43, an internatfonal financier and Los Angeles lawyer, and his brother , Her~rt MarllD, with securities fraud and arand larceny. • The chairman of American Motors predicts that the domestic smK.ll·c&r market will triple or quadruple tn the next few years and ensure a future for small· car specialist AMC. "To be abJe to fish in a pond of six mUllon new small cars in· stead of two million la infinitely better, •• Roy I). Chapin Jr. said as AMC previewed a display of experimental de$1'n cars for the 1980s. Chapin also disputed reports that the firm, which .is in the oc•,.•• midst of a severe two-year car sJump, mny abandon the car business by 1980. Sl'•RKLIHG SPRINGS s WATER. NOTICI IS kl!RE•Y GIVl!N to Ille Breed•..,, U.A...,..a. c.llfOnll•, un •I a.• Sen Ao\~ ~ • :: 1)0, Newpcwl credll-ol l"9 abOw """'" ~tdtnl Ill 1'000 11\.. Wltft•Y,J-I, 1t11 al 8 .. cl\.CA •MO 111411811,__.. lleviflt c111mt ... lnU ""'ldltifnfthtywlHlll ...... l<ll'OPIMd TM 111c11tlOV\ ~l~n name ,,... thl .aid dleot"""' are nMulrtd to file .,.-r...t In Room 1101 _.Mid eddreu ment tw h -lnef'Srup ,.., hied on '"'"'· wllll IN -.,wy -••ert. II\ tw: AP'l16 1•111n 1No CourotvofOrMtt. n. office tf llW Cltfll Of IM aMW -l!STAILISHMINT 0' ,ISH ANO FullN-enctA«tr•uOfthe Po™lll tltlMc-1,otlOllf'tMflllhe<'n,Wllltthe oAMe IOU.A CH1(4,.ICIOU>OICATYL Wlllldrawl"<I NC.tM!Y-.Clltrl.IOll\tundtultMCI RISl!RV& ORANv& C:OUN LINDA t<. llillOSS. US BllV'lde Or .. '-' ttweffleltof A4YMONDJ ST4TON. CA\,ll'O..NIAIW.O.Rf1Wt110tl , Newport IM<ll, CA. 92..0 ESQ., NOSS4M4N. t<RUEO•R ANO l,llk lltOl«I <Olftlll'\MI constrvcllon SIOMd: Linda K. Mou .MARSH AltotntYI al I.Aw. us Soutll et ctltltt .no oti.r modlflullont to ~UJS l"loueroe Blvd , JOlh f'loor, Lo' dftln ... ,'(111...-. ' ftllt)ltlNd OrMQe COt•I Dau., Piiot, A"09l9', Ctllfomla'0071, whl<h ts Ille Tltll lH~IMl'Mfltot•orolKI M..,. 27,andJne 3, to, 11, 1'77 p1ace of l>ultnes1 ot tilt underslOMd In for whkll blch -• _, ..-Mey •. 11n.n ell '"'"•" ...,ielnl1>9 to lht e1tet• or "" and "° contract was ~. t•ld dt<eotrol, within lovr month\ allof S<ooe of orlol,..I woril etld \OIClflc•· 111tflralp;.ibll(.&llonolthluollu. 'toft' ....,..or lte"9..., ,..vlMd. ,..,_ 0•1tdMe¥3. 1tn. -lfk•ll-. and ~1 tormt•lll OIEOAOEW. SIBOl..DT l>t IUllltdlqqlltllftitcl~'- ...CTITIOUSaUSINIESS l..cutOf'ofllteWllllf BIOOtrt mo •rd•• 11••n• '"o '1ttat1ovena"'4tddt<tdtft'. Ult<Nketlont by <Oft*tltlo COl\'1'tct NAM•ITATEMl!NT R•YMONDJ.STATOH.HQ, ~nqe,,_I Sections, P.O .... t01t, Thltoll-4119-toMtrtdol119~I· NOSSAMAN. KRUaO•R ANO S.cramento, 95'Qj, Taltpf\OM (9161 nH111~E °'LLIANCE IN\/ESTMEM,.. MA•SH l21·?111. GROUP. 1600 North BroadW•y. St• .. .._.Yntuw Pl•ns Md sp«lll~llCllllS ,.. • ., .... IOI, S.1111 AN. CA '7106 4'S '"4• ~. IOlll l'l-l•IMd wlttlolll Cl\8'911. Wllll.m E Oitermllter. Jr .. ttol E '--' ......... Ge. totn Ett<h bidder mwtlle tlf~lllltd Ufl• PUBLIC NOTICE Felrhavefl t lt.J, Santa M a. c• t210t 41t...,..,..1., Enc:lllM' dlrtllt S111eContrildAct. • Samuel J Ce<ner•••· 1'• t PvtlllWct Or-Coes' Delly Piiot Succeulul bidder INdl fljmlsll .,..,. ~•l•w .. ,lltr Roed, SMol• Ana, CA May•. u .10. 11. "" 1'91·11 ,.,,.,.tbondMreqvlrtdbylaw. The newest member of the Royal Society of n1os PurwanHo Se<ttan 1710ot tM 1..e11w Rlch•rd L. McDermott. ?2111 Code. ,.,. Dlf>er1men' of lnduslrl1I Edinburgh says he's honored that Scotland's most S.Y•ront.E•Toro,CA'216JO PUBLIC NOTICE Re1aoons 111!5 aso rta1ne0 the ootW••I distinguished SCieDtiSts Would Tltlt buSIMH la COf\duCltd by • l------------1l>f'tvalllNJ r.Ce of..,..., In th9 COllfltY embrace "someone n.tl'th SUcb 8 OOIM••I partM<s.hlo l'ICTITIOUS aUSINIESS In whi<h 1"9...,,.. Is to lie done. to be h ... Richard L. McOtrmoll NAMIE STATE Mil NT llsttd In the Dl!Mrtrnen' of TraMDOrta. CfUmWhed intellect." Tiils Stlll-"I was flt.cl wltlt Ille Ttlt fOllowlng oer-sare do0119 t>u~· !Ion tloollle4 enlllleel Equl-t Rtf\tal n..&-. Cb•"'les 28 County Cterti of Orenot Coutltv on Mey nen .,. Alll9' and O.-•I Pre•1tlllng W999 en a-aauCe _. t ' J0,1'17 NEPTUNE ANO .. TH, e llMltad AalU, cllled s.me H Plllns and year·old heir to the British JACKSOH&Kroou part,,.rsi.1~ 110 ,.__., c.n1 ... 0r .. \Cl«lftcetio-<:.-.,, this llOc*i.t h d 'tt d t th Atterrttvutuw NewoortBlacll,CAn..O ••e°"fll••t lSOOSltlSC""t.Sllcr...-e<t-t rone, was a mi e o e ....... fll9ftar.0r. c;.o,. G. 0 ...... 1 & A'wc'•'"· 10.c.111om1 •• ...o ... ••v•ll4bleto"'" society, be warned that such N••l*tllMdl,CAn... Inc ... Cllolornla CorPOrellon. IHI lnt ..... '9ds1::ZN°"o~EA A N A I. form.er members as BenJamlD .., .... Newoort c.n1er Or .. N.wp0rt 8eacll, ~·-·-~· y • • .... Pu1>11"'9d 0r1n91 eo.st O•ll'J Piiot. CA~ ............... 1ect Fraaldln and the German poet. Ma'l'?7,lndJunt3, 10, 17, ltn Anlllony A. Oedvar, 1880 P1rlt Putlllshed Oranoe eo.st Oelly Pll01, Goedae "will be turning in their 2211-n Newoon, •1!0. Nl•llOl't a.ech. CA M.Jyto,v.1•11 mo-n _graves to see standards falling. 92~SNC a-.v .. Pei ane1 01or1• CMHLIS all around them." l-------------1 t<wok·Wth fl'lll, n• HOllyllOc:k I.are, PUBUC NOTICE . b ·d b fiunked h l PUBUC NOTICE Ptec11111a.CAm10 1-----------Cbarles, w o sa1 e once prep sc oo Th1, b\l\lness "co'lduc1ec1by•11m11· M,.,.. physics, majored in history at Cambridge U~versi· NOTicuw euLK TlllANSl'H ec1 par1ne.v.1p f'1CTtTiounus1Nus ty. He was in Scotland for celebrations of the 25th cs.cum-4mu.c.c .1 Geo'9t'P_r1,1100'0N,·.~.:e1.•p1,&.~~~ ... ,·'nc. NAM•STATeMaNT fhi th , Q EU beth 0' ·g No,lce Is hereby Qlven to 'h" •• n""" Tiit followtng ""'°"Is dol119 b\ISI· year 0 S IDO er 8, Ueea II I, rel n. Crtdllorsof fARL R. SCHUBERT and This slltlernenl 'NI\ fll~d with IM n9'U\! JANE I(. SCHUBERT, hus!Nnd •nd County Oerll at 0-""09 CO\lnly on M•v VI 1(1(1'5 SAG, 506 North Co••I * wit•, TrM1sl~ors. wl\Me buslroeu ed· 23.1q11 Hlollw•v.~BIKll.CA926SI Willi R d I b H m d F' 1111640 VICTORIA DUR4NO, 5Ci. Nortlt am an 0 p earst an Jack Ord aD· drus Is ISAI Adams Avenue, Costa Publl""9dCnn-Co.SI Delly Piiot, Coan HIQhway, LIOUM 8taclt, CA n n ed th '11 be • t t k · h Mu •. Counh• of Ortnoe. $tat• of ,.. OU C ey Wl g1n es ·mar eting t 6 new Celltornl1,,t1o1Ut>ulklr1nSferlubOul May27,MC!Ju..,.3,10,17,tt1? 2lt5-n 976Sl Publication "Outside" in San 10 t>t made to SUSAN LLOYD REES This tMlness 11condUCltd1>¥ •11 ,,.. ------------dlvlcll1I. Diego end BONNIE LEE BIELOUS, Vlc1orla0urand • Trenslerees whowt>uslrwsseddreuli PVBUC NOTICE Tith st•-wn filed with llM Hearst, 27, considered the uot F·J Harbor eiw .. Coit.a MeY. ------------'°""'YOtrt!MlyJ, 1m. eoun,yatOranoe.steteofC.llton1le. l'lcttTIOUSAUSIN•Ss 1'7H1t heir apparent to the Hearst ·Ti.. ~Y 10.,. transterrtd is 10-cated •• 2101 F.J H••bo<' 81Yd .• Cost• NAMESTATEM£NT Published Orano-Coast Delly Piiot, publishing empire founded by Mue, Collnty of ~llRQR, Stale ot The fOllowtng !lef''°" ls dOlnQ b\111· Mey6.13,ltl,17,lm 1 .... 77 his grandfather, Said the C•lllomla.. roeuu· S.ld~yhdl!scribedlngener•I Afll(O'S SEWING BASKET, JOO magazine will be for people WhO as: All SIO<k In lrade, loXlures, equip. N. Nellrporl Bl~d., a E, Newport like Outdoor acti Vity • men I, Ir Ne namt 111\d good w111 at tt11t BMch, CA ""3 ---=,,..,.1CT=1-=Tl,...,OU~S""a""u""s.,.,tN,;-::£;:-:U~--· PUBLIC NOTICE "This is not a National Geo- graphic for hippies," sajd Ford, 25 , s on of former President Gerald Ford. "It is for people HllA•ST 111 who are considerate or the environment and for peo· pie who only have a two-week vacation and cannot afford to go on luxury vacations to exotic spots around the world." Beauty Shop Duslness known u Rrlko W.st. 200 I!. 1 .. 1 St., •A. NAMllSTATIEMllNT OolPllln Hair Feshlom end toceled al CO\ta Mn&.CAt!tt1 .--.__, This M<ntas Is conducted by lft In· Tha IOllowlllQ Otrtofl Is _.,. ._. .. ?1'01 F-3 Harbor Bllld .• Coil• MH<ll. dlvtdU61 "'"as: CounlyofOr1n9e.SletrOfCllllornl• Rf9'oWest JMJ DESIGNS,33'5:2Vle 0. AlllN. Thtl>ulklransterwllll:leconwmmal· This si.lemenl w•' fll«I wllh the S.nJuanC.11Plltr-.c.tlfomlatars l!donOt"al~rtl'e61f\d1yofJ._.,,n, CounlyChtr•ofDr.,,veCou"'yon Mrt Janel M. Jocheft. J36S2 Illa O• ., Bank of Amtric.• NT &.SA, S4 w. ,..,., ... 1t71 .. Aou•, s.n Juatl Coeplstl'-. Calllornl• Street. Gosle Mew, County of Oran91, _6_ ti.7S Sl•l•olC.llfoml•. .., -Thia tMlntts II condudM tty an I So fire\ k-lo ttw Trtnstertft, Pu1>11"'9d OrMIOt Goist Dally PllOt, ..,. •It ""-lneu _.and eddrus.s us.eel May 20, 27 Mid June 3, ,o, 1'77 dlwl41ual. vv• ?U0·77-J-IM.Jocltt'n by Tr•Mltrots for Ille three years lest 1----------..;.,;,.~ Thia _,,.,., WH llled with llte PHI, II dlfftnWll fro<n Ille above, are: PUBLIC NOTICE Covnty a.., Orenot County on Mdy s .. HotM Solton, 1S48 •dams Avenue, 2, 1977 • Coll• Mes•. Orange Counlv, ------------Catllornla; Ooll>/ltn Marlr1a Beauty FICTITIOUSaUSINISS 1"7SUt Publl\htd Orenge Coast 06lly Pilot. S.lon. '°3.5 411anla. Hurollngtt>n Buch, NAMll ST4TIMINT Ora1199 County. Cllll!ornia. TM followlno perwns •redoing bull· Oeltd: Mayn, 1tn neu oas: Su~LIO'fdRee' HANCOCK BROWN E ANO Bomltl.ffllletou~ WATSON, Slt'A Alr1>«>rt LOOP Or., 1------------Tr-f~ Cost• Mt14 CA '26211 FICTITIOUS •USINess a4NK Of' 4Mtl•ICA NT&SA Cerlton 8r-lfld ComPlln'f Inc.. NAMl!STATl!Ml!NT ntW. lttllSlrttt a C..lllom1a Corp., 31'11°' AlrPOrt LOOll The lotlowing person I' doing bu>I• Hijacked Plane Returns Mav1>. u .20,11, 1m. tttl-71 PUBUC NOTICE Russian Responsible Seeks 'Refugee' Status STOCKHOLM. Sweden CAP> -A Russian a irliner hijacked to Stockholm returned to the Sov· iet Union today as Swedish officials considered a Soviet demand for the hijacker's extradition. Soviet and Swedish officials were on hand at the Arlanda International Airport when the twin-engine Anatov 24 aircraft departed with 17 passengers and five crewmen. The hijacker, a 37· year·old engin~er fro.m ( JN Sff ORl' Riga. remained in custody at police head· quarters. Authorities said he had asked to become a J Hope• Plnllftl to Senate WASHINGTON (AP> -Environmentalists and the Carter administration are looking to the Senate to restore the tough automobile emisaion controls shot down in the House. The House passed a major revision of federal clean air laws Thursday, including an industry. backed amendment to delay tighter standards. Some of the rules now set to take eCCecl on 1978 models would be delayed for two years, others in- definitely. Contnnon Rule RealflrMftl Gt•'•~. CA '1627 Or., Costa MHa, CA 9761'> nen as: aKrewHa.S11·1'e6 H.nc:o<11 O.wl_... .... Compeny, FREE SPIRIT PAOObCTIOHS, Publl$11ed Or~ Coast Dally Pllo,. tnc •• a C..tlfornla Corp . lltlA Alroort 1190S Sky P•rll Circle llG, ln1lne. CA. May 21. 19n 1'¥J1-n LOOI> o r .. ~ta~,.. CA mi. 92714 ThtS tlllsiMSS " ~...ct .. •Y a Scott Al.., Frledlarod. '1411 8 tv•n PUBLIC NOTICE NOTICE OP ~•UC HEARIN~ ON 41..Ta•NATE METHOO OFl!LECTIO•UY IRYINE •ANCH WATER OIST•ICT oener•I ~r\hlo. St .. WtstmlMler.CA. 'n693 CMlton er-~ c.o.1nc. This t>uvness Is <onduct.d t>v a" ln- 4)1mM.. Wat,.., dlwldu•I. V 1ct Pnrsld9nl ~ Ass,. SK. Scott Friedt end Thi' statement was 111.0 wllh 11\e County Clerk at Or..-oe Coliftly on May 11. 1'77. This stet-I w•s flied wt"' tht COUfltv Cltrtl of Or lnQe Go\lnly on M•Y u.ttn. F'JMQ Publtslled ~ ..... Coast Dally PtlOI, May10,17enclJ.-3, 10, ttn 21J8.17 The IRVINE RANCH WATER OISTRICT.eeatlfomle W•t..-Olslrlcl aoes hfrt'bY qlve notice of a 1H1blle lleerlno lo be htld. punu1n' to Stclkln 3S11S el seq at IN Walff Code of tl\f P\lbll~ ar....,. coatt Dall'I' Piiot. 1------------ Sl•lt of C.lllornl•. tor lite pur001e5 Of Ma'f20,?1MldJune3. 10. 1'77 PUBUC NOTICE consldarlnq alte<Nt•rneMK of ttecllno __________ ,_,_.,_·7_71 ___________ _ Pf•\Ollsloll"l,OFFICEOF DIRECTOR of the IRlllNE RANCH WATER OISTRICT Tht public Mari"9 wlll be PUBUC NOTICE ltlCTITIOUS aUSINESS NAME STATEMENT hfld. JUfle 13, 1'77. lrvlne RMl<llWa'er -.... fOl._.I ~• .... i Dlitrl'I llollrd of Ol~tors R0«n, 4~' ,ICTITI=!tstN•IS • ~";s: ..,.. no Ptf50l\I are....,119 vv~. C•m1>11s OrlVoe, lrvlne, calllornl•, 6:00 NAMll STATIMl!MT THE DINGttV PLACE, MSG ScHrtll QE H-'AS Sonia and Hans; PU';TERT 8•""'13 L and Peul J ; OUINETTE, Cll.lrl•• F. I nd S.r•h r BROWN Oon•ldE oJMSuttlftG ; "'°'OOK, B•v~,, I\ ond ArltlM; AN· DREWS, Fr•n• 8. •nd Btrlltrt; tlQOH ER Ceroo A tnd BrU<e R MPNTOVI\ Juli<l<lne end Gllbl>rt · "refugee." Police said he managed to convmce a Soviet stewardess that a newspaper stuffed inside his coat was a bomb. VATICAN CITY (AP> -The Vatican has reaf. firmed the Roman Catholic Church's ancient rule that confession should precede first Communion for children. 0'~":.~:.·~~ be consldtfed and ec'td Th9 fOlloWlno Ol'lonl•r• dol119 busf· Plara Drtw , Sa"'• Alla.CA. t2704 uPO<I •I 9UCh time 1>Y ,.,. Board of nllt\H: Lerry cnar1es Ferrell. 302' oi~torsof IRVINE RANCH W•TER CRICKET DESIGN INC., 3333 Gartleld,Cosla~.CA.'12626 ·~ Brhtot. Coste Meta, C4 9lta l<enneth Thomes Lind, 12131 Orr & OISTAICTareasloll~: CRICICET GIFTS I.TO .• 8160. E .. OavRoad.Nbrwelk.CA.'I06SO Pt RRY O~wn MMI• l<ld Jt~\o• Hv µ j Ll RIChoHd e . and Ann. J Ml\G NE R, Donn• E ll•n .,,d Jo~ Wiiiiam NUCHOLLC., Juov ~"" Jt\Mf'' Lll'\hit ""•d •Pf'll ,. COMBS. L•""• A and Fran~hn D SCHOFIELD B~b••• P •M Eoworo w . OECUR. Lind• L. end O•,,n•\ G GU•ROIOLA. Gto•oe L .tnd CM•\11, OLEVAR L.onore Ind Kennetn G: CUNNINGHAM, Gloria C••o• M•r<111rtl and Robert James OEVULOEA A""" RomM""' •nd J•An LUC Allred ElltflM DAMM. Monard Aael l<ld Dan• Jo MN HEISER vu·o•nl• Lou •nd Artfour Jolln Jr • EAMOLENl<O NoCl\Ollli V •"dCl'terloti. BOWDEN, Ronald c ""d Andrft IC FRIED Elleft Aope• •""Joel L HAMLIN Carolyn R •nd B'>v'1 L StLVERMAN,JtySluarl 41'1dSl\••O<' P KAllGAS lttQlnl L ln!I JOM II MELLO Jos• 11nd Su\a,, Ml'"• JOit DAN PT\olllD W1fJ#' ~nll J11ntl R•• MC KIERNAN Chri•llnt H 1nlt Mich••' D CARii. !iit~wn en• M••·• B I( HOWLES, Jo/In M "nd $ar•h G WILL1-'M5, 8Mb.,,. Jten ~M (h••IH Ru"tll MOSS. C>fbor•ll I( W and HOiiey Quine-;, Wl!LL!.. C•ro1 L ~nd Willl•m M . PENTecosr. Jolln HltfiChfll •nd COllnl .. Jo; CATiS. Mfthatl 0 erld llllUbt'h M . MAT· THEWS. l'emtl•Jtanne l<ld Dougie• MlC hUI, CORN. Shlrte1 o. •nd Ronald E , PHEBUS. Julla llltebtlll •118 K.nlWlthWllllam; l(INO, M.,~ \ •'I• Slltltqh Mary; TOWNSLEY, Ollne ana Otvlct Anll\onv. CUTHBERT. 8etty Sue tnd Artllur Jolln: MC PHl!RSON, VIHI end Stewart C : RAICHE, Con\lll'IC• end Mkheel Johft• NICHOLS, Nonn•nW. •nd Edn• MM KENT, AVtll and• J~l)ll T ; 81LLING, o-.e R .. end Gr11don Ao1. OOl!LL, JKll R. encl Ev~lyr1 ChrhllN. STRANO, Olorll MH tndWllllamCNrlel, •LORICH, Dl'"'ll E.end Rkl\ardG WlLLIAMS, Jtnnle and JoM Clay; COIN, Pftvllls I( and lllCh.,d W l I!! E, StleM>ft E end Sunny· COOi<. C..rtltJ enc:t<:onn1tM STANl"ORO. lllhlt Jun end l(•nn.111 LH, O~AY. S"•'YI Lynn •nd Gery Lvnn. PEA•SON. ThonWI\ C.111 tncl Lortllle F ; LONN ER Satly A .. ellll G('OrQt ' ROberl: ERICKSON Slllf'Oll Ree •nd Eric R11uell; BENES. Jeme' H and Jef" (.; FALCON. PeOQY end Pablo Jr': ~ONTELL•NO, Gl*laluat N, and•MM. CALVO. Julltll F, •nd Lula E.; LUDICIO, GttQO<Y A, anO A19IN Ii.;• DEL "OSARIO. AtvM'o and L\'flll 81· ten: WILLt•Ms. Co!ln~I INld ._.,,.., · Je<ntt: a•RNSTT, at ....... ~ L~fr'l'L"; Dayan Clloi~~ ~~on•ltkred TEL AVIV. Israel <AP> -Menahem Begin, faced with a growing political revolt over his choice of Moshe Dayan as foreign minister, has decided to reconsider the appointment that ts threatening to split his Likud coahtion. a spokesman said today. The Llkud s pokesman said the party's ex· ecutive committee would meet Sunday "to re· consider" the appointment. Tbe l.Jberal party. ranked second in the five· member Llkud bloc, met Thursday night. A spokesma.o said the party would "pt'esenl formal opposiUoo to Dayan·s select.10n" at the Sunday con· ferenc~. A document made public today said the rule was reaffirmed after Roman Catholic children "In som e regions or the world" had been receiving first Communion without previously making com· pulsory confession. l'Olalfl c....,ietea Trfp WASHINGTON (AP> -Fiery U.N. Am· bassador Andrew Young ls back in Washington after a trip through Europe and Africa that left the State Department stunned, the Swedes irate, the British cbasttied an.d the president of the New York borough of Queens incredulous But President Carter was still on Young's side. Jn a nationally televised news conference Thun· day. Carter said be knew ol "no instance that Andy Young has violated" administration policy. Stockholders Win Suit Mattel Settles for 9·34 Million Damages llAW1110RNE CAP) -An out·of·court aetUe· ment that gives S:W million to some stockbotden of toymaker Mattel Inc. ends four years of legal d11· pules. The stockholders had filed five class action suits in 1973 and 1974 , contending they su!fered damages from inaccurate financial statements filed by Mattel during its fiscal years 1971 and 1972. Mattel, In reports to its stockholders in 1975, said its 1971 financial statement "may have sub· s tantially overstated sales and net income." Sez Edue!ation ReJerted SACRAMENTO CAP> -The Assembly Educa· tion Committee bas rejected a proposal to let stu- dents aged 16 or over take sex education claases without their parents' permission. The bill by Assemblyman John Vasconcellos <D·San Jose), lost on a ·4-9 vote Thursday, arousing the author to say the committee was "sanctioning i1norance." Vascoccellos, citing ( ]' statistics on sex and il· STATE le1ltimate births among teen·aien, said, "I think .... _ -------~ tb09epersons wbo are not· able to adequatel)r undentand and experlen~ tMlr own bodies are t.he ones who 10 into violence, rape aod pOrnoSrapby, ·' £e8ell Setatetld•fJ Set PASADENA <AP> -Sent.enema ls scheduled ·June 23 for Gene LeBell. a former pl"Ofes&Joaal wneUtl", for hia conviction of be1nc an ·~ · al\er tho fact In the murder of private det.ctive Robert DoUHalL . Le'Bill, °"• faces • ~le one-~fiY"e-ye.u" prllon tmn and $5,000 fine fw th.~ Sol"I~ .~rt conviction Thursday. Tbc same Jury found him tn· nocenl ol the murder of Hall. He remained free on ~.OOOball. Dbcro.ure BIR M~ed SACRAMENTO (AP> -A proposal to require docton to quote their prices over the telephone suf- fered a final, respoundlng defeat In the Assembly Tbunday. The bill by. As11emblyman Herschel Rosenthal <D·Los Angeles), was rejected on a 2J6..42 vote, and even more lopsided defeat than the bill suffered in an earlier vote. This was its final try for pus age. passage. Bridge Dbtrlet SllM SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -The Golden Gate Bridge District was iue4 on the eve of tocla1'1 ob- servance of the span's 40th annlvena.ry by the parents of a young man lilted u CIOe-'of th• more than 800 knoWn suicides. The Suit WU filed in Superior O)urt here Thura- d ay on behalf of Thomas and Ruby Pattison, parents or Kenneth Pattlscm. 19, ot Sa Joae, who leU to bis death from the bridfe Ja.1uw·y s. ,,.,,,, c .. mcu ••••.-•• PASADENA CAP) -A handyman baa bief!ll convicted or murder, robbery and burglary ln the death of a J)ftlJW1t woman. whole battered body was found oo a knoll overlooktn• a Puadena Solt coune. "· Jurors Thursday found Emery SOwtlll Riddle, 25, fuilt.1 after' two days, d.U•atiOft In ~01" Judae Arch TutbW'• court. Mn. MMI CU.., wll•"' of an ArclldJa aUorne1, wu toad dMid Dec. 4, two d•Y~ afts' ahe wu t.Uen from be.r bome. 1 Wlllttl'ler lhe tRlllNE RANCH Tht Pro,.,,.nade, WOOdlanct HlllS, Thh buslroen Is c;ondutttd by • WATE~ DISTRICT Sllell lldoDt tNt Callfornla 119ner•l0&~\hla. •llernate mtttlcld Of <onductlng eltc· Tiiis business Is c.otldllCled by • cor-Larry C.. Ferrell llons tor Ille OFFICE OF DIRECTOR POrlllon. / This statement WM flled with Ille provlOtd tor In Section 3$17S et seq. of CtlcM\GH,s Ud.. County Clt<tl at Or'"9'1 COUMy onMav tlleW1l«COde; 8yHerryPMrett,Presldtflt 6.1971, 2 tnlhetvenlofadel ... <nlnetlOl\1,..1 This ~et-t wa tlled wllh tl'tl 1'75761 •lacllont SMll Ile <On<ill<led 1>'1' such County Cltf11 of Orenot Covnty on May Publl\ho!d O'Mlqe Coast Dally Pilot. melllOd,esi.bllSllmentof OMstom and •. 1tn. Mav 13, 20, v.lllldJune 3. 1977 t111 .,.... to be 1nc111dtd 111 any SllCh 111cH a m1t 0Ms1-.and 1•c:-twyttat11Ea .. ... ,.,, PUBUC NOTICE J '"tl1uwntofao.tennlnellonlltet LMA,.....,CA....., •IKllOllS s11e11 be <onducled by 1uc11 Tel: m-no method, dtWnn!Mllon of tlle prapor. 1'7JIM ---....... --------llorleta ~r Of sucll OFFICES OF Putlll!flod Orengo Cont Delly Piiot. f'ICTiTIOUS8USlNIEU ~~::.~~::': ~n=::: ~'o~'':':; Mey IJ,20,V,_,J_>. ~tn 2002·11 Tllefol~n:=~~e~"Obusl· llU,.... fl QftdllCtlllQ sucti ti.c'loM _____ _._ _ __. ..... __;;,;;,;.;;~nesus: I ano .,,. ,......., dK!r1<t eiectl°"s at PUBUC NOTICE A&W •UTo Sot.LES. mow. Cof'll. wtllclt oach OFFICE Of' OIAECTDR tnOflWNllll.FvllertOt1,CAft633 • \llAll llrstbt nti.. AIU C.. Mc:Nelll, IDM Colwlllt st .• •. '" tlluwntOf adettrftlfnellanlhel f'ICTITIOUSIUllNEH FounltlnVallft',C4'2708 · tlecUOM tllell 1>e condloded In such NAME SlATl!M•MT W•ll.r D. Glloln, 18697 S.,U st- manner, tM o.t-i-1111 of Wllklt Tiit f0110w1119 ""'°" Is dolnq "4.111· Cr .• F-1111t1ve11ey,CA'11al Olraclora \hall t>a dtSIQnlttO •• Mnas· Tltls buslneu Is concluctld by • reartHf'lllngwltktl OlvfalOf\. INTEllSTAT5 WHOU::SALe. 230 oenerel-1ntrsfllp. A II lnttrnltd oersoris ere '"' E. DY•• Ad., S...teAna, CA AIH C. McNem cour•9fd lo etttfld Ulls Merino al'CI to J•mes c. Kim, 2l0 E. D'ltr std... Tiiis atttll'Mf'lt was flied wllll 1119 Of'ovtdt testl<nony. Thota wlshlno to S.n1aA11a.c•. CourrlyC1t111ofOrenoeCo1m,.,,onM•'t Pf'OVlde oret fl/I' -men <Ol'llmtMI .,.. Tlll1 builr.1• I• Conducl.O .,.,, • ., In· 12. 197l.: !!~~s~ do IO by contactlflO Ult..... dlwldu•IJlrt\9' C. KIM Putlll~~ Orange coast Dally":,:::_ Ar1hurC.Korn.Stcret•rv This Slalttnlnl Wai flied wUl't th• Mty20.17andJIN3.1019n IRVINE R"NCli Covnty Cler11 Of OrlnQR County on May 2131-77 WATEROISTAICT 12,1'11. 1------------Publlslltd Or111191 eo.at 0•11'1' Pllo,, .., ... , PUBLIC NOTICE M•'l'21.endJund, '917 tm.77 Publlstled Or.,.oe (out D•lll' Piiot, ------------· M•Y10.27andJINS.10, ttn 1------------714).71 c ....... PUBUC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE PVBUC NOTICE SUNIU09lCOUllTO,TM• ST4TSOl'CALlf'ORNIA l'O,_ TH8CIDUNTYOf'O•.ANoa ...,,..,,rn NOTICI 0 .. H•AIUNO Oft .. STIT10H ~ tt•omAn 01' WILL ANO POlt L.lnaRS THTAM•N• TA•VANDAUTMORllATtONTOA~ MINl•TI" UNOI• TM• INOIPIN09NT AOMINISUATIOM Of' UTATISACT l!Uelt of IOA HA1'0V WINN. OKt•ted. NOTICE IS HEftE8V GIVl:N tllat ALDliN l .ANOREWhHflltcllterelfla 1111 lllon tor P,_la Of Wiii 11111 for 1 .. •u•nc• Of Utlora T~...., to lite Pellll_, end Mltltortratloo to •d· mlnlSIM' t"9 estalt under 1119 .,,.,..,,. dtnl Ad<nlnlstr9'10ft of E'llltt A<I , .. l•re!ICI ta wlllOI It ~ • fwrt9ltf' P••llcul.,t. tlld .,...1,. time .,.o •- ti lttlfl nt ttle NIM It., llHn Ml for JuM "· 1'77, .. tO·OO a.ml In tfle to.irt,_ Of °"*1mtnC No, J 0( Hid ewf'I, tt 100Cltle c.i.. e>n ... 'W~ll'tt C:lltof .... ,.... C.lltornlA •• , Olttd Mrt ts. m7 Wtu..t/l.MS.•*" c...ntYC'lt ... Tlt0.A"· "°"O ...... 1' um,. ...... v .... i. ....... ......_CA_., rJM)111.alM ·--yter: ..... fttlef' ~ltNd °'""' ~ o.n, fttlot. MtYltaJf,nJunu, 1m ,,.,.n • DAit. Y fltLOT .. Eaxe~ Vies 1ionight in Anaheim Le1eadary Rod Laver.wru leacl the San Dieso Friars a1alnst the Los An1elH Strlnga 1t tbe Anaheim Convention Ceoter • tonl1bt ln a World Team Tennis match, then wUI return to Anaheim Sunday nicht aaalnst the Indiana Loveg. Both matches begin at 7:30. The Strings and Friars have both started slowly this season but the San Diego crew is ex- Dodgers, Reds Open Warfare LOS ANGELES -World champion Cincinnati invades Los Angeles tonight, 12~ games behind the host Dodgers in the National League West. Pitchine matchups in the 7:30 game are Tommy John against the Reds' Pat Zachery. Dusty Baker's sacrifice fly in the bottom of the 10th inning gave Los Angeles a 4.3 victory over the Houston Astros Thursday night. ROD LAVER PlAYS IN ANAHEIM TONIGHT. Ron Cey led off the 10th with a walk off loser Ken Forsch, 4·3, who took over for starter J .R. Richard. Forsch fanned Steve Garvey, but Rick Monday singled Cey to third and pinch runner Lee Lacy raced home with the winning run on Baker's ny to short right. Retirement Out Laver, 38, Stays On Full Schedule Mike Garman, 2·0, earned the victory alter Burt Hooton hurled the first nine innings for Los Angeles. The Dodgers took a 3·0 lead in the first inning on just one hit, a two-run single by Garvey. Richard loaded the bases on walks before Garvey singled and Monday followed with a sacrifice fly . By HOWARD L. HANDY Ot tlle 0.11, ~1 .. t Sl•ll Rod Laver of Corona del Mar has re~ched the age of 38 but he doesn't profess to have found the Fountain of Youth even though he still follows a rigid schedule of com petition and has no thought of retirement from a nossy tennis care«.>r. The Rocket will be al Anaheim Convention Center tonight as his San Diego Friars tangle with the Los Angeles Strings in a World Team Tennis match. "When you get older and meaner, you have to keep play ing," Laver said Thursday. "I re- ally don't find there is much dif· ference In my game now than there Used to be "I plan on competing as long as I can play well and the arm doesn·t give me trouble. Retir· mg? I don·t look at it too serious- ly. I JUSt ha ve to be ca rerul and take a litUe longer to warm up. The arm lubricates itself and 1 feel pretty good right now. "I think. 1 can certainly play a lot mo~ tonnis and in World Team Tennis. I could play three or four sets and not worry pbout it." lk>wdoes he feel about WTT? "I ltunk we' (the league) are doing fairly well,·· he says. "We <Sa n Diego) haven't been doing as well as we would like and Los Angeles has had a rough start. "But I think LA will turn itself around and in general. WTT is doing very well on the West Coast." How about some of the Eastern cities that have been drawing less than 1,000? ''That's a disaster ," he say&. "Those teams in the East having trouble are not promoting the matches. We've been pretty con- sistent in San Otego with crowds from 4,500 lo 7,000 "Anaheim Is a hotbed of tennis and it 1sn·t surpnsin~ to me that the LA Strings drew well their last game even though LA isn't doing well . l think they will tum things around in another few matches," Laver says. He plans to compete at Wimbledon next month with Scott Coasts ' In Prelims FARGO. N.O. -Steve Scott won his 800-meter heat, but elect· ed to fmish second In a 1,500 beat tq highlight UC Irvine's performances in Thursday's NCAA <Division II ) track and field meet at the University of North Dakota, here. No finals were held Thursday and only the 10,000 and hammer throw are being held today. The r~t of the finals will be Satur- day. Scott captured his 800 in l :S2.0, but in his 1,500 heat the UCJ junior stopped short of the finish line to allow a North Da1cota run- ner to win -much to the delight of the Fargo crowd. Scott clocked 3:56.0. Other UCI athletes advancing illoluded pole vaulter Mlke Sabatino, hurdl e r Wilbur Gregory, Richard Grout in the 800 meters, Ed Ahlmeyer in the ateeplecbale and Ralplf Sem• in the 1.500. Sabatino took just one vault and easily cleared lS-0, -..... Ahlm~ wu aecond ln h1a beat tD 9:21.G; GreaorY ran third in the 110 blOI tn a school record mark of 1•.6;:8ema wu aeeond ln his but Ol the 1,500 (3 :53.5) and ' Grout was third ln bl• 800 race (1!$1.4). participation in singles and doubles with John Newcombe as his partner. "That may change.'· Laver says. "He's commentating and 1 don't believe you can play an the matches and be on the air bull'm not sure." Laver, the southpaw. red· headed tennis great from Corona del Mar, says Team Tennis has given him more time at home. "With the airport nght here in Orange County. l 'm not upsetting my family too much because I can compete and be back home again when we play in San Fran- cisco. Phoenix or San Diego. The matches are all pretty much in m v backyard.·· ' Jn add1t1on to playing, he i~ also tennis director at the Sa A Vicente Racquet Club in Ramona where he does some coachin g on the Side. Slain Fighter HOUSTON lOSANGEl.E) •11 r II bt -. , 1111• CedeJ\ecl s 0 0 0 l~•7b ) 1 7 0 J C.ont•I· 1 n ~ 0 I 0 Ru,, .. 11 ~' 4 0 1 0 J ,,,, ,, l ' '0 Y..lln rf 4 1 ' 0 ( JO,,'°l"tnil\U ' I ' 0 C•"f 1n ) I I 0 F•r1u•1lnC J ' 0 0 Lett-; pr 0 I 0 0 W•l\on lb ' 0 ' 1 ""'"~'I 1b 5 0 2 l ( jf)MI )I> 4 n I I MoncMv<• 4 I) I I .,..ow•· la • 0 ' ,, B~HH•r 1r ) 0 0 ' ~1cn.\rrJo I 0 0 0 Vt.1dq ... , c • 0 0 0 K For\Cl>P 1000 Hoo'o" o l 0 0 0 Powtll Pfl 0000 Ma,.tint't or 0000 W,.mano 0 0 0 0 Tot••• 11> l 6 l lo••I• ll • 8 • TWl)O\i1 w~ W·'Ytl"Q '~"\(Orf"<! '4oo•IM ()Or) 000 100 0 ) L.,\ AnQ"I•\ ]1)1) 000 OOl 1-4 OP HOU 10'> 7 LOU HOV•lon S L.,, A"'1~1h •O ?A c ,., .... ...,~ G ,., '( l.,I>", c;e ·J Ctot \F Monddv B·O.•·" Q ,,,..,.,, "' f.or <'-IL • 11 ... 0010-i ~"''" tn 'W J "ti T l on A ?& lll IP H ~ EA 88 SO , ) ) ' ? I 1 I 1 I ' 1 I 1 1 0 0 •) 0 ' Tyrone Everett, 25, a top contender for the world junior lightweight boxing crown, was found dead Thursday in a Philadelphia residence with shotgun wounds in the face and head. He was due to fight world champ Alf redo Escalera next month in a rematch after losing a con· troversial split decision to Escal~ra last year. No sus- pects have been named in the slaying. Been ·Treated 'LOS ANGELES CAP> -James Harris won't say it, but chancea are be would like to be traded by the Loi Angelea Rams to a team that would ~ve him a better chance at belnl the 1tartiD1 quarterback. Hanis, one of the few black 1i1nal·callers in tbe NaUonal Football League, feels he bu been treated unfairly by the Rama, and thinb be could lead them to the Super Bowl 1f atven thecbance. DW'iq the 1976 seuon, R&rris lost bla.wttna Job to Pat Hidtn. His tutUN wi&la 4be Rams is even more bi dOutit now with the re- cent highly Plibllci.led 1ignin& of Joe Namath. Hanil, 29, ,. .. one ot three quarterbacb wbo •tarted Jast season fot the Rams. He began Ole yev u No. i. but ended oo the bench as tbe team Iott in the playoff• to Mlimesota. ''I never said I wanted to be traded," Ha.rm said Tbunday. "ThahltuaUon ii in ~band& ot the Rama, u la my con~act slluatlOD." • Hariis h• oae year left on bla petted to lftake • awltcb lri tile two weekend matches 1nd mate a r.un at dlvlalon leadtn1 Phoenix. In the first makh at Anaheim betweei the St.rinis ancl Phoeolx, a crowd of e.111, second large1t in Orance County history tor a tennl1 match, viewed the action. In addition to Laver, Sin Die10 wUI a1IO have Cliff DryldaJe, Kerry Reid. MOl\I Guerrant and lutle Anthony to go aaainst the Strings' Dennis Ralston, Charlie Pasarell, Mark Cox, John An· drews, Rosie Casals and Dianne Frornholu. When the Loves come to town, Vitas Gerulaitis, the recent wln· ner of the Italian championship, will be JOlDed by ~ue Harker, Al· Ian St.one and Syd Ball along with Ann Kiyomura. Laver, winner of the big four •loales too.rnamenta ltisown u the Grand Slam of Tennis (Wimbledon, U.S., French and Auatrallan> in 1962 and 1969, sUll hill the ball with authority from the southpaw side and d~ ·~ show any sips of leWna up. • Tickets for the matches are available at the Conventlah Center and area ticket agencie$. For further-information, call 956·1800. DARRELL DAWKINS (LEFT) SHOVES PORTLAND COACH JACK RAMSEY. Brawl Marks 76ers' Win. Everybody Gets Into Free-swinging Act PHILADELPHIA (AP) -Dar- ryl Dawkins tried lo destroy a pair or Portland Trail Blaiers. did desecrate a dressing room urinal and left hopping mad at everybody, including his team- mates. It all happened Thursday night during and after the Philadelphia 76ers' 107-89 rout over Portland in the second game of the Na· tional Basketball Association ehamplonship series. With 4 minutes. 52 seconds left, the 250·pound Dawkins first tangled with Portland's 200· pound Bob Gross, then squared off with the Blazers· 218-pound M aurlce Lucas. Before the fighting ended, players from both benches. coaches. officials Joe Gushue and Richie Powers, and a t least 50 fans were involved in a free· for.all. The officials and the coaches were swept up in the melee tcying to stop it. Dawkins and Lucas were eject· ed. Dawkins alter sinking his half of a double foul and Gross missing his opportunity. In the 76ers' dressing room, the 6· l l'r2 Dawkins angrily tore a toilet tank orr the w al I. He s howered. dressed and stomped from the dressing room, pausing momentarily to say: "I'm mad at my teammates for letting a man get behind me and belt me cold turkey. Get out of my way." And Dawkins, the 20-year-old who was drafted two years ago directly out of high school , stormed into the night. The lnNdent almost turned into a f uJl scale riot as enraged fans ran onto Uie court and took punches at players. The Spec. trum security force -a couple or dozen strong -pushed and dragged some of the fans off the court. The scene lasted about 10 minutes. Gross tried to explain what happened. "We both had our hands on the ball," said the Portland forward. "He <Dawkins) threw m e down. I think be lost bis temper." Dawkins threw a punch at Gross, but It never rUched Its target. Instead, Dawkins hit teammate Douc Collins, who !lad coetnct wit.ti the Rams. '"l'be re. HOil I dldri-i play involved somtddnc other Ulan my abill· t.y," 1ald H1rrl1. refmlng to elabonte but leavtn1 the ioot" ope• to a cbar1e of nds~. ''BUeii an my~ormanee Oftl' the pmt ~~· I ...,ldn't ha.ellilirl . .. I tldak~ takbal °"" u the No. 1 ~Ii °"the Ramawaa a m...,ement• cwoa. a .. -... by coach Cbaek boa. .. ~ Hams. "I , ...... --•Jted WfalrlJ by the Ramil over the put year.• • jumped between the two players in an effort to stop the fight. "He just -grazed me," said Gross. "Dougie got hit." Collins, who earlier in the game twisted an ankle. had to go to the hospital after the game and get the cut above the right eye stitched. "I didn't even know who hit me." Collins said, "until I went to the bench and Rick Barry (TV color man) told me. "Oh my God," said Collins when he heard "King Kong" - the'76ers' affectionate nickname for the huge Dawkins -had hll him. "If he hit me square I 'd still be out. I still don't think that D;µ-- ryl knows he hit me. Boy, it's scary out there with all those big guys around you fighting," said the slender C<>llins. Sports in Brief After the Dawkins-Gross bout was broken up, the 6·9 Lucas . - clobbered Dawkins from behind. The enraged Dawkins went after Lucas. They squared off in the middle of the court and traded punches, none damaging, until . non-combatants jumped in and separated them. Gross was concerned that the bitterness would spill over to the third game of the series, at Portland Sunday. f'OltTt.AND lltl -Lucas H , Gron 10. wa11M., 11, Hollln\ U, D•vi\ 8, Tw•rdtlk 6, Steele 4, R ... JOl>e\, C.lholJ'I 7, NHI '· W•lker J. Total• J6 I 7.t.. 8'. f'HILAOEl.f'HIA 11071 -Ervlnq 70. McGinnis~ U C Jon~ 10 OlbbV IS, Collin' 11. Ml• 8. Free 3, , Dawl<IMa. FurloW4 Tolaf\41 7S·34 t07. Portland 76 II 11 25 -8'I Plllll!Mlpllla )I 30 10 16 -107 Fouled out -Pllll-lphl•. McGinnis. Tol•I IC>YIS -Portl.nc! 24, Plllt-11)111• 14 htMIUI\ - Por111r1d W•llon. Holh"' Luus and Odwl{1ns ~l•<1~l«t"11ttu19 A -te.?16 ... . ... 'Unser 4-1 Choice ··. For Indy Victory Bobby Unser is the ravorite at 4· l odds, to win the Indianapolis 500. The other drivers in the front row for Sunday's auto race, pole· sitter Tom Sneva and Al Unser, were listed at 5·1 and 6·1, in the odds posted by Harrah's Reno· Tahoe Racebook. Three-Ume Indy winner A.J. Foyt also was listed at 6·1' with Gordon Jotmcock, Mario Andrel· ·ti and Johnny Rutherford all 8· 1. Janet Guthrie, the first woman driver to make the 500 starting field, is 40-1. \',....a,.Quff• UCLA's 7·foot center, Breu Vroman. is switching to Nevada Las Vegas this fall. "I'm unhap· PY with the program here," saJd Vroman, who has clashed with Brui,n coach Gene Bartow. Vroman believes bls chances for a pro career wlll be ~nbanc:ed Barris under Las Vegas coach Jerry Tarkanian. "I don't think I'm im· proving that much here and I feel . I '11 be ln a better situation," he • said. · He said he had not discussed , hts decision with Bartow, ad·: ding: "A lot of people are unhap- py, but you have to be very un-' happy to leave with one year left." Bartow wu not available for! comment. • AllgebPla• TORONTO -The Califomiw·. Angels meet the expansion ., Toronto Blue Jays tonlgh(for tho first time this season with Gary'. Ross pitching against a former • An1el, BUI Singer. The game will be heard in the : SouthlandaU:30onKMPC (710}. --.-..·--~...........,..,-'·-.r --- DAILY PILOT BRIEFS.~ . Ccmtlnued from Pafe BS ,. lng, assaulting and menacing his wife. Newsome's 27-year·old wife, .. Lolita, told investigators her husband forced her into the fami· ly car last Friday night and •.trove her lo a remote area where _he struck her in the lace. pointed a .357 magnum revolver al her find said, ''I'll blow your brains out." Mrs. Newsome said s he jumped from the car. but her ·husband grabbed her. threw her into the trunk and drove around for two hours before returning to their home and releasing her. in· vestigators said. Mrs. Newsome called police, -Who found a loaded 357 magnum ~thehouse. t~agtdreGM :~ George Maguire 1s the new ikeneral manager of the Los •>\ngeles Kings. succeedmg Jake :):f ilford. who resigned Thursday •11\ght after a meeting with owner ·:tack Kent Cooke. Milford, 60, served as the Na- tional Hockey League team's ~ general manager for Jan years. J Maguire, 52, has been a member of the Kings' executive staff for the past nine years. • . Corcb, JlrtdR• Win ,. ATHENS , Ga. The .• doubles team of Matt Mitchell ·: and Perry Wright won the decid· · ing match Thursday to give Stan- . ford a 5·4 victory over Trinity for ·the team championship of the ~~CAA tennis tournament. ·::·Earlier, UCLA took five of six :s.ingles matches to defeat ;Southern Methodist University ·:~-1 for third place. Friday, May 27. 1977 • driven by Houston Oilers quarterback Dan Pastorlni crashed into a crowd and killed two people Sunday TrojatURoH HONOLULU Fresno St.ate and the University of Southern California meet today in the second round or the NCAA Western Regional baseball tournament. Sophomore lefthander Brian Hayes pitched a five-hitter and Chris Smith drove in four runs with three hits to lead USC to a 6-1 victory over Hawaii in the nightcap of the first round Thurs· day. Fresno Slate topped Cal Stale <Los Angeles> 7 ·4 in the opener. SJWad Leackr• Charlie Sifford, Jack Fleck and Henry Ransom each carded one· under-par 70s Thursday to tie for top individual honors an the second day of the pro-am con· petition at the Sam Snead Open )!Olf tournament at Yorba Linda Country Club. Snead. who turns 65 today, was one ol six players at 71 . The others were Jerry Barber, AJ Besselink. Tommy Bolt, Doug Ford and Howie Johnson. The leading team score in best· ball play was 56. Members of the winning foursome were pro Don Collett. celebrity Norm Alden and amateurs Ed Turner and Melvin Collins. The 54-hole $100.000 tourna ment, open to pros 50 years and older, began today Goll Leader• ;~cutorini Cleared • ·LIBERTY. Tex. A Liberty Putl.i scores Thur<dav •n th<· ''orm <M:l~yed and unc:omt>letlld flr\t round 011,.... noo 000 Att~t• Ctaulc golf t01Knament on the I> &IJ v•rd ....,. ~>6-n AUanta Country Ctut> cour'\4! ST Of•v.,., wt're 51r...O.d Oii the cour\• and wer~ sc ,,..,ulf!d to comp1e1e Pl•v toci.v STEVE RAKHSHANI OF EDISON HIGH (HB) LOOMS AS ONE OF THE POLE VAULT FAVORITES TONIGHT. County grand jury ruled Thurs· 'd ay there was no c riminal ;r«?sponsibility involved in an ac· .cldent when a jet-powered boat ~French Open • Second Round Men's 51"910 f t)m (,Ullllr t)n 0ndl.J\k6, W I\ M"t T homttt jc,,," Br<1111 b 1 b l b I bl E r1c Of'bltr 1u,, f r~nctt bttttt (IH1~fOPh~ C.d'\fll f' r .mu • h b ) 1 S 7 S • C.,u1llPrmoV•l.1,. Ar(J"n1intt bO.t\ Bt'\u\ PrdJOU• Lhlh•7 6 hO b 1 bO ICarl W•l~r W~\I Cem>rlnv j)P.tl Jorg.> An "'drf'W V1•M>/lW,1l .th f'J ) b .t b .t · Rolf N<>rbl>rq Sweden, IM'.il F '1d11• OollM o I :.l6 7\b4 • Pavf!I Hu01tt Cl~Ct\OS\Ov&••~ b••\\\ 8rt,~n •tt-..cher, S,,n Ooeqo 1 6 • 4 ~ I. b • • Jtrt HrrbK CtKhO'\IOva,•il bt'dl Oom1nlqu_. ll•·dl'I Fr11ncl' t. l •·1 t. 4 .. tltt" Nit\fft\•~ Romdnt'4 t>t -.~ Tim GuU1"-"°" '()n•l~'k.t WI\ 6} l " I b " 1 • I " B"°'" CroOhtt'd b tlt fr.,~ W"tt~t '' Lt)u1't ).I., h l 1 s • 4 • l-4l.Hl)ld \t)tf>mon f>"'-t1 AnOr1tw Pdltt,On 1111><'<1• ... I> l ~ • ~ 1 -C>P\1t O,.nl Au ht ••t b~,., J '"' Alt f t"lf'n .. Jloul)ld>lo<I N Y 4 o • 1 4 b • ) o l : f)u11H Mnt1r,1m u,.1.00 bt JI f'.."-.lr•Clil ._,, ... • , ''H,. A 1 6 1 l b h J • '"''",. Pinto f\"•"" (hlfr bf'.tt p..,,., ,.-,,.tTIH"l l:'"'''">m N J •I " 1 •4 I> 7 Q'>lf (,. .,,. nq Wf•\t f,,1 un411'v h. •t ""'°"'., M unl)t ~otw·~ " 1 " 1 " t tj.-r"'' Mitton \f>,J1n />drH t h• tf p.>"Nt1• W• II q..,,..dt!\1 t '-I C. I 1 Ii, I \ I\ J J Sc:hr-r lS..13 -61 0 Gr•ham JS..ll "3 O Eochlbn)r '.Jl>.n- M Mel.non 3J )S M G McCord ll·l6 ~q o . 8Yoer 11 n~• S Ver..tlO J) )1-10 0 8•k•r JS.JS· 70 0 MOOdy )4 l6 70 O Wuwr l3 37 10 J Nicklaus ~ 16 70 8 e •slwood )4. )6 70 A Tapoe )S..JS--10 l >ion~I~ 34 Jo 10 Lvri LOU JS..36 /1 M want•\ C StolCllH L ll~91.,. JM II\,..., Ltt Etd<>r S Malrwk 8obWyM 8 Jt111(kfll J S<ltl~ Jdy H "11•\ 8 Mdllon L W•d~'"' H B l11ncd\ Dan Murany )I )4 II )4 )7 71 JS )6 71 1118 II l6 H 11 Js..l6 71 17 )4 " M 11 I! 11 J~ ,, lb 10 n '.I& Jo n )\ 17 17 n 11 n Jo l6 ,, UCI GoHers 12th CORPUS CHRISTI, Tex. -UC Irvine's golf team was in 12th place after the third day of the NCAA <Division I I > cham pionship, here, Thursday UCI has 917 points. Troy Stale 1Alabamal leads the team com petition with 871, followed by Rollins College of Florida (877 l Irvine's Tom Martin was m 16th place with a three.day total o f 222. Other lJC I scores m eluded: Tim O'Mara 226. John Schock 235: Scott Campbell 242 Oilers, Edison Gymnasts Triumph It's an all-Sunset League ~howdown for the girls CIF gym· nasties championship June 2 following Thursday's semifinals action which found Sunset League champ Huntington Beach and runnerup Edison vie· torious. , Pacing Huntington Beach '~ victory over Sonora was Lori Wright. Hunt l!N<t<ll (?Ol.61 fln .UTllou••ndO.k• Vdull1n9 I Wr•CjM •H61 11 s 2 IC4'<1\lk IH81 11) J MtCdbo' iH8• 11 0\ Bar\ 1 M<Cdl>P IHI 1 11 • 2 JonP\ H81 11 1 l Conway , ... 8 • 11 ~ Bt'am I WroQhl >iRt 1'8S J McC11"" HE\ tr ) ) 1(.tr~•~ IH8l 1' ~ f:t°"'r ,.,.,_r('1V f ..... , ... ~ "'40\ 1' 1 1 ... M C.tb" H81 c,lr\d w.-~Qh uft 11 (I I tult1,,,., 1 0 T "\n,. C, ' \\ , Wf!1 ,...,.., E " l\ l rno''"' E I' 25 BA,. I ThfH'Y'I .. \ [ • ,. 1\ ' r~rttnt-rl"J . EI ., Bt•-ttn t Rr.t'I SI 1' )\ ~ N,.,,~ .. , E 16 &\ l I) fo-1 ..... ". F '""' ,..,.,.nv-l J)_. -'v ~ '" '' ) fr,,fJ'""'' f ,,. 10 l w ,, ,,., E t,,,~\ Laguna Seeks CIF Title title for three straight years. Laguna Bt'ach High bids for its .$econd CH' vollC'yball t:ham- pionship tonight al UG Irvine !lgainst San Marcos, the Channel League co-champion from Santa ~arbara. " The match will be preceded by jl best·of three baltll• for third J>lact' m CI F between Mission ;'\-'iejo and Santa Hnrbarn High !that du('} ~tarts at 7 \5 and the ehampwnsh1p best of ri"e matt•h beg ms at about R 30 Laguna won the championship in 1975 and San Clemente took 1t last season. This is San Marcos' first trip to the playoffs while Laguna has gone every year since the sport became .sane t1on ed in 1974 never been to the ClF finals in any team s port. and 1 'm just hap· py to get this far Wm or lose, it's been a great season.·· San Marcos 1s 16· \ on the year. the only loss com mg to its league co·champ. Santa Barbara. Laguna J;leC:1ch won the South Coast League race. If the favored Laguna Reach -Artists can ..., m tonight 1t will mean the South Coast League has h ad a lock on the CIF volleyball "San Marcos 1~ a very i::ood team but I feel if we can keep our m istakes to a minimum. we c;tand a very good chi.I nce to win." says Laguna coach Mike Duncan. Sao ~1arcos coach Tom Shog1 realizes that he enters the match as an underdog "Our school has The Artists are led by 6-0 junior J arn1e Plummer. the team's most effective hitter. and 5-7 1unior Kip Engen. and all-league setter The other starters are ... eniors Phil McManus and Steve f'a1r. Jun1or Randy Smith and sophomore Andrew Dodds. COSTA MESA AMC & JEEP 1977 JEEP CJS 6 cyt .• l tp. lcket , .... A 7 A83AA088214 #I JEEP DEALER IM CA.LIFORMIA HUGE INVENTORY . '-1'117 GREMLIN 6cyt.. 4.,. bucket seats & mortt s2999 A7M467E227820 I ------------c 0 FUE Major League Standings AMERICAN LEAGUE East Division w L Baltimore 23 \6 New York 23 19 Boston 21 \9 Milwaukee 22 23 Detroit 17 22 Cleveland 16 21 Toronto 17 25 West Division Minnesota 27 14 Chicago 23 16 Texas 20 17 Angels 21 21 Oakland 20 21 Kansas City 19 21 Seattle 16 30 Tltunday's Game• C•uc ~Cl" 4 M1lwauk~p J Only 11"""' \Cheduled Touy·•~"'" Pel. GB .590 .548 I '~ 525 2' ! .489 4 .436 6 .432 6 .405 71, .659 .590 J .541 5 .500 61, .488 7 .475 71, .348 131~ o.-•-t81~)11•1 Cl•Yl'litnd l(;.trl•l'ldl \! n C•ttlo•nt• •Ro1• 1 11 •t Toron10 •<;1riqo•7 ••" 111\•nn~">la Za'1n &-1 1 at B•tllmo< .. ""'"" s \l n tCen\11• Coty lll'onartt 2 0 at Boston 'Jc'""'"' • •• n S-1111 .. t~ O l °' Abbott t 41 al O.troot IFldrychO.OI n Chlc.qo (!Ir.ti S-tl at New Yor' rHuntf<' 1·l • n Te~n tAlewancl!>r ~lo< Brll~ 1·11 •t Milwauk..,. 1s1aton 2·51 n s.turuv'• °""'" C•lllornllat Toronto Mll\119\...,•t !Ultirnot• C111caoo It New Vorlc Te .. s ti Mllw•u-ee. n t<a-City et &oston SHiii• at ~trOlt Oektlnd at CIClll,land. n NATIONAL LEAGUE Easl Division w I. Pittsburgh 26 12 Chicago 25 14 St Louis 24 17 Phitadelfhia 20 t9 Montrea 15 23 New York 15 24 West Division Pct.GB .684 .641 11"2 .585 31r2 .513 611'2 .395 11 .385 11 'n Dodgers Cincinnati San Francisco San Diego Houston 23 11 .744 All ant~ 18 22 .450 12'h 18 23 .439 13 19 27 .413 1411'.1 17 25 .405 14 'n 16 28 .364 16 1,2 Tl'ounday'\ O.mn '>I Lovl\ I Pl>••-tol>lit I 10 •nnlnq, c"or-1 ~,,.,.,o •11ero1•• ""'nO•eqol LO\ ... ,,.,.,., I ...,.,ston) 10 •nrHnQ• ~•n l'r-l'l(n~ C•nnnn.tll \ Ont 1 <I-• \Ch .. dUll'd Tootay" G•mo. Plll•bu•Qll Candetaro• t. 0 1 41 Chlc•90 8onh11ms l l Nl'w Vo,_ •S••v•r • 11 ~1 P1tll11d•lo1tl• CP1ro\hl•ri'>01U-4) 1\110•11,.l l41c&I& 1-11 at St 1..oul\ <Ole<ll9f011.n HOO\ton 18-1\IP• I " •I San O•eoo IS.W'f9" 3 ll " 4tlanl• (Niellr01·71 •t San Franc:•U.O 18«l'6-•I. " Cincinnati IZecttrv 2·SI al 1.4~ Anoe••' CJofl" I 21 n Sa1111'110'1 OalllH Plllsbl.tf'Qll et Clllce90 New York at Plllllldflllll\1• Cincinnati 81 Lot AnQelft Monll"ffl llSt. Lou!$. II Allentaat San f<rt11e1Ko Houston lltSlrl Ohto0• 11 Walters-Kingsland 880 F eat11red in CIF Meet NORWALK This is the rub· ber match. The two fastest 880 runners in Cl F's Southern Sec· tion have split a pair of previous head·to-head races. and tonight they go for the tiebreaker. Jim Walters of Estancia Hlgh <Costa Mesa) won the first dur- mg Century League finals, clock· mg 1 :51.3. the nation's fastest lime this season by a high school runner. Dave Kmgsland of El Modena High <Orange) won the second dunng CJF finals, running 1:52.3 and leading Walters from start to finish. In the race that Walters won. Kingsland was clocked at an identical 1: 51.3, but the Estancia runner broke the tape first. runners must be considered potential winners. One is Ken Margerum of Foun· tain Valley High. with a season best of 13.9. The others are Corneal Milloy of Pasadena High, Jerry Sanders of Muir (Pasadena) and Milan Stewart of West Covina High. each with a top time of 14.1. Pasadena has more depth and talent than any other school m the meet and its brightest star 1s sprinter James Sanford. a poten. tial double winner tonight Sanford's best times for the 220 (21.ll and 440 (46.71 are within fractions of a second from the meet records, and if anyone can stay close, they could push the graceful runner to new stan- dards. Meet records are also en- dangered in the high jump and pole vault. Two jumpers who have cleared 7-01.t:i battle tonight-Dennis Smith of Santa Monica High and Gary Lawrence of Thousand Oaks High. Anthony Curran of Crespi High <Encino> tops the pole vault en- try list with a 16-23 ., two inches - better than the state meet re· cord. His closest competitor 1s Edison High 's Steve Rakhshani. who has cleared 15-8'1~ this season. They'll be running side by side, in lanes four and five tonight for the CIF Southern Section state qualifyin g meet at Cerritos College. Boys and girls field events start at 5 and running begins at 6:30. Five athletes from each event qualify for the California state meet rinals June 3·4 at UCLA. Gymnasts Advance Weaver Top Performer Walters didn't race Kingsland during the league dual meet season because of a hamslring muscle pull, but Walters has been fully recovered for several weeks now, and tonight's 880 figures to be a two-man race between he and Kingsland. A slmllar battle l}hapes up in the mile with thre~ outstanding prospects leading the way. Most notable is M ark Fricker of Hemet, who ran a CIF record 4 '.08.2 during the 2·A finals. Agoura's Joe Stormo, with a 4 : 10.2 , figures to challenge F'ricker most of the way. Charlie Christensen of Edison High in Huntington ~each could also pose a threat. His best this season is 4: 11.4. The closest race of t he night could come in the. 120 high hurdles where no fewer than four World Team Huntington Beach High's Ran· dy Weaver and Eric Brave!, along with Craig Graves of Edison (Huntington Beach) won events to highlight Thursday night's CIF boys gymnastics pre- lims at Huntington. Weaver, a 5·4 senior. remained undefeated in floor exercise this year, Bravel captured the rings competition and Graves had the tep average on the long horse. Weaver was easily the top all· round performer. qualifying in all six events for next Friday night's CIF finals at Mlllikan Wgb in Long Beach. Weaver was also fourth in the parallel bars, fifth In the horizon· tal bar and bad sixth.'i in the long horse\ pommel horse and rings. The top seven in each event ad· vance to the CIF finals, along wlth the leading four au.round performers. Huntington also got a fine ef· fort from senior Don Thornton, a one-legged gymnast who was Tennis ........ s. ........ u Oorm1n·¥an 0111..-IS·P t 6·1: women -Navralllcw• 181 !Ital 1111oro100 ($I •·•; tUnatltova· S1 avl'"' !BJ btal M ororova Chmyrev• .. I Mitt\ -Ro<he •a\ Mal l(a ... ull• IS I 4 1 · EmH•on Roen• r e 1 b••I 111\•trevell l(a-ulla l!'>I b ) Mh•d Erner\CHI St@WM re I bP~I M•t-.wll O\mv••v•U 1 " VNIVll•ltOI• at 80110" ,..,..,. •• J1 •....... " 1J Women -Stow Austell IS.Pl 11<>~• h•rt Shew IP).,.. •wrt !Pl bNI StOIH' IS.Pl .. 2 Mt" Walls Cut CPI lltat Gol'mtn CS.PlbMIC.S. IP I ..... Ml•-0 -""'"'"""'n Ditton IS·PI llHI SM•Walb (Pl H A -S , ,. et ""'""1• ""'v~ tt, 5an oi..n Men Mli'"' IHY I tie.I i...wr •SOI 6 J ltufl"t~M<tyer <NV) t>Pal Ory\dat.,.L.awr CSOh·4 W--Rtld ISO) ~ Wade (NVI M ; W-l(lno INV ) !IHI Rtld• Guerrant ISO> 6-J Mlwtd -Rulfels-1(1<19 !NV) bHI OrV\dale-GueNar!J, <SOI 7·6 A -1,8'9 M San Df«ogo. third in pommel horse, fifth in rings and seventh in parallel bars CIF Fl~ALSOUALI Ft£1t~ loro/) i.o.-.. 1 (;rdve\ 1Ed"nn HBI •I~ 1 11~1 C4rl\on l'idnta FPI Md Wdl'>On 1fount..in Vall•yl • 1 ' 111~1 C•••l.t IHu.,ton91on 8f'o>elt) anrt ('.o1d\l4"tn IEd•'>Onl 9 0 6 W•,wer IHunllnqton• I 9\ • Gu1~n '"ntrl00<"\/at1e11S 1} floor e•P'C•V' I WM..-r IHUnllnqtont 9 O· 1 Aurn\ rw~••mon\lerl 8 75 J tl•<'I Glen An•hf>1m) ~nd l.-t•vr• q:~owf41nd t 8 ~· ~ T .... ,, 1911 ·w•,tm•M"'• I • IS 6 111 .. 1 St. Juro W•\lm•~t-landAdams ''°ut" HlllS)ll 4. Pommt"I 1torw-1 Horrac• IRowlandl 8.l; 1 CXburro IWHI Covl,.al I 1. l Tllornlon l>iunl· I or")lonl 1 IS. 4 Hall IRowl.endl 1 SS: 5. ~.,' IRowt••~ll 7 OS; 6. Wuver IHuntlnqtonl 6 95; 1 lt '4tl !(•"" !Fountain V•U•yl and M•••las IWe\lmln\trrl 6 35. Horl1onta1 t>Ar 1. 11.to !Senta Fel I •S; 1 WdUon IFount.a1n Vollfey) 8 85; 3. Au\fl" Row tan" I I 75 4 c;1en ,_..,.,.,..,m 1 8.7: s. WHver I Huntln9ton Beac '1l 8 .6S · 6 . P•dllla IWestmlr>\l•rl ft U . 1 Gr~~· IEd1\0n, HBll .15. Parallel ll.iflo 1 Brave! (Hunhn9tonl I I ; 1 Burne IWf'\lml"''"'' A,. J 61Alne IROWla"") ft )S 4 W•lfver IHunt1nqlon) 8 H : S. T••enit9a IWe\tmlMterl a'· 6. Gr .. VO\ IEcloson\ 8.3. 1 Trtornton IHunll1'19tonl8.? Rln9,-1, l(Ulwllf'll' IRowiandl 8 6: 2. Totedll IW~•lmlM!..,I A SS. ' ltlo\ Burch IRow•&.,<tl and Gom~1 IWtttmln•terl 8.5; s. Tnornt0<> IHunt· 1•111to") I IS: •· Weaver (Hunllnqlonl 8.4; 7. C•\11110 IWM!mlmter I a 1. ""''°"""' 1. Weaver 1Hunllf>91onl 8.4; 1. Glen 14nell•lml 1,1; J. ltlel Rlc.o <Santa F•> lMld hktna9a 1We\tm1..,1eo 1 .SS. ' "They Tr•t You 11 • Person, not Ju.It another Cu1tom•r." TENNIS Ca.o:ntQ ALWAYS ~ PRICE WITH THIS COUPON AUSTIALIAM TYPEDUHLOP TIHMIS IALLS RUTH KRIPS Huntington Beach ·-Ne arl y Sn:abb~d Once, ~Ellison see ks CIF Tit le By aooza CULSON .... Dtft,~ ... AlmOlt OHrloolsed u an entry la the CIF aolt 1ectJooala recently •t Ml11loo Viejo, the Edl.&on High (Hunt.- lnaton Bucb) Chargers don't figure to 1•t the aame liaht treatment Tuet· day at RivenJde'a lndJan Hills c.oun. 1 try Club. The Chataen raced throuib the op- poelttOG Jut week at MlssTon VieJo Country Club with a five-stroke ad· vantaae over their nearest com-petitor. But only hours before the day-lonf event was to get under way, ClF of. ficlall were qot aware of f.dlloa- aJnce the Sunset Leaiue champions, unbeaten in leaiue, was not reported as such by Sunset League tournament host Marina High of Huntington Beach. "We don't know why we weren't en- tered with the rest," says Edison coach Larry Milne. "It was a pro- blem, but not anymore." The quint.et of Greg Frederick Ci.>>, Rick Van Dyke (82), Jim Lencek (st), Randy Peterson (81) and Dave Melamon (83) used Its customary balance to beat the tricky Mission Viejo course. "Th05e aren't exceptional scores," admits Milne. "But at Mission Viejo the course wa!n't in the best of sbape and It's a tough course." Indian Hills presents another pro- blem ID UM tact that it'• a different letup~ "I have mlxed reactlonl to tbe coune." -. Milne. ..lt'a not ~· tere.tina. bOwever, and It ahould be competitive.'.' Goll ls u lndlvl<lual a sport as you'll find, but Milne aaya IA!amwork does become a factor ln one aense: "You have to be aware that your lndividual score goes toward a team effort. You can't fall apart ti th1D11 ao bad." In league, only four ot tbe flve scores count toward the total, but in CJF, all five count. Thus tt yau're bav· inc a bed day, you ailll have to work at SPORTS B anquet R esults every stroke, because lt can still s c o t t D e L o n g mean the difler~e to wbetber your (baseball) and Dan team comes out on top," aays Mllile. v l d e t to ( t en n la > Frederick, Van Dyke and Lencek, garnered most valuable the three Hniors of Edison's five, are honors Thursday at considered the best at Edison, sports awards banquets altbou1b depth bas been the atFountainValleyHigb. Chargers' m-.jor welJ>OD. Special award win· a......1 V•'11ty Also lnstrumenlal in the annexation ners: of the Sumet League crown have been sophomore Greg McDonald and junior Clint Juhl. ~al": 80! Grllr: '"'°"' V•flNtlte: Scott 0M.on9; McKt lmor-d: 8111 C.rn>el. • 'Coosidertnc bis consistency and mental approach," says Milne, Frederick ii our best player. But any in our lineup can beat him on a given day." And although none of Edison's aces ranks as a solid bet for individual honors at Rivenlde Tuesday, chances for a team tiUe are more than a pipe dream. ,,,.,_ va...itr Co-<-•Plllns 0\¥11t Skknwn -Sl.tt1 Shi~•: MIXI V•l..,.ble. o .... B••cktey: Most lmpro..,.d: M•rto: L""9 •r>el JOI\ 11..., 1 ru. ,,,...s..ft CePl•l,.1: Rf,,dY Smlll'I, Rob Ernw-.. Erle SDI'~: ~I \1~1111- ble: Jerry Girvin -8111 M<Telr: Mo\! lmll"O'f'9d: Jett Enele •nd Eric MHIH. T-b V•l"Sltv ~·~"; Oen Videtto; Mott Villll· bl~ 0.tll Videtto; McKt lmprovoed: Mangano :.Throws N o -hitter Area Girls Sh ine In CIF Swim/est Gt't11!>ilwr. J""l~V•'11ty C•lllll"· MMlr Pete"; Most V•llll· bl•· Allen ltllne: Most Improved: Fred 80f'Oe'. ........ 5--" C•Dlolt": Cr•l9 Joh.,\Ofl; Most V•l ... t>i. 01voe Guyot Ind Brllft Gerber; MOU Improved : TO<ld L•mptl. EAST LOS ANGELES-Tracey Cook or Estan- cia High School, Alice Browne of Corona del Mar High and Llsa Hilger of Mission Viejo esta~lish~ girls swimming records at the CIF champ1onsb1p finals meet at East Los Angeles College here Thurs· day night. * , Racing Entries ,...,,,,.,,., Oeolr,TrldlPHt ••an llA<• -uo , __ i ., .. , old "'' ..... ll\lrw t.UIO. O~l"1l<11 ,.,._,, Wlt '7AO oto ......... ,~. ,,. .. ,.,_,.. ,,...,, u.eo Ttni.-'9..22 AIM ftlfl -fl•t A'-1. M19htv HI 8119, ere\lfltlti._ ~ Oo, CUI• H Tr11,' c .......... Wey. MondV'S °'"~ S<rel<Nd -WM 5c>ecl•I. CN-11 Cll B•• u ·--'"0..-ldlkll • ,..,.,.., ......... """ $aCO.O•ACll -..OvM'!ts. l'l'Nr °'"'·"llO*-Pvrwueoo. f..,...roe CAdllrt IUO UO )10 Huftllft9._,W IAtllt0r>l UO 2.90 Moore T..,..,H IC'PH9er) 2.00 n--n.v Alto It'" -WlfllW llCKkt(. ~r Goor ... w..t v1rv1,,11 Notcrelchu SleotfO•ACa-MO'l'•rft. .,.,.., Old ~ 0.wnlf19. l'u'1t Sl.:IOO. Clalfftlftt ~ 17 .SOO. GoOart"'9 llNDllsl T"lltO ltACa lSO yard•. 3 l It .,..., ela& yp. Ollmlng. PllnaUIOO. H lttt lhlt Of 4m IC>oteomo.t I Olette-,,.ltjllp l"lre 11("'9'111 Mutl'I Adi! IClerlHt l Ottant ITrwW<'t!I ICettebo Kid lllOUQfll So<fttctmes.i.., lc..'dot•I Tll"llllllf'IT""*- !Btooliflelel l DHoMldJet fCrt~r) ~Ill HlllWl-IUOhlml .............. C1'arteNWoonder ,.,._,l 1.-• GOldefl E ... ICMC!Owl '.. ,...., ~ IMlkhelll 11' '"'° uo uo tn ~ Oel" IAdllr) J.40 J 00 •n PrlM 'M .....,.., lo.riue) ~.60 '" ,. __ ... ,. lt2 HOM:tMcMS , .. ~OU •TIUtAC• --yerd\. , wer ~ -.io. o.im1,.._ P\lrwUlllll. •n ~~a.-cere~rl ICt UO 1 . .0 2.10 Go9Dl• CT~H.OO UO 1?1 O..M.,GolL!Oheml 2.tO 1n Tlni. -20.22 AIM ftlfl -l't"'d Br"'"• St. l.ollll TitlftO llltCS -«>O v~ 3 .,.., Jr. U11tltJlmmr Old\. Cl~ P'l.trw $2,000. Clalm· No•<retCM\ i,.. orict U.900. TM Pon , .... rt) Som~ l("-"•SlllOr fPavllfltl Ml Buddle f4111W)lt) s. ... , ... I(_ 10oml"9VQl) 11..,..,.,.., e.r &Id rw .. ,.,., 1 Jet Rocket Hew\ CMYIH) Nl9lll p,_,.,. 11(....,,..) C!Jte 'H ~ ILIOhlml 171 ~I~ ftAC1E ->JO v•rcts. 2 ye., 111 otd\ c1.irn1,. Pvt'wS2400. I 1' Al•UU<n !Mylt'SI "' 13.00 .... 3 00 "' lob\1114or IT-I l.40 UO 111 "llote IW-l 2.IO "' Time -IUJ tl1 Alto A.., -Mr. Cu1e Gvv. 8o1ltr1 ~OORTM ft.\CI -JJOy..-ft. )yNr 01e1s &. up. Cl•lrntno. Punt M.?00. e~. ""'"' Paoe St .. NO$CreCChH Cl•lml"O prlu l l?.500. l.ous t<lm-r lllu!rl 5o11c1·, Roc:ke1 fLIPhlm I hie Fly 8Yt CTrusurel De"' OIYol IAdelrl Dully*~ IClff'hWl .Maori FIW• (flOUOf11 J"'' Jim OeftOv cc,...,-1 11' , .. 171 I" s1 l(Tif ""cc -110 ver·o,. 3 ., .. , ohh & llD. O•lmfrwa. Puna S2, IOO. ~nOfA/19el\ :~ GauchoofYear 11) Ftl'Tlf ""~ -J50v•rd .. 3yur Eileen Connor was o+d\ & uo FllliH & m•rH. Allow~· selected Gaucho of the :;::r ~C:1\ll tRuir> m Year al a recent banquet coco'\ eoov rc.roor•> .1, honoring the Saddleback 11u11vc~10.iom1w1 ,11,! College women's tennis 8tll• Tu rw.,..,1 • C"•·~·c.o 1Lfpt11m1 "' team. L1111er:•ncyA~1K,,'9"t1 1" Other awards: cap. Ruth .a.llC!l IH•rtl 111 uPue.r 1B<001111 "' tain -Vlckle Elliott; 1 .. For1y11;1111.a.111-1 121 most valuable team T••v•11"""w:=E~..;:!""'1 119 player-Tori Reithard; CC:..rdos.11) J.. I 40 ! 60 ttovatOo,._11~1 HO 1.0 Miu oa1i-o... 1u.,._,,., t '° Tlni. -4'..4 AIM rift -Milo I• "<-II Siii\, 1("19M r:lltt, ltlllt MIM'illn. s.w4dy Vl'lt\al'I S<ral<N4 -Ol'o.ti, ~"'"''' Jt1. Olrls , • .,.. Oytl\efeOlt SS ••ACTA ~ .. ....., & •• ., ....... ""*" .... SIVIHTN llACll -.cl Vlf'ft. I .,.., •ICM &. uo. ClasaltlM .ii.w.nce. PurwM.000. Ot<lt'em t"clllrl 1.40 t.eo t 40 Thrtt Oii., len IW.rdl 10 . .0 4 10 Al·s 41111( (Mylt\) UO Tlma -tt ... Aho ran -Rl9•doo.,, SllYtr't ''"'· ttoclltt L.t\lfl<lltt, ,_To 0.. Otc'•ll---HOS<Tet< ... SIOMTN •Ac• -400 ve•d•., .,.., Old\ & "II· Cl-lflt<l lftowen<t. Pllrst M.000. NINTN ... C9 -1'0 yards. J YMr aid\. Clllml"9. ~ U,100. ' Q.ll<lltfl Doti• '""" •.«> ' 40 uo NeY.U ,..., .. l~tal UO 1AO Mldwey R~ IAlll""1> •• 40 Tlme -ILll AIM , .. -Sorw!V Seid. Courll,.,.11>, "' • ..,.. Vtl" Wl"ll. Tlnv'• Rn. Gefl.I• Olllll'-4 N•tcr~ U IXACTA s.ottcllflt O•lt & ~ MeH4• 1tev11. ,.!rid au•.• A lltndlflct -6,011 TE NIS QINICS .. T-wo 11/i '-' ltHW • $6 OSCAU• • •os UC9U11' md SPOaTS c 1714) 546-1560 TRY ONE ON US s I 00 OFF rental prtce with thlaad. Sunset League cham. pion Marina (Huntington Beach) High, behind the no-hit, 14 -strikeout pitching of Diana Mangano, rolled into the second round or the CIF 4-A girls softball playoffs following Thursday's 5·0 victory over visiting Bishop Amat High of La Puente. Mission Viejo won the team championship by a wide margin, scoring 169 points to 78 for runnerup Indio. Cook came through with a surprising 1: 51.14 clocking in the 200-yard freestyle, her best effort by more than three seconds, as she lowered Shirley Babashoff's CIF mark or 1:53.3. Cook also finished second in the 100 free where another national mark was recorded ~Y the winner. Sal Grijalva and Mark Kachelein share most valuable honors on El Toro High's varsity baseball team following the Chargers' sports awards banquet. Special award win· ners: """""'""'o\t 1c ... 001•1 m most improved-Sue AWOT~~,~~~~~ jJfo~h~~~~;~~;;;e~of;~~~e1~1;1;;~~11;;11111,111~,,,,,,,,~··-.. !IXTM ""Cl -S50 Y•rctt 3 yNr year-6ue Steenersen. old\&. uo Allowanc~ Pv~t UlOO. Ml9P1!y0\lr.,tr tc.111 1n And, Santa Ana's Mater Dei, Sunrise League co-champ, ad- vanced when Darlene Ramirez singled with the bases loaded in the ninth inning to get past visiting Covina. 6-5. In 3-A action, San Clemente's Tritons post· ed a 2·1 victory over vis- iting Ne!f (La Mirada) while University High Clrvlne> lost a S-2 de· cision to visiting Anaheim. In 2-A play, Hunt· ington Valley Christian Illgh of Newport Beach was ousted by host Wal nut, 23· l. Mangano, in addition to 14 whiffs. walked none in dominating Bishop /\mat: Marina Is at We st Torrance Saturday. Mater Dei, whic h journies to Katella <Anaheim) Saturday in the second round, got the winning run set up by singles from Kathy Baetts and Michelle Zamora. San Clemente's two runs were scored on back-to-back triples by Mona Bishop and Cindy Furst and an error in the third inning. Tritons pitcher Robin Mooneyham ran her season record to 7·0 with a five-hitter . San Clemente hos t s Los Amigos Saturday. Hum VtlltV f111UIW••- Hunl V•flO-wllllla c, >·0-0.0; Tr1<Y a.nett o. >-0-0.1; aani.n n, l O·O 0, 8uf11"91'11m Ill, ).0.t·O: Ch.sl\lrt If, J-0-().(), l'ovlcl'I cl,> O~; 8•11•r JI>. J.M.0. Hoowr 2tt, ).0.1.0; WI\' rl. 0.0 0.0. l •"' lltrkttl rl, 00~0 ' h • Hun1. Valley 000 OtO 0 • I > ll W•l'WI '111"~•-U U I Ma4w Otl 161 Ill Cl~IM Meter Otl BttH. lb • 1 l O. z...,.ora. If s-0-1~; Fuller. n l 1 to. fl•mtrll. c ~) 2; Arrlol1. cf 4 1 HI; Teylor. 11> ).1.0.0. Wiimot, rl 1 I 0.0 Hebec-er. lb 4.0.t-O: Mlfldo11, 11 .lC>+I. k ..... ..,,11111..,. Browne, one of three CdM sisters swimming in the meet. posted a 4:51.60 in the 5()0.yard freestyle which lowered the CIF mark by more than six seconds. She also finished second to Cook in the 200 with a 1: 51.28 clocking. During the meet. all CIF records were broken with exception of the 100-yard butterfly with rive na· lion al marks erased. Hilger of Mission Viejo was the winner in the 100 backstroke with a S9.S9, good for a CI F stan· dard. lowering her own mark set in the pre- liminaries Tuesday night. Becky McCafferty of Mission Viejo captured thP 100-vard butterfly event in S9.18 while the M~s sion Viejo 400-yard freestyle relay team lowered its own CIF standard with a 3:34.78 docking. The old meet record was 4: 12.85 set in 1976. Cl~ P'IMls 100 _.., _....,._, 11\dto l:SI 11 IC IF rf(.ordl; 1 M l\,lo" Vie lo I SI 1' l. E\Ql'lela l·Sl.U; • S... M.ar1,,., l·i6.01; S L8 WI'-I H ~1 • e .. ,.. 1 · sa.'7 0t11e"· e. c ....... 0e1 Mar I SS .. ;• Unf,,."lly l·H fl 700 lrtt -1 Cooll IE\~nci•I I SI. U CI F record l, 1 A . 8•ow"• ICO'<l"lt .,.I Mar) l 'S129; l. 1(,...,.., Mo\\..,,, Vltlol l ;Sl 14; 4 Pvvuo 11:1 T0<ol t S7•l I K•t....,_ 18...,..•1 I \l 86 6 Wollord fMlr•luttl I ~· '1 Olller s 7 Gll!Mrt IM""'I e .. c,,I ' u 10 •. M 8'-ICdMI I.SS£.!. 11 Fr...,,,... CS... C~ttl 'S.66. 700 f"d "'tdlty-1 JOllft\0" fWal.,\111? o. M •Nd'"""'' '""'d ' 1 Grey IMIUIOfl \11#101 1 o• 41 l Bird 1Mlr•le'\1el 1 O'I 50 • IMll••"d IVlll• P¥lr I ?· 11 '1 S LeUQllll" ll"dlo I ?· 11 "· 6 GclO<Urd ISu""Y Hlllll 1• 14 '3 Oti.to· I 0•111 CU.,1Wr\'1YI 1 11 ,, ' It Hllqtr IMIHiO"I Vlelol 1 110 '.><> lrff-1 Stentl IHH Wlt\Ofl l 11 •o IN•llo,,•I •\'Coro I 1 HI"· dereller CIN!lol U SI J Ott ITu<tonl n .. ; 4 9Nw< ... , •El Toro\ H SA S lllf'90Y'W (Cil...clal\'I H 111 • Johln- -is... Mol~I ,, .. °'""" ,, Oehl IU"4 ... f\lly17So' 100 fly-I. M<c.tlerty IMl\\iOr' V••· lo> s• 11· t. Ae~ IFOO!hllll )• H 3 & ... hi ... fCAlllOrnl•I I 00 10 • Ode"w•ld IE<la,,cl1l I 00 SS, S 818"d f~y P•r~ I I 00.. O Gu~· fNllrlll"llel I 00 ~ O!her\ 11 J 9,_ l(OMI 1 07 IS 100 , __ ,. sc ... ~1 IHH WI"°"' SO U IN1ll0111I •ecordl 1 Co.,• fE"-'•I SI >t-> ~IM< ... r El Twol n 10 • 1(•1te,_ 19119"•1 u 1) s "°''""" •ll•llrt Qwlst1..-1 SO If 6 _.,, ..... IAwi•llO"I ~ M S00 1,... I A 8<-IC..Ofll ckl Oji•• 4 SI .0 CN•llO'l'"I r.cord l, 1 i-yylt-o •El Toro• • H tu J t<••IM• IMl\liDft lllelOI S 11 03 4 EIT .... a--.11 V.w>lty Co mO\I YlllMble Sal Grll•lv• - M•rk l(.chelein, ~I '""'ir•tkln•I: ll•y &yter•: Most l"'9fowd: Johri Lt•lly. J""iw V•rslly ,,,. ..... s.... MO\! V"1111ble: Jack T •r~v. Most lmoroved Alu c.tkle<o.,, Co•cn·~ Aw•r'tl !lol>Mllle< Tr.ell Venlty MO\l llafuablt· Art Gou'°IM; Mo\I lmoroved Trac•: N1 II•" Wle. Mosl tmpro...., Field G•eo w..-~, McKI '"'olraClonal· Len 8ro .. n. Mose v 1l1Wble junior Yctl"\•l v "°" Kem11. ......... Sec>!\ M0\1 V.iu..bfe Andy Olclt; MO\t lmprcoved Trac• 8111 w.a..,r; Mo,1 tml>"Oved Field .-P9•vv: Mo\C ,,.,p1, .. c_.. S<ott B<own. Gett V.n.ty c..,,.,,, and Mo\C Ouhl<tndlno: !>t~v~ P~tf'at.a M O\t fml)i'"OY~O· AO"~ Hot~. Aoo•!ie of the Ye•r: ~rltHu"I.,. * Bruce Anderson (swimming) and Paul Kubas (volleyball) were chosen most valuable Thursday at sports awards banquets at Univ e rsity (Irvine> High. Special awarG win· ners· Deep Sea Fishing So<cer ~ Mlfl\I 4 S•., S 8'111 * '•••d~NI fClerl\~I 1n Af'd fltdWI"" tCMdot•I 11' Wind J•m,.,,.r IRouoh• •n 8tulaf1'5 CJ\lr~ 11(~'9111 I 1 1~ 0t• 01<> l8roooo.f1t•d I 114 Col0rad0Joe7 ID\'IOmbll 11? .... StrttlSam ITrH\ur?I tn El9'1th ""'°"""( IMliO'ttll I Red R0<kleToo 1c-.~cier> ""• llltlllle N•v&d~ Fl~r llriN\urtl Aoo~I PH\ IMvlesl F on dl Mo"I°" IMYlt\ I H••ot Good O•Y ILlll"""'l •11 '" SEVENTW ftACE )50 y,orlf\ 1 .,..r Old\ P\lr..e '7~•0ded. llH! L~o F lrsl Ol•h •Or> E ot•v o~•• Jtt IH•rt I B•nd.., 0...flt fTre..surtl M•MI ~ IWa!\Oll) Mt. T C 1 IU~ml Theirs O•-•cr..,l (All Mt Nock 10.,f~) Pebble J t tl fCa•dOt•I C•lthe Go I Add Ir I Run\llke-atcf\ ICltrl<1.1) AIM 11 .. lbte WI...,,.., W\<l'op\ !Ward I A•lt MeH•9'1 ll•C>tWml "" ''° 110 ''° 11l no no no Ul E IGlfTH ll"Cll -l)O v•rch 1 yur old\ Pur\t \ISOO·•dded Tht LM ~Ofld OlvhlOfl 1(1~•1 IAO.orl C•rter Oe<ktr Jr fCMdOr•l Oe-IH..-tl Twt!tl>e<'\ ~I !Ward) Mr A f..,,. IC>\ Good f Oe!om«MI I 8UQ<tlll\a 11(,..Qhl I Bowf'll• Too IMyl~ I G"mt Ch•roer IW.tl\Or> I C.,.lk Hiii Charm fllllhlml AIH l!llflW. U\UMCDoy t~lrl Mr J.ttr IDoml~I) W"i" &lltt ICMdOt.tl 110 no 113 11) no 111 IU 110 110 lflHTH ftA~ -'400 y.,..,, 3 , • ., ol<I\ & uo c1a1m1no. Pll'1ol uooo Clllml"90tlo ~ Mor> Go'\ Ol.t•Of'• IWM\Ol'l I Mlcl,,ll•Soe<l.111 (Mylt\I Gober Too fR0U9") &o Ot<ll IC,.....rl F•fft 'o.-1uoi..m 1 Tull .-o fOelomt>al ~lu" Oevl! llra.nurtl Sw1.,91119Sllm 1"'4"'1tat•l I" 111 I" 11• 11' 111 I" •n Cycles Vie IMlll•ldf ~SIS 04 .O. • 811<• IAIC• "'"''°°"T 1,.,,·, u..-....1 -> .....,.., s01n Ott.ts 7 Gt•y tM •s· Chito Vassallo was Speedway motorcycles 1>1r• •CvtH U boNIO 111 NH. t sJeft Vi.lelf "0 f "'"Hr•• ,.,.11-•1 .. ,., ,oc1. 1001No-1 .. ,,.., cMIM-v1e1o1 selected Gaucho o the return to the Orange su1. HAOt_-.., ..,,..~ . ., ~.,. "'~ -.c-1 ' "" .,_ Year at Saddleback County Fairgrounds in '°'. ,,., ) ( .. cod ..... -n ICdM I 1 ao" > .. .,..,H fM''''°" .,,o, .. \ io boftlto 1 wnr1 kn.. 1 v1e1e1 Mo .. • ~·"' 1e"""" College's banquet honor· Costa Mesa tonight for m1<~t,..I Shill-<1•1 I OI OJ S 8.,d 1 °"1r•••<t~I ing its swimming team the fourth Wffk With the o""'" -""~ -....... "" ,.. I ., M • 11•..-r •e ...... 1 I 01 11 b.tt• '"°"''° "'""""'·1•ror•be'I' > 0111e" tt En c""°" «Mt<\iO"I 111•101 recently. 20-event program get. ,...,...... 1·001. Other awards in· Ung under way at 8 SAN "•ott0 ,...,. 'O c:.t111 -" tOO •-1-1. HIM•"""'' rtl\4101 eluded·. tri-capta1'ns -1 ........ ,. 1)6 <•'<• ""'· , l'MallllUt, '·°' eo C'Netl-1 r.-orol. 1 JOr>MOn o'c ock. m" s.. 1.e.,..,.., -.. ...,..,,. 1 1~u1,.u11 • 01.10. ' &tut•11m Jeff Myers, Steve Kitch Alan Christian of Hunt· ~11-1•11 • WTac...,.,,., uuco '°"•'""1111109., •• "'""""111o11' and Dave Batchelor.· h ill be t 111" 1s """'"' "°" v ttf01 1 ~ n : s z.,...,,.b.,. IMI\ lngton Beac w ou LONOH•o.1 .. ._.,.~1 -11 ,1o<1v1eio11·0-o:~e"'°"'A"°"" most valuable team toreoeathisnarrowvic· •n11••" 10'1 c•ll<O IM" (OuMfl'I dol I . 10.0• Olllt•\ ' W•rd rlayer-Vassallo,· most •-ry over four.time na· Wll1rll -o -''" 'waacudl i. IUl'IW91'\.,.,l l:tt tl "' bon••o ••c•1ko1" 'O...,dw•'· 10 * .,.. ,..,..,_,, M'""'" vi.to mp roved -Dave Uonal champion Mike r·oo cod J•,. ,. fCIF r"KO"dl; 1 HH WlllOfl Mil h ki of the B In th t h i M"'""" oc1. .-.v _ • _,.''"' > >• n : ,. u Toro 1·•0.u : •· osc ; roo e a11t e Sera c man no roo Cod. '° r.., ,.._. 'cow ""°".-Oell'I ,.O .D ; s. lM All<l'I year-nm Meia. event. cod J bl\\. I ... llbul l ' 46 J1; 6 ""1lfl > ... n. O!llef'\· ti ------------------------°'"" 01100 IMlll'IC ... I ~l --S." (1--.tt)·fUS. •"Oltr\• I ,,. .,.11ow1111. .. ..... Telf'I\ K_,. I Ml\Slon VltfO IM; -----------------------.., ta<llCte. Jl4_.... ! lrMllO 11; ).. 11141 Es'""Cll IM MAl.18U ...... -61 ~: nt WllMfl IH«ltftN He~\\ 7S; S . rou cod.•"''"""·• Mf'tl NH, •• Mlralffle 72; • El TMo 11; 7. eor-roc~ bl''-'llflllcOd. dtlM••f7:• S.-yHlll\SJ. r -•------------------------Covina 001 IOO >00-S • 0 ------------------------, M•I.,. o.4 ot1 110 001.-. ti • ,,_........ m •1 ..._AIMt M•rlN-4rvlt1. H ~; 8r•MY, rt )-0.0.t; NuOtr, tt ).C 1.0; I!~. cl ).M.0; Wiii'-. lb M~. 9odlt, 71> >•H: ~r. ~ J.1 I !I I.~, c 1-0.0.l;~.ol-0-1·1 Sar9.., ,,..,,... r II t 8iU.OO Amtt 000 000 0-0 0 4 Marl,.. 010 JIO 'l S S 0 AMtltl"' 161111 Uf'twnlly Unl""'ty-Tho~. 11> 4-()..0.0; Wlf-lt. If ~!I; 5-n<her, < 341.0; WllH1m,, 31> o 3-1 1-0. Huber, n J..0.0-0: tlc~lfo\lcine. rl J 0 0. I, Con Ml· ly,(1).().1.0: ..... "".1b3-o.l.O. Gold,. p I · 1·1.0; °'"""'· 3b 7.0.0.0. Seen .., I ""11191 r II t Anehelm 006 000 C>-6 4 2 Unlwrslty 010 100 O-t 7 2 1e11~· mm ..... • Sift Clemtnlt-O•lllstrom If, ~ l-0+0! ...,,t n . 3.Q.1.0; GllllQ<tfl t, a-o.o-o; "'1W ri, M-0-0; MooMyl\em o. l ·•'"I Wllllem•tn 211, 2.0-0 O; 81\1\oo 1-. 1'1-1.0; Fvnl Jb, M ·l·I; llollcltf.~;O•M199nd,t-O+o. SW..., 1Nllft9• , " . 000 010 0-1 s t 001000• •1 TheGa~has Roomier Levi~. At last. The latest style Levi's• jeans. But with a roomier seat and thighs. They're called Levi's for Men. And we've got a ton of 'em. Sizes 34 to 42. l · 1 UI~ COITA ~ to.ltl CoHt Pleu LOI ..... 11, I~ 8'oectwey a flt! NOllTI IUDCll. 11171 NordlMiff llrMt CANOGA 'MK.11nt V•MMH NNTA~WlllNr•&Dt 'MAOlllM.t ........ ~ wan•~w.....,...., .. . . i I ! Summer StClCk of 530i's I I ' Just Arrived. All Colors & Options. Immediate Deltvery. 1S40JAMBOREE RO .• NEWPORT CENTER NEWPORT BEAClf. CA. 92660 714-~ FOOTBALL SIGN -UPS Jr. All American Youth Football Boys' Ages 8 thru 13 Years Old 18 BY DEC. 2 , 19771 • . FULL EQUIPMENT, TACKLE FOOTBALL EVERY BOY PLAYS IN EVERY GAME C.l.F. REFEREES FOR EVERY GAM E BOYS LEARN THE BASIC FUNDAMENTALS OF THE PROPER WAY TO PLAY FOOTBALL • FOR INFORMA TIOM ON SIGNING UP CAU THES15 NUMBERS IN YOUR AREA: COSTA MESA -751-2855 FOUNTAIN VALLEY -531-7233 NEWPORT BEACH -675-11611644-1210 SOUlH HUNT. BEACH -961-3851/536-0423 SOUTH CWT. -&61if751 ' DAILY PILOT Friday. M!y 27, 1077 Holiday Regattas Skited '77 CAMARO LEASE •77 EL CAMINO By ALMON LOCK.ABEY o.llY ~Ii.I ....... Wri~ BOATING Memorial Day regattas from San Diego to San· ta Barbara will keep sailors and powerboalers waterborne during the three-day weekend which of· f1cially rnarks the beginning of the summer yachl- mg season. Action on the local front is light with only two regattas scheduled, but many or the yachtsmen will be competing in major events outside the area. It's Staggering Me~ured Start for La Paz Race? :. Newport Harbor Yacht Club's use !•of the ·'staggered start" in the Cabo .. San Lucas race may have started a : trend in medium distance yacht rac· : ing. ! The Long Beach Yacht Club has an· • nounced that at will use the staggered : start as one means or salvaging its ! l,OOO·mile La Paz race next October. "The once popular biennial race was : almost scuttled two years ago when : only five boats participated. But the main feature in re· ~. viving the La Paz race will be the in· -;; auguratlon of what LBYC chooses to ~an the Sea of Cortes Series in which ~one race will involve the taking of ~el apsed times as the yachts round a ~ mark at Cabo San Lucas while conli· :.: nuing on their way to La Paz. .r . ·: ALSO TO STIR intcrclit in the ::-race, LBYC has opened it up to yachts .cated under the Performance Han- dicap Racing Fleet as well as the In· ternat.ional Offshore Rule ratings. Hospital Opens LOS ANGELES CAP) -Holy Cross Hospital, the San Fernando Valley's new earth · quake-proof hospital, has opened doors to pa· tients six years after the original structure was devastated by the 1971 Sylmar quake. The S21 million four-story facili- ty was des igned to withstand an earthquake of more than 8 on the Richter Sc all'. Coa•tal 1t'eada~r General chairman Bob Graham said the race committee would review the PHRF ratings prior to the start and may make adjustments to improve the quality of the ratings based on wind conditions encountered in the race. In addition to the original La Paz trophies. a new ~ea ot Cortes perpetual trophy will be dedicated re· cognizing the overall winners of the IOR. PHRF and first-to-finish fleet. GRAHAM SAID THE slower half of the fleet or classes will start Satur· day. Oct. 22 and the other half will start the next day. ·'The staggered start should equalize the wind conditions encoun· tered in rounding Cabo San Lucas and beating up the inside of the gulf to La Paz," said Graham. "It should also bring the fleet together during the lat· ter part of the race and at the finish.'' Questions and s uggestions regard· ing the race should be addressed to the Race Committee, Long Beach Yacht Club, 6201 Appian Way, Long Beach, CA. 90803. Low rl'11H11n4'\' lnrrt ;\\tn'l "'"" be,.om1nq rnorr ,. "'"n''"" ll'W\Jt')hl throuqh m1c1 '"4'>t ntnq \Aturd.\'f (0'9\fdl t1tm.,.,..ft4tVtl'\ Will r,tl'\t\,. betwtJJ~" 66 to 70 lnt~twt trmf°l'J"'rAfU'fl"• wlll r ~n~ bl'l-f'n 76 In l!O l "" "''"~' l~m~«llV'~ Wtll I)" 61 Its the most versatile vehicle you II ever own Station wagon. motorhome, economy car And since t s mounted on a Toyota chassis the operating costs Ntll be a fraction of what you might e11pect' AS\.OW AS Sun, Moon, Tide• s 122s2 CH/NOD~ S"" Moon Tlcl•• TOOAY .$1Korid '""' I ~I> "' $econc1 11111n " ~\ o " SATUROAY ''"' ""l" ~ 16" "' ''"''tow ' 04n m 'Se<on<I 1111111 • • 1 o m ,_..M~ 'I t~t)"! ,......., ~ ._....., 1'} ""'ll'Y'l'M Of>;,,.,,-.fW't pr ft 4 I AA.,, 44 f\ol •-"•"? '"'•"l' ..... .,,.... ., . .\ """',.. -.~ '' ,~,.._ 'tf•C::aV\O"' .-''"'-.0f'l4•"'t •••A -c 04C <,1• ·~~ S.-. 1<!"'2-~'\71 Sun rl\f"\ \ ,u ' m '"'' J >1n,,, Moon tlV'i11 "'""' ,..,, 1 \4 1 m Suri Re>pori Wuntl~1of'\ ""'" N•wr>ort hf"•'"'''"' W•Vf'\ two lo tr>ur f~ft w tlh tl '\oOIJf~t 1\y \Wttll (l)nc:J1t1ont. t ur 11UM-SALE11 OM CAMP7 The ri5rng wholesal1> price of goose and duck down has forced most manulacturer5 of down gear to raise their prices 20·50% ,.. ... """"-SLEEPING BAGS Although the once o f Camp 7 oroducts r05e as of Aortl 15. we AHO s1111 o ffe< all Camo 7 gear at D Owa..J !tie 0 10 onces However we must " raise our onces attar June 15 This is your last chance to buy Camp 7 CLOTHING bags. vests and parkas at these or1ces1 And now lhe good news We have discounted wool 5weaters P1ve1ta 8 boots and certain tents. packs. and accessories by 10-1. REMTALPACKS (Used) $2Sfo $35! .. 2700 WIST COAST HtGHW A Y MEWPOIT ltACH 642.allS IJU IASTM maT •B.MOMT SHOaes 14M741 2411 I LA~tM.UMAU. • LAGUMAHIU.S 511-4111 .. Bahia Corinthian Yacht Club h invtted five classes of rag sailors to CGnpete in tts annual In· vitaUonal Memorial Day regatta for E~be1Js·22s, Soling.a, P·Cats, Lido-145 and Lasers. DANA POINT WILL BE the focus of two events -a coastal race from Marina del Rey lo Dana Point for ocean-racing types and a Memorial Day regatta (or small classes. Huntington Harbour Yacht Club will be host lo powerboaters with its annual Easter Catalina Predicted Log race which starts today in a race to Avalon and ends with a race home Monday. The big event for powerboaters will be the Craig Trophy race ror one of the m05t coveted pre· dieted log kudos in the United States. The first leg or the race will start today from Long Beach with the power cruisers headed ror San Diego. The second leg is from San Diego to Long Beach on Monday with both legs counting toward the trophy. The event is sponsored by Long Beach Yacht Club MAJOR EVENTS FOR sailboaters will be Los Angeles Yacht Club's ChaJlDel Islands race Satur· day and Sunday; a Pacific Ocean Racing Con· rerence CPO RC) day race out of Del Rey Yacht Club on Saturday, followed by the start or a California Yacht Club sponsored race from Marina del Rey to Bahia Corinthian Yacht Club at Newport Beach. ' Southern California Yachting Association calendar: l't 6CYL Join us . in a «Love Affair'' asa~r or a partiapant. Announcing the•20,000 USfA National Husband/Wife ChaQW.Wnshipit, June 20•26. 1977. at the john Wayne Tennis Club. May the best marriage win. Rt...,(l""I !\" \,)11.•ht111 ·~ H .. u11.J, ~·.11> '-«al• ,,lmt" \l1•n lun,. .C0 ~ I r,.1 s ! 1\' 'Un· J,,._ . .., luru. ! l ' I .,_, ' ! l\' \\, ,J lune~~ ' I >0 -::. l (\' l II\' lhurlunt'21 :5 I Si.1 s 2 l\' 't.at< . 71 R,,unJ ,,j \c-, h1 fl1J11 lun.: :.i ) \ ~., ~ ~ (\' 'c·1.J U> \'OUI Chtt l p.i\·3bk 10 l·n I Sr-:htl June :~ ... I ;.1 ~ ~ l\.' (\\IC Lui~ Att•u \..'lu.ln~r hn.1J, Amoun1 ~or charted ~a1 June ZS ~ 5<A.L :> 7 ,.,, BJnlAmmcatd t Sc:nu ·\ & foul, !:>un. )unt' !ci s 5(\) ~ 7 5(1 "11:NCu T<><01I Vat...., SBl\1-SHN 0 \\~ ,.'t'IUIJ liu ro pl..y. c:ncloo.d .. °"' :;...i~T1Ckt1' ~ tn<ry tee: • t~lf t<'C'Mt~I .;,1sro $!~ \:\' 1\-n. fn• Ch1ld1cm \'1ILI).~ l'::. A ~.J' John \\'ori·nie Trnni~ Club • " ~ 1171 ~mbortt Road. Newport Beach,California 9l660. (714) 644·1171. SE. --------- It's just good common sense to want great gas mileage these days. But there are more economies built into these Toyota trucks than just what you'll save at the gas pump. 5 Toyota trucks have a transistorized igni, tion system for dependable starting. Value. It makes sense to buy a truck that'll hold its value. Owning a ioyota is like money in the bank. Because Toyotas have traditionally high resale value. Dunabhlty. II makes sense to buy a truck that'll hold up. Toyotas are built. to last. That's why you see so many older Toyota trucks still in service. Ret._.,.ltty. It makes sense to buy a truck you can depend on. Toyota built its reputa· tion with reliable vehicles. For example, all •These California EPA results with manual transmission are estimates. The actual mileage you get will vary depending on your driving habits and ~our truck's oondi· tion and equipment. .. EEKENDER Arts /Di0in9 Out Entertainment 'Superstar' • By JACKIE HYMAN Ol 01e D•llY Piiot St•fl A hlstorical opera that was never meant to be staged hardly seems like a popular proJect for a college campus. But Crom its nativity as an a lbum through its Broadway pro- duction to its upcoming presenta- tion at Orange Coast College, "Jesus Christ Superstar" has lost none of its appeal, according to director Thomas Bradac. MUSIC director Steven Jay Wa rner said he believes the OCC presentation will have freshness a nd originality, despite students' familiarity with other produc· lions. · "They're putting their own in· tcrpretation into the numbers.·· Warner said. "A lot of the time when musicals a rc done, people tend lo imitate, but they (cast members) are not." • l . .. Bradac said one reason for Passengers prepare for a roller-coaster style ride at Space Mountain (above). Summer activities at Disneyland will also include the Main Street Electrical Parade. debuting June 18. choosing "Superstar'·' was that it hasn't been given a college-level production locally He cited two high school productions -he directed one himself at Newport Harbor High School two years ago -and one at the Fullerton Civic Light Opera One reason for the paucity of production~ may be the d1fftcult} of staging "Superstar " There are 40 cast members at OCC and ··we auditioned over 150," Warner said. "We tried to get the strongest singers that we could." WARNER AND Bradac said the production required an un· usually long rehearsal period, about six weeks of musical re- hearsals followed by s even weeks of choreography and stag- ing. Just sorting out which direc- tor was responsible for what was complicated "My job is basically concept," Bradac said. ·'Going more to the Visits historical than to the religious, for example, and the visuaJiza· tion that we will present on stage. Melinda <Moreno. a professional ch oreographer 1 helps to inte· grate my conct'pt into her choreography.·' Meanwhile, Warner and his as· sistant. University of Southern California student Gary Ellis. are working with an or chestra of about 12 players, including such instruments as a :.lring syn- thesizer. piano. organ. drums. lead and bass guitar, woodwinds and brass. "We usually don't step on each othe r s· toes, .. Bradac ~aid . However. he said things will get a bit hectic right before the open· ing, June 7, since the cast will have only three rehearsals on the OCC Auditorium stage BUT THE TECHNICAL pro· blems haven 't obscured -the philosophical r equirements of presenting a story about s uch a Bradley Elsberry as Jesus (left) is besieged by his followers, who include Beth Hansen (right) as Mary Magdalene, in 'Jesus Christ Superstar' at OGG Coast central religious figurt'. "We're not trying to deal with this but lo take what Rice and Webber <composers Tim Rice and Andrew Lloyd Webber) have interpreted," Bradac said. H e said he believes that opera's point is "that this <Jesus> is a man who was trying to initiate change. Judas has been looked at as the villain, but Webber and Rice make him as much a victim as Christ. "BASICALLY JUDAS says we're getting away from our cause and calling you (Jes us ) a god on earth. Judas questions that," Bradac said. The role of Jesus will be played by Bradley Elsberry. with Michael Soto as Judas and Beth Hansen as Mary Magdalene. Other leading roles will be played by Cary Miller, J im Fletcher, J oseph M. Collins, Richard Kleber, Kevin Duffis. David Kent, Cynthia Wenner and Friday, May 27, 1977 Kim Hill. Additional apostles are portrayed by Rene Gubem1ck, Brian DeLapp, Rick Millikan, Duane McDonald, Ri c hard Greeley, Brian Fields, Pal Llpot, Ha rry Fitzner and Michael Barnes. "Jesus Christ Superstar'' will play at 8 p.m. June 7-9 and 11 and at 2:30 p.m. June JO in the OCC Auditorium, 2701 Fairview Road, Costa Mesa. At Lion Count ry, Knott's, Disneyland OAILYPtLOT Tickets arc $2 evenings, $1 matinee, and can be reserved by calling 556-5527 or by sending a c heck and a self-addressed. stamped envelope to Superstar Tickets at the college, zip 9262fJ. Tickets may also be purchased~ the box office, noon to 4 p.m. weekdays. Designers for the production are Jeffrey M. Koppe, set~· Stanley Tudor , costumes, a~ Dean Alexander, lighting. Special Shows Start Summer Tht end of May signals the beginning of summ er plans and schedules for Orange Count~ amusement and theme parks, with special events under way lo· day through Monday ( Memonal1 Day> al Dis neyland. Knoll's Berry Farm and Lion Country Safari At Lion Country. "Born Frt'e Expo '77" will h<' held Saturday. Sunday and Monday to raise funds for the Elsa Wild Ammal Appeal. which protects en dangered and threatened species. Arts. crafts, s pecial entertain · mcnt and personal appearances by television and film celebrities will be featured at the park, 8800 Moult.on Parkway, Laguna Hills. In addition, beginning June l , hours will be extended. The last car admitted into th~ wildlife preserve will be at 6 p.m. instead of the current 5 p.m .. and the Safari Camp e nte rtainment center will also close one hour later, at 7:30 p.m . Opening time is 9 a.m. every day, regardless of weather, with admission $4 .95 for adults and $2.95 (or children 3-11. MEANWIDLE JN Buena Park. Cajun fiddler Doug Kershaw kicks off Knoll's Berry Farm's sum mer entertainment. He will perform at 6 :30, 9:30 and 11 o'clock tonight through Sunday and 3:30, 6:30 and 8 p.m. Mon · day. Singer Jody Miller wtll be on stage at 3:30, 5 and 8 o'clock lo· day through Sunday, and 12.30, 2 and5p.m . Monday. Extended Knoll's hours this weekend arc 10 a .m. to 1 ~.m . lo· day, 9 a.m. to 1 a.m. Sa'turday and Sunday and 9 a.m. to 10 p.m. Monday. Admission of $4.75 adults and $3.75 children 3·11 in· eludes enterta'i'nment but not rides. 1 On June 10, Knottls will open a new ice show. "California - That's Entertainment," starring Country ltdd/er Doug Kershaw, along with singer Jody Mil/er, will perform at Knott's Berry Farm this weekend. Cathy Steele and Willy Bielak. Shows will be given four limes daily except Friday. In nearby Anaheim, today marked the official dedication of the new Space Mountain attrac- tion and its support facilities. The attraction, similar to a popular s pace ride at Disney World in Florida, has futuristic spires 118 feet high , a new landmark in Tomorrowland. Inside. "astronauts" board special rockets for a journey through the whirling galaxies of outer space. During the roller· coaster-type ride, visitors elso encounter a threatening meteor shower and other special e(fects. I N ADDITION, the Space Moun"tain complex includes Space Place, a 650-seat restaurant, plus a 1,000-seat am- phitheater a nd the Starcade, an arcade with electronic games. Opening in coQJunction with Space Mo untain is the PeopleMover attraction, pre- sented by Goodyear. It features an elevated acenJctour ofTomor· rowland and passes through the new Superspeed Tunnel, which produces t h e sensa tion o( tremendous speed. Then, be11nning June 18, aum- ' m er activities at Disneyland w be in full swing. Nighttime en tainment will be highlighted by new version of the Main Str Electrical Parad<?, each-nlght 9and11. Among the new effects will an underwater illusion and n lights in the shape or Disney c loon characters. Following the p m . parade, ''Fantasy in th Sky" fireworks will be launch above the Sleeping Beauty Ca tie. The show feature pyrotechnics from througho the world and is accompanied b appropriate music. U P COMING TRIS sum will be Buddy Rich and bis Kille Force, June 18-25; the Duke !:It; ington Orchestra, June 26-July~ Les Brown and His Band ot1 Renown, July 3-9; Louie BeJ1! and the Big Band Explosion, Jul 10-1$, and Freddy Martin and m.' ·Orchestra, July 17-23. Houn Jwie 18-Scpt. 10 wtu be a .m . to 1 a .m . d ally at ore neyland. Today's hours tre a .m . to 7 p.m .; an Saturda through June 3, 8 a .m. to 7 p.tn AdJnls.Slon of ~ adults and children Includes Ote parade enterl,alnmcnt but not rides. • > .~ ,. . .. Love l's. News Plwtos Slww Life at Home· EMMET GOWIN PHOTOGRAPHS -0( home Jile and lhc South, Thursday through July 3 at Susan Spirit us Gallery. 3336 Via Lido, Newport Beach. Reception 7 to 9 p.m. Thursday.11 a.m . to 5 p.m. daily except Mondays. Free. URUGUAYAN WATERCOLORS -By Luis Sarubbi, Sunday afternoon at Lido Village, Newport Boulevard at Via Lldo, Newport Beach. Free. ART TALK -And slide demonstration by Karen Carson on her own work, noon Tuesday in Orange Coast College Fine Arts Hall 116, 2701 Fairview Road, Costa Mesa . Free. PHOTO SHOW -Works by instructor Brian 1 Miller, now through June 10 m Orange Coast Galleries I Exhibits ~andy ~lliot . <center) .has the sinking feel· ing shes losing her f1ance, Steve DeNaut' (left) to his job as a newspaper reporter. George Wood s plays his crusty managing editor in the comedy "The Front Page,'' which will run at May 31-June 18 at the Laguna Moulton Playhouse, 494-0743. College Photo Gallery in the Fine Arts Building, 2701 Fairview Road, Costa Mesa. 8 a.m. to 5 p.m . weekdays. Free. STUDENT EXJUBIT -Photo-realist paintings, clay constructions and other works, now through June 14 in Santa Ana College Humanities Build- ing, room C-101, 17th at Bristol Street. 11 a .m . to 3 p.m. Mondays-Thurs days; 10 a.m . to l p.m. Fridays; 7 to 9 p.m . Tuesdays-Thursdays. Free. Film Explores Hawaii Dick Clark narrates ''Hawaii: In Conquest or the Sea" Saturday at 8 p.m . on KTTV, Channel 11. DARRYL CURRAN PHOTOS -Tues day through June 2·1 at BC Space, 235 Forest Ave .• Laguna Beach. 9 a m . to 5 pm. weekdays. Free. Underwate r explorer /photographer Bruno VailaU leads an expedition into uncharted waters offthe Hawaiian Islands, braving the South Point where currents, rough seas and sharks have kept divers away for centuries. PAINTINGS -Ry Path Alexakis, Tuesday through June 4 al UC Irvine Graduate Gallery. Noon to5 p.m. dally The special is climaxed by a 1600 foot d ive (in a diving bell) in search of precious pink coral, recording the exploits of coral divers who sub· merge300feet. ·so RN FREE EXP0'77' -.\rts, crafts, plus en- tertainment. Saturday, Sunday and Monday at Lion Country Safari. 8800 Moulton Parkway, Laguna Hills. Bcncf1h Elsa Wild Animal Appeal. 9 a.m . to 5 p.m. S.l 95 adults, S2.95 children 3-11, includes drive throu!!h \\ 1ldlire preser\'e The Arts in Brief Star Trek Meet Slated A Star Trek convention, featur· ing pcrson:tl appearances by William Shatner, DeForest Kelly a nd several science fi ction writers. will be held from 10 a.m . to 10 p.m. June 18-19 al the Los Angeles Convention Center. Admission is $10 pe r adult for both days or $7.50 fo r one day, E.50 per child for two days and $5 r one day. Tickets are availa- e at Tickctron. Disco on thP Sea Disco on the Sc.1, a 9 p.m . to l a .m . cruise departing from Queen 's Way Landin~. Long Beach, will begin operating June 3. The lhrce-d('('ker ship can carry up to ~'°° rwrsons :md will J eaturc disco d:rnr1ng Cru1s<.'s ~are plannc<l on Junt' 3, 10, 17 :md ~4 and J1tly 8. T1 rkl'ls are ~ pf'r person or $10 per couple and :Jrc av ailablt' through Liberty, Mutual <Jnd Walllchs a~enC'1t's Information may be o btained b) calling (213 ) 27G 4810 .tlorem~t M'orluhop quing his films which begins June 12 al Cal State Fullerton. O'Brien will discuss his work during the last session of the seven-week class Additional JO· formation may be obta ined by calling 870-2611 Magic 1tlountain Hour• Beginning Saturday, Magic Mountain 111 Valencia 1north or Hollywood J will be open every day durin~ the sum mer. flours this weekend. 1ncludmg ~tonda}, are 9 a.m to midnight I lour ... other" 1sc "',11be9 a m to 6 pm ""eekdays and 9 a m to m1dru~ht weekends. with <.um mer hour.. of 9 a m tn m1dniJ:ht bl'~inmng June 11 tf1c.deul .l11ditioru Aud1t1ons will he' held nt·~t week for tht' Santiago Commum- t \ Pla)l'r:..· upC"omin~ pro<lut'l1on of thl• musu:al .. Onc'L' l'pon a M attres::.. · scheduled for mid July Tryout!, "111 ht' held from 7 to 10 JO p m Wednesday arnl Thursday at \'ilia Park H1 ~h SC'hool. 18042 Taft An . \'111.1 Park. Room 301 The Spinners and !'i atalic Cole will highlight the first night, with Glad)s Knight and t he Pips and Lou R;,1\1.ls, plus Tavares and \\'1ld Cht•rry. the scconJ night Tickets ar c $7.50·S9.50 and m ay be purchased at Sl'ars. W drds. Broad" ay Stor e::. and T1ckc·t10n. Or<-hf"~t ra JubilPP A mu~1c.il s.1Jute to ~1ur1•11 Ehz.ibcth "111 be a h11!hh~ht 11! t h <.' J u n 1 or Ph 1 I h a r m • 1 n 1 t• Orc•ht-slra's Ruh\ .lubill··· cl'ldll Jl1un .118 p m junl· 71111111· Sn11t1:-h R1t1• Auditor urn 111 1.o-. ,\ni.:<·le'> .la< k1t• l'oop1 1 "tll tw m a~ll·r of l·crcrn1i.111·, Fn•e t1 <'l-l'l<; :Jrl' ,1\ ail.1hl1· I" c;end1ng ::i .... If .irld1 ........ , d ~lumped <·n,·l'lnp1· 111 1!>t• "' l'hl·~lra .11 R~Jl \\' 'l l11rd '-'t. l.o.., :\ ngl'll'S. (',\ !.KX~IX Tournament Tour• The P::is aden;i Tournamc·nt of R o~es Associat ion 's head - quartt•rs. thf' former William Wri ~ll·y .Jr Mans ion, "'ill be open to lh£' public from 2 to 4 p.m. Cd<'h Wednesday afternoon now throu~h September . Admission is frN• at the house . 391 S. Orange Grove Bl vd .. Pasadena. lnd1Vlduals need no reserva- tions. For groups, contact (213) Aired Guest Leader Noted trumpeter Rafael Mendez will be one of three guest conductors at 8 o'clock tonight when the Golden West College Symphonic Band presents a free concert in the campus theater, 15744 Golden West St .. HWltington Beach (off Gothard Street parking Jot). ,~L~' 2e MILES ACROSS THE BLUE PACIFIC~ f!EaAVAlDCS DAIL'! CRUISES YEAR·ROUND \!I ~emoN· ()( '"Box 1948 S.n Pedro, Ca. 90733 (714) 527-7111 .J \\ 1"'''' ,., .. Ii\ th •Ith"'°" oer M•lt<' C•rJM'i.. ~ 111•ttf"f ""'''' •·•• '''"' ... ''""'n .. , \O• ~rnH• la our lniqut' t ,, .. 1, u .. .1m .,.I rt rt"""'•""· and )OU"" lit okl E•ropf. t I ,,,.,. ,.,, 111 I 1 t t,, _..,. ttn th.-lr1p TMTf' Oft ttw-frtt, •• 11"t , .. "' 1 .. , •\ ... u •wl1ful h .-cht.ap"" b_, lt•<hard l"t\H'llt•n \1.wJ '"'•I .-i.t v~1ntf'oft.!tit)t'U~)~O. • ''•&i+t.llt i..1... ' 1t rph ••. , J\ ... 11 ;n rr~arb f "o", • •rlt\h ... , ""''''''''~•fl t1ftl!Al11r \A-•r fl"tl,.,., •"·t Jto111oi ,. '""'" , ' 111 H1U h11n-.1ni:: tu~k mr'mOrlt-i of .. , ~ lfffll '"·' lh \ult. Uloi ,., ,, ....... ,M,U fl'tlMHrd. and no tip· l"UI llliA'• Coming Hut Wfflc Grand Op•nlftCJ Our "A.II M•w" Country H•alth Food Stonl Walt 'tfl you Sff this opttation! TUM Jn K.F.W.B. for afl HM "frff" Grand OPflting SpKJals. The Dance and Movement W o rks h op fo r Caldorn1J educators will be held Aug 7 18 at Chapman College in Orange The program brings teachers and profess ionals togeth<>r in special courses. Additional In· formation 1s available from G. \Velherill, Director, O r ange l)nlfied School District, 370 N. ~Hassell St .. Orange, CA 92667. Thost• .1ud 1t1on1ng -.hould pr1• pan• :.i ballarl .rnd .in up t<•mpo :-on~ An .wC"omp~1n1 ... 1 \!.Ill lw prt1\ 1rlrd Tl.tnrf'r<. shoultl "c•Jr .ippropnalt' 1 l11th111..: For .1dd1 t1onal inform.ttt•IO, t.111 6.17 1383 nr 997-341/l 449 1100or (213 )681-3724. Of"IHALL ._,H•Course • A special a ppN1rancc by film actor Pnt O'Oricn Is scheduled during an extension course cnt1· .fMltcl Sh19.-r• ~-•--.:-if DAY SUH. & MOH. ~•pea re .. .... MlMOltlAL DAY1 ~ , ... w ... Twelve rilms of Shakespeare 7 to 6 P.lft. ~Gl\ = plays .,.,;11 be shown this summer c-... an conJunCtion with the San Diego BIG ORANGE SALE . ~·' "":':..."" National Shak'espeare Theater. Wortd's Flft"t "'Our Rowr Shop Films will be shown at 2 p.m. r----R•llf:1•ril-----, r-----((111J:Z•I1.J----, Fridays, Saturdays, Sundays and I TU.AS JUICY • 11 GIAHT SJH I Mondays b(•ginnlng June 3 at 1 1 SWHT 1 1 1 1 CHINA MUMS t 1 Ken Cinema, 4061 Adams Ave. The Spinnt>rs. l.011 Hawls and Johnny Taylor ""I JOln other lop performer.> m th<> 1977 Thml An nu:tl San Oit·~o Kool J.111 Festival. Junf' lO and 1 I .11 7 :10 p.m. in San Die~0Stac11um --~~~~~·~~~~~~~~'--~~~ --------· I ORANGES 11 $2 99 I Entertainment Happenings ..• FU ma Theater Dance Televlalon In the MOVIE RA11N08 FOR fMEN1B AND 'ttlUNO PEDPlE Ml AC«I Mlllfnt ,_.,~·--- ·~- ® • "" ""' '' •mtt ........ 1....,. • .., "'"',."'"''' .... w ... "-., ... """ .... .......... o "" ... .............. ., .. , ........ J81N RYAN FftSHIGNS 148 Fashion Island Nrwport Beaclt (at1o.1 /•o,,. tit# 81<*•y) 7141759 0506 I I 0 s I 00 I I .~ I . 1~ I Lbt I I O••-•L I t:;;;, I · I I llMCIC I . ..-: • I Ul'lllt t 0 Un. I I Limit 2 I I Wlltl C~ I I Wlltt C I ·---------------' , ________ O!!f,.!'!. ___ .J If You Shop H-!ft Our D ... • ..... D.,t. 1-----{(1}IJ;.l1J1l-----· r-----((lllf:ll•TJJ-----. 1 Y•'I h........, wttti Ow-11 "0Ui OWH" 1 : NISH SQUHllD I l FRESH DA TES : t ORANGE JUICE It '6 9c t : 59c II ,.. : I Q9arf 11 Pa.d I t UWtJ It l.Wt2Lk I 1 wi11t c~ 11 wi11t e 1 '---------------' '--------~~----1 7f' ldl.. "' Mott Sforfl "' Ow Healttl Food Stor. .. -----(ft11Jil•J1t----..,r----1.1.•lll;4•11t----, I OUR FAMOUS I• LHM LOCAL I 1 caav HEARTS 1 I v•LBQA 1 : I OIAMCHS I I 3 IM A 25c il 1:0 SI 00 l I IUHCH It ,_. I I u.lt J lcltt. I 1 LWt to Lk I Wiil c..,... , • 1 Wffll c.,.. ' l--------------~~--------------~ COUPOMS DPIH THURS.. .ftlMI 2. t t77 ~-L --.... ~ J.:: J ;. -> •• > · • • • • • • IJ([ PUBLIC AUCTION I DAY ONLY SUNDAY, MAY 29th Preview • I 0 CLM. • 2 p.m. Auction • 2 P·"'· • Promptly • DUJ.BS & 'UIUC IHVITID COME EARLY· HO RESERVATIOMS • GEORGE J . KROH!. UCIEMSB> & IOHDED AUCTIOMEERS. HAVE IEIH COMMJSSIOHl!:O IY DIEALlllS AHD 'RIV.ATE PARTIES, TO DISPOSE OF AT PUILIC AUCTIOH: • ORIENT AL RUGS • Large selection of hand made oriental r\Jgs from Chlria. Persia. India. and Pakistan. From private parties and dealers • LOUIS IC ARTS • Also one of the large~ exhibitions from a private collection. Original signed etching and oils by Louis lcarts. 1911-1953. •EST ATE JEWELRY• Also featuring a worldwide collection of estate and ant1Que diamond and precious gem Jewelry. The newest creations out of Europe, 111 diamonds. emeralds. sapphires rubies. opals. and 1ade, 1n nngs. bracelets and pendants SALE TO IE HELD AT: M•wperi IHclt Ms-riot Hotel too M....,,.+ e~ Dn•• H•wp«i IHch C.itf. 92660 Sol°" C of Ht. Poclfk Iott Room PLEASE CAU FOR IHFORMATIOM: (213) 990.0360 • (213) 872·1I03 • CELEBRITIES • ENTERTAINMENT • PRIZES • EXHIBITS • GAMES • •• AND soo ACRES OF FUN I Memorial Day Weekend May 28-29-30 Lion Country Safari A very speclal weekend at lion Country Safari, filled with fun, thrills, excitement, adventure! First, drive among countless untamed animals living free In open country • . . meet them eyeball-to- eyeball, just a windshield away ... herds of ele- phants. rhinos, giraffes; lions, tigers, and hundreds more. Then enjoy the dazzling displays of Born Free Expo '77 ... plus animal shows, entertain- ment, rides, games, and endless fun In the exciting Safari Camp . . • all Included in the low coat of admission I ••• end don't for get to bring your enter•! ENJOY A FULL DAY OF FUN -one low admission cost covers sl/ -tree park· mg, unlimited admission to all attractions. $4 95 Adults, $2.95 Chlldttm (3· 11 ), un- der 3 free. "'°"' (?14) UMHO, (ttl) UMMt Clfl:M DAILY, RAIN O" IHINl1 t A.II. TO IUNDOWN. I.Alf CAlt ADMITTUI TO IAfHI TUM I ,,. fO •AY 11, I ..... TH&"IUTU TO lA80JI O~Y. -- Sully's Restaurant Opens in Clemente Relegate to history the City Yard Bar and Grill in San Clemente. A new name, menu and staff debuted two weeks ago as Sully's restaurant at the Old City Plaza location, 111 W. Palizada. Sully's, we're told, offers a wide range of seafood and meat entrees. A house feature in the beef department is the cut or prime rib labeled Sully's Special. Fish fanciers can turn to such choices as sand dabs St. Ger· main, boneless trout bretonne and filet of sole almondine. Still more selections are veal picatta and veal Oskar. as well as a chef's choice every day for lunch and dinner. AT THE SALAD bar -open during all hours of food service - diners can create their own salads with a choice of bleu cheese, green goddess, thousand island and vinegar and oil dress- ings. Kitchen supervisor is Robert Serna, former chef at Donkin's. Prior to that he was banquet chef at the Airport Marina Hotel in Westchester and has been as. sociated with the Velvet Turtle restaurants and the Hyatt House Corp. Open every day. Sully's serves its luncheon menu from 11 :30 to 2·30. From 2:30 to 5 you can partake of the salad bar and steak and prime rib sandwiches. Dinner is served Monday through Thursday from 5 until 9:30 p.m .• and until 10:30 on Fri- day and Saturday. Sunday dinner hours are4 to9:30 p.m. ON SUNDAY there's also a champagne brunch, at $3.95 per person, served from 10:30 a.m. untal 2:30p.m. Featured aresuch dishes as eggs Benedict, huevos rancheros, eggs Florentine and a wide choice of omelets. In addition to all the other changes, Sully's restaurant is progressively being remodeled. And there's piano bar entertain· ment on Thursday, Friday and Saturday njghts. The telephone num bcr for re· servations at Sully's is 498·1211. The restaurant is reached by tak mg the San Diego Freeway south Lo the Avenida Palizada off-tamp and turning right a few hundred feet to Old City Plaza. .. '*tit No on e. actually, is t oo. Out 'n' About NonnmSbnler crazy about dieting. So those with an uncontrollable urge for sometlliq gooey and fattening can create the sundae of their dreams at 1,001 Sundaes, now open in Costa Mesa. Orange County's first make-it· yours6! ice cream shop, 1.001 Sundaes features a smorgasbord of toppings and flavors of Dreyer's Grand Ice Cream. And for t.bo5e with more will power, ice cream cones and shakes in a variety of flavors are available as well as Dreyer's frozen yogurt. This ice cream heaven, located at 2750 Harbor Blvd., also offers facilities for children's parties. *** READ THEM AND WEEP! That's what we did the other day while perusing the prices on a menu dated Sunday, December 8, 1935. Like the dinosaur. this relic of another age proved fascinating for all that was and can never be again. For the opportunity to ex- amine it (and malce a photocopy) we're indebted to Eddie Park of Costa Mesa. Now retired and living near the Daily Pilot's main office, Eddie spent his entire working life in the food and r estaurant business. It was while going through some old papers that be came across the menu from the Melrose Grot· to -5507 Melrose Ave., Los Angeles, lllllside 9033. The bill of fare, it turns out, was one Eddie would have had a hand in preparing since he was employed by the Grotto at that time. And somewhere along the line, obviously, he had tucked away this memento of life in the depths of the great Depression. WHAT COULD YOU get for 85 cents nearly 42 years ago? Well, would you believe a complete dinner? That consisted or ripe olives and hearts of celery; appetizer choice of shrimp, lobster, oyster. avocado, fruit or tomato juice cocktail; choice or soup; salad; cboice of 10 entrees (abalone steak, half broiled or cold lobster, scallopine of veal. French lamb chops, fried Pismo clams. top sirloin steak, etc.), AT BOB BURNS PIANO Ronnie Brown choice of dessert (nine selections plus assorted pies); choice of beverage -and -a glass or claret wine. If the 85 cents asking price was a bit steep for your pocketbook. you could turn instead to the only shghUy less sumptuous -com· plete -dinner for 50 cents. Or, if you '!Vere really a big spender. the full deluxe dinner was an astronomical $1. Chef's special dinners for the day included whole baby broiled lobster, 60 cents; fresh fried shrimps, 45 cents; grilled salmon steak, 40 cents; half cooked crab, 45 cents; calf's liver and bacon, 40 cents; fresh lob6ter a la Louis. 60 cents; roast tom turltey and dressing, SO cents. But why go on? The next thing you know Eddie will be coming around with a later menu thal shows the price oC a martini or Manhattan has skyrocketed from 20 to 25 cents. ••• MARK YOUR CALENDAR for an exciting opening on the locaJ entertainment scene. on Tuesdav night. Keyboard virtuoso Ronnie Brown will return to his old stand at Bob Burns restaurant, 37 Fashion Island, Newport Center, 644-2030. <See PlANISf, PageC4) ~Stew kettle ,;~\»n 1tJa,,~n CROWN HOUSE ~~ ~'°t · RESTAURANT • • • • • • • • • • ~tews from Many Nations WINE BEER SOUPS • SALADS • HAMBURGERS Yummv Cheesecake & Other Spec1alt1es FASHION SHOW LUNCHEON TUESDAY&THUASDAY MESA VERDI CENTER Adcnl at H.-bcw • Costa ~ • 979-1 878 Whenvousee Pizza Ads On TV 1 ·' Your dining pleasure is ours. Phone 32802 COAST HWY. LAGUNA NIGUEL VU C,_ V,,,.., P-y· 499-2626 496-5773 South CotMt'11 Firwsl Cui1Jine IVY HOUSE RESTAURANT 314~STAVE. LAGUNA BEACtt 11~n..~""'l Ample Free Parking 494.9491 752-8558 ' • reservatio~'i accepted (714) 833-9185. 2'& ..... ~~--..J_ sia .. ~ T~P~e !~-:~b~ In MacArthur Square between Birch St. and MacArthur Blvd. • . . .. DAJLVPILOT Geoff Muldaur at GW TONIGHT, MAY%7 GEOFF MULDAUR -Blues performer, formerly of Kweskin's Jug Band, with Amos Garret and Bobby Kimmel, 8 o'clock tonight in Golden West ColJege's Community Center, adja cent to Gothard Street parking lot, Huntington Beach. $1. RAFAEL MENDEZ -"The Reifel~ of the trumpet," plus Dr. Clarence Sawhill and Phil Moore, guest conductors with Golden West College Symphonic Band, 8 o'clock tonight in GWC Theater, 1S744 Golden West St., Hwrting&on Beach. Free. DOUG KEllSllAW -Cajun fiddler. 6:30, 9:30 and U o'clock tonight through Sunday and 3:30. 6:30 and 8 p.m . Monday at Knott's Berry Farm. Buena Park. Also, singer Jody Miller, 3:30. sand 8 p.m . today through Sunday, 12:30, 2 and 5 p.m. Monday. $4.7S adults, $3.75 cbildrenJ..lL •WEST SIDE STORY' -Fullerton Civic Light Opera, 8:30 o'clock tonight and Saturday, June 3·4 and June 10-11, and 2:30 p.m . June 5 at Plum· mer Auditorium, Chapman and Lemon streets, Anaheim. $3.50-$.5.50 adults, $2.50-$4.50 students 12·22, $2·$3 children: matinee SO cents less. 879-1732 weekday afternoons, or Wallicbs Music Stores and Liberty and Mutual agencies. ORGAN, VOICE CONCERT -Del Rich and Cece Woods,. 7to 9:30 o'clock tonight at Anaheim High School Auditorium. Benefits Childrens Hospital. 535-0920. STRAWBERRY FESTIVAL-Today and Satur· day in Euclid Park area, Garden Grove. Parade, 11 a .m. Saturday, begins at Euclid Avenue and Katella, ends on Stan!ord. Free. HARPSICHORD, ORGAN MUSIC -Performed by Frederick Hammon; different programs, 8 o'clock tonight and Saturday, 2 p.m. Sunday at UC Irvine Concert Hall. 833-6617 or 83.'Mi61S. RUSSIAN MUSIC -.. Songs of the Soviet Under· ground," lecture and performance by Vladimir Frumkin, 8 o'clock tonight in UC Irvine Mesa Com moos Gold Room. 833-5433. WINSTON CHAMPIONSHIP RODEO -At the lnglewood Forum, 8 o'clock tonight, 2 and 8 p.m. Saturday and 2 p.m. Sunday. Ticketron and Mutual agencies. COMEDIANS -Willie Tyler, ventriloquist, and Roger and Roger, 8:30 and 10 o'clock tonight through Sunday at Laff Stop, 2122 S. E. Bristol St., Newport Beach. $3.50 and two drinks. 'MAJOR BARBARA' -Shaw comedy, 8 o'clock tonight and Saturday at UC Irvine Theater. $3 general, $1 students.833-6617 or 833-6614. ·PLAZA SVITE' -Comedy, 8:30 o'clock tonight, Saturday, June34and10·11. Garden Grove Com· m unity Theater at Lake School, 10801 Orangewood. Garden Grove. $2.50 general, $1.50 students and seniors. 554·1452. •ARSENIC AND OLD LACE" -Comedy, 8:30 ~-~-Giill- 1~ ~A\VABD! C!Iaptain·.s Ancitnrage IS PROUQ TO At:CUT SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA RESTAURANT WRITERS A WARD FOR EXCELLENCE IN SEAFOOD WNCH! Monday tu Sal&Hdap DINNER: S.wen Ni,trta COCKTAILS: ll:lO a.m. 'til? liltwt ....... T'lllrs. to s.. AMAHllM A Legend for King Crab Legs, Fine Beef and Seafood ANAHllM 81G8Ua&AD 1221 s. lroolrhwst Hwy. 11 at MoMli•a• •U.OS31 866-3"7 DANA POINT CAllLAAD 2U21 (vppw) 0.t PrtHlo 3171 Cwtabod tMI.. "'96.6116 729~170 I I I I I I I I I ·Times/Places o'clock tonight and Saturday. Sao Clemen· • Community Theater, 202 Avenida Cabrillo, Sall~ Clemenl2. 493-°'65.. · ..* ..~. 'SEE HOW THEY RUN' -Westminster C~ munity Theater, 7272 Maple St., Westminstef:':· 8: 30 o ·clock tonight, Saturday and June 3 and 4.: ·: 893·8626. 'COME BLOW YOUR HORN• -Comedy. S o'clock tonight and Saturday at Knights of Pythias Hall, 3797 El Camino Real, Tustin. pre- sented by Tustin Theater Guild. 838-1971. •EQutJS'-Adultdram~ now through Junenat South Coast Repertory, 1827 Newport Blvd.. Costa Mesa. 8 p.m. Tuesdays·Sundays and 3 p.m. • Sundays. $4.5(}.$6.50. 646-1363 after lp.m. daily. SEBASTIAN'S DINNER THEATERS - .. Norman, Is Tbat You?" now through Sunday at 140 Avenida Pico, San Clemente, 492·9950; "Hello,· Dolly," now through July 3 at the Grand Hotel. : NumberlHotelWay,Anabeim. 772-mo. CONTINUING IN LOS ANGELES -"Merton of the Movies," through June 4 at the Ahmanson Theater; "A History of the American Film" and ••Angel City,•• through June 5 at the Mark Taper Forum; "Porgy and Bess," through mid.June at the Pantages Theater. Indefinite runs: "Hold Me,'' at the Westwood Playhouse; "Vanities" at the Coronet Theater; "A Chorus Line" at the Shubert Theater. SATURDAY, MAY28 REN~ANCE PLEASURE FAIRE -9 a.m . to 6 p.m. Saturday and Sunday at Old Paramount Ranch in Agoura. Re-creation of an Elizabethan county !air. $4.95 adults, $1.95 children under 12. 'CINDERELLA' -Ballet Pacifica, 3:30 p.m. Saturday, 1:30 and 3:30 p.m. Sunday at the Forum Theater, Festival of Arts grounds, 650 Laguna Canyon Road, Laguna Beach. $4 adults. $3 children and students. 494· 7271. GABRIEL KAPLAN -Of "Welcome Back, Kot- ter," 8 and 10 p.m . Saturday through Monday at Magic Mountain in Valencia, north of Hollywood. $7.95 adults, $6.95 children 3-11, includes rides. HARBOR TOURS -Of L<>s Angeles Harbor, between 10 a.m. and 5 p.m. Saturday and Sun- day, departing from south float of old Municipal Ferry Building, foot of 6th Street at Harbor Boulevard in San Pedro. Free. MODERN DANCES-Choreographed by San· dra Foster King, 6:30 p.m. Saturday at UC Irvine Studio Theater. 833-66ll. Free. THE Omo PIA YERS -7:30 p.m. Sat~rday at (See lllVINE, Page C6) Eniav The Musical Excitement of ne 5.Piece Band OASIS Wed. thnl Sat. • From 9 p.rn. NOWl 2 BANDS SUNDAY AFTERNOON! Calypso Steel BCWICl- 3to7 PM Cltartie Romero Jan 9uarfet 5to9PM Reser\labions 64e.s1z.3 At tbe end a£ Narlih "Bayside Dr., New~ Beach In San Clemente It's • Open Daily From 11 a. m. Sunday Brunch IOa.m.·4 p.m. Twenty Thre6 Segenlj One South El Camino Real For ReU111ations ClllJ 7141492-7962 .. l'RESEXTS OlJTSTANDJXG DINING & ENTERTAINME!\'T .. * ME DITERRANEAN ROOM FOR EXQUISITE CU ISINE-SERVICE DINNE R SERVED FROM 5 PM LUNCH FROM 11 :30 AM CHAMPAGNE SUNDAY BRUNCH FRO:\t 10 AM • 3 PM * Captain's Ta ble Coffee Shop SERVING 24 HOURS C4 DAil Y PILOT Friday, May 27 19n" RoWe .Directing 'Page' ' Back in 1964, when Hap Graham retJred for the second time as m an aging dLrector or the Laguna Playhouse, the theater signed on a young man ln bis middle 20s to eulde iLs fortunes. His name was Doug Rowe, and his inlormaJ, easygoing style -along with his generally first. rate productions -made him a popular figure in Laguna, wh ere h e d irected nearly e very playhouse production through the next two seasons. After stepping down from his full-time post in 1966, Rowe returned periodically to stage someofhJs best works(" A Man for All Seasons," "A View From the Bridge," "Dylan") as guest director during lbe playhouse's last three years on Ocean Avenue. He closed out the old theater in 1969 with a hilar ious production of "Ladies' Night ln a Turkish Bath.·' THAT WAS TH E last Laguna was to see of Doug Rowe for seven years. Then. early in 1976. he was back a t the new Laguna Moulton Playhouse to mount a revival of "The Petrified Forest" -in which he also stepped into the lead- ing role on a few days' notice. The success of that show earned him an in· vitation for a return engagement, and Rowe was back four months ago to interpret Oli ver Hailey's moving comedy "For the Use of the Hall." Two months later Hap Graham, who had served six years in his third stint as managing director. an- nounced tus retirement and Rowe inherited t.be direcUon o! Laguna's last two shows of the season, "Finishing Touches" and "The Front Page." Having dispatched "Finishing Touches" in April, Rowe ls currently in the final stages of put· ting "Front Page" on the boards for il$ opening on Tuesday. And he seems to have his bands Cull. "I was up on stage tal.k1na to about a dozen cast members and I turned around and there were another bal( dozen sitting ln the audience,·• he remarked. "It's really ~a~ess in this show." THERE ARE, IN fact, 18 roles in "The Front Page," the vintage newspaper comedy recenUy remade as a Jack Lemmon-Walter Matthau movie. In the Lemmon role is Steve DeNaut, an actor -writer from South Coast Repertory wbo helped cr'eate SCR's superior mime show "The Darin£ Dardolases." With Rowe putting three of Laguna's last four plays on the boards, it might seem that his- tory is repeating itself and that he's about to suc- ceed Hap Graham as managing director for the second time in 13 years . He's definitely in the running for the post, along_ with a half dozen other applicanLs, and the • Intermission Tom Titus decision istin ~he hands or the theater 's board or directors. An<S while Doug Rowe may or may not .be the front runner, like the salesmen in the pre- lude to "The Music Man," he certainly knows tbc. ttrritory. ••• SOtITH COAST Repertory has scheduled its sixth annual Summer Conservatory from June20 • throucb Aut . 13 al the company's Third Step Theater in Costa Mesa. . The eight·week-Jong session, the most in- tensive of all SCR's professional acting training · programs, will run from 9 a.m. to 4:30 p.m . five days a week. It will feature workshops, acting laboratories and lectures by guest artists from the stage, movies and television. · The curriculum will consist of acting techni- que, stage movement, voice and improvisation. A workshop presentation will wind up the con· servalory program. The seminar is open to adults 18 and over with or without previous acting training. A limit· ed number or scholarships are a vailable, with the grants based on need and ability. Deadline for scholarship applications is Saturday, while the deadline for enrollment is June 9. Further in· formation is available at 646-3252. PIANIST RETURNS TO NEWPORT ••• DANCING & ENTERTAINMENT NIGHTLY IN THE LOUNGE 18700 MacARTHUR-NEWPORT (O,,OSITE THf AIRPORT) 833·2770 . ( L M. BOYD ) in the <From Page C3> Ronnie, together with Bob Cic- carelli on string bass, will be holding forth with show, pop and jazz tunes. And if you 've never heard him before, you're in for a lesson in authority over the 88s. Above all, Ronnie is the master of free and easy improvisation. lie never str ays too far from the original theme, but m a kes it sound new and bright with his in- terpretation. Jn addition to his pia no artistry, Ronnie is a lso an ar- ranger, composer and conductor. Some of the top artists he has ac- companied include Tony Ben- nett, Ella Fitzgerald, Sammy Davis and Frank Sinatra. Great Ape Studied lnSi}ecial Two women r esearch ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ scientis~. Dian Fossey Now a nd Birute Galdikas- Brindamour, track the gorill.B and orangut~n WEEKLY SPECIALS Bee Master WHAT~S LAWRY'S GULLIV€R'S ANDTHE: LOS CASTILLOS IS A WINNER So Calif Restaurant Writers Award! &t.ehftt Food· .. wllM Cocktail~ 15081 IEACH ILVD .. WESTMIMSTER lt2.Sl47 TEMPLE <t~RDENS ~A.... ; ctnNSSG Restnurant .. "~!5 DELL&CROWN HAVE:IM COMMON? LUNCHEON AND DINNER DAILY Specicd Luncheofl Mfd Monday thru Friday t 1 30 to 1 30 HANSPRAG€R 30 I 0 HARBOR BLVD. (At The Corner of Baker) RICKSHA COCKTAIL LOUNGE Featuring Exo11c Trooicat Drinks 1500 ADAMS lat HriMI COST.t. MESA .A.lid, !ft GCM'deft Gro·H 12201 IROOKHURST COSTA MESA 549-0319 SUHDA Y OHL Y - 5 to 7 p.m. • Red Snapper with lemon butter • Cornish Hen with orange souce • 7 01 . Top Sirloin with onion ring h•dudH soup or salod, S 3 9 5 Cilass of wiM .ct dess.rt .....•..•... MOHD.A Y -5:30 to 7:30 p.m. FRIED CHICKEN •••••••••••••• $3.35 Includes soup or green salad, potato. vegetable and dessert TVESDA Y -5:30 to 7:10 ,..._ CHICKEN CORDON ILEU •••••• $3.35 Includes soup or green salad, potaot. vegetalbe and dessert For o ver 20 years. Hons Prager hos been creating unique din· ing experiences for Lawry's l'\estouronrs and then Gulllivers 540-1937 540-1 '123 H11:hest Quality Native Mc"<ICdn foods IAt ChOfltl'la"I 638-7020 Open 7 Days ~ All SPmTS EVENTS GIANT 7 FOOT 1V SCREEN. ··Mon.-fhur. 11:30 o.m. to 10 p.m. Fri. & Sot. 11:30 o.m. lo 11 p.m. CCX:KTAfLS Sunday 4 p.m. lo 10 p.m. HAPPY HOUR WB>MESD.A Y -5:30 to 7:30 p.m. SP A.GHETTI DINNER •••••••••••• $2.85 14041 Oeoch Dlvd. Westminster CA Rltservottons (714) 89tr6702 4 to 6 P.M. DAILY . 9093 E. ADA!IS. HUNTINGTON BEACH 962-7911 Includes green <Jalad qarltc bread and a glas, or wine r-•-----·COUPON·--------1 • 111 st~ r-~ ENTllTAINMEMT I 1 ~R ~ s •=._o,tt!~G I ·I cll..ediwJrant-t fforJdi,UIJ -~~~-I 1 Y2 PRICE DINNER SPECIAL 1 I Buy one dinner ... got 2nd AT HAlf PRta (with this aiupon) I I YOUR CHOICE: STEAK & CRAB LEGS I -1· ..... OR STEAK & SCAMPI ?Ti-:\ I I Open Doily For 1100 lnM A••· 0/ lld ' \\ I I lunch & Dinner Mewport lwlt 751·5223 ,, ---I 11 a.m. to 10:30 p.m. 0• ........ Ml.,_.'""· Wt c..n. /I @>'' L--------COUPON--------1 .-. --·· ' . , Jt1111g anti la~• is Bade wil9' tivelhsk au fa al Jlmitll' C1a,,rittie (;at Wed. thru Sot. Announcing A Suriday Brunch In The Garden. Exquisite food1 a delightful environment and the fun that only the · Disneyland Hotel can give. At the Chef's Kitchen this, and every, Sunday. $6.95 ($3.95 for children under 12). )lisue~lAud j_otet 11 50 W. Cerritos Avenue. Anaheim. CA 92802 10 A.M. to 3 P.M. Validated parking With the Uve Bro.dway Hl•Mualcal ~\;O' ~' ,. .. ~~ """~~ C"\\.IA'1i~, y Y"#1~ For Information & reservatlc>na call (714) n2·77'10 or at the box offlc~i Grand Hotel, Number One Motel Way1 _Anaheim. (Acroaa fromDianeyland~ "Problbly one of the funnlllt 'comedle• you wm ..-... :i ~~t\b~'f ~~~o~\\~~:; \CEJ ! .. .,.c._.., For Information & reservations call {7'JM 492<9950 or afffii ox office Sebutlan'llWeet, 140 Avenlda Pico, San Clemente. A TRULY througn unknown terram SE ... S ... TIO ...... L when "The Search for "' "' ""' the Great Apes," a Na-SHOW!! t ro n a 1 G e o g fa p h i c B 0 B WHITE Formerly With THE PLATIERS R A y LOW DON ENTERTAINMENT AND DANCING Tuesday thru Saturday 9:0.0 P.M.-2:00 A.M. OUTRIGGER ROOM KOMA LANES 2699 Harbor Costa Mesa 545-1112 Special, is reprised Tues - day on KCET, Channel 28. Ric hard . Kiley nar- rates the documentary. which begins 10,000 feet high in the mountains of Rwanda, Africa, in a ca mp that has been home to zoologist Dian Fossey for nea rly 10 year s. She has spent thous ands of hours re- cording the behavior of the mountain gorilla, an , animal that can grow to six feet tall, weighing 400 pounds or more with an eight-foot arm span. I IOS u st httll1 IYf, •n11Mlm 17141 Uf·2't4 .. , . ·~ ~' d .. -:' ... .., ·",;. ·~ ... ··. ·, ' ~-i. I "I ··..:·-Vt r tor jl)u go 3tnn i\rsr4111rJ111 DIME To U•tly HARP Strf1tgs Fri thru Tues. lltUHCHto MtflowJAZZ Sunday Aftemoona (714) 49f.9477 361 diff Drive, Laguna Beach Take off for a fuil evening at The Regisfry! . Great evening a take off In The Grand Portag·a Rea tau rant and Saloon. Start with a au~rb dinner featuring tabl••lde gourmet cookery. Stay for dancing and 1wltchtck>n tnttrtaJnment. Come for dinner. Or the dancing. Try our24 hour Gu.be, too. Now that'• =· KATHRYN CHASE ·. Mow ...... 4 . mE RrolSTRYHOTEL ORANGECOUNTY AIRPOR'I ···---1llOCtMlc:Artharhd.,.,...,.. Phonl7U.a71f OwNdMdopnted.,, ..... .... ~* ......... ,a.,..wi.,-r.. \ ' . • • Friday. M.y 27. 19T7 DAIL V PCLOT C( Frampton Due at Big A TV DAILY LOG Stung Again Confidence man Paul Newman finds himself pitted against racketeer Robert Shaw in ''The Sting," costarring Robert Redford. which has been rereleased. The film won Sl'vcn Academy Awards and is set in Chicago of the 1930s. KCET to Air 'Giselle' The American Ballet Theater production or '' q isel~e." star~ N alalia Makarova as Giselle, Mikhail Baryshnikov as Albrecht and Mart.ine van Hamel as Myrta, ai rs on ''Live From Lin- coln Center" Thursday at 8 p.m. on KCET, Chan- nel 28. "Giselle" was conceived by Tbeophile Gautier. 19th century poet and critic, who took his inspiration from the Slavic legend of the "Wilis," maidens who ha ve died of unrequited love. Their souls can find no rest, and they are doomed forever to roam the earth from the hours of midnight to dawn. If a male enters their do- main during these hours, the maidens force him to dance to his death. ~olden ~~~~~~ ·~~ S/I;)ragon . -- GENUINE CHINESE MANDARIN DISHES Specializing In Chinese A Lo C.Orte Dishes LU NCH•OINl~ER DAILY Food to Take Out 11 30 A.M to 10 P M 2o:u ...... -.t1. COSTA MU.\ 642-7162. 646-'91 I Gourmet Japanese Cuisine South Coaat Village et•o•• ftom South. Co••• P1&1• 3800 S Plaza Dr Santa Ana l714) 557 2531 H ori kai t'ct In Ullle Tokyo r"•I' tht Mutt< CM tef" 111 S San Pedro Lo~AngPles 1:'131680 9355 A•••tv•l10ttt Recommend.e Real Cantonese f oad ot here or l•k• horn. STAG CHINESE CASINO 111 21st Pl., Newport Buch ORiole 3-95'0 HOOfl to Mldnl9hl Oaity-W~ u.til I :00 •·"'- O•ll n """'1 .. Moo.t•O. '-H• The By MICHAEL PASKEVICH 0t '"-()•lly PllM $\.if Britiab guitarist Peter Frampton, rock's big- aest new superstar, wUl appear July 8 outdoors at Anaheim Stadium. Tickets go on sale May 31 at the stadium box oUice and local ticket outlets. Cost is $9 for a reserved seat in one of two stadium upper decks, or $10 for a non-reserved "cramming-room-only" spot on the playing field. This murks Frampton's first return to Anaheim since his show-stealing performance last summer co-headlining with Yes. His last lour aupported the modest success of his "Frampton Comes Alive" album, which has already passed the seven million sales mark in the U.S. alone. WORLDWIDE sales or "Alive" are ap· proaching an awesome 12 million copies and a spokesman for his label, A&M . is predicting the. album will be the biggest selling LP in American rock history, topping Carole King's "Tapestry." The lithe, undeniably cute singer /guitarist's success has been long overdue based on his four previous solo efforts since leaving Humble Pie. However, his overwhelmingly rapid climb to popularity with "Alive" bas prompted a critical backlash, with many writers claiming his fortunes are due more to his charisma and lucky liming than musical prowess. No doubt the debate will be rekindled with the release of Frampton's crucial follow-up album, "I'm in You," which is set for a June 1 is· ~ue. The title track, a string.laden but pleasant ballad, is already out as a single and the album will contain a Motown medley featuring Jr. Walker's classic "Roadrunner." A bit frightening perhaps to newer fans. but Frampton did an able cover job of Stevie Won· der's "J Believe When I Fall in Love," on his second solo album, '·Frampton 's Camel." His upcoming concert is a Wolf and Rissmiller affair, and the promoters have ten· tatively 5Jated Emerson. Lake and P almer, a Ted N~~ent/Lynryd Skynrd show and Chicago for additional summer shows at the stadium. ••• LIKE A BOTTLE of vintage wine, LitUe Feat keeps getting better with time. With the re· lease of its sixth album, ''Time Loves a H~ro" CW amer Bros. BS·3015), the soulful sextet may fi n ally overcome its label as "Amer ica's greatest.unknown band." "Hero" is the band's most balanced and re- warding effort since its early "Sailin Shoes" era. Striking a varied musical posture, which mixes elements of soul, jazz, reggae and straight-out rock boogie into an engaging whole, Feat, once "'9tCH LAM.UA•......-USH 1111:mus "\.OY&T...A uarn. A POm<: COMmY ?MATS 11.\UY ~ . BAY THEATRE -SEAL BEACH 11,, f, (.,, ,,t H1~ ... .,f')y .,_M ai,. \t L.!lll 431 -9988 APADANQ .. •AUYOMATICGAlAGE RtStauranf · ~ DOOR OPENER AUTHENTIC CUISINE ~ SPEC OF ~e~s~i;~~~~~a~:;~!tST I , IAL .ind Hu~!'ian '>Pt-'Ctall1e.s ~-i( $ 1 Oft Continental Cwsine Ahn ~ INSTALLED ~ 7 Lunc1h~3~-;~o~;Y ~~ ~rrday J~~~ COMPUTI Dinner-Every Evening rrom 5 oo om 600 Newport Center Onve //I r " __r- 'IJ H.P. WORM DRIVE across from Fastuon Island ~\ Reservations honored -640-7502 ~ conv11ni11nce and p10tection with II \ E--"'11•n~1 ~ 10·100 OA"J<;f rJ!!tENT Al 7 NIGHTS A WEE'< HAV1 A FREE APPETl%ERo.t\lS WITHTHISAD DINING • DANCING EMTERT AIMMEHT Busmessmen·s Lunch Soecrals SU.FOOD• COCKTAllS • F0o0 TOM> IAHCf>UrTS • ,.IYATI PAIT11S CHAMPAGNE BRUNCH SUNDAYS HAPPY HOURS 4-e 1750 W Lincoln • Anaheim 991-0640 s.1 w. 19th St •Costa Mesa 642·97&4 - again. is ready for its big stride to populanty. Backed -Oy some well·arranged horn charts supplted by Tower of Power and the neat produc. lion of Ted Templeman, LitUe feat bas moved away from the flat dynamics that made .. The Last Record Album" a minor disappointment to fans. Low ell George and Paul Barrere team up for some excellent guitar interplay on their pro- gressive instrumental. "Day at the Dog Races." and the rhythm section or Ritchie Hayward <Drums), Kenny Gradney <Bass> and Sam Clayton (congas) is back in full force. Versatility is Feat's strength and the group adeptly moves from the hard-core funk of "Rocket in the Pocket," and the Boz Scaggs-like rhythm and blues of 'Hi Roller," to the simple country charm of "Missin' You." This is easily the best American rock album of the year to date. Catalina Bands The Casino on Catalina Island will host s'ix big band evenings this summer, beginning Saturday. · The first band, Bob Crosby and the Bob· cats, will pl~y from. 9 P·~· to 1 a.m. Long Beach/Catalina Cruises wall have a special ~at leaving Long Beach at 7 p.m. and return- ing at 1: 30 a. m., as they will for all dances this s ummer . Boat cost is $10 and dance tickets are $7 .50, available at527-7111 or (213) 775·6111. Also scheduled : July 2, Lee Castle and the Jimmy Dorsey Orchestra; Aug. 6, Jimmy Henderson and the Glenn Miller Orchestra· Aug. 20, Freddy Ma rtin and orchestra; Sept: 3. Les Brown and his Band of Renown; Sept. 10, Harry James and orchestra. P•removnt P•c:tvree preeents ••vLA.,_, IT Bl.()CORT HAROLD and 'MAlDE WHO IS THE UTILE GIRL WHO LIVES DOWN THE LANE? EVERYONE WHO KNOWS IS DEAD., 15~ WIU{l l AlllCC)ff' 0-tM!llt Al(VIMUll l'llODUCTIOlt JODIE FOSnR · MARTIN SHEEN • AlEXIS SMITH MORT SHUMAN . SCOTT JACOBY IH .. Mtt. li.iiei •'THE LITTLE GIRL WHO LIVES DOWN THE LANE" Alt AMElllCAN INTEllHATIOllM. l!EUASt f 'ttUtiW ProOittlt llUGlO •llUMOI A AUWI l'All1SO MllK ~IOf llOl1 SHUMAJt Ofoglnll Sccir't ClllllS1'WI ~ IMC PwOllSlw .urTIUl llUllC • Scttflllllf, llYl.MI l 08lt 111Md en la ~ l'foMtd llY m ~ · O...Clld"' ~ff,_. ·Celor 111t11a r., MIMl\.49 ....... · UA ...... COlllt ...... ........... UA._.Mll_.... ( FRIDAY I •V•NtNQ I 6 :00 0 U ((1 (.JJJ (I;) ~ News CJ ~ (lJ (.all CJ)) fll> Ntn 9 Star Trtll (I)'°"* l'yllt Q Gunsniokt CD '•rtrl41• fallily Q) AdJm·l2 m lltdrlc Com~ny m o,,1111t1e Senn tU! Milt Ooutlas -6:30-a Dinah! Guests include Tony Randall. Harvey llorman. Suit Bachar1eh, R1ch•rd Thomas, 0011 • Mtred1th and Ceor&tlle Khn&et l e'1 WJ Gntfitll 110 llltrv C11H1n Show m family.,,,., ( 111 ~ ) Gun~t ID Zoom C 2t 't ) S.mey Miner m Town blk 7 :00 DD @(J)Q) mHews 0 ltlrs Club r I ) My Tllr" Som LI) To Tel tlie Trutb 0 Cwtlltr1llo11 m 1l.Off1.uq aJ The fBI m lb~ell/lthrer lttport ( 2:tJ Cl.l) Pr""'ry EnJllSll Class llli Cros.s-W1ts -7:30-e Wild KlncdOm 0 Love American Style ( 6 J The Odd Couple 0 Cl0114ll (A) m Hollywood Squares 8) Tiie Mu,pets 0 The Joker's Wiid m ('29 lU) Bt1d1 Bunch ( 17'1 n Tony the POiiy f1!) Channel 21 T on11hl 131 Ua1$ Club 8:00 0 ANNE MORROW LINO· * BERGH IN FIRST TV INTERVIEW! TONIGHT WllH ERIC SEVAREIO 0 ( in (3 ) 1 e • Co11vtrul1011s witll Errc Snareld Anne Morrow Lindbergh, the best sellme author a,o widow ol one of America's rrtal est heroes talks lor lht lusr llmt on tefev1s1on dboul lht Jove.. losses, luumphs 1nd trditdies ot her hlr D .23' ~ • 10 m San lord and Son tR) · Aunl lslher Hd$ A Baby frPd pla~ an important rolt whPn Aun I lsther Ines lo adopl a child he ~tdnd\ 10 1or her drunken husband 0 Movit; (2hr) "Monsieur Beau· u11e~ !com) '46 Bob Hope, Joan Caulhtld , 6 Movie: • c (2hr) "!lever Too Late" (com) '65-Maurten O'Sullivan. Paul ford. Connre Slevens, Jim Hutlon o <1~ CJJ) Qt ABC rriur 1111111 McMe Doubleleature: CJ!) (90) "TM llept11ne Oisaister" (dra) '73 Ben Cauara, YvellP M1m1tux. Waltrr Pidgeon, Crnest Borpn1ne. Ch11s W1gg1ns. Donnelly Rhodes, Cd McC1bbon. M1chaPI J Reynold~ Ciani hsh and !>td 4111mals mtnate d 5un~en "S~alab" and a helpless re: cue ~esul under the .waters ol lhe mid Atlan11c D Movte: lC "The OutNcl" (dra) · 71-Donald Plus.inc e m Brea• the Bink aJ All Thal Chtters Berl Ines lu~ lutk al computer dalln[ 4nd s:rvr com•s to sar good bye, but Andrtd ha\ othr1 pl.in\. ID Was/11nrton Wee-111 Review -8:30- D 2~1 W (10) m Chico and the Min "Chico s Problem" After con stanl interruptions from Cd, and hrs d~te s suddrn tall to duly at lhe hospital where she is employed. Chico l1nds his plans lor a quiet, romanltc dinner destroyed. m Closs Wits ID Perry MaSOll ID Will Street Week 9:00 0 (<fl) (3:1) (8J PILOT: The EnipTI People Scott H)'lands stars as a danng a&ent for Tuangle, a larger than hie 01&an11ahon with a global charter to f1&hl c11me around the world Guy Doleman, Barbara 0. Jones ant! Soon Trek Oh co star. D @ W Gt Tiie Wtotl filu (R) ' Resurrection m Black and White" Jim RocUord rs hi1td by a maguine writer to help her lree a conwicl shes conw111ced 1s innocent ol homicide m Merv Griffin Sllolt fD Clu&it Thutre Q) ll«llei Tapabu -9:30- 0 ca OO> u Ase Frida, ft11h1 Movie Ooublefulure: (CJ (90) "Hard Oriwtr" (dra) '73 -Jell Bndges, Valerie Pemne, Geraldine lltzcecald, Ned Beatty, Gary Busey, Ari Lund. Cd Lauter. A freHpmled boy becomes a hard drivina men on the roclty roads ol stock car 1ac1n1. Q>Mocl ~ 10:00 m Dnawk S.rlCS -I1:30-n < 121 ' > 1 cas Lft• t.1ov11: CJ:) .._,l'J A ""' Gui LiM You.~" (myi) '7l Brenda Va<caro. Itek Walden. Rod!fw tkDolqJJ, Jo Anne Worlty. V1nc1nl Pnce. II call CU UO) G .W..., Cnin (I)""": "Tiit Dark 'ast" (d,.) '49-W~ltam Holden. lee J. Cobb, Nina foch, Adtlt Jtrcus. Stephen Dunne. 8 (~ (J)) U Biretta CD llfts (!) S&t 8Uko Em Clptloned ABC btnlnf fttws " • • •• m CllMllll u 12:00 U Olxo '77 CD Movie: (CJ "Master of the World .. (scJ.f1) '61-Vmcenl Price. Henry Hull, Charles Btonson, Mary Webster, Richard Hm1son. m Movie: LC) "twnd 111 the S1111" (dra) '57-James Mason. JoJn , r ontaine. Ooiothy Oandndee. J(l~n "\ Cothns. Michdel Rennie, Diana Vly· 1 ~ n~drd John W1lhams, Step"en Boyd. Ha11y Belatonle -12:30-u All·lttpt Shor. "Secon4 ~ Secret A&tnl," "The Mummy's ltand," "Tiie Sllitary Child," WAip! ,.,,, .. 0 S4ISpttlSI Thulre .l.li Soul T r1llt 1 :00 U Talbbout D l2lJ (8) (1.Ql Midnichl Specill m Thriller 2:00 O Doubleluh11e Movie: "The Strance Lowe of Marth.a Ivers," '7he 'romise" m All·lli1ht Show: "The Hurt of the Matter," "8at\ From the OeH" -3:05-u Movie: IC) "The Impatient Heart" (dra) '7l-C,1111e Snodgrtss, Michatl ConstJntine. Michael &iandon, Marion Halley, Heclor llu· on do D (lfl CD @I m SuzJ Visits: Oki lllue Era and Old Brown [JtS Suty Ille syndte:ated columntSI mttr v1tws rraok Sinatra and Muhammad Ah with rare ghmpsts ol the men behind lhe publ~ 1mitJt. SATURDAY MORNING 7:00 0 Summer Sanester CJ il3l I t I (10) m Woody Wood• pecker Show r 6) Popeye Cartoons O (12911e 1) \llJ Tom & Jerrr1 Mumbly Show LU Interior Desitn D Y011th l lhe luues CD llemenllry Mews Q) 5'111 Yorty Show fD Yop I• Kealttl -7:30-u Came11 Three II ~II Ctl 1101 ID Pllll Panther 0 Pau5etters l u f tlll the Cit 0 (~ (J.J) Ill Jabbefiaw CJ) TJPilll a Hoc Fodre si- CD Mootre: "Three facts West" (~s) '•O-John Waynf, Sigrid Curie, Charles Coburn m Romper ltOOlll ( !.1J 1 ) Blxk Buffalo m EmJbody'S 8111ineu 8 :00 D CC!Zl QJ) (I) Srtmter & Twtdy U Mowie: "Captain Blackju•" (adv) ·~2 Georgt Sanders re) Popeyetllllci c,rtoons 0 (lit) (I l) Cffl Scooby Doo O Movie: '1he 11ghtinr O'flynn" (adw) '49-0ouglas fairbolflk~ Jr. IMena Carter. Richard Greene. aJ Wom1n: Real to Reel -8:30-u (TI') Q)) LI) Clue Club rs 1 Speed It.acer ID The Tnbal Eye 9 :00 0 (.17J C3J) (() B111s Bunnr/ loadtunner II ~ CJ) ® m Speed 8uUJ CJ) Valley of the Oinouurs D MoM: cm "Tiie llad Kntcltt" (adv) '54-Alan Ladd, Pal11c1a M,d1na Peter Cushrni, Andie Moiell. m truicht -9:30- 11 WJ ())®I m Mo111ttt Squad U Tiit 81& VJl1ty m Johnny Qunt 0 ( llJ l t 1) t!t Kroltts Supt•· ihow Ql Movie: "Scrumlnc hctes" (dra) '56 lorn T1yon, Jdn M~rhn mzoom Q) Al Dia 10:00 U ( 11) (ll) Cl) T arun II ~JI CV (f.Ql Gt S,,Ce Ghost/ f ra nke11ste111 Jr. l 8J The J ti SOM ""'I J I' ,, ·~. •• . ~' . I G (!IZJ CJ)) HUllter (R) A ptliontt uchenae-a US. htld Communist spy for a Rtd·hefd U.S. SllY-IOtS IWfY, Ind U.t acent.I Jrm Hunter and Marty Sllaw art assi,ned lo the rec.mry of the Ameoan spy. O Wanted Oud or Alcre ID Infinity Factory . . ,..,. •'; 8 ~11 (() tD Qlll11tf (R) Maude's TV dauahler, ~nenne Bar beau. cueslt 11 a counstlOf to rape vrctllllS wllo is a rapist's tarael htr self, in this spea1t episode wtltCh points up tht IKI !hat doctOfs. 11 properly tauattt an 11d 1n the pmtr ntion and mafntenante of mdence lo mptOvt the rate ol c011Viclions in llPt cues. John lrel1nd, Luke Askew and Kim C.ltrall also 1uest . Q) Tribv111 ,ubhu -10:30- • ( !l) Cl)) LIJ ftew Adwtn1Ult$ .r111 ... 11 ., (JO) ... Joh, Ultte Jtl\11 • Alcels la1thll Cahlo1n1a. t\natls vs. 1 OIOlllO. (l)LtM blpr 8 (!Jt) (J)) QI Superfriends Cl ~ ' eo.tello :A i!l...* rtstitat ,,,,de -~ . .,...., Ct 1 friday ft Ten "Anne Murray" 11 :OO (IJ Woman'• Speciil 0 (!IZJ l: ) CJ) Shmm/lalr ClOI Hollywood: Tiit Wznid YNrt" ttovr Em El BlH AM1dt 8 ® Lalld of the Lost 10·30 D (8 CIJ) Q..lJ ABC Sllorl Sltly (() s.11 ~ ' -"Valt11tine's Last Chance" (R) Ken "-Berry stars H a reformed safe . • m G) CllCktr Who llSkS his new Status IS 11 sOO an honest c1tiMn to save the hie of a a a Cll (ltl ..._ younc boy trapped 1n$1de a time· D CJ) cm ~ CJ) ,._ · locktd salt. Gier Morris. Cliubelll • (8 Cl)) Lett ....,ten Slflt Bauer, Sean Mf!lhaU also star. w M n..1 catt.rs m u. h tt.m D .-. a:> "W1r1r1 tt1t Matt• 8J Wildlife Mwtftttrt W1ti. M•lt11" Cm) '71-Dtbb•c • m lltra Reynolds, Slltllty Winters. Otnnis -11:30- Wmtr Q <IO l* htM C.U .U . • lblJ KartMI. ...,., fftrtNll • ( ) AIMl'k:n ..... m n. """••••11 ..., . ([Pl CJ))""........ • n. ..... KOCE Television (SO) U tt Mll't•• •oe • •t I:• W......_.TCNI ... IC 111 "•1M .. MOOO ••v1n •1• ¥1\.LA ·~••tt• at• ~..,..nWWllJ 6 1• OUMnTOCMAJfC• t?tl "'9WAYl'tWM 1:11 OUIH '°• P••tolllAt.; t t• ._MCAM ...... ,. 111• MO'ltlll".'\.'t~ ....,rt• IUWWM.cowtUMl•IOT ttta nt.e ~MUl 11» \IOTWlf'I flll'tlU•I ••..O•T • , J: l' l Q t b s " Jl ( ' I -...... -. --,,. ~ -----_____..... ,. 0 DAILY PILOT Friday, May 27, 19n Films Off er Nostalgia By BOB THOMAS .,,.._1 ........... ''SMALL CHANGE" is a celebration of childhood as seen through the fond eyes of Fran· cois Truffaut. There is no plot. The mm maker shows us a series of superbly wrought vignettes durin& a year al a boys' grammar school in a French village. Truffaut touches the b~art as can no other direct.or practicing today. His new film is piquant and sentimental, yet with an edge of reality. PG. "FRATEBNITY BOW" explores the same nostalgic country of .. The Summer of '42" and "American Grafitti." A Pennsylvania college fraternity reflects the youthful attitudes of 1954, complete with Perry Como hits, singing com- mercials and college fads. Two idealists, Peter Arts Education Called Essential WASHINGTON CAP) -A panel of 2S promi· nent Americans said recently that the arts, far from being frills, can perform a useful function as essenllal as the lhree Rs. The committee headed by David Rockefeller Jr., following a two-year study, urged the nation to reverse the historic segregation of the arts from education. Such a move, it said, would not only teach children about the arts themselves but would enhance learning in general. "This report appears at a time or cotradi c· tory trends," the 330-page volume says. "On the ooe hand, the arts are flourishing as never before mAmen(·a ... "On the other hand, arts education is strug- gling for its life." The report tilled, "Coming to Our Senses." contains 92 recommendations addressed lo every level of government as well as to teachers, arts spec1a1Jsts, school administrators and parents. It proposes that the U.S. Office of Education be raised to Cabinet status . Fox and Gregory Harrison, try to fight snobbery and brutality ill the fraternity and fail. Filmed as a doctor's thesla at USC, the movie overcomes awkward and amateurish moments to register ingenuous charm and vitality. PG. .. TllE GREATEST" is Muhammad Ali's portrait d Muhammad Ali, bom Cassius Clay. It is a complimentary portrait, of course, but also a fascinating one. The late Tom Gries directed the episodic chronicle with a sure touch, exacting from Ali a performance that is both accurate and moving. This is no "Rocky" dream world· but ~h~ Cinderella story i~ more convincing bec~use 1t 1s real. The champion gets solid support from Ernest Borgnine, John Marley, Robert Duvall, James Earl Jones, Annaiette Chase (as the second Mrs. Ali) and Phillip MacAllister a con- vincing replica of the 18-year-old Cassius'. Rated PG. .. ISLANDS IN THE STREAM" is an old· fashioned movie -well-written, compelhngly acted, directed with intelligence taste and honest sentiment. Based on E;nest Hem· ingway's last, autobiographical no,.vel, the film s tars George C. Scott as a redusi\>e but not em- bittered artist on a Caribbean isle. He has never given a more sensitive performance on the scr een. The supporting cast, headed by David Hemmings and Claire Bloom, is equally fine. An achievement for director Franklin Schaffner and writer Denne Bart Pelitclerc. Rated PG. "THE UTl'LE GIRL WHO LIVES DOW N THE LANE" is a modest thriller that satisfies despite its far.fetched plot. Young Jodie Foster moves into a seaside house with her poet.father. But the father is never seen, and his estranged wife seems to be missin~. too. Then a nosy real estate woman disappears, and the town starts wondering. Fos ter is such an inspired actress that she manages to maintain credibility, and she is aided by Martin Sheen, Alexis Smith and Scott Jacoby. Rated PG , 1t has sexual un - dertones. ''COUSIN COUSINE" follows the romantic (A Quick Look at the Movies) lradil.lon of "A Man t&nd a Woman" with 1 sardonic twist. Marie-Christine Barr1ult and Victor Lanoux fall in love despite their mar· nag es to others. They are secretive, at first. then flaunt the affair before their bewildered re-latives. Director J ean Tacbella's sharp eye for the absurdities of polite society makes the film a Gaullic delight. Rated R. "ANNIE HALL" presents Woody Allen as a neurotic, obsessive Jewish comic enme.shed in hopeless. tempestuous romance with Diane Keaton. Autobiographical? No matter. Allen is in s uperior form, tossing absurd insights and pro- found nonsense like tree blossoms in the spring wind. He is again masterful as the survivor in spite of him.sell. The real news is Diane Keaton, who emerges as a comedienne of the Jean Arthur-Carole Lombard class. Rated PG . "AlllPORT '77" gives every indication that the disaster movie trend may soon come to a crashing halt. This time Universal is bard put to breathe life into the cardboard characters and the contrived jeopardy. Billionaire James Stew art has an assortment of people and a planeload of art flown to his Florida mansion; the plus 747 disappears underwater. l'<.i. Diamond Man Vieiood Senor Geraldo Santos de Silva, a life-long diamond prospector now 80 years old, is profiled in ·•Diamond Rivers," airing Wednesday at 10 p.m . on KCET, Channel 28. It will be repeated at 1 p.m. June 3, 8:30 p.m . June 4 and 1 and 5:30 p.m . Junes. A tiny, rustic village in lhe Brazilian state of Bahia 1s da Silva's home; he has spent his life there searching for gems in the dingy water or the river. "I was born lookm g for diamonds. One day m the river I found a diamond ... I went to town and got a good revolver, good clothes, good li· quor. good women and good times. And when the money was gone, I went back to the river to find another ... IRVINE MASTER CHORALE PLANS 'BON'V-OY AGE' CONCERT. <From Page C3) Shrine Auditorium. Los Angeles Part of "Soul Search '77." Upcoming. Rufus with Ch<1ka Kahn, June 4; KC und the Sunshine Band, June 11 . S3. SUNDAY, MAY 29 PIANO CONCERT -By Sheryl Catherman. 8 p.m. Sunduy an l 'C Irvine Concert Hall. Free. }'LUTE CONCERT By Shendon Stokes. 8 p.m. Sunday m Cal State Long Be<ich Music Recital flail in 6101 E 7th St TUESDA \".MAY 31 'SURVIVAL' Play by fnur black actors from South Africa. noon Tuesday in Ph1l1Jps Hall. San· ta Ana College, 17th and Bristol streets Free COMICS · Rodn<'v Winfield. Denm· Johnston and .Jonathon Moorc . 8 30 and 10 pm. May 31 .Jun£' 5 al Lafr Stop. 2122 S E Bristol St., Newport Beach SZ 50 and ont:' drinl. weeknights, S3 50 and l ~ o drinks weckl'nds 'Tll E .. RONT PAG E' Co med v about new:.papcrs, TUf''>day throu~h June 18 at Laguna 1\l oulton Playhou~c. 606 LaJ?una Canyon Road, Lttguna B<'ach 8 .30 p.m Tuesdays.Saturday~ .ind 2 pm Junt• 5 and 12. 494 -0743 after 1 pm TllliRSOI\ \'. Jt:NE 2 BAND CONCERT t \ B .rn<l. 7 :IO p m Fountain \.Jllf'v Commum Thursday at · Huntin~ton Center, 7777 Edinger Ave., Huntington ~e<Jch Free. 'THREE SISTERS' Chekhov dram<J. R pm June 2 in UC Irvine Com·ert He:tll. Free. 'HARVEY' Comedy, 8 p.m Junt' 2·4. 9-11 and 16·18. Ana-Modjeska PlayC'rs at Loara Elemen- tary School. 1601 W Broadway, Anaheim. $2.50 J(eneral. Sl.50 students 17 and under. Special rates for seniors and groups 533·5278 FRIDA y I Jl NE J 'LIFE' Oy Jenie .Jackson, 8 p.m June 3 and 4 in UC Irvine Lillie Theater. room 161 nf Humanities Hall 75 cents CHORAL GROl'P -Girls' chorus from Crest View School. 7.30 and 8 30 pm_ .June 3 at Hunt- ington Center, 7777 Edinger An' . Huntington Beach Free BAND CONCERT <:olden West College Band, 7·30 pm Jun£• 3 1n GWC Amphitheater. 157-tt Golden West St . Huntington Bearh Free 'OKLAHOMA!' Rod~ers and Hammerstein musical. O!>('ns June 3 for four \.\eekends. Long Bt:'ach C1v1c Lll!ht Opera at Jordan Theater. 6500 Allanllc A"<' S3 to $7 .50 evenings. $2 to $.5.:>0 mat int><'S Lt bt'rty and M ul ual agencies or (213 J \32 79'l(1 RARBERSllOP, CHAMB ER SINGERS Loara High S<-hool ,::roup plu~ Wh1tt1C'r chapter of Soc1e Iv for th<' Pr<'Srrvat1on and f''n(·ouragcment of Barbershop QuartC't ~in gmJ! Ill t\menca. i . 59 Recapture''tbe ~TIN(i fxperlence'' RfMfMBfR now 6000 l'OU ff LT THf flR&T TIMf. WINNER OF 7 ACADEMY AWARDS Including Best Picture In 1973 ... all it takes is a little Cont idence. IP ll1 ru JL ~(fJ)IBJJEm. Lr NIEWIM!aJJN ~IEilJJJF(f]JR[D) ~({J)J13JE~ iI ~JHJJ111W IN A 811.LIPHIWPS PROtillCTION OF A GEORGE RQY HILL FILM THE STING A RICH ARD 0 ZANllOUDAVID BROWN PRESENTATION Wnt~n by DAVID S WARD Directed by GEORGE ROY HILL Produc.t bv TONY BILL and HJLLJPS Munc Adeptod by MARVIN HAMUSCH A UNIVERSAL R f P m June 3 and 4 at Anaheim High School C1ud1tonum, 81 t W. Lincoln. $.5 adults. $2.50 stu· dents and children Linda Emond at 774-5867 or Ann Mc Ra<' <1t 776·3874 POPS C'ONC~RT Multi-media production, OcC>an Vit'w l l11?h S<'hool band and choir, 7 :30 p.m . ,lun<' 3 at OV llS, 17071 Gothard Ave., Hunt· ington B<":ich $1 generul, 50 cents children (un· d<"r 13 ~ .md seniors LOS ANGEi.ES BACH FESTIVAL -June 3·11 at First Congrc•g<1t 1onal Church of Los Angeles, 540 S Commonwealth Ave. !corner of Sixth Street> t213J 385·1341 IR\'INE ~tASTE R CHORALE -"Bon Voyage .. ('nnrl·1·t h<•for<" leaving on European tour, 8:30 p.m. June :~ CJnd 4 at Santa Ana First 6aptist Church. 1010 W 17th St . Santa Ana. S4 and $6 adult~. $2 students. Al Coast Music Store in Costa Mesa or 542-1790; or at the door. 'REQUIEM' By Gabriel Faure. performed by Oran{!e Coa~t College Choir, 8 p.m. June 3 at Sts. Simon and Jude Church, Huntington Beach. Free AMAN FOl.K ENSEMBLE -At Bowers Museum, 2002 N. Main St., Santa Ana. 8:30 p.m. June 3, sponsored by Music Center Presenta· lions. Free. 'COSI FAN TUTTE' -University of Southern California Op<'r a Workshop, 7:30 p.m. June 3 at Santa Ana College's Phillips Hall. 17th and Bristol streets. Free. Ploys Himself Muhammad Ali stars in his own life story in the new film "The Greatest," which f eatures Mira Wate r s as an early romance. Also in the film are Ernest Borgmne and Annazette Chase. Phillip MacAllister portrays the boxer as a young m an. M.1;3=1 (218 5ff.fuo I c1111 ;3f.iio I "NOW IT'I "4111 'l'\llNI" DAY OP THI ANIMALS(l'O) "'"' OIUZZL Y ll'OI "A YIMON Of lllNCAINAf!Otf' AUDUY IOSI ll'OI PlUS imu Cll • 00 "" • I.Al ll'Ol ~NOW IT"I fHIJI TUINI" DAY OP THI ANIMALS (l'OI "'UI GalZZL Y ll'OI CNOeOI C. Kon ISUNDS IH THI mlAMll'Ol ""' THI SHOOTIST ll'OI .,...... AND IOUlOn'lllOH A STAI II IOIN 111 "'"' I WIU, I WIU FOi NOW 101 IOIST, MO "'"" """'~"' fHtATN:S ~E·IN SUltEA SWAP MEUS HAMOfl k VO. DrM-lft SWllp Meet Set: & Sun.-' em to 4 pm ORANGE OrfYe·ln 1 & 2 SM 6 Sun -4 Ml IO 4 1111'1 ,.,. ,,_ Su,_Y9 el A,..,,.w.. $-um Flmily Fun! Proftta! Bit Int Glfort! a. tfla ........ ""1 IJlfn .. S.L. $e .1U S'9ln tl.Wl 11'-l •-UllT llOTICl l CtlllOlllll UllOlll IJ ,.HI MCI 111&11 ,.._.....,. t IOll,UWO.O .. ~~lorMll;~;=~ll'O) ~A YlUON OI ltltfCUHATIOH" AUDHY IOSI CN I "-US CAIA11111 ITLYUfll ffAUONI -~·I t ::C.N1:~IAKllJ (N I __!,. __ , __ --· 3. INJU-MAN fl'OI ... , •• ,1 ~ ! ,, . j •• .....ji::?I JoACX UMMON • AlllPOttT 77 ll'OI 2. OONI IN 60 HCON 3. 00 POil ff (NI ,. ...... _ .............. ..... THI STING ll'OI ''NOW IT"S TNl18 TUINI" DAY Of THI ANIMALl (l'OJ PlUI OIUUlTCl'OI MUNAMMAO Ml THI OUATllT (N J ... .,. HAID TIMll (NI Mf•1MM•OAU ntl GUATUT "91 ""'' HAID TIMllCNI Hlw.i1's totll ., .. of 6,424 tctUMe milts 1s less than thM of 1ny othet ttltt except Coftuctlcut, Ott.wwe tnd Rhode laland. ( 1 .. , New York Fetes Dolly BJLIBA SOBINSON Dolly Partqn toot New York City by storm tut week. She performed au sell-out ahowa at the Bottom Line. WU the booored gueat at a laviah (the Dom Pericnon fiowed like water) party atop the World Trade Center and bad every celebrity in town at her feeL Among those who saw Dolly were. Mick Jagger. Andy Warhol. Candy Bergen, Lily Tomlin, P.boebe Snow; John Ot wouldn't be a party without) Belushi, Nona Hendiyx. Eric Idle, Olivia Newton.John and Terry Southern. . · ~· ~ops In Pop~_ (ij dienee than what I was playing to. For years, I knew I bad a large following in the cmtemporary area. but they wouldn't go to the places where the famille1 )rtent toaee me. "So I wanted to try and do aomethina that would pleue as many people as poeaible and add as much to my music u I can. I think lt wu a smart move, I'm not leaving what I've done -I just want to reach more people. I'll always go back and do my almple. country songs like 'Coat of Watching Dolly perform wearing a rhinestoo~studded diaphanous pink . cbilfon gown. with that hair and sparkly shoes, ·ring braceleta and teeth, I wondered if she ever wanted to just unburdeq herself of all that image, and sing in a simple blac.t dress. Mqy <Alon' and 'Tennessee Moun· ------------------ "I'm just a character and I like to be an extremist. I have been all my life. J don't want to be like everybody else, I want to be like myseU." As !or the well-publicized "switch" from cowitry music to conquering the pop audience: "I've been planning to do this for a long time," DoUy said simply. "I just felt that as a writer and creator of my own music, I want- ed total musical freedom. "THERE WAS SO much more I could do than to just have it labeled as country, even though it will always have its country flavor. "I was sure I had a broader au- taln Home.''' And the reported bitter Nashville reaction? "It got 'distorted in the preu," said Dolly. "I didn't I.eave NaabviDe, I just moved mf business things. I love my friend& there and I love the Grand Ole Opry which I'm still a member of and hope to be forever. "I G~ TBEBE was some fear· at the start; some of the people who loved me thought I was making a mis. take and wouldn't do well. Then, of coune, there were those wbo were afraid that I would do well; they re-sented the fact that 1 was doing something they didn't have the nerve or the courage to do. •'I had my feelings hurt a few UIJ\es. "But my writing is more serious to me than any phase of this whole busi- ness. Il I bad to make a choice to be an entertainer, a singer or a writer, I'd choose to be a writer. I'd bate to give up any of it, it's all so closely related it's almost like one gigantic thing. But the song writing I take very seriously. "I would like to think that &ettin.g into my music would be considered fashionable now. I can feel lt growing and spreading, and I can see it in the faces of the audienc~. They've got me working Ulte a man these days," she laughs, "but It's so exciting, it's really fun." "DAY OF THE ANIMALS" 11GATOR11 CPGJ J~AU11ELMOMDO "LE MAGHIFIQUE" ' SUl-TfTlM .. NETWORK" "ONCE IS MOT EMOUGH" CRJ 11MASTY HABITS11 IPGJ CLong Bea~Ji ·vie ~igJit Opera ~'lftt_ presenu .. INFRA MAM .. IPGJ 1'WlliRDS'1 ~ ~ Rodgers and H1mm•rs1tin's immortal z ~ ~AHOAl I ~t Live on Stage! ~. June 3 thru 26 "CROSS OF IRON .. "KIUH ELITl'" UU "ROCKY" "IURMT OFFEfUMGS .. IPGJ .. AUDREY ROSl" IPGJ .. CARRIE'" CRI ' pt1rformane••: Fri Ol·JOpml SJ.00~.50. Sit 18:30pml $4.00 7.50, Sun 12.00pml S2 00·5,50 order tickets nowt "II.ACK SUMDA r (I) "LITTU ~RL WHO UVED DOWM THE LAME'• "SILVER snu1r· (213) 432-7926 o,,t Libe•'Y & Mutu.I AgenetH performances at Jord1n Theatre 6500 Atlantic Ave. _. . ~-ruMMR VISIOH"' CPG1 . . "A ROARINGLY NOAOEMlNT FUNNY SEX COMEDY" '•CINDERELLA'' IS NOT JUST ANOTHER FILM IT'S AN EVENT! FRIDAY MAY 27 "MR. BILLION" TERENCE HILL VALERIE PERRINE PLUl(PO) "THE LATE SHOW" RATEDX NOW PLAYING WED & THURS r---;;mlidlW--"DOMINO PRINCIPLE" PLUS (AI SU STAR CHERY\.SMfTH IN ~RSON FRIDAY NtOMT ''THE EAGLE HAS LANDED" -, I MANN'S SAM rtCIUHPAH FILM .. CROSS OF IROM .. (RI SO. COAST PLAZA w.Doln .. so SAT/SIMIMOM lr ... I'\'""" Ct111 lltu 34111111111 ""LUCKY LUCIA ... 0 .. ~1111 MO 0141.,.._ I I tJiMm1D 11CIMDERELLA11 CXJ Wftll!OolU M .. t:tt \AT ~f'O' 1.-J:M.5."4 .. 7:> .. .,Jt WED-THUR-FRl-7:00-8:55-10:50 SAT-SUN-M0~-1 :1 ~3:1().5:05-7:00 8.55-10.55 • edwards BRISTOL CINEMA BRISTOL AT MACARTHUR 540-7444 DAILY PILOT CT. Tradition Glynnis O'Connor and Hal Holbrook star in Thornton Wilder's "Our Town:• at 9 p.m. MondayonChannel4 .. ''DI lr&lllll IUSPIAll lhrlllar Ol lhl dlCldl I'' · THEATRE #3 NOMINATED FOR3 ACADEMY AWARDS! ,.,,,_,.... l'oc1v~I P.•~'11\ George C. Scott A franklin J. Schoffnet Fiim ''Islands in the Stream" ART CARNEY NEWPORT CINEMAS HEAR COASTHWY.lcMACARTHUR •»WPORT. OEM'fll& 644-07 60 HUNTIN TON CINEMA . IEACH AT EU.IS, H.I; 147-9608 147-6017 O~LY PILOT Friday. May 27. 1977 • Dog Lands Br~adWay Role -- By WILLIAM GLOVER APO.--wntw NEW YORK -The perils ol Pauline bad ootbinl on the career of Sandy Berloni,, Broadway's most improbable celebrity. Rescued from mercy extlnc· Uon. later mangled by a truck,. untutored ln the skills of pro- f easiooal rivals, Sandy bas sur- vived to meet Presidents Carter and Ford, eat steak nigbUy and thrive on guaby audience ac- claJm. Sandy Is the tan dog of chaotic ancestry who turned out to be a ca.sling director's dream in the new smash muaical .. Annie," a caper based on the comic strip ••Little Orphan Annie.•• .,BE 18 A VERY mellow animal," says owner Bill Bertoni of the psychological complacen- cy with which his charge bas ad- juated to unexpected salvation. Between roles, the only performer around to be named for bis stage part likes to curl up in a comer of his Alvin Theater dressing room. Deep in long doggy introspection, be lets his understudy Arf welcome visitors with woofs and sniffs. Bill Bertoni, 20, does the talk· ing to an occasional rollover, paw stretch or corrobatory eye roll as tribulations and triumph are reviewed. "Ever since the opening, he's been on a round of chores that have knocked him off habit,'' Berloni says. Sandy has been on television, has an elaborate magazine profile upcoming, has been photographed by hi1h fashion's Richard Avedon and ia besieged to endorse every dog food around. IN APRIL. 1171, thoµgh,. he wu a scrawny waif at the end of his rope. Salvation came because up at the Goodspeed Opera House in East Haddam, Conn., untested .. Annie;'' was slated for presen- tation. The producer found that get· ting a regular trained animal would cost $600 a week plus ex- penses, so actor-technician Berlooi was sent on a bound bunt.· After seeing 500 lost, stQlen and strayed canines in a half-dozen· pounds, Bertoni arrived at the dog-catcher's corral in New- ington. just outside HarUord. "Over in a comer of a cage, this fellow was cowering, scaly and sad, skinny as anything. I was sosorry." When Berloni reached in his pocket to post a guarantee, he discovered he had no money with him. Q>uld he return in the morn- ing before the pound opened? "You can try," was the noncom- mittal answer. At 8:30 a.m. Bertoni returned, roused the janitor, pajd the $8 adoption fee and hurried his nameless companion to the nearest roads ide eatery for a couple of hamburgers. THE GOODSPEED company enthusiastically received the vagabond at the communal bar· racks. "Just right," s aid the bosses, and Bertoni settled down to preparing his charge for "An· nle,.. scheduled to open in AuausL •'The vet decided be was 18 months old, in good health but in need of lots of care and oouri.sh· ment," says Berloai. "He's most- ly Airedale and Irish Setter." To- day, Sandy stands 2t inches at the shoulder. wet.&hs in at so pounds. Having bad many pets, Bertoni set about winning the dog's trust with kindness. And after the cur- tain came down each night on the show then running, Sandy was tak:en oo stage to get used to the orchestra and audience clatter ' Everything went fine. includ- ing gelling acquainted with the youngsters who,f.rere to be in "Annie," until two weeks before the musical was to open. A de- livery truck ran over him backstage, dislocating his hind legs at the hip. Immobilized in a cast for a week, Sandy only got three days of rehearsals before the show opened. He just bad one scene, but audiences immediate- ly flipped. THE END OF the run ap- parently was lo be the end of his stage career, but Mike Nichols took the property over, planning .revisions and performances in Washington and on Braodway. Sandy was recalled, so Berloni gave up his own drama studies. Next, the dog's role was ex· panded to parts in four scenes. In one he has a solo stroll across the stage. There's never been a sign of stage fright. ·'His performance every night is totally unpredictable. There's a bit ol ham in him. Sometimes be is brilliant. sometimes be dis- rupts a scene.'' SOON AFTER the New York opening, Sandy decided to wash himself in a w.., that broke up the audi.ence and sent Andrea McCardle, 1'M plays Annie, gig. gling into tM wings, her song un- fin i sbed. Mias McArdle bas become a4&.,i ·at ad-U~ng around biJJtmPropptu wt.tms. New star on Broadway: Sandy, of 'Annie,· even has his own understudy-a Jong way from the pound where he was discovered. Like any import.Mt ,...,ormer, Sandy MW ha.a aa ~derstudy. the i.month-old Ari, found in a New Y.k Hume:-.e center. -~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiiii .... ~iiiiiiiiiii--iiiiiiii~ ..... .. -..--,_ New Bogart Picks Hits LOS ANGELES (AP) -In the "new Hollywood," where record studios are busier than film fac· tones, they still speak or "Bogart and Casab l anca" with r e· verence. But there's a difference. The object of admiration is not the 1943 movie or its s tar. Instead, it's 1977's recording in· dustry wonderchild -Neil Bogart -and his s mall but mighty record company, Casablanca. It is the kind of dazzling suc- cess story the old movies could have told well: A YOUNG MAN with ambition sells his share of a small New York record company to go West. He borrows $2.5 million to s\art his own firm, then releases his first record and it flops, losing S1 million. The scene shifts to two years later. Neil Bogart, ensconced in Moroccan-style offices on the Sunset Strip, is a millionaire at 34. FIRST ITME TOGETHER-OHL Y AT NEWPORT CINEMA BLACK SUNDAY "We've gone from a defi cit to a $30 million company in two years,'' exults Bogart. "We've released 30 albums. "You make music for yourself as you think you'd like it if you were 15 years old or 25 years old.'' Nine of them went gold ($1 million in sales) and three went platinum (one million albums sold). That statistic has to be mind boggling in the industry." What turned the company around? Outsiders might say it was the star powe r of two Casablanca acts -Kiss and Don- na Summer. BUT, IN THE e phe meral world of rock, where stars are known to flash and fizzle fast. in· siders say it was Bogart's sense of timing and taste that made the difference. ·'When we started with Kiss, people thought we were craxy. We had .four kids with makeup shooting fire out of their mouths . ... But they were very visual and had a good rock sound. "THEY SAID WE were crazy when we came out with Donna Summer's 17-minute version of 'Love to Love You, Baby,"' Bogart recalls. That 1975 record, featuring Miss Summer emitting sounds of sexual ecstacy, sold 600,000 albums and launched a caree r. BLACK SUNDAY --~lll(1ll(Hlfi~IJHJ911ASllMJJ)/J)l~l[l!Sfml.(lr111 A .11$'"~JOI Pnd.udllllJill\1111.S 1Re11i!IRA.tf\PllIDi (ei,l,.."iND~Sll4~ ~~Dt!M£lllr0Jf( I WIOll ..Olfl.lll RW a.. ... ..., ... ,.,.,, • ..,. .. ,tta.1 ,.f~~i.,.,. ...... ._ llEWPORT 0 CENTER (PG) FASHlON ISLAND * NEWPORT CENTER • • ·'The history of Casablanca Record and Filmworks is as col- orful and dynamic as its founder and president. Neil Bogart," Cashbox magazine declared re- cently. "It was something daring," says Bogart. "You have to take chances. In the motion picture and TV business, you hear - 'That's not done.• In the record business, there's no such thing." Friday -7:10 Holid ay M atine es Sat .-Sun.-Mon-3:30-8:30 ••• • •• Friday-9:40 Holiday Matinees Sat.-Sun.-Mon-1 :00 6:00-11 :00 He has a pitchman's instinct for what will sell. But a potential hit record can die if no one hears about it. A col- league calls Bogart "the best merchandiser in the business." Bogart says, "He's right." ROBERT SHAW BRUCE DERN MARTHE KELLER "It's a gut feeling," he says. ' . : • ·-VvCIXX ALLEN Dl.ANE KEATO'J (PG) 'ANNlE HALL FRIOAY-7:oo.l:SS.10:50 SAT.SUM-MON-1:15-3:10. 5:0s.7:oo.l:SS.10:55 "Islands in .the Stream" PLUS(PQ) ~ NEWPORT CINEMAS MUICOUTNWT.&MACAITMUll """°" 0 carra '44-07' C»fflT AT HUNTINGTOH "1'1£ ...... smm..., .. HUNTl"TON CINEMA NACMATIWS.IU. ...... THE STING .. all it takes is a little Confidence. (PG) PLUS (PG) MR. Bli,JJON TERENCE HILL .~ ,..! MUHAM~ALIIN TllT ROBERT DUVALL ERNEST BORGNINE JAMES EARL JONES PLUS(PG) HARi> TIMES CHARLES BRONSON JAMES COBURN edwards BRISTOL CINEMA littSTOl Af NACAlnM . ... , ... JAMH MOUN PLUl(PO) 'at"' ' ' I ~ ron PLUS (PG) ~FEGUARD" (PG) ''HASTY . 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C292NXBl U99 "'"' -~ TnQI _., ~ '*" m & "-1s 1:>en :ie "'°""' lirlan0"9 °" _.... crt911 '38!>80. IOllllO. ....... -"lll'Ctl ANNUALP1;RCENTAGE.RATE 1e~ '73 OLDS STATION WAGON $ 98 3 seats, air cond., AM/FM stereo. 84 MO • luggage rack, power windows. 6 way seat. cruise control. loaded. Low price. sn1 '''"" ,,,_., ~ T'l<lll CMl'I DnCf' olVI II• a '"*"'" 1< 17~77 111 montl'I l•nandnO on~ crecllt S3JJ9711toool ""'-~""°' ANNUALPERCENTAGERATE 1•1111 174 PONTIAC FIREllRD s99• Espnt. VS, automatic. power steering & brakes. AM/FM stereo. rallye wheels. MO bucket seats. (7300KQ) • \&45 101111 -DltVl'f'll"I Tot• C89h Dt'C!I oMI tall & flcMW I• 93111. 38 MO<lllt finanelnQ on~ clWdll 14103 !leto1• d!ll«T9CI DeVfN'll Ot1011 ANNUAL P£RCENTAGE RATE 1• ~ 75 GMC PICXUP '74 TORO~DO BROUGHAM • s 1 i~4 Loaded. Vinyl top, AM/FM stereo; power 6 way split seat. tilt wheel. cruise MO control. air conditioning. (097KBB) • 1877 totlll down ~. Totll casl'I ~ Ol\ll tu & 1.--Is 13871. 38 ll'Olllll ~ •n _.... cred•I U lMM IOClll ~ ~ Ofic9 ANNUAL PERCENTAGE RATE 14 ~ •75 OLDS TORONADO MOON ROOFs 133w Air cond.. AM/FM stereo w/tape, 112 padded top. 6 way power seat. power M ~ door locks & windows. (485MVI) -· ssoo l()laf down oavn-1 TOllll et'" OMfl "'"' , .. 'l'C!lnH ., 141177 ·~ "'°"'" l•nenclno on IPOtO'l9d c "'" 1&930 56 IOlll <l'>le<rlld °"""'°"' Ol•t" ANNUAL P€RCENT.O.GE RATE 1'100 177 GMC PICKUP - Radio. heater. automatic. power s 13714 steering. white spoke wheels. low · miles. (1 E06043) MO. I 500 tot• dawn D11vment Tot• cash priC!l DIUI tax & llceme II 15111 48 ~ ~ °" ~ c:r9Clll '1118 32 IOI• de"'"11d I one. ANNUAL PERCENT.O.GE RATE 800 84 ONLY $99 . DOWH 6 cylinder gas saver .. 74 CHEVY SURFER VAN TAKE YOUR Jis -~ · · · CH-"' 01c· E. · STARFIRE .. Automatic. PoW&r steering ·vs. AM/FM stereo w/tape, V8, radio. heater. power steering. (16830V) MONTH cond. (446RJT) (60980W) • 1 & brakes. radio. heater, air power" steering & brakes. 48 month financing on approved credit. S3277 plus tax & lfcense cash price. Deferred payment price Is 14506.62. ANNUAL PERCENT AGE RATE 16.00%. • 02 DAILY PILOT PUBUC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE PICTITIOUS aUSllUtSS NAM•STATEMENT TM lotlowlno oertons •r• OOlnQ t>uw- 11~\\ U : "LL STllR P"INTERS, 1~1Cutly SM•. Hllfltll'lqton Buch. CA.,...,. Ttrr•nct Franttn, 100'1 Cully Sdr ... Huntlllqlt;>n ll•MCh. CA 'I'll>•~ How•rd ConnP\ ~Q7 I f r"d~rlc• C.r HUnllnqton R1•.1tn. CA 976.jh Tnl• bu1ln~'' I\ conou~t•d by • q•noral c>arlntf\lllo. Tttrance Fr..izt11 Tnl\ ,, 1!Pmet1t WA\ "'~" wllll ,,,. ( ~unh (h•rll QI Or~'"' r l)U•\ly nrl "orll ]1 I'll ""1UJa Publl\""'l 0r-~ CQH! o ... ,., Piiot. M~y l1 ,,,.., lt1<W1 l, tO, 11 1917 n., 11 PUBLIC NOTICE .. OTICE 01" NON·ltESPON\18 11 .. 1 TY "lollr" I\ ,...,,11y o•v~" tnat t~ "" tt.·f'\lg"""ft will not t.-r~mc>f't'\•bft fO' . 1n' <K t>n ~ h•ll411ti"\ <ontr"' t.O by t•"•O~ °'~' l't\;\n myW>tt on or.,,,., 1n1,d•t" O•tr111n11 t8thd.wot M .. y t•n 111....,11 H Omeron 1AV,7 Simmon. L"'' ~""''"<llon&-•ten C" Publl\ned Or<'ln? Co.i\f Dally Pllol. M 1v70 71MdU, H11 2tU 11 PUBLIC NOTICE • • • -...-..... • • . . • ----.... -__ .. _ ----='~ --. . . Friday May 27 19n PUBUC NOTICE PVBLIC.NOTICE 1uo-11 PVBUC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE FICTITIOUS 8USINESS N•ME STATEME"IT Th• fo11owu'q Of.:r\Or\S c>rP'Oo1nq o,,.,. ne\\ tl\ RESPIRATORV HOME CON VALESCENT SPECl"L!STS, Hl>H Hl\ll"Q> c.r. Huntonoton B•ach, Colll 911>4' Ml'"'""' Wall~ Sims. 8"Sl Ha\llnq• Cir., Hunhr>qlon 8'!Kll. CA.~ Howard Georve Sim\, 8052 Hast· lnQ\ Cir , Hvnllnqton Beach. CA. 9'2~ T111s t>o ,,,.,s f\ conouc ted bv • c;a•t1er•I oartne~hlo. M•(.,..IW !>!ms Tno·, "•tement was 1111!'<1 w1tll 11\e County Clerk of Or~ County on M•v b "" F1 SH! Puh• ....... d f>d~ Coa\t 0-Jdy P1101 'IAJ f II }Q 1f 1"0 Jul\•), 1q11 1q13.71 PUBLIC NOTICE FICTITIOUS 6US!NESS "4AME STUEMEffT Tht lollow1n9 per\Ofl~ are OOlnq llusl· 110\\ \S KE"INEOY-SALVIN & AS· SOCIATES ZQ•• ::10 RanOolph, Costa Mes.s CA q71,71> Wlllt'm T S41vl" 3•8 Oa>111a CoroMOdM.1',Cll 97&~ -------------1 "'·"" • A l(t1>n.,dv. ?S1 ~~111.1 !~!Ml. c,,.,,,, Ml-"1 CA ~626 PUBLIC NOTICE Ttu\ bv\•nf'\\ ·~ conducted b'f • -------...--::-:-...---1 ~~·•I oan,,..~n.o Pl'BUC NOTICE ocaA1tVIEWSU400\..0lnll1<:T ~w-........ H111111,.._.. ...... C•ll•-• t U.1 LfO•L NOTICf NOTICE lltlVITINO llOS NOTICE I\ HEREBV Olllf"I !Ml Ou• 8o4trO Of Tru•IP-' "' l"t Ocf'•" Vl.w S<.....,. [);\Irle! al Or""IJf' (1)111\fy .. t,;nUnQfM Bt.-cf\. (Al1f,,rn1, will ,. ,.,.,.,,, .. hh7\ tn '~°''' off1c• ..,..V•Pf"~f'I\ •"rt PU"<"-'~ \VOOll.,.'S Bid\ wltf ~rt <"'l~rl ''" tn t 00 • m Jvn• '1 1q17 At t~ .. Admln•d,•h~ t')flirt-o• \ ••d Sr ~Mt 1)1\trtrl, ,.17 w,.,,.., Av,n..-Hunt 1~1on l'INI("' C:•hto•"'" t?f>.O '1 w'"'" ti .... H id bllk Wiit Of> 000-"°lf 1tnd '"110 tn a-c.con1•rK• wHP\ SOM',tlc•tlO"I\ now °"Ill~ In tlleOlll<f'OI \.Old O••lrict. •11 11 ..... DrlWldNI l~rOt"I .. tnl• bid mu1t me-t All ADOllc•lll~ lel!llral. U•I• .. ndlDCAlc-. T!I~ Board ol Tr\1'IH\ '"'~rv•s ti\<> rto111 to reJKI '"Y .orwt .oll b1'1s, •ncr 10 waive""" l'"9Ufe<lly lhe,.1n O•ted M.Ay 15, 1•11 OC£4N\llEW SCH()()t.OISTRICT !Iv JulloR1~r" Clffllof llW> ..,.,,, of T "",,..., Put111""'9cl OrllnOI c ... \t 0•1ly Pllol, 1My27,....,J-J. 19'7 PUBLIC NOTICE Willi~m T ~atv•n Palf'<I< R l(tnntdv nu~ \t~t,.,.....,t WM loled wit;, fOtf' COi/iiiy ''"'I( (JI Or•nqt County on M•Y •. tUJ Polll•\t>>lf 0-"''I" Co;,'! O•llY P!tol M ,., I J l' ·•M ful'\f') 1911 ,,., 11 PUBLIC NOTICE NOTICE TOCOHTllACTOllS C•LLlltlG FOii BIOS Scllool Oo•lrlCI HUNTINGTON 8E•CH UNION HIGH SCHOOL Ol'iTRICf R•d Oeldllne 1 OOo'clock om. ol tM 3...S oav o< Jut1~ t•n Pl•c~ of B•<I R..:•1irt HUNT! NG TON RF ACH Ut<IO"I HIGH SCHOOL Ol'ioTRICT f OIJC'l\TION CENTER \i«)I (Vil,~ Av~""" Hvnt1,,Qlon Bt'~Ch (A.,,.., Prn1M ttt1irl"ltif•t 1t•f')n N.•m'' OlttNo nt W"\tm1n'"'' .,.,,," ·,rr.O'lt Stadium l i;rtR,.Mwl•f•f'lr ,._,,,,_,, P1 '" ,tt,•nn f.lr M.,ltit•oarv:P O~'"''('\n tl'\n Con-.1tuc Hon 0t'OI E ~ t I 1' 1 •• •t n I• n qt n n B,. Ac h Un1Qtl HolJf' <,c """' 01\lflCI S101 Bills.> A'<I• Mvn,1n .. 1tnnA~-''" (.A~)t.47 NOT IC.E ... Hf RE nv C,IVEN lh~t '",_ .-oov~ ~rn1 o ~ Nw>t o,,,, 1ct "t o' ~nq1 rnont" r .-tt•ntf"l1t1 .u t 1"q nv "'"' t~rnuqh 0. r,ntitr '"'"q (\t),.,.fj .,. "_..,,,,,f',. ,,.,, ,.,. d f t) d\ DIST RICT• wltt r@'C~f"" uo IO but l"t'>t l.ttH" lhan the 4\MY@·\latPd t•m'" .,..,..er 11<0\ for,..,. awMd ot a conlra<t for 1"41 a bow oro1...: I thct\ •"911 be r?"f'-1' lfl tN O'"C~ 1.,..lltlllf'd -"'1<I \tl~ll bP O~'ltd """' 0Ubl1(f'I , ... ld ~IOUO at the dOOvP ,, .. ,I'd 11,,,.. •"Cl Oflt<l' C •<" bid rnu•I conform and bf' ,..,_,1,..10 !tie t Oftt•acl do<umrnts EA(h bod ""•11 IMP.ccomoanied t>v tne ~curtty ret•rr~ to '" thf-contrdi(t dO<U,,...,I\ •nd by Ill<! lt\I of P'CC>OW<I \Ubtontrec:1or• T"41 DISTRICT '""'""' 1111' rlQhl In ,..1-<t 4nv or•"..,.,.,\ nr •~ W;tlW' "'"Y ,,. r11JQut1trll•~ 0" frtto'm~t1t10\ 1,, 4'11V hlt1• or •n ,,,. hiddl"Q The DISTRICT h,)\ oeterrntned the q.ttn•t41 orPv.fllmq ,.,,,,. of Of'r d1Ptn w•oe• 1n I~ loc,.111., I" whlcl> '"1' work it lo M 0ttrfor"1f'd lor •Mh cr~I! or lVM nf workmM1 ~,,.d to P•ACot'! t~ c.on tract n..~ "''"' MP o'1 Iii• al th• DISTRICT offlc" l«,.1"'1 .it S101 ll~I\,\ Avp , li11n!i,,9lon B~~cll. CA 976'7 Cool~• n\<IV ti-01>1alned on req.,.st A COOV ~ \~ r•le1.~ll IM POSlllCI at tile flll><lt~ T~ l()n'Q'>lnQ •<,,..dull' of ner di..,,, '"'"'"' h ~ UPOn a workl"G dav of 1>lont •~1 NIU<\ T~ r~•~ tor llolldav •n<I ovtrtl""' wor-sllal! bt at least llme•r>d-n..11 II lll•ll be m....UtorY UOO<l I,,.. CON· TRACTOR lo """°m '"" con1r"'t Is awerdecl. tt..t _,,, env MJ!Konl,.ctor """"r "'"' to""" not 1~ .. tn.t11 the H IO sptc!lled rtl"~ 10 ~II worl<m•" emolove<I till' tllem In tile <'ncullon of '""<Clftt•M'I No 114<1dofr mdy wllhelr-Ills blO tor a oeriod Of torty-llw •ASI d<tY\ a!ltr '"" cMt~ "'tor'"" _.n1nq ol bids " ~y,,.,..,1 bond ~nd a ~rtorma"'" bOnd will be r~u•N'd prior to t•ecul1()0'I of ,,,. Conlr~. T"4I P•Ymal\l bond""'" bf 111 Ille fonn Ml fOrtll In Ille contr.c:t oocumams. A-11 C. BalltY OIA<:tor Malllt-nce, Ooer.clons en<1<00$1rvc1ion P\lblt"-<I Ore<199 coast O.lly Pilot, M3Y to.21.1m 2ut-n PUBUC 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 The Blgat Marketplace on the Orqe Coast DAILY PILOI CLASSIFIED ADS. You Can S~ll It, Find It, ( 642•5878 J T rode It With a Wont Ad One Coll Service Fast Credit Approval ~!.~.~ ........ ! ~:.~~ ..••••• ~-~~ ••••••• ERRORS: Advertisers GeMf'OI I 002 GfMf'GI I 00 Giner.I I 002 .t.ould check their ads • • • • • • • •• • • • ••• •• • •• • • • • ••• • • •• • • • • • ••••••••• ••••••••• ••• ••••••••••• daily and Nport er- rors lrnmediote1y .. The DAILY "LOT auwnH lab,Hty for the first ln- CMT"td inMrtion only • Houses for Sale ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1002 ••••••••••••••••••••••• HA!aJ E.5tate HOW GOOD ARE YOU? WESLEY N TAYLOR CO HEALTOHS S l lH't' HM( IM THE MEW!ST "ILUFFS .. $169,500 1-Story highly improved Linda Model. Picturesque corner w /deep set-back from st.. Beaut. outlook of greenbelt view of mtns .. 3 BR. 2 b a ths, wraparound cov. patio, choice plants, custom wrought iron gate & extensive aggregate. Expensive custom cptng .• drps & wallpapers. 3~2 years new .. l 11 I San Joaquin .. lb Rood MEWPOaT CENTER, M.I. 644-491 O I 002 Generat 1002 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• 4 IDRMS -S352 v!~" f~J ~~ y!~~!~n top of the world from thls new home in Spyflass Hill. Just call for the de· tails on this beauillul 4 bedroom home. Call 640-6161 ~ COATS&WALLAC[ REAL ESTATE . INC. C°'l•Partc 3 BR. l~ ba. Obie attach ~ar. Newly painted in & out. Encld patio. Many trwt trees. $78,000. Call now. 646-3928 or 640-4737 Lachenmyer Realtor Need 1.etr starling ag- gressive agent.. New firm looking for qualified as- sociate. Extremel y generous comm1ss1ons .. Xlnt working conditions. Prestige office in Newport Centt.'r. FIRE MOUMT AIM v.i+ acre CUSTOM 3br. 2ba. drn rm, frplc, hrdwd firs. All upgraded Ready n ow. 0/11 Sat/Sun. 1490 Avocado, Oceanside .. 433·4801, 498-0788 MOMTHL Y PA YMTS J og to bcoch Huge hv rm. with crackling fireplact'. Gourmet kitchen :rntl 4 largc·!iliiiiiilliiiiiilliiiiiilliii------• 759-0761 OCEi\NVti':W Beautiful mountainside Laguna B eac h 4 bedroom. fomtly room. dining room w 111st un- der 3000 sq. ft . F<1bulous \ICWS from OHi' t a I I rooms & from al>out !)(I' nt p,1110 de<'ktng. Both floors could be used as separate homes. S266,000 JACOBS REALTY 675-6670 EASTSIDE DUPLEX Well located Orange County property. Both uruts are 1 bedroom. din· tn~ room with an at· t..acht'<l garai:<'. Prict'CI at a low S-19,900. CALL 556-2660. C::::SELECT T'PROPERTIES Fountain Valley Xtras! Xtras! Too many to mcnllon! Im mac & beautifully up- graded Jbr, l~ba, fam. rm & l'overed patio. Pool Tbl & Juke Rox incl. ·------ SHAMGRl·LA Your own 9 whole i.:olf crsl'. Spectacular '11•\\. furn home for only $'75.000. Gala Properta•' !\largerate Dul>o" 673-1068 MARINA HIGHLANDS Btfl 3 bdrm, 2 bath ex· ecutive home in quiet, private neighborhood Owner has purchased larger home & dc:.1rcs immediate sale. Hacycle distance to the beach 646-Till. Real Estate CANYON CREST Lovely Cd:\1 Condo. 2 Bedroom,:!~ bath. fami· Iv room. dmin~ room & SUP Ell VIEW Up .. graded carpet:-. & drapes & prof landseaped out · door areas. Call 640-9900 $81,500 i---------Cabfomaa Property -BLUFFS BEAUTY ~cw lls tang -ncw low price! Beautifully de- corat~ :l bed rm. end un- it. AND you own the land~ Gorgeous Back Bay view. Exlra large side patio and fi repit in front patio. $1601000. PETE BARRETT -REALTY- 642·5200 COSTA MESA Wc•ll dC'coratt'd & beautifully ma1nta1ned 3 h<'droom, home with l'JrP<'ts. drapes & a hr..and nl'w roof. Located on a shady tree hned street, short distance from schools & shoppin~. REAL ESTATE MANAGER WANTED f'or well known. expand - '"~ R!'al Estate com· pJn)'. Or>t•nins: a new of- fice tn Co!'lta l\lesa. Must haV{' cxpcr1ence. Salary plus +. ,\ 11 applications conf1denti<1l 1\pply to Ad No &l9, Daily Pilol, Classatied Ad\ ertising, 330 W. Bay St .. Costa Me!la, Calaf. 92626. Great price of S6212SO.i----------CALL 151·3191. C:: SELECT T'PROPERTIES DOMTBE PERPLEXED ... call for more details on these JUST LISTED duplexes & fourple'Ces in prime area from $85.000. Hurry Call 540-3666 Wflela11 REAL ESTATE C-2 Corner Choice Newport Blvd. location with 166' fron· t:age. Building and por- 1 aon of lot currently leased Cal l for particulars. s 125,000 ~~ -ANYTIME BAYSHORES bdrms. Low assumablc1-----------loan of Sl;J,500. Hurry! Call 963 f)7ti7 Ol'fN Ill'>•• 1 r, 1 '(1( f\1 l• I 'I ' .. ~ :.,•I •I• '' ~ 3BDRM +POOL $65,000 lluJ?1• hv. room gourmet k1tchen with formal dan- ani.:. .l<1g tu b<·Jl'h from this bt'.•Ullful Spanish \•11la garden home. As· sumc V./\. pJyments of SOMERSET in llarbor View Homes. New paint inside and out.. l'p~raded cJirpets. wall c·m cnng,; and drapes. S lfrrlrms, larRe family room w wl'l bar. Form;._11 rl111111 ~ room. 2 Flrl'pl:tc'l'S. View CO\ .. t'l l'<I palao. Asking only ~17 l,950. 644-7270 "4tt.SHCid ~ st71 . 00 per mo.. H urey ! 1 _::;;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii-i:t Ca 11963 6767. ,. REALTORS f>tlV 111Y•11 S ILllV fOM N>C"l' [~IEPMI EXECUTIVE HOME 2 STORY-BEACH ltah.an tile c•r\lt'y to sun kl'n liv. room butll 111 rnacro. Country s tyll'li kitchen. Formal d111111i.: Winchn,:: sl::urs lo maslt•r ~wtc with Homan hath tub. I-form• fully ansulat· ed. Call 963-6767 . UPIN Ill 9 •ti S fur111~ P.( NICf' ESTATERS ~ UMDER $60,000? Beautiful up ~rad<'fl lownhou'<' 3 IJdrm-. th:11 arc wallpap1•rerl and paneled throughout . Clo-.c I<• cvcryth1nJ? Call now whale 1l lasts! 5-16-2313. LGnJe Family Home 4 Bedrms, 3 baths + 2 oversized family room ...... nnck fplc, new kitchen " micr 11 wa ,.,. oven a ml t:irgt• µool. 1\ll tlns lnr on- Iv ~i ,:l(Kl .md in Co-;t.1 ~lt•~a ~ .J "'t ll~h·1l. 11111 t ·'. t·~111 :>!ti ;>880, 1111' I ull ill'· ta1b. ~HERITAGE, ...... REALTORS IMPRESSIVE OM LIDO I SLE $275,000 Especially large homc surrounding patio & pool. P erfect for indoor· outdoor living & enter- t.11nang Flexible 5 Bdrm home. Ideal for the lam1- l y who wants tw o separate wings. Situated on l\\o lots & two green st ml as. WATERFRONT HOMES ' REAL ESTATE 631-1400 $©~4U~-~t!rS e That Intriguing Worcl Game wifh a Cliuclcl~ -------1411•4 t.1 CIAY 8, ,OUAN For Ad Action Call a Daily Pilot AD-VISOR 642-5678 3·RR .. 2 ba., completely remodeled Bayshores' garden home. Gourmet I H E N I W kitchen , oversized. hf,_...1-..-1-...,lr--"TI__, secluded patio: quiet ... __._...._ ... __ .. __ .., __ street an this guarded I J J l community. Sl79,500 I M U Y S 0 0 Seller !'iays "sell!" ..... ===I ·===I ===L=:i::: Owf.,.erd1 "He's the kind C. F. Coleswortb~ . . .. .. .. of guy who ttill hu the f,m dolfar he •~r -.. " s 11 REALTORS 640-00 0 I N 0 G L u E I t--r-1 -1..---r-I -11--1rr' --i A ~lei. ,... c~~le o\ICllled .. .. v by flillftg "' ,... l'lll>M9 -d ..__.__._ _____ ,_ -..1cip ''°"' 119P No. 3 ~ SlllC & ,INl1 FIGURE S TING AMP I OHS C M L M Q 8 P 0 H H Q R F F 0 N H L H R E f R 0 0 L L E H H C S N A L R H A Q L Z I L G E I Y X Z 0 M W E M 0 A A Q M L S S R T H I L E S HOFMYOCWSPHERXNLHWT MZACLYMCkDAWHOHZAPF MHCPDO AMMR NSLHZBNYTHTTYOUSFFM 0 £ H E R J l L 1 0 T l T T D D F E C N Y E R E X R l N U Y I A T E M 0 A L T J H S Z R E X Z T L E U Z l H N Z TCWOSklkWIENV8N EL Ni SJ EN KINS AP HRNA PI t 'A I U N R l Z E A N E C E H S D R L H 0 Y 8 K I M 0 J D N S 1 D 0 R N E L Y H L ntVuct : r ~ ow •PPMr or-• . bllC • wn, up, down or dletO'ltfly. find._.. eftd box It 111, Vood H1111111 Hoff1111n l.lnn Button Ntptla Hoyt Jenk1ns ~herson L1tl Dlnztr Schntlldorftr TOllOM'OW: Hodge POdge •Applt" i9 n1NI NUMeUCO UTTUS IN lHUf ¥?VAU$ 6 UN$CIAM8lf A!OVC lUTUS TO GH AN$wtR rrrr 1 I J I I I SCRAM-LETS An1wers In Clonlflc:atloe 5 I 00 Gwral I 00$, .. ...e I 002 . ..................... .,. ....................... . HARBOR. VIEW Popular tri-level home with 4 bdrms.. professionally landscaped and highly upgraded with nice vi ew. Offered at $211,000 -submit. -... --... ----...""' ~ ......-.......... • u s .. o ~ ; f • , ...... For $4e Ho8se1 For ,. Moun For w. Homff For We I Hotnel Few w. . Ft1dg. tA!Y 27. 19T7 DAILY Pit.OT DI ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• u-.--. F <_._ u~~ .... Fo-~........_ u--.... ... -.-.. .__ ~......._ •••••••••••••••••••••• ~.. IOOZ ~• or-~ .... ' -..-. ... ~-G...,.. 1002 G.....-100 G_.,... 1002 Gwt'111 IOOJ Gwral 1002 _.._...., .......................... •••••••••••••••••• .. ••••••••••••• .. •• .. •• .. • ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••• .. •••••• ••••••••• •••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••. ••••• •••••• •••••••••••• C:O..O... .-M.-I 022 Coato Mesa . I 024 C..... Mesa I 024 l :·f.iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiii•~ JU ST LISTED! ! ! ···9.y·c; WH ER... . ..•... .•.•. ••. .•.•••.• • .••••••••••••••••••••• IASTILUFF OCIEAM VIEW LUSK HOME Four bedroom, 21.h bath, large family room, all new appliances. One year warranty. $158,000. Opn Sot & Sun I 0-6 644..0406 or 121 ~u. 640..9900 \':\I ~I "'I~\· Ill~~·\ I ~1,,7 1470 JAMBOREE RD . NEWPORT BEACtt . 1002 GtMrol 1002 •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• SPYGLASS HILL 28 Morro lay DriY~ New 4 br, fa mily rm, 21-'l ba home. Magnificent view. c ity lights & hills .. Deluxe carpeting & fixtures. Complete landscaping & sprinkler system. Move in immediately to qualified buyer GeMral OPEH HOUSE Fri. 6-9. Sat, Sun, MOft. 2·5 640-64 I 0 or 644-4684 1002 G~ral 1002 •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• COSTA MESA CONDO .. ,. .. FlAMI OH THI SANOS Just a block from the surf -and your own private pool are run extras that come with this beautifully remodeled, redecorated, relandscaped 3 bedroom. Dutch-door entry, beamed ceilings. warm woods . neat brick & tile enhance this charmer . Offered at $130,000. U~lf)Ut: liC>Mt:S REAL TORS I 675·6000 2443 East Co ast Highway, Corona del Mar also in Mesa Verde,dt 546·5990 BA YFRONT, pier & float, lots $250,000 . to $325.000. to build your own custom home. Several areas to choose from. PRESTIGE waterfront homes with pier & float from $495,000 up. BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR 341 Buy-.1dc Drive N 8 675 · 6161 '!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~ G.Mral 1002 GeMrol 1002 •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• PRICED FOR QUICK SALE Military T ronsfet' FORCES SALE \lust !'ell this bt'autiful 3 highly up&raded popular hE· Spnlass HJU. $275.ooo. s ONE OF A KIND.·. PLAN", 3 bdrms .• family rm. con-Br 3 Ba, View. Harbor k · ed b This dominium in "THE BLUFFS". There Viow Hills, $189,500." Br College Par Custom1z ome. are 2th baths, 2 frplcs. & a 2 car elec. 2 Ba. Vtew. 640-2981 home at 2284 Avalon (North of Wilson) garage. The VIEW or the greenbelt CQualJfioo Buyers Only> will be open Sat/Sun/Mon 1-4 PM .. gives you the reelin' that you are llv· OCH VU HIDEAWAY .Take a minute to stop by &say hello! .. ing ·in a park. Realistically priced at· Bachelor or artist 's 2 BR. $1A9 500 2 BA w/old CdM charm, ~ • . steps Crom LitUe <.;or011a. DOVER SHORES-VIEW! ! Huge lot w/room to bulld ~~w studio or ? 'l'ry ~.OOOdown . HALP1HCHIH REALTORS 675·4392 DOM IULL 751-2855 Glallfl Realty If you haven't seen our speclal buy on Polaris. with 4 bdrms., family rm. & formal dining rm .• you.may be miss· ing an opportunity. The price is only "$350,000. Please call for app't. 1/J Ilk to Ocean Costa MHa I 024 Costa Mesa l 024 Complete ly remodeled •••••••••• ••• •••• • • •• •• ••••• • • •••••• •• • •••• • • • 759-0811 IRVIME TERRACE Nicely located 63xll5 ft. lot with l~rl!e. attractive back yard complementing a sharp 3 bdrm., 2 bath home. $139,500 While it lasts. 673-4400 Oi•ision of Hcrbor lft•Hhneftt Co. on an oversUed lot. A smashing 4 BR plus den plus formal dming plus huge family room with o pen beams , natural wood textures and ocean and jetty views Crom master swte & sundcck. J ust steps to Ocean Blvd. ~.ooo. Call 644·1211 ,._ Beautiful duplex, So. or hwy. Corner loc. Ea. unit 2 BR. lg. liv. rm. w trrpl. $164,95() PAUL MA RT IN REAL ESTAT E 644·7383 CANYON OCEAN VIEW 2Br & den, So. or Hwy. 1 Blk to bt'ach, $215,000. Owner will carry. Shown by appt. Owne r bkr 67J.5740 SPYGLASS NANTUCKET 5 BR & bonus. 3 Frplcs. pool & Jacuzzi. Done wit h thousands of brick.s. Agt. MEW VIEW HOME FIXER UPPER 3 Bdrm. 3ba. trptc, shake WITH POOL r<. 2 story. Still time to Needs paint a nd corpet. pick cpts/drps. S89.9SO. All 1l tak~s 1s a httle 1m· Owner/Agnt . 675-6695 agi~allon & work a nd CONDO S PEC lALIST, you 11 have a beautiful H 8 c M F v \ y pool home. Hurr}, call Tou~hs t on'e Realty'. 64.5-0303. 963·0867 F ORESTE OLSON •"VC •••"""•UH' NEW CONDO End units '2 Br, 2'h Ba, beam ceilgs. cer amic tile, 2 fplc's. Pool & spa. S69,500. P rine o nly. 675·4912 Bkr. lfalecrt:st area llOOI hnme, Jbr, l·'~ba, bhns, (l:;hwr din rm, frplc, intercom. 18x.26 heated filtered cov ered pool + auto. POOi sweep. Lrg yrd. Auto sprnklrs 1n frnt. Lytton Rcalt) ~15-477 1 ----....--~---~-Eastside 3br, lba. $69,500 642·2164 JUST LISTED 5 Br, dining Room, fpl<', R 2 corner lot. Room for more. SS.t,600. 8UAKAllT$ OPEN HOUSf llfAl T'I' 17630..nv•.Coiu Me~ 645·9161 . MESA VERDE PACESETTER OM THE PLATEAU End uml. \'cry prl\ att.• trop1c;.i l i.:ardcn, l;Hi.:l' patt0 2 Rt•droom, :I hJth on ly S57 .ooo. If vou !\nooze. you lo:.c. Won ·1 la&i' Call Frank Sarabia Call 540·3666 VA TERMS One story home m Wood· bridge. Lakeside VICW, Just i.teps to pool and en· lertainment area. Owner says sell. A best buy a l I 002 _955-0350 __ • ____ _ bedroom. 2 bath Costa ••••••••••••••••-••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~fes:i home. Gourmet ·---------1---------1 Getterol 1002 GMet'OI SPYGLASS HILL k it c h en. comp\ By Owner · $84.750. LARGE tr1 levt'I. 3 BR + 3 ba + fam ily room. +3 car gara~e. 10 Yrs old, nice residential ar e a . C ou l d b e showplace w /some TljC. PILOT REAL ESTAT E, 54-0-055.5 or 58 l ·5986. 3 BR, 2 Ba + formal din· ing room or fam·rm . Most desirable M>c., qW.Ct cul-de·sac 1696 Mmorca Pl, C.l\1. lela11 REAL ESTATE •HORSES •KEMHELS •STORAGE t::.t? vour G I Benefits tn S1 19,500. Call 673·8550. bu' thb 3 Rl'droom home V"''' '" 0 • '' 'LN •n rl '' 1 • r;ir;:·.~1~1~~~"\:·~~ [ ~ lfi&Hil Price Reduc~d UPPER BAY VIEW-DELIGHT INCOME PLUS HOME WITH OCEAMVIEW •OR 77 C"ha1 m lflJ.! J bedroom. 2 Your hfct1 mc opporlum /\ hugl· 82 5 \'. :130 .\ 1 lur hat h homr with sweeping ty awaits in this l'l:ewport " J br, :.! ba hnmt' 10 up up1H·r Nl'"' por t Hay Hc1ghts DUPl4E X ! i\ per b;.iy tounty area. 'It'"" luxurious master three bedroom . t"o IC\ cl S00.500 IJedroom :.ultc. soaring w11h deck an<.l a two fl.14 7211 for details woocl hcam c a t hrdral bedroorn. two ll'vcl with beam tellings & much rll'Ck can bC' yours to h\'e more in or rent out Both units • ~ Now0nly$110,!l00 h:ne ocean 'ie'4 s with _ Ccdl 644-721 I Ca talina Island in th -----E~clus1vl' L1st1 n1? d1s1:rncc. Call !'>16 2313 SUN&SWIM ~ ""11·••/Q••· I,,,..,.,, L<1ts of <iflcrnoon 'un 111 ~ [~ 1m~·h·L1 ~r::h' ~;~~k o}"~~d11;:~~~~ ""-~--·-~· =~=·==-1 ~ i;@'U1i: • JJt'lf>I and l;1ri:1• 1·oimtr' --. - w1butcher block counter tops, & contmuou.s c lean· 1ng oven. Sculptured shai: crpts. Hea,·y shake roof Lari:c Yard Hurl') pncl'C'I on!) Si9,000. Call 546 5880 SPACIOUS LIYIMG CathNleral ent r). !-ttcp do1,1.n Ii'' rm w /br1ck trplc. di\ 1d1ni.: formal din rm " CU!>-lom chan· dchcr. br1~hl kitt'hen w Cornlni;! stme. opens 11110 l~c tam·rm w/bnck frpk I RR. :i Ba. plu~ honu' room "" ·,·1c\\. Air t·ond . :i c:rr i.:arai;e. lgc p ... 11 !'17t'rl ~ ard. near \brtt•wood & C:rnyoo $2,400 D1tierence in pnce in these two 3 bdrm., 2 hath homes. Onl' in Ml'~a \'erde, SR!l.900 The other. !\f1:-~1on \'H'JO, ~i .500. Eal·h 1 .... in xlnt cond1t1on 1n & out! HEW LISTING D ecorator s br ig ht OPEN HOUSE $12,500 DOWN!! cheerful fam home. 7 lg i:---------•1 bdrms. 4~2Ba. d in rm. 2 Cam rm'I. 2 frpks. \'iew S315,000. Q uali fie d Sat&Sun l·4PM !I UN ITS at Sl:!S,000. 10'~ buyers only caJI for appt. Dow n . Exce l le n t &t1H 388 dl•prcc1alion No out of ---------- pot k et expe nses r e · RARF. Offering. Rl lot, qu1r<'l1 Act now! 5.t9·8t>55 old Crnt. oceanside. Pnn only. C;.ill (714 )613·5607 Co1ta M~sa 1024 ••••••••••••••••••••••• HARDTOFIHD P opula r M esa Verdt' LIYOaugherty model with 3 overs1tcd :.,sonsttlne Broker bdrrns , family room , 546·4871 largl' dl'n with wet bar.--------- Big formal, h ving room with f1rcpluc~. llp~r;.idcd thruout. Hurr y. pnced a t only S7~,900. Ca ll 540·1151 Mesa Verde East lmmed. Possession 3 DR. 1600 sq. ft. blt ns, SUPER brick frplc, 2 car i:arage, shake roof, new crpts & ~HERITAGE Atlrad1ve 2 + family on ----------- larRe R·2 lot: close tol---------•I Buyl drps thru·out in color of • 1---------1 your choice, an outstand· Make dollars 1n this 4 ing b uy al S87 ,500 . "' • REALTORS Lido shopp1nf,!. $95,000 lnclllfl1ng the lJnd' 673 3663 673-8086 Eve::. associated BROKE'R S-REAL TORS l02S W 8olboo U l·J66 J PERFECT RETIREMENT '.? hrlrm. 2 bath tondo. Ht'aulllul laq.~l' patio with ~ardcn. WJll. to W~tchU or lit h S68.300. bedroom pool home in M ESA V E RDE Con · CURTlS R. E.962·2458 quiet area. Has n ew do 'Pool 2 sty, 2 Dr, t lla. car]lels and re modeled Din Rm. elcc Rar. elem & HARDWOOD bathroom , but still needs .Jr. l hl!h across strl'el FLOORS a little sprucing up. 558.500. 546 3653; 551 6959 4 BR, lge cov'd patio. $79,900. Hurry on this flurry & pick e xt. color. all od Wanted to buy: 5 Br. one. c t ar. R 1 Or vou pa1 ot & s ave! w Fam, D , <at east J l.1tch1'n \n "'<'L•ll11nt CHINA COVE lour hdrm f.1rn11\ honH' in Grl'<'nbrnok . Jnd onl\ 4 ~ ) (•:ll <, u\i\ ( .11\ IHI" S< hool., OPE"1 Sl''.'I· ----------400L~a:~ C.M4~ C7ASL2L·N7J015 • :J.000 sq.fl.> in Mesa ~.000 ~lichael,673·1166 Verde or Nwpt Dch. L ' Dana Point I 026 '""'''' .J• ( I II , [~ THE REAL ESTATERS F.: -STAR G A 'ZEKil i'• "' l l~Y ll l't)ll AP.. ........ ~ •••n J;).. 1ov1 o~.1,, •u .. ,,,. r-.v·rl. ~ ..,,.. I "''°' II :1: . ........ ;." _.u~rt1u•t to ,-.,. ~,,.,. • ll'* .. • •ll\34' Tn ~Wl"'C' """",,or '"' \l)hJ•rlo-. <>>~.i.'>{ "A~ ID rrotwvd~t "'''""°'.,,~ r,q t1 '"''°"~·tt ,, ,~,., - , • .,."'' l·..ti·O< I •r1t\\•J" \(,OIPIO 'tv, ,J ,,,. .,.., .. ,.... ··~ .. , .. ,,-.,_ .. t..;r1-.a- • •r " 1\1* ....-""' .. t ..... ........ ... ~ .. ' .... "' . .. ., ..,.,. . \• •1 11 ~"' ......... .. '·•'!\ # ... ~t~.~~ ... .. .... _ ... ,,. ,.. ~· ... ... .. ,., ...... ..... . ..,., ... ..... '* .. "'"'\.. •fr~• .... )lf)t~ "''°' I 'I ~J\ Q ·'' ...... . 4QUAl1Ul ~u·••-" ""'t"• •"loft~ :";•• " \,.:~ .. _, :i ~ .. ""' "P' .. _ .. "' tf ~ ....... ••U •'Qf'l ,. 4 ,,,.,w .. .-••• ,. :)0 ?'>\'9"' ¥(11'W'f:'a•~ ... ,, .. .,... ., .. ,... y. -....... ..,. ~1 16 :I"""""" \I l·~-'-' ., . t~ll "'"' .,.. .. ,""""" ... •• ... ,,., .... ~ ~'·" ·--· .»Do " M,i..-1 flQ .,.,.,. --~'Ciood ' Al OOA't"",,.. ~ )N••'"' G....,-al IOOZG-.ral ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• mecnab I Irvine realty FINER HOMES FlOM $72,000 TO S 1.100.000 STORYIOOK 2-STOIY Under construction. 4 BR + ramily room w/views or Cherry Lake & Upper Bay. For sale or lease op· tion. $175,000. Helen Wood 644•6200. (W·ll) THIS OLD HOUSI Near Santa Ana Golf Course Could be duplex! R-2 lot. 2 BR. den & dining room. $72,000. Vee Stinson 842·8235. <W·12) . wooo•tDG1 MEDITERRANEAN ELOQUENCE WITH OCEAHVIEW Two s t or\' SPF:C T,\(TL\R' 3 hrlrmo;, 21: bath .... :incl ,1 1antJ-..t1i' ocedn '"'" rmm t\<'r\ room ''ill i:rcl't )OU 10 \h1..; eu~tom e harmcr EveryUung 1s new Jncl the l o <'a t1 nn 1 n ~EWPORT llE tl;llT!'> C~ll now ~ :?.'UJ. !) \' I 5. Southern Calif Rralt\. 5~0 8t.i9 01 5-'6·!'J6<~'> --- OCEANFRONT Cu<1tom dupll' x. rho ice location 2 And 1 bdrm. S289 500' COSTA MESA EASTSIOE F:xt ra cl<' an 3 hdrm & r:tmily rm. pool homr R\' .. t i-:a:o<t'lidt local\nn. $43,900 LarJ!e 2 bdrm townhO\IM' w blt·ms sh.ii! t·rpt111~ thruout m '!Utl'I scttini: ------------- " community pool &1---------•1 clubhou~c. 0 1\ncr Ill lt.'restt'd in qu1C'I• salt' C:lll todJ) tot-Ct' 64& lill VILLA PARK CUSTOM HOMES T wo prestige custom bwlt homes 111 exclusive urea. m<;g 752-8777 x20.t or 5! 7 H43.5 p I • • •••••••••••••••••••••• OONAlD M. BIRD ~.,_._, __ . r_m_c_. ~-Y-· -WA.,..TED Auo<•Ote\.R-ho.~ JOG TOTIIE BEACH "" : EASTSIDE. 2 unique houses, lots of Oc~an View HolM' character, both 2Br + 10 trade for luxurious 57' lndry rm, triple garage, World Race/Cruise An· 2storai:e rm:i;. wlk to sthl napolis Sa11in~ Yacht & shopping, Nwpl H~ts w/Dana Point shp. Value Sl.50,000. Must see to ap. S102,l\'t. Call Bill Gates prec. 646·3817 <2t3l 923·8187 COLLEGE PARK lDEAL FAMILY HOME, bm·k frpk. lo\\ mam· ----------'z Ac re Est a te L ot. POOL+ GUEST Prime Eas tside Costa Mesa. Towenn~ trees! CurYed drive. Rustic hv· ing room hosts cathedral ceiling + massive brick fireplace. Sunny galley kitc he n -with n o ok! Cozy den. Hideaw ay master s uite. Gia nt s parkling blue pool with shdc, boa rd & dressing r ooms too! Se pa r a te guest racilities with kit chenette! Easy care yar d. J us t S98.500! Hurry--= all now 646-7171 Jbr, 2ba , POOi, 2 frplc, dose to schools and ram r m, bar & lo maint. beaches, parks, & Dana Jndscp 'g. S76,500. By Point Marina. Over 2000 Owners. Phone durinR sq. ft. of Jiving area. \'iew1ng h rs. 6·8PM . L a r ge r oom s and Pnn. Only. 556·2663 e nclosed yard. Open h'n8n<'t' yard $109.500' MARLBORO Single level. 5 Bdrm. fo m Boltoa lay Prop. r m, lgc J;!ame rm, 3 ba. R•ctltOf"S COUNTRY covr'd patios. 3650 sq ft. * 675•7060 * 1·1a<.s1c Coloni<1l :! !'~ory :\umNous featu r es. home on '~ acre' Quiet $239.500 -----'--------! house Sat & Sun 14 PM. ________ .. 25211 Yacht Drive, Dana La Cuesta Villa S73,500 u ..... rahlc mod('\ "Ith S1>.1n1\h 1t1L• rool Fl•Jl111f'' :1 t>Nirm fJn\I I\ 1 m 2 h.1th . .! < .1r ~.H<H!t' \'1re polio and 'arr\ l In~<' tn hf':ic-h. park .inti oth('r far1ht1r-. Plea"'e phont' for <ulcl1 twn;ll min .ind Jppo1n1 meot PA~ORAMIC OCEAN VIEW $4(,..4141 ~ COATS& WALLACE REAL ESTATE. INC. 100 G""'111 1002 ••..........•......... . ..................... . rE 110181 BLlllS CD. OVER SO YEARS OF SER VICE ILUFFS TOWNHOUSE WITH VIEW Lovely End Unit Condo Like New, Highly Upgraded. 2 Br. 3 Ba, Den, Wet Bar, Al1 Electric Kitchen. Formal Di-ning Room, Wood Pegged Floors, 'Entry Hall and· Kitchen. Large PaUo. Gated Courtyard Entry. $162,500. 2021 PORT IRISTOL CllCLI . HillOR V11W HOMES lB>UCID TO SI Sf ,too <'ountry scttin~ m V11l:.i Sun t 5 at 10i2l Ad<1ms Park "ilh barn. corral. C'trclt>. Ask for Nancy mhm: rinl!. fruit tre<'!>-. i31 1522 tr1plP gurJI!<' ;incl workshop. Spacious 3 hdrm .. 2 bath. hup.t' fanu h· room. fnrm:tl dining, rount1\o l.1t chcn & :! f1repl:ll'<'S CJll for de· tail!; 5~0-115 l ~,. HERITAGE • • REALTORS Panoramil' V1l'w Lot, single fovl'I. :l Bdrm & convt'rt den. <am & din· mg r m. Lu:.h landscap'g w/yard fenced for pool. S:MS.000. ShowTI by appt only 111822 R1dgev1('w Circle. As k for Mike. 731·1522 O"fN ll(Q• 17511J•J r""•'•;(!1 [~IAUil GORGEOUS CUSTOM HOME! This one is being bit just for you. IC you hurry you can select your own col· ors. Blflly planned for a Western Paci£1c Cmly w /separate wing Properties for childre n. Separate EAST --------• mstr wing w /sauna & -----------t jacuzzi & den or bdrm. Has frml din rm, brkfst. rm & fml y rm & dbl frplc. 545-9491 SI DE ~~~~!!l0pen 1925 Lanai Dr. 58r, Cost a Mesa Colonial xlnt country clb loc ~1ans1on on quiet cul·dc· COf'OftCI del Mar I 022 lot a n y x l r a 11 sa<' ocar Newport's Back •••••• ••••••••••••••••• 541J.8614/54Q.20t8 Bay' ~139,500. R ed •------------- Carpet, i5H202 *OPEN* Connery Villacie Come on in and ta lk fo u-; about your real estate needs. We have a van~ty of rme lastings. Ask for J.,ew 673·6261 SAT /SUH /MOH. 427 NARCISSUS Walk to beach·storol'I· post otncc. lmmacuJate and ready! $130,000 CURT DOSH Realtor 642·6472 644.9596 1002G....-.I 1002 ~····················· •••.••••............•.• fllc~!i~ .... W.-C..to. loyfrOllt. DELIGHTFUL! 4 BR., 2 BA. & POOL HOME. NEAR SOUTH co~ PLAZA. $74.ooo Agent 640-5560 Bar Jain ......... s,.c1at Lovely Mesa Del Mar home, very sharp and clean. 3 Bedrooms, din· Ina area. family room, hearty aW!le firep\aoo. Two patios, OM ls. COV· eredl Handy bullt-lns. Only $78,750. BKR. call 540-1720 Su1>er Eastside-Pomt. · 2 mt, large family rm. 1 ;t AHCHOIAGI nl'w no-w aic tile. extra IHYESTM&tTS b1~ lot full of fruit Ire('~ and vegetable j!arden. C714t 496-7711 Must see! 645-3474 Fowttain Vall•y I 034 .~ Iii ~~~. ·~;;·;;:~~;~~ .. ~~: I I I I. HB , CM, F Vl y. T o uc hs t o ne R e alty . • - -963-0867 ------------- OPENSAT &SUN 1·5 NEW TIBURON 2 br, l ba condo. Pool. patio, garal{e. 1649· STINGI Iowa St. $1&7,500. 8 ) LI . _o_wn_er_._64_2_·_64_2_1 ____ -t Fabulous 4 br, 2114.i ba ""-T h Newpo rte r mod e l. French..,. .. wn se Forma l dining rm, 3DR. Jl~+V..ba $59,900 l avis hly lands caped 4BR. 3ba$63,500 patio w /son s creen, Crawford&A1111oc Rltrs. balcony bedrm overlook· _____ 9_5"1_-01_0_1 ___ --t Ing huge greenbelt. See it EASTSIDE Large Lot today ! 531·5800,e¥H 968-7725 WHtho.-... Rffllton Inti RE Network 3 Bedrm, r. dio room, dbl det. gar. & fireplace. au•--------on hardwd floors. Don'I wait, call now 645·7221 CENTURY 21 WestcUff Realty You'll Love the Decor or \bis handsome 4 --------------bedroom home. Lot.s of •TOWHHOMI* OHEYEARHEW Mu1tMll.-bo.Jht ClltOthtr . wallpaper and rich wood paneling. no wax v1nyl entry and gourmel kitcl1en. Bis bonua room for y our pool table. $93.900. BKR, call 540-1720 Spacious 8 Bdrm, 2~ be.th, deaorator pe~ec:t..1--~--~--~----- Feoced patio, atrium, GREEN VALLEY 4br, btam celling, xlnt Costa 3ba. nr Pt.ygmd & park. Mesa loe. Clt>1• to enr· Prinooly. 968-0001 Newer Lido Isle home ori 55• fron. tage with sunny South exposure & exciting action view. Dramatic 2- sty. entry, parquet firs .• wood paneling. s BR, Maid•s rm. bonus· rm, formal din. rm. & brtfst are.a. Pier & slip for lge. boat. sandy beach. $895.000 ~-.. ythin&. rs;::;, I ~ &lo /Mon. -10665 La ..., Rosa Lant. Green Valley ..#1 t.e.llfonileM 4 BR, fam•no, dln·rm, 1---------1 bonus rm, 2~ ba, pool, W°"'*f Ii Wowclerl_. ..tr toAner. $123,000. B1 Condo. In convenient cwmer.S58-7GS Townbousa. 4 8r,'2ba, 3 pools. 11•,000. Submit of. lere. Qulnt.ard R.ealt)' mmo .. •• Brand new Broadmoor Patio Home -Aspenwood Model in fantastic location w/4 BRs & lg. master off atrium. Sunken dining & living room w/massivc fireplace. Gorgeous glass walled family room & built-in electric kitchen I Enjoy the parks, pools & lake! $100,500. BilJ Hutchings 752-1414. (W-13) ~RI 10.lPM Charming 2 Story "Portoflno" Model In An Executive Neighborhood Of Prestige Homes . 3 Large Br, 2tAi Ba, Family Room, Separate Dinlnr Room, Lar1e Patio._ Well Landscaped Pool-slie Yard. Owners Have Purchased. Another-Anxious! Costa Keu loc1tlon. Prof~~ In .-ct tutures It col· on. For .&altt®lJ. Pool • reaa1loa tacWU... 2S1'0RYPABKSIDE • • MIS.A 0& MAR . I Jl8ar s BR & Den, 4 ba, ' '42 .. US 644-4100 901 Oo¥'91'0riw HMbOf' "le• C..etet IMM 9t C.mraa V11U1y c:.111r 712-1414 I --WATUnlON'I' HOMES Gl·1t00 •I ' Clean 5 Br, 3 ~ w/uf)-up, f•m•.fn\ "'/W.i.·lw. IJ'Qdcd crpt, eov d t>•Uo tt.ep dowd Uv-rm w/frplc 6-other strH. Nr all ltdJo ere-a. Cbolce loc. or ..., ICh1I. lmm«L poaeq. Nii. Sq pan_ Prleod f« .. PrJno. oa.17. Owner. ·qQlct ult al SUJ,000. 6U81 • A1JJ.. ttwneor •• OtM I ---...._ ~ p - --. -· -~ --- ;JNH DAILVl'ILOT u-.~-· F'15M927,1t?l' ~.~~ ... ,,,, ~.':':':~-·-•t::;~~-""' ~.~~ .... ~ .. ~::~~ ....... ,,~.'!';~••••••: :a•n For We r--.. "°" W. H Fw StM 8"M a..,..Hlc)lm -................................................. ~................ • 1044 ............ _ 1012 MigMM IOIJ Lallie'°""t IOI Ml ••rf leactt -106tNtwporileoeh '°''· · • I ........... leocll I 04 I I ti ,_ .._. I MO ...,... I 044 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ......... ••••••-••••••••• •••••• ·-..... •••••••••••••• •• .. ••••••••••••••••••• "••••••••••••••••••••! <.· •••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••• ••••••••••• ........... •••••••••••• DEAHi HOMES 'I' ACU Jyrold4bdrm2~bicol WOODBRtDG~ SlsS DEH+STUDIO DIEAM COM This 3 bdrm home Is onia1, fam rm, wood Fant .. Uc 4 Bedroom, 2h Twnbse, 3 Br Fam Rm, Fablllous Dnoe bome in I TIUI situated on v~ acre in shake roof, ire yard pro ~th CAL CJaulc By The 2\.\ Ba. ownr. $17,900. Irvlne. Super i m-Brand new & Ready to move in now, Lt.ke F~t. Xlnt area fcuionally lanchcaped, Sea, in beat location, M0-02:St maculat. Walden model. wltb all the finishing touches & nr. abopp1ng & schools up·.rraded carpet• II Mar beach, Meadowlark OM THI La~ett Cul-de-s~c lot in landscaping completed. Save lime & Home I.a in 1mmac. t'ond , drapes, 3-car 1ar, close Goll Coune & ahopptn.c. tra I Mexican tile entry energy by com~ ring this 4 Bdrm, &won't last at $71.SOO ·lo 1cbool1, fireplace $U1 ooo WATB,.OMT • ldtcheo, too. Beamed Living R D Wlr'tMtqton RHlty buae patio. $119,900. Op~ ' · New 2 level Condo. below cat Md ra I c e ill n I . m, g Rm, Family Rm ) I 4-t79-S060 Sat/Son, 1-5. Other times -list, by owner. 76'Ml838, Forcoal dlne. Microwave home for your satisfaction. High call tor appt. 963·8541. ~122 oveo. Glgaotlc master Beam Ceillnp add to lhe benefits, in· MIMloft VJ.lo I 061 P/P . auit.eopenstoprivatespa eluding a 3 car garage. super garden ••••••••••••••••••••••• HOWS YOUI bouie. Huge secluded b' hf pool •-CORDOVA' BR, ftlmlly lfYOll ... Outgrown REALTY INC. HOME UNl den. 22' detaebed arttat ig enoug or a •°'an open view · rm. cpt'a. upard'd, YourPretellt HCNM 7~4/146-1'71 It --··'dn't h•lp lmprov atudJol &eparau. storage all for $139,500. Drop by & see for beaut. lndscp'a. VIEW. the apaclo""ness you've w.u "' • r oom.· Profeulonally yourself. 171,900. Call 830·2011 H .... MISS OUlsnoNMAIU DO YOU LIKE: living at the beach? Relufna in the sun? Jogging or stroll· in1 at water's ed1ef Watchinc graceful gulls? Body or board surf- ing? Cozy frplcs.? Surf fisbini? If you answered "yes," one out of seven Umes, you could be very happy in a charming 3 bdrm. home on Balboa Peninsula Point, for only $159,900. Please call for details. ~a.looking for abounds SUPER BUY! :r~~::: g~::.,t:1~tu; ~J&:,cr:::Ja'.ja~tst 0,-...... Sat.. S-.W Ii Mea. _owne_..;_r_·-------1 ~this 4Br,3Babomede· Lovely3br,2ba,ramrm. level. Hu hl11h vaulted Call' for preview no~: 2t•ll A9e ........ Lr .. 1 MCJ11111 Deluxe "Trevino" 3Br, ~·-~~-.L·T~l)O REA .. ~'" ' signed to accommod_ate Many xtras. $86,000. By ceilings, vlew of TV & 75.2-17®,. MMr Cl"OWft v--Mtl 2ba B s ~' 11.1.a .a · ~II the families ac-owner.968-2242 frplc in fmly rm from · Ol'fN111Q':'11sruNr0&1Nict• • -F sunSet ;,:,:nfr~m ut.!~ , tlvltles. Huee happy kitchen & brkfaat rm I:. , Ii I I M A y Q C K I l T 1377 Via Udo. Mr.port IMCh family rm, formal llvlnl By ownr. Upgraded mdl Matr bdrm baa 2 lewi~ :-~ ~ ifl't ~U.:::,m 0r~atu:C: t':'t~i. . 673-.7300 . & dlnlna tms. Sweeplnl H.B. Seabreeze Condo. 3 w/altUna rm area. 4 · , t CORPORATION Shows like a model. circular atalrcase from tge bdrma. 2ba, formal bdrms atuU bathe. Hur..., .c : : sa 000 /b · ~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!I!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! &~ac~ad °:taster aulte din.rm, attached 2 car oothlaone154S·9491. ·~ · · " LAGUNA BEACH wih carr5 : ~fo:~w~~~-= w aec u e parent &ar.Pricedtosellqulck· GttEBilTIH 494 2146 T.D.OpenbouseSat/Sun ~~r:;!: 85J;.~~W~ :wf!~ ly at m.900. 968-0271. $95,500 • 11 ·5. Call 586·8581 Newport leoc:h 1069 .Wwport leach t 069 ming pool & many more Hlilttt~on Broker Pr i me I o c a t i o n . • eves/wknd.s. •••••••••••••• • •• •••• •• ••••••••••••••••• •••••• features. Call now HarbOw-I 042 P r o r e s s 1 o n a l I Y Loi;ii.a Hlpl I 012 1 LOCJU1M1 Mic)MI I 052 11r...1 L• t • Balboa·Penm Pomt: 2br. Sltor9cNtt ... •••••••••••••••••••• WOODBRIDGE land!.caped groun.ds. -••••••••••••••••••••• ··-··-·--·••••-..... ew IS . •nCJ l ":iba, !am.rm, s uper ONWATER120'.55'dock. Thtck, plush carpeting. Romantic View Charming Chffhaven views. steps to ocean. aetiffy 4 Br lwnhae on point. 3 Hr. l "" bath Brick Fireplace is home. Sunken hvtng rm. Sl45,000. Ownr673-~79 146-1173' Pvt, beat vu. S2&S,OOO. ~o~O 00. 0sate0or lehue enhanced by natural sFl\joyion Vtethjoefroligmhtsth'?! 1M0 la· with rock wall & hearth. _:_...;... ______ _ -==;.;;.._-----1 Ownr/Aif., 714-840-1879 P•· •.' • · pn se wood bookshelves. Huge 13 ve· Beamed cell. in dinins TWO UNITS BY OWNER ----=;__-----• Sat/S&m 12·3. #5 Saae. Ph sunk Is s e d cou ntry ly 3 bedrm, 2 bath home. rm. 3 Bdrms., H~ baths. On Peninsula; charming 'Poolsidecondo3Brll,', TRJMIDADISUND ~ kitchen. Seoond story ~~sidnal,'f copper plumbin1. Spanish style front Ba, wsh/dr, inc. Prime New 4Br, J'hBa. 3 car THEW LLOW hosts secluded master .,_. an tute u · $114.900 house, with frplc.; tri· loc. Muat sell, 'llr.7,000. aarage, avail immed, POO I S wing+ 3 more queen 1 1Yordecodetairalsted.CCenallt ryloda2y1 C"'LL 0 ~ ,., •• ,,. levelrearapt.wllhvi<'w ' 963-4169; 962-7698.., owner536-2174 L H 0 ME· BY sized bedrms. Beautiful · u " ~ .. .. .. ofbay&ocean. Sl50,000 QWNER 3 Br, 2ba. frplc. latticed covered ratio is WestSM-4840. A~MM NEWPORT BEA.CH l"lne 1044 ·'14.500, call 752-7847 lv here too! Cal fas~. ?'ruLTY-., WALK TO BEACH ••••••••••••••••••••••• msg. 752-1700 .. 1069 ,Nur Nt•port , ... Ottlo REALTY 67S.1642 P .a.RKHOME Ol'fNfl101·nHu•iroH•11('" · SIA TERRACE Newport och "' UNIV. PARK Village Ill, [ . ~ ~ Ii · I ..a • ......_. .. -................... SELLING NEWPORT HGHTS This Executive homeha11 A Deerfield 4 bedroom very pvt & elegant 4 BR, ·a~1t~~;!iitl --' YlftCJ n a ,....Y • ..,...-co.-BY OWNER, short block RIE.A.L ESTATE Exclusi\·e Cliffhaven fo rmal entry which home with over 2500 sq. J Ba. detached home · .:: •; ,_lty with recr-.atlan c....,., pool, t.-1 to boat docks & private Lu>Cury Inside & out. <!pens to gracious foyer. ft.ofsuperlivingspac~. w/xtra. lee yrd. Comp.· iiJ i' • cowls. Giid prlYClh beach acc"a. .... beaches,3BR,3Ba,ex· Npt~~~~cg~~ar;!1esa Bcuul ocean view Step down to .hv rm &. Many neat extras on this upgraded w1plu11h crpts beclr--. 2'/i IHlths with.._ md _. pandaJ:>le (or gueatqtrs). 759-0226 w/pool 3 Br. 3ba, :! rormal dining rm . one. $127,500. Call for &drpsVanLuilpapers, llAUTIFUL tolR.tew fl--' etbcr ~ Youowntheland.Hlghlr, ----,_ frplcs .708St.JamesPI. Cheerful k1tcht!n & ad· appt Solarium kitch floor. CULVUDALE -~ ._·· .,....ace, w ' 'OOlft. exclusive "Bayshorea' ICCPl~'!!MA~~ Hy owner 64~·2818. Joining breakfast nook I formal din-rm frplc & --.,..-ttr ..... · · · $178,0 0. guardedcommunlly. ~ ~Iii_!., 645·5746 occupyonccornerotthe bltns.NearSau'na&Ten A most beautiful 4 499·4551 OpenHouseSal/Sun ,:tround floor. Spac1ou... • • ni s Crts steps from 15 bedroom home m one or GUNA DANA LAGUNA 1-5 pm. MEW 8 UFFS CO ram rm features lg lrplc. ac. park: 2 shop'g ctrs, & the mo:;t desirable areas ~~GUEL POl"IT BEACH 00·132A '187,500. L MDO BA YCREST & wet bar. Powder rm is schools. Call for appt. or Irvine. Outstanding 495-1720 493-8812 497.mg 2511 Vista Dr. N.B. BI oo ming 0 e Io res 4 Bdrm. 2~~ ba. fam rm. nearby. Upstairs are 48r SS2..s982 By owner. Prine. curb appeal: Real pride Model. 3 Br 21 :i Ba, end w/2 lull baths, walls or only. $121.500. of ownership and only LIDO ISL! unit. By owner. 501 dining area. 80140 sq rt. kl S87 5 C 11 Pl $133 U\I\ O•~ 7901 lot W/40' pool. 1924 wardrobes, + an over· as n& • 00. a to Exquisite Mediterra· aya. ,.JUV .,...... • Ope Ho • S t & s & Leeward Lane. By owner \lewtothe livrm below. RAHCHREALTY WAL.MUTS(i>UARE see. l.oqmaleoch 1048 LagunolHc:h 1048 nean Style 2 story. n us .. 8 · un. Callnow to see th1sexc1t 551-2000 PlanB.3Bror2+den.2 I •••••••••••-•••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• Comerlotatquieteodof .Mon. ll·6PM. Owner ~!~,~~ol~C~lr~~~e rnithome. bath, ut1I rm. Pvt patio. ., . OWN YOUR OWM lfsland1.1 Dbl Frdench dr11 w/cooperatew/realtors. GOOD LOCATION , air cond. Upgraded rom v rm, Jn rm & SEA VIEW. Dynamic MHller Californ1ahme,P1an104, w /new cpl & paint, APARTMENT solarium open out to li ocean/lites view. Brand ________ _ Realtors 3 Br 2 Ba , Fam Rm. Din wallpaper. Beaut. cond Across from Heisler So .. red. brlck patio new. choose colors. *'ARADISE• 963·8364 Rm, w1buffet, newly Pool & Park. Nr. North Park. 0c~anv1e~ & hills w /~ountain. 4Br, 4Ba. $25.000. under mkt. DREAM HOUSE ---------1 painted. S76,500. Prine Irvine High $61 .200. Pnn too! 2 BR, 2 BA. ,\dulls S12.500·Hawah lol ~ .• acre maids. Luxurious mstr $279,500. 548-8614 J .V. Co. CONDO SPECIALIST, HB , C M . F Vly Touch!>lonc Realty , !lti3·~7 S&..c;; lk~.11<' Sper 111l1!.t::. :1. I or 5 bdrm modl'ls avail . :.ome w pools, !1611·4W:.! P,ennmglOn PrOpC'rtlt'S only. 759·5848 dys ; only. Call 5518042 art 6 only. rnR. own your own nr bath w /sunken marble BACK BAY AREA ~9·0186 cvs/wknds pm for appt to i.ce. RANCH REALTY ELENA APTS bt•ach. S-i!l.500 tub. Gorgeous Spanish COUNTRY LIVING 2tX>O sq ft, 3Br. 2ba. hv ---------551-2000 484 Ch ff Dr. Laguna S156,000·4BR ocean vu ttle floors. 3 frplcs. Bay Horses OK, lovely 3 br on rm. din rm. 2 frplcs SORRENTO RANCHO JAY W YEATS Sl89,000-3BH 2Ba-Bchsd \lew $304.000. R-4 lot. 2031 Orchard, ort lti'x22 rec rm, beam In th<' RANCH a 4 ELEGANCE • St98,500·3BR /den Fan· . OPEN HOUSE Irvine. $110,000 firm <'ell'AS. 4 car gar or rm bedroom family home at SAM JOACf)UIH in a c:onlemporary t n REALTORS tlli.tic ocean \'it!w :SAT, SUN, MON 1·5 5S7-1738 for )hop or studio. New. lh<' c•nd of a Cul·de·sac Sharp S;in Carlos·2 King level ; sumptuous maste1 499·2237 S!:i9.500-C11i.1 F;n~ Tudor. _Owner'Agt675·9lt!9 cpts thru·out. Nicely rtdJ.1rent to a Euc·<ilyptus si1.e bdrms. formal din· swtc with its own satun~ 1 B ll J R D · 2 Nwpt H~s, new constr, 4 landscaped, I 1n". + ('07V. snunnlcr ' . II . in.rm. HARBOR VIEW B 21.1.. II t I . A t 23 d St J Ii net ~reenbclt. Sl09,900. " ...... rm + 2 generous I) pro· Oceonfront Lot cll't·ks. wine ct•llor. dcn r " a. a a01en1 1es. rvme vc o r . tallforappt ~xtlusive l1 s ti11 ~ portioned bdrms . up. \\wet bar. lnm rm. fan. PORTOFIMOMDL $139.500.Agt .645·9950 hlkwestto2305Redland~ --------111 . SOUTllLANDERS H i-; Sun I.. u n Ii vi n I! rm . Extremely rare p1C<'I.' ,,r tJst1c whatcwatl'r & ca· Ownr selling 1 of a kind ----Dr SI 19,500 by owner. Ph Jt>.tn Howe. 631 :!1:1:1 +formal dinin~. family propertyonxlntbchwlth nyonvu on lge pool sized lot SEAYIEW 5-18,0051 SUPER FIXER • Open House Sal & Sun rm & den or 4th bdrm. panoramic oct'an ''iew w lush gardens & paddle Port Hoyal Pla11 5. 4br, 1110 VteJO do"n -i Bdrms. J bath). Easily butldable Laguna Hiiis I 050 tennis crt in popular Jba. ram.rm, 2718 sq rt Byow 11o..1ER 1n!X'<!rf1eld.Sll!l,900 ~ ....................... neq~hhorhood near w1panoram1c view from MEWPORTSHORES ' " n.n• • , ..... 8 3br. 2bu at 22512 Montova. Fashion Island & 10 ocea.n lo mountains Delightful 4Br, 4 ba, fam Ope ho d ·1 11 " ~ --·-=;w~ • ( h d rm. 3 blks to beach n use a1 Y v ....._IVUY/ S73.500 1213 >672·1731 & min s rom beac . Guar ed gate, tennl!I 3792 Fern St Coll""'' 552 7000 '--"' 2 3 Profes d t d 4b .... I .-.0:9 000 c II 5139,500. Open Sunday ... • 1990So.C•t.Hwy.494.8c 19 , _1 l )i70·2729 · s ecora e r. c ..... poo . ..,..., . a RAHCHREALTY Park "Cornell"4Br,2li "' " 3'2 ba hme, features Ownr/Agnt,5S2·1800 ll·5. 477 Prospect, NB. 551 •2000 ba. fJm rm, d111in1t rm, THE · ·:. --hv.rm w/fire pit, formal _64_5·_8626 ______ _ --------•1---------l bonusrm.Overlk'gpark, A BEST IUY d1n'g, sunny gourmet OPENHOUSEDAILY THE COLOMY schl Community pool!. VILL CE. _· . ." SPARKLING (..' 0 n 1 e m P 0 r 3 r Y kitch. ram.rm. & ma ny By owner. E . Bluff 4 Br • EASTBLUFF - Decorative Ff air' Jmmaculate 3 BR. 2 Ba. $112,000 Ph 559-06i2 REAL TORS J br <S panis h tiled &. Cahforniu Townhome. cusl xtras. adJOlning Fam Rm, 2 fplc's. 2' ~ Beautifully decorated J ht>:iml'd >. pool w Be\l'I · 0\t?r 1500 sq ft + 'eran· tiled breeie way & patio. ABalt'a poov1!tas17.6.e44~olt3.2322ot.ir Br. 2'2 bath Townhouse. I) lhlb Flair. S139.SOO da w 1, ie~ 3 RR ·s. 13., INCLUDING a sep ap· &W·ll25" HUGE :'.las ter Bdrm. 1~ evident m lh1!. inviting on t•ul·dc !>ac Custom Open House Sdt Sun Mon IBr 2 Bu homt> Dewrat bu1lt-1ns thru·out. New 12·-1 2br. d~n. 2bn. on tht• •·ti bv th<' art1r;t nwner carpet, full patio. ap. Jake 63 Lakeview \rbo1 ~leach I 048 By Owner. 0 H Sat/Sun· ba·s. A/C, 2 car gar. Only t rec /bonus r oom ------1 5107.000. Ph M0-8895, ••••••••••••••••••••••• Mon. 4!l4-7837 or 499.3497 ~.900 " I h d rm & b a for Upgraded 4 Br. 3 ,12 ba, ..!_2_13_l4l!.H660 ---------1 RED CARPET teenagers, guest or lam rm. din rm, ~ame BLUFFSANITAPLA;o.; Rfflltors 586-0400 study. Open hse SaliSun· rm. Portofmo HV home. 3 bdrms, 2 bath, frpk wit h many interestln~ pllan<'es 1ncld. Walk to Lak('. <i9ot·IX>36 tletall ~ Cracklln~ school. pool. tennis. '~Ion 1-5 at 1718 Port Sl69.950 fee . Owner $112,500. OwnrSSl-4038 Marga Lt> or by . appt. 6444844 l1replJt'C. witlls of m1r shopping A bargain al VIEW + SPA ror!I. enclo~ed 11a1 io & S82.SOO t7H )551·4872 Spac1oui. & warm 3 BR RAMC H EST A TE l~h land!lcupinJ! '"' th11' Dean homt' tn t n1v 644·5128. Sl82,000. ------lll[l!llerpiN·c apqi I from WOODBRIDGE Park f'eaturei1 a I 11n· L'ndcr ron;.truclion on a l.acJuna Nl~I I 052 ot h l',. h o mt•!. 0 n I Y Stl..'P~ to beach club. tasllc \'IGw & II CU8tom onl' aeri· "Ill· in the roil ••••••••••••••••••••••• YOU ASKED FOR IT DREAM HOME sro.750 Call now won'I Cho1111c "Our own in· enclosed jacu211 Fl1lly ing hills of San Juan 3BR,3BATwnhm WEHA.VEIT. Private beach & dock. la~t J Capistrano. 4 Bedroom. 4 I BR · · ort..---t tl'nor This i BR & 2 BA landacaped. titslefully bath. family roorn with Beaullful new home in Elegant e>Cecutive 5Br or I A most new · 2 • ~~,.., hse is readv for occup decorated & hlJ:hly up fire PI are• c ount r Y Seu Terra<'e com um uni 4 + 5 tu d Y home . elegant MBR suite, fam Realty now 113S 0211 t''Ct 9582. or iraderl Call owner for kitchcn. 'fop quality ap· ty Fircpla<'l' Security Professionally derorated rm, formal D.R . Open 846-5573 6753.S._:t ______ appt Ml-till96S12ol.500 pnintments and ap-~ate. Fully landscaped. •wHARIORVIEW* & wallpapered thruout beamed ceiling. Stainect I h Hurry .. ··fore summer' P-' edt Ill _ .. , t P11,.,,uetentrance, Terra i::Jass \\1ndows. much -------TURTLEROCK·Beautlful UHIVIRSITYPRK N QR {NS P lances l roughout. "" . ..c ose mm.:ua e--... S f ho I S103 u.r. I I vel l t M Cotta tile, executive of· more. ll PG RA 0 F. O Pa r 1 fl r dc~iRner home, lg corner Vlll:T 1 pa~ or rsea or poo .. .,.,., y, o Y s ory on· "-nd 4 A 2 u I I t k 3B RE A LT Y and tennis court. $335,000 Rdh Ellis-960-2358 te,qo model in an ex-fice w/cus tom wall units (.:>Gulls.tr r, na. pool t' ro on par '92\'1ewS._ r, Edinburg en unit 3hr C·21XCntry848·1188 clusiveareaofexecutive ln study, hvinl( rm & r ee!I. i·orner 0 :im rm 1 6 ierra 2\~ba. fam rm. On i.?re~n bdrm. Professionally S95.ooo tll7'.! M Jllov Or Gttona 833.3820 ... _It w ''1eu of pool •· t'"n· SEA TERRACE Artist's presti*e homes. 4 BR, 2 n......n "-t& " n l "'P\1 ------1 "" ft °' " .a.TT•HTIO... Ba, din·rm, beautlfuJly lndscpd Including brick v.,., .:>a ..,u .. nis crts Proft'~"innull) "' '" " hm. studio w/bubblc. landscaped yard. patio & breakfast nook l\ll{.645-0050 Woodbridqe decoratt-d w many ENTREPRENEURS 3 M~:=~~~:i1aia tract lights, 3 BR, 2 BA, Owners exttemely w /gas flrcplt. Bl1n HUMTIHGTOH Pati•o Home xtr11". $94,500 O H Bwld }Our next proJect 496-7222 8ll-O&l6 lovely LR, country kit, motivated. By appt. on-st.ora1e area alone side COVECOMDO Sat/Sun 11,. 4302~mu In Boom Town. Five lot1~~~~~~~~~ double car gar. Guard, ly. Under SlSO,OOO. of house. Soundproof NF:W :i tutrm 2 ba Wy.orappt "2·8488 comer ava ilable in Vlc-1. pool,t('nnJs.$135,000 759-0761 game rm. Mustseetoap I bdrm. 2• .. ha <'nnno Wll.l>WOOD MOUl::L toria Bl'at'h area. Prime TOPOFW IOMD REALTY ---------preclate.640-166-i Thu1 llunlln11111n lk-t:uh Uiahly up1raded and WOOOIRIDC:.E commercial location. R-2 ORLO ll l·f• I I NEW LISTING OPEN HOUSE home is in mini 1·ond 1'' U L L Y A / C 'LA.CE and C·l wnma, One of Ocean Vlew: super f&mi· HARIOR VU CARM•• SAT/SUN /MON 1 ;; th .. th t '" ly home with ~real ---------• ..., ~1 upi,:ro uc" 1u11u l.1nd11capf'd In front, 0J>('n Jlou"c 8 y0wner thelaslol1t1k1nd.Sulta· posslblllties for ex· 3BR, fam-rm, din-rm. 2042PortWcybndgc t.real 1 1·r w l urn m with ~prinklcn sos 750 "' · 1 1 1 ble for dufclexea. Call for NEW PATIO HOME B Prl f J t Harbor View 1ar1ht h·~. Su1)('1 lot·. 11t•1tr .-.'Ct't'JltlOnll ot on cu panslon. Thia 4 bdrm., 2 2 Bedroom + den, 2 2 A. me am. oc. 0 -------- & de·,,ac. lmmed. occup further in onnatlon at bath home haa new Npt. Bch. By owner NR SEA 'M SURF Beaut. 3 br, 2 ba. Vaulted open beam ceilings, priv sundeck. Hideaway study. Pnv. pool, tennis cts. SJ04,000. Call 548·0066 ~~ ,~ -= Surflina &allJ! hehoo. aclh ·0~ ho5ppdllllil Vt<'W of bch club, park & • 494-8057 * carpet8, comp. fenced b3ths, frplc. wet bar, up. Sl52,500incl's land. Open *°"'Y One Left• ~c w=5• pen UR aylty SAdt1lthllC'k 4 nr. 2 ba. -------yard, lot8 of storage, fish graded crpts & drps. Sat/Sun 1·5. 1812 Port °" •• ~<:Pr -~m. Ira mm rm UNLIMITED pond, waterf".illl " fruit Landscaped beauty on Man I el ab p I. cal 1 oC our S custom homes in BIG CA.HYON 714·9 t-5060 &J'!Slarlum. 1119.500 rOSSIB1LlTIES trees.Alltbisptosroom corn1er lot. Adil com· 644-7730. NewportHghla.Thls2300 4 BR. 21,; 8111, pool. ""'"· '"""" ••• """• NORTH ENO to park your RV. ••39,Nvt muJnAtyy. $94W .• 500ye •tS ---------• ..,. ft home hes 3 Bdrms. ·Jacuzzi & view. Electrk IMMACUL• TE! ""' ....,.., ,......,,._., BEACH SlDE OF HWY LAGUNA. HIGUIL""" CA S-Owners 20 Yrs ~u.s rm, Cam rm, Jlv gates. Agt/Bkr, 644-8415. :1 BR + d un, :l Ba , * OPIM 2·5 * L1v•ln lovely 2 BR, all 3 Bdrm., 2 bath htmt' COMPANY 3000Cl1ySt,NptHt1. · rm, dln rm, & room for _640-_59:_57 _____ _ Decorator' upsradlng 141025aarin.n wood&: gloss home & neerustop; the large 499 2,.~ New Ustlna w /many boat &camper. $141,000. BACK BAY thru-out. Muftl !leU 11eel TheColony·Plan400 ha~ nfc., business, re· rooms & xlnt flo.r plan • .. ,,,, xtru lor $149,500. 38ft, 3112 Broad St . Open ~·~· Agt. 759·1131, -.S73C.U."'5ft...•leu-(Fr 1 / sat Is u n >. 1l4'totlal income unita previde for eaay in-DR la encl la.nal. Open ~ Sat/Sun J·S. Call 3 Br 2 Ba, Z fplc's, lgt _...,., ~ ".,,.~ Decorator aharp! •BR., MXtdoor. door/out.door entertain· every day thru Mem. Mlke731-t.a22 corner lot. Owner; Agent INTHISHORIS... 2 Br. 2bo Cardiff. ''The 2~ ba., (am. rm .• tor· "Z"~EAL~R ing.$119,ISOO 4 8 Daj.Agt.548-?73'. WesttmPaclffc ~~l~~an~a":~~~~!e~ Nearthe bcac-h location I ~rrace". Like a~. up-race kitc:h. " din. rm. ~1 COMMMC.11.DG. r 14YSHOllS SIM,000. 2298 Redlanda1 3 Bedrm plan. Ralled, grd'd lhru-out. S79,500. $129,000 · _____ ;...-__ _.On a ,nme comer let; D)towner, beautiful 3br, ---"'°--°'*..:.._rfl_n __ --4 Drtve.64a-0596 hiah ceWn1a, brick (pie Owner 975·2285 or IVILYMCOPILAHD CALLUS... xlnt location & J>attllne 2 ba, lam. rm, totally JM1 Palermo fee fixer -------- wanna all Uvinl areas Ml-1422 RIALTOlt 55~0434 For all the lat.t maltl· '8cWtie8. An lnvettment Femrm, l"4 ba, in 'THE reblt. $187,500. Open =r. Drtvebyl715Port •-ea.i••ite 107, •-d h {---------I f!: Ii tt lb f tbefuturo $1•9000 HILLS". "RadclJft" -.... ---· Glau ex woo c e TURTLI ROCK _________ 1 e s ngs avai a le In or • • mdl 501950 Ownr/Bkr "°'* r n/Sat/Sun/Moll Ung then caij ownr. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~tcben. Decorator noor· · runa Beech area. 4~ • · · ~z.i:U Creal view. 840-0008 GOLFERS ing and draperies. Bi~ GLIM Added Be~ ~ BYOWNER PAR~ISE yard for garden an • GAaDIM HOME Located ln ''The Ranch". A~t'P& Moftarch S....tt 11 HARIOI VIEW 4 Br, HVH Montogo 2018 n...-an view me 0 .. 5an play! BKR9S2-65ll Jasmlno Plan. BEST BeautJM added-on faml· ~~ . Adult Community MO~O Port Chelaea Pl. Prine. Oemente O<>lt eou:.:o. 4 HUllYOMTHISl view . Up1traded . ly room with wet bar. 3 ~~~~_:':,:0:0-~2:'°:0:.__J ,,_.,,,,_ New2br&denTwnhse. "'sw only By appl $158:500 •• Ownen have bou•ht $149,~. Bedrmsfiden, l" baths. -110SN.CoctnMwy,.&..guno $84,500. DelilbUul 4 Br, 2 ba ett-oi0'7 . . ' ele1ant bedrooms, 3 aootber fr are amioua to Owner. '752·14'73 Quietcul·do-aac location. Contractora flxe~upper 494•11n Ocean view. clubbouae home. Upgraded thru• batha. den, famJl)' room Al•-' bl f rt t U .... t led e •-31601Co pool&Jacuz&I out. Prot 1..As"pd. F-"-·-Opt., l yr '--aut. &i tunny lal\al. A truly sell thl.a a bdrm., 2 bath""--0 ___ Sat. ... ~. 4 1orua e com o a no.,.. r ue O<' an ... ouHwy59s.~ ":'r"'" """' .__ uoe b tif 1 t ' v.-• .._ ....... -" Ce W l l'"-blk 499 4 Telll" Babcock laod. •1"'8,"'00. 01,e"" condo. Pool & tennl•. eau u execu ave bomei near beach, Br, ........ '--, 1900 ..,,, '"., • ....,,900. atury 21 est canyon v ew. "' s .. l • ., ., u ., home ecboo 1 " ahoprlni. Yl'I =. i,732 ~~~te; 6M-4840. !~ -~s~;ri J,,,12!>~ ~ tnc-. OM1t'1 S.t/&ba 1·5. 1121 ort Newport Cresi, e-12 mo BERTHA HENRY ~.·~CH Rd. s9s,ooo. Call~~~~~~~~' .._....... ..,.,_ PATIO HOME. New ·2 Ce.rlow.Pbl44·S11T 1M.S750.64Q.l751 • 1\EALTOR.$ ""'"~' -T ouchatone Realty,i--------•1•-------• bedroom,2bath,clOMto B\'OWNBR RIDUCID 21.ISDel Mar -..u21 RIAi.TY 675-1642 963-0881 VILLAGllH WOODS COVI pool &Jacut1I. Adulla HARBOR. VJ&W 3 BR, Steal thlt •Sr, den. pool......_ ....-:.. ----=STOil HOM& abr TOWNHOMEIN lllAAM.IM. $11-t 500 11.A1kln1118.50Q .• • ~~!'.~.i tarn-rm. prof. & Jacuul home. O"n ...__snc;:C--.U;;:: •~.e.....-1.. • WOODllJDGl.-a.. JValATHS At .a.~&aa ~ )'OUWD-comet HoU8e Sun. Make orferl A -~- 1u ~ -• 141t2BrCounU7Cbann _...~ lo&..Jk,.cloewhantybrn •·9023 COMDOS '-i~US~:t:§~ ar ~ ari•L ~4~00 __ ~~tt;::11':': ~.· !:k~~f.n~ ~ c?Pt. fem & wicker sueat BrEPHEN &ASSOC. lit 1'me Otfered. Belt Pao ''''A.LS ~ ,,...,.a;•&Ji-an-.._ ....__ .-.. ., .... a-.. ., • ..., 11t4t4,..7711 rm. eJe~ kit.ch, wood • b l • ~.. lt. ·-:t •or Aft. --1 IND.. cllll ,,._ •• parkUlol COl"Oe'l". 0-.n H rt'!::::=====:::d.I p. n e I u D. . . " p . EMTBLUFF ,.., . nr • opp nr --.... , -=.... · '' --ln an encbanttn1 formal • .._..a--'--1'"-bt'-· to ere's your aam•e ,;;.. .,.acb S~a lab St"'I -·· _.. ...--Y-~ .,... -place Jwrt-to•eol _. ... .._ ... y .. • ~ • .-tetul dt· •· n 1 •• ._•ln"Y"l-ds livb\atrn.Thlshom•wu beh. 1111 Olenneyre. the W c:; .... most _.._.._" ~ cor, Pline. Oft11. OPE?( S.-clowl' bdrm. •lntlt quiet a4u Uvll\£ 2Br. AIAMDOMID . 14M 7M ~ •t! ~:'1 ()peftl-4 Sat/Sun ~'1tlful bafl. 3 Bdrm•.. 2;tce;_ttet 12 '~ 1·$, ?' 833·97~~ ~home lft ;'°'t dt· i~~~ia coi~. '1t:~1: . a LOM& y bdnn. • can be cc...W • 2 Ba. $221,000 02 A ; • a.1: ~7 Ao r a PP t I ,........ parkUof <~ ml, So. Cl vle Cen~er) • ...-v a bdrm bomt In WOODlllDGI blck •&ail)'. Plus cent. I ---c~ 'nl 2 ...,.., '8r ~ I08ft IN . ...aro• 1/ v ew 0 nl1nt Utht•, 'unit• avall, 2 W/Vltn -:.+.,,. aru. va"•nt YU.LA61 alr~eondltlontn1 and .. ~"' lb• wlfarn nn bu:J111t been • 0 co.ls. l99S ort pl"'lb landtcpa.Ptn& wltb Model open. Prloedboo-...,...._...... -... _ tll 11 d od ·1 p•on•rt" t 2 _,..tite).y _ rr ...... ,.t-S..bOUrnt Way minimum u .. a.oep ,yard ..... aN\ 0 • 1 .. Ii awaltinl a familY o ToWllha•. I ZOO 14ft, vvau u 1 ecorat • ,.. " """'~led 6iift .... tad • abtol~o mu t to -·-· .-JM oUleo •It U'a own! A little TLC 3 Ir 11/i lo...,~ thruout. New on tbe SJC.4tMtJ4 ~:~o, lof,rce'f~·.c~ :.wtbowl Uk. a ~l 'bdrm 2 ba, ram rtn, lr au: But hurry-•1110 .• = tt tn tip.top aha-· market and pricec! 1.o..._ ______ llAllliill f""" _.... al · rec nn. Cor lot. rm i ,....,. ooo By p • ~~~~~~~~ clout 1rdo nrd. """ 111 cookl•t HU! ,. w/ ....... a .... commm:l Sltuatad on• lar1• In I boat lovely at 548-0.155 -· · • p .. 0»·1· ......-prtvate rear 1arc1. IM.tl"9' D .. w1w Ii IXIC wa . 42 corner lot. Tb Jowul ' • IT~. &kr. . OCIAMPIONT ~ pari.e1ed famll •poit111 ~ lilo¥9 tn U-:::,: ~~-. i.wiH in lbe .,.. for • GATHER tbe famtlY ln a An unuaul • UAlqDe ,..... formal dlnloi a _.. tMt for ...a.. • 2~. bn•e ilv rm. fa-homaf-a' lhllSt""'.~500.• ll"ll 1 II Cadm·-to ao..c.a... co1y country kltcbe0• o c e • n Iron t a B r..t ..,. country kitchen ,......_>.llO~ rm. format din. -ii HO ... w\u~~:.-..-.. Wha';;.eTthef'~~ b>Joyadlplnlh PoOll3 CORNE& Con.do. PTi o.b1172Uiulfa..lt1 .. ~!:!'9"...!F.-dolell. .--oww -~.;n,m llolPtmoftthemarb' Bedrm, + Hp. lHn at.pa t.o ~.bieelt.! 116-7141 979.1oi ._.1 .... 1hcullitt ~~~~~~~~I i11t,10':.' 4t'1:11oa: UALTY wiu.a~ quart1r1.·cti.tury 2 BrMlhtHlu•.-tODJY. 149-4764 "8111lM...._ ~...,._. -...r 4'7·1744 "'-"Howl =•. a.al. SN~ sn~ooo. ·~ oner. _... n. .. 1111;aM•- ' ~ I l Hom" For Sdt Other Rfft Estate OfMf-Reol &tote Ho9Mt lw1nla1d Housff u.fwwl.-..cl N ...................................................................................................................... ·················••···· Sai.a...... 1076 Coct1 •rclal J frKOmt rroperiy 1000 Mewportleada JHt CostaMIM lJ24 0...PoW lll6 H1mu U.M 'rh• H-HU.fw 'it1• H-HU.fu '+1• t ' ....................... ~ 1600 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ....................... ....................... ••••••••••••••••••••••• ...................... • ......................................... .... ~etn·lt'V~l.48r,3Du, ....................... 4 8r Nwpt Crest C<mdo Neat Halecrest home. 3 SURF&SA..IL .... fit4o.a..da 3240 ....._ 32._. 1 1pu11Mdt 1248 J'am Rm-beaut P?ol. MARINEl'S MIU MESA VERDE S600 yrly. Tennis, pool, BR. FP, qt $U t. Easy 3br home within walldna ••••••••••••••••••••••• --•••••••••••••••• -••w•••••••·--- Prtme area. Ocean vae w. PRIME COM ERC L l''oor plc-x. 2 bedroom & ~1751 walk schla " mrkts . dlatan~ of Marina • $385/Mo. 3 BT, 1q ba. Rte ........... . Prine. only. $122,SOo. M IA b.tth. built '"'·~carpet. Families. $WO/mo ioclds State lkb. $495 mo. yd, gardener incl. Avail Lovely bousu, lovely ..,..WV" ««76 Xln.t lease + 2 BR apt. dra~" & cl~l'd garJ~e • SI JS. Utfl Pd! gardener. 3118 Dublin St. 9!lMlsteves J u n e 1 • 0 w n er neighborhood. 3 BR. 2 HOME Ho.""'°°" Cottw SOX213 Hurry on till!\ tll.· an ideal Roya.I Palm f ep· At ~ch' We CC) Ver all Dave M6-4l•l. (21.3)700-2'705 BA home, crptd thruout, Spaclou! 3 bdrm. + dln •• # -T" clu:.1vc per Tree rcl\tal areu. beuch area~! Many more · drps, patio, 2 car aar. rm. borne. t.se. Uv. rm. 3br$laMr Homl' $195,000 SH0,000 Pn11 only. Rep· avull! Unt. Small rec, $245. 2 Br 2 Ba, rncd yd. Fou.ttabtVaUey 3234 $260-Easy access. $31~. wtth fireplace & ocean s Gallon vlcw or IJC(!Sll 0 I,> .id 1'941 Daily P•~-· -Ufetime 645..(900 Dsbwshr, pat, 2 Sly view, ··········:············ Nice 2br. gar, C&D, kids 983~. Aet •• noree. view. Bustk exterior of' Walking d11.tuncc to **~rs Gulde unt.StnaUfee.645-4900 4 Br2 Ba,• um Rm, bltns. ok. Plex. Avau. Feo. wood shakes. Db l ~ r•c'tr & S~Opt; }1(.•rfcrt Lots for Sale n oo -••COMUIMt"S Gulde lge yard, (pie. children Locators 8•9891 Woodbridie Villager Cl\rt)Ort. or r~r:;t °.i': 0500 ••••••••••••••••••••••• pets OK. $:SM. Smull ree. condo. 2 BR., 2 baths. $i2S &10. er, ~· BUILDERSSPEClM, L..L.. __ 11-..--1...L.-~ 3 Br & Fam Rm, cozy Std Sas.898-96661\Jmfor Quiet area. 4bt' bome. 2 New, 3·aty. No pcta. MISSIOHlllA.LTY S-.luofl ~ :· ~__......-MesaVerdehome.Avall Better L1v1ng 5940 ba.rnedydforltids/peta. $37S/YrlyAgt84G-OO'lO · PhoM49,..07ll ""-'·ftoolto 1078 . R·l Lot 10 exclu5ivc •••••••••-•••••••••••• June 4th. $t25 mo. D. J . Westmini.t er . (a~ Spr· $315/mo.Serv.fee • •• :::?':••••••••••••••• Ba.lboa lslandReally TbhlreeAbrchBayldoc.Un·Gentral 3202 Feenstra,lnc.M9·3162 ingdale)Westmanster Locators 898-9891 MOWAITIH~ a&r2Ba,eoastliocvtew. "''"•"r"'"·'''1._,. e aeva le 180 egree ••••••••••••••••••••••• !Manymoreinarea! 2BRCondoA/C $350 fp~ refrii wahr&dryr. M~ 673-8700 ocean vh·w trom dwntwn leach Cltiff Rentals $190, Nice home! Ulil pd! CONDQ.lBr. lBa, bltns, 3 BR $.185 _., • ~ DalrabM --. -- -Laguna le) Dana Point. LOC .. 'TORS h 100, t Ref+ more! Have many 3Br, 2ba, den/dining, cpts, immac, close to 3 BR $400 S. ~Sq l't $72.500 "' as & 0 more! Smlfee. 645-4900 frplc. Cpts/drJ;l5, 3 pools. shopping $235 mo. o Dotting CondominiumsfTown-WAYME ooach crtaes rental&. All •CoMulners Guide Clubhse. $425. 962·6783 963-!242 ~=: ~5 l.aglMclHIU. 3250 DOLL HOUSE housff for sote 1700 s1:ies & prices from $100 ----------• 3 BR S42S ••••••••••••••••••••••• 2&r, lBa Condo will••••••••••••••••••••••• THOMSEN up. F~.Call898·98Dl $195, 1 + more! R" + Jbr, Zba. Tiburon Condo. Condo. 2br, l ba. pool, 38R $440 3 Bdrm. .. study & 2 batb please you. 2 pools, Ji; CondoSpeciolist REALTY492·9 Locators TIUtpm xtras! We cover the en-Pool.AC,yard.dblgar, dose to shot>'c & fwy. 38R $4SO viewhomejustabovetbo J b & ' • • I tire bch area! Plx Small 962-8586or 554-0108 $295. 673-1163 M Ito p k grass awn, nr us 11 .8 ., l:.nt.. r . Vy. at 2 8r.DinRm,rearporch, bfefee'64S-4900 3BR $475 new ou n ar way ~ownSaoJuan,only Touchstone Rt!jlty. R2lot.hagb on theblu t chLidren&petsOK.S290. * ... C · G 1..._ CON003 br.ram .rm,2"'2 3br w/frptc. Pvt yrd. 4BR $475 Plau.AirCOJ~tioned,2 ~.oooHurr& 963-0867 Big River. C.ihf. C 2 o Small fee. 898_9666 Std .. omunten .. -ba, pools & tenn. t:rts. Close to bch. $400. No 3BRAiC $500 car garage, f1replace, PO~~LTY 2Acres FoUbrook ~{1~~:.~~lloRcal . Slg.Almfor~tterlivmgs110. pool. refrig, unt. Cls.to!lchl.&shoppsng. pets. Ask for R~n . :::A/C ~ ~~!t~~";~;~rrn~fh~ CUSTOMFAM HOME ----5940 Westminster tat s mallfee.We have many S350 mo.32714-536·1602 & 963-8961or168-1225 afl 2BRGotr'·rs~ ~"""' FREE rent to June J. COM DO Absolutely hke new 3 br. 112 ba, good area. dbl gaTage, upgraded cpt & drapes, clo.-.e to pool Super buy at $59,500. ~11. Agt. ?tlr 1''ry. Mowttain Des~rl S P r • n g d a I e > m<rre in all bch areas! 71 1-1128"61 6pm "' -~ 3hr, den, 2'2b<1, 2 frpks. R __ ........ • 2 400 w t l , M ----------1 4BR S600 Callownerat64Z·Ol38. I~ !IQ fl. Heal ump e_.-. es, mrns. ,er . any 645-4900 Huntington leoch 3240 CLEAN 3 br, 2 ba, lg din k P ••••••••••••••••• ••••• • rnott an area * •ConSUIMf"S Guide ••••••••••••••••••••••• ts d bit A C. Brae · patao. oul· --rm. cp • rps, ns, !lt:mdang view. Produl·-Appl~ Vall~y b:-ov.ncr -1Br2Ba,cpts&drps,re· newly decor'd. Nr. mga\'ocados&famfrwt Mu,ti-dl .!br.dhlgaron d~c Lgc fncd yd . $1 35.Util~! . •AVAILABLE• Yorktown&Brookhurst. Sl29.500. 29,." dwn OWC. 5 acre:.. Own well. Chal~iren. pets OK. S360. Unt. Try us. you II hke ...aOW S395 lse. OK. 968-S779 or ownr/bkr 7141728-f>SlO Natural gas. country at· Small fee. Std. Sag. us. '!"e have many more *"" * . M7-8623 3 Br2 Ba condo's. pool, air. cond. 00 pets. $.165 & S3SO be. 54().1256 L....-Mlgllel 3252 • •••••••••••••••••••••• mosph~re. cln ll•r Great 898-9606 Aim ror better avad now! 645-4900 Houses. condomm1ums ---------- ~ ~ Santa Ana 1080 ~xes/ for kad:., horSl'~. or hvu"' 5940 Westminster ••ComirenGuict. and townhomes. Month S.E. 3br ~ndo, patios, ·-·-••••-••••••••••• Onitssal~ 1800 rt>treat SJS.500.639--8937 (alSpringdale> tomonthrentalsstarting pool tennts ct. R .V. RANCHREALTY View from 4 Br, 2 Ba, encl gar, lge yard. $650 mo. Grdnr incl. 831 ·1695 SA!l~.R ••••••••••••-••••••••• Outof C~ty ---Westmans lt:r !Many $215. 2 Br, beam ceilgs! at$395to$6SO.Locatedin prlc.ng. S425/mo 640-1076 _...,.,.,., NEWPORT BE ... CH p 2550 more an area' Patio + lots more! Unt. Huntington Harbour and Eves, wk:nds. 551·2000 View from 4 Br, 2 Ba, encl Ruck•r A.atty "' roperty · Small fee. 64.5-4900 Huntington Beach. Call ---------·•--------- 642-4 758 OPLX ••••••••••••••••••• .. •• 3 Br, cpts. dJ'ps, lge patio, * •Consumen Guide us for more details. 5 Br , pool + jacuzzi. Nr. ~~~~ci8~:1~ mo- --------• 28r. l:!.4Ba, lg. hv rm & CUSTOM HOME fncd yd. E. Garden Westminster Mal l. mstr bdrm w/huge ::.on· :1 1 at·. Ternfic View! 4 Grove. $300. Small fee VERY SHARP 3br, 2ba. ~/mo.846-7568 Macnab -Irvine .NEW Shadow Run, plan 1, 2 BR, 2 Ba, lgc yrd. 9>5.000. Sale or lease op· tion. 842·8368 deck,+ lBr, IUa ;ipt. Br.2ba.22SOsqft.1''rplc, Std. Sig. 898·9666 Aim $395 mo. Eastside CM. 5Br,4Ba,2.500sq.ft,2sty, REALTYCOMPANV ~?al<'nes'1o;1a9t15o·on, l blk to 5yrsold.S70.000 For Better Living 5940 673-4801,64G-8572 new cpts, drps, bltns, RAMCHO . "".. · .,,.. • · GALA PROP £RTIES Westminster (at Spr· . . ., entry kitcb. Children, SAN JOA9UIM Exec. 3 bl', 3 ba. sp\t lev. huge den. fpl, bltns. xtras. Quiet $525. 968·1519 lslondRealty Cal!Geo.Frey54234S6 inAdale> Westmins ter 4 bedroom.l 'hba,patao.-Pets OK. S525. Small Beautlful"SanJoaquln" f\mVacalionLiving 2 rentalhouse;lbdrm &:? 491:1PARKAVE ':\lanymore marea! ~=·bltns.S400mo. RE ALTYINC. Fee. 898-9666 Aim for model-2BR's 2baths 36Sdaysayear.Twonew ~~~~~1~~Js~~1stol. BA~3~1200A ISLE I 0 Ac. w /Cabin J Br, tncd yd, children & . 714/846-1371 Better Living. 5940 den & dining'. Lowe; ~ver l~d ~ 1eluxe ----------t WC'll & elec. Vie\\. Onb ~ts OK. S300. Small fee. 3Br, lba, frplc. Easts1de. Westminster (at Spr-level on golf course. Near · mes. . at c o~e to ScMlthLoguna 1086 Corona D•I Mar 522.500. Std. Sig. 898.9666 Aim Fncd yd, new cpts. 2 br condo, 1 ba, comm. !ngdale> w.:;stmirw;ter., pool. Available im· Laguna Nag.uel .Regional ••••••••••••••••••••••• "' GAl..APROPERTH-:s For Better Llvmg 5940 $380/mo.557-1255. pool . carport. 16684 .Manymoremarea. ~1:~~s.ba~lli.~ ~~k&c'f:J::;.:~r~h~ JARCll BAY ~I~; f~~l~a~/vden~. ~ Call~ Frey .S.l2 3456 Wes tminster (at. Spr· 3br. 2ba, fam rm. frplc. Arbor Cu·. $300. Dys; 3 Br 10% Ba, family rm, (W-l8) Rm, wetbar. comm pool. Quiet seclusion.'·• jt·r~. Ba, den, utility rm . RealEstat~ 1ngdale) Westmm ste fnc'd. Mesa Verde.Avail 89.3-657l. ext. 210, eves: fplc, cpts & drps, bltns. EXECUTIVE HOME 2000 sq.ft. twnhse. ~9~ whitewater \'ICW Pvt gara~e & parkmg. each Wanted 2900 'Many moremarea! Juoe30.St2.5mo. 714·827·0645 Mr. $375. Small fee. Std sig. IN mo.AND3Br,FamRm. ~c~.~4~~~~ beam:;. _unit. Prmc-. onl:-67:\·2060 ••••• ••••••••••••• • •••• Vacancy coming up for a 557-~5 Mohamed 898-9666 Aim for better den. wet bar, 2000 sq.rt. - -· I p 0 ow:-.; p r 0 pf' rt y 1 n d f d c 1 2 B 2 Ba t h 1 living 59-W Westminster Turtf«Oek Glflt Single family bme. Ex-WH tminster 1098 ncome ro~rty 2 0 ln<>lc>AC)OU , ll,\wthornc agnibae •hl?roes,stona1 3Br ,2 ba,famrm,A/C, r • wn1:el. poob h• (at Springda l e) Outslanding3BRhorne -elusive Lake Park cit>- ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• or~·· 8 .. .\. a-a·• mem ers ip ~e err a frplc lg encl yd Fruit Jac, sauna, wa 0 c · Westminster. ! Many perfect for you! Plush velopment. S595 mo ,_,.., u _ • '-M'r\l('l' With absolutely trees>•..., 6444486 Sec, dbl gar. 898·2989 · , d DUPLEX. llunl111~~011 WILLPAYCASH!! no co:.t lo the landlord. _...... morema.rea! coeoa carpe.ang, e· 714-495-1407; 496-7929 or BEAUTIFUL 2 STY WESTHAVEN &>ach J ui.t the lot 1~ SUPER NICE• corator drapes, indoor 496-3618 h h k Ph. Tom O'..\le:ssandro <A.ill Al:\t FOR BETTER 2 Br, 1 ba, fam rm. toed • · u.~-garden tn the 1a·brary, ----------near \\ort l l' .is 1111;! 3 Br ?1 Ba condo 2 • ._.."!"J""'"" T.D.PROPERTIES L lVl~G & BETTER yd. Westside. S315/mo -·:i . • Hc:rbOur 3242 prof ess iona l ly 4Br,2ba,frplc,Jgyd.S400. pnct! ol S/9.0ou. !)t:!.000 TE'.'OANTS. 898-9666 557.1255 • fplc's, palm, gar , pool. ••••••••••••••••••••••• br b olf down P ILOT RE.\L (213 > 674·6907 or 1714) _ _ _ JJC. !>auna. ui>graded. landscapedyards&cov· 2 • 2 a on g course ESTATE. 5-10-0535 5-16 620.1. an vt 1 n:ie . or Bal>oa Island 3206 Mesa del Mar. 3 Br 2 Ra. s .i 7 5 m 0 • 8 0 b , 2 Br+2ba Twnhme. Super ered patio. Near pool. S32S. 499·2241 (71-t)8-lt>522laft 6pm ••••••••••••••••••••••• dbl gar. fncd. S425 mo. ·>13.8()9-20()7 plus h. Wet bar, 2 Jacuni & volley~al\ MissionVieio 3 267 Willtrade 2 nR.2 b:ionlBLK Bch,closetoshops, Lse.Availnow!545-6-t75 -balconies.Frml Dinrm. cou~t. Available ·~···••••••••••••••••••••• Distress Pr_operly! Lido Isle + cdsh tor 3 picturei;que 2 Br 2 Ba. Arand new 3 bedrm LAN-Tennis. Pool. Jacuzz1. mediately. $625/mo. tila V h 3 bedrm 2 We c;.an f111d 1t tor you Rf' ., ·R , ··d 1 1, AdJts. Yrly. 675.2.578 Exec home in M esa DING home, 1900 sq.ft. ~/mo. Call Mr. Nelson Harper 752·1414 <W-19) ery 5 arp • Beach ::irea. ProbatC's. ·>'··.a. on ..... 0 :. t: Verde. 5 Br, 3ba & with formal dining, 898-2636 1----------1 bathhomecompl w/fplc, bankruptcies. trus tee _1 .. _13~WJ~127 _ Balboo PeniM411a 3207 j a . chu z hzoodi. 1 Gr .e1 Ja t owner wants 1 yr lse & l"ine 3244 Univ. Pk. Vil II, 3 Br or 2 ~~·P2 sc8: f~·~ ~)tt.y. s:iles, forct>d :.ales. under •.fbr house in ~ood shape ••••••••••••••••••••••• Neag bor . Ava a U· 5550. per mo. incld g markl'I 'alues. Wet•an 'n 0 I cl <.: d \l 3 Br 2Ba lowerdplx.Ex· ly1.S795.Ph546·5120 gardene r. 13th Month ••••••••••••••••••••••• m+adce.n$480,2Bl~.:.a64trlu8ml4.51m· nei ghborhood. $375. Jmnt ventur Call World · • 1 ' "" ·1 f'd ____,. free. 848·1688 Bkr. Ranch S. J . 2 Br + ck!n, on "" v-963-4567 Agt. No fee. c .. , • • Slti0-$170,0m. Wehavt•Al cept ()(' .• •ama Y pre ·College Park, 3 ~rm. 2 -----GoUCoursew/primeVu, Wide Brokt•rs.67:1-4:>4;:,. Duplt·x lo wll ur trade. S475 yr\y lse. Ref's. bath, fplc, cpts, drps, Lovely 3 bedrm 2 bath $S25.5'l7.1044 Deerfield. 3br, 2ba. fam Forlse,3BT11/aBacondo. _ __ _ __ . 640·7266 ~~or642~728 bit~. dble J?ar. $-WO/mo. home. Crptg, drps, 2 car rm, 2 fr~lcs. Bright cmr perf cond. Air, pool priv. HY OWNF:R. S63.500 :Jhr1---------·l·---------icopistrCMO~ach3218 Ray MeCardle Realtor, gar., nice neighborhood. 'The Ranch, 4 br, H '• ba, home .. Highly upgrad8!1· $350.586-2877;763-3356 I' ~ba. hrdwd llrs. nu Reol Estat~ Coun~lor •••••••••-•••••••••••• 5-18·7729 Avail ammed. $375/mo. pool. frplc, short lease. beautifully lndscp d ....__,..Beach 3269 rrpt'g Nu <''<I. Tl'\. t•out 9634567 \"' f 540-046'9or644-841S w/atrium & gazebo. Nr ....-... ,_. • m.i:. Enclosed patio .... oft Pr 0 fl'~ 1nvl's 1 m 1~ n 1 WAMT R2-3~4 "-learly new :? BR Duplex. Very nice 2br. quiet area ' ~ 00 ~c.__ schls & recreation. $485 •••••••••••••••••••••- wtr unit "Jr sch' & anJlysss. :.ippr:u'\als. la\ Acreoge orLots It'd )rd. bllns. close to Kidsok.S275Smfcc Sharp 1 bedrm. :! bath New Woodbridge-Poplar moincl'ds water&Asso. BLUFFSCONDOS -.hop·~.Quiet.1rC'a \.o of & exchjng i• ;ul\11•1• l-'rwy&bch.S300.27t~5-B Locators 89S..9891 home. Crptd thruoul. Plan. Landscaped. dues.752-1171 Leases s tarting at $t50 Wa rner & wi>s t 111 Spcc i.tlaling 111 11 < h SoufftO County \n•nida Los Palmas. ----Newly painted, drps, 2 draped, 3 br, 2 ba. $475 h Montb.Agent644-ll.33 • :\lagnoha. 8711 LnaH'r'>t' multa-pll'X propNl•t''> rancJe 1-131674_-8395 a~. 6 __ $210 for 2br home. Coed c·ar gar. Children & pets mo. 551·529it LOCJWIO leoc 3248 ---------- X..2-8727. Pnn. Onl\ Sellt'rs & bu)l'r.. <t\ ail. C--..t-• M-3222 yd. patio. full rrpts & OK. $375. 963-4567 Agt. no WOODBRIDGE ••••••••••••••••••••••• 'fl Ml Fr Bch 2 Br, den, 2 • C.allRnnElh'> Pavtoµprlct!~'J'h . _.. ....... uet -d s r OLDE Ba, pool/S/Jac. 2 car ••••••••••••••••••••••• rps. m. ee. fee ESTATES Other R~ol Estat~ l t•nllirv :!l ~-lllSI( • Locators 898·989l ---SP ...... ISH gar. S495. 675·0745; t:ra.-..Cnuntry9tiO·Zi!'>X Pnlln l'al-.111' li111k1·1.... Hroadmoor Seavscw. ---3 Br l'fz Ba fplc. vaulted Brand new Jbr Lincoln. "'" 552-7074 '1,:mtucket model. ~t'"-2 ceal'gs dbl cur gar w/ Upgrades, $S50 mo. 127 U>CATEO ON OCEAN•---------- J oek Sc0U90ll b1 w dl·n /..; atrium. MESADELMAR opnr.~arnew.S48-0800 W. Yale Loop, open SlDEOFHWY.ATVIC· EASTBLUFF ••••••••••••••••••••••• 548-9 7 9 2 \ H'\'. Tl•nn1:-&_ com· .·Jur, 13 ,sa. n~wly de· house Sal/Sun. 644-0496,· T 0 RI A BE AC H. EXEC Hme. 4 Br. sep U' Pt.1-·.x· :> R0 \' • H \, :> 0 "' <: ..... • 2 BDR"• h _. __ ,_ If ·1 oft. "' -" -1---------• mun1tv pool. $7.5 mo. t•orated 551 4311 or 4 BR. 2 ba. frpl, bltns, an-640-0020 ~ctous 1.n., as w.mug aDU Y rm .• s 1100 .......•.......•••.•... Deluxe <Hl11ll µJrle 111 lrvme. 2 BH , 2 ha . sun µorch. patm. New t'arp. ~I.JOO /\gt. &lli·21 l I dbl ~ar 1•1 In r hno't' ll11J-H557. 1>1• KU IK or 5S&0866 • · cl. wash/dry. Fncd y.d. R--... Ls 30 FT. LIV. RM. water.Nrschools.shop· from S72.:.oo ll r llo\.\n )(33.3622 ----Cls. to schls & parks. '""'"' W/Mediterranean in-ping, tennisclb. S795/mo. Owm·i· agcnl. :>-1011:.;;;; Rentols • . b-1 --.-Eastside :J Br, l "'3 ba. $445.963-9950 28R,2ba ...... $425/525 fluence. Lge. picture Incldg grdar. 64~2240.. W11ltrade •••••••••••••••••••••••.I Hr. 2 a, Pu..-frpk So wtr/gdnr pd S350 avail ---2BR.2'hba .••....•. $475 window w/VIEW OF 640-6775 Houses Funti$Md ~I H~v. S.500/mo. C.ill 6,20. tst&ldst.642:8674 Avail Jwie l, 3 Br2 Ba. nr 3or2 BR, +D,2ba .• $425 THE OCEAN & BEACH _Ba_k_Ba--3-8--2-B--F-R- ••••••••••••••••••••••• ll7!>-068l ----------beach. Fom rm, fplc, JBR,2Ba .•••••• $425/550 BELOW. Ce n te r c Y r . a, • TR1PLEX :-..\1,\LI. Moh11t• hnmt' 1111 rl'nt SI 1:, 11r ~;ilt• s:.?;ioo Senior ('1111t·n Park, n1> pt• Is. .1 v .11 I .J 11 n '· 111. IH2·21i27 l·:~•"tsulr Co!:>t.1 \),.!:>.• General 3 102 Dix JBr 2u11 µvt-patao.'l; North Costa Mesa home. 3 patio, fncd back yd. lse. 3 BR, 2'".l Ba .•••• $475/500 fi rep-1 ace In rustic lge fncd yd, ~vall June L ~~~ ~ ~~ ; 1,1,h·111;,,1 ~h'-. '.! ••••••• • ••••••••••• • ••• bl ks 10' heh'. Avail .July BR. ~lean & ready. Mo\'e 84-iO. 675-1501 4 BR, 2 Ba .. _ ...•.... $435 Spanish flavor. Lge. lot $.550. 644-7001, 710·1166 RENTAlSGALORE!! :iielO mo.='iopet!>6752l88 ~?w. Has FP'.. D\~. nsrc 2 Rrl Ba.likenew. 4BR,2'"z ba ••.•• $535/550 w/courtyard patio, & Weslcliff,5Bll,3ba.,lge. (;;u.1~<'"i Prl\·a11 • p.11111' .. W1· hJw lht• lalC'~I in -~ard._F~m1hes.S42Slm? Dowritownarea! 4BR.3Ba ....•••.... SS15 tess than 100 yds. to home. 1 Yr. lease. S6SO -Xlnl .m'<a' E·i ... \ 1•'1111" DAIL y Rt'ntal 11..,1 ~ 10 th<• 2 Rr & d<•n, 3·-Ba. tplc, Dave ~·.U4 l_ S300 mo. 536 "'"," THE BLUFFS beach. Just completely Mo. Ant. 548-5527 \VhileWatl•rV1t•w.~hti:i3 PnMinali;onl\ ........., 48R 388 4'<>CI\ mod led & d 'ed , __ _..:ce_• _____ _ IR R 1·1 'I I " ho•.;< h ar1·,i-. 1110'' ol pool. tl'nnt:. ~. 50. 0 l de r 2 b r h 0 us n • • ••••••••••• __,., re e ecora" ,,-l · 2 a . ., ·• oro .• <11( Pyr-1·d 11:.-cha-rs ~ Br s a·ncl new W/W carpetm' g 3 9 .. 2 Ba newly de"" B h ) 7 .,, ..... m;a ··~-'·""'"''"'" '1,0W 1 Sml 714·1-493-5888 w/garaae. "''OO mo. 308 3 pres. taglousS& Park · · • • wr, r Slf..tJ<K . t!l ,io ... J 833-l748 ..... FH· .. 1111• ''""' ,..,c -----E.t8thSt. &;sta Mesa. Hunlln.gton. Cul de sac Ownerwantspermanent fplc,palio,walktobeach ;! Hr 1 Ba. v, hlk to h<'h hi:. 1~oi 1&2 Brhousc.ocean.s1de, • location. !''am Rm, tenant. Good references or comm pools & tennis. HuntinittOll u~ fhc ~... 4 UNITS • •Consumus Gvidot llawl~. palLO:., lpk "· KIDS/PETS OK W/fplc.1 yrlse. $495mo. required. SS75mo.645-3370aft6P~f P k J• t t l h t'pt:,, lsc C·• II 968-A""2 $415 MO ·1:.~ s1~'g1bo t· 1 '>t.:. COST• M£SI !>M'<·luc!c-<l ~hT ml 10µ mn ___ 673-8617 Ea~~:;,::;~~· Penmn'&ton P;;'perties OMWNISSEIRO~R~~ 3}>;{c~g!~b i!!T. f~: · ,. ,. on .l<'re nr 1\11,.,1 ~17~ mo. Spacioas 2 Br, t ba. lge ----------• " ·• • 642-2282 '1 Mobile ·~ Hou~e $139,900 ''·"' i; 1 _12111 l31 125-t i..at10, ~ar . xlnt. toe. E-si<k! 3 Br. new crpt. & Super Sharp! 38r, 2ba, 494-4731 l'\anusht'd Adultpnrk 2 .............. _ ••• _..... 3 106 _,\uent.67~38l_50 paint. Cul ·de-sac. frplc, n.r ~olf crse. HarborViewHomes Rdrm.12x21'hvrm.Xlnl -Dt-"' ....... 1mo 645-7593after5 ~/mo mcl g gardner. 28 Wood,.,_. Walk to .. Ca 1 .. 3B ( .,. • Ann '""""' ~ h ·' r. I• . P r ' ti ,. " f .......... ••• ..... •• ••• LJL'LUX L' ' "'b 3b ...,... . a"' "A51 r s ......, .. e. . rme r, am rm.&. ol'ean view ..• ,..,.,u."' A 1 1 ""'t' "' ... vacw, ·> r, a, .,._...,.. u.5'h r ..... Bt .. 1'...t-.-· beach. $475. bath, children OK. 0';n,-•~~1P um " 111 'u.,.. Win11•r f.11llt· 1 ~1.11111 1-: 1 ~ fam rm. bltno,; + Vacant 3 br, 2 ba. Cpts, T "'"•""'"'"'~'"' .. '"~· n nlJI ( OJl lo• J llO!l "I) lin\ frunl \\ JllN. Full~ . •( /" w h /d drps. Adults only. Perfect home for ramUy. . 494-SlO'l $600/rno. 960-5272 :!l'x56'. Tht· \11•1111ow ... Irvine. S37 ,SOO hy ownr ..SI m!JO. No hrokt•r. cl1•flo rrNI ma1ntc11antl· . st: rai;:. :l!I t>r ryer. 642·0236or546-5886 Short walk or bicycle to Uruv. Pa.rk Terrace 3br. S 1 ded N Laguna RVH ,.._t.....,. ...,.,... 1 ~ 'I , . 1. 11 111rn Sr pt 11\ .l11n1• twl.S 30 Agl.675-3850 b b C 1 d 2b h hi d d ec u 1uou -.. ~ JnVUe .. : ,;no-.1 I .11 I ' ·1 Jf.llll rno Wtlhuut p1c•r ----eac - u -e-sac. a, 1g y upgra e h e' b r I b 2 b F/R N ~ I ~44' Ul7H ~k \ hm' u ... t'll lo 111o·s. Adult l'rl.. ltt·a s rent & finnm·ini.: $15 ooo :>18·71:1.'ll .1112 7i>SX tor 1 '"' rirn11·1 , 1500 mo 671 0211 Pt>rm-Jn<>nt qualified ren-2 br. fenced yd, patio, gar. Fenced yard, fireplace, $495 mo. 751·2600 er c &!mer, 1 r, a, Pc, r, a, • ear t1tin 0'4nt r w11l 1ru1l1· 1 "r '4 w 1 1 0 c r Pr 5 • cpts, no children. Pet ok. 3br, 2ba, double garage, 64()..1Z70. patio, walk bch. $400 mo. school & comm. J>O<>l. Costo MHo l 124 ftt'<le('Q('ated 2Br. Iha • 5265.mo 546-7506 landscaped. new l y yrly"99-3202or4M·7401 $650.64(Hl4leves ... •••••••••••••••••••• Some furn SSOO •mo. ca rpeted . $475. Call UNIV.Pk.Terr.3br-,2ba, lt..L..wport .. It l269Mew-r' .. --... 3169 3 Br Fam Rm exec type """8377 494 A016 frpl, wet bar $440. 2 br, 2 ,_ ac ·~-. ~ "" S 135 vfll ... ..I! t>l·I 1167, 64()..5160__ _ ' ' .....,. or ...., b t k•t h · ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••-••••• r-home . ,\vaiJablc now. a. coun ry 1 c , vaew. )lx40 Mobile homC' a1·rm.... TWO 4 PLEXES \h 1 "' rr •II I tw ·• l'I\ Costa M.sa 3224 ~mo. Ask ror Betty 4 *I YR 'JWHHSE LSE* $425. S.SZ-7896, 551-1245 llwv lrom R<-<wh. N H Hunlln.l{ton • lltach Will .in-....,• \1;in) mnrt• avail' ••••••••••••••••••••••• .Br2Ba. $460w/grdnr. 2Br + d.en, 2Ba, spaclows Brand new T urtlero"k s.1000 cash 'l-IR flH27 I nt Small f1•(• l.1fl'ttrf\l' PETS OK " · _ .:..._ · .....;._ cxchan.ic. (':ill 11111 otfu·e t>l.> 4noo MESA VERDE attracttvc, pvt patios. 2 Glenn Grdns 3 Br 2 Ba Acreapfor1oft 1200 foranappoin1mentto!\<'E' ••COMUrMrs Guide Outsta nding 4 bedroom, AskforOon. car gar BEACH WALK mstr ste wibalc, Faui •••-•••••••••••••••••• thi!. ~uall Pl:H·l• t•x 3 bath, new carpets, ~ r e ~ • p 0 0 1 s • Rm, brldsl bar, lndry rm AVOCA.DO COUNTRY rlusiv1• $137 ,5011. t•u, D~Point -3 126 drapes & dishwasher. ~· )acuut/sa unas tennis workshop ¥lo t view Nnar new home. JBR. Open tilJ 9 pm ....... ~••••••••••••••• $.595 includes gardener. adJ \l!i ml to bch $475 mo. 642 2162'7 • • " 11 I CALL 751-3191. Dave Baron 538-3701 or lv • :?BA. on 8 acre!!. 400 Quail ~ 2 BR+ den hme. Pvt yd & ~ msge8'6-1371 SJ nh b Mature trees. Property ' Plac patio. ore an view or 11HC>rMte.Coet•MIM Rancho · • Tw me 2 r, bas been splll anto 5 Pr tie · Manna. Av! June/Sept. MESADElMAR 645-9161 Sl7521r! ~·.~~&tennls. .1cres & 3 acres. Owner Gp•I •• 581·6164 Sharp 3 bedroorn, 2 bath, G ............. area'· J(i-'-OK, ----,,-------. BK R 7S2•1920 -"-1 If 11 d t d 3 Br 2 Ba Monti-"-Co ... .......... \13 .inx1ous. · 1400ou.-1uT N~Tll.A04 ~Gift Valley l 134 ~au u Y ec:ora e · • "~ n· pix, small lee. We have UNIVPark3Br2S. Fam (714)676-5717 ---$450/rno. CALLSS&-2660. do, encl dbl gar, pool. many more avail now• Rm, ~ blk to bus, shops, ORS22·2080 6 U""-'ITS ••••••••••••••••••••••• .SELECT New painL & cpts, $385. • '-·~-d " :-Jr Bch beaut de<'o hse. ~3097 M5-(900 •NWK::/not con o. 1 sty, XO ACRES. Chri~lmas EASTSIDE own pool July lhru Sepl. .PROPERTIES ·~~ Lse.5SH059or963-4834 Valley, Ort", St2,000 or Lovt'I~ pride or S800mo968-470fl . Eastside.3br.AvadJuneSl!IO. 2 Br, 1 ~ Ba, Jots WoodbridgeTwnhse.3Br, best c,.sh o(r. PP owm•rc;hii> ""'"'· near - - --JBr. 28a, fresh paint. new l. ~mo. 642·1552 dys, mort'! K.Jds OK. gar, pix. 1 µ, ba. S385/mo. Ph 1~~9l Westclaff Off(•r'ed at lacJalnaleoch 3148 cptt •. Mess Verde avail 646-1 ...... eves Small lifetime fee. 640.ooss 5195.000. R~ dJlflCl&ntment ••••••••••••••••••••••• now, $39S mo. 646-3627 ----------ONE ACRE only Open Iii lJllm FOR LEASE 3 ~~Condo, air cond. ap· fWS-4900 Unlv Pk· Atnburtt mdl. 3 -.; 3BR 21JA 3 Bdrm .. South LuJtuna MESA VERDE plrtaL s .• ~~~~· tenms **c:o..s..nGuW. Br, 2ba, c ul-d·sac, pool, ~,:~o~e;~crepa.rtially J I. ,Quail~ view i;pectacular Best area, t'uper exec 4 c ·4'hN·"'""&..KY' JBr2 Ba F tnR fpl Jae, tenail. cul·d ·tac. renced. Horse stalls. Plactt .. Completely furni'lhcd Br. 2 ba. frplc, many ex· Qillege Pk. 3 Br 2 Ba, 2 Pt'esti(le: 0 8ew ,':int i; M2S/mo. 152·1St1 I". Priced below mark~t. Pt aperl:I-$650/month tras. Avail 6/1. $525/mo. fplc's, upgraded bme. cpts,IMT·8142or898-t098 -""'--';;;..·-------·• BKR. 7S2·1920 Cousey&Company 56S'T26 Avail. 1/1. $475 mo. ;:::-:;::---::=-::::-::::1'--------•I (714) 676-m7 MOO OUAIUI. N.IWPOtl'T IUCH 1104 So. Coast Hwy. Sharp clea 3 b 2 ba ~ 3br, 2ba, near new flae. Two Bedrooms ~II. macnab/ Irvine ?-. realty . qtlAIMI' HAUOlt ¥llW IMOI LS Be the firSt to Jive in this cozy Camden Model w /2 BR&. 2 baths, dining room, fireplace, beamed ceillngs, lg. fenced patio, balcony & close to tennis & swimming. Walk- ing distance to shopping. $595/mo: Marjorie Mahon 644·6200. <W-10 ... CANYON Prestige townhome w /best view of golf course. 3 BRs & den, 3 baths. spacious eat-in kitchen & formal dining. Community pool, jacuzzi & tennis court. $895/mo. Joyce· F.dlund~ (W-15) o~= lNDUSTRlAL BLDG. J.!\GUNABEACH ram 'rm.~. g~' quiet .,_,., 3226 dol~~~. DwfMdd S3'1'J ----------• 12,000 sq. n.. with I>rime 497-2457 loca tio n . $3fS/m~. ••••••••efle••••-•••••••----------Univ.Park $375 ~ VllW HOttlS Smashing 2 or S BR Monaco Model within sfeps of the parts & pool. Available immediately. $550/mo .. Donna GOdshall 8«.QOO. <W-16) ii l'/•ACRIS tenant. Industrial park u o -1u1 H erii aae Spark.Una zst.y 3 Br a¥.a EXTREMELY ruce 2 br, 'l'beTerrace $385 1 o cation. Income Mlt~ a..c:t. 1169 Realton. ba ~ drpe f~c Rec 1~ ba. '300 mo. -.w1 Turtle Rock' ,.,; Sl9S fOryourmobilehomeor $1200/mo-triple net.•-••••••••••••••••••• , fa:.il tie'• ':'Jr a'rina ' Bia. WoodbridCe ~ b ldtr site. South of Prlcedat$165.000.0wner .8Brl8a,W/Side,reclec, ... · N • bo J $S2S Corona. UtH avail. ~II will ~onsider carrying cul de 1e.c. Kicl4 OK. $350 ~ :,:5~0• Call Pat bdrm 2 ba. wlk tt> bch, Rane S.n ooq. prlco $12,$00. BKR. Isl T. o. By appt. only. REGANT mo. lat, 1ut. 644-9982 Yi • $450 mo. 536·U91 or fte =~ms M2' (714)67'7·5691 Call: 545-8424 Bkr. ~ n...---vu ..J-b .._..._., • ~ OR 522.2090 Blti Canyon Condo for \A.'O&U ,.,._ , ....... ~.... ... Vlllaae I $42' 2BRMHSE+duplex leasc.S800mo 2br,fnnl . Bd, S Ba, poo,, 11aun1. HARP Glenm ar 4.Br. Univ.Park $4410 RVE ACRES Rood C. t location Need dlnlna rm • lam Uy rm. 4 tm. SU-4192; •~ !Ba. oew palnt~ cpta, Village I $415 r...;;...a.of,.-~-$30,000dwn Pnnc.onfy. mos or mott. lmmtld. •B d ti BBQ stove. raqe • dabwahr, Deetfltld $&SO -~ ., r , en. pa o, , bl #, ed d ·~-FantuUe View VEAOERRF.ALTY occupancy. neat. 2 sty, $450 mo. I 1n '¥ • _... m o. VaUa,elfl $S2S f\JU price S12.900. BKR ~·617l 64CM600 SI -.~. *-3710 982-4471 Woodbrld&t> $550 PRIME EASTSlDEC.M t--------F'Ollf Beef.loom '61~~~ Brand new. s unit.. All CONDO. 2 BR. a BA. dbl 2bt, lba. Ira aar, troll • 1.• Ba. •&cant",... Woodbridfe is. ---------•elect 333 A\-oeudo, C:\l gar.Bral)dspankin'new. trtes. walt to h•rbor. aeytomovelnto,walkto PLUSllANYMOBE .. Miii rrip: c+J 1400 $37S.OOO. favtlrc1 hie YTly IHH. PU/mo. m1nrt. JncJ'd. S350mo. Weltm.ln Mall. CaU •••--••••-••••••••• t~ms M2_E64__ OIU ICM' 8.Pflt. Miry or $7649 llOlll'IOMe Don. C~OFMIWPOIT REALTORS •7MSll a BR. z Ba, eO)ts. an , yard. Aval!. Jmmed. $3S>. Tay~Mado R al· ..,, ... 2818 • red hill _ :) .. ~) • ' l J ·~i . l 1 ., • '* • ,. .. • • 1 Ape l•11t1 u.fwta. . ~nh ,_,,,shed Rfftfals to Staor. 4300 lusJMn Rtt1tGf 44SO Lott & P--' 5100 . ••••••••••••••••••••••• « Unfwftlshtid 3900 •••••••••••• • •••••• • • • • ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••• •••••••• Ht•" U.,_.IMd ..._., U•f•wlllMid .,_.,.,.............. .,,_ ...... u.tw.. tlwlkt91on leoch 3140 ONLVPILOT ....................... ........................ .............................................. ....••••.............•. Mewportleoch 3269 WHhnimter 3291 eo.taMna 31Z4CostoMHa 3124 ltklTOIEACH •••••••••••••••••••••• •••••• .. ••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• 14lt 4 br. 3 ba. frp\c. Harbor View Homes 4 er 2 Ba. 2 St). fncd. $350 ds hwhr. ut I t:Jl Jge. Beau t. hlahJy unaraded Small ft.t• Std. Sli: 5MftSt11N(j/ ~ncl yd No d_<>g~ 1703 " v.. M-9666 Ahn io'or Betler Alubamu. 5Jtl :14ti5 or Portalano Model, 4 BR.. Li Ing c:n•n w st · le SJ6-171K 2\.\ baths, f!lmlly rm . '' ..,......, e man~ r formal din. rm . frpk I a t S " r I n i d a I e l c:onversat1on pit. Extn Wes tman,tc r ! Mau) lge. profess. lundscaped more i~\ area i Deluxe pool :.1dc xtrJ lgl· 2br, 2ba, bltn~ dshwhr Nr. bch. Adults. no ptth s:?25 •mo 536·8362 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1 tfE EXC'ITJNG ,ALM MESA A"1S. MINUTES TON P'I' HCJI Bach. l .U UK from S2JO & up \dulb ~o rt•!:-. l!.IH \le~a Dr 11 Hll>s E<.1:-.t of :\l·\\ 1x.•rl lll\d I ~lh ~I Spt B z !ltrolaht prof mt'n x~k 3rd to shor~ I~ lu'< \'U hme . ~:15 ind ulll. m111d & grdn r t'-14 O.SB<I or MIM790 lhp fem 1 mrntc.· s Cmu.t Plum art'a, I 1·hl1l 01' °'13() rno :>45 33G7 \l,1lt' . nun ,mkr lo 'hH' \I 'a 1111• :1 Br :? ll.1 pool ~kl 11111 + • • util NB '7~ llSJtl lot. Minimum l yr lt>ase . .i Br. 2 t'ar gar, focd. 01va1l Owner pays Wdler & ammie<f ~. Small ree. gardener . Avail. fvr Std. SLg. 898.9600 Aim move ·ln June l~ For Belter r.1 ... 1ng 59'W A wtMtng coml>lnotlon of adult apartment Mmes with Juxury appointments ones supett> recreation or o premium IOcotion. Tennis • gym • lt\etapy spa • swlrnmlng • bllllords. IRAHD HEW! Rooms 4000 ll.i\·c :!hr JJ>t 10 ,hr 1·2 & 3 Br a pti. fo'rom ••••••••••• •••• •• • • •••• s1:n S() + I J ut II Ca:.~· References rcq S6SO Mu Wt·l>lman~ter (ut Sµr $250 /pc r mo 1l11 Sh.'\!pm~ rnh 9!" ~105 mo Vll'lona !>\M l!i(\.I 4 DELUXI OfC'S C'.'011r rm • ~'·at ?S. all lll&ndt.'<1, Mn wl1.:>c In rt'- ,1r t or 2 \'r le~se [,ake ~nrr xl .t r•a Kent llurk1n, 714 ~J !I~ Bristol St /CM for Lc·os{' ~11" A1 uila bit· :woo "I !1 pnm~ "l>Jl'l' '\Jr ( '11 \I l<'r" ~ l>l:<tll\(11\t' Ill <111 JM~Clb l..11\dS<'iiPlnrt & 14rChll€lC lure art>" ell ~ullcd to re• lat\ or ot h cc tocllllon Call Found. Pr. Prc~rlptlon (lhasses. very stron g . D;tanc1a Dr. nr Adam!<, CM Found 5122. Leathc:r case. 646·1072 n~WAlll> $\00 for lost rumale Whllc> Samoyed. ii• yrs, no eolh1r. t&1t0<> lower s tomach (7U l 532·2176 call collect please 1''0UNO· ltu~u:otl a;cort-. ·'The Tiny Golcten Whit> tl l···. Uu•har d ~ rharmat.·y, Laguna Bch. 49M05!> rift BJJ-9781 : Hester-Brown iniid nle\ We,tm1n.,t~r ! Many morl• 111 nrt<1t • One & TWo Bedrooms, One Boltl ~ f~O. P:RMesct.Vlltfs ~-=tr J-·· Delaware Jill Open 12·5 All ~ "h ~h:m• kll Owly 1 ~1111' to ocean b.1th. Shti~ n ~Ion SJ\ 642-oo02 Agt SJIH808 ··only". C.111 nft lpm \It Welch al 751·2321 - -Fem tn !.h1 '.\l1:i.a \ l'rd1·1 __________ Lost: :.mall older whl poo- \'11la :.! UH ,1p1 Tt•111u~ ---die. male. Lost. May :!, 1at·u111. t•\l' :O.o '1110k•n>: t.'11 \'1rg1111;1 l'I L' M. 1650 vac Garfit:ld & Newland Sl7'.. 1110 ;,.x; Ill 15 .1fl i Sq fl Outstdt> torage ~ward. 968-266'9 -11ui 1o itr·· 550 Paukutno Avt .• Coa10 lleso 751-t995 ---Hefs req '<1 5SH oo.~ 01 •Location ~5~ Condominiums ~~~~~~~~!-~~·-~!""'!!' ~~!!~~!!!'!! $235 2 Ir Utwfumlshed 3425 : 112 Ha Close to ~ll'h ' We ....................... Apwt11acllftu..furtl. ..,_,t11t1.t•UnfunL •Price •Luxury 2 bedroom from ~60 Sunbury Cross•842·ti60-l ROO;\IS Sl5 \\I. up \\ 11 h GoraqH :t~i 'ct It ~330 mo lutcben. SJ7 :,o \1 I. up for~ent 4350 1~1R·l322 I.Ml: Black male Lab on heh in Lag. Deb. Blk nylon collar & taas Limps on hind leg. 4~-4915 cover all bth :Ht<"''. San Clt>m.-ntc Dclu" con·••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• Many more,, a".u1I now do. ::!hr, lba. den Small General 3102 Costa MeM JIJ4 Unt. Small fee. 645·4900 pet ok;J\ Cull l9'l·8454 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• apb ~ 9i55 •••••••••••• ••••••••••• l>oublc.· s...; .:\taJ 1,111 1, lndustrialRHtal 4SOO BJI Isle. ~UICI. \\Olktnr, <ll"Jr 72~ \\' J<1n1\'' C~t ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••Consumers Guldt -· --2 BR. l Ba , s1ngh: story. 2br. 11 ·bJ a\ Jll June 1 1·2·3 Bdrms Nc\·er lived Sh an l ma tu heilCh a)( crpl-;, dprs. p,.1110, New Hunllngton Beach 4 pie" & triple>.. 19181 Coenson Cr. 833-1693 Open lloust' Sat & Sun 10--4 men. Sh.art• kit & b.tth~ "'° tii:l 7i87 IN D UST HI ;\ I. l !'\I TS 1Vrms.Sll5 mo lo Juli "oil· Woocl\\orker·.., -------- EASTBLUfl' llOl 'Sf': 4 Br 2 Ba . S70CJ mo 645·7~ ~~~~~ I l'l S350 m o $2501UP Open 12 5 daily beam ce1l. frplc. aar. 1111 Ul'l:rn;irl' Hunt· Adults. S265. 254-l Elden ls! Jul~ 10 St•J>I I l>uuhlt>i:.traa.:t'~I. r.. 1 S130 m() ., ... 1 •• 1 ••• .,1 .. 1 . •t o" ~a~ang o c open " ,.. lo~l.1" C3J u 5, Mon Fri. it 1 W 17th FOUND 2 dogi.. lt) Blk Spaniel. (1 l Cockapoo l\tJlcs. 535-~ 538-8406. A' all J unc 2nd ---Npt. lkh Wik 10 bl'h. 2br angton Beach ti~2 9601 Bluffs buyfront. pool I.I! Sl5o "kcl)~ 11:13-8151, s.i6-l826or Agt 2 Br. 1 b11 duplex.encl Fum1shc•cl rm J>Vt t'nlr~ J}\ l h.11 h '\\pt }h·h l'l•N' IO hNt'h b 15 .):)!1:1 1¥15··1336 St. CM or call. ti 12·H 63 --- FOUND: 27" Doys bik\· 3 Br, 31, bu. fom rrn. 3 c\'t''-· wknds s.tll 'lli75 i----------patios ~so Rltr &14 01:1.t garage. crpt:-. dl"J>!' No 3br twnhse t ma to bch. All pets. $295. 642·0583 appl. + Wshr & dryr. S315 mo A\'ail June 1 Call Verna 962·991 l Room & Board 4050 sina.:le <:Jrai:c fo1 rl'nt S2S month 1;.t! O!itii HVH 5 Rr. Fam Hm. :.! Apartmeftts Furnished fplc's. si;:!.5 l~l' s.>2 0443. •••••••••••••••••• ••••• ?59-52ti6 or 552-51K;l Bolboo PMinsula 3707 Beach Citi•s R"9tafs LOCATORS ha:. 100 l't of beach cities rcntals. All sizes & price-; trom SlOO up Fee Call &jg 9891 Delu«e lge 2 br duplex fncd yd , A <..:. i:ar <.:en tral loc. $315. 642·6612 Larg~ new :I br. frplt'. <i .1 r J ~ l' r o 1 r t' n 1 •••••• • •• ••• • • • • • • • • •• • J>t.'n1t1~ul,1 at 12th !i,t Room & Board 111 pvl L"ill ti7:'i·71iih ................... ! S5501Yrly "\t•\\porl Hght" J Br. tum rm 2 ba+boat ~tora~c ••••••••••••••••••••••• OCt-:r\:"FIW~T l Ur dlx /\\'illl 'Ill .111111' ::?5 (',ill 673·61i40 Locators Till 9pm --wfw crpts. bl trui. 7 miles 2Br, 2Ba. li v rm w /frplc, to beach Close to frwv & full kitchen. wshr/dryr, shopping 839119-19 • dshwshr, garu~e. short ----- wlk toslOrt!S. 646·3650 JrviM 3844 hme Mc~a Verdi· lH'('a Xlnt mt·ah Hel \rhp,cl ~15 20!J5 Jlunt J..k>Jl'h eXlf d "1ni.:ll.· i..urage. S35 962·353:1 Ion~ mo S650 ) rf\ :.ir·ro'' fr urn hl-ad1, 1 ll1 . ;:: h.t CostaMua 3724 New 2·3 Bdrm:-. 2 b.l 4 l'lex l'n ih Frplcs, bc;imcd ccilangs, ~araRes Garden Grove. $340 ~15 (.'all 8~6 2107 aft 5 Spacious 3 Rr Nr So Cst Pla1a Bltns, cpts, drps enclgar.$360.540-1901 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Hot .. s. Mot.ts 4100 Offic~ R~ntol 4400 S600tm1J ~ rl). :1 Hr hoinc. walk lo lwh. pool I l·n111~ S850 } rl}. Ol t .. 111 frnt h omt' ,up .. r 1·ond :JBdrm:-. St 100 mn 011 I hi' \\a I f'r' <.:ondu II<'\\ 'harp 2br + dt•n \ •t''' WHEHfHO:-<T 110)1 ES C.1111)31 l IOO ••••••••••••••••••••••• $40.00 WEEK & UP •Studio & 1 BH ,\pis •1V &. Maid Sen 1\\ .tll •Phone Serv. II 1 d pool 2376 Newport Bl,•d, C.:\1 548 9i55orG15 3907 Balboa Pe-nmsula 38 o 7 New Townhse Apt. 2 br, 2 ba bltns. a1c, adulti. ~85 . .Mgr. 6-15·5106. l!ll!J Anaheim Ave, Mgr Apt :l ••••••••••••••••••••••• USTSIDE Lrg 1 br, attract . clean. 1 Br p-irtlv furn Wkl' ::-.~ai.:. hlt~1~. J>MI.. taund rut£.;, SlR.5. + 't'I' cll·po~ Vacont·H~w Apts. ~o pct:-. Z>t~ 518 !>885 106 E Ba.v St .\f>I 9 Taking applications 2.t.t6 Elden A' c· -----------StllO for hJl'h pad :"t'dr S3JO Yrh. 1 • ikn, Ill'"-Immediate Occupant·Y Harbor \'1t>\\ \lontcgo. bus&::-.hop::..!:>mlcc slo\•e, ·rel Ill!. ll l'WI} 21Rat$325./mo. IDr, W.1 trpk f:Jm rm. locators 898-989 1 puinled, "c·ll lnc·ated 3 BR at $400./mo. pool t\ 1'111lih111h1' ll'." '\r 1 Rr duplt>x Eastsicli• 642 371>3 OOYLE·t'F-:NTUR Y21 pa/rk &t '4'111101~'11 ~1 .:,:'iHl!lllu Ne.di & rln. Sm but t:Ulc 2hr 1• ... Uuple:< Yard lne 5-\8-llS8 w Aili'( t'11l'I' I t ' I • & . "" . . ,. · · 1n:.1dl• Slllc) mo ts.I sun deck. ~ar, ycurly l\r ShOPb· Lgc 2 llr, bltns. s1-:wru1tr 111·.ll:ll'l'S, I L:.i::-.t mo +~50 l'I n~ S.J.50 mo 6753013 newdrJ)l>. cpb. nl'" pnt llH. 2 1\,1 "l•·I• 11111-. fJm \\ml .lullt• h\ 128 I:: 'cllt ... · -11 1 · \ t I I'" 7°'M Coron del Mor 38~2 " ~. no uoi.:s . ~.!.> 11n w :!nd 1 rpl<--.1·<'1ud1•d ~1st SI.' P ~ .. , l)V\1 a "' 675·6:'i27 & f>-15·5487, lfC<I E ••••••••••••••••••••••• i::urdcn ·'"'"1· "1·10 mo Dona Point 3726 Rocht•!>lt•r 410 El \lcltl,•n'l ••••••••••••••••• •••• •• ----------1 f; Sidi.' 2 Br I ~ Ua, fpk. pool. l\\nhM· .,l) le K1dl. OK S..'9<! 5-Ul ·t~Hi WOOLJBRIDGE ••••••••••••••••••••••• PINES APTS SEA LARK MOTEL 1. 2 & 3 bdrm units 22i 1 Ne\\ port 81 . l' .\I Dt>s1gned lake early 1,.6.7us. Weekly r.ilt<' California bungalows. fromS60 ~up Fr om S270. 11 5 ~ Pine~tone Ofr hrs. 9 5 :30 Dail) ~st Home 4 150 552 ~OU ••••••• •••• ••• • • • ••• ••• Oran ~Ptrl'C Lakl' Adil condo. l Br + mcz. A/C, recfac1J S:JJS 833-~271 P\'I rm:-. "" 111~ l Jfl' b:.ilanccd diet:-, nil'•· patio 8.'tl 27~ i71 :ll!JU - ---Summer Rentols 4200 2 Br condo, ten ms, pool, •••••• ••••••• •••••••••• Spit. gy m. no kids/pets. Big Canyon. \'1cw furn S335 + util llA.\I llP.:\1. ;,iµt. :!Br, 2Ha. now thru _:!.9-1-495-l Sept. all 11"> 5700 mu WALNUT ~UAR!': 2Br ti40·5560 T\\nhsc. ~315 mo . 673 2313 \.'H':./\\knds 752· IROO du\':-. Una" crs1l) Pk Village JI I. 3Br :!1:1\;1. appllJnces a\'a1I, SS85 mo. 1st lai.t + SlOO cleaning dcp. <I\ ail June l .5.51 S~ll SPACIOUS Ot:canfrout I Br 2 Ba t:omplctely furn hme Fpl<'. wshr1dryr. d~hwshr. 2 t•iar gar. no pets. S2tlt.llJ Jun«.>. SllOO, Jul). bl to 16th \'rly rc:nlal a\ ail 611·~582 Nl':W ILt111411 \It\\ 1-.null 0 1·t':in \ ll'\I I 111 . p.1t10 C.1P<' t ,.d ·I, It• ( '11rido :.! ,.:a1. llt'\\ t'Ph ;idll!'\, no hr ckn " 11:1 \\ , It'\\ [I. 111:h I ~l' S2:,0 · Isl &. '>ll'P!'> 111 pl I\ 1111111 , I ~ l."I ".'IUCJ cit'µ 1 l'llll lhl pool 111:,!hl\ u111:1.1d1·it uk 1!1;j2Sli 1llf!I)'\.\1>1.1. :\I \H Sparkling ~ Hr. D W, frp l c . fnt d p" t10 . locJlanaMi9uel 3852 8 a I h o a I ' I a n ti S Ila) front I Hr :1 llJ . 0111 Rm. Jul). ~000 .\u~. ~JI) Yrh wmll•r l'oil~~ iu1 n 01 t11i1 ' '" fll'1' I'll';. J\J1I 111 m:; 05:!.1 ,\\:.HI 111r 11111111•d 11 .. 1w L-...a Beach 3748 S585 lllfl .. :.2 111111 I \t'' -.,.-· ....•••••.......•.••... 11.:uhor \ 11" ( .n '"'I .l 1111.:" II\ nn 1Jcl1111 l>J br.2 h.1 l.11n1111 1111'1t.1111:i~t11·11e1·.111 \ll''' ~.in It''"'' "' i 1 1.10 !6:!:! oldl'r l llllJ>k µrd'd \\'1 I l :! Br ·r"'' 11ho11">t' I rpll• 1'1H1I lt·n11i:-Some lllCJI\ ~ L'.llJhn,1 \ h '\\' C\l)~C tu !'>hopping & I 111t· hc.•;.il'I\ fH-1 :!•ii I l'or lt'il"' 1l,1rho1 \'11·\\ ""''II I 1t1H l1> I Ill' '.!I • l\.1 & i".1111 II Ill \ lrlf \Ii•\\ '11)."JO pr n10 :'>I I l!.!:! rl'<IUt t• rent in t·Xl h•Jll~C ----------t I IV K1111ll . hr .111d Ill''' -.phi It•\ ·• Hr 1k11 'J l>.1. H·n pool ~-i.)11 •· 11 h 11~1 tor 1 ll'.111111~ .\Ju,t ha\ l' 111'. ('.i\1 l!ll X\1!17 hd Xa111 & l l~1m 'il':JUl<I ••Ill Ill ~I JIO IM11!11n.1 I Blk 111 .1n·.1n \\ .111. 11nmcrl l'H Ill I:.! ·t lllt. :J h.1 G ;1r;1g1• , l' ho'' I Newport ~och 3769 Blurt-.. ~·nrldn •• •••••• ••••• • • • • • • • • • • p1111I , nr Im rn 1· ti C07\::!ht lrpk \1r~n11" s:r.:; for ~ini.:h· ..;.100 \'<HI pit· h Ill 741:111 2hr lh.1. ga1. 1'Jt10 hlln' ... hulf(•r... :"o i>•'I~ H1•I '.!:!.'>mo Iii:> :1 \\Ii :! h1 \ ba Oupl trpl. )!,1r patio. nt'\\ '' \\ q1t~ drps ... tm·t· ,\. r«.>rr1:: '\r 111:.11 h ~1m ti;:, J~l.1'1 S?fi..5 mo 58:tl tj~ 18 • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • I Br duple" f':J shadt' ~c~•t & cle.111. "m but cute 1ns1f11• :SHiii mu 1st & Last mo .; SSO dn'i.: .\\all Junt· ht 12H t-: :!Isl St. ,\pl I t>.t5 i8'J<l J HR. 2 RA. 2 kids OK :'\t) µ<.'h 1040 t' \'a le111· 1 a ~!>.l5i~:1 THE DAISY FOR KIDS AND THEIR PARENTS! •Pool •2bedrooms •Tot lot l'.1110!:. fcnu•d ',1nb liX7 Wt•,..t llitl) SI L'all o:ll .'1515 Condo 2 l1r. ;:: ha. loft m;,i,lcr su1k :! lar g.rr Fr pk. bit ns :.? pools S:l75 171 I1<1!19 1289 ~wporl Beach 3869 ..........•..•...•..... PARK NEWPORT II J l' h c I o r ~ . l 11 1· 2 Rl·drooms & Townhou ... t•::. From S219.50 Spcclat'ull!r ~pa, total r ecr1•at ion µrogr~ m. SOl'&al program. 8 pool,,!( tcnni" courtc; Al Fa.,hmn Island .. J:.imborce & Sun Joaquin H1ll!I Road 1714> 644-1900 I br w soJ .1 hl'fl ad1h·d Bl1M. k to li,1\ & ot•t•an S?,<;o \H'l'I.. h .; It! h 17 J ;'\:t'\\{lOrl tk1•:infrool llsl location :!br Iha .... 1,~ ti. w l' l' k I \ ~ ;1 ~ ;) J II 11 l' ~:1i!'1 .Juh . S42~ \uj.! !'>.)'I 1:!21 or ti31 11!21i SAN CLEMENTE Bc•adt hum•·' 1·11111111' and .1ph 111•-;1•1\1• 11•1\• 1\1-:RTll.\ l!E'.\ ll Y RF:\J.TOHS 2lS Del \l.ir l'I:! 11:!1 :\1•w duplc>.t.':-. 2 3 br S..150 , . . up yrl) f';im1tv & pets OCEAN \II•.\\ Sl\'I" t~1 ok bi'l·49\ 2 -b c a !' h ., 11 1 I 1> 1 \1•\\ .ipts I ~ ~heir rn' \II -mcm1111;il ''l l l..e·nd Sl:ill • •••••••••••••••••••••• 60'PER SQFT llil7 W~STCLIFF' :" B .\GT S..11·5032 150 I Westcliff Dr. Newport F111;,inl·1.ll Clt l~asin<J Office Spac:e (';,ill on S1tc• 1\lan;1~~1 1714 1 t>l2 31 ll l'Xl 246 DELUXE OFFICES l'omml & 1111.btl s paces. ;!Qt) to 20011 Mj. rt As low as JS! sq It La~ N1Ruel & ~l l~SIOn \, ltc'JO <lrl.!3!> l!Jnd~ to S 0 . Frwy C;ill 831·1100 WESTCLIFF AREA NEWPORT RF./\t:ll I lOO Sq fl two fl\ I bath-. ~IOO p <•r m o f>l2 0200 1770 Orang~. CM sou sq II Bathroom. + 1 m \\ :-ink n•llcl· l't'rf tor )Jhotoa.:r,1ph\ ... 1udio. Ill nll'dlt .ii 1111' S22S r.ui ~)~Ii. DESK -.µan .11 17Xi:'• BI' a t· h 111 1 d n • • a 1 T .tlhl'l'I 111 llunltnj.!lt•ll llc:adt :).i(J 1w1 monl h Hnng II\\ n I urmtun: Our l'l'l't·pll01ll'>I \\ill ''°"" 1•r ~our phone lor ~10 p1·r month Daily P1lol oll1n• 1.t.!·4321 THE EFACIENT ALTERNATIVE Ope n a hr;rnch office 01 ... 1;1r1 your 01\ n <·omµan) tor ;1 fraction of the t n'il \10111 h to m onth rl'nt 111 dudes: rt>rpt. <1en-1cc. f><'r"1nah1t•<I ph011l' l'O\' •·rJj.!C'. <·11111 11tt1m m;,i1l Upiattek M•wHt Ye I I o w S c h w i n n Industrial Pork Eastbluff. 640-28R2 bt wn 7:11 thru 96011 Ml · rt 5PM&7PM __ --- 'PJt'CS 11uw leasing FOUND gray/blk poodle, ~ 1~1 d.i)'s 989·2224 male Vic Uaysade Dr. & Evening" J amborce 842· 77'77 or 1000 Sq Ft U111I!'> Prime 675·15/H Co:.t,1 Mt·~41 Im 1''~y f-'0111111 Sml lJlk te m doi<<' $17~ mo 1n:11417 Chihunh~a /DoXlc. Whl WA .... TEDll c h c:-t Nr ~u c ifi1·, " • • Warner . SA s.&6 2705 I man bodv shop lo rent --. ----- or t s<' itca:.onn ble Lost 1-t>male BOXER. ~28-271 '> or 9u5 l lO n bnndh~(wht. Owner ver} l'rlo'sto 1 or John upsl't . ( osta l\Je11a area · ' R~WARD. 645-2602 aft 5 C ~1 lndustnal I too Ml II . Los-t · Pood le brown ~1'5 2955 ltandolph "B" · . • · i..it2no ng.3709 male Vil'. Adams & 1 • • ' • Ma~noha. II B. 968-4989 Storq 4550 -- •••••••••• ••• •• •••••••• Lost. fem neutered tabby .\1 O T 0 H II O M E cat w/fluffy tail. 4 Wht .... ,..0 R .. rL· !''DOOR pawsmv1cPoppy,Cdl\1 ·~ ., " r. '' 759-0SW 545·1960 <.:orona. lull :-crv1l'c --' ---- l 737·9580 foun d Ul k Lab, Vil' --Bnstol & l\1 al!A rthur. Warehow.~ ~ ort1ce !>pace. SA. Approx 1 '~ old lr\'lne Sl;!j mo 557•2672 54!:1·9252 ----PfrSOllCll1 53SO Rentals Wont~d 4600 •••••••••••••••••••u •• .....•.••.............. Lac Balboa lslJnd rcs1 denl hC:t ndvman wants tu 11.:nt !Im apt. or h:.c on the 1:-.IJnd b} June 20th. 5 Yrs apt mgm\ 1.'Xp. Ref:-. il\';Jll. RCU'> upkCl'P ol entire prl'mlst'i. can ht• prO\ldt>d t>i5·8i ~i. Mlsctlloneous Rentals 4650 ......•................ I 'l I Q I,; 1': n E T ,\ I L STUDIOS FOB BENT ~ to ~oo mo Ut 11 mcl I nq ..ii 'Th«.> 1-'Jctory · 125 E . Jllth SI Nrwport lk':.ich ur l'Jll Ui5·Gllll CJf hi3--IZ71 Business/ln•Ht / Rnanc~ .......•.•............. &!sinus Opporlunity 5005 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Forci~n Auto Rep:llrs & Hod\ \\ ork VW t; & l'or.irhl·s l11w J>l'll'l'. Good C i\I 10<' Ai.:nt . 5·1!1 9511. Dnnkang problem? Call Alcohol Helpline 24 hrs a day 835·3830 PRf,GNANT? C a r1 n i; l' o n t 1 d c n l 1 J I rounscll na.: & refcrra I Aborl 1011 ;1llupt1on k keeping APCAnr: llMDA & VICKI OutcoU Mass• For ttt. hn of it! St-n·anl( all Orange Co t\J.5. 7313 ru:1.AXTNG MASSAGE UobJamcs Lw. Masseur OUICJJIS 9·9 494·5111 Spfritvol R.ader 11115 So }';I Camano Re11 I San Clemente. f'ully h t' For appt. 492·7296 •SUZI'S* Outcall l\tassage 10:\M 2A M 731·54-t8 EXOTIC GIRLS l'o:-.~ 1•,.. -.,,1111 11111 M7-571iX Ill I) 11 l.!:)11 •SIL\Hl'2br l "·ha t1pl pool Wik IJd1 \tllb 110 ··lt·,·trH ·1:1;1 .\ \ m ·"'"· Stc!'J!' to beach. t Br 2 Ha . Am 1rn 11110 L"\1 til;! :!11;1 fplt:. l'pL-.. drps, S600 yrly -wn I Cl'. u11dcr1:round TOY WORLD Mnssage & Modeling prkl! & rnon• 1)1:;1 rs h111 or wu 111 rd . Outcall 5'12·3169/543·3<!51'1 I ,l \ I h1 \\ .• u.. I•. It• h p ,. ' ... ., ·1 I .'l I ... t• l'ool. ,,11111.1 1.1•. :-.1111 8J'.l R'li I lt'IJ I li5.l .>W 83R:! Costa Mesa 3824 lse 642-34-1:\ San .I u:.i11 l'.1phl r.mo '.! Ur tom pl I 111'11 ( 'oncln \\ pool SlllH mo 1:1•1 ..!';'5t. TH E EX EC.:l "I I\ E (', >!>t,1 ~lc~a & ,urr ound cwlTf': 10~ an~u!> HU N.B .. LEAR~ PIANO TUNING SanCl~mente 3276 <;fH-.\fH1':CHE\TIO'\T ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~\\1tn1n tn.: "''unc.1' ., \If-:'-\ .. \ \ f-:Hr>t .. 1rl .. ,t :'\F:W BREI-:!> \l"IS Bachelor. frpk .1111lln:.. poul. ian1111 1•111• i.:.ir ,\dull"> no p1:ts .5205 mo ;~1311.imrll<•n 1, 15 4 111 NEWPORT MARIHA 9 19 Bayside Dr. 67:.1 R414 &ii boa. I urn :! fir. St.50 wk. Junl' onh u.1d1dor SIOO "I.. .Ill :-.ummt•r 5!J:J I 2.l:l S67SA:'-< :'.ICOLi\S OR. F v. Irv .. & Lag Bch. New low rate:. on begm SlllTF: JOO Over 75 Nat J lmmd toys. _!lCrcoursC!I. 837·0733 "\F.WPOHT Rri\CIJ. CA .Walt D~sney. Muttel. WANTED · Women whn <.lCEAN' \ 11'.W 1111 ·• ·ha hr.illh i luh.. lnlll.ard,, ll4~m. 11mth1Jhl:'1l' !. ~.I 1'110\. ~ , ar "·II 1·111111\1 hr rhliA\t' apt:-.i lti to.H :-O:EW 2 br & :! br .; den lUXUI') \\,1ll'rfr1tnl ,1pl-. •Buill in::-. 1,111-5-lit> ron.ka .. f 1shcr-Pncc. No ha,·e a lot of love and a •I i\IOFR~EHENT• !><'lling i~wohcd. Sm in little xtra time to be Big "' lllJ.:hl 11 l!hl t•d I Pllll I!'> ~25 m11 1'114 :!l•.M , uurh l'r o •"-flr<• -.hop llrand Ill'" l. ..,, 1 .I Br goll cir I 111\1( r.1111o:1· !>JI l \ patio. dhl µu1 \lit .t 1<w1m Costlf \'lll.1 111 all Fl '\i \1'11\ IT lt-:S 493-85RS J-'11lh1m1• tl1n•c\or frt•t OCE1\N \It-:\\-:1 11r :!' ·· Ila twnhs1• 1lhl 1 .. 1r poi1I ~OI( (~Ill "' I 111 Ill I(' 'I, I' ~It'll> $.1!15 7 I I Ur. ::!.1% San JYGtt • Capistrano 3278 .•...•................. :1 Rr, 2h.1. 111mm11111I\ pool lrvk '\Int l111·11t1on .-rrn 1\ttr1 ti 11111 1·•'.1 :~1111 111 1:?1.)1;1~ H~..Cll I 1•llt•d :!lir. I ' Ila Ii.: 1·11ndo \\ail """ s;11;, Sm 11·1• I .111·ator ~ ll!m·98!11 :'IJ(';W Mc.1111itulll' tll't"•r ii 2 br. 2 h.1 rlt•n. tam rm frp l \II'\\ ~11 ·1 714-400 :.."1n>1 .For lca~t'. l'APTAl"l S JIJLL. 2br. 2ba Superb panoramic \ 11.'W. O"ner. 4!)3.J.165 ~undJ\ ltrun1·h HH<l' trip ... p.trlll'' "1'1111 to11n1.ln1l'l\h t\ mu1 c.·' Jlt-.\l llFll \ I' \ H I \I l '\ l ~ :-.1111..I•·· J,\" ht•<hoom ... 1-\1111 ~ unfutrl \loclc•I lll'K'n <I 11f\ Ill tn 7 ftl)t•rl' Ill.i ll' 'l'r\ 111' ,I\ .111 '" \.•a,1• I 1"1111 rt•fl ~C•I I\ ;rrl11lh •lnh nn p1•t• 0 Akwood Garden Apartments Mewparl lffctl/Horltl >IM lrV'inf' I at 17th • ~SM."tO ... .,_. ...... /~- 1700 16th St (Dover at 16th> 642-11170 Santa Ana 3210 -------;~;~~-;a·::~:~~;~·;::1::. ---------- <.'Om er lot. nr So. Coast STEPS TO l!ACH Plaza. avull 1 June. $425. 3 BR, 2 bu house ... $600 839-4616 after lP'.\I 2 BR, l ba .. rurn . $375 ----· Weha\esummcr rental-; associated s111)" • 11'.>· llflll r o11s THE BAY LEAF :!lllh Ill, W!.ltlr pd ~ill Heaut1ful. :,p.ll'Wll~ rw11. Jph l'ool. P' t p11t10' mestaB.AU I BK fo\Jrn t HR l.nluru ~70 :)245 •Tr::ash C'nan11;11'1111 •Wet U.1r 2 Br, I "· ha (lua i111 t•ol · t.1i:r w \ ll'W of ncran Patios, deck. ''• blk to bC'h, frplc. ~wk. CdM. (714 )346·218-t 1·2·3 Rm. dlx. offices. No \est req d. Guy l\urnett Sisters. 834·1116 for more lease r«.>q Adj. A1rportcr -'7141821·8602 collect info. Dig Sister~ of Hotel. Low rates. full Massage Spa. SS.500 cash. Orange C_o_un_l_Y ___ _ \rlults, nn J>t>h llH F. 111111 St &!2 OR56 • Flrephitt' •Private beach •Plexiglas ... end. patios •Smoke detectors •SliP6 avail. to tenant~ serv S.13·322:! hi noon Wntc ~)r. Vincent. 6773 Notice is given that 1. Westminster. West. 92683 Eleanore Bauer Kratz \dulls. no pet-. ~J A\ ocado. C \1 646 0883 Fo xhoUow Vill• •·.!1 \\ W1l~11n 646 ~no fo'UKN OH liN l''l/HN •2hr townhnt111•"' frpl •I .~1· 11.11 If> & c·nt 1:<11 a)(c • \dult ' l hthl lti .~ OH•r •('1~11 & j;Jl'Ul/I I\ ail r1t•Jul Iii'\\ '1111 .!h,1 IO I pk\ f'itllll l.•Utllll\ hit n-. ~\11!1 h I:! 11;.1:1 ~tiO 2 llr. '"!ti sty. encl i::ar, <idlls, nt• pets 2126 Thurm. 675·5i7'.! Adults, no pct~ ----OCEAN VIEW yrly 2Br1 Ural\\• mrt• I hr 1-:astc;1dc Ila, dplx. J(ar, $400 mo. HPl. SIO\l', rc•lrii.: 1\riult. 644·6'780or642·3639 700 sq.ft. office space $275 to $750 Wk ava1labl«.>. Pacific Cst Hwy in NewPort Bch WATERFREtNTHOMES <.:all Robbie 548·0757 Call 631·1400 -'-- ----JUSTCOMPLETEO. Full Waterfront 2 Br. pal\O, !>ervirc tll'luxe offices dork. fuxn . $250. wk. <t7.5·650 sq. ft . l lrvinl' ln- Nwpl Shore:. area. J 'li _'\Ya ll._!lOW. 546.:.6299 __ dustnal t·omplt'll., recep· \U.1.A room ... 2 hr 1 ba. blksocean, 2br. lbH dplll.. Vocation R•ntaJs 4250 t1omst'. ~ecrl'lary Xerox, Adlt::. 1Jl l'r1·rn·d. No Yrly lse. 71'1·870.9203 ••••••••••••••••••••••• hluel?nnl, ~ia1l ,\. l·ofrcc &?00 mo 1;.12 1!111!'. P<'h :10'1 ''""'" \ 1~1 ... ---HI(; RF:AH sl'r\'lt:C 1-nrmul Conf ~ 'IX:I NEW I 13r + den, steps to 1.AKl-:1-'ll.ONT rm, loun~l' Lc:i..,e or m o iwfll'h. patio. J.?IH O.J(I'. to mo [)49 !lll2'l $325mo yrly675·2250 \'~ban~. (i i.II~ 7iOI -U-1 9 '2'1 or RJ!l·,, 17'.I Lil• It•' B.11•hf'l111 II\ I pal ill. j.!Oflfl 1111 '11111 + EUROPEAN CAR will nol be responsible REPAIR. f o r an y d e bts or s:mClemente area. liabilities contract ed by 492-5682 a sk for Chris. anyon e other t han ----------Myself on or after, May llcl;taurant 15~ interest ~.1977 . In Newport Beach. Lldn•---------- \'illagt' Shopping Ctr. *KAREN 1S* C.i5·70011 OUTCALL MASSAGE l ntrrior L>e corating Sl11d111. will tram Smull ln\Ci.I. ;\o IO\Cr1. li3HJ060 I lclp yourscH by joining a 6PM-2PM 973·0893 Luxury Condo. Wik lo DESBHT n)soo 2hr heh 2br. $450. wkdys ' · MERRIMAC WOODS ~33·8151 CVt!!> "knd:. lx>111.1t1f11llv turn on i.:olt "IC f. I hr r11w1I .11llh 110 i:,.t". <.>tfl 15 Ui 111:i-. ~ tn "''" :t7•lM ,tft sdect group of ~ople in Twin Ofr hid ·~-; f,?:Jo C'areer upporlunity . Set sq ft a \·nd from 300 )Our own goals. Direct Irvine 81•d BACIIELORSERVICE WIDOWF:R S DIVORCEES Losin g your huttons ., Sew 'n • SewG45·4719 ----t\P.\t or~ l1~1i Spacious 2 hr.<! ha apt. S.l8·9tl7!'1' ' er~•'. lt~n,ni s ., P0•~1~. !-.'Tl~'1 1;-;c 11>11··• Rr 2 Rn. l'til pd . clo!<C'<1 garaJ(e. -.J11cuzz1. Sunrtst' { C sq ft . to :.! 101\ t;q fl At· 1 ra ctn l' 1l'111 n I ni 1,.. your own life. Cnll Mrs. Pre'lti~c an•a ne.1r 2 _Ski at (714)7~917~.-- llELP IS A VA il.ABLE l"or f'umilies in Crisis. Call the llopeUnit, South Coast Co mmunit y Hospital, So. Laguna. 499-1311 . .:amen Jfll Pool S2S5 710 sauna & JiJ('UUI. Bcnul. Santo Ano 3880 Ranc ho MarliJ(t!, $27:;. ~RthSt _ surroundings. ••••••••••••••••••••••• wk! (7 14 1673·4850, fwy's. MoMy'o Loan 5025 Al Johnson ••••••••••••••••••••••• 2 Rr 1 • J Ba Twnh'le brk 425 Merrimac Way, CM 2 BR. 2 bu 2.sty adlt. con· J.:114)324·2688_. ___ _ (pie. iinr. lgc patio. ~dlts. 0-C. Point ]a26 do. Nr. Mile Sq. park. Rental' to Shor• 4300 Corpora.te Realty I st, 2nd & Jrd T.O.'• no pets S28.'i 2447 Elden Gar. sm. pel olc, $275. ••••••••••••••••••••••• · ~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• 646·351Han 4:30wkdy11 C714> 558·170 I LOANSAVAlLAULE PtnOMI Set-Ylut 5360 1\ve. 979-1658, 646·7027 Oc v· 2 BR 2 b _ evs. ~fo~~~rly. ' a. South LCICJUl'CI 3886 Deluxe 450 sq. Ct. orrice, BAY MEADOWS Agent644·7383 ••••••••••••••••••••••• A responsible woman to Const Hw y. $175 Mo. Spac. 2br . 1 ba a pts. Lge, quiet, luxurious. ex· share condo in San Juan Rcalonomics Corp Mony facil. avail. Encl. SpedacularOcean vu.Nu ec. 2 br, 2 ba apt. Capistrano with 11ame. 675-6700 gar. r-,1 patios. Gas/wtr 2br, 2ba. gar. $340 mo. E levator to scenic prlv. Will split rent & utilities ---- pd. No kids pets. From 752·2400or 49J.7748 bch. Party & game room, Call a n er 7 pm. at (714 ) Orritc 'pace ava il. cen· !i2flO Adi ,,,.,, ()(Y73 BT 3832 total secunty. Pecrect 661·2072 trally locutcd in c; M . 39" • ts . .,.... oro li vingorwknd retrealfor -pl'r sq rt Contact N 0 W REN T 1 N-G . ••••••••••••~•••••••u• the adventurous odull . Rinrnate wanted h> share Corpornte Reiill ). 17141 beuuldul ti('" »PtS. New. 2 Br 2 Ba. 4·plex, Start1nl( at $515 /mo. IJ:<• 2 Br hse an E Sldl' 558 1701 spacmus I 1:4r 's. great A C. cpts. drps. bltns, 499-2835 CM. w/neat. non smok WANTED CORONA DEL MAR Credit not important ••••••••••••••••••••••• __ 6_7_3--4883 __ B_r_o_k_er __ We need so people who are Home r e fin a ncin g, &% at . leHt 10 lbs. over · VA. 8'A% FHA. 9'h%, weight. Call Ml11 Slone co~v Non owner oe· at C714>~1·9J75. We can " · ,., tell you how to loee lba. & t'Upaed louns. 8~ h, F HA. ellm money at the aame $38,000 m ax loan. 30 yr time loan&. assumable, no ---· - prepay $<19·8469 Morl-s. Trust -Trani 5450 ~-5035 ••••••••••••••••••••••• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • ••• • • Ltaving for Bo" ton from For y OUltCJ FGfftlHH Hreat :mr. I' c•bu. fncd ~d. just pamted. cl bl gar. nr schl~. S1'10 536-2797 ev, 546·2313 dys J 1,' W 8olt..1 u tt•1 ,.,.. cl(lsl'ls. S2fl5 Light & enc l gar. no pets 586·8137 • ing EST grad Mm'-; to 2 R 0 0 M Su 1 I«.> w H.B. mid July. Good dri ver. Fem pref'd . uirv :! Br ·~. w ·pvl patio ~nh Furn11hed OCC & bl·h. Call D•rn r ei.tr ooni St 75 l 770 !DANS got Westmin,t.... 3298 1>r · hakun\. s.!95. Encl ~on leach 3840 Of' Uwfwnlstt.d 3900 634·47MI h<'f 5; ~·'8 1!21.)3 0 ran$: l' /\ ,, l' • C.: M /O ••••••••••••••• ••• ••••• 1&2 br. rur unfur adlt<;, gar !>, lndry foc•il Come ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••• ••••• ev<, 54S.m96 or 675 8386 Also 2nd TD Loans ---- - 84(}.~ l::.'<eclbhmt'. 'p n r k1 1Jpu.I ri~I<', no pets. 1st. lu!lt S22S dby btwn lvl·:ct30 &1 5:30 8 n>'11 2 ledrooms. 21ottis 2 Young men scare hi"" Ofrace 2fiO !lq ft. f':mv1~w l"atr~t TcrmutncC' 1949 ~-_.. ~ we or. nr a.e. "'''l °'. l6th ".'t. ,"' H ... •. 3'' 324 1 or u,orcu Del u e a pt, rrplc, . .., w s \ -u&..c .... 5096 ..-.c.. ,.., • •• ,,.,, " 3436 for 2youngladles to:iihra at »rner •. i. $61 .!W SClttfer,..,7 o. etlon &174J142or~---.,,., 1801 ~!ullan naealty, 646. • encl09ed gar. lodry l ac, beaut 3Br apt '" N B mo 645·5111 LJl.2 2171 5 ... ll061 I .,...,.. 540-2960 t II d I ta V't • .,;r ••••••••••••••••••••••• :mr Condo. 2lr.!Ba. fam --~ -pa to, 8 8 u t. nn pe ' Tennis. health spa. etc. Luxunous office ~pace, Se .... a rm.2car itarn~ercl & ~~;.~n~.9~e;~r!: 2 br. cpts. drp.'i, bltns. $285mo .. S47·2G22 We are. lookmg forward N.B. arcu. 1100 sq ft. 4 rRIVATEPARTYe:::Wctton 7001 tennis, rer req r • Call Ag~nt 675.6161 Kids OK 5225. 2 br condo, S295. mo. l to a nice llummer, we rooms. $375 mo 1527 Win pay more rar your •••••-"•••••••••• .. •• Kay963-o84lor 968-m2 645-2978 child&l petok. alao own a yacht. Call Mon rov I ;1. C'.'ont act 2nd T .D. ~3S'rn MltN d CUTE &COZY 963.a73 FROM S2.40to tt1tc bt~ 7·llpm. fl.44·8020. 714·"'5 2114 --------• 2 Br, cpts & rpe, b\tns, 2 Bdrrn on yrly lease $2'75 2 br. l ba, E tSide _.., "'" $300. Smoll let'. Std Sig .• 375 /mo Wa•erfroni triplex. Enc. gar, 6aJc. SUPER NICE! S Beaut apt plans. avail. Will share 3 Br, 2 ba NB ---------Amoultc.......,/ ~Aim for better HomesS3i.1400 • Nrnew.642·1600 3 Br 2'h Ba condo, 2 fW1) or unlum. Bach. 1 Twnbse w /1 pe r son. lcaiM R...tat 4450 ,.,..,...,, living 5940 Westminatcr fplc'a, patio, w . pQOI, babr~~ b:;'... 1 ~~i li2 br, 2 Pref. remale. SlOO/mo. ••••••!!••••••••••••••• Lost Ii,.-1 at SP r l n id a l e> BEACON BAY Baytront, •East31de. 2 Br twnl\se jac, aouna, UJ>Rr•dos. • UJ:J, ui:ami=u v rlDS, 642·1950 •••••••••,••••••••••••• Westtnin~t.e r 'M•ny lge 1 Br. pvt bch. tennis, lge patio. lndry bk up. s 4 7 5 m 0 . B 0 b , dinlnf :areas, storaae. DESK space at 1787' Lod&Fomd 5100 moreanarea 5450 mo. Utll incl. $280.548 .. 971 %~-2007 P • t o 11. decks • HeHARoo m2h? Beach Blvd .. near ................ : .... .. 675.fl899 landscaped g rounds , To Pro~ ioM.lly Find Tolbert tn Huntlnitlon .3llr 2 Ba. Din RM, Cplc, 2 t# gar. cpts. drps. bltns, Balbou BJay Club. Bach. dsbwshr. fov'd patio. Apt. for :'iuhlet. $850 mo. foed >:d. Children pt•ts lndd'is all club fadhtles. OK. C.:IMe to !Schools. 548·1743 s:.uo. Smull te~. Std. Slac. ---------IG66 Aim For Better S.. Ca.ment• 3176 SUPER FREE RENT cov prltg, ll3hled ~nnls, ntAT RlGHT PERSON Rench. SSO per" month . * t,t0FF2nd Mo RENT v o 11 eYba11 •. 2 11 t Y 1'-.,-.Q)..uu UHuMmD Bring own fumlture. Our New detu~e I Br, 2 ba. c lubbou11c. b1lll ards, ~ ri'ceptioni1t wlll a.nl\w r •DIA&. .,,,. cpts & dr1ltl. bltna. "wlmmlni pool, pint Uk'i«~ ~ your pboft. ror StO f:r 2 br farol•" ft adwt apt.& ds to frwy & beach. ponR. hydn>-f P8,' 1tym. cu at~ ~eiwq month. DB•ly Pilot off ~. t roCP szes . Full am· 831M11)4.9_. -Sar~~:~ C-0rnet 8.Tl·_4tM_Sln_ct_1971_ ~-43:!1 men\tlH Incl. poo,, Nr StacUff Villa{~ Jbr, EchnRer N~wl~u\d Respnn,mltr!l·IO,aharc Cc$11M -PrimeatC>rt' SCUM-l.ETS ANSWEIS Dawned -Whi Mo~)' -LounJ(o OWSD Overhoerd . ..lfe' the WOMEN llil~POR IAATIMDIMG TWO WEEK Cl.ASS NATION· WIDE JOB ~~ml· GOOD JOB OPPORTUNITIES AMBICAH IARTIMDRS .SCMOOlt U6C E. 17th St., SA 83HMO Scboo Cout To CoUt U vlni 5940 W t min ter ••••••••••• • • • • • •• ••• • • i 8 t $ p r l n K ct 11 l t. l l 8r 1-\arn. All ullUU . We1\ml n1t er. ! M an)' to bdL Ne• CtO men noirra! Nopet.~ !2~.492-Mse jac\I al . aauna, 2U l 2ba·~. !hr, 2ba·1290 IMOO l!:idlnter. H. 8. J bd l ba w/11.•r. 1rnh5e, with Newport Blvd rron· Sunltowtr Gar, rec t reo•, 18071 Roi• ( 7lON7·9605 yrd. S150/mo + v. \ltll ta ~. 1300 to 3800 !\q.f\ 5574800 • l)'.MWlll OPEN9·50AJLV CM 145-HlOafU ~~ kind C>I COY who aUll .... Swtm Latoos. Pvt. z ,.. the firtt dollar he e..-er ooun.e. \'CM.Ir piool °"•pt:. • OWED '' m-G:UO .... .,A .. -..&--.----- -~~.:.. .... ---~-...... -.-. ... ,, ._ --~--~ --,,.---~ ... =------- Add lt ... Bulld lt...Oiaper IL.Hammer It ... Carpet lt...Cement it. .. Wlre lt...Hoe lt. .. Clean IL.Move it. .. Press IL.Paint lt...Nall lt...Plaster lt...Flx it. .. SERVICE DIRECTORY Arelllttd.... Carpetder c .... nt/COM,....t ,.... ....... •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• Bu.lld'c Desian• En&· lndust{HotM RtpaJr Cement work oC itll kinds. THE STRIPPERS Sluploader. dump truck. HO\;SEKEEPING per ln'c• Const •. Ne~ or Carpentry, plumbing, Rea<>rates·f''reee:.ts !'Um unfm1Ahers. Qual haubng. tree work. grad day, 6 y~ ex~nence add. Res, Com, St he # ceram1c Ille S40-~ 7SO-~ 750·6625 flt r 1 P ·' on t In e 1ng. demo. etc 751 3930 Call Carol 548·2049, 331154. P .D .1 Corp r-t~-= 1 ---furn meta Let U!> tllke Lt-.1;_ ---~ 640-7020 -.-~v c:e B & 0 Concrete All the hr1> of work from you .--""I ----------•o•••••••••••••••••••• phai.t::. concrete, block & al a price you cun arCord. ••••••••••••••••••••••• MolcMlli"'f Workins: drawings & WeCareCarpetCleaners ~rick work. Free ests. 661-0655. 34252 Santa Fe Haulma.m•vlnl(,cleanup •••••••••••••• .. ••••••• r:rmlts. Ex~rd In custm Steam clean or shampoo l.ic & bonded 675 9720 Ave. Cap1::.trano Bch. $7 'up. Tf'ffwork. Reas, Fireplaces·Plantt:r:. &~:;;:~i;~~~~~ns alsoupholstery·allwork One man crew, 5 yrs-;;~ ... ~ -fast.freeest 842·4S97 BnckConcretePatio guurRefst MC.rreee1>t. perlence i>ouring &•••••••••••••••••••••••HAUL.ING. Odd Job". UlockWalls 88QP1ts ......._u.u !teas Rutei-645·3716 ° Hefs, Ests. 646·~64 -r•'"''"J finishmit. Set your own Reliable Expr Japanese Law student needs work. •••••••••••••••••••••••Shampoo & steam cleun. forms, save mon ey. Gardener. Reasonable Jim494·MS4 ~·ree Est: Dlockwalll>. Babysitting, Mon.Fri, Color br1ghtners· wht 494·1485 prices. Freeest.645·5230 i.lumps tone . brick. starting June 6. Mac cpts lOmmbleach .. Clean ,.__,_od Mike Housecleonm9 Res/Comm. Reas. lie/· Arthur/Coast Hwy. Ten. 1· d' h 1 ~ or ••••••••••••••••••••••• bond. Bo b 750·9354, iv rm, mrm. al$1S.•••••••••••••••••••••••EXPERT JAPANl>C'E 675·3780aft5. Avg rm $7.SO, couch SIO. • a:.» Want 11 REALLY CLEAN 642·9144 ----------• chr ~ Guar elimmate L~t:M.JA~VIS GARDENER. Free HOUSE? Call Gingham --------- WiU babysit days, eves. or pct odor Ciit repair 15 Add1t s. Rmdl g, hrs 8·S estimates 962·0858 Girl. Free e:.ts. 645 Sl23 Paintift9/Poperin9 wk/nds. rerer D · k Ph 962·3200 Lie 317856 ••••••••••••••••••••••• S4S·376S y r s expr 0 wor ' --GcMralServlces Houst!&windowcleaning. PETERSPAINTING ----------1 _m>11~lf Refb 53l·Ol0l &Ktrical ••••••••••••••••••••••• Good ratei. & refs. Ask F.xpr'd Reas Rut.:::.. CClbiMt Making Cahrin9 ••••••••••••••••••••••• llAN DYM,\N·Hom"' & for "Big Lynn" 536·7711 Free Est . Call Gene ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••ELECTRICAL SER\'ICE Apts t'on-.c1~nt1ou:. - - --~'152·0458 Formica & Gcn'I carpen· A1 . • .., t d C \LLS SIS hr. & S~IALl. rraftbman Ph IWS·O:l02 If )Ou OESJ<:R\'E: the ---~ lry . finibhrng Avail l) occa.ion or.JuS ~n · .HJBS84211233 --be:.t! Call lmmul·ulate EXCL:'\T PAINTll'G wkuds, fr c!-ts. Mark Cn,e,Tr E'1'!1r NC2 ~ ~/8482A8 NA ---Wt-; DO IT ALL! F'~ee ~bl Couple NO\\'': ' 673·777t> lntr & Extr Reas. 751·1.J0.1,5579272 ..:: '· '.HO ____ <'nnl·rete. paint g. -~'reeest.S48·2706FREO ---c ·n A t' Fenc:ln«J ploJmb ·g carpenter llousedejmn~ '' antt.>d. C--nt•r •• '"JS• c:ous IC . ••••••••••••••••••••••• roof"• gla.s< elc'·tr1·cal· Reliable Own trJll&p. WORK GUARANT~EU -r-•••••••••• ••••••• •• •••• b• .,, " • ••••••••••••••••••••••• AR~tOH FE~CE CO tree removal. oarbage 548·0431 Eve~ lntenor/Extr. Free . Economy \coustic'i Qual Ch G " Carpentry. Small Jobs ceilings. new or re-am Link & ates, free disp . mar·late. tale. HOL'SECLEA~l:\G. E>.· e1>l.25yrsexpr.642·029S '~fPoptri119 ......... ,..,.... s,. • •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• Knowles Paintlna Int Ext. commercial apts & residential 836-ll.2Q Pl\INTlNG . Xlnt cra.f\sman . Knowled~1ta ble. l''ree est. Bond lie. 673-4967 VERYNJo;AT PATCH fTN. VA.LLt:YSPAS JOBS&TE XTURE Faclory Author! aed Free &.t 89S-1439 Dealer for Gertco Spa!> --962.0000 HO:\fES-ADDITIONS ----- Hl?stucco over block Teltvlsion Repair "Jib •. free est, low rates •••••••••••••••••• •• • • • ~ CANOPY TV SERVl<..:t:; bl RATE SERVICE At Jo~alr Pl"wes UdO· lliJ:I ••••lntrtl::xtr. Average Pl~ ~ room $45. Good loe11I ••••••••••••••••••••••• Th refs' free est. Ask for 10'(. off with this wd. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Brian642·3194sass Plumbine. water serv, CERAMIC TlLE. New or leaks. bathroom encl remodel. Fr est, sml jobs Brighten up the House! Norm's Paperhanging. All kinds. Cree est. Stale li e 330986. 835·3705 or 675-6480 P\PER · PAINT 20 yrs ('\Pr. Save SS. work Qu11r I'' re e t: st. no w n 11 . ~:!·1950 Reas 832·2468 welcome S36·2426 aft S. DRAINS CLEARED F'rom ~.2S. Main lines Tree Sft-vlc:• Crom $14.25. water••••••••••••••••••••••• heaten from $54.25. Remo,·als. trlmmln ~. Garbage disposals in· pruning, free est. L1c'd ::.t ailed Crom SH.25. 1'\ally Insured. 642·262·1 Plumbing rt-pairs. 7 ---- - da)S, anytime/anyplace. Chuck's Trel.' s,·s. P~llm:-. Fret· ebtS 751 ·6942 or oli\'eb uimmed, thlnnell iSl-6968 pr u n t' d . removed .>16· 92.."9 a ft S "Painting Paperi ns * ••Interior· Exterior•• Llc 225398 lnsrd 'Uuar Call H:trri!i &i:!·4558 llOMESA\'EHS. Plumb· ing & Heating. Free est, Painting/SiCJI' $10 hr. Honest & reliable ••••••••••• •••••• •• •• • • sen·ice. B of A, M~trchg BLACK'S Tree tnmming. toppini.:. r emoval. Free est 897·S9H . P~nehng, door hanging. •prav, repairs, free est estimates. 493 0320 carptg .. screens & heal· d ood f & re .1 Lie contr, est. s.ul·Z719 ~...,1"800 ing .. Serv'g Orange Cty. pr' • g re s a orua AA.s ~ PeoplewhoneedPeople 22yrs.714,636·6SSS ~.J~ces . Free csts BLACK 'S OK 847-0383or751·3150 Commercial & Res1den· . . . tiol No job too big or too Pa.inling interi.or /ex· You don't need a gun lo 3ARAGE SALE ads m ~mJll. 20 yrs expr. ~~i4 Free estimates. "draw Cast" when you t.heDallyPilotbringhap- Rooms SIS/up. Fully m· · · place an ad in the Dllily py results. To place your !.rd & lie. Odd jobs too. Sell thlngs fast with Daily Pilot Want Ads! Call now drawing card , phone The fastest draw in the West. . .a Daily Pilot Classirilxt Ad. 642-5678. Have something you want That's what the to sell., Class1f1ed ads do L>AILY PILOT it well -Call NOW. SERVICE DIRECTORY 642·5678. is all a bout! Try_ a 0 a 1 I y Pi 1 o t Xlnt housecleaning. Gd Class1ficdAdtobuy,&ell refs. Own tran s, or rent something. R05emarie. &15·3439 636-0095 Pilot Want Ads. -642-5678. 642-5678 today. Jobs Wanted, 7075 HelpW011ted 7IOOHelpW•ted 7100 He4pWanted 7100 H .. Wanted 7100 ~pWant•d 7100 HefpWanted 7100 ~pWantfll 7100 twPW•ted 7100· ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• Companion· Ori\ er Good , __________ n c n t ::i I R l' I' c p I Ao: plalll cook Beach area Bal.iy::.ittcr \\~nted fur. ly r COOK C"h:11r.,1JI.' :.C!>'>l E'per Dru)? Clerk full I 11ne co-;ml'11t· q'd 5-10·891 I 01 part <''ll re l;\'Tf:RIOR UESIG,f;R '\t'f'<l.., 1• time help i-:,pr de-.1red. &12 :!2.>5 MAMAGER NURSES AIDES U\e-Out 642·3276 old l'h1IJ. I:: '>IUC' C :'It •lll'<.C''Jr) l'o::.t;i :'lte ... J -Hd req Pll'.l!il' call aft 55; 9681 GUARDS MEEDED IMMED. Prl'fer mature wom<1n 1• 11me. OJ) &eve shift::. 111th retail experience E'per prefd. but will r\11 replies confidenllal. tr:un quahht!d pen.on Reply Bo' 848. The Dally Good benefits & sal. App • Pilot. P 0 .Box 1560. C.:\l. ly Park Lido Con,· 92621; CentC'r. 4G6 t1agship Rd. A\'aJI 5 21 Prat nur ... e 6.&l2 0792 BreJld:.c!>t Shatt t;ood l)J) & l>l·n{'flh r ELE(i'RO:'lllt'S Joan a pro1:rc~s1\ e. fast ~rowing ro. w1unlim1tt:d ::ad \'lrnccmcnt :\I ust l>t- mature & resp 8 llrs paid training 1f you qualify + other benefits. lnt t•nor Desi g ner 4994.30·8.>41e~t129 Call until Bal>-!>itter for 11 _, r old ,\pnl•, Joll• Ho""'' Ot!nt::al ll·cepl. lull nr p.irt , ,. ' ' " llmt>. t''<I benef1h :\o -girl :1lt 'ch +-i.o mc e\ es IOO S l'oJ .. t ll\\ Y Sat. 832 0377 & 64-1 2119 HELP . \.S. l 0 01· 5 ) •~ t·xp -19·HJi6i Laguna Beut:h CdM ar<'<l 675·5-tl6 Ltl!UnJ Beach Pnvale l)uty :"urse Geriatr1t's preferred 645-1219. Call aft 2PM ,.._ _________ ,·---------DEST,\L·G1rl f'i ·1day tor •--Orthodontic Office. ~ood We arc growing ::.o I ast that we need YOU 1f you flt any of t hl·se d 1sl' r1 µ taons & want to J{row with JANITORS ~l/F, cpb. p lime Irvine area Ph: 752·7292. betwn 1·5. J\1 AT U R E W 0 MAN N.B. tH.2·8044· --- p /t i mc to welcome ()(fice Girl w !bkkpng & newcomers & contact payroll exper. in guest merchants. Flexible hrs. home Hrs 9.4, C. M. Need car, lite typing. 646~716 COUPLE -Experienced Cook /Housekeepe r · Houseman. Rderences an1ilable. Reply c lo Catalina Dr . Newport Bearh 92662 Summer employment "anted for dependabl tet'nager llas hcens and work experience \l'o somr typang. Me~a \'rrrlr are;i .HO 5721. aft Banking UNION BANK llasOpcnings For: PROOFOPR & CREDIT CLERK Ex!)l:r dt·~1rabll' Please tonl,11'1 L>on:. \lllrhcll at t..:nion nank. 610 :"e\\porl Ctr Dr. :'.. fl 5511 ~280 F..qual <>p1)or Employer •• * *. Cook COLO.-.Y KITCHEN '.l:o\\ at·repling apphra· l11in' for day cook:. Full & I' Time a\'~lllable C:o1wl 'tarting <,Jl.iry & c 111npJ ny bt-nelth \ ppl)- 111 pt-ri.rm. 321 l Horbor Blvd (':'II • • • • • 4. i.l!>k for .I uhc :\I' a i l;.i 1,.. , ,;,11 .. 11\J.: ole holl l1mt• Jum• lb. T k R I.. :.; 1 Pilrl time ~ntil mid o·a1 a u 111 . t•\1p"r June 11 .... 1d1 ha:-.111 101ml·t11:1~e COOK I·. \l)t'I ti 1n I ri;: 1•sl .i hhsh m•·nl tr11 1>1 t·11.1nng qu:an ltl\ mt"al" EmplO)Cd male. CSULR student wall care for you ~e. :ipt for R 18 1n same. Honest. dependable. clean Russ 581 ·3581 7100 ••••••••••••••••••••••• opc•nani:: for :in r'µ1•r d N o t 1• T 1• I I 1• r ' I 11 I be nt• I 1 l.., I' I",,,.. 1 c· .al I &tsil~I B \llTF,01.;R l.1110 l'otl\ l'.·ntt•r l.'i!l.i "'" 1wnnr \ \ ,. 'n < .111 ll It; ii~; I f'ri \ :itt• ('luh nt:ed~ COOK 1-:,pr cl llrnlll•r II c a d H ,1 r t t' n d e r . :inil :Ill m ... .i.. \ 1111h in mat Uri'. <i.Jf'l•t-r pos1t1011. Pl'"'"ll .ift :I :JO P :'II ..... .....,_.....,,..... _ _....._,,""""" full time ·\ppt onl) K1·.id1 ll11u"' t 1111 Kin Acl1ng Clerks Retrµt l'HX E".'t' Set):. Manuf ~anai:1•r Rkkpr Costing lo $9' In ant-Prr<.onn~l ,\gerH· ~ l!iS 1': 17th Coi.ta l\1es::i Suite 22t 642 t ti 67:J ii:lft ~lt'l'I'' 11 1111•1\\ L:anc l:fr U lJ I I l' I ,111 ~ \\ J II\ 1• d :\1.'\\ µort llall., l'1•11l1•r \\11rl.. ''" ... umc•ont' \\ho l',JI t'" \,I() !I 1!11 Jli•;a11l \ \t .11111 1111'\t 1\ Jnt l'cl t. ,, I :1 I uri1 ., J 1011 LJ~ lkh COOKS '\o E'Pt>r 'Nc· ... s lrnmt.'thall.' Open111.:~ ----bJi r;t.. \ppl~ 3 Spm :\l rm Fri J\mh1l1011 ... perbon wanted to fill nur~ery J(rounds Hookku•µ, 1 ll··-t.rnr.1111 ma111t1•n .. nct: l""i< ion In hOlh•'. 'vnH l!'\P~:r Xlnt \\1ll'kmi.: r11nct f'ull nt.>t•'''a1' a;;:1 liCHr REUBEN'S LOCJUftO HUis 810-90 I 0 111111' pt•rmanent All r~wkkl'l'Pl'r t11ll I hJrC:t' rq1111>men1 'ul)plll'il thru tn.d b,ilaaw•· \t u-... t F.qu.al Opr>0r F.mplo~t>r M~'' ht'.. m.1·rha111tal l>P f.!!Kl<l tq11q 1;rn\\IOI! S.'.LiOh~ C.a~I fue.., !1:,'orn c·n nr Cl I ,\1rpon Call C:OOI-\ I K \I'\ F:ES So. 111~9 l.onl)_ 496·12.>.> iSI 111'2 nr '"net rc>,.umtt l.J~ 'H & t':'lt I' llmt' & \pJI tml'nl OlJllJgt'r. !ti unit-°'" pels 83-1·939 ,.,,, 2i6 Apt manaf{er for 17 unit .... <.:osta :'lk&a. Mature cpl or ret 1 red 642·5848 ~SEMBLERS TRAINEE Lona & short term as· signments Holiday & vacation pay . Ho~pitallzntlon plan available. . VOLT 11Mt••11t"l1.,.•.,tt•'Vlll' to l'O Hu\ 7: . .lt '~•t Hth I tun, t'ollt't ,hop C'P 9266:1 Ref!> pled,t.· \hurhe's Bookkt(!per ~·l·n•t .c r ~ Part Time t9.i·Off76 L.u:una li.·.1ch \h1h (')(1 17111 :>t9 0351 LOl '\fl-K llt.>l p, fem . p I I l ,n & (•1 t' Apply. St 11' ll11rs:1·1' lltl'l W 19th CASHIER/HOTH. S1 .11i..tJ \h•,;, Newporter Inn. l).t4 1700 - eict Sll> 6 JOpm 2 30am ~ntt•r h<'IP 11·p cream sh1fl E O ~: p a r I n r I 11 J 0 a m - CASHIERS CA ... DYGIRLS ~ :wpm. no CAP nee. Start work 1mmed. 9b.J.~7l Mann s ~0111h Coast Custom drta1l1n~ shop PlaLa •I Theat~r ~tust ntt<b hanct14ashers men be I~ or m·er Apply after v.ith bulff'r exp. 1ns1de 6 30 P\t t1f'talle~ i'S1 1337 DEll GIRL ( all ..,Ill f;f;~h I.' l c; typist. full time 548·2291 DENTAL Cha1r::.1de assist Expr d. Swpt Bch 5 day wk. 8.30 to 5:30. Paid 'ac. med insr . .>&8·8331 Dental OrJI Surger) ;\c; s1:.t. Expcr d Somt• Sato; Sal OPl'll !Iii.I il!:J9 or i51·9HU aft b .\.. wl..nJ,., DENT AL RECEPT. ~111turc rcgl1d & $(d I' It llC'l' t•: tlJ) \\I., 1..11.: [kh 194 "!jll l>E:\T \L \."iSI!-> rA~T °'c" pcJrt l\·ntl·r Rel\ c1 hd\\t:cn front tl.: .. i.. & <:h~1r:)IU\C' )l1n C'P oka\ X r;n l'<'1I1f1cJtc :\lu::.t IM> ... hJ 1 p ~o O:JOl.I us . • ENG TECH u~L!! ft Capable or bwlding, de U1!''!f~ P Wir bugging & te::.tang . . soph1st1cated sohcl ... tale Secunty & lndustnal c11g1tal & linear clec Sen1ccs tronir c1rcu1ts. H2.i S Grand, SA. 558 9027 DESIGNER u~.>oCamp~sSte 130. NB DR •fTER 549.soit ~ Lit:. No. Co2lii l':lc1·tro-mel'11a111l:.1I ---------•I Janitonal SUPERVISOR Expcr'd p1tlme. lr\'ine area . Call for appt. 752·7292. Jumtonal Wa:\ & Floor man. night shift . C\ per prt:ferred 5 r>a y wk l'ompany bendit!> ~l4ti-titi82 or 545 8911. .>17-3095. --·------ EDIC ""L Office Help: woman to &s· M "' i.1s t. ~on·smoker Medical Manager·front Pleasant conds. Call Joy & back ore. screen pa· 631 1212. llents. supervis~ & t ri.1111 . . p;.H'k.1~1ni: ol d1~1lal & I I 11 l' •• I' h I g h p II \\' (' I' 1r;111~1tor 1·1n·u1to, 1l.11rrlresser. I.'' pcr'al Lady li\C in~ wk Cle,111 Uulhoa B<.1~ ClulJ lkaut~ in~. l::aundry. bab}~ll '\;alon 1: 12 009::?. t'hal.I BJ I Pen ~14 23:!3 med assistants . Appro" Off1t·e Pos1t1on a\·ail :10 hrs per wk. 1\bo. 14 Slll'CC~sful irn~stmcnl rhvsicians Assistant. m.inagmt'nt firm Ill Co~psman·:\leuic cxpt:'r I r,. 1 n <· I n du s Ir i tt I or P.\ program ,\ppmx Com~lex. ;\l ust l'lljl)y 10 h1 1o per \\k. Jl unt · wMk1e" numbers k ht· 1111,;ton lkach t:ommuni· M'l'lll'Jtt' Xlnt oppor fur ty Cl11lll'. 50G Orange ll•a1·11111"' & ad\·anc111;; \H'. HU 536·8333 Call or \la1l rt::.urM to Ad ;:g;5, l.ood Ut.>nd11~ I·: () 1-: DECC JR\." 1' ;).tt; li:ll ELECTRIC IAMS II \I H U fl 1'~ SS 1-: It o µ port unity for i! '>PJl'C' ,1, .11 1 c;ood loc l'll'a,,<1111 ~urruundani;:-\ Trend Shop spcc1ahz111g 1n hair ('\lb &l0-205() L;11I) Wall µaper :-ah•!>, bnng 1-e~ume lo clink. Daily Pilot. PO Box 1500. '>llllle ""' Stead) pJrl attention Doug or )!arty t:<r..tJ )l('sa. c~._926~6 • tune Salary + comnw. Equal Oppor Employer 0 "' .... 1 CE G 1 R l r 5m \.\' 19th St. 0 1 bl.'t 10 ----,. ,. • or &5 \Jf::UJCAL ASSJST w 3 to Jc"elers :\lfg. 5 Day wk -----5 y·rs pre\'ious back olc. w benefits. Forr~st Ponti OESK CLERK ~\Pt'r d. & HELPERS lla1rdre!>S1ng 1hb1st ant. LAND PLA.-.NER exp. In busy GP ofc. Jewelers. 290.i F.. Coa ... t Expcr'd w 'mgmt skills lle:.>\'y X·Hay w/\'alld ll\\y.Cdl\I 6"-1·8857 on 'l.;CH Sdn Clemt.>nlc Hcs1dent1al t.>XPN req. Inn. (.';.ilf 1!:12 Gl03 a~k for Top pay Apply II 1 lr\M Kick Ell1t•lt or HP;\l liiSI Skypurk Contem porary Hair Studio. Lnl! B ch. Gui1r~111 Sal. Call ~J . Williams & ,\s~oc·. Wed thru Sat for inten-14 19"1·9729. Professional Oulslund· l':.1lif C£·rtific:lle llim1t· lng oppnr. Apply in l'U permit I 1''ront ufc. person w r(':;umc. Mr. knowlC'rige ht-lpful but Puentes. Robert. Bein, not rccfu. 631·0710 \Vilham Fro"-l & Assoc.· , - - - --- Prof t>ssional Ennron· :\lol>1le home for retiree m cut al F.nginet!rs & rt:nl free exl'h p time PIJnncrs. 1401 Quail St. hC'lp&dme 919·-l:!.'>ti Offset Pressman Pnrt timC' or split shift Santa Ana 'C·"· arc~ F:xpcr 1wl' on AB f>ll'k ,Ii; Itel.. eqwp Good p:.>y for n ght man or woman To be lull time in a few month!>. Call S.10·1355 Dick Churc~s Restaurant ~y Coo~ '\n "' 1><·r nl·l'l'''·' n 2W1! '\pl k l\d I \I Didophone Typist, 65+ "Pm ... tJrt at S700. grm\ 111,i;: :\l'14 port Firm " 'er) pli!J:-Jnt !>ur roundm.:!> mu'il bt> well i.?roomC'd l'.111 ;;,2 .rn11 Drnini: Room l'Jpla.tn Su pen l'>Or nee<led full lime JI lnc.;I l'nuntr) Club ('.tll f>.H 5-ICH Dir. Of Mursin9 For S:-0. F l'ont act \d mini~trator (;arf1,•ld Co nv Hosp 7781 Garr 1 e I rl ,\ ' e. II 8 ~i 91i71 DISTRllH Ton. I' t1m1• f..acn up to $1'125 r>cr mo :'llature 63!Hil2J. Circle. Suite "D". In Ille ELECTRIC IAN S & HELPERS Industrial & Commercwl cxper. rcoq .• \pply8·ltA~I or l ·-IP:'ll. l7iSl Sk) park Circle. Suite "D" lrvm<' ENGINEERING DRAFTSMAN Exper'd ~lrt'l'I µlans. [)(:si~n Tent :\laps Ap· pl~· 111 pt!r .... 111 \\ work :-;1mplt•,, Hnlll'rl . 'W<'ll1, \\'illiam Fro!il ~ 1b!>Ot:. tlOI Quail St. ;o.;o lla11 St' list W;intcd for hc·..,t Newport Cl'ntt.>r lot:nllon Soml' follo" m~. top co mmi s ... 1on 6-10 i870. Tuesday thru Saturday HAMDYMAN For lite motel wori.. Good oppor. for retired IX'l'!•on Apply in peri.on only. Cosl::a :\lesa Inn. 320S Harbor Hh d.aC:'il NB LEG1\LSECRETAHY Newport Firm. exp prl.' f'd. Excellent typing, no !>horthand . Call for ,\ppl btwn 10,\:'\I & 12 noon. MODELS ---- Fa:.h1on Photography PAISTERS Models needed for top \\1th at 11.'aM 8 ) rs e-.:pr Fa1>hion assignments. only Call t>t2·2928. 8 am Jay Kay '.\-!odeling Agen· to 12 pm only.-·- cy 666 Baker Sl. Ste 413 . Costa Mesa. For I . PJ1kmg Alten.dant. nuy' " n per O('<·cs:. 1' t11me. Xl11l ---_1en1ewphone957·0912 oppor Call for interview Lt::GALSECRETARY 752·:!518 Exper. able to handle 1 Need 2 women. full 1pt We 673·U790 girl office. C::ill :\lary. t:ain. Vanda Beau I Y Patrull':kc R;(irC'd law 714·6"-1·4212 Counselor 963·9046 enforcement officer. full EXEC. SECRET ARY llELP~ Transp nl•cdcd for weekly s hopping LEG "'L SECRET"'RY 630·1675 time CCK cnforcemenl S3 SO hr 586-0860 I' time for I g11 I ,.ft Sh Goocl car & insured "' "' n•q'd F fl henl'11I~ <.lri\H. ~liddle age Sm husinesc; Lita~ation NOW Recruiting sharp, \ Jlue Anal) !>IS, Inc !029 6'42· i362. ;.;e\\ port are... f'"irm in Newport Center ambitious man to sell Westerly Pl. I It.. -• ~<'eks exper'd Lcgul hardware. tools & shop Nt•wport Reach 92660 HOUSECLEANING Sl•crelar,> or trainee equipment to industrial Ph. S.18·8018._ __ '"omen '"allied to '"Ork :\lust have xlnl skills " " " Call Linda at 640 6960 occounts. Avg $280 per Pt.>r::.onal :\l~nil Age) seurching for talent for films/TV /Stage, Comm·· Is. All Ages /types. 95i·0282. Executivl• Senttt~-for Janice's Ra ggedy wk. No exper . nee. Call .. everal duys iwr wtelt or Ann house c I ea n in g Loan Closing Supv. 751-9134. PHONE CLERK FT.:'11uslhu\'C'l{il0d top servire. Start $2.50 hr. ca paci ty. Must be1---------•l the Daily Pilot has an ,kill" for Prc:-.1lknl of co SAM to 3. Tues thru Fri. familiar w /funding, In· qpening for a telephone R{"'.ume to· Pla1.a. 2082 675·6553 su rin g, s h ippi n g. service clerk. part time, Domest1r ~t'l"> for voun~ \I 11· he Ison , No. 212. Housekeeper for n ight FHA I V A & Con v -NURSES evenings. No selling. For bach. e~ecuhve Ll\.e in. ln·rne.92715. 752-0234 shin 11•7 in guest home. FNMA & GNMA. Salary URGENT inform atio n . phone Mu!\I care for Lag. home. commensurate w Jablli· Immediate full·tlme RN 6"2 1321, ask for Ruth (ll'rlorm p t ~ec > skill &l•---------1 C :'II. 646-6710· ty Resume to PO Box position available on 11·7 Lea \'II t. t:qu a I Op. mh a J?Ond mart inl FACTORY WORKERS HOUSEKEErERS 2-109, C.M. 92626 or con· ~hift. f"ull ·lime position!> portumty Employer '15.> 15.\ll Fem a I e m :a" h 1 n e F tame. perm. positions t .art David Connt:l ly. also for licensed person· 1 ~ ~~88il nel 3·11 & 11·7. Excellent opera ors • 11 t''<pcr Dav -;h1fl Will rota•e ----------I d k' 3141 Campus Dr 546-4741 n .E \Nl'\li !Mored I pl House & ot" • leunin~. d r 1 ' 1 n ~ ,. r r a n rt ' . g11rrlrn111~ I' f Hohh1 fl.15 2Z!:I Doorman/Ushers necess. Will train Xlnt some wknds Prefer LO"' ..... SERVICE sa ary an wor mg con· tl<' f 1 "'" d1t1ons. Call Personnel. PHONE SALES D• ot:il '""I'' ··h.11r..,1dt'. \lann ' "'""' h Cr1<1..,t i·ompany ne' ~ prcv hospital ex per COU ..... SELOR 83i 8000 Ph11a ::1 l'hl·atcr :'l'lui.l <"Jll ~IS o10:i ;\lust be ambitious & " ' · r T ·1' lca~t ll mo·b t•xp lw• 111 or 0 , er Apply after __ _ hardworking. Mortgage banking fir m BEVERl Y MANOR Phone Sa le~ people . I t1<•ro11s From Oronge Co. Airport> Equal Oppol' Employer Clerical, 1o1c11 I oft' 11. 1111• Sorne _~a_t_ll.~ S.l6·1>&0 · 6:30 PM. FOOD PR Er l\:eed good Pacifica Hoipftol n e e d s I n d i v . CONVALESCENT male or female, 16 to 6:l bk kl' n i: f n r DENTAL RECEP ··--------•I reliabl~rsnn 10 pre· 18792 DelawareSt. w/knowledge of beni HOSPITAL yearsof11ee.Guaranleed bldr/ .. ,,., .• 1 s • d r statements & demands. Laguna Hills wanes or commission:. .... ·-11111·r 1n · " TIO!litST Exper· . or pare f daily & assist Hunt Bch 842-0611 · " eo 1" 11 k r Oe • & b 'd DRAFTt.-.G/CIVIL Prefer indiv w /6 mo's to Equaln...portunlty 250 t::ast 17th Strt!et. "3 .,p4•n 1111'a e '" quality crown n ee w/cooklng. Expr helpful . v., ----------1 co. Ph: SHi S.160 Co1 ap· ()(c. Many benefits. N a Jack G Raub Company or will train 10 AM lo 3 llousekeepe~ h\IC In. nice l yr exper. Good oppor.1~~~~E~m~p~lo~y~e~r ~~~I Suite O. Costa Mesa. AsMmblera tor light ml' a. plication. Call &M·9all. Expanding firm or en· P!tl. Cafe Metro. Nwpt ladr for nice family. 3 for advance. E.O.E. Call 1. between S:OO & 8:30 p.m. "111 time only. No. East \'ironmental enl'meers & c h 11 d r e n R 0 0 m I Ma. Popov for a ppt. 64&-4223. C.M. 97H600 CLDICAL D&"TALASST planners near O.C. _Bc_h._C_a_ll_A_n.;;;.g_ie_6_75_oeo_i_ Brd/Salary ·Spanieh ok. 640-4SllO. NURSES AIDIS Equal Opportunity ---------• I 1 r · I · 0 • Employer N ght Sh t . t :xper. Ortho, chairs de exper Airport hu perm. posi· F\tll or p1t general omce 979-8025 LOSING THE BUDGET 3-11 " 11'7. Exper'd. -41 Auto Mechanic, brakes, helpful. but wtlllng to only. Pref'd RDA. 4tn tions open for people he lp. Laguna Niguei.1---------·1 Beds. Good sat w /ln· front end. Quick serv. train resp indiv. J ob re-days.toppay."2·2626 w /civll englneerln1 831-0594 IMMEDIATE RACE'! Let Amway help creases. Country Club Llt• mot.or r epalr. Smog q's flsure aptitude. tn>· DENTAL drafting exper. In crad· ---------OPENING you win. Cal15S7·021S. Con v. H osp., SA ., ________ _ lie. S300-S500 per wk. S Ing & 10 key. Xlnt wo~k· RECEPTIONIST ing & improvement plans General Offlce. Must llke Showroom sales positlc>n MAID Needed. Depend•· 549·3061. P~TICS Days. Pd vac. Insur. Ing conds & benef1ts &record maps. Apply a t, lo type & file. Good S, f bl I kd •· bene. Howie's Auto W/co. locuted In Fashion Modern «t,hodontlc ore. Jack G. Raub Co. PO comfortable small ofc. ope n o r young. f&i· e or wee ays .. Murw1Al•s& MOLDINGMACHIHI _c_en_t_e_r._6_46_·8838 __ . ___ , Island. Hn are 5.1:30. nds dynamic. lntelllgent Box 5019. 125 Baker St. Npt Bch/C.M. area. Call ff::!1~~:!~~ln0f°~~~ :;~~~~~~~92.Seacliff Ord.riles OPEaATORS Automotive . Callan spm.644-4360. 5remokcepte.r.~~,~~Yp;~rn!k: Costa Mesa, Ca 92626 Mr. Kane, bet 3& Spm. bey Rl'nts Furniture. Exper'd . Xlnt Benents . ()penlnasonswlnc 13pm· " .. ~ (714)7Sl-2510. 645-21640 L 1 b 1 MAID. part time to work Bayvlcu Conv 1.101~ llpm & graveyard llpm· New Detail Shop n~eds CLERK full p3rt time. Must be p lea!la n t. ---------e r a co mpan y mornln•"• incld. wknds. .. . or • ?am> s hlf\$ for trainee• help. Printing ore., Lag. ffjlla, ct\ttrful & like ~ople. ---------General olc w /5ome radio benefits & good slartln9 -ZOSS Thurin Ave. C ~ lsexper 'd molding mach Top wages paid. Enatne cnr :'lloulton Pkwy. & 979'-1400. DRAPERY Manufactur· d11patcbe.xp. Ptr Apply ulary. Call Donna. tft1t~;~~~otel Call 642·3505 opl'll. ha\le been created steamers, en~ painters, Lake 1-· or(' s t Dr .. ing Workroom trainee. at Ben Warner's Gara1e. 645·4772 between 10 & NURSES AIDIS because of further ex- buffcrs & polishers. up 8.JO·SPM Dental Assistant P time Apply l~ Whittler A\'e, 4.lOW. SthSt .. S.A. 6 30 MAIDS·$2.50 hr. Part panslon Rapid advance bolstery ahamPooers, Hrs flex. Salary nego. B·7,C.M.orcal1 642·184.3 Equal oppo rtunity lime. Balboa Inn, lOS ltOlDBUIS ~ .. t c~k out, plck·up & de· Clerk ofc, sensonal, 4 mos 631-3733 or eves 494-8-403 GEH'L CLERK Employer Main St, 67541740 '1·3 le a,u. WIU train In· ment assurlCU or tho5e tivery.Applyat job. 52.60 hr. 548·7423 for Dental Asslstani F/tlme. DRIVERS Expanding N.B. tlnan·--------· ---------• teresUteddoConlndivvl.dCueanttse.r ~bot•J::~eeb:lc~~~~ ~H!~~1030rBl,CM ,_•P...,pt. ________ , EJper'4 . X ·R &)' 2Drtven. lntervlewbll cial or1anlaatlon has IHSPICTORJlurd MAIDS, 2250 Newp~l •u"'"'u~ ... orAveNB ahead byourtralnlna& ..,..... CLBICS ~rtiflcate.5'5..(MS3.. bdweeo 1-4 p .m . Com· opeiWia t« re.tip. lodtv. ench ·a Blvd. CM . ap9ly ill ._oCal"~ .. -... merit review pro. for switchboard. mall Machined • benc ·aa· ,_,_pe_non __ ._A_U_Ba_b ... a_M_O(_e1_., _____ .,.,.. __ ,, ... ___ , ""•d ur••. 0 ood pa" Auto Part• D•llvery .. _,,.eo• ..... MG · pany benentJ. Full lime; "'lln • .r 1 Ill aembled component1.. "' , Driver. female, must ,.,,,, vnu DENTAL ASSIST. Non· s day weelt Apply in room, u , .m cro m Ml.lat be eble t'o read MAJDSWANTED MUISIS +nlahtahlftbonusfixlnt bave=drtv1 .. d record We wllJ train. Must be a mkr. No exp. n ee. -f'l'o_ n at Ro{c Carver dbututl~ !!~d.r.AphpeI!ruat'', blueprlnts/drawln1r:C le T<~..-1ea n.aJdt Tho Inn '.u RN lief CrtQI beoefltac,,..0• 0 "'* very good w/numben. C.ll:Dorma 714-893-1356. r;-_.,_ R 8 W ""~ ._, v ... N C Lu,. eves. • re • .._ 6be peadableworlter. 6G6830 1907 Westmlnstu Ave .. ~-oyce. ..1$40 CPI, 2nd floor, 110 performtsurtJcles. 111 1t una, 211 • out Xlntopportun.i\y. 26$Brt A C Apply Beacon Auto • W , __ \ Jamboree rid., Newport Newport Ctr Dr. N.B. i40-7839torappt. ~.O.E. Hwy., IA(. Bch. UdoConv. C.nt.r W ve, .M. Put.a. 480 N. Newport COCICT ... IL estmu~ er Beach. See Darrell ,.u ~......... •u•su-r1orAve,NB Irvinelndust'lComplex Blf'd. 1'f & m ~ SkkJ ~a.all tor Ed Cook. Mak•UP Artist wanted -.... Equal ()rpor Employer ~ • 548·l WAJTllSS Dmtalofcm1rwanttdfot e. -INSTALLERTRAINEE forN.B.aaloD. ~chaslve __ ..::Ca:U.::...,_:::.!77..:.:64::___.-11-------_. Bab)'lllter, Newport Bch, ~am In 40 h,. the roocst ~rowln1 practtee hi DRIVER WANTED-GUARDS ror window tlntin&. start m11re·up line. u1 • Nundnt car ntcenary. 2·5PM. exclttn1. glamourous, lnrlne. Mus:,. be brisht, Scml·Atlred aentleman Cotta Mesa &Ccrrllol sa.so hr. raises to $UO comm. Mm ha\'e cos· OIL°' Ptum~er or any hard wkd.Yt. 133-31~ ask for hilhlY palc.l prorcaa. Day &elf·moUv1l....u. capable. to drive me· my car· Permanent. Full• Part· ~r. within 1 yr, over 21. metldans He. 640·6023. ... .... ~ s-utCI wotk na honest, depen· Judy. or e\le eeuions. Place· SaJA.u11ttn1 •1fj>.:.,7h~lpful. Newport 8*ach 1.tta to time. Phone a, tranap re· ta1t 4' neat, ex per ............ ~-RN,_",~ ,s.u .... ~ableb1_m~ •• 0 Aodrua meotaulst.GoodJobop· aryopea.7'::! ..... Anaheim dallJ. Call ... R ti_... I ... helplul,6"~ ~~·P\ w expet. n corw. • .-.um wt.-lenneyre • i.ab)'lltter my home. Bal por. 752· _, 772-tT•O d.a11, 140·2078 ~~ M8~4, ttt~t-:.01':;: all\ Oat.larr. Oppor ror rehab nursin• ff>t' 118 bed St. t.o~n11 Ouch l1l. 24ftltht4 '9k.1 cltild. Cal 714/H f ·tlf4 1 I ev C\oeed Wect-.a•u. INSU~Cl.K owfttrlbip. &per. r.q'd. holp. Good staffln1 pat· -;_ODU m-zu t. Deqtal rHept on at --· -------•---.r•· itoniaga nrm. n In· In me~uncUalnt, d i•· tern. xlnt benefit••,.,, r:" CTtOM So. CaH . Cocktall w/u.p. Busy office. DIJYR GUAIDI div. w/lite imur back· play• bush~ ~ntrol. Apply Park Su1>4rlor • Tl.Al ... Babysl\tu, 2 bon. vie ::;tr;~· ~r.c·st~79~: Salaryopen."2·8814 ¥an w/compad car for NB f WtJ P P\an around., lYJ)inJ. Oood ~1-cp"'. Healthcare, 1445 Atnea 6mlth Sehl ll.B. IMM..C8t:rn•. .D~'TAL ASST ·OM yr ur17 A.M. bome de· •Pm:._ unu:.:!'tW'1l~ oppor. for advance. . Superlor Av i!I, N 8 • An4=~1ln Pridllc· "6·2NO •Yet .... nte aper w/r!OfM ••Ddtd llve11 of L.A. :Tl F.S. Telepb • ur req'd. O.E. C.ll MJ. Popov ClHtlfled ads ae11 bl "2·MlO. tJoa to ta~..,... mq OOOC,Dlnnf1'ASau&e. du.He l«iq'd lor pro-flfust Hvt In HB or Fto Retll"edot. Call &3M61s. !ouppl6*4580. ltema, amall ltemt r:;r:,~f: tia.~1&,'r· PboM O"ISIY9H.B.olt,4d.an. VaUe1 area only. CaU bioe~"D kin • Jpm tor • aet · lltm. Jua.t eat appt;J40.713t Gt-22'11 ask forCh~r. salOClll 162·SS45 B ·270Sanytlmt. •.POl Wf!lAda CllllU· SQ.1678. r..O.P! • • l j \ I ' , Ba DAILY PILOT Friday. May '17, 1977 Hefp W.ted 7 I 00 Mlrehedlse Aucffoa 80 IS DoCJS 1040 ~ 1050 ~~ ......... ~~.~! ~;::;....__;;;.;...;... _____________ .;_..;..-.1...:_~-=~~ • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • ••• • •• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • h " HelpW..tff .W..ted 7t00HefpW-.ct1 • 7100 •rv1ce Sta. Attendant.~ 800Sfm ________ IAKC Alaskan Malamute. lloust· full . !!Ola:.. etc. 6 Cn.LShedvelvet9'COl.tC ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• full & P time Hrly ••••••••••••••••••••••• •ftUILIC• 6mo. f4tmale, xlnt mark mooth:i old No re1tlll0rt&· matching chr. $17S for SttmartaJ Sttvk.: will· _+_co_m_m_ . ...,6_73-_3320____ Wonderland •RllHITUU•' ings&&s-5062 bleoHer~ru."rd 842·7~ both.55&-5324afUpm f T ~Ip wanted Apply Tats, 230 Newport Center Or , N B 640-8780 SALISPBSO~ fnl to relocate, d lred S.wlagM.ch Opn · •AUCTIO .... * Dalmatian l y r old. AK Trundle bed. practically Spani.ab Dtnintf ~!..m+sel5ltdb~ Mature, expr'd for rebll tor newly establ1shed Q · EX~r. pref'd. NearO,C Of Antiques! :r.-. 7.30 PM Reaa.stered. lo\'el> kids new Met.ii frame. $8S +.!!i ovrs . Cm• ~/bSt bath shop. NewpoM Kllh1 cecutlve i.u1te omce Alrport S40-381W --U U GE ware b o use -• • -Best OCr. 9G2·9$21 M29S.U bu~ w1m1rror. P'-lbllc R.elAUonSa!e£ Ceoter. 540-72.34 bmldms. Desk space & crammed with O\ er 500 lt~/C: ofr CaJI 968·9Sl8. Profuslonol •SALESPOSOH \It equlpo1ent furnished l SHIP /REC ClK mu:uc boxei., nickt'lo Stock Llqul s AKC Jnsb Seller fem1tle. l !X'Jullful ~' loot ort white hl d V_ ...... ....._., no C()jt in return for re· w ............ Evnor h .. lpf1tJ, ..1~-cn.--t~-w-•-, yrold. l\lu!>t sell i.of..i $900 Girl's 5pc VI le wool "'.,..,_ P•rt or ruH time. Win· ..... ~ "'"" "' .. II.IL""' P•,.nO!i. carcui. or ---• w-KOnte 846-~ 646 g5t15 canopy trundle bdrm 1e . Part & t/time komm . dowtmUna. Transparent 11 a bl t' & e Hi c i c n t IM not nee Apply, Wood gans. wa 11 doc: ks. Dre:si.eri.. cbel>t.s. night ------Floral sofa & choir. Cud· Season ticket swes po!>•· shades. m anl-blrnds. services . 549·9022• Laghtmg Fixture Co. grandfather clocki., stands, headboards. m1r SHIHTZU l\lo\ln~ Sale Liv rm set. dle chair, BBQ & patl~J t1ons open to meo &. fH.4..8494 _M9-__ 95915_ _ __ ~:u S.E. Main St, Irvine. fascinating ant1que!I. rors. French Hdrm s et. 10 mo. Gorgeous blk & din rm, 6 l'hrs. game tbl furn, TV. plants & mlSc women> No prcv exper. ----------SECRE Over$1,000.000Worth bunk bed, baby furn, wht male. AKC Cham kmi:br~t'l IH2ltl34 Items 642-~ nee. Catt (714> 955·0370 · ~•· /AiJ;Y· R:ce p ·I•--------• Amencan International chinas. table & chairs, sired SSl-6479 Mon·l-'r1 SALES tio ...... t or tenor esifin Telephone Sales Gallenes; 1802-T Ketter-barstools, liv rm tables, Countrv t-'rcnch hutch. Custom 8' Green velvet ~~ms h~~:ht~~~~~k~lo~d AfUNNY ang St.. Irvine . Tel. &ofas & loveseats. occ fnetoYou 8045 $95, tryi.tal brhandhell.er, c.:ouc~~ M.a~chh'c 1 woo6~ REAL ESTATE SALESPERSON Salary+ Comm BefferHome1 LOCJUfta leach 768-7315 754·1177. Open Wed thru chmrs ••••••••••••••••••••••• SSS, Cw.tom ur c aars. curv""' pnn~ c o rs, OPPORTUNIJJ phone personaUly. Refs . Sat. 9AM to4 PM. V1s1t! * F"' ..... T"'STIC * cute black kittens need & S9S. Ant1qut> bevell•d modern couch, xlnl cond Call for appt. Mon·l''rt. THING ~" --home 10 exchange for glas!< & Pool table hght. &14·0262 9-5, 645-8706 HAPPENED M~~~~~~~oT:~~NE COHN ORGAN lots olfu~~-~-846 1838_ E-t-h-an_A_l_le_n_, 2-1 .... a-dd_e_r_b~-e-k Looldt19 For More Out Of Life? SECRETARY Color & Blk/Wht TVs, lllDE·A·Dlm $120 chairs. 2 pine t restle Musthavc 11oodtypin"& ONTHEWAY ESTATI': JEWELRY, stereo, lamps, pldures, FREE kittens, 3 wht SoCa8',$'l5;Sofa9',$70; benches. 6' harvest ta· .. " /\RT OBJECTS. AN-drafting mach ine . . sh skills Cor busy loan TIQUES. F INE FURN . Refrigerator, freezer. ~ale, 2 caJaco female, Boudoir chr SlO: 94l2·7408 ble, 536_._·239_5 ____ _ AVON Kt;PRESEN -serv. dept. Plea1>ant TO WORK ETC. PHONE FOR IN· washer, dryer, PLUS kid. dog & box trnd --C,\Sf1 PA10 --Ev. qu1·s1'te p 1'ece of ES telephone personality FO & BRO,.llURE 5"ID-1889eve I# ·' TATIV meet people. also req'd. Good oppor . ~ · LOTS MORE MISC for good u:.ed furniture furniture fo~ large, en· earn good money, en.JOY for advance. F..O E . Call I DIDN't 645•2200 ITEMS!!' Tortoise shell long hair 963~1 tertaining home. Sorry to their work. Learn how ~ts. Popov for appt Furniture Strapped & $$SAYE$$ spayed female cat. 6 sell.toolargefor m y new ---------•I you can become un Avon 640-4580 WANT TO GQ Refinished by Expert!> Don't m1!>s thl!tonc toes, cute face & sweet Thoma .. ~ •Ill· M edit home. Stunning coffee Representative. Call ------752·S059dys, 646-6826en• We honor BofA. ~JC. disposition. Work day., Dresser, 2 nat1.• stJnds. 2 table. w/heavy remo\'a· RULESTATE 540-704lorZenith7·1359 SECRETARY Cashier's Checks & and go to night school mirrors. k111R l>L lldbrd ble glass top & intricate SALESPEOPLE For marketing m gr ol lfyou'r~not POOL TABLr: Antique CASH No personal Cat needs lots or atten· '~mall. bx spgs & trm. wood base. $i00. 548-6940 BrJn('h or established SE-"MSTRESS data procesi.ing co. Po' ho•i-fun from England. Custom checks Please I f'~ood lion & TLC 646·0818 C.:offl· Tbl. lounge Chr Eves Real i::s tall· Urokerage A • ood h ··'7 made Carved oak with 1 bl h St 1 rr e I I amp 2 18 A ----------firm open1ni: in:-..; B t-•utt Retail operation needs req s exper. w g s working or makin9 a' aa a e on l e pre· Darhng Fe m Cock·a·poo Palmer St C ~I 64t>-l).Ul5, THIS WEEK SPECIAL :.erv1t·c. Honus com person to do alter ation t Y p 1 n g · "er b a 1 & good money-~~~lls & light. S2000. mises. Items subJect to and '.\I ale Germ /Sh ep 957.0727 Spanish or Contem p, 3 work Good pa~·. ffex telephone skatli.. Must be presalc ,, t d 11 ·h t - 1 t of m1s!>1onto70', &1671 17 ., adaptable&haveab1hty CALLUSF'OR •• . .ue'.Tl:.DS-"UCTIOu 73'~cl·u199u3re a :. o s Fin" <'o mp e e rooms REAL ESTATE hrs Call Rebecca, !714) /\N INTERVIEW Antique 1911 Showcase. ~ '"" "" " .. anllQUl' mahos.tan) furniture. lncJudes 8 pc lo work well w /others 075 u Bl d bd 1 d · 846-302-1 Xlnl co. benefits. Send BASE PA y + 11' long, cur\'ed gla!>i., 2 "•wport ., ' ---rm :.cl, c ;iss1c es11m. hvmg room set, 5 pc din· Offlc. Receptionist lor ;irtl\ e oll1ce. Must be Jllradne, l'nlhullta~IU.'. st•lf·sturter , hte typing. Apply 111 per!>on Friday only bel\\Cl'n 3pm & Spm. 22311 Brookhurst, lluntington Beach. --- * SECRET A.RY * BEACH AREA Young executives seek qualified sect 'y. to fill responsible posit ion. Sll neccss. Xlnt salary, benefits & working con· ditions. Catt 675-6700 ( SlSO.John.714·646-5288 CM Healthy kittens an assort br;iss pule;. lnl·I ingroom&8 pcbedroom res ume or phone. or COMM + BONUSES d I d d d t appt intervw. Integrated Long Distance Lanes Antq. F'ern stand. shaving Call (714)833-9625 hom~. :;-2~8~:~ft 6~~~ h~~~<l:r~~~~;45 wn set. COMPLETE $588. Data Corp <J..>iv . Casual.Fun mirror. ropper pots. orl714J646.8686 -F..asy terms: S25 down. Safeguard Uus ine:.s Atmosphere. Lal1que bowl. small • 2 Mo's old, l cute gray, 3 BEAUTWUL S25a month. No payment Systems, Incl. PO Box FUN-TIME wood rad•o Ct·1rca 1930>. 81cycl•s 8020 blk. Elegant vcl\'t'l sofas, 8' & t ii July 1. CURTIS 577. Costa Mesa . Ca 67~·b"75S. befor" S:30am ••••••••••••••••••••••• 646·0385 5',gohJ&beai:c.Twogld· FURN I TURE, 1865 PART-TIME " ~ 2 7 H arbor Blvd, C M . 92627.546-6080,631-0070. d 1 .k t oraCt5:30pm. Men's Green 10-speed. 3 Id f ,,,. h· .. d 11-:rnoct chairs 75 ·5 16 ..,.5_6151 ----If you rea wel. h e c Excellent condition. yr~ em are a11e .,,.. SECRETARIES talk on the phone & want w AL Nu T TABLE, Odometer , Headligh t, terner, alter~d. Not hsc MOVING SALE --------b-l- M fr o f s p ec i a It y to enjoy your Job .. Call... HEXAGON CARVED Uook rack, Waler bottle. broken. 846·3615 Mui.I !.l'll ht~h quality DUNCAN PHYFE la e, RECEPT(TYPIST 1•---------1 · d . ant1q ''ht & cherry wd 1 -chemicals for the prtnle TIME/llf[ 963·6541 all xtras Asking S7S 7 L b 1 · h s d furn Su l only lOam-Spm. CRL'DL'NZA 536.2350 'Jmml><:ll;ite requirement SECRETARY circual brd indus try ------- -, 638 8 . . mo a I ns ,et. n s 9' Blue orn !.ora. din set . ~·. i:. • .., h th · A.-.l'1c:mc•s 80 I 0 ~ 1 ---happy home w /yrd Mov-.. ...,,.. 536 7996 message ;.ior soml'one w o raves needs 2 serty'i. for our "'t'r "" 'i2i.. 11 cinl1q whit<'. 2 " ..... · · ~m a \'an l'ty or assign N B. ofc needs )>t'rsona-sales dept LIBRARIES INC. •••••••••••• • •• •• • • •••• Schwinn 10 spd. boys 24 ", ing, 546·4937 bef 2 lca\'cs. 8 Turq uphol Excell lli vier a HideA· tm tt n l.., • n 1• I u d 1 n g ble. resp. ind iv . for Cl) poi.1l 1on t·a lb for :'1.'on-Workins M aJor Ap like new $65 ~tatenal for fund ra1:.111g chrs. \\h1te server 40x20. Bed walnut frame blk & ';lelephont· & I oh by re challenging position re-s;iles. order desk. cx1>er 833-8095 PI 1 an c e i. & P ower 6·14-6829 eves _ dnve. any scout troup 48'' Round grn RU me la· whale sso. 646 .6138 • !t·cpt Will hi• tl'i.tecl for porting to lop exel'. of + m 1n1 mum 2 )-r s 1-;qual Opp Empl} rm f M owe r s w ;i n t e d Cats 8035 -~ef'd Call ~J.-1912 ble. 2 leaH~s. 4 \'lnyl blue -- ---1t~ ping & 10 kc)-skills At· rapidly growini: co. Sh & secretan al e"<per Reasonable 646·5848 l'hrs Queen blue sofa ;Jracl1\'e surrounding:. & accur typing ei.sentaal. And 0 th er r l' q · !< --- - -••••••••••••••••••••••• r't,·e year old male bro\\n sleeper. 5 • Coflcc tbl. GarO<Je Sole 8055 ~nym p;i1<I benefit:. m 1 n i mum 3 ~ r:. Tow Truck Drl\Cr needed Washeri.. dryC'ri.. Clean Lovel) colorful kittens. poodle. free t o good ktn).:!<lle mallr, !<prngs & ••••••••••••••••••••••• • DUMCAH • secretanal exper +-90 <'"<per C..lllH6·!1630Mon late models SlOO. 1 yr Gd hreed 'f: Angora home.545-466-t frm. lamp~. m1:.c pac PUBLICA.UCTIOM :!81>5 Fa an 1ew ltd fJ_ /J~S'S~mJ wpm shorthnd f'r1 8 5 Coast Towin~ guar Free deli very background. S20. 979-8978 -------tures. Turq swivel chr !\t ANY Fl NE lTEMS OF ~:o ... tJ:\lt>i.a 51511261 11 Tvpmgoroo +\\pm•~ ~~t.':.,~0hi; Willalsobuy. Cu-t-ebla"kkattens eeda FREEKITTEMS ~-7iJO ESTATE JEWELRY, ; 1-;qualOpporf':mploycr req'dforbothJobs TUXEDO S1\LES. parl ...,.,....,.. · h ' h n ( '.\1ediumha ired751·5979 ART OBJECTS, AN· ... • TemporaryServices We are a "Fortunl' 500" time. mu:.t bl' out ~orn~. -------ome 10 exc ange or ----------3 Pc Corner BR set. 4320Campus Ste 130 r 1 rm o (( c rin g 'I: In I For info. 540<iJJJ e>.l 3-11 ~ew Tappan Corning top lots of fuzzy love. Angora kittens. 10 wk\, Bol:.ters & cvr:.. Sl25 TIQUES. FINE FURN .• RETAIL -CLERKS k f T r ange, cont. clean1n~ 638·8833 Cor adult or older child ~.0_0160 l:.l'C. PHON1': FOR IN· Newport Beach benefits & new offa<·cs Jll or ern 0 ,.en.ne\'eru!.ed S2SO.or ..,. ____ 1-·o. & BROCHURE . 1424 S. Grand Ave located in the ln ·ine Jn T.V TECH_M_l_C_l_A_H__ bt.-st offt>r. 496 0817 S I 1\ MF.SE S50 & up _53.5_·_2084 ________ w a 1 er bed 5 m 0 s. &15·t200 Santa Ana 558-9026 dustnol Complex Y.1thout papers SISO & up F'ree Hamster. habitrJil. w bkcasc hdbd. S225 b;.t ---------Please call personnC'I for Good p;iy. m~ide & out CASH P,\ID w papers. All colors avl. allaccessoi,es ofr.49-1 1573or5fl6 1136 Bedroom set, B & W TV- UTOTEM . SECRETARY an appl (71-1 l 832-3560. "1 d <' Wright ·::. T · \' For aµpliam·es. work an~ !:>4~ 3787 645_2322 stereo. clothes. s hoes . Thiokol Ornachem <ill8h ornot.963-6541. s· Sofu. club chr. ot-loys,misc.Sal-Monl6513 •Convenience Markets J'1>!>1l 1ons OJ>l.!n bt. 2nd & flrcl shill' 111 San ('l1:m1.•nte S-L aguna lk·<Jl'h, Otlwr an•as h;I\ c t>r>1.•11111gs a l~m Nn t'\ IH'r t't•q ·11 .\pplv .11 .iny or Ourstorl'' TO PRESIDENT Shorthand anrl typing re· qwrl'd. r\ \'ariety posi· lion with many ex· C('uth·l', administrative and social duties. A team Orit>nlcd 1nrlividual who I 1 k l' s p t' o p I e C " I I ti-10·2500: mornings on ly 8.~iO to 9 '.l41 and ask for Pam Corp. OOCJS 8040 Cul" Kittens to ••ood toman. Ant1<1ued bed & Jl emlock Cr. FV-T.vp1st. 5 6pm lo 9pm & K • h r & ' ., • d & JI 11 -EqualOpporEmp M ... s· .. 1 \•·h"n n"~d"cl. ;1 en m ore "tt :. •· ••••••••••••••••••••••• homes. healthy, box chest , n11sc. llogan Golf Duo.;thar e · u • ~ ... ~ ... Colru.pot refrigerator \L·c Poodl p ,., d lk 8J9 ljJ08 +\\pm. <Jl'l'llratc. good 96-3.6"'! / n c uppw!> trained646-3833 C'lubs, 4~5 1 nour w<.1 · Sec'y Young bach. t•xc1· ,,.. Teacup & Tiny Toy Dr. Apl 207 Huntington tivc looking for ll\c in s pelling & grammar ca11530.5649 lnshSctterFemale.5~r;.. ll<1rhour!J.5 6Fam1lyGarageSaleAn· domestic hdp. Mui.t he Cill or ;.l'nll rc·sunw: Wshr Sl2S Gas dr)r SlJO - ------Obedience tra1n1.•d. liques. baby item!<, able lo tuke cure of L;1g i'la1.a. 208:! :\litlH"lson. Refrig SlOO. Very good OLD ENGLISH Sheepdog 955·16'19 CONTEMPORARY clothing. 55--1 Hazel Dr . home. JX'rfOrm JJ l scc·y No 212 Irvine. ~J<!il5 ronrl.559·4913 pups. AK<.:. t I wks. ----FURNITURE CdM Suturday9-4PM '.!~K :"\ l.'Y. 1>11r1 Ill \(I clutil'!. & mix a i::o1HI 75202:11 FHGHT DAMAGED Shots. Gd.~ kids. SllS To good home _.iyr old mart mi 955-1550 HOTPOINT SALf: "J"" 645.6625 BI k / Si Iver 1' ('ma I e GamL· st•t w1lh beaut cut M 0 VIN G. r urn . a p . Cui.la Ml'S<J Ii 12 77112 SECRETARY Small sail's & mklg J~l') T y pt :.l Hl'l.'l'JJI (;t•n J "0 German Shepherd w ln•t t•hrs. M1r;1 & lo\C phances, 10 spd bakes + di·nc·.il 1111' l'ubl1t· \nt W. Warner nr Harbor, Black Lab Puppies. 6 wki. Shots Lovt':. l'hildn·n 'l'<JI lt•.irthtones l Glass misc. SatiSun 9·5. 2069 oil' l).lfi-13:12 Sanl;iAna 979-2921 AK<.: thampion line:.. 540_1738 Eves. & wood coffCl• IJbles. SwanDr.,C.M.979-8795 need.; hi~hl y s k1lll'tll _________ _ RN'S Night nursei. 11 i Full,~ p llmt.• 1\lso. CC'U HN ' ikncfits for ( t 1 mt• <:on tact Mas:. Jl'ni.l•n. Cl1!<la \ll·morial ll 11:.p1lJI tt.12 27J.I Secretaries Typists Clerks pcr:.on rur 11nport<.111t WAITRESSES mull a fun ct ion f>!<I n OVER 21 \tusl l)OSSl''!> :.Int Sl'(" c;ulh\Cr;. Hc~taurant i.kalls & hu\e payroll, lntcn11.'\\lllt: :\Ion thru ..iccts payable & gl·n or Thurs b\•t\\n 3 Spm E"< fll·e exper. S<tles order pcr'd only t' time Uan· desk bkgrnd h(•lprul ncr!>hllt. Starting satar) l'Om IS.182 !\lac \rthur. ln·inc mcnsurall' w ab1h11c<, !•--------· Call for mter' 1ew John L Belt es. 546·6444 WESTMARK ASSOC. SECRET ARY /lkkpr WAITR~SSES WAITERS 645 12·16 ~ ----lump:-.. bdrm suite, mat 2 Oarhng longha1red kit tresscs.ycllowh1i;:hback SP RING CLEANI NG D 0 G 0 M EU I ENCE tc•ns. 1 beige. l gra'. All rhr... bookcuscs wall un SALE 3 families, Sat CLASSES sta rt Wed '1.&16-0121 Its. barrel swl\l..'I rol·kcr. 10~. 3005 Cleveland Ave. Jun c 2 2 . 7 : 30 PM . ----All in xlnl cond 554·4760 C.~f. Auction 8015 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Nwpt In area 546-4928 Furniture 8050 Bdrm set . m:.t i.cll St50or l~l-P_r_o;-end_t_b_ls-.-b-a_b_y • Orange Co Antique Guild Pre\'lew night benefits S. Coast Repertory. May 2i. 7 30P!\I Sl250. re-Gordon Setter Pup. i;enat1ons6-16·3252 female. AKC. l'hamµ ••••••••••••••••••••••• b!!l ofr. 1 ~ r old. Call items. fire wd. king·o· STOREWIDESALI'; before3. &12 5350 lawn mower. edger. col- MOW IS THE TIME lines. Sl25. &12·8327 LABRADOR PUPPIES No papers for JOb seekeri. lo check the Daily Pilot llelp S20 646-1997 New & used Curn. uppl's. or TV. salver & klt ch misc. Wilson's BarS?ain Formal d1nin~ -.et Or-items. lots or misc Sat Nook. ~5 & 814 w. 19lh. t;igonJI antique ''ht tbl only, 9·3, 1766 Bahama C:\t. 642 7930 &548-3262 w ,6 yellow uµhr>I ,·hri. Pl. Off Country Club Dr. 536 3489 C.M. **I BUY** H N ·.,,OB. ICl'. \kd1t•;il Surgal'al floors. 3 11 & 11 7 t:X I' trn n: ""l' I·: I> O'\'I.) SJn l'll•m1:n11.• C.,•nl·ral lloi.p 111 11 ~Iii 112:! t-:\t :!11 VOLT ff MPllUl'>.f lv •.t,E~VtLf • 1 girl offat•e Dulle., in elude payroll. µayablcs. Wanted rlass1r1cation. If Black Lab puppies. 15 the job you want as not wk!<, AKC champion there you might consider line~. shots. s.so. 557·2508 -orfrring your serv1C'e!\ ----- 0\~·1 II! San Clem1:11lc Inn . 192 fi103 ~t·e Htlllem.1rv alt Ip m Good used Furniture & Applia nces-OR I will sell or SELL for You. MASTERS.AUCTION 646-8686 & 833-9625 King :.Ill' bl·d \\ •hdbrd S75. Lgc uhht} desk S30. White swivel chuir $25. Wool rui: l3xl7 beiite S.10. Alt tl or wlo.nd:. eall fi75·24J5 BBQ Tbls. benches. misc. 960 Denver Dr, Cost< Mesa. Sat/Sun 9-5. RM Super•isor 48 C D • rect>1vahlt•s, 1n,·mcmg & l'.1rlo. Lido <.:um Ct•nkr 38 ampn n•e typm~ Mt•tm· F ab. 3032 ni·1·1b " ~~id HN su1)\ 546-4741 Enterpn!le St. C:\I Ph. WAITRESS \\1th an ad in the Job A K C M 1 n 1 a t u r e \ I M s 1 Wanted c;1tegory. Phone O;il'hshunds. SlOO·SlSO. · PP Y Orn:.· • a 1 ~"'11 1 !> • 642·56i8 or trade '! 840-2959 S.t:i W lflth Sl. l ' -'l Spy A lass: Min i-blinds , woven woods, pict., king spread & misc. 644-1968 01w,1h;it I:-t111IP1'1•sl&t•rl in l)ra<n·'.~·eroCsos.fA'rt.orpomrt l --~-1.1.ss _______ W~11trl'1>~ & llo;.lt'M• .. ;:\ SO•X p;1twn l·an• n• ... r- lp h n11ri.111 i.:. F t1mt• EqualOpporEmplo)er JX'r'd \lu;.t lk' ablt.· to Autos, Ht1w 9800' ..,.os, Hew 9100 Autos. New 9100 Autos, New 9800 Autos, Hew 9100 du"' G1>01l IH•1wr11 s & Sl'cret;in Full time work wknd.., \ppl). R1~ ~mpelitl\'I' sotl \pply Clerical· l>k ilb rl•q rt .:l't'. 11; Fa..,h10n Island. f nrk Lido con, ('tr. 11;i;l•---------_:'>i_·e_ .... _·~~ B<'h s.10.toos =" H fkt''" 9;im 1 IJm & FIJ gi.,h1p 1t11 :--.. n •S.Cretarieslr Jµm&Spm __ _ 61'.! m11 Gflt Ofcjlookke.per i--------·1 Employers Pay All Fees SECURITY WOOD ASSEMBLY SALES SUPPLEMENT YOUR INCOME ssss ssss PART TIME TElEJIHOHE WORk Liz Rc1ndt>rs Agency GUARD I'" time. hie work sand- ing & finastung 320l W :\lJc \rthur Bl, Santa \n.i HOUSEWIVES COLLEGE STUDENTS Guarantct'd llo url' \Vn~l' l'lui. nonu' !1 :m Piil to K :111 pm l'.ill IWl 122:1 ur 1·11mi• to :!;>O t>: l7th St t•o,t,1 ~h·-.u 1020 81rl'h St, Ste H» Nc"port Reach &33 8190 Cnll for .1ppt l'!'t;ah '65 Sccretan<'"' & Typ1f't' LOOKING FOR Te~• y Work? I CHOOSY. Wt1 A,... Too! Hr1n~ \OUt sk1l1' & Pl'l .. Ut1,tl1t~ l o orru·t· Sttkanl( an 1nd1v ror 1-"rt dJY thru Tue ... da~ 11 P:\I 10 iA:\t i.hart :\lahtan or law enfon·e.men~ b~ck Singer & Piano. :Uat ure grnund rcq d t ntform \lount R{•sort SJlary & lurn1!!hc!1 Xlnl l'O 11u.Jttc•i!> :llll 1011 ht•neru) Sal.1rv Still) + 111 , d11l~renl1al Contact StJtioncn Store in CdM rcr:o.onnel Dt•pt need' ..,j1eslady. f tlml'. PACIFtC MUTUAL :>!.l.i~' Xlnl y,orkang <'on iOO Newport Ctr l>r 11, ~pcc1all} lllll' l'11en Ney, port Hurh h•lr Ph l''ranc1o; Orr fo:qual Oppor Employer fttj ll)l!J for appt Ovt•rlo:ul Choose ~our ____ _ Stil(•s t.llJOY A Chalhrn~t."' tim r"a •· ~·011r Stnckbo\' mu t tw II! vn '" your a • • "'-~ Ser\'1ce Sta. Help full 111 Interesting pos. In lllll' Jllll.\. We cui.tom tailor P time Apply, 990 t: or older · l!M-0767 Lagunu Beach. je welry i.Jli>n . N .11 . Jobfltoyour c;chedule.No Const llwy.N.R _!111t~re ~oman. ti73 4734 Char~e SUMMER WORK SALES/ORGAHS777 ~Q~ office ' • AnYouTIMOne 0 overload We arc looking (or jc,•cral h i Ah energy le\'CI 557.0061 Service St at10n Atten dant, exper'rt. Day & Eves. I-ult & p1tlmc. Ap· ply. Shell Station, 17th & Irvine. NB. FOR STUDENTS PIT $5.18 hr take home . Lcx:al job sites. 3 shifts. Al(el8+ 1714l6J.1·1063. Indi viduals for and exca.t 3723 Birch St. N. 8 . foR coreer In the mus1r Service Sl3. Attendant, Don't drop the ball! Get a bui.incsi.. We are the ~~~~~~~~~~I exper'd. Full or P time. JOb with a low-cost Dally Or11on ExrhonR(• loc:itect S.Cretal"y/R•ctpt. '\pply Arco Station, J7th Pilot Classified Ad . in !101 So Calif rcAional R.E. Ok lmmed open-&Irvine, C.l\f Phone642-5678. Shopping malls. We offer mg. Good typist . dlc- b prestigious career, xlnt ta phone ski I Is . ox. M.A.. W...ted 7100 Help W..ted 7100 tr a In Io g program • A1rport area. 833·0099 ~~•••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• highest eomm /guarn. & many fringe benents We req. proressaonahsm In lhe on of selling & a $1rong determination to suc~ed. Some keyboard ability is req 'd. 1C you ore the one,call Daphne eU. 586-7300 SALES oriented R ECEP-Tf ON IST for P hoto· gTaphy Studio. 962· 7877 SECRETARY F /time. Personable. StronJt typing & sh nee. Apply in person, Robert. Bein. William Frost & A!ISOC . MOI Quail St. N.B SECRETARY Dynamic sales exec. for leading financial fir m needs hard charging ad· min. asst. to s hare the growth of excit\ng new Sates~rson field. Typing! Stire, but a RULISTATI quick mind & proven ·cAlHR phone savoir faire are !fecurity. lnde~ndance, even more es.enUal. Call '4>P incomer One vacan· to&ay to join our expand· eytorliccnseo,schoollor Ing co. Ast for J a n, uDl.icmsed. See Oeor1e _644_-UJO __ . _____ _ Davia, Red Carpet SECRETARY R.u.ltors. 32302 Cam ino Exec. To ControlJer C.,p11trano. San Ju.an Fash Isl R .E . Firm . Cap,st ron o P h one: Type 70 wpm. Sh 90-lOO. •D::l:-99SS:=~~~~~~f Ca I I M s . Ta b a ta • -&1G-0123. SICllTAIY Pl\Jm . lnql.ll.ri Ullman Sa.111, 410 29th S~ NB 675-aTO. WAREHOUSEMAN WANTED Shipping & Receiving Department. Exc.ellent oppor. w /young growing & active carpet mill. Forklift drivers & floor men. Exper. pref'd. ~/time positions all shifts. Apflj In Person ~VEC~ ' ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• 1 { 7 ,. ~c--w. ~055 . w. 1055 Ml~ 1010 Mlscelmtous <TV-•• -oc1o ..... "':°' .. , ............ -Power 9040 ~Ff.:..:;td!V::.1.:.·..::::Max::z..:'Z7~, 1:..::,9n:,.:_ ______ __;o;;.Al,;;,;L;.;.Y...;.Pl.;,;;l;,;;O.;,.T_.piiiiooiiiiit• . ·•~1'• ••• ••••• • ••. •• •• • ••• ••••. • ••• •• • • • • • • • • •• •••. • ••••••• • •. •. • • • • W-.ct IOI I Hlff. S...-.0 109S ••• •••. •• ••• •• • ••• • • • • • 'A'M/FM stereo TV. cas "'"r 4 fam.lly aa•ag .. Fdr Sate Newport Beach ...................... • ........ 0 • ............ '73 Bell Do 2$' Al.Id loah, Sail 9060 loah. SaH 9060 r ••P artGtloft '-n ( TV I lh ..... ., • " WA",.,..ED 2 l -d COLORTV'S $12........ y, • na ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ..,., r an, ,eec tr, lM!leSat28th,8969Nlght· Tennis club mem-N,. : wo rawer """ ; & moy bahld it ma. Sat & ingale, FV. Of( Magnolia bersh1p. Belwn 7·UPM. flle cabinets. Reasona ALL MAJOR BRANDS ~lor 531-7i38 16' Venture Cat. new WA ....... KITE Cu IP.Its. s•; 91 •o Mon 1728 Ma In St bet £.lbs" GarfleJd &W-8020 ble SU 2317 Recond. & Guarat\t~ tramp, self-furhn1 Jib, "I Rtt.t ' -H.8 .(ln alley) 538-2459 . • Portables & Con.Wies 196S 16' Dorsett, 100... broom .vang, lrlr w /3 & lrlr ju!)l for fun :.all ••••••••••••••••••••••• • GAR AGE SALE lO'Dwll>are>esignerSOfa Mllsic al JlOOlo~ fiberglass I 0, Mere new tires + xtru 1ng Hopefully by Sat. vw poplop camper. twtn bell, dressng lble & Weekends until ever-Good cond Cost $2000 IMfnlmtfttS 1083 FREE same day dell\. cruh.er 1-:ng to~. 00 & $800 Ofr. 963·9995 aft Qill 675 8679 183Sce eng. Many xlras. mJ14nw ... coucb~t,toveA1de1at. >1hing gone. 1613 w. Oc· SeU for $300: Ph 830-tS02 • ••••••••••••••••••••••• WRIGHT TV OD steenng fou.led up. 6PM .. 3• R "Cl .... G SLOO• Sl~. 496·4617 s 1snauof h ... et, er c1dental. (Bristol /Ed-Conn Mtn O :\1:ittc elt'c. SU:\. w. t9lh,t;M Bottom nds paint. See at 14 . SAIL t 1 & b 1 ., A " ,. sew ne mac • all tn xtnt 1nger) S.A. 1 Drapes, valances & rods. organ. excellent condi· 646-1786 000 £ Coai.t Hwy $800 in· w r r mo 1 e :I bag:.. >.Int t·ond, ne\\ '59 VW Camper. 65 Pwr cond, I 1tora1e cbnt1, 3 ea. Avocado cir. tion,Sti()O,P.P .532·1259 t'I trlr 644·2788 or Don. dock rack $lZSO or best .. u>.1ltary. purlnt.'r1th1p t..rain.Hatcbtop,gas blr, • • • mo)' sm ltms. all priced Hones 8060 120"x84", Swag Tiffany - - - --Boats & Marine t>H-4131 ofr. 673-6030 a1·ail $3 ,000 dwn 01• new radials. needs TLC. to seU now. 536-2979. 82'1 ••••••••••••••••••••••• light fULture, lSO+ yds 67 Gibson SG. Stereo Eicplipnwnt -LIDO 1, XI t d S2.SOO dwn al ~7 50 mo. Make offer 642-3848 Reilly Dr Jr B A oc doC t 556 4396 wilfumb S29.5 28' Dte. Bay Tug, new "· n con ·new 7 ... ,., 429 ·• · · Saddle,beauUfulWestem v a p . . · G .. ; .. • .. ·•ral••••••••••••9•0••1•0• whee I h 0 use Ullmansa1ls.Trlr&cov-< U l"'-o 4 --11' self-cont. butane 'YARD SALE· llshld equitation w /sll\'er, 2 MOVl NG·Must sell wht 675-8258or64tH848 .. I h~"T&G er 6406.563 6462577 "~t ''" "'U . II r . h ter lps 6 Id • ....,.,,, ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~ l'arn1s ...... . Jaun-· · • · ....... "" ,, moorin.i al'U . re rig • ea • i, • i t e m a, inc l uding mo. o •new_.,..,, now sculptured carpel, 12xl2 Gencmhurdt F'lule. xlnl 16, WOOD Boat & trlr. ty good sea boat. $4500. Package. 18 • O'Day 1-... lctrns •. l.t?nd.ed $10,SOO. $1600/bst.545-o.183 bathroom fixtures. Sat $a99.673·1933eve w,hea\'y roam underlay c..'Ond. $125. 20292 Birch, 2138221866 822 4574 Din JD 641> 5788 6 • -May 28 Only. 10-4:30PM. Sor re 1 Ge 1 ding gd $65: Sora S25; misc S.A m s. 7.51-6503 needs wrk. but has lots or · · or · w 'shore mooring at 40tt\ 98m pm. · · 6 Pac Camper shell for 224J E.Orange,C.M. gymkh"'na, 9 yrs old _640-4277art6PM Gutlar w ,. .. sc, G-65, possibilities. $350. 20'Formuln'74 l /0 .VHF. & River. $3450. Days, import truck. Sips 2 •• " '" 963·364l xtras. Xlnt Harbor boat. 552-2301. El'C'S, 675-4986 \'ery t'lean, Tb!. ice box & -GARAGE SALF.-1976 w/tack.$500.842·1189 Tennis Club Membcri.htp nl'urly Mw, excellent 840-1128 8792096 Boats SU-/ storage $400 9602106 Y h 65 d · ( 12' Aluminum boat, 3' 2 or · FREE Sailing Lessons for ' r -· · · . a m a a 0; 2 trt BEACll CITIES FEED or s ale. rond. After 6. 640·8116 Dock1 9070 · 9 bikes; Walnut coffee tbl, 2372 Newport Blvd C.M . E\'es, 833-3256 Cont"llo Ar•·ord1'arl like II P Chrysler Motor. 5 I' Yacht. 60 ,.;, re . ~hose interested _in ~uy· ••••••••••••••••••••••• Motoriad likes 140 Lawn mower bdsprd• , , , oars, cushions, misc. furbl~hed . Lrg pilot mg a boat. Noobbgat1on. W NTED· S. , •••••••••••••••••••.•••• drps & many 'qlly Item;: Pet supplies-Wayne Dog 8 lug II Dt y. alum mags. new. $650. $400. 673-2706 house~ Near new twin Call for appt. 496·1707 or HA hi .'~~ r~r. 44 1 '76 lkitavus Mo·Ped. Near 8819 Nighhngale, F . v. Hf"ood.;.., K50' elly'sbF1eedA·~lf1. 12"xl6.S" 12 pl) tires &i6·0385 10• ,~'AS SPAR '---t & dil"hels. Mimy xtras. Sac 831·3255 condunt.er:R. _, .• ~aN~~p·l ~rest~. nu. xlnt,cood. Msl sl, mk SatMay28,10·4. ay...,. per ae, aol't Chev 4S4 alum Wieand uu uva SH 500 Aft 7 ""'~-.. • .. ( 631 ln $4.95. Open ~undays. ial/c1rs. l.;hcv 4S4 Inti .-.+s 8087 ront roli. Gd. cond 831 00s7 · Pm • CLASSIC 1955 t:l'es 711-675-8931; dys _o_r. __ ·_-_____ _ MOVING-Ping Pong tbl, Open Memorial Day son clec magneto. Usd ••••••••••••••••••••••• &'-6··2010 CRAFT 22' runabout. 213 325.7030 Red Demm Smiley. gooti lamp&, bicycle, couches. Frcedeltl'ery64.5·5686 DeWalt 9" rad :.a" African Grey Parrot. w 2 Boats Morine 13 ' BOSTON Whaler ~~~:d~P~y~=~~ ~~~eryr· Btochemcst seeks slip. cond .. 1200 m1, S275. & much more 16378 -;;:---S. 1 . Ch t t "' std 551·292-1 cages, healthy young ~~ t 9030 w 40flB Johnson. Stde d t d t' f h 67J.9218 Scotch Pine 1-·. V. S· t /Su ,. or • a e es nu pup $750. 492-6070 eves. ....,...pmen <.-oru.olc, trlr & co1. $.1395. eng Super cond. Lido ~• c tleboor en ll' or ts ----------9-5. 3 n quarter horse mare 8 Carpet, 38 sq.) ds. Ill Le ••••••••••••••••••••••• 675 4119 Village. 6i5·8662 :n_ ~JI :it 545·~115 _ :\tOF~ED·Xlnt condition, ---------~yr:. old G~ntle. v.cll shag w pad, 1 )r old Planos&OrntH•S 8090 Complete Chrysler 4 S250 10 spd bike $40 N tr "d English & -:.-· f ldsf V 1o~,Sot'I 9060 Hobie 16. "i5 Banana. :'\EEDl~1!\1EDIATELY '. . " . eighborhood S;.rfe. a1n" . $150. 180 sq)d!>, gold ••••••••••••••••••••••• manto . or318cu II un .. ~.. I d Sltpfor-IO'satlboat.Rel !)li31448aft5P .. i clothes,housewarcs,col· Wcslem640·1995 !\leri or nylon carpet w. pad • , Include:. manifolds,••••••••••••••••••••••• stnp~sails.x nt.con Jecllbles & mo 511 6408277~1adalme SlOO 9626393 ' . flELDS_Warehousesale rizers, elbows, end '77 Wc!;.lsa1I 32 Fully S1850.S48-9781 a\a1I 675·7981 )toped w/extras $590. • re · 400 Pianos/Organs. "' b t r ~·oo Fernleaf,CdM. SattSun. •-w-•rv n ew /used. Spinet.:.. plate-everything for l'qpd. S54.5?0 May trade LY:\JAN 12 loats, S,,._d & ·'e"'" s or O\'er <70 .nr .... , 8070 Pooltable,dinmi:trm:.et. twin en~mes with 430 for 27·32 Sail N .O. <.">l\llorbstofr."'5.7n.,. Ski · 9080 takes.49"-7701 ~late Sale. Antiques. ••••••••••••••••••••••• k itchen dinette set , Grandi., Pla}ers Going hours S225 total "O't. I ~"0 .,......., "" iJ.7\1 fi t ro b Re t I ' " mooring a vat . .,.; 'mo. d•s 675-4011 e1·"s ••••••••••••••••••••••• Jawa Mo~. xtra clean 1sh rods. misc Fri/ Sal, WA.,..TED couch&chair .646-7597 ou r ustness. n · se CaU Daleal-196 Ul2l 673·4220._____ .. · ~, 18• ''u.~tom Gl"sspar. 120 run~good~$21.5. 10-4,281 E.16thSt,CM. " opt Kawai. Steinway. ----------• '-,, .. ., ----------t TOP CASH DOLLAR Ygman·i.s1te20corduro) Baldwin, Chtckering, 75 HP OUTBOARD Mtr lO"Sail Boat men• 10, full col'eri., 673·3489. S t /S B b G d t 1 k & h y h K b 11 ' 1'I' llOBIE CATi\:\1,\R,\N Xlnt eond1t1on $3750 olr !213) 598-6842, --------- pa1·a nuon,, •1a4 ~•carca1n .... PAID FOR YOUR :.portcoa .sacs ot er ama a, tm a . Wards, cost Sl89. ran 2 Xlnt. cond. Many xtras. $275 759"'' Cadll toCo-CarL· ., '" u Jl::WELRY, WATCHES items.644·4149 Wrlt1.r 17141638-2770. hrs, sell $95. 1).1;1·9517 aft · 6 · .xi5 or430·5819 . t acs s Corona del Mar. 675·9407 • 2072 H kh GG Beautiful boat, must sec. Whateverthe Fad ~~:v~8F:E~R~~J'~· Sears gas stol'e, table 1 _roo ur~-·-9PM l!W-3775eves. 16' llobie Cat. Xlnt coml. IJ' Low 1·rof1le Ski boat, Roll'emoffthemarket Sidewalk sale. 11 1 Ai:ate St, Balboa Island. Anti· q u es l(alore, rust clothing, deco rum. jewelry, diamond ear· ings S225. & books. Sat/Sun/Mon F I NE FU RN & AN: model: Poker tbl: White Boats, Power 9040 Musi sell this wknd, Mere C'ng. & trlr; never With a Classified Ad TIQUES &15.2200 ktng si hdbrd . 3 ba1 HAMMOND ••••••••••••••••••••••• ls~J:~,~;:2sc!1'~~i~~:~~er Sl.350. Mark. 642·4352 used. $700. &15 345Se\'S. Call Now! 642·5678 · stools. wht naughyde 30· Stephens Sedan 842·2821 Autos, Mew 9800 Autos, Mew 9800 Auto• Mew 9100 675-6576or842·410ti ORGAllo...IS \'.8p11·r.1···d10.s11dr,o•-· - -.. flepair Chains Moun lings r. u r ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• CO'.\IPLETI-: Ll:\F. nu paint. tuned, sharp' u;· Olympic Clusi. racing .. --------------illiiliiitiiiliiliiitiliiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiliiitiiiiimiill Casting 3 Oriental Styli' Rug-. Brand new. Wool. 1m1ta Mac lavish t1on ~tyl<'. Gold cream • :'\ EW & L'SED . &151)0 A Y616·9000 ~~5~~"'·:w'Jt & co1 er. Buy w 11 h Confidence from lht' Oldt>sl Authortlcd llammond Dealrr tn Orani::e Coun I\' Wl• 11111 not be kno11 1;11:ly undersold ' ' GARAGE SALE Ma} 28 & 29. 9AM-5P)1. New Sears wardrobe. new window screens, !>Creen dr. tbb. lamps. ptllowi., crock • pot. bedspreads. pie lures, best M!lkrs, ctt· University Pk, 18135 Leatherwood Way, Irvine. Goldsmiths Inc. r ed ~" 1 blk. S250 ca 4250Scott Dr. N B 195"11 '3 833-3048 133-3064 "We buy old gold & s1l\er" Ftndings Stones '.\tembcrshtp llB l::irgcst & finest tennis club. dt~ count pre. 968· 7270 Washer & dryer, StOO fo1 pair, or S60 ea. Qn i.11c bed w 1fakc fu1 bedspread SIO 968 3132 GARAGE SALE-Dining - FREE URGA:\ CL,\SS '.\Ion l' 1 l' . c 1 l' r 1 on l' Wcll·Oml' • STOP I'.':· OR C.\LL •••JUST ARRIVED• KAW Al PIA MOS rm set, end tbl. king st :"JEW : Diamond Engage-Stai·n-d Glass bed, outboard mtr. ment & Wedding Ring. ... llA\l)IONOORGA:"l motorcycle.642-0634 E'<qu1site. Cost SlOOO. Jo.c; )laes orig work 8 & PIANOCl-:NTEH MeredithGardcnslfami· ~akeoffer.979·6714 tall x LJ", rontt•mp de ~54E Coasl ll\\). sign or sculpturrd glas~ Corona del :\lar ly garage'> sale _Sat 28th. Genuine light blue Star set m copper. S900. Bei.t 64111200 · 12·5. 2035 .. Cra1mer Ln. Sapphire, 33k immense offer. 675 6695 l•---------H.B. hea\'Y gold ring --------- Home rurnbhings. mt::.c w diamonds. (;'o~t Ol'er Standard s11.e PoOI table Consolc piano SSOO. items. Jl untini::ton Sll.000. for sale S-tOOO. ext:. condition. It l'Ul L'allaftcr.> Harbor. Gr1:<it 5,1\'ings~ PP 516·9977 sticks. Extrai.. 5-IR 70.15 __ !>68-59_74 , ;is17 Mt!>lr?I Dr. May Ladies diamond engag<'· Wanted : Telephonl' that G U L B H \ '\f S E :"< 27th thru Moy 30. 10 to <I ment & weddmg ring. 39 n•c·ords mc•ssage:-. ·I lllCl l'J>lll<;JlT pm. pnts. Appraised at $900. oak t:h:ur~ tii5-8 1U7 afl 5 SIOO Call I pm lol:lpm '.\JESA VERDE :\lo\'1ng will ~di for $400 Jla\'l' Fumiture & clathes .'ilX 11115:! Sale. All must uo th1 :-. gemologt!>l report GREi\'I l'I \'\O Bl 'S Weekcll·'. Lois of evottc 675-IHO u)" 6-16-3718 G75·8407afl5P!\I ~ , I rep "l'I l'ral whl-.lrs. plants, some gar a gr eves _ King mattress & box spr \'oo l·an t do lwller" Ray goodies. Onc·a ·Br<1l'. Livestock 8075 ings. $150. Se;ifan•r Sm1th 5RI ;1;r; 2933 Andros. C:\I ••••••••••••••••••••••• lamp S35 . King Bates -Sat/Sun/:\ton 9 6. J\LSO ·I spread S25 . New Datsun lla~lct Uan,, -.plOl'I piano. HATTERAS. 53· FDMY C )l 8 VTI"!>. ·73 Ltke new Loadt>d 011ner (213> -176-5268 ·;5 llobll' w trlr. Dbl trapei Super Traveler, Sli95 John 751 5288 20' Bl'rtram. com· top If Flipper Good cond New Cphol 427 f"ord Ne11 s,11ls. Sl50 e n g . B c r k l e y J e t 497 Js;-; 1 ___ 1 \merican tandem trlr SOL C \T 1., trailer all &l2-S&t2 o, ' ____ ---_ '\trasSl500 ~'GRA.'<0 BANKS '72 826 3003 1,,ooks ltke brand new tn· ---!.ide & out. Sec Ill Nwpt SABOT. nacing custom Sch. wood Bilge pump, 2 L"".'JlTl':DYACllT BKRS :o:uls, <'O\'Cr. Xlnl cond. 631 ·3133 759-~ Primo 1947 Chns Craft 22· Baycrutser. l'omp . restored $3850. 548·7673 or 548-0211 23' Seacraft Sceptre w Vanson tandem lrlr. Men· I 0 8&1. Hr:.tnd lll'W cond Xtras. Sl3,500. PP496·9603 lfi' \l;dco Aluminum '' ~tel'fing w hel'I l'on '\Ole, & trlr 18 Ill' Johnson. elet· ~tart. 2183 Tustin All' Costa :\lc:-.a 548--4641, asktnJ.! $!195 18' Boat. Cabtn CrW~l'I 28' COLUMBIA Near new condition. Must sell NOW. Atomtr 4. rlepth finder. including shp. Don 675-8883 -----1 '73 Catalina 22' w /trlr, x lnt cond. w /xtras . S5500 orr. 963 1680 WAMTED: Ocean View HOIM m trade for luxunous 57' World Race Cruise An· napolts Sailtng Yacht. w Dana Point slip. \'elue: Sl02M. Call Bill Gates <2131 923·8187 53388 PLUS TA)( & LICENSE f'lew 77 Rabbit including fuel injection. 1.6 lfter OHC engine. 4 speed. front disc brakes. rack & pinion steering. 4-wheel independent suspension. and hatchback Ser. ~ 1 773175351 Of'EH MEMORIAL DAY I 0 to 1 Harbour VolkswGCJen $42-4435 11711 hoch ltvcl.. HunffnC)t°" hach Br house for rt>nt . Reg '1organmare.brok<' llre:>S20ea !>i5·2322 $.150 5-$6-3202 to nde & d r11 e. blk --parade ~lor~ao geldan.g, hl:l Ii-Ii w trlr Supt>r dean llOBIF. Ci\T 16 Older WllEELCllAI R L1kt ... -1 ~ha~. w hp '.\lcrc 111..1.' hoat " >.Int racing re- We Hrs: Moft.Fr19-9, Sot 9-7. Sun 10·7 AUTHORIZED DEALER Mo\ing· EHrythingn\U'il F:ng , Western 17l-4 J go Jo,recz<'r s1;; (;olf lJ8 lOll nev.. S600 vall!t!. make l"~ner "''"Ill>! i:nu'l :.d :\I reasoff~.Call67S·9028 \\ urt ltil.'r Sp11ll'I. new •any '\Ira~. m.•w tonl X1ra~salls w trlr. All Priced Plus Tax & Lie Offer Expires 5-3 1-77 club'I. ftsh1ng rod~ Misce4-&an.ous 8080 w/Pcnn and J1gma~ter ••••••••••••••••••••••• reels. paper cutter. etl' matural11oalnutlllti·9:IB!I tani·as s22;;o. Cd ll $10110 h-.t orr Days Radial ARM saw 12 · 6iJ.lll 2 0 83.5:1:116.l•1t•i.ti12.m1 !'~--------•------------------• 11 5 225\' Crafts man Y'-unahJ YL .10 St .. 1J:t' or ,. ---1 d 1 Autos Mew 9800 Autos, Mew 9800 AlllM, Mew 9800 Autos. Mew 9800 Alrtos, Mew 9800 Sat. Sun. '.\Ion, 9 5. 31:> Sapphire. Bl WANTED $29.5. .'°>Ul-8713 ~ ~~~l;;:~l . '>Jll I ll'C ••••• .. •••••• ••••••••••• ••••••••• • •••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• TOP CASH DOLLAR F'n . ~at , Sun )10\ 111~ wooden desk $55. Bed S35. Dresser S25 . 12· -.t ring guita r St 25 . J,eather tools & suppliei. :\tV ball. chitrger. m1'\c. 724'h W. 19th St, CM. '>'8·6910 P \ID FOR Yl>t.:R \O)llR.\LRl'frlg mp llaldwtn. :! m..1nu1JI. 32 JEWELRY. WATCHES. pertone. ~d workin~ pedal rLi-.-.1l-.1~ clet· ART OBJECTS. GOLD. cond. Si5 Queens11<' tron1c nri:,111 l h11ni•-.. S ILVER SERVlCl::. matt.&foundnuononly'J. <'elesll' .• s~11t.'.1.>h~~· _fo1· FINI-: FURN. & AN -mos old. xtra firm. $125 church ~I >!J.1 ht_ ,_:i., _ TIQUES. 645·2200 Qucemme mall & box ~i-Goods 8094 sprft . old but ~d SJ() ..,.-•-·-, PUILIC AUCTION Call an 3P!\I s.t2·3219 ••••••••••••••••••••••• MANY ITEMS OF' FINE ------Ire hoekt•y skates. s ize ESTATE JEWELRY, 2Sofas.«'i'.ea S.10 l correc 8 1L T\Jul'r . nylon ART OBJECTS. AN· table. ~O. 1 arm t•hu1r !>llpreml' '!I:? , hardly TIQUES. fo'JNE FUR:-.!.. S20. Krontch Bach Parlor u~ed . s.i:i or hsl nl r f':J'C. P HONE FOR l:'li· Grand Prnno & bench, t>12 207:1 1-'0 & IJR OCHCRE. S2000 See. Make offer.-:--ti..iS-:?200 &l-00110 Nl'ed a \\t•h1~1t .11 a .'l'r.' ---good prll'l'' Mens & Ready for summer '72 MhceHaneous women's ~urf1ng d1vm~ Western Field tenHrlr. Want.cl 801 I & water sk11ng I) pes Sip 6 Stol'e, sink . ••••••••••••••••••••••• 67S-62ti6 ____ _ 1cebo'< + a 1Qxl2 add-a-t: S. Sta mix. rolleet1on S --8096 room tent S950 962·8S40 e ~ t a t e a p p r t1 s e d waps . . ....•.................. purch.1•.f•rt Sat Sun . , Sew mach mi'd cah $ll0. e\'l'S pp 6464-13 Will trarle beautiful <'olor car bed 14. bas1net S7 Inf · · ' ---1V for hod~ & p.11nl 11oo1 k i.eaL'I $1 ea 6"2 8900 Tilted Pt a no bench & used nn van t;.ii; I iRli -piano roll-. TV a-:..U ~ ·~a...,""'°' , .. N, telll St h•e r p I at r flatware. b4tViS6 , -o. .... t LA.No ·•110., ... u R. 4 t h RECORCDAUIS£As ' SEr:rlNG MONTH IN A ROW!!! EVERY SALE CAR WllDSHIELD PRICEDlll YMwMt'l,_tnyovrloe•t R°"er Chalice patttrn __ o>_ ---HIR. Stereo 8098 _llltlftlt, ... -,,ct.ey <:ompLete 4l P<' :\l'n IC(' V.':intcd Round t,1ble " ··-·••••••••••••••••••• .. ------------.... ----------..------------------------• for8. ~7 New In J:trt box c hairs Game d1n1ng NEWT\NUUEHG MEW 1977 c· OROLLA l •lllllt m!I · 50 sets a\a1lable combo preferred. All TCD310.MC'reocassette NEW 1977 5"9 ~109.:. 642-8845 oonsdrd_ ~ 2335 deck. Lt1-t St9!l. I only l,A MILEAGE Aute1, Hew 9800 Autos. Mew 9800 ....... Mew 9100 S319. Atlantic Must<' 4<15 ESTIMATES: ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• Jo;. 17th St CM _ _ __ _38 MPG Hwy IMMEDIATE · DILJYERY . Of94 ....olUAL DAT --31 MPG Combined -26 MPG City Th~• C.HIOO"'• ""'·~ Hllnltl".t ,,.... """" a... lo •GM .,,.,.,ttion• °""""•! IOQUIO!flMI • your Oll'iin9 ... .,.., IOW 52958 l'l.U!I TAI( & l•Cf.NSE IOW 53999 Pl.ti'\ TA'lr &L•C.CW.E JUST 3 OF OUR OUTSTANDING RESALES '7' CIUCA GT coun 5 speed. AM/FM stereo & air cond Immaculate thruou11 Finished In yellow w/tan interior. (702NWT) $4300 PlU1TAIC & l•CENSE • 176CotlOUA WAGOH . Automatic. radio. heeler & air cond Immaculate thruout with exceptionally low mileage. (n7PUN) 53300 P\.U~ T"" & lK'ENU 176 CBJCA UFTIACI 5 speed. AM/FM stereo & air cond. Finished in cherry red w/black decor. (033NRN) $43·00 PlUSTA'lr & L•CE"IS£ THIS SALE ENDS MAY 31st -ALL CARS ARE SUBJEC'.1' TO PRIOR S~LE -~OM'T MISS THIS SALE!: MBR · I 7 I ~ J . t • I DIO DAIL'( PILOT Friday '"Y ZI 1977 4 Wheel DrhH 9550 Tn1tks 9560 Vans 9570 AutOSW.t.d tlH . ............................................................................................ . . • r i,4otoriud l fk.s 9 I 4 0 Mot:'"/ ~=/ ••••••••••••••••••••••• Sc " , 9150 9150 ••••••••••••••••• •• •••••• • •• • MOPEDS .• • •••••••••••••••••••••• • •••••••••••••••••••••• ·1• Kawasaki KX 125. Ex· • '•SPORTSTER We only sell the best! cellent cond. Many ex· Elect. start, lots of Foxi & Puch. End of the tras. $350. 559-50<19 chrome, looks clean, month i;ale. S25 dti>count runs good. Must sell. + free cable lock with '76 RM 2.50, very fast & ex 642-2073 after Spm . any moped purchase & tremely Immaculate. this ad. Offer good thru $8.50. 64-1-0714 1970 Yamaha 125 Endu.ro, ?tfay 3L'\t '69 200cc Suzuki. SJOO street legal, clean & re· Five Points Moped built. $300or malte offer. ' Good condition. Call can after 6. 546-SOJO . Beach At Main, Mark or Kelly. 545.597 4 Hunt Bch '74 Honda CB 360. Mint '73 Suzuki 250 stn·et. Blue condition. 12,000 mi. ~. Nfnt Ad Results 642·5678 color 5,000 mi. $475. 675-34.SS or 548-0500 496-4617 '4!1o1,Mew 980CI Classified Ads 78 A..tos.Mew 9100 642-567 • •• • ••••••••• . . . -.. . . . .T . ' HEVr .\'i i l:XE('t Tl\'t·: 'lOTOH 1un11·: FH<DI llEHH FHILIH . \'\l>l:H . ~.!X·XXX8 or .·,;r;.;;;;, S!IS liiii l:'\l. :,:;~, IF YOU MISSED D1d1 Bar1Jo11r 'S SUPER MARKET SALE! 2't1J-DON'T DESPAIR ~SfO~ · -7 I O -WE ARE RUNNING 6 I 0 IT AGAIN BY 'F-1 0 i I~ 280Z POPULAR II I 11KiMGCAB 11 LITTLE V3JJ ~) DEMAND HUSTL![: ~ IF YOU DON'T ALHAMBRA DATSUN ANAHEIM DATSUN ARCADIA DATSUN. INC. WALLY TUCKER DATSUN, INC. . BALDWIN DATSUN CANOGA DATSUN COSTA MESA DATSUN CULVER CITY DATSUN DOWNEY DATSUN, INC. ATLANTIC DATSUN UNIVERSITY DATSUN GARDEN liROVE DATSUN GLENDALE DATSUN HUBOR DATSUM. INC. DDT DATSUN. INC. BUY YOUR NEW DATSUN FROM D1d1 Bar1Ja11r MISUN YOU MAY BE PA YING TOO MUCH!! CHECK YOUR CLOSEST DEALER LISTED HERE. GET THEIR PRICE IM WRITING. THEN COME ·SEE THE VOLUME DATSUN DEALERll IMMEDIATE DELl~RY Z-CAR '74 ... SIN '74MADA '73TOYOTA MUUY a.tc:N. COllOMA Cft. 4 ~. f.M~M II t19d; 1t~to 11ut0. ,,..,,.. -~no. • sotl•d. llr condllfonlnq. 111dio. ""rldilll. IM""'°"I AM/FM "61o, ........ ,,.,,y1 AM/FM ladlo. ~ ... vfnyl ~ ttOOO 11'111& (411MC&l f'OOll*'.O S4695 52595 5 1795 '73DATSUM ?1240% ?4VW .... taAlt CAA ..... 4 IOffd ..... ~mot. lo. to 4 SOMCI. l"ldlo. flllll. 1111rP. lo 4 ~ llM./Y'M 1191'.o rec11o. ll'lllM. (0880V11l ..,.,....(M30U,) [llMllent condlliof\ (1011(1(0) IMMEDIATE DELIVERY '71 YW .. Rlldlo. !IMler. etllO. affelt tf\111. ..,1191..,,. ~--all~. (100CIEI YOTA C&ICA e.T. Cl' • S •OHd. alt COftdltfoftfng, AMl ,M rtdlO. "'"Y' tool (131MJ'l'l FOOTHILL DATSUN. INC. MOON DATSUN TRl·VALLEY DATSUN. INC. LONG BEACH DATSUN DOWNTOWN L.A. MOTORS IMPERIAL DATSUN. IMC. UNIVERSAL CITY DATSUN, IMC. NEWPORT DATSUN ', QUALITY DATSUN IMPOIT PASADENA DATSUN SOUTH BAY DATSUN, INC. una IMPOITS. IMC. MlllEI IMPOITS. INC. TOIHMCE DATSUN TRUCK SALE 1974MAZDA ' PICKUP 4 speed, radio & heater. (81991X ). Reduced to OHLY$Z595 1976CHEVY 11z YOH rtCKUP Automatic, pwr. steer- ing, l'adio, heater ~ low miles. <GTY 8 37). Reduced to OHLY$4995 '73 Dodge Sportsmen B·2 window va n. V·I:!. air. r:idio, pi s. p tb. SSOOO 644·8020 1002 Ford window Van. ~750 or ., . I tti t: :!1st St.. Costa Mesa 1976FOID EISOVAH vs. autom atic, factory air cond., pwr. steerin,i. radio, heater & tinted glass. UC42957). $5799 PHIL LONG FORD S.D. Frwy .. Jrvine 768-5888 CONNELL CHEVROLET 2!i28 Harbor Bl nl. COSTA MJ<:S A 546-1200 WE PAY TOP DOLLAH FOR TOP USED CARS FOREIGN. DOMESTIC or CLASSICS If your car is extra clean S(.'e us fi rsl. BAUER BUICK 2925 Harbor Blvd. Costa Mesa 979·2500 TOP DOI.LAI PAID FOR CLEAN ~.'l 1!iii1'· 11f A\11 Ill llU HUN 11Nl'..TON Bl ALtl fl.I.' '!UI '>·Iii 0.1.i: IMPORT CARS ALL MODELS WE HEED CLE.AM USED CARS MOW CAUPArPY 540-~630 IOll~SO~ & so~ • LINCOLN · M EflCURY ....••••....... ,, ..... . Buy~rs Step Up! Cons ider a Bentley Mercia Roadster. We start with a Bentley Sedan, discard t he body, modify the chassis to sport car standards with ever y s ing l e part c.:hf:'ckc-d. repaired, re· machined, or replaced as b r equirc-d. 800 man hours later a virtually new chassis Is the res ult, with a pre 1955 lllle. THEN an all aluminum c:o;H·h bui ll Hoadster body 1s manufactured and in~t allt.-<I. Tnmming 1s to highest standards. A gorgeous machine. The prototype is in our showroom. The second car is in transit. 8 MORE arc in production. Prox S37.000. Jim Rickman Motors, 2124 E. Colorado Bl, Pasade na (213> 795-2551 or locally· call Ca r lo s Ca rrion a t 752·7841 '74 Do<lgt• v.:ioo Window WANT E D : Good Van Auto 318. p is. p/b, transporlution car . To am fm. Xtras. 492·~-·-_Sl_SO_. 548·7491 ~~~~~~~~~ 9800 Autos, Mew 9800 Autos, Hew 9100 ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• VAN Stif;tl Slit~ •IWl•o ""Sitt< L•c No "3231111 St~• 19'1 I 51995 BRAND t6Y1W1 RABBIT. ' MOTSl'alPPID 53995 Cu<tom Model """' CO<'lllllele c>erl~nce ...., comtort o•ct<•o• tnctod<no 4 ,.,_, disc !>rakes ~'"'"'1 "°"' llucktll sNI• u,_ c:om1no ,,,... 11e11ec1 rtdloll 11.... ~'" -tlr.o ~ 111110~ Wea s.. No 1773280124 lk 93~ , 111110 •tick •h•lt ••c•orv Al• co11d111011•n9 rad•o lie•••• • ~. rldlO. heater "'")/! ~',"j~7 1nt&nor OS~CNO Stk. lnt4tllor t~ ~2495 •14vw CONWMI .. 'tjlMd. ~ ..... .,. SM No_ otttae. S1t•m• -· AAitoa. Imported Mtot, IM,.,W A.tos. t., •rtld ...... ,.,,,..... Alltoe. t.porild Aeltol. t.,.arW ~Ftl~d~IY:z.:·..::M::IY:z..!.21!.:·..:1.!.917:..:... _______ __::.;.;;,;;.;...;_.-._'"'::~ •.......•••••..•....... ....•...•.......•.•..• .................•..... ....................... .....................•. ....................... ~ ~ -ecua:Cll 9701 ..... ..a1 970-7 IMMI 9712 ~·-.leftMtt 9712 Metoctdeahta '740 Autos.IM,..-tiecf Auto•,l.,orW Aadoa....,onw ·~ AIRill ..,.... .,,........ '7 2 0 • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • .............................................. . ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• MG 9742 MG 9742 MGI 9744 • 7 I ~ ) MO HASSLES 73 \udl 100 1.,S. Good ORIVi A. '14 JE.~SE.'l HEALY 2 dr 1975 MIZ 280 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••411 ton<t Mui.t ~ell $2495 convt . w /b d top, COUPE Mupl1.· ·-•MGMIDGET 1.aMGBConverUblo. ... JUST '\t:w ur~i.. Ac. AM FM LITTLE AM/FM litereo H•J>t' dk yc.-llow bamboo Full ,1; ~iJitH l'lpt.'t' r•kr. IL X.lntcond. $3000 GOOD .uys radio 675-8~ fl 6 ••• 3HOOO ml. Xlnt cond po\H'r, :.unroof & IO\\ 11.000 nu. undt.'r ~urr 2.2c AM E --a pm ~' sr •HOAOWAY SAVE A LOT 768-'7348alt3P?tt malt-' In mint ronditaon lmmiw -'96·3765 C'Jll toda> for detail:. on Cull493·6683 '76 TOYOTA \lf71 8e11;l" 1001...S. uuto \i,1' S•"'" """ SHOP&COAIPARE IU9lNONI '\ ~l cmoll.JI our c~l'il11t~ new ~ 2c a ~~~ i!" ~~.~~ ~!, ~;}~:~;;::~; ••nd m ... -ft'!.~~~~ ·~~.<;~~~r.~~~ T~"::w·s wc>H~i'Sl'i' Soo ~~.\"'"~ Jr,~:1, '",,:.~~ >lll~i~ ~ ~~i'~~ \~-;,·~; g::.; hkenew and t:<·onomil.tl 73 Au<li lOO LS. brown. •USED BMW's* lll-1375 491-3375 Q.ASSIC TODAY! L'lj!o:.lfll'd Ail ·Phone Pa lot Classified Ad. Buy or lease IO'J<!PFY > 'lunroor AM1FM II track 713.0CpeS/R T•l6LWB FREE 5 YR/S0,000 mi 6\2 507tl Pbone643-5618. lu mi. $2000 tilO 1308 e x t . w a r r u n t y '76 CHIYSLER 'Tl 1600upd9'0l\1 RJ w /purchase of new lt..4.toa, Htw tlOO '"'~1.1·••&J<t•lklu.1v•R0· 11><~• AMto1. Mew tlOO COIDOIA 73 \ucli 1001.S 4 dr . '7'120024.spdll&iNAD J en.sen C.T PowtJr win. ----••••••••••••••••••••••• "• '"'l'>ocl • l•1 10~1 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Loaded ! One O\locr . ht·•i.tt.'. Sunr1111f S290U 68 1000updVWll817 SPICIALS dows,alr,AM/F MsttJrao 1958MIZ190SL A M /FM stereo With l;.it\2(~5_ C&oMdO..Sundaya 1976 110 a Dr. Sedan cassettt! vinyl roof and With both hard 11nd soft tape. powcr .:.t~llls <tlld .711 \l'IJI Jul•>rrtJtl" ---(~NXM)was $11895 more <Ser . 354191 27 tol)i. This 4 i.pecd m0<il'l wi d ' • 1973 IMW 3.0CS ~ow s~295 New Buv1Lease Plans II t I I n ows, <:rwsc control, nl't•tb n·p;iir d ( 1 " ., " is an exre en c u.ss1c. door lock11, vinyl top and 199 2110 4 :.pe~ • i.unroo • 0 r 888 DOVE STREET availa ble. 60 mo. financ· CITX71S> su.n roof. Priced right cond & l ow miles . Near MacArthur i.oJr. available OAC Call SADDLEIACK (686PRJ 1 BMW 971l t351JPS>. EHtlllcnt &J amboree Roads for detalh. VALLIYIMPORTS ••••••••••••••••••••••• have '73 & '74 automaltci. 83 I ·2040 495-4949 '72 TR6 ur this model also --- lease plan available. We lll·llOO :=~r;'\iJ * A sharp , classic car Lo SADDLHACK lt7l'IJ DATSUN • • • 1975 Ml1450SE SADDLEBACK mile:., 4 -~pd, A M t FM v•• •tY IMPOltTS ShortbedPlc~ !\letall1c gray t black radio. roll bar, cw.tom --c-.. r I h •-r 11 (in an c in" a" u' I 831-2040 495.4949 With Camper She I. .a i&t.s,~~~!i:~~':.·l:1· er.t• ""'nroo , cat t.'r °' u BMW " speed. rndio. heater, low power .1ccei.sor1es (519GBKl miles. blue exterior & in Kannan.Ghia 9735 IOJ0.'>.1 11 Pm·edtosellal '75 TR7 The Black Rt:ilUI\' Custom paint 4 ..,pci mag whet>I •" I\ '\1 fo"\I ..,lcrco "1th t:J?>!>l'lll'. ;\lJ mo fl n <1 n t i rl .: () ,\ < · <O'J9NPP> '75 MGB ROADSTER AM F:'ll radio, 4 'JJfl , lo m1kill-(l'. ShJrp ' :'II.I' buyorlcaM' 1i3!!1'EP1 '73 DATSUN 2402 . Tht" W('l'~· ... SPECIAi. .. \:'II F.\I i.tereo. ·l·~pd. Jll' <'nnd. S h n r p ' L o µ ,. 111 t ' 1342UYWI COMEIN&SEE THEALL MEW 630CSINOW! COMPLETE IODYSHOP NOW OPEN SADDLEBACK VALLEY IMPORTS 831 -2040 495-4949 1975 BMW S30i i\ulomat1e. air rond . st ~·rro & a fine nnl' ownt•r l'ar l~xcdll'nl lt>a:-.e pl;.111 a\atlable. (062NlF1 SADDLEBACK VALLEY IMPORTS 831-2040 495.4949 '73 FIAT 124 SPIDER l·'1 nd \\hal \OU \\ant 111 d sharp .:-ar ·11 •1 n~t·t• f);idy Pilot t'la:,s1l 1<.'d.., price . .S ·~pd . \ .\t I· .\l -· radio l'st• mw ol 11ur ~--------.. t wen I y i.c\ en bu} lt'.l "t' The Bl&&esl Market~e p I •l n s on t h 1' 1111 t' ' on the Orqe Coast •899~BG > , ,, ~· DAILY PILOT CLASSIFIED ADS You Con 54,ll It, fuld 11, Trade It W11h o Wont Ad ORANGECOUNTY'S cll.cellcnt condition.••••••••••••••••••••••• OLDEST <003Gl0). &· MUSTSEE!!I COSTA MESA DATSUN ~les·Sen ice-Leasing Roy Carver.Inc. !lolls k oycc BMW 15-IOJamborce '\i-" port Beach l'HO 644.t ii 30 <.:S, 1mmat. lo mi. ·I :-pd. all xtra:. ti73· 15:! l 284SHARBOR BLVD. 540..6410 540..021 l TOPIUYER See us first, & last! Top dollar paid for imports. COSTA.MESA DATSUN 1975 8MW 2002 2845 Har bor Blvd. .\ut11matar , air eondition· Costa Me11a 540.6410 iog, slcn•u, :.unroof & ----- metallic paint. <OLS·ll. ,\ '72 sedan. 2·dr. 4·:,pd rcire Jewel! Exct•llcnt stick. 25mpg llluebook lea:.e plan available . $1650. Sell for SI 100. SADDLEBACk 552 1077 eves or wknds VALLEY IMPORTS 2.ioz. '73 . Sparkling 831 -2040 495-4949 S1hcr Blk ant. Auto. ck. 71D~tW2002 ~nrl, clean. (915PK FI 556·393-1 1974 IM'W 2002 J-'lnd a cleaner one for S4250 &. I '11 buy 11 SW 6806. 838· 1873 '712·10Z. <lspd, tape <11r. xlntcond ;,s9.0973 '72 Ghia. 33,000 mi. tp dk. radls. Nds minor bdy wrk S2700. 646-0916 ---Mencia 9738 ••••••••••••••••••••••• miracle mazda 21 so H4rbor lt•cl. Colla M..a 645-5700 ·73 ;\lazda. 65,000 mi, 17mpg, lop coml. great road car, ~oei. anywtwn· Regret. mu:.t sell. S1500 551-6808 1974 MAIDA RX4WAGON 1 !>J>Cl"d. radio. hl'ukr & air cond. Low. low mile~ <873KXZ J. Reduced \o ONLY $2175 MARQUIS TOY OT A :O.IJSsl O'.'< \'I 1-;JQ 831-2880 495-1210 .i speed, AM /Fl\1 & only 22.00n or1g1nnl mile' J\ ~uper :.harp car' IU3UKYT>. F:\celll'nt ka:.l' plan a\'a1lable. 71Datsun510 Wgn. m.Jg~. ·n RX2 " i'J eni.:inl'. 4 dean. S1200. 751·2339 !>pd. ~n;sT SELL S89S. l'\ 1.><; wknd' 546-4882 SADDLEIACK 'ilSedan. Jj :'It PG. Mercedes ~nz 9740 MISSION VIEJO IMP0R1S " . . .. ... . ... .. ~ .. . 831 1148 49.S.1104 Lease New·Used OVER 100 MERCEDES ~DISPLAY HoUse of Imports AUTllOKIZtD MF.RCl:-;OES l>EALEH ~2 Manche:,ter • Buena l'a rk 523-7250 On !ht• Santa 1\n;i r\\ I '73 450SE. Ikon µold . ~un rCJol. ix· rfot·t l'Ond =" u tirt:~. brk:-ell' \hi-.! -.di ICJ sl'llll• l'~IJll' 1198 6{;x1 i52·6:!38 1972 MBZ 350SL COUPE Sil,er blue blue lmmaculJll' condition & lo.... mill'~ t97SETC> ,\ ~lrmonal Weekend Spcrial al ONLY $11.500 MISSION VIEJO IMPORrS ... . . . .... .. . ... . . ....... . 8311148 4951 104 1 I 6 S o II I h II I 1• a ll o u I t· \ a 1 d 11 r c .1 213 &!12854 .711 V!J0:!.1'.,!,, VALLEY IMPORTS ~ or ht'-.t offer •••• ••••••••••••••••••• '64256781 831-2040 495-4949 83'7·413ti '67 :'llli 25USL. :-lit:!. 2 ---l "' -.7 .. "?lO ? 0 i\:\I FM tops. nice. S7S!.15 _P_P. 1975 MBZ 280 SELL 1'111· 1tl'n1' \nl h ;1 Daily Pilot Cl.1~'1f1t•d \d Or1t Coll Service 1976 BMW 530. AM Fl\I " ~-· ~ ?Or·. · ' ( 7 l .i l 8 7 l 1 ,., 1 9 SEDAN. A one owner car fo\t Cred11 Approvol .:;terco ca~settc, 30,000 radio. Lo ma. Mint cood. e\'es 'wknd~ with stereo. pwr win· I pd r I t 642·627 1 , 552·7181. ----. dow~ & ai'r cond. L'x m1 ... ~ . sunroo. x n c •2 61,,.,C · , S \t' d ~ "' I D .,75 .,~"iS .,.. · "" onnae 72 450 L . int <'on . "ull"nl l""S" plJrl a,· .. ila Autos, Used .t..utos, Us'"'d cone . ys u .,.,., , eve:.. '"' "' "u .. " "' "' "IO'""" TS Wire whls. Both tops Lile. <~MVl ). ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••., ""'.,. 197401t.. UH -0000 "'1700 ' · ma . .ol • Slt..DDLEBACK * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * "ii :m02. A:'II:n1 Mcrco. 710 WAGON 496·110~-_ VALLEY IMPORTS it * BE _.CH IMPORTS * ~ ,..un ronf. ma~s. S5.20<J 4 SJ>4!l'd. radio. h~nter . A .... 715·1 10-165589300 roofr<'ll'k&lowmileage. '76 280 MERCEDES 831-2040495-4949 ~ 848 DOVE S T -NEWPORT BEACH * . :.._ ~ ---In CXC4.'llcnl condition~ Sunroof. all xtras. P .P. ----- "" N M Arth & J bo i6 B'.\tW 2002. i\M-FM <92()Mt'VI A real beauty .\ssume lsc. 675-3121 MG 9742 it ear ac ur am ree ,. ~ll'rco cass Xlnt cond. for ••••••••••••••••••••••• it 7 52 0900 + \~sumablc 1st'. Contact ,,....LY 53195 1976 450 SL MG'S Jt • it l.111cf;1 Oy!> 552-1813. C\ e:-, """ Exquisite luxury w less "' 1han 2500 mi. Savl' SSS. BC\ .\ "B" and Name 1t : RESALE SPECIALS • ti.jl),,..6'!} t~:!·-141l8 nu;£. l'l·r~on.tl PljlCS -----------------• ;1; ~>:lul Stl.. \C. '>nrl. JI on us' Call tf'l<h•' for dl' Jt 1959Clt..DILLAC 1971 MGB it It•' "hb C\lerl'o. \:?.000 IMMACULATE tall' on Ol'H \'\nlln~ Jt COUPIDIYIUI it ni1 5111\110 711b-117509 284.sKARBORBLVD. Ol'" l.l'.l"l' Bu' PIJn •r~""'....,''•c<•"""'"'• '" ..... ~~""' it 011,11 ;1i.1 544)..6410540.0213 '70·280SE.l n"ner.ong Sc11!>1bll'PJ~mcnh lit If-Gvc11•11 1,, •'l• • t•\'<'rything all papl·r-. on !">() Brea P~ Breu it it 1969 BMW l002 ·-;3 · 2-lOZ, -1 spd. air cond. eng ct.:-. ::..'>-100 l>-1:! Rt®! r \R J':') DEPT • $ 1795 s2795 • \ulomallc.a1rcond1tion ,\Mtl-'3.t r11d10, magi.. af\6P:'lt 111'~:'\Si\T !I l:! .... • in" & ., on" owner car radials. xlnt cond, 27.000 --1 ~ 3 .., _ 1 ~ ~ ..J , ~ .. " " · nu uAoo 64~-0574 67 :'I erc=ies 2 o."'. 1mmat· , ~ • • tZR\-1191 •-" · xln\ mct·h conll $37511 ·'f"! Li~ ::h,~•~;~;:.~~. ,~'~~~~~~~~~ES : v!C~~~::;R~S ·~{ut~aJsi~l.5~~~~~~ .. ~~~~711.~'. ~Tl.LY :-~l ii ••M•,.., .. 1 PMHtVlll "' >j • • 831 -2040 495.4949 below blue book Sl 165 1••• .. ~l• H l ••"". ""l"' 5700 CASH REIAIEI ON EVERY NEW PONTIAC LEMANS IN STOCK! NEW 177 GRAN LEMANS 1977 ASTRE landau too. 403 V-8 engine. automa11c. bucket seats. accent slnpes, custom belts. air cond1t1oned. radial white wall tires. Rallye Gauge cluster and clock. power steering. lilt wheel. Rallye V(heels 12G37K7P204152) 33 MILES PER GALLON EPA lested 23 mpg. (city) 33 mpg (tllghway) ORDERTODAY ~3488 AT ONLY . 5500 CASH REBATE! 'we HAVE A LARGE SELECTION OF FINE USED CARS! F-011.-•1lfnn~1 ~I,_. jrf\ 1 "' I "\N ••'"'' ,,.,,,, .. , ' ~.r,. / M, 1 •• '72 Olds Cutlass v ~ • ,, ••• l f -t r I r ~ I f .,.,1 • 1'>"'"'1 ''"•lt ""-' •• ,.,, JJ•'BC $2197 '71 ,.OMTIAC c ........ v l!I 1uro "'" 11ct orv ''' conOlfio"t'H~ oo-Net \•eftrn"H~ '~SOOl f l $1388 '"' "-• \I ft t• r In ~ I I I Ct.i~i·t•?'\11'1 ~hf• ti lt7'C•diria v.a •fl9t'le • ''"""''" •• , C.O"Mltf~ \t111t• t•o ~ ''~•ono Pow•• b'J" .. .-. l lMHOlll $4695 '75 ,.Glltiec LAM11111 Zlh-.H. T. V I) 11u•fl tr.il"'> I i t; t Or V a • r ro.,~1l11")"1f'W) ()t)<Nf't \t ~t.-tnrt'1 ~MtF=M 1 J J1? "'"vi N)"lif hnt:8d 111• C' _, .. ,.~"'"''n' n,,w .. , 101')' 1nr s.. ~•l?'.l•1 . •• • . - •' :.: .• .. .• :: . ... .. .. ' . .. . .. ' • it '.\1u:.ti.ell.962-63s.t LO.\DED :'111111 t'()t11l ' "•'lio.lOO ... ,,.,,.,qo. : S 4 99 5 S 5 4 9 5 : :~: ............ !?.'.~ !'!~: ........... !?.2.~ .~:It~!~~·~::~ l'la~~l l'. ~uf.~!·.~~~~ ........... ~~.~~·.~~~~ ............ l~e:t.~!·.~!~~ ........... 1~~~!·.~!~~ ........... ._ ,. it -;!} Cdpn \'ti. I .,!XI :11r. Compl t•lt·I~ rl·~lored . 1974 VOLVO 1976 SA.48 it ,\:\I n1 rnd10 ~ ca~' 1976 FIAT 131 Xlnt ml'dl. lht ofr • 1'41 WA.GOHIACK ... ~t '9i8aft7 :10 2DOORSEDAf.t ~~li -3838 .. W"h '" c :.i,,d '• • 1• n-•11· TY ""' "'• irf;lol) A .,... Jt ·'"'''•f'\f') & Ot t'-v' fu tlhfl.' • 4 ·'' 1 w '"-• ' 11 Jt. It ,........ (3Ml<Ml Jt : s5495 ss695 : ********************** '7 1 t'.1p11 :!1100 l IHl•·I' Cl·~"' llll ltl.\· 111·\\ \\\'ht. till. i up dlx anl ~1110 111,t<l\•11 I' I' ,\\QO ·~1 -~1;1, ~~~·.~:.w. ....... !~.~~,~~~·-~::: ....... !~~~ ~-!.~~·-~:.w. ....... !!.~~ - Vinyl roof. "' speed transmission POWer front disc brakes. reclining bucket seats fold-down rear s eat, orotecllve body side moldings. full carpeting (Ser. GAECTU33396) .'I !.JX.'l.'tl. r.1d1(1. hl·ute r . - radi.11 I 1n•o., l'\I ra s harp l~n~ & r1111111n~. -I LY $3395 MARQUIS TOY OT A '\USSIO'IJ \'I EJO 131-2880 495-1210 1975 MBZ 450SL /\nl. gr:.t) black lt•atht•r inl Full M'n ICl: rt·t·urd~ for I h1:. full~ t•q111 pped C :..i r I I 4 i ;\I X l ' t • \ M c m ori,11 Wc(!kend Special :.it ·n Canan Y£•llo\\ 121 Sport Coui>c. Dual pipes. Ill.irk lccllher interior, \ \1 fo'~t 'itereo Runs \ l'rv \\1•11 A&kang S2:wo t>lti 3818 1976 AATXl /9 Full\ equipped & ha ... lui.;~!.q(t• r ark majl 1\ hl'<.'1-.. :111d O:" I. Y 7000 null''.'> 1.11..l• 'Ii EW ! I". ' 1 1 II 1• n t I •·a i.t• p I a 11 ,,, .11lol>le t~J2Rl.\' > SADDLHACK VALLEY IMrORTS 831-2040 495.4949 f''int t i.a Spydt>r. ti9. lo m 1. b<'autiful 67:>·~12 1i 9727 ••••••••••••••••••••••• lrandM.w '77 HONDA Cars MANY To Choow "'o'"I UNIVERSITY OtdsmobU. Honda Cars • GMC Trucks 2850 llarbor Bh·d. C06ta Mt.>sa 540·9640 1973 HONDA HA.TCHIA.CK 2 Door 4 eyl.. 4 speed, rMdio at h ea t er . '(738NDN) $1999 PHIL LOMG FORD S.D. Frwy .. lrvlne 76a.Slll HONDA CIVIC 4 apd. Dan Gurney mags. 13" Urea, headers, clean. $2395. 162-8119 '73 Honda Civic Fastba~k. Auto. Clean. 493-7695 ....... 9710 ••••••••••••••••••••••• '72 XJ6. super runnin& cond. Looks 1re1t ! $6300 I "ofr G4S·9794 or 642·5991 MISSION VllJO IMPOUS ··-· ,, . ... ...... . '.' .............. '· .... . 8JI 1748 495 ·1704 PARK LANt Molor Car Co. \tutor Car Co CO:'ll PLETE \I EHCEUl!:S ~ER\'ICINU i5.'i"1\"W 17St.l':\I Iii I ) 631·0!H5 4SOSLC MBZ, 1!17:1 lhru 1977. will pny l'<ISh or Take over payments Pl'. 494 2146 Pr Ply. Llkl! n~w '73 450 SK Chot· brn. s roof, stereo A .\1 ~· :'11. M 1 t' h tlrt's, cst m CB. 26.000 ml. Many other extras. See to Bl"lieve ! Sl I .flOO . 548·117l '76 280.S. s ilver w 'black int.. sunroof. tape deck. must sell Sl5.000 or S2600 down & assume pym nts. Pm·. party. 11-1 ·559-1882 ---- -........ Mt.11:•••• a 7J4IO• SIO,tOO Bentlflll Ikon 11old flnhl\. ped cc\ In nery re-SMC( f~I 74410M Sll,"7 811)' Of ,,_ llllt Oll• Lo lo mil••· •blu w bamboo tn~rior. IOWMEOI '744'1• SIJ.tJJ' It el ~t'll~ w ~1111rool lhmbo11 lUUIOI" lntetlctr 19=) nabers auto center QUALITY CARS OVER 150 TO SELECT FROM CORVETTES • BMW 2002S •MONTE CARLOS • T-BIROS • FIREBIAOS • CAMAROS • TRANS AMS • CUSTOM VANS • PICKUPS • CAMPER VANS • WAGONS (BIG & SMALL) CADILLACS • MONARCHS COUGARS • DATSUNS • CO RDOBAS • GRA ND PRIX's • PI NTOS • SURFER VANS • MUCH MUCH MORE DON'T BUY UNTIL YOU SEE OUR SELECTION ! '74 DATSUN 82 10 $2295 '7 6 GRANADA 2 DOOR AM ( M '11 , A H h l 1o t 10.a • 4ul~ ,, • .,. ~·~m ''••nr.M~ $3895 \t\~11t1 fr11'\ \ "1f i wtiof"tl"I nowt• htatri.-v•.,.,i r-.n & It IL)ll l<•~~l l>~'>Ctl """' '914MWO '7 6 PINTO RUNABOUT '75 EL CAMINO CLASSIC 4 •M I•••· ~ •l~~«•H $3995 4,,•nlr\n' J""~ ~~•~? $2895 b• '"*' tilt """""'' etu•~• ".:On•rnl ~·' ttonr lor"• ' M•ehfll1•f\ I,,...,. l)'t-1rA• A"''~ ,~,t'\ 4•' cnnd l'e •S9M'W 73 CHRYSLER T.&C. WAGON '74 THUNDERBIRD $ 4 795 4 .,,.~ A'.l rv "~~ "' $ 3195 P•d04::1 '"" ,. "" IKl<l t 1~ W'\'l•I e 'U P o"'I ,,.,, '}01' ,.,,.. '1•"1' t ti <N"Ntl AY , ..... ,.,, .. "''. ,.,,._,, .. -~,,"""" ,,._.,.,,, 0 .... ~..,.. 0 ..,,_,, • t'\•W•' .,")."'JlrWl9-i\ '"""'''•I> f) '""'t-.•r t~m 'll'\;t~ 1A. M ••'I>"" •'>II.ISO 7.,3c~•~I~ ~~y1~~~$ 3295 '76 PLYMOUTH VOLARE WAGOO , ••• , D4••-t !•·~. w·~ -$ 5 29 5 '•V•' AM JM f1 '•4' Oii COf'lltnl t) w vt.....,,.,. t ,. •' W~AHI C' I '!lilt ,.1),,,,,01 n AM f~ .. ,,..,'!>"> l •"1"" rno w>4\tjnN' n ft"I' ~Jl')~.Jl'M 'l<C'-ll)HJCT • l!>tl>Vt;\ '75 CHEV. IMPALA 4 DOOR '73 CHEV. VAN-GYPSY CAMPER CONVERSION . 4ulo l••M o "~•"nQ I $ 34 9 5 ~;~~OO~ AM tadi? ' 81 -~~· ~~ ~·~·$5695 l\lllVC~rlltl"1 1n1PEOI .. . '74 PONTIAC GRAND PRIX z~~~TTI. .... ·$6995 4,,,~ ,,~. D •'U~no •$3495 bit~• A"1111M ttdlo -our bfa•et-.. 16 1~ ... -....,..,... "'' -· f,h wh"91 AM"M ''-~ !I» I r1•t19 #llMI\ t92eMl01 • & ,,q .. _, 111""""1 , ' l . , i I L _ _, #' ... ~ --=--._ ~ ----~ -~ - ' ....... an.,arW Aldot. 1.,.ort.J Aaltos, IMportld A.Ito-, UMd Aaltos. UMd AlllM. Uted ...... ___ ................................................................................................................................. .... J2 DAil. V PILOT • t.,cwt.d ......., a.,orW Mtel. l••wt.d Toyotw 9765 Volcsw... 9770 Volluwage., '770 Well 9t t O Cocllac ff t I Qevrolet 9920 ····················••t ............................................................................................ ·•·········•··········· .................................................................... . ,....,.. 974, Ponche 9750 lolhlloyu 9756 '70 Corolla. "~" paint. vw SALE!!! ·71 vw e~ auto Slick. 1971 IUICK '73 Cad Coupe De Ville. 1976CHIVY ................................. ••••••••••••• ....................... lllrk. gd cond. $800. Scott \ ery cle.an. lo mi. xlnt cond. loaded. must MWIUCLASSIC lt74 PAHTOA 1970 Porsche 914 good [l~ LL\N~ TG7rf3-_,..5"0 ---$1~ Olr 49"H0311 da)'$. CIMTUllY 1>ell thts wknd $4000/besl AutOD\ltl@, factory air 1976 VW R.AlltT "94-8327eve Automa1ic, AM t FM oiler 847·9583 cood., tilt wheel, padded s :speed, AM I F M cond. Cover, $3,100. 9767 DEl10 Air cond111on1ng ---radio. p .... r. sttenng & ·ri-.. Jlop,pw-r.ct-ring& w /casi.t-tlc, Mich"hn f>.W..24-09 M lor Gar Co b k ( cto ond '6 • Fleetwood Run" ... ~ ......., ,. ••••••••••••••••••••••• &low ma.1~. 109344:!) •77 SCIROCCOS ra es. a ry air c , .. . .. brak•s. r•dlo. heater. radluls •-low males. • 0 t • --ded' <Z"'"1416l 0 reat Looks awlul Sl'"' "' .. "' /1 1973 Pon.cbe 914 t 7 Ap • '71 ~"TAG Wire wbls. ne.,., -e c . ........, · . .,.. .. • '7;J ""'c. (a~"'""' ... ). superb clal>slc. 1£xcellcn1 · · · · ur Champagne edition car $2395 firm. 646-5980 ""' °"'"AJ!J• lease plan available pear group. Aar, i.tereo, Rolls Royce & Benlley radials, needs wrk. Must 1970 V" CAMPER Plallouni -------1 $4195 <9MLOZ > ~ma. 673·2823. t.ale!> & !.en ice 1s our i.ell. '97·2674 P 0 P T 0 P m o d e I ·70 Coupe DeV1Uc. SADDLEIACK '70 Porsche 914. clean. specaahty i3 SplUlre Convertible. l"°4CEVl •77 VW IUSES Nabers SlSOO Nabers VAUEY IMPORTS stereo FM . S3,650 •'49 BK~TLEY, Forest Perfect tniout. $3400 m Champa.:n.e,'diuon 675-~4 131-2040 495.4949 546·244S 19-4 p M) or Gm .. 4 dr. Very rare! \'etted. 82650/~t offor. 1969 vw Cadi·nac '75 El Oor&do. Loade(j - -497·2566 17-9 Pl\t) • '63 CLOUD Ill. Burgun· 900-3171 KARMANN GHIA l Cadillac •7 dy. Immaculate! :oil ed Xlnt cond. $7950. Cal 3 Pantera GTS. Ne" . , 7u "A" W 17th St, c•1 '67 S . r T • ew r paint & new 995-1161or545·5984 pnrnt, dean. 31.00\ t>O 3S68, S~l\'er:. good ~ '714) 631·".,... n p1l ire conv. onneuu tires. Hard to find l'llr 2600 H,1rh111 Bl\d. :!600 H.1rbor Blvt.I . miles. Call l·K2S·3J94. cond. ~. 642·5675 days • ...,.... C\'r, nds rings. l\fui.t sell, U4.2NKJ ). ( '"t.t Mn.1 5..10-9 I UO Camaro 9t 17 Cosl.i Mes.s 540.9100 or eves, 495· 1938 • Soab 97 60 bst ofr. 673-6884 uft 6 BILL YATES Close to •••••••••••• • • •••••• • • • Porsche 97 50 '61 3568 COUPE' frt'sh •••••••• ••••••• ••• • • • • • '68 GT6. Sharp vw· •oRSCHE South Coast Pia.ti! 1976 Chevy Camaro ••••••••••••••••••••••• J I ' d 1970 S • •1 See to appreciate ....-----1971 Buick Ri\'lcra. \'ery vs I d & d ena:. c ean, " nt con · ..,...,. San Juan Capistrano '68 Squareb~ll·k sharp and well cared for. ' pwr. w n ows oor '63 Chevy Nova. wagdn. PORSCHE 924S SlOOOIOfftlr. 848'1421 S~MMET 6-16-3389 af\ 5 837-4800 493-4511 Xlnt cond. S300 Sl895. Cash onh'. Call locks, c ruise control, Good tran5 . car New We have an excellent 76 91-1 20, S spd, mags. A classic 4 speed Volkswagen 9770 __ ~3i.>taftcr~m SJ0-4167arter2pm. ~~~,t!~:!i:t.!·to~~ brakes.548·4116·$"l90· selectionpluslhe "'Vfl'd.8track.radiab. sportscar. You must see ·-•••••u• .. ••u•••••• '73 Squa~ba~I<. AM f M i 11 t d 't' 1974 M l 'b Clasuc ""' th1& one to apprectale 1t ! ra4io. low mileage. lug '6S VW Bui. Campt-r. Ne" '65 ELECTRA. power n exce en con 1 ion. a t u Champ1onsh1p Ed1t1on. Lo m1, xlnt cond S8900. l860DQBL '67 BUG, 1700 cc eng. good gage rack. new brake:. rblt eni::. Ill'\\ eluH·h. everything, good cond , under 90 oo m ll es . wagon AM/FM stereo, MOW!!! best offer. 49-t 4386 SADDLEIACK cond. xtra:., S1200. Excellent l'Ond1t1on dean Lca\tng country. St50.644·0887 . <507159). lug!.age rack . Good llLL YATES 1971 Porsche914 V.AWYIMPORTS &127834 S2250.S54-2536 ~f7to:.;:ll hi.mg Sl5SO. Codfftoc 9915 ONLY $5795 L'OD •495-6799 VW-PORSCHE 5 spl'ed. s tereo .. mag 831-2040 495.4949 '73 VW Bus In good t•ond. ___ ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1967Chevy4dr. new tires, San Juan Cupt!.trano ""heel:. & :nr condillon· --needi paint. fi2700. Call ·; 3 S li P t.: R B l' (; . 1500 V\\ l::ngmt'. frel>h ball & wtr pump, PS. PB, 837-4800491-451 I mt!.\ lo" mileage r ar Toyota 9765 S57~72Carter SPEC! \L f:DITI<>~. O\erh.iul b} A1n·raft Nabers air, ~475 . Marly. l~l7RKQI. ••••••••••••••••••••••• s1her metallic I ~pd, Mechanic. Ne.w crank 284SHARBOR BLVD. B!M·9131: 846·0358 1968 Porsche 912 SADDLUACk ·72 Corolla \uto, nu pnt c::0~.~~00 .nl F:\I 8 tr -.tereo. air, pistons. rings. vah·e., 540..410 540.02J.!_ .71 VEGA Hatchback. n exL·elll'nt rondll1111t VAL.LEYIMftORTS \'cry el e an Run :. 546-9627aft5 l"Jdii!ls. loaded lmmac. e-chau:.t guides . cam. Cadillac 1975CAMARO reblt eng. s tick shift. gr "ith 5 '>Jk't•d tr.im. & 831 2040 495 4949 perle<'t. SJGSU or ofr ---:\lust !'>t·e ~ l O\lo nr 8:!195 c~ 11 nd er~. bearings. nd 548 0024 675 4194 l' hr o m l' w he c I :. -• • 631·21~!1 iO \'W Bug. Sunrf. mags, 359-1602 crank hne bo.ird ~ VS. aundlomatic , ftacl<;>rY co · · : · 1WP:\l25i 1 Rolls Royce 9756 . , --. XJnt shape Offer " t.>xchan~e. $100 de air co . pwr. s eerang 1971 CHEVY SADDLEIACK ••••••••••••••••••••••• 74 CorollJ \\agon Ne~ -1!1669S4orS59-3!131 '66 \'W Jo~abtbuck . lo" pc>!>il.6i~5 ti & brakes. radio, heater, MONTE CARLO "l DEALER IN U.S.A. radial lire-. lul( rack. ---------mileage, S700 vinyl roof. tinted ~lasl>, VALLEY IMPORTS wry lo male:.. ~050,ofr. ti6 \'W reblt 1500. new ~5·1534 • 111 Rl'G lo ma. \cry cln. • w1s/w tires & ~heel CO\•-V8, automatic, ractory 831-2040 495.4949 ROY 892-0992 trans. manv xtra:.. S850 ---Huns gd ~1150 ers. (13257 >. air cond .• pwr. steering JRR CARVER --or offtir. 559:4634 '67 VW Squareback SSl· 1752 $4199 & brakes. radio. heater, llf7091-I. 68.UOO m1. 35mpl-(. Radials. FM. S3. ltl0 firm. 194·2130 --Good condition ""'~ tinted gt.ass; vmyt roof. ROllS·ROVCE Qid1llacs to Go Carts ·ro \'W Bug. Clean. Fan· S700. t>-15-241:! Volvo 9772 OrarteJe County's PHIL' LONG FO,ui wis/w tires w /wheell·ov· IS40J•mborn Whatever the Fad tasllc cond. SlOOO Cash -----•••••••••••••••••••n•• Seville Center S.O. f'rwy.-lrvinc ers. (8400VSI iwwpcwt Butt• Roll 'em off the market only 751 495611n SP:\t ·oo \'W Pop Top Cmpr 768·5888 51999 Scllthingsfo-;t"1th0~11ly l'-----'~ , W1thaCla!tsiric:dAd -----Sli50. 1972VOLVO • £'1lot Want Mis CLOSED SUNDAYS Call Now! 642 567S '68 VW. r••blt l'arh, runs _&12-8907 _i 59 5807 p 1800 COUPE 1976 SEVILLES '69 CAMARO 307. lo mi, PHIL LOHG FORD - ---... -greatSHJOO 14ToChoose Froml PS, PB. air. new trans, S.D Frwy.-lrvine Autos.Hew 910uAutos,Hew 9100Aattos,New 9100 C:..11963 -613.J Autos,Hew 9100 I !'>PL'l'" w O\'t•rdrl\e, Full power, fodory ;iir goodcondS13S0.540·3566 768-5888 ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• -••••••••••••••••••••••• AM F:\I i.tl!reo Th as t•ond .. cloth or leather an· -•------- h.ircl 10 tmd 'portM·ar 1 ~ lcriori.. i.ome wat h ·m Camaro, VS. AMlf'M. '76 Caprit~ classic sport ammuL·ulall' lhruout. cab r i 0 I et t 0 p s. new r t:ar end . brks. \'-S. 5 yr:S0.000 mt warr. 131111-:1'\'l Will sell th1:. IQ.tS25.i6 i Sale Prieed S13SO Art 7. 197 -3785 exccll. cond. 17,000 mt, ·. .. Clyde Johnson ... President Dick Johnson ... Vice President THIS JUST COULD BE THE BEST TIME EVER TO BUY A LUXURY USED CAR ... WE HAVE AN OUTSTANDING SELECTION OF 9UALITY LUXURY CARS IN STOCK AT JOHNSON & SON! -A FEW OF OUR LUXURY SPECIALS - 1976 LINCOLN I Dr Town ~ C'oppt•r m .. 1.ilh• paclcl<>cl '1n \'I rool ll'.1lh• r interior 111wr.1 ~tnd014 tn.1cl1'<I with l'\tra ... full fl014t'r & ,11r cond of c·our'l' 'we.• 11 no"' l.11 118!1K'W7. 58795 1975 IUICK R1 v1rra :! nr II T Low milt•' mc<tium brown with wh1k 'mvl roor. fuJI power. '>tt'rt'O. 01r c.•onrl A i;rcat pcrsonul c·ar I.It• #l79PHK s5995 1972 MARK IV This Black Beauty I loaded with extras. f"ull power. air rond stereo. and much much mori' Priced to sell lh111 week I.tr #395TZP 1973 T·llRD Gold with black vinyl roof. P 8 . P.S. & P . windows, air cond . 5tereo rad.lo. a real nice car. test drive it today. a sure winner Lie. '493GOO 53895 1973 IUICK R 1v 1 <'rd \' 8 .1 u to l r .in' f:al'lon aar rond1t1onm1? po'l'c•r -tP1•nn11 powl'r brake' J)O\H'r .,., tndow' f>O" er '''llb \ \1 F\t ''''n 'o radio h1·<1t•·r wh1ll"•'i1ll tin'' \IO\I roof tanterl ilia.,, .,., h,·l'I 1'0H·r .. 1 ·n11,1•1·ontrol 1111 \lohl't'I F:xlr.1 1111· .. c·ar'' h r ,,-•::!i'>llBB 52795 1973 MEICUIY :'trlarq BrJth t Or ~ Slunnm~ wh1 t t• e'<terior with brown intE'r1or & vinyl roof. comfort lounge rrt -.eats and load'I of factory extras . A great family car Lie #061 53395 1973 UMCOLH Cpe Oulstanding black fmash, w1lh malchmg leather lnlenor & black vtnyl sun roof Full power aar cond and more Very rew of these around . 'lee it today Lie 1'999JDY 54295 1975 MARK IV Turquoise. with radded vinyl roof. stereo. ful power. air cond .. and mor~. Test drive this today. Uc. fH29MX I. s7995 ·CLOSED MEMORIAL DAY 1975 LINCOLN <'P<' nus red beauty • .., a rE'nl bargain. leather interior. white vinyl roof. full power. air cond - all the factory '>landard e'<tra.-. vou like lo have on this end t>f the month Special L1 r #882LWP $6695 1973 MERCURY Marqub. 4 dr. white with brown interior & matching vmyl roof. loadi. of l uxury equipment including comfort loungl! frt 'lcnts. air cond. & much much more. A real Holiday Special l.ic #061GLV 1974 MERCURY Marquis . MebJlic brown with medium beige cloth interior. fuJI power. air cond ., comfort lounge (rt <ie3L'i and a hol>t of factorv optioM Lie. #823PIC 53895 1974 LIMCOLN 4 Dr Sedan. White with brown leather interior and white vinyl roof, full Power aQd air cood Re al luxury at a s mall price Lie:. t44TKEM. s4995 OrancJe County•s Oldest Uncoln-Mercury Dealership W..-SerYlce Leming dOllNSON I SON l 1\lQ l ~ "• ' ~ . . .. . .. 2626 Harbor Blvd. Used C• Dept. 556-0520 \\t:Ckl'nt.I at trom C""-• -•-t 9920 car has C\'erythang Co:.t OHL Y $4595 9 _. rVK new $8400 incl tx lie. wall MARQUIS VOLVO $89 5 ••••••••••••••••••••••• sacnfire for S6iSO. Call \l ISSIO!'\ VIEJO • '65 Cona1r coupe 95. Run!. 893-~00 aft 7 pm 831 -2880 495-1210 1975 CADILLAC good s>.7~96·4617 COUPE DEVILLES 10 To Choose From I ORANGE COUNTY Full power & fat·tory Jar VOLVO t·ondtt1omn~ <~ilil:\IWZ l i-;x c t.l SJ\'EL y \'Ot.\ 0 Sale Pm ·ed from L.ar~t''>l \'oh o Dt•;ill·r 111 <lr.111g1• Count ~ ' 11 l \' or u : \.') E l>IHEl-f ~~~ 2025 S Manchester Anaheim 750-2011 'i:I \oho 11;11·: \:'II F:\1 1·.i •--1·\11 · \ (' l1 .. 11twr . "llllrl "h•11111111111 rond \Ith! ..,,•II .,;j~fi,1 •II ufl \\'Ill I.ti.<' 11.llh I.II Ill 11 .1ol1· 1,:11 :! I l'I Autos, Used .................•..... Gen~rol 990 1 ...........••.••....... :.! lot' I '•tit•· ti5 lmpal.1. ."1 l llu11·I. ~u pN llul h ~00 Bo! h r1111 1; 11 1;,2!1 AMC 9905 .••.................... i>I ll.1m hh•1 'e" p.11nt . gt•n -.hu1·k., uµh11I . rad1.1tor !() I.Hiii •111 rchlt 1·ng ti c·~ I .I ~pc.J SlillO l:'l'' l!li .!!HI\ ;:1 <.rc·mltn '\; l.l•\1 int 1;i1·111g ..,In~·~ racJ1.il-. '>1'101 5 IX :110R l!li., \\IC I' \\f-;R Im' m1lt>.1J.!t' S2b4>0 h-IO K:1118 ill ,l<Jvl'lm SST .\ar ne\\ tare•., (;ood 1·011rl Ill out ::,llli."l l!l:I Uill!I lklick 9910 •.••..••............... 1974 BUICk RIVIERA $6595 • 1974 CADILLAC COUPE DEVILLE Full po\\l'r . faetory air u rn d . C ;,i b ri o I t:l t op . tiO ~o l"H .si:at. .\:'It F:\l ..,ll'l't'OW l<iJX' 1867.JSFl. $5795 • 1974 CADILLAC SEDAN DEVILLE Full l>O\\er. f;1t·tory air t·ond . lt•;ll hl·r rnll'nur. .\:'II F:\I i.lt·r1·0 tilt "hl•t•I & '1r1 \I top ll~l.JHI I $5595 • 1973 CADILLAC COUPE DEVILLES c 11 To Choose f''rom 1 F\J II f'°"' t'r. fart ory a 1 r c-c111dll 1onini.: 1117!11 ID .. ;> Sale Pnred from $4195 197 3 CADILLAC SEDAN DEVILLE Only :12.991 :\Jiles f''ull power. faetory air t·ond . \'.\I FM ~tc.•rl'o. tilt \\ht•L•I & \ 111yl lop fl81JHDI $3995 • 1972 CADILLAC COUPE DEVILLE Full po1Aer. factory air cone!. \'lnyl top & \:\I F:\I stereo w itap{' ctit>irZJI $3295 O\'ER150 QCALITYCA RS TO SELECT FRmt OPEMSUMDAY Nabers Cadillac 26UO H.1rhor Blvt.1 \'H. ou1omut11'. I .lrt11ry Lost.i Mes.i 540·9 I 00 uar cnn<I , pwr. :-.teer1ng ~~~~~~~~~ & hrakt·-.. ~tc•rco radto. :.- h<'~llc.•r. 'anvl rool. tinted gl....,:. w·:. w tires . lfH:.!KL 1 $2999 PHIL LO~G FORD S.U Frwy.-lrvme 768·5888 '72 R1 viHa. loaded . l m\nt•r 'Cini cond. S2500 PP 640-1277aft6P:\I 1973 IUICI< ESTATE WAGON CodHlac Sevllles Ten lo choose. All fully loaded·4 with s hadow finish. (3192). SALE PRICED THRUMAY ALLEN Olds/Cadill3c>lGMC S.D. Frwy.·A\'ery E'<it LAG UNA NIGUEL CALL 495·6430 \'8, automatic . factor~ '72 Eldo Dlue-beuut mr c·ond pwr '>ll?l'ring cond \II power at· & brakt''· ~t~reo rudao. cessones S3800 962.0505 P"-r \\.tndnw' & '-iCJb,. ------- ht•atN. tintt'rl gta).s. C~DJLLt\C. )I.Int selct· , tn\ 1 antcnnr \\ .., w t1on. S93u. dcl. $7.910. ltrt;~ w wheel ' r o' t'rs total payment + T & L. 1 U!911SX l • 77 C~ ... Vllte $2699 $195. Mo. 38 Mo. CEL PHIL LOHG FORD Fully equipped. No re· saler&$k. lnstock now . S. 0 . Frwy .-Irvine 768-5188 '76 Bwck Regal. Cream GENERAl. AJITOLEASJNG Since 1959 (213)869·2007 ext. velour int. All '60 COUPE DE VILLE goodies. Perfect cond. Gd. Ure. reliable '78 $5600 lncld'g Tax & lie. tap. $329.'548-.8673 ' M7·9347 ---------1"13Cad, rare. l)'~legance '76 Buick Centur) V-6 Vin l<tras +. Must aeel Blue top, a cond. stereo Like \elour Int PP. 828·9070 new. Lo ma's. S36·73l3. ----'O Cpe de \'le, White, blk. '71 Bui~ Regar .Xln\ v nl.. blk ltbr Int. CC>nd. Only "M mt. All Beautiful. l ownr. power Csll S.8·0129 Loaded. Barpln SUOO. befo~ 0 pm 892·2651 an 548·1229 6 wknds -------'---• '5S0V, full powe.r, ·111, Rhltrca. vinyl l<'P. mushelU18S. executive driven. full 752-8019 pwr. fully cqu1pptd, --------"~"'- 1toreo deck . ntw Mlche1Jen1, "'lnl cond. 53000 549 8828 dnyt, &M 0483cvc ·~ Impala -4dr ;\u pnt & tare!. Gd cond. S895 ofr. P\1 Ptr need:. rca:.onable 673-951.i transportation t·ar bet ------- l-'n 893·379-1 1975 CHEVY '71 NO\'A llalr hbatk JUlOO m1 . .Xlnt t ran .... hke nc" S2SOO Ph S l!J 2:!~ 3 ·~ Knr;s.,.,d \\'gn aulo. air. P S. 65:\1 . Xlnt cond. ro<JS it;R IU 00 'ti\) lmp.tl.1. 2dr. auto. Hun:. good f!l.·~t offer S.16 40!>3 aft. 5 · 30 rn Clli':VELLE :\lalihu 330. x lnl eond. $1500 MONTE CARLO \'8, automat1t'. factory air t•ond .. pwr. steering & braki:s. stereo radio. ht>ater, \'anyl roof, llnlt>d glass . " s .w tares \\'wheel CO\'l'r s . (186:\IPRJ. $4399 PHIL LONG FORD S.D. Frwy.·lr\'ine 768-5888 Farm. tl-15-2322 '76 Camaro LT. A C. A:\I "i'tj Che\'Ctl l' A :\I ' ... :\1 :\lust ..,t•ll tmmed1atcly. WMI h:.t t>fr Ph s;:;.1999 ·;5 \\•J.!J GT. :\lust sell. S2300 or bc:.t 6-14 2038 F:\I tape dcl·k. Pwr win· dO\\!>, brk::.. slct>rin~. tit whl. 9000 + ma Xlnt cond. S6300 bst ofr &12·2862 t'\'CS & wknc1 s Find what you want in Daily Pilot Class1f1c:d:. A CONVENIENT SHOPPING ANO S£WINC CVIO£ FOR THE CAL ON THE GO Higft.Scoring ! 1..1~~-r 9480 e.1a "" 1fT M i-1lf MT- SCOAC al tennis i nd sum11111 tun alld IMllS 111 this CllS9 one p!ece $hOl1 1ump. l:ontmt rd rKk ci•ty .ccents the to0 and WTIP Slllt't effect. Send now! P1111ted Pattern 9489: Mims' Sizes 8. 10 12, 14. 16. 18. S11t 12 (bust 34) OM<O«t 1ump 2 l/8 yardi 4S·tncl1. Send S 1.25 tor eteh pattern. Add 35c for each pattein for ll1$1-class aim111I, handli111. s-4 tt: Pifk)w Twins! ltt dauahter hef~-1t's Mh fun to malle doll pillows! Oecerate den btdltOlll. ctnld's room with doll-lace oa1 lows Very •sy lo embfoldtr, 19 phque. Perled l0t bmlrll Pit· tern 7140 translei pett~ Plflm. pillows about lblS"r Sl.~ tor uch patt•11 Add JS4 each pattern tor lint-elm a11Cna1I and handhna leM tt: ' .......... Ulect ....._ UM41 ......_ UM4 AMtM ,Ut-4- ~~····················· ................................................. . ····•••!••········· .. ~ 9925 Ford 9940 MIRury 9950 Mm .... 9952 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••• ••••••••••••••••••• '75 Confoba. r~l pwr, 14K ~ 1975 MERCURY 'M HA . / ml. xlnt. cond. Must l>ell. PHIL .. IOICAT" , S5.150./otr54S-Ol93 LONG VILLAGElt WAGOM ~ "•75 Cordoba. Fully FORD V6. automatic, radio, '7l F RDTOP V .g auto, very cln. Valve job. trade? 494·2130 • equipped. leather intr. I healer, pwr. s teer101i:. 1 t stbck. Auto, A/C P /S mi. Pvt. ply 552·8080 luggage rack & only ~ disc brks, pos tk. 752 8300 22,000 males Runs great-1 __ 631·1531 '00 Chrysler 300 lull pwr. air, AM/FM. new tires. Sf!JXl/olr. ~-03S2 looks great' <618NXN >. '75 ONLY $3595 302. MAR9UIS TOY OT A A C Mustang II Ghia V8, Auto, PS/PB, Vinyl roof. AM/FM '73 TC wagon. 54,000 mi, speed control, P /S, P /B, P /W, P /dr lks, P /sut tilt-telescope wheel, C MISSION VIEJO ~ter L ........ .._ ... $.-OY-tieltff••t' 8 d ..... --c-, .. _ 831-2110495-1210 ~1 -5294 eo, custom tnlr. New 111 I a. S3tlOO. Pb 1975 FORD--Mustang 9952 • V GRAMADA 4 DOOll ••••••• ••••• •• • •• •• • • • • ~ II - -8, au-. radio, S1200. • set. Heat & air, roof rack ... $29:50. 548-1557 Ot' 646-2371 Comtt 9927 '-•······················ '73 Mercury C6ftwt 4 Door. Automatic with rudio. A CLEAN car! <3J3JSJ). PRICED TO SELL llLL YA.TES VS, automatic, factory aar cood .• pwr. steerin1 & brakes, radio, heater, hnted glass, w /s/w tires w /whee l cove r s . t537RJW>. $3599 PHIL LONG FORD SD. Frwy.-lrv1ne 768-5888 ----- 1970 FORD SS~ MUSTANG . 9-5, 168·1491, aft. S, 2278 Automatic trans. & new paint. C828BQH>. Special at only $1599 Town. & Country Auto Sales & Leal>tn~ 2167 Harbor Blvd COSTA :\-J F.S,\ 646-4446 uto 289. 57.000 orig '66 A mi. Sll!OO 2 ownrs. Xlnt cond. . 831-1548 Olds mobile 9955 ••••• '72 0 oond days •••••••••••••••••• Ids Toronado. Xlnt . $2500. Call 540..9650 . 645·7297 eves. '72 0 Ids Stn W~n. 9 pass. VW.PORSCHE '67 Ford Mul>tang. xlnt San Juan Capistrano cond 289. low ma, cln, nu '66 Mustang. good cond, cos 837-4800493-4511 paint.346-4394 PS, PB, AC, eng over-w,x t cruiser. Loaded tras. $1995. &t2·3203 _______ 9_9_3_0_.'_00_W_g_n_. -Los--t-j-ob-.-s-r-or_c_e_s, hauled ~200 644· 762.!_ _ '00 0 Ids 98. 4 dr, air, PS. 6 way p~ r l>eal. SS95. ••••••••••••••••••••••• sale of car just made re-'70 Mach 1. Dark lvy PB '72 Uncoln Cont Mk JV. ady for my cross country green. VS. P JS, P /B, 962·S 161. Loaded, com·ourse tond. trip. 390 VS, A/r, P /S, A/r, On~ cond. :\lt:ST A.to s,Mew P /D/B A /c 63k m SELL' I t>-15·0518 serious inquires only, • • 1. 9100 Sl400 /ofr.552·3437 or Sl,OOO/ofr.536-2646 &W·U20. pp 1976 FORD LTD 1974 MK IV . Will t ake COUPE. VS, automatic, trade for trans. car. Exe. factory aa r cond., pwr con<L Gene. 548-l!J.i steenng & brakes, stereo C _... 9932 radio, heater, trnte d orv"""'e g I a s s . w I s I w t i r c s ••••••••••••••••••••••• w /wheel covers, cruise CORVETTES ~~~~)~ t ilt wheel. CHOICE OF 17 1961THRU1977 -I speeds & Automatics O~County's Lar9Ht & Finest Selection EZ FINANCING WE Ll-:ASE CORVETTES HOWARD Chevrolet Dove & Qua al Streets NEWPOHT BEACH 833-0555 Open Memorial Day Monda y 10 to 5 •Corvette 77 $4999 PHIL LONG FORD S.D. Frv.y.-lrvm~ 768-5888 I Spd, low miles. tall. S D. Frwy.-lrvanc t.q>e. Runs super! 768-5888 GE:-.:t-:HAL Avi'O Ll':ASI:'-:G .. i6 Granada Gh1J Cpc. :-.anee t9S9 <213!!!6!1 2007 air, pwr sc.-at, PS. AT. V *c _......._ ,77 top, FM-s tereo. tmmac. OrYCTTC PP. S.'600. 979·8795 ~lfiS. mo. 38 Mo's. CEL.1--------- \\lth option lo buy. S6.270. Pvt. Pty nC'l'dS rcasonahlf! lot;al payments + T & L. tran..,portalaon t·ar bcf ~-del. Fri. 893 379-t -..... •••••••••••••••••• I Alltot,UM4 ..._. UHd Fftder. Mar 21, 1tn OAA.Y Pit.OT aJS •••••••••••••••••••••• °'* .... 9915 • ;;;;;•••••••••-•!;;;•; ..._UMCI ..... U..4 ........... ·~;· .. ······················· ............................................ .. • •••••••••••••••••••••• '78 Olds Omeaa Brou&hm. Landau t.op, air, tilt whl, Pvt ply. Below bk. 49' 7865 '71 Custom Cruiser Wan. 9 pass, lo mi, orig ownr, S2.000. 548-751S Pinto 9957 ••••••••••••••••••••••• '74 2300cc Runabout, dhc, radial, 4-spd, 45 K. S2200 C-111 545-5974 ---- '73 Panto wgn. Gd cond. Sl800 or bst ofr. 834-0511 dys, 531·8851 e\'es - '72. Auto, A 1C, new brkl> Gd tires. Xlnt. 48,000 ma. S1500. 549·3139 ----- '73 Squi~ Sta. w~n Sl995. Xlnt cond. 645·7950 days, 675-40U eves '72 Runabout. Super sharp. Low m1. Auto trans, See this o ne. 644·00>3 74 Panto Wgn, xlnt cond. :\11 r1 I Van. too many xtras to last. S2800. 559-4649 Autos, Mew 9100 ••••••••••••••••••••••• • .................... ~ 9960 Poftffoc 9965 n-L-... 4 "71 '72 Squire Wa1on. Atr. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ............ ••••••••••• alrcond.,.t1001.,~,, '75 Plym o uth Dui;tcr, "16FtroblrdFonnul.a.xln1 -n>T·BIR1>. tomi.toaded. .. .,.,.""" Auto. Air. P /S, P /B. cond. all power, SS,000 xJntc:codS1950.&M~ ..._..., 996 $2475. PrivMte Party Firm.549-0909 SZOJasmi.De. CdM • .,..._'" 0 962-261 \an er Spm. __;.__. ••••••••••••• • •••••• • •• '74 Grand Prix, like nu. Lo 'a VW Bus. Good ~ '75 PLY!\lOUTH Cu'>tom oontiac 9965 mi, full power. windows, R.blt eng. $850. "'· ..-trunk release. air !\isl Call 642-8802 rury ~-pas:.cnger wagon ••••••••••••••••••••••• only $1,995. Low blul' 1973 PONTI.AC sell; ~111 talk pnce. IT·Blrd '69 Jdr wb1te book on this vehicle i:. 645-1602 or 534·529'1 coupe. 5&,000 ml, 2~d S3.100. A good clean car CATALINA Be tif l coad but It has 71,000 males on Automatic, pwr. steer· 6S Ponllac Station Wgn, owner. ao u · at. See in Daily Pa lot Ing, factory air cond., all xlras. xlnl cond. Makeo((er. P.P. 4'7~7 parking lot at 330 West radto, heater. vm>-l top, SlOOO. 642•1634 V991 9974 Bay Street, Costa .Mesa, w Is I w lire s. e t. c. 1974 Lux. Le Mans. Xlnt ••••••••••••••••••••••• or call 642-4321 for more l743HDD>. cond. White, maroon top. YIGA ?6 information Ask ror $2295 1 owner, pvt. ply.~. HATCHIACIC GT Rack or <hear in fleet ~1141evea DEMO. 5 speed trans .. garage. ThundtriNrd 9970 a i r c on d • , e t c . '54 Plymouth two tone. 6 Nabers ••••••••••••••••••••••• (6505/3$32). cyl, overdrivt', :dnt cond I 976 FORD T-Blrd ONLY $3495 $950/bst orr. 645·5315 Cadillac HOWARD Che ...... -----Special Edition '68 Satellite, nu tires. pnl. VS. automatic, factory Dove & Quail Sts. uphols. Runs xlnt S1200. :?600 Harbor Blvd. alr cond .. full power. NEWPORT BEACH S51·2699 Cmt.1 McsJ 540-9 100 tape, tintt!d glas'.'., Lan· lll-OSSS 7-1 Duster, auto, AM radio. dau t o p, w/s/w tares '72 Vega Hatchbiact. ~ 2 dr, bench seats, $1000. '75 Farebard, Formula 400, 7~~~ 1 c () v er s · eng, s U belted n4W.S. 640-MJ.3. stereo, air, wht/wht. PS, 57999 runs great. 5Ul •u. -PB, auto trans. xlnt $1200/bstoCr. •-876 972 Plymouth Satellite cond. lo mi, must sell. PHIL LONG FORD Sebring Plus. $1900. 675-7674 d:iys, 6-10·5242. S.D.Frwy.·lrvme 7lC9'evV .. oW,. 551 ·~97 eve. 761-5888 $1395/o{r ~ Autos. Mew 9100 Autos. New 9800 Alltos. Mew 9IOO ....._ Mew telO ••••••••••••••••••••••• ....................... ••••••••••••••••••••••• ............... 1111 • Every Nerr Car, Trucfc & Used Car in Our Inventory Reduced Hundreds of Dollars GENERAL ·~~i· I I AUTO L EASING "" ·air anl'. run~ x nt. 352 Sance 19.59 (213)869·2007 t>ng. P S. "100, ofr. Aft · 5pm, 548 35.'il BRAND NEW 977 FORD F-150 BRAND NEW '77 FORD 150 •73 Vette. :1''111 pwr & air. 2 sets of T·tops, 1 transparent set. • Huns perfe<'t. like new. ~ms Wall trade. fi45·86t-t or 523·2991 Jo<' Hu par. 'r.1 Corvette. x Int t·nnd 74 LTD Station W~n. xlnt cond. Fully autn. Call S57 ·3986: 545· 7780 ---1970 Ford Tonno wgn . towner !n!J 7208 an 5 1975 FORD TORINO ELITE ·;\fui.t sell thas wknd ? \'8, automatic. raclon S...>%0. /bst ofr. 645·8557 air cond., pwr. steenng & brakes. radio, heater. 'iti Corvette. T-Top, all \an~I roof. tinted i;lass, P" r, loaded, wholesale w /s/w tares w , wheel t:O\' prwc. PP, 552-45_91 __ -1 ers. <~MGT l • Cougar 9933 $4199 ........................ PHIL LOMG FORD S.D. F'rwy .·lrvtnt! 768-5818 I 97 6 COUGAR Xll 7 · \K autom,1l1t'. factory 111r C'Ond., 1mr. '>leering -.. -... --1 1 & brakes. "ll•r1•0 r::idio. •~· ,-,purt t "111~ h .n · o~ l'tl.'.iler, Land.111 top, tant '.111 _1\ ~ Lu1al Ll11'. \P t•1I .:lass, '' .., w 1 In'~ ~'> 't.h \\ \\heel CO\'t'I' (f)87ti;j) $4999 PHIL LONG FORD S.D. Frwy .. frvlne 768-5188 1;9 Cougar Con''" t n:i-.slc. good 111\ , • .,, • 'ill Country ~dan "gn Auto. PS, AC. runs ~tl S7S0 1bst ofr Ca II u H'!> nr wknd.c;.~7RO ---r.:1 1-·onl 1'';11rlan(' 500 Goocl Cr<\ns . 9111! !lllM A fl er Spm & '4t'ekends. HN·onditloned "-'.ti!I.) ;o Rant·hprn " ,h1·ll t\.H ·4599 \hhl !>1•11 ~ltiOO bsl otr 1974 COUGAR :1:!2·73.'lf, \11, automatic. f:i1·111n ·;s -R .1111-h <'r" GT~ ,11r cond., pwr. sll•f'nni.; llroul(ham ant. full pwr & brakes, radio. h1·.1t1•r. ,,11· stt>rPo. ,11r ,h()ck' 'myl roof. llnte<l gl.1''· 1 rlr hatch & , .. .," cont w ., w tires w /Wh<'l'I tm·· Les-. thon is.Ono m1 H!!t 1·rs & vinyl 1nt1•r1or. orrer 646 0-18Sor957-0il7 l:!l8RYNL -. ----..::_ $3799 1973 FORD PHIL LONG FORD GAUXIE 500 S.D. Frwy,.Jrvim• 0 ~I u x c 2 Do o r. 768-5118 ,\utomatac, pwr. steenng 1973COUGAR \'8, automatic, pwr . -.tc<'rfn1 & br,1kes, radio. ht•aler. t inted g lass. ,·myl roof. tilt whl•el. '' s w tires w wheel cov· l'rs CMFW311 L $2999 PHIL LONG FORD S.D. Frwy.-lrvine 768·5888 & brakes. radto, heater. vinyl top, air ('on<I . l'll' (463111'1>1 $2195 Nabers Cadillac 2600 H.1rh111 Blvd. Co~l.1 Ml''•' 5·10 11100 DodcJt 9935 '66 Cntn· Sdn . ·oo <.:h~\' ••••••••••••••••••••••• Needs some work. :\1uch '75 Charaer SE. 31M. air. new on bolh. 830-1897 full pwr, AM /FM B T, --------~nrf, crae. vinyl top, '72 Torino Wgo. Auto. PS, $4400. ~0097 or 524-8939 PB, air, rack. Sacrifice. --------~ SSM818. 'f>t & '65 DARTS. Bol h run --,-------gd. SM9. each. io FMi Ltd entry Squire. 548~ Xlnt cond. A /C, P /S, ---------t P /B, R /H.19SO. 8'2·2838 '72 Charier, 2-dr, auto,-.-------- pwr, alr, fd cond. Below Mercury 9950 Blue Book, 8'5·13619 ••••••••••••••••••••••• '72 Dode• Demoa. Auto,,_ ______ _ PS. PB.AC.cleall. ''" MaCUllY 800. 846-7651 GRAND MARQUIS Ford 9940 SEDAN. Full factory , .. •••••••••••••••••••• e quipme nt lncludinll '70 f''ord CUSTOM Six. _.uto Trans. PS. xlnt cond nu lirea. $795. 840..2666. 1966 FORD LTD VI. automaUc. factory air cond .• pwr. ateerint & wtndowt, radlo, ~Nlltl', W/l /W tlroa • wheel covers. <RIS75$). ' S799 'HIL LOM'5 POID iii! S.Q. Frwy.·Irvine I 7il-Slll \ quad tape1 cruise con· trot. Finlaned ln sUver w /matchlna leather In· terfor & vin y l t o p . Showroom condlUon ! (WRSP>. All for OMLY$6995 MAIOUlSYOLVO Ml~IONVIEJO 111·2 .. 0 491-1210 ,. GrMid Marquis. Silver VI /bhl vi4Jl top. l.J,500 mt P /P. tsl95. 833· 1559 l 6 cyli"der, sto"dard transmlnlon, tl"ted wind\hle4d, gauges, extro cooflrtg, rear 1tep bumpef, spore tire , much more. C*· FI 5t. RY6n89) (St\ . .4997) BRAND NEW '77 FORD F-250 Netted vinyl _., 90U9ti, outomotic tronsrninion, power stMrirlg, mffTon, rodio, linltd wind$11itld, talro cooling, spore wheel, much more. (Ser. "258RY66961) (Stti. 502~) 1978 PINTO 1976 GRAN TORINO Auiomcttic: transmluion, rodio. Air conditioning, power steering, power {985NCH) (Stk. P1392) brakes, vfnyt top. (-'64NLD) (Stk. 228) $2699 s4199 1973 FORD LTD 1976 MAVERICK ,.. --., '-tory ... ,_.,,, ~. ~ btobt, 2-0oor, ovlonlatlc transmission~ oif conditioning, AM ..... w1,. -... vl11yt rool, -• ..._.,, •le. (2HGVAj powtt ltllring, powtr broktt. ( 4 I NQN) s2499 1~U.1'01} s3199 1974 CHm WASON 1974 GRAN TORINO 9~, loaded lncludi~ tilt wh"I. (265Kff) (Sttc. p. J' 3) fully equlpF*f ln<ludlng olr conditioning & power 1~ng. (926lAB) s3299 s2aso 1970 IERC. COUSAR 1974PINTO ' Air ~ ovtOf'ltotlc tr~, vinyl "' tpMd tronsm{"*'• cl.on _,., low ~ ........... (131AKT) ($& P.121)1 ........ (967 JS!) (Stk. p.' 31 •) 51899 s1899 SUPH CAI. 2-toae point, '00 Ronget, outo. transmis1ion, trodton lock, power ftering, heoyY duty tow pockoge, dual IJClt tar.It and """*' l'llOIW. (Ser. XI 5SK0880U) ($& 82711 BRAND BW '77. FORD F-100 , •. f w .. • · It 7" whffl baH, Acnside, VS, cu.tom decor, 1974 MUSTANG 6 cylinder engine, oir conditioning, power brakes. (271 NII) (Sttc. P-1338) ~2899 1975 MAVERICK gouges, powtr dMrtng, power broh1, slldi"9 -..indow I radio, afro c:oolftg, ,., a.,..._ ' /llOf9. (Ser. FIOIGRV0.49-'0) ($& 8312) 1976 MAVERICK "·Door, air conditioning, outornotlc tronsmlsslon, low mll.oge. (620PIV) (Sttc. P-1374) s3199 1975 MONTE CARLO Manual tronsml1•, air conditioning, rotty. A1t CIOl'ldiHonllig, pcrww.......,,, ..... ~ ~ wheels, super dton. (9°"9REL) (Stk. 421 A) top, deort -• bell. (699\HP) (S4k. P-1 '35) s2299 S!699 1972 TORINO WAGON 1974 FORD BRONCO Air condlttonlng, ~ atwfng, 4xA. A-I condition. outomot1c trarumluion. (.598GNP) (Ser. U1SGl.TIM113) (Stk. P-1'1 ll s1&99 s4299 1975 PINTO WAGON 1972 IOllTE CARLO I 7 17 ~·· __ .............. --.. OPEN MEMORIAL DAY -1974 OLDS CUTLASS 1974 MADA U-4 V·8. automatic. air cond1ti0n1ng, oower steenng. Automlllic air cond1ttor11ng. AM/!=M stereo rW!io oower btaket. radio. neater. wMewall tires tilt w/c:assette heater. rot~ engine. white sidewall 1974 CHIVY MAUIU CLASSIC V-8. automatic. air conditioning, pawer steering. oower brakes. radio, heater. whitewall tires (718KSO) wheel cruise control Lie No 333KFH tires. mags Ltcente 880REA '2395 '3195 1975 PLYMOUTH RllY V-8. automatic, air cond1tion1ng. power steenng. oower brll<es. radio. heater. whitewall tires. vinyl roof (101LPCl 93195 1971 DOD&E POI.ARA V-8. autonwttC. air conditioning. PoWet steerino. p()Wet' bnk ... r.cSlo. heater. whitewall t1rM. (017000) '2295 1972 PLYMOUTH RJIY 1976 CHRYSLB V-8, automatic. air conditioning. power steering. MIWPORT poW9f brakes. radio, heater. whitewall tires. vinyl V-8. automatic. air conditioning. power steering, roof. (128GJC) POW« brakes. pawer windows, AM/FM radio, •1495 t:~EB.~•iiii' Lie. No 1976 CHIYSLll 76 DODH ASPIM COUOIACOWl Y-8 .... __....., ........ , t--' s cyfrndlr, eutomltlc, • conditioning, POW9r ... r ""'""1 ~· no. power s _.,ng, power sttering. power tnkes. fldio t1eet wttltewal brues. power windows. AM l'ldlo. heater. vlnyt tires vinyl root. lie. No. 191 Pciv er, I top, eutomatte. Uc. No. 6T2f>tN. ' · •4995 •3315 AU CAIS AU SUIJICT TO PllOI WI. ALL PllCIS All Y AUD UMTIL I 0 P.M. ALL PllCU All PLUS TAX AHO UCIMSI. SAU MS l-zt..77. " ' INTERNATIONAL TRUCKS BRAND NEW I 977 1NTERNA TIONAL SCOUT TERRA PICK-UP BRAND NEW I 977 INTERNATIONAL scour 11 4 WHEEL DRIVE 7 17 .. D11ntington Bea~h Fot•ntain Valley EDITION VOL. 70, NO. 147, 4 SECTIONS, "4 PAGES •• Afteraeon N.Y.Stoeks Huntington Teach~:r; Pact Drl}ws F~~· By ROBERT BARKER ~ A bitter dispute between two Huntington Beach City (elemen- tary) School District trustees over a new teachers contract bas splashed over into other areas of the city. Employment Relations Board ~ (EER'B). He said he wanta 19.Jind out lL lhe negotla~ns were conducted cir.cumvmted by Garland She said that Garland bad taken it upon himself to initiate changes and had discussed mat- . ters with thf\t teacher represen- tative on a personal basjs. and a roepiber ol the California • Teachers Association <CTA>. emphatically denied favoring the teachers. Steve Schumacher, a member of the HOME Council and the parent of a child in a district school. wanns to go a couple or steps farther. legally1andin good faith. .. VANOUt MOL.EN Mark Porter. president of the HOME Council. said Thursday his group will call for a study Qf the contract by an impartial agency such as the Educational Schumacher says he would like the contract set aside for a re- view and he wants board Presi- dent Brian Garland to step down pending results or an investiga- tion. The eontract, which gives teachers a 6.7 percent salary fn. crease as well as other ben«int.s, touched off fireworks be~ Garland arad Trustee Nerfna Vander Moten wbeJa seltlenient was reached May 17. Mrs. Vander Molen. said th•t her position as the board's negotiati~ representative wa& She said Garland's position on the board is clearly a conflict of interest "and that his action clearly indicates his allegiance to. the teachers wbo endorsed him.'' Garland, a high school teacher .. 1 think the 6. 7 percent in· crease Is fair because there was a smaller increase last year. The teachers realize they won't get this much every year." Garland says that Mrs. Vander Molen's comments were inspired by her "absolute hatred" for <See PACT, Page A.2) GAIU.ANO Grand Jury PrOhes.·Realty 'Deals' 'Bondono Bandit' $134 Taken In HB Robbery Brandishing what was ap- parently a pistol wrapped ln a yellow kerchief. Orange County's bandana bandit struck again Thursday night in Huntington Beach. taking $134 from an ice cream parlor. This time, the trim, petite armed robbery artist who favors a different-colored scarf for t.'vcry holdup, hit a Baskin· Robbins 31 ft'lavors ice cream ~tore during the supper hour. Clerk Chris Marriott was on duty at 5971 Warner Ave., alone HB Ctulet Wins Drug Rap Victory Dru~ charges filed against a Huntington Beach police cadet accused on arrest or taking $5,600 worth of confiscated drugs from his department's crime lab were dropped in court action Thurs- da v . Douglas E . Dunn. 23, a five- ycar employe when he was taken into cuslodv March 4. won the \ 1ctory at a pretrial heanng tn Wes t Orange County Judictal District Court. Judge Ragnar Engebretsen granted a defense motion to sup· press evidence, namely the co· caine police allege they con- ftscated from has homo at. 8342 Munster Drive in Huntington Beach. Narcotics Detail Lt Bruce Young said ~everal days ar terward that a California Bureau or Narcotics Enforcement IBNEl analyl.1s confirmed the whi te powder was cocaine. Judge Engebretsen based his suppression of evidence ruling on the defense's argument that a search warrant allowing police to enter Dunn's home was issued without sufficient information Police Chief Earle Robitaille said today that although charges against Dunn were dropped, he wlll not be re employed by the department as a police cadet. The cadets arc paid employcs who perform various auxiliary work within the department and outside headquarters, while at- tending college in a variety of fields, some law enforcement· related. They are not to be contused with the department-sponsored Police Explorer Scout Post, <See CADET, Page AZ) \ WpShuns Involvement A law entorcement of· ficer for another agency called Huntington Beach police late Thursday plead· ing with them to quell a wild party involving about 100 people who were keep· ine the netghborhood awake. Investigators who later ordered the revelers to quiet down said they asked the policeman lt he wished to slgn a complaint aaainst the dl!turben of the peace. But be declined because he apparenUy dldn•t want. to 1et involved. before the busy after-dinner in· flux of customers picking up dessert, when the young woman walked up to the counter, police said. "What can I do for you?" Mar- riott asked the woman, who wore huge. mirrored, Lolita-style sun- glasses. "You know what you can do for me ... ," she replied, brandishing the apparent weapon swaddled in a yellow kerchief matching the scarf that tied down her brunette hair. ''Pardon me ... ?," the young clerk stammered. "Give me all the money!," she snapped. Detective Dick Nolen said al that point Marriott quickly grabbed a white paper bag from beneath the counter and stuffed it with bills. He said the bandana bandit re- fu sed to take any silver com change. Two stunned customers stood by during the holdup. after which the young woman scurried out the door or the ice cream parlor which is located in a busy shop- ping center. The victim said she Jumped in - to a waiting car described as a 1974 or '75 domestic sedan. dark blue, dnven by a second. male suspect. A third man sat in the back seat, wearing a pulled-down hat Marriott told Officer Jim Austin the bandana bandit wore a matching blue denim jacket and panuwt outfit and was about five feet . four inches tall, weighing about 110 pounds. "This gal bas been hitting all over the county," Detective Nolen said today. Investigators say s he has robbed small businesses such as hquor stores and markets in at least five Orange County cities over the past few weeks. using the same method or operation. Victims describing the scarved gunwoman indicate to police that s he selects a different color scarf to wear as an accessory before every armed robbery. Witnesses to the Baskin· Robbins ice cream parlor holdup which occurred at 6:30 p.m . were unable to obtain descriptions of her two male partners. 700 Volunteers ... Due Honors in RB Over 700 volunteers in the Hun- tington Beach Union High School District will be honored for their service at a Jtme 2 ceremony at 9:30 a.m. in the conference area or the Huntington Beach Civic Center, 2000 Main St. Vohfnteers have performed services in areas such as tutor- ing, telephoning, chaperoning on field trips and booster club ac· tivities and providing clerical help. Body Discovered SAN FRANCISCO CAP) -The body of a master watchmaker has been found bound and 1as1ed in the bath room of bls apartment·WOTkabop, pol.lee said. The Partially dec:ompoeed body ol James Olsten. 4l, was dltcoverecJ Wednesday by the apartment manace.r who said he w at coacerne(I because Olsten hadn't been 1 n for more than a week. , • D.tllrl'fi.t,...ll!Jr · LONG WNJ-There was a )oag; ton I pf ~t.ntblaft!r .... the 'WM1ial"W\ a winding back up the highway this morn- ing as the wouldbe campers waited for San Onofre State Beach to open for the three ' .~ .. nd. ;-hai;tes Alan Crow, open. He was first in line and said he had been waiting since 4 p.m. Thursday at the facility south of San Clemente. Terrorists Hold Adults . 59 Remain After 105 Dutch CIUldren Freed ASSEN. The Netherlands CAP> Gasps of relief and quiet reu- nions wtth parents m arked the end or four days' captivity for 105 Dutch children held by armed Asian extremists in a village schoolhouse The mass release occurred after half of them came down with a stomach virus. But five South Moluccan separatists contmued to hold four teachers today. including two women, in the school and refused to surrender. At least 55 other hostages remained the captives of seven other separatists <ln a train 15 miles north of the school. The South Moluccans, who want the independence of their Pacific island from Indonesia, have demanded the release of 21 fellow extremists jailed for ter- rorist activities and a jumbo jet to take them to an undisclosed location. "l~ was fascinating to see the reaction of the children," a Red Cross spokesm an said. "Only three of them cried when they saw their parents again.•' He said while many mothers had tears in their eyes or were openly crying, the children were sby for a few awkward moments before breaking into hugs. kisses and "just happy children1s talk." The Red Cross said one little girl's first words were: "Mum· my, I left my coat in the school." One girl said she and her schoolmates were never threatened by the extremists but were restricted in their move- ments and had trouble sleeping on the cold hard floors at night. She said they spent much of the time playing games and watchine television. Ambulances rushed the ailing children to a hospital where 26 were admitted. Another 79 children and' a teacher -also re· leased __, were reunited wlth ramilies under the watchful eye of Dutch psychiatrists . Hospital officials declined to disclose the condition of the ttoseitalized c1>ildren1 but '-'\Con· Ol'a\ed re'ic>~ said they were ~te...,.tbJY well." The childreh bad l>eerl sulf erina from vomit· in( and diarrhea. 'J'Jl•P~ of children return· tng hOl'be ~e told'by the Red Cros.s to give them bot baths and 1etMI them fq bea. The children we'e ~ tot4t Dot to drink or eat tQ<>muc1'9'flrst. w~ televiston said one 12· ~ 1.ear·old asked bls mother for paacalies bUt .,,.., ref u.ecL Diedrich l,ink Denied By GAR\' GRANVILLE Of .... ~·y f'11ot Stiff The Orange County Grand Jury's probe into political cam- paign practices swept out Thurs· day to delve into real estate transactions allegedly involving federal indic!tee Gene Conrad and county Supervisor Ralph D!edrich. But Diedrich's attorney today said the Fullerton supervisor had no part in any or Conrad's real estate deals. ''As a matter of fact,'' Fullerton attorney Michael Rem- ington said, "Ralph referred Conrad to me with a warning that ' I watch my wallet. He (Diedrich) said he didn't want to get in· volved in any way.•• "Unfortunately," Remington added, "I did get involved. And it cost me a (ew bucks." Conrad is the former paid police informer who turned political financier last fall when be dumped more than $53,000 into various campaigns. Early this year, Conrad's ac· tivities and those of the Irvine- based firm he heads, Pension Funds of America, fell under the scrutiny or a federal Grand Jury as well as the county Grand Jury . tn ApriJ, the federal jury in- dicted the burly ex-Chicagoan on seven fraud related charges re- lated to $1.2 million worth or Joan fees for loans allegedly never made. Like Diedrich, Conrad bas de- nied the two were ever joined in business ventures. And Remington today em· (See PROBE, Page AZ> HBTrashmen c,ei Holiday There will be no trash collec- tion in Huntington Beach or Fountain Valley Monday because of the Memorial Day holiday. Officials report that the collec· tion schedule for the rest of the week will be delayed a day, meaning Monday's collection will be made Tuesday and so on through the week. Both city halls wlll be closed Monday. Coast Weather Increasing low cloudi· ness becot't\iqg more ex· tensive tonight and conti· nulnf through mid· momin1 Saturd._y. MosUy sunny from late Saturday · morning through after· , noon. Lowa tonieht SO to ,1, · Highs Saturday e6 to 70. INSIDE TODA'° .t% DAILY PILOT BJ TOii BARLEY Of .. O..,, ......... H /F Orange County Sherlff's of· ftcers are becoming increasin1ly convinced today that the so- called Phantom Rock Thrower who eluded capture arter stab- bing• deputy may be responsible 2TeensHeld Fri~.~y27, 1977 Mo-ped Bftndit ·Sprees Solved The case of the mobile mQ~ters known as the mo-ped bandit.s who specialized in bit and run strong arm robberies of women pedestria ns in Hunt- ington Beach today has been Car Slams Into Horne; 4Injured solved. Detective Dick Nolen said two teenagers, 15 and 16, taken into custody on burglary charges have admitted to the several purse-snatching incidents. Cases including one in which a woman, 73, was knotted down in an alley and another in which a lady leaving a bank Jost her purse and $185, were r eported. Detective Nolen indicated to- day others apparenUy went un· reported to police. He said many citizen tips sup- plied after newspaper coverage of the incidents led him to sus- pect two local youths. hives in the c&Qyon and wbo has Mc>ken into the pro shop at the Green River Golf Course on severll occuioos, they said. Investigators beHeve lhe man con/rooted by Allen may be liv· ing off the land and making bis headquarters in the rough ter- Activities • rain nnr Featherly Reglonal Park and the Green River Golf Course. They believe that bis periodic bouts of rock throwing along the Riverside Freeway may be in· dicative of bis need to vent his frustrations at a civilization that .~ ............ may have drive him to lcneli- nets and exile. The attack on Allen, who is now recovering lrom kn.lf e wounds on hls right arm and neck, has given tbem their .fl.rst real descriplioil oC the rock thrower. The Minion Viejo deputy described him as a abort, bearded black man. dressed in dark clothlnl and wearing what appeared to be Army boots. Allen told his fellow officers that tbe man repeatedly warned him to \eave him alone and em- phuiied his demands by tossing rockS at the deputy whllQ the pair scrapibled throueh brush and scrub at the side of the freeway. Allen said he spotted the rock throyter while be was driving home from duty Wednesday night oo the R1 verslde Freeway. The deputy said the man he described and s ubsequently chased was piling rocks on the center divider of the freeway, apaprently preparing for another session of windshield-shattering attacks on passing cars. Fellow officers rushed Allen to the nearb)' Canyon General Hotpital alter the chase ended with the bunted man slashing the deputy in the neck and arm. Other officers and the Anaheim police helicopter t ook up the pursuit of the suspect in vain. Investigators believe that the rock thrower may be the same man who has set a number of fires in the canyon area in recent years. An eight-month-old infant, two young boys a nd their mother were injured as they slept when an auto crashed into their Westminster home early this morning, police reported. Con.fronted about the recent wave~ purse snatch robberies, the youths, who fit the ban- dits' de.criptions perfecUy, ad- mitted their role, Nolen said. LNG TANKER TO BE DEDICATED IN SEA OF CONTROVERSY OVER SAFETY Ship's Capacity Gives Rise to Concern Over PoHlblllty of Giant Fires A man answering the rock thrower description was hunted for three days in the summer or 1974 while firemen fought a number o( fires deliberately set in t he bone dry Santa Ana moun- tains. Infant Biff Wyatt Yelgnsky re- portedly surrered a fractured skull and was taken to UCI Medical Center in Orange, of- ficials said. Michael Patrick Dykes, 8, un- derwent surgery at West minster Community Hospital for facial injuries. Hospital orticials re- fused information on his condi· ti on this morning. The mother. Deborah Sue Yelgnsky, 25, of 14265 Magnolia St.. and her son. George Donald Dykes. 10, s uffered minor in- juries in the c rash and were re- leased from Westminster Com- munity Hospital this morning, of- ficials said. Police arrested David Hall Grinstead, 22, of 14211 Magnolia St., Westminster, for allegedly being under the influence or a lcohol when his auto crashed in· to the side of the house at about l :lOa.m. Police said Grinstead 's sedan continued through the house and s mashed into the bedrooms where the victims were sleeping. Grinstead was booked into the jail ward at UCI Medical Center, police said. Haldeman Plans Expose LOS ANGELES <AP) Those who enjoyed the published and televised inside stories of Watergate by John Dean, Jeb Magruder, Charles Colson and Richard Nixon have a new treat in store th's fall -Watergate "with the glov4's off and no bolds barred" by H.R. Haldeman. Haldeman called a news con- ference on his front lawn Thurs· day to say he 1s dissatisfied with Nixon's televised explanatioo of t)le Watergate cover-up and has a 6ook roming out to outline his version. Nixon's former top White House aide said the television in- terviews By David Frost did not clear up unanswered questions about the cover -up. FroraPageAI CADET ••• whose teenaJl'e members also work within the department - especially during summer vaca- llon -to learn police work through early exposure. DAILY PILOT They are now awaiting Orange County JuveniJe Court bearing on the burglary charges for which they were originall)t ar· res ted. But, Nolen said, since victims of the mo-ped bandits purse snatching escapades cannot positively id~tifiy the two as their hit and run robbers, they will not face armed 'robbery charges. An uncorroborated confession is not suffitient evidence for pro- secutio1i. Detective Nolen said the pair have promised to pay their vic- tims back and authorities will see that they do. F,.._P-.,eAJ PROBE. • • -. phasized that point. "Naturally I'm concerned because anything Conrad was in· valved in spoob me a little. But that's hind5igbt now that I've Jost a few dollars. However. Ralph had nothing to do with any of the so·called transaclions that nevf'r were," Remington said. He admitted that Diedrich has had past dealings with two wit· nesses who appeared before the jury Thursday. The two witnesses were real estate brokers Stephen Berck and Bart Rainone. Diedrich. who is out of town and was not available for com- ment. showed on a recent conflict of interest statement that he re- ceived income from Berck and Rainone'a firms last year. "Yes.·• Re mLnglon said , ·'that's true. So. big deal. RaJph 's a wealthy man with extensive holdings and you would expect him to do business with brokers." Remington said, "The jury ob viou!d y 1s following whatever Ralph did whether there's a re ason lo suspect something 1s wrong or not.·· ''I think that's unfortunate bee a use no one s hould have to put up with that kind o( thing," he added. Another witness closet~ with the jury Thursday was attorney Ric bard Donald, Conrad 'a former counsel and reportedly a male in lbe transactions thal never came about. Carter Sinks Beneath Sea In LA Sob CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. <AP> -President Carter, a onetime career submarine of. fleer, slipped benealb the surface of the AUantlc today aboard the nuclear-powered, hunter-killer sub Los Angeles. When the Los Angeles began its dive at 8:15 a.m. PDT, Carter became the first president to cruise in a submerged undersea vessel since Dwight D. Eise- hower dove in aboa rd the nuclear-powered Sea Wolf 20 years ago. By coincidence. Carter had been senior naval officer in charge during the construction of the Sea Wolf. The l..o5 Angeles took two lo three minutes to complete its dive in waters about 35 miles off the Florida coast. Carter had begun his Atlantic cruise some three hours earlier eager to take the helm or the Lo~ Ange~es and perhaps willing to let Wlfe Rosalynn take a tum in the "driver's seat." Aboard nuclear subs, the in- dividual who mans the helm is said to be driving the ship. Accompanied by Adm. Hyman G . Rickover , "Cather of the nuclear Navy." the President and Mrs. Carter boarded the at- tack sub Los Angeles at Port Canaveral for the eight-hour cruise. CarUr, an Annapolis graduate, joked to reporters that when he was a career submarine officer the undersea craft were called boats. He said they've grown so large they are now known as Ships. "Do you have any last words?" a reporter inquired shortly before two Navy tugs began nudgtn9 the Los Angeles into a narrow channel leading -to the ocean. '"No:• said Carter, laughing heartily, "because they won't be lut words." Co1nmand '.l•Ps SinglaUb Gett1 ~iB Po1t . WASlllNGTON (AP) -~aj. Gen. John K . Smglaub was natmecl chief~ staff ol the Anny's big- gest command tod_,, less than a week after being re- lieved as U.S. staff chief in Soutll l(otea for publicly challenging President Carter'• decillon to withdraw American ground troops from there. Singlaub's assignment as chief of staff of the Army Forces Command headquartered at Ft. Mc Pherson, 4tlaiUa, Ga\., was announced a day after Carter said the general would be pven a Job of .. equal degree of responsibility and statare .. to tbe Korean' post . . Sluataub bu ftturned to Korea to clear up personal mattm and will ~ oter hla new job on June27. ..,, The. Anny Fore• CornmaDd Li responsible for· trainJ.D£ equipJ>iJla ftd ~ the com.bat tQcU.. ness ol all Army tn the ccnttnental United States, Bawall, A.tluta,. PienO klco and the Virgin Ialands. It ls a110 ~ible ft>r supervising the tri.fiiti;li of the ArmY.~ Guard and the Army Reserve. " · Slqlaub will bit lttpptilC lnt.O a vacancy creat.d bY the pirol9ot1oG 'of XiJ:".OiiD. Jobli Q. Henkm to three IW't .-I IOdllbilil Ol.ttii ltb Corp. la iapan. The He-o nlon ~ wu~A~l4. . ·• l Controversial Ship Goes to Work Today QUINCY, Mass. <AP) -Tbe first of 18 American-built natural gas tankers is being dedicated here while controversy stiU sim- mers over whether such ships are a nswer s lo t he energy s hortage or potential sources of fl aming disaster. The ship to be put into service today will carry 125,000 cubic meters of liquefied natural gas. Supporters say that's enough to serve an American city of 500,000 people for a month. But critics say it is also enough to cause a catastrophic fire 100 limes the size or the wreck of the Hindenburg, the hydrogen-filled German dirigible that burst into glames in 1937. The greatest damage could oc- cur, scientists say, if the ship's tanks were ruptured during a col· lision' at sea. The liquid gas would pour into the water, and if it did not catch fire immediately. would evaporate into a colorless, odorless cloud or gas. That gas, they say, would float close to the s urface. H the wind eventually pushed it to land. any flame. even a cigarette, could ig- nite it. Class Saves Survivors 'Physically Fit' Grace E llerbrock of Leisure World says she and her husband, Byron. survived history's worst aviation di saste r two months ago because of a physical condition- ing class she had taken. THE RETIRED couple, part of a handful of people who survived the collision or two jumbo jets in the Can ary Is lands , were hospitalized in Ft. Dix, N.J., up- on their return to this country. Mrs. Ellerbrock wrote a letter lo Diane Edwards, Leisure World exercise director and an instructor in the Saddleback Valley Unified School District's adult education program, thank- ing her for the conditioning class. "IF THERE was ever a living testimonial to your conditioning classes, this must be it,'' Mrs. El- lerbrock wrote. . "When one of your senior citizens can jump Crom the wing of a 747 jumbo jet and drag a 200-pound man (Mr. Ellerbrock> barefoot across a field with no more than abrasions, cuts and bruises, it's something to be grateful for," she added. "WE ARE MENDING. It will take lime, but you can be certain when I get ho me I 'll be back in your class -'beginners only' probably." Mrs. Ellerbrock's husband sus- tained a broken pelvis and other injuries in the crash, which claimed 575 lives, including 27 Leisure World residents. KALEIDOSCOPE But sheriff's officers working on a new plan conceived since the attack on deputy Allen believe the rock thrower's days are num· be red. "I can't tell you a thing about it," a senior officer commented today. "But we believe we can track this man down and end what has been 10 frustrating mo nths of nonsense in t his / general area.'· From Page Al PACT ... him. He said that she was involved in the negotiation process but was unable to attend one session a nd that her absence may be responsible for some of her charges. Porter said Thursday that the controversy is apparently clouded by personality clashes a nd an investigation "would clear the air." "We feel there may not have been full disclosure ·and t he board perhaps s hould have been more candid," he said. Schumacher said he is not at present particularly concerned by the size of the increase, but he believes pay hikes may have been granted when the district does not have the money. He maintains that officials re- fused to say how m uch the new contract would cost when asked by members of the public at a school board meeting. He said that either the trustees didn't know the exact costs or that they were conceaJing it. "In the words of Peter Finch in the movie. 'Network,' I'm mad as hell and I'm not going to take it anymore." Garland said Thursday that he and fellow board members Dave Sonksen did announce the cost of the teacher increase but con- firmed he didn 't include the total costs of additional benefits. Our showroom 1s a virtual kaleidoscope of colors. The reasons are vaned-: .... We know that color coordinating 1s the primary target when buying carpet. Quality is usually second 1n line. and because we have such a vast selection of qualities, it is easy to coordinate color and quality to each individuars taste. However. we know that a volume of samples looking at you can seem very confusing -but we feel that showing just a few samples is not a fair representation of the carpet business. Our huge selection gives our salespeople every possible option 10 working with people. helping them to find the perfect thOice. So if you are in the market to select your carpeting - 9elec:t Alden's to t\elp you. that's what we're here fort t ! t · DEN'S :iiiila1litiiiD:·custom draperies 1 linoleum • vl&Nl floor .1663 PLACENTIA Avtto(UE • COSTA MESA. CALIF. 92621 • PHONE 6"6·A838 -6A~·2355 ~ ... • It, r .. ~-. . ._..... . .,_ ... ' 7 •• IJ.!Vine .. VOL. 70, NO. 147, 4 SECTIONS, 44 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA FRIDAY, MAY 27, 1977 Today's C losin g N.Y. Stoeks TEN CENTS ' Jury Eyes Diedrich-Conrad Land Link By GARY GRANVILLE Of Irie D••ly Pilot Sl•ll The Orange County Grand Jury's probe into political cam· paign practices swept out Thurs· day to delve mto r e al estate lransacllons allegedly involving federal ind1ctee Gene· Conrad and county Supervisor Ralph Diedrich. But Diedrich 's attorney today said the Fullerton supervisor had no part in any of Conrad's real estate deals. "As a m a lte r of fact ," Fullerton attorney Michael Rem· ington s aid, "Ralph referred Conrad to me with a warning that I watch my wallet. He <Diedrich > said he didn't want to get in· volved in any way." "Unfortunate ly," Rem ington added , "l did get involved. And it cost me a few bucks." Conrad is the forme r paid eat LONG, LONG TRAIL A WINDING AT SAN OHOFRE PARK All Available Camping Space• Snatched Up Quickly Camp Fills Up Cars Wait at San Onofre It w.t..; fi rst C'ome. first served a t San Onofr<' Slate Park today and lhl' f1r-.t t'Jmt• la:-.t night and slept 111 front of the gale~. Tlus mornm~ when the gates opened lo the newly rc•furb1shed park. 150 cu r!'>. campe rs. trucks. tra ile rs a ncl o ther assorted veh1 rles wr n• m line ror the 290 available camping spucl'S Parks offu:1als CXl>t'l'll'd all the avail able camping ·s paces to be taken quickly Camping spaces i n the two o t h er s t a t e park!: at San Clemente and Doheny were "sold out" under the slate's r eser va· t1on system a month ago for the Memorial Day w~kend. Although camping spaces are gone. day.use s paces were still aY ailable. Volunteers Needed For Culture Center College Park School in Irvine is sending out an SOS for communi· ty m embers with knowledge or other countries and cultures who can help out next year in the school's "m ulti-culture learning center." M a r y Bet h Bu tt s, a , spokeswoman for the school, said Irvine res idents are being sought who have come from other coun· tries who can share information with College Park youngsters. QrugFinn Faces Charge MILWA UKEE (AP > -A pharm ace utical fi r m was cbarged in U.S. District Court berc with m a nufac turin g Laetrile under unsanitary condi· Uons. The learning center ·will sup· plement the regular instruction at the school. providing insight into people from other areas, Mrs. Butts explained. The center will be directed by the school, but it is hoped that community members will run the operation for the students. The school already offers a bi· cultural program, that includes Spanisb-speaJdng and English· spe aking students, as part or the curriculum. But the teaming center will be separate and will be a vailable to all students at the school. An organizational meeting is planned for the last week of school so persons willine to help are asked to calf Mrs. Butts at 551 ·3871, as soon as possible. hsue Worsem police informer who turned political financier last fall when he dumped more than ~.000 into various campaigns . Early this year, Conrad's ac· tivities and those of the Irvine· based fll'l'll he heads, Pension Funds of America, fell under the scrutiny ol a federal Grand Jury as well as the county Grand Jury. In April, the federal jury in· dieted the burly ex-Chicagoan on seven fraud related charges re· Penalty Measure To Brown SACRAMENTO CAP> -The California Senate sent a death penalty bill lo Gov. Edmund Brown Jr. 's desk toda y fo r a cer· tain veto. The 27-10 vot e cam e after lengthy debate th'at focused more on charges of poli tical motives than on the minor amendments whic h were the o n ly issue technically before the Senate. The vote was the exact two· thirds maJonty r equired in the 40-seat house. "I am convinced the punish ment should not be the death penalty. I am convinced a better punishment would be life im· prisonment without possibility of parole." said Sen. Milton Marks of San Francisco. one of only two Republicans to oppose the bill to restore capital pumshment for treas on a nd IS cat c~or ics of murder. Sen. John Briggs of Fullerton. a Republican candldate for gov· erno r , s a id Bro wn's "hear t bleeds not for the attacked. but the attacker. He continues to speak out for those who commit crimes. ''Every day in California, over five people are executed -not by the state. but by the criminals." Briggs said. Briggs also charged that the Democratic ~overnor m ade a de a l with De mocrats in the legis lature to override his veto to prevent the political 'embarrass· ment of facing a death penalty in· 1t1ative on the ballot next year Democratic floor leader David Roberti or Los Angeles a ngrily replied to Briggs ''No deals have been made " 'Tm proud of the governor on this issue," Roberti s aid or Brown's pledge to veto the bill as a m alter of conscience. "Sen. Bnggs, you are running for the governorship. You want the headlines," Roberti said. The Se n ate a pproved a n earlier draft of the death penalty bill on a 29· 10 vote March 31. Today's vote approved a mend· ments made by the Assembly to simplify trial procedures and limit the manner in whic h prior records can be brought before the jury. The Assembly gave approval on a 54.23 vote Monday. State Sen. George Deukme· jia n, author or the bill, met privately for about an hour with Brown Thursday to try to con· vince him to change his mind about bis pledge Jan. 6 to veto any death penalty bill ''as a mat· ter of conscience." <See VETO, Page A2) Banks Hike· I.Dan, Rates By tbeAuocla&ed P reas A number of major com· merclal banks raised their prime lending rate from 6Y.a lo 6~ percent today. Amon1 banks increaslna tbe rate were New York's Citibank, the n ation's 1ec0Qd·lar1ett co m- m e r clal b l n lt , a nd Chicago's Continental 11· linol• Natlooal Dant le "Trust Coropu y. Use na· tlon•a seveftt b ·lar1eet bank. • Bert Laiee, dJr~ of • t be fed eral Orlio• or llaa.,... aod Buclaet, •di M lell no reuon why NDkl lbObkt be ralslna their )>lime rate. Lance · •atd that ban ts .. are . awaih j\1th cub." Federal prosecutors sa id the Laetrile, believed by some to be effective against cancer , was aduhcroted and could ,have been conlamin uled al the Mosl.Dee Reaearc h Corp . plant ln Manitowoc. W~. The ~blJ'fH seid the substance was prepared, packe d and held under un· Saullary condlUoo.a. SAN DIEGO (AP) -PoUce were called to deal .-itb unruly pupils, 800 teachen stayed eut sick and the San Die10 tcbool system 1ave 1n Thvl'ld-.y c a stu mb1rn1 block In eoatract talk1. School SUJ>t. Tom Good· man aald the d ltt.tlct h withdrawlni a plan \o ratruc· bare the talary·step acbedulecl fo~ Lbeaystem '• S1100 teacben. . . ._..._..._....,. __ ._;., __ ....._ _ _,,,_ lated to $1.2 million worth of loan fee s ror loans allegedly never made. Like Diedrich, Conrad bas de- n ied the two were ever joined in business ventures. And Remington today e m· phasized that point . "Natura lly I'm concerned because anything Conrad was in· volved in spooks m e a little. But that's hindsight now that I've lost a few dollars. However, _Ralph had nothing to do with any of the so-called transactions that never were," Remington said. He admiUed that Diedrich has had past dealings with two wit· nesses who appeared before the jury Thursday. The two witnesses were real esta te brokers Stephen Berck and Bart Rainone. Diedrich, who is out of town and was not available for com· m ent, showed on a r ecent conflict eto A J A Big Stretch or interest statement that be re· ceived income from Berck and Rainooe's firms last year. •'Yes,'' R emin gt on said, .. that's true. So. big deal. Ralph's a wealthy man wJth extensive holdings and you would expect h i m t o d o bu s iness with brokers." Remington said , ''The jury ob- viously is following whatever R alph did whether there's a re- (See PROBE, Page A2) Dally l'ilot Photo oy RlcMrcl Kotlller Julie Pitchess. 8, leaps over a hurdle dur· in g Thursday's track and fi eld meet a t Ir vine's University High School. Several hundred first. second and third graders participat ed in the meet. which culminat · ed a thrce·week "team teaching" pro· g r a m by hig h s c hool a nd elementary school teachers .· Hi gh sc hool t each er s helped instruct students during their lunch hours in an attempt to develop sports potential at an early age. Rock Tluower F ll£es Queries On ln£idents By TOM BARLEY OI tllt Oelly li'llot Staff Or ange County Sheriff's of· ficers are becoming increasingly convinced today that the so- called Phantom Rock Thrower who eluded capture afte r stab· bing a deputy may be responsible for a number of other bizarre in· cidents in the general area of his anli·auto activities. They believe that the man who was chllllenged by deputy Dave Allen Wednesday night may be the intruder who has carried off the carcasses of several dead goats in recent months from a goat ranch in Santa Ana Canyon. And the rock thrower who has terrorized Riverside Freeway motorists fo r t he past eight months -s mashing more than 35 windshields -may be the sa me man who bas smashed bee hives in the canyol\ and who has broken into the pro shop at the Green River Golf Course on several occas.ions, they said. Investigators believe the man confronted by Allen may be Jiv. -.. ing off the land and making his headquarters 1n the rough ter· rain near Featberly Regional Park and the Green River Golf Coarse. · They believe that his periodic <See PHANTOM . Page AZ) Irvine Landowners Mull Water Issue Four landowners in Irvine will decide in next Tuesday's special election ir they wish to spend $19,345,000 to improve domestic water service in the proposed Irvine Industrial Complex-East ar ea. Landowners who will be cast· ing votes include the Irvine Com· pany (3,646,760 votes), the Irvine Industrial Complex (S,017,720 votes), the Atcbison·Topeka San· ta Fe Railroad Company (34,270 Track Meet Set Saturday At UC Irvine Athletes between th& ages of 30 and 70 will compete Saturday at UC Irvine in the fifth annual r~- 1 ay meet spoQ8ored by t he Corona deJ Mar Track club to benefit the UCl track team. The meet begins at 9 a.m. wJlb the hammer t hrow a.nd the 10,000-m eter ruo and ia slated to end at3 p.m. wit.h the mile relay. All eventa will be conducted at UCI's track stadium. . Admission ls free. althouch athletes .00 ·spectators will be as)ced to make tax·d~ctible donations lo lbe u11lveraity's track team. Free par kina is avallable Jn the Craw~ord JQJJ parking lot. votes) and the U.S. Marine Corps (2,070 votes). Votes are assigned on the basis of land values. Irppl'()vement District 103 lies in the eastern portion of the Irvine R anch Water-District and en· com apsses 3,150 acres. · A two.thirds "yes " vote is needed to pass the bond measure, which would provide funds to Im· prove domestic wate r service 'facilities in that a rea. The dis· trict Ues in the vicinity of the junction of the Santa Ana, San Diego and Laguna Freeways whe re the I r vine Industrial Complex-East is planned. Coas t Weather Jncreulng low cloudi· ness becoming more ex- t ensive tonJght and conti· nuing through mld· morning Saturday. MosUy 1unny from late Saturday morning through after · noon. Lows tonight SO to 57. Hi1hs satu.rday 6G to 10. INSIDE TODA~ . Memoriol 0011 WHktnd mar1" the beginning ot "'"'" mer .at Ota•ge Count~'• arnuttrMrlt porlca. For. a look at wbGt t~·r. plcmmng. He P.agcCJof CM W~. .... At \'tw ""'« A tt INVlft CM ... ""' .. ....,. ... ,... .. ,, (allf«Ma AJ ................ .. Ct•Jlfl• DM • 0r-.o-tT Att C-les a> ~· 814 c .... ,..... U .... ..-I> CM .,... """• .. ,. = ,..,... ..,, • ....,... .... "' aw •Mtnat....... CM Wedi....,..... A\MJ ~ At tl T_...._ Ct ,_tllelt«W att.M ""''''" CM ~ ~ ....... .... ,,......,...... ~ . ...,....... ,... .. ............. et ----0.. ....... M I ---_r -----.._..... --=-~ .. --t---- .._. ..... ". ~.......,... ... , .. , ~ -,..,..,. ·--~._.,, ..... Terrori.sts Still Hold 55 oli Train • Al'WI,._.... t LNG TANKER TO BE DEDICATED IN SEA OF CONTROVERSY OVER SAFETY ~ f . Ship's Capacity Glvea Rise to Concern Over ~oaalblllty of Giant Flres · r;a ' i. 1· ,., ;·First LNG Tllnker Sails ' QUINCY, Mass. (AP> -The first of 18 American-built natural gas tankers is being dedicated here while controversy still sim·, mers over whether such ships are answers to the energy shortage or potential sources of flaming disaster. Va., anciNewOrleans. The 936-foot·long ship, which cost $100 million, will be operated by Burmah Oil Company of England to carry gas from Jn. donesia to Japan. right, it's about as safe as anything. There are lots of other dangerous gases we handle on our waterways." , Rolf Glasteld, the chief de. velopment engineer for the new tanker , said he believes the ship is a safe way to transport fuel. "No question about it," be s aid. ''And no effort has been s pared to make it so." ASSEN. The Netherlands (AP> -Gasps of relief and quiet reu- nions with parents marked the end of four days' captivily fOI' 105 Dutch children held by armed Asian extremists In a village scbooJhouse. 1be mus release occuned at\et' balf of them c:ame down with a stomach virus. But five South Moluccan separatists continued to hold four teachers today, includine two womeo, in the school and ref used to surrender. At least 55 other hostages remained the captives of seven other separatists on a train 1S miles north of the school. The South Moluccans, who want the independence of their Pacific island from Indonesia, have demanded the release of 21 fellow extremists jailed for ler· rori.st activities and a jumbo jet to take them to an undisclosed location ... "It was fascinating to see the reaction of the children," a Red Cross spokesman said. "Only · three ol them cried when they saw their parents again." He said while many mothers had tears in their eyes or were openly crying. the children were shy for a few awkward moments before breaking into hugs. kisses and "just happy children's tallc ... The Red Cross said one little girl's first words were: "Mum. my, I left my coat in the school.'' One girl s aid she and her sch oolmates we re neve r threatened by the extremists but were restricted in their move- ments and had trouble s leeping on the cold hard floors a t night. The ship to be put into service today will carry 125,000 cubic meters of liquefied natural gas. Supporters say that's enough to serve an American city of 500,000 people for a month. The giant, black-hulled ship carries its cargo in liquid form in five globe-shaped tanks. The tanks protrude above the deck, and from the air, the ship looks like a long, narrow carton filled with eggs. Off Florida Coast \ .. .. .,!' She said they spent much of0the time playing games and w atcbing television. . Ambulances rushed the ailing children to a hospital where 26 were admitted. Another 79 children and a teaeber -also re- leued -were reuntted with families under the watchful eye of Dutch psychiatrists. Hospital officials declined to discl04e the condition or the . hospit.&IJ.zed cblldren, but uncon- ftrmed reports said tboy were .. reuonably well.'' The children bad been awrering from vomit· inl and diarrhea. ' Tbe parents ot children return· Inc home were told by tbe Red Crau to &ive them bot baths and aenc:t them to bed. The children were also told not to drink or eat too much at.first. 'F,....PageAI ,, PHANTOM SOUGH'I'. bouts of rock throwing along the Riverside Freeway may be in· dicative of his need to vent his frustrations at a civilization that. may have driven him to loneli- ness and exile. The attack on Allen, who la now recovering from knife wounds on his right arm and neck, has given the m their first real description of the rock thrower. The Mission Viejo d eputy described him as a s hort, bearded black man, dressed in dark clothhlg and wearing what appeared to be Army boots. Allen told his fellow orficers that the man repeatedly warned him to leave him alone and em· phasized bis demands by tossing rocks at the deputy while the pair scrambled through brush and scrub at the side of the freeway. Allen said he spotted the rock thrower while he ·was driving home from duty Wednesday night oo the Riverside Freeway. The deputy said the man be described and subsequently chased was piling rocks on the center divider of tbe freeway, apaprenUy preparing for another session ot windshleld·shattering · attacks on passing cars. Fellow officers rushed Allen to the nearby Canyon General Hospital after the chase ended with the hunted man slashing the deputy in the neck and arm. Other officers and the Anaheim police helicopter took up the pursuit of the suspect in vain. Investigators believe that the rock thrower may be the same man who has set a number of fires in the canyon area in recent years. A man answering the rock thrower description was hunted for three days in the summer of 1914 wbile firemen fought a number of fires deliberately set in the bone dry Santa Ana moun· ta ins. But critics say it is also enough to cause a catastrophic fire 100 times the size of the wreck of the· Hindenburg, the hydrogen-fiUed German dirigible that burst into glames in 1937. Boston is the only U.S. port ., where liquefied natural gas is de- livered. 'The Coast Guard con- siders the tankers so dangerous that all other traffic is baited when they enter the harbor. • Other docking facilities for such cargoes are being prepared in New York, Providence, R.I., and Cove Point, Md. ·Carter Takes Sub Ride But sheriff's officers working on a new plan conceived since the attack on deputy Allen believe the rock thrower's days are num· be red. •"I can't tell you a thing about it," a senior officer commented today. "But we believe we can track this m an down and, end what has been 10 frustrating months of nonsense in this general area." The greatest damage could OC· cur. scientists say, if the ship's tanks were ruptured during a col- lision at sea. The liquid gas would pour into the water, and if it did not catch fire immediately, would evaporate into a colorless, odorless cloud of gas. That gas, they say, would float dose to the surface. If the wind eventually pushed it to land, any fl a me, even a cigarette, could ig- nite it. The new ship, called the LNG Aquarius, is the first of 12 li- quefied natural gas tankers be· i n g built by the General Dynamics shipyard in Quincy. !:iix others are under construction alf shipyards in Newport News. One of the most outsp0ken critics of gas tankers is J ames MacKenzie, a director o( the· Union of Concerned Scientists. "If and when an accident OC·' curs, there would b e an enormous conflagration with people being injured for miles around," MacKenzie said. "It would be a devastation. There would be a huge fireball in the sky visible from miles away." "It has a potential of being very hazardous under certain conditions," said Robert Reid, a natural gas ex pert at Mas sachusetts Institute of Technology. "But if it's handled CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. (AP) -President Carter, a onetime career submarine of· ficer, slipped beneath the surf ace of the Atlantic today a board the nuclear-powered, hunter-killer sub Los Angeles. Wh en the Los Angeles began its dive at 8:15 a.m. PDT, Carter became the fint president to cruise in a submerged undersea vessel since Dwight D. Eise· bower dove in aboard the nuclear-powered Sea Wolf 20 years ago. By coincidence, Carter had been senior naval officer in charge during the construction or the Sea Woll. The Los Angeles took two to three minutes to complete its dive in waters about 35 miles off let wife Rosalynn take a tum in the "driver's seat." Aboard nuclear subs, the in- dividual who mans the helm is said to be driving the ship. Accompanied by Adm. Hyman G. Rickover, "father of the nuclear Navy." the President and Mrs. Carter boarded the at- tack sub Los Angeles at Port Canaveral for the eight-hour cruise. Carter, an Annapolis graduate, joked to reporters that when he was a career submarine officer. the undersea craft were called boats. He said they've grown so large they are now known as ships. ·'Do you have a ny last words?" a reporter inquired shortly before two Navy tugs began nudging the Los Angeles into a narrow channel leading to the ocean. ·'No," said Carter, laughing heartily, "because they won't be last words." The President was whistled - not piped -aboard the sub- marine and, as he disappeared down an open batch, the pre- c;idential ensign was raised from the conning t-0wer. I . Irvine Crash ti . Hurts Woman 1 A 21-year-0ld Tustin woman is · listed in satisfactory condition to- day at Tustin Community • Hospit al a fter crash ing her I . moped into a parked car in Irvine Thursday. Class Saves · the Florida coasL : ~ists, Craftsinen Invited by Irvine Carter bad begun his Atlantic ' cruise some three hours earlier, • • cager to take the helm of the Los Angeles and perhaps wiUing to • Irvine Police said Cassandra Stover Fow was traveling on Gates Avenue near Milliken A venue Thursday afternoon when she ran into a parked auto while looking over her s houlder Survivors 'Physically Fit' ~\ . . Grace Ellerbrock of Leisure take time, but you can be certain i RedistrJCl Accomplished artists and bud· ding craftsmen interested in the arts and crafts center to be local· ed in Heritage Park in Irvine are invited to attend next Wed· nesday's Community Services Commiasion meeting. phase of Heritage Park constroc- tion. It is planned as a center where artists may gather to work on projects, receive instruction and exchange ideas with others in- terested. in the same areas. f orTear traffic. Officers said she suffered bruises and a possible fractured leg and was treated at the scene by paramedics before being 1 taken to the hospital. World says she and her husband. when I get home l 'll be back in Byron, survived history's worst your class 'beginners only' Pl M aviation disaster two months aji?O probably." ~ an oves because of a physical cond1t1on-Mrs. Ellerbrock 's husband sus· \ tng class she had taken. tamed a broken pelvis and other S • lDJUries in the crash , which opervisors THE RETIRED couple, part or <'I aimed .575 lives. including 27 . a handful of people who survived Leisure World residents. Other it.ems scheduled for the The architectural firm that bas m eeting inlcude: . been working on the center will -The joint use· agreement • present recommendations to the between the city and school diS>- t' F~PageAJ PROBE ••• ,. , .. , . ' I 1 ..... . , . the collision of two jumbo Jets in the Canar y Islands. were hospitalized in Ft. Dix, N.J ., up- on their return to this country. Ff'09PageAl lf you live in Mission Viejo or commission at the 1:30 p.m. trict. related to the new stadium ason to suspect somethlng is El Toro, Ralph Diedrich oC meetingatcityhall. being built next to Irvine High wrongornot." " Fullerton is now your represen· The recommendations follow a School. "'I think that's unfortunate Mrs. Ellerbrock wrote a letter to Diane Edwards. Leisure World exercise director and an Instructor in the Saddleback Valley Unified School District's adult educahon program, thank- ing her for the conditioning class. .. IF THERE was ever a living testimonial to your conditioning classes, this must be it," Mrs. El· lerbrock wrote. "When one of your senior citizens can jump from the wing of a 747 jumbo jet and drag a 200-poWld man (Mr. E llerbrock) barefoot across a field with no more than abrasions, cuts and bruises, it's something to be Jrateful for,'' she added. ~ ••WE ARE MENDING. It will OAANOE COAST \ DAILY PILOT ::r~~~~:~·r,:.i:j==~= Qe\I ~11111no Gomc>••r . s.ia.r• .. itlont t<• publl.,,.., ll1lc.,•d•y thrOllqt\ Frldey for Coit• MtW. -.otl h.ttl\, H ... u.,. ....... <lllFoun· t.in \lelley, tr•lnt, ~eddl .. ~-Vell•Y ..... "-.._lllSou1llOM1t.A ...... ,......._ tllln h "'*'-s.1 ... u-n """ ~ n.e "'-'• ..,..,"""9 ~ " .. a wtst e.., .-.c.e.Me$A,C.Uton.lemat.. ............. ~·-~· .lect lt.cwtlf .a ...... 1-a.-111........, n-IK.- '( •tllW .~) 1 . "=··~-:c-•. ) Cl!Mrl....... ... ... . ,..., .............. . ' OfftOM °"'9--~--.. '\~~,,-~~ . ~=~~~-=--=., • et SM 0...,. l'I'-. Ttfepttone (n4>1G-432t , Qneffled~ .. tof111 -s , ••• ._,....., ..... Oltk.e t~ 1114110 ,,.... ... °"'-* ...... tatlve on tbe Oranae County series of community meetings -Anupdateontheproposalto becausenooneshouldhavetoput VETO BoardofSupervisors. • andsurveyssentouttonumerous installaFrisbeeDiscGolfcourse up with that kind of thing,'~ he • • • • A redistricting plan approved 11 rvint; residents. But city aides in an Irvine park. added. ' Deukmejian said the meeting bysupervisors:Marcb22wentin· explam there is s till time~ -Findings fro.ID the Another witness closeted with " was "constructive .. and hinted to effect 'Thursday, corred.ing change parts of the P!ans if rest• Archaeological and Paleon· the jury Thursday was attorney there was sti'll a chance that population imbalances among dentsbaveaddiUonahdea.s. tological Advisory Committee on Richard Donald, Conrad's the five districts The center is planned as a $1 the site' where the Univenlty former counsel and reportedly a 4 Brown might reconsider. . As a result ~bat had been million, 20,~ squ~e foot facili· Town Center development is be-mate In the transactions that ' B u t 1 n a Pre · recorded · RU ty to be built durmg the next ing planned. never came about. telev1swn 1nhni~broa~~t a Boa~~airmanTum ey~~---------------------------------------few hours later, Brown repeated fast-growtna filth district. cover .. I' his intention of vetoine the ing allofSoutheastOran1eeoun.. Deukmejian bill. ty bas been split between Riley Brown said he still intends lo and Diedrich. veto the bill, even if politically · The redistricting, which leaves damaging, and even t hough each supervisor with .a~ut c apitai punishment may be re-344,000 residents in his. district. instated anyway -either by a i ~lso places all of F~tam Vall4;Y veto override in the legislature, tn Supervisor Phil Anthony s or a ballot inlttative. fint ~ct. . • · 1 think it would. be better not _The city bad been split betweera t h 't I ... 1-'-t b · t Rlley and Anthony. o ave 1 • ul.lllA a eac poan The plan reduces the number where it can be sto~pe~, we of county cities divided between s hould t~y l o s top it, the perviaorial diatricta from 11 to ~ Democratic aovemor said. U:ree. Fugitive Eyes .. U.S. Trial? ~ Huntingtm Beach it one~ the divided cities but almost all of tbe · city will be in Supervisor Laurence Scbmlt's secood di.s- trict with a small porUon in RUey'1 fifth. Costa Mesa, Newport Beach. , OAKLAND (AP) -The lawyer Jrvine. Laauna Beach, San Juan "" or Panther party founder Huey P. Caplatruo and San Clemente re-• Newton ls negotlating wlth maininRlley'sdistrlct. 1 J federal authorities for bis return • So do the unlncorporated areas 1 from CUba to the United states. of Laguna Hills and Laauna ! accordiJlltopublilbed reports. • Niguel • • An associate lawyer in Charles Even though population Garry's San Francisco office. figures have beeo put in balance Francis J. McTeman, was quot. by the redistrictln1, county ed by 'lbe Oakland Tribune llS fi1urea 1bow the c:Ustricta •ary in ,, saylnf Garry left for Cuba Wed--Ute1lwnberofre,Uteredvoters. \ neaday an4 11VOUld be gone about 1 Riley•s fifth district baa J.8¥21 . lOdays. registered YOtera, while Newton. 3S, jumoed ball In 19'1.C -.ntedrlcb's third hu 172,417 • white awaiting trf al for murder 'Scbmlt'a distrlet bu 168.tea re. . in Alameda County ln the fatal giatered voters Anthony's flrlt sbOot1ngol17·Year-oldK&theri.De dlstric~ 134 tM and Clark's Smith. tourtb bas m.Oee. Body RecOvered YOSEKJTE CAP> -Yoieriltte ·Park raqen have reco"redtbe body of a Harwich, Mau., ma "Who wu ldlled in a cltiilbtiia ac-cldmL ~. Although a~• om. are =DeiiioerldlOdt· number bllema Ill~ tloa ta 'a, Schi1Lit'1 ·a Clart'a ~ ~•bUeus are in tM naajorJty hi bOth Dledttela'• and ~~· accardlal t.o cou:Dl1 ,KALEIDOSCOPE f ' t I Our' showroom Is a virtual kaleidoscope of colors. The ' reasons are varied-: We know that eolor coordinating is the primary target when buying carpet. Quality is usually second in line, and because we have such a vast selection of qualities, it Is easy to • coordinate color and quality to each individual's taste. However, we know that a volume of samples looking at you can seem very confusing-but we feel that showing just a few samples is not a fair representation of the carpet business. ' Our huge selection gives our salespeople every possible option in working wath people. helping them to find the perfect choice . So If you are in the mar1<et to select your carpeting -- salad Alden's to help you, that's what we're here. for! l l f · DEN'S I ':iM'iallai:iiia:·custom drapsries linoleum• WOOd 'flo.Or. .. COSTA MESA, WIF. 92627. • ftHONE 646~838 -6'46·2355 • ~----\ Lalguna/South Coast • Alternooil N.¥.Steeks I ' 1 VOL. 70, NO. 147, 4 SECTIONS, 44 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA FRIDAY, MAY 27, 1977 TEN CENTS. Jury Eyes Diedrich-Conrad Land Link · By GARY GRANVILLE Of UM O•llY Piiot St.fl The Orange County Grand Jury's probe into political cam· paign practices swept out Thurs· day to delve into real estate transactions allegedly involving .federal indictee Gene Conrad and county Supervisor Ralph Diedrich. But Diedrich 's attorney today said the Fullerton supervisor had no part in any of Conrad's real estate deals. I. As a matter or fact, •• Fullerton attorney Michael Rem· ington said, "Ralph referred Conrad to me with a warning that I watch my wallet. He <Diedrkb> said he didn't want to get in· volved in any way." "Unfortunately,•• Remington . added, "I did get involved. And it · cost me a few bucks." Conrad is the former paid eat Goats, B ees Deputies Probe Phantom Acts By TOM BARLEY Ol IM O~lly Pltol St•lf Orange County Sheriff's of· ficers are b<'coming increasingly convinced today that the so. c alled Phantom Rock Thrower who eluded capture after stab· bing u deputy may be responsible for a nomber or other bizarre in· c1dents 10 the general area of his anti-auto activities. They believe that the man who .. was challenged by deputy Dave Allen Wednesday night may be the intruder who has carried off Stnoky Fire A Cover For Theft? San Clemente firemen battled a smoky fire in a $100,000 canyon view home Thursday. An investigation into the cause of the blaze in the home of Chuck Nauman, 222 La Cuesta, was un · der way today. Imt1al evidence indicated the fire could have been deliberately set to cover up a burglary. A determination into the dollar amount of damage was pending. Unofficial estimates ranged as high as $24,000 due to the heavy s moke damage. There was httle structural damage, firemen said. The fire killed one dog. A second dog bolted from the home when firemen forced open the door and a cat was rescued by firemen. The fire was battled by 17 San Clemente firemen and four city fire department engines. Fire Capt. Gary Carmichael said the house was unoccupied and tightly closed when tho Ctre began. Evidence indicated it sta~ a pile of papers and books on the floor of the living room. Captain Carmichael said it was likely the fire had been going for sometime before it was notice. He said the death of the dog was at- trlbutable tothedense smoke. Fire Marshal Don Hodgson is investigating the possible arson. the carcasses of several dead goats in recent months from a goat ranch in Santa Ana Canyon. And the rock thrower who has terrorized Riverside Freeway motorists for the past eight months -smashing more than 35 windshields -may be the same m311 who has smashed bee hives in the canyon and who has broken into the pro shop at the Green River Golf Course on several occasions, they said. Investigators believe the man confronted by AJlen may be liv- ing off the land and making his headquarters in the rough ter· rain near Featherly Regional Park and the Green River Golf Course. They believe that his periodic bouts of rock throwing along the Riverside Freeway may be in· dicative of his need to vent his frustrations at a civilization that may have driven him to loneli· ness and exile. The attack on Allen, who is now recovering from knife wounds on his right arm and neck. has given them their first real description of the rock thrower. The Mi ssion Viejo deputy described him as a s hort , bearded black man, dressed in dark clothing and wearing what appeared to be Army boots. Allen told his fellow officers that the man repeatedly warned him to leave him alone and em· phastzed his demands by tossing rocks at the deputy while the pair scrambled through brush and scrub at the side or the freeway. Allen said he spotted the rock thrower while he was driving home from duty Wednesday night on the Riverside Freeway. The deputy said the man he described and subsequently chased was piling rocks on the center divider of the freeway. apaprenUy preparing for another session of windshield-shattering attacks on passing cars. Fellow officers rushed Allen to the nearby Canyon General Hospital after the chase ended with the hunted man slashing the deputy in the neck and arm. Other officers and the Anaheim police helicopter took up the · pursuitofthesuspectin vain. (See PHANTOM; Page AZ> Class Saves ~vars 'Physkally Fit' Grace' Ellerbrock of Leisure World says she and her husband, Byron, survived bistory•s worst aviation disaster two months ago because of a physical conditioning class she had taken. THE RETIRED couple, part of a handful of people who survived the collision of two jumbo jets 1n the Canary Islands, were bospltall.zed in FL Dix. N.J • ., upon their return to this country. . Mrs. Ellerbrock wrote a letter to Diane Edwards, Leisure World exercise director and an instructor in the Saddleback Valley Unified School District's adult edu~tioo program, thanking tier for the condiUoni.ng class. "IF THERE was ever a living testimonial to your con- ditioning classes, this must be it," Mrs. Ellerbrock wrote. "When one of your senior citizens can jump ftom the wing of a 747 jumbo jet and drag a 200-pound man <Mr. El· lerbrock) barefoot "8cross a field with no more than abrasions, cuts and bruises. it's somet.b.ins to bo aratcl\al !or•" she added. "WE ARE MENDING. It will take time. bat JOU can be certain when I eet home I'll be back 1n your clua -~ · nera only' probably." Mrs. Ellerbrock'• hua~ a brohlil Pel.W and other injuries in th• crash. which claimed 575 llvea, Ill· cludina Z1 Le1lu.re World residents. ) ' police Informer who turned political financier last 1fall when he dumped mo.-e than $53,000 into various campaigns. Early this year, Conrad's ac- tivities and those of the lrvioe- based firm be beads, Penalon Funds of America, fell under the scrutiny of a federal Grand Jury as well as the ~unty Grand Jury. In April, the federal jury In- dicted the burly ex-Chicagoan on seven fraud related charges re- lated to $1.2 million worth of loan fees for loans allegedly never made. Uke Diedrich, Conrad has de- nied the two were ever joined in business ventures. And Remington today em- phasized that point. "Naturally I 'm concerned because anything Conrad was in- volved in spooks me a little. But that's hindsight now that I've lost a few dollars. However, .Ralph had nothing to do with any of the so-called transactio{ls that never were." Remington said. He admitted that Diedrich has had past dealings with lwo wit· nesses wbo appeared before the jury Thursday. The two witnesses were real estate brokers Stephen Berck and Bart Rainone. Diedrich, who is out of town and was not available for com- ment, showed on a recent conflict of interest statement that he re- ceived income from Berck and Rainone's firms last year. "Yes," Remington said, "that ·s true. So, big deal. Rlllph 's a wealthy man with extensive holdings and you would expect him to do business with brokers." Remington said, "The jury ob- viously is following whatever Ralph did whether there's a re· <See PROBE. Page AZ) eto een LONG WAIT-There was a long, long line a winding back up the highway this mom· ing as the wouldbe campers waited for San Onofre Sta~e Beach, to open for the three d;c .,... it'd. C'fit"les Alan Crow, San Onofre ·state Park Filling Up It was first come, rirst served at San Onofre State Park today and the first came last night and slept in front of the gates This morning when the gates opened to the newly refurbished park, 150 cars, campers, trucks. trailers and other assorted vehicles were in line for the 290 av a.Hable campin& s paces Parks officials expected all the available camping spaces to be taken quickly Camping spaces in the two other slate parks at San Clemente and Doheny were "sold out" under the state's reserva- tion system a month ago for lhe Memorial Day weekend. Although camping spaces are gone, day-use spaces were still available. Drug Firm F-aces Charge MILWAUKEE (AP> -A pharmaceutical firm was charged in U.S. District Court here with manufacturing Laetrile under unsanitary condi- tions. Dally .. 1101 l'!IOIO\ .. ., ltlcl1111'd ltwlller 19, of Westminster waits for the gate to open. He was first in line and said he had been waiting s ince 4 p .m. Thursday at the facility south of San Clemente. Federal prosecutors said the Laetrile, believed by some to be effecUve against cancer, was adulterated and could have been contaminated at the Mosinee Research Corp. plant in Manitowoc, Wis. The charges said the substance was prepared, packed and held under un- sanitary conditions. LONG, LONG TRAIL A WINDING AT SAN ONOFRE PARK All Avatrable Camping Space• Snatched Up Quickly Bania Hike= loan Rates F~tiveEyes U.S. Trial?. OAKLAND (AP) -The·Jawyer of Panther party founder Huey P. Newton Is negotiating with federal authorities for hll return from Cuba to the United Stat.a. accordini to p~bllsbed report.a. An associate latvyer 1n Charles Garry'• San F?anctsco office, Francis J. McTema.o. was q-. ed by 1'he Oakland Tribune as urin1 Garry left for Cuba w• naday aDCl would be &Olle aboilt lOdays. Newtcli, ~ Jums*t ball In 1'14 wblle awalUn& bf at for murder ln AJaineda COUty In the fatal abOotJUa ol l1·~d Kau.atne Smith.; Penalty Measure To Brown SACRAMENTO (AP> -The California Senate sent a death penalty bill to Gov. Edmund Brown Jr.'s desk today for acer- tain veto. The 27·10 vote came after lengthy debate that focused more on charges of political moUves than on the minor amendments which were the only issue technically before the Senate. The vote was the exact two· thirds majority required in the 40-seat house. •·1 am convinced the punish· ment should not be the death penalty. I am convinced a better punishment woijld be life im- prisonment without possibility of parole," said Sen. Milton Marks of San Francisco, one of only two Republicans to oppose the bill to restore capital punishment for treason and 15 categories of -· murder. · Sen. John Briggs of Fullerton, a Republican candidate for gov- ernor, said Brown's "heart bleeds not for the attacked, but the attacker. He continues to speak out for those who commit crimes. "Every day in California, over five people are executed -not by the state, but by the criminals," Briggs said. Briggs also charged that the Democratic governor made a deal with Democrats in the legislature to override his veto to prevent the political embarrass- ment of facing a death penalty in· itiativeon the ballot next year. Democratic floor leader Davld Roberti of Los Angeles angrily replied to Briggs: ''No deals have been made." "I'm proud of the govemot' on this issue,'' Roberti said of Brown's pledge to veto the bill as a matter of conscience. ..Sen. Briggs, you are running for the governorship. You want the headlines," Roberti said. The Senate approved an earlier draft of the death penalty bill on a 29-10 vote March 31. Today's vote approved amendo. ments made by the Assembly to simplify trial procedures .and limit the manner in which prior records can be brought before the jury. The Assembly gave approval on a 54-23 vote Monday. State Sen. George Deukme· jian, author of the· .hill. met <See VETO, Page AZ> Coas t Weather Increaalng Jow cJoudi· nesa becoming more ·ex- tensive tonight and conU· nuin c throu g h mid· morning Saturday. Mostly sunny from late Satur day· mornint thr ouah after.-. noon. Lowa tonight SO to 57. Highs Saturday 88 to 70. INSIBETODAY · Memorial Da11 W~ek"'4 markl Utt beglalng oJ .am· mer ot ~ Cou1U11'• °'""""""" . For 4 look Gt 101.Md tMf/'nl planing •... .P.ogeCl o/tM W~. latles --· ' A.I DAILY PILOT ~ ... SC .Eyes Dam Site CUSD Voters Go to Pol& Tuesday Projects A~ million local bond and a $10 millloo •late loan election faces CapiJJtrano Unified School Diatrict voters Tuesday, with the county reeistrar of voters pre· dicU~ a light voter turnout. PolU In the district's 56 con· solidated preclncu will be open lrom 7 a .m . to 8 p.m . The dis· trict'a -41,106 voters live in the communities of San Clemente, Dana Point, Capistrano Beach, San Juan Capistrano, Laguna Niguel and part of Mission Viejo. School officials say passage of t he bond and state loan election is needed to build schools for the 8,221 new students expected to move into the Capistrano school district in the next five years. When school opens in the faJI. district officials predict 16,355 students will attend the district's 20 schools, which have a capacity or 16,171. In addition to 14 elementary schools. three junior highs and three high schools, the district is operating with more than 80 portable classrooms. District officials say county planners predict the population oC the Capistrano school district will grow Crom 82,809 residents in 1977 to 124.645 in 1981. If the registrar of voters' estimate of voter turnout 1s ac- curate, about eight percent of the school district's voters will de· cide what school facilities are Carter Sinks Beneath Sea In LA Suh CAPE CANAVERAL. Fla. tA P > President Cart<'f, a onetime career submarine of fleer, slipped beneath the surface of the Atlantic today aboard the nuclear-powered, hunter-killer sub Los Angeles. When the Los Angeles began its dive at 8: 15 a .m . PDT. Carter became the first president to cruise in a submerged undersea vessel since Dwight D Eist' hower dove in aboard the nuclear-powered Sea Wolf 20 years ago By coincidence. Carter had been senior naval officer an charge during the construction of the Sea Wolf The Los Angell'S took two to three minutes to complete its dive in waters about 35 miles off the Florida coast Curter had begun his Atlantic cruise some three hours earlier, eager to take the helm of the Los Angeles and perhaps willing to let wife Rosalynn take a tum in the "driver's seat." Atxlard nuclear ~ubs, the m dividual who mnns the helm 1s said to be driving the ship i\ccompan1t>d by Adm. Hyman G Rickover . '"father of the nuclear Navy,·· the President nnd Mrs Carter boarded the at- tack sub Los Angeles. at Port Canaveral for the eight hour cruise Carter, an Annapohs graduate. Joked to reporters that when he was a career submarine officer. the undersea craft were called boats. He said they've Jirown so large they are now knov.n ai. ships. "Do you have 1my last words .... a reporter inquired shortl> before two Navy tugs began nudging t he Los Angeles into a narrow channel leading to the oce11n . "No," said Carter, laughing heartily, "b<!couse they won't be last words ." The President was whistled - not piped aboard the sub· marme and, as he disappeared down an open hatch, the pre- sidential ensign was raised rrom the conning tower. ORANO! COAST L \C DAILY PILOT ~:~:.i:,:e:.!.~,"r,:::i:::::. .. ;:.:0r~ """'' Pvt>tt"'i"Q C•"'O•"• ttoiu-1• Ht•tWW\\ ...-. "1bH"'4d MoMey ll'lf°"t~-11 '''0..'t '°'" C-'t• ~'4 ..... -.oiort s-.c"' .. \if'tl"""""' ~""("' rOUft t•11\ \f•h•v lt¥1,.. ~ctdl«Nf'\ VAtf~ .. .tf'ld U~ hMf\t~P\((tot'1 A \lnqlP'f"lltOMl-di f'°'1 '' ~IWf i etvrd"'' •"Cl ~'" TfW' r;;:;'.'"c!..~=!'.'M'.:!..~~~10 ,...,, a.. lloMrtN.- l'rt"clt"I end PuClltWr , .. _. c ...... . Ill(~ "'••'"*"' .,,., Go ....... 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Capistrano Unified truatees have said that if the eleetion fails, the district schools will be forced to operate on double session or perhaps year-round in the struggle to educate the grow· ing number of students There bas been no organized opposition to the election. Both the local bond issue and the state loan measures reqwre two-thirds voter approval. District officials have called the local bond·state loan fmanc· mg or school construction the most equitable way lo provide housing for the expanding stu· dent population. They say it places a heavier financial responsibility for new school construction on people moving into the district than alternative funding methods. Because the Capistrano school district receives state building aid. district taxpayers will have the ' same 90·cent tax rate. whether or not the election is ap- proved, said Ted Kopp, president of the board of trustees. .. As I see it. this is really the way to go." he said. '"It seems ironic that a two-thirds vole is re· quired to pass a bond issue, when that enables us to do what must be done and do it the cheapest way possible." Kopp said district voters abou..ld uoderatand that if they ap- prove the bond issue, bonds can be sold onJy to 10 percent. ol the district's assessed valuation and can be used only for school con· strucllon -not tor teacher salarie1, educational materials or anything else. Election returns will be com· piled Tuesday night at district of· fices. 32972 Calle Perfecto in San Juan Capistrano. Results will be available by caJling 496·1215 or 837·5181 Haldeman Plans Expose LOS ANGELES (AP> -Those who enjoyed the published and televised inside s tories of Watergate by John Dean, Jeb Magruder, Charles Colson and Richard Nixon have a new treat in store this fall -Watergate ·'with the gloves off and no holds barred" by H.R. Haldeman. Haldeman called a news con· ference on his front lawn Thurs- day to say he is dissatisfied with Nixon's televised explanation or the Watergate cover-up and has a book coming out to outline his version. Thanks, Mel U.S Secret S.rvtce ltlMto by M.,"1' •••lit~ Former President Richard M. Nixon shakes hands with retiring San Clemente Police Chief Mel Portner during a ceremony ~onoring P?rlner for his role in protecting the former chief executive. Portner. who is taking ac· c~mulated l~~ve until formal r etire ment in August, wa::. given a cert1f1catc of commendation from Secret Service Director H.S. Knight. Creation of artificial lake, a re· gional county park and a "clean" Industrial park are being mulled by the S~ Clemente City Coun· ell. The locoUon for all tbla ls up A venlda Pico three quarters of a mile beyond San Clemente High School. There are three locations un- der consideration for flood con- trol check dams. Behind the dam the city contemplates crea· lion 'ol a small artificial Jake filled with reclaimed water and adjacent to it the 100-acre Segun- da Deshecha Regional Park. After a bit of foundering around on the dam-park pro- posal. the county is showing re- newed interest and an environ- mental impact report is in pro-. gress as are geologic tests. Estimated completion is within five years. For its part. the city Tuesday suggested to the county a dam site about three quarters of a mile above San Clemente High School. T he dam is designed to protect lower lying reaches from the flood damage created in a 100 year flood statistically the worst storm that can be expected to OC· cur an a lOO·year period. The city also set in motion the potent ial creation of an in· dustrtal park tucked into a ca· nyon near the county park. 'Weighty Problem' 3-Arch Bay Tax Increase Vote Tuesday "This is ideally suited for in- dustrial," Councilman Tony DiGiovanni s~ud. DiGiovanna. hus been working with city busi- nessmen in finding a location for clean industrial development. Obese Sub Crew Hides Fro~ Carter DiGiovanni said both the city and the developer for the proper- ty independently reached the idea or industrial use in that area. CAPE CANAVERAL. f"la. tAP 1 -Five crew members of the submarine Los Angeles s1ud they were banished from the boat today. while President C~rter was aboard. because they're too fat. The five reported they were as signed to temporary duty aboard the submarine Spaderish here and were kept aboard. out of sight. until Carter and the Los Angeles left port. Only one of the five. William Darrendorf. a fire control specialist, said he was willing to be quoted by l)Jlme about the inci· dent. The men claimed fi\•e or six other Los Angeles crew mem· bers also had been deemed over· weight but were not banished bee a use they were needed to help run the boat. Obviously angered at being de- nied a n opportunity to meet Carter, the portly submariners -one said he weighed 260 pounds -said they had been working long hours and getting about three hours sleep a night Two Laguna Girls Escape Auto Crash Two Laguna Beach Hi gh School girls escaped maJor in· jury in a crash into a truck on Laguna Canyon Road at the Big Bend curve Thursday. The girls, both 16. were taken by ambulance to Saddleback Co mmunit y Hospital fo r emergency treatment of gashes, and bumps and brl!:11es sufrered m the accident, which s mashed the rront E'nd or their Volkswagen. Jody Alderson, of 1036 Dyer Way, dnver of the car. suffered a bump on the head. bruises on her lr~s and possible whiplash Lauren Post. 880 Wendt Te r f'ro• Pag~ A I VETO ••. privatety for about an hoor with Brown Thursday to try to con vince him to change his mind about h.ls pledge Jan. 6 to veto any death penalty bill •·as a mat- ter of conscience." Deukmejian said the meeting was "constructive" and hJnted there was still a chance that Brown might reconsider. But in a pre -recorded television interview broadcast a few hours later, Brown repeated his intention of vetoing the Deukmejian bill. Brown said he sUll Intend! lo veto the bill, even if politically damaging, and even though capital punishment may be re· instated anyway -either by a veto override in the legislature. or a ballot initiative. ''I think it would be better not to have it. I think at each point where it can be stopped, we s h ould try to stop It," the Democratic governor said. ,.,.._ rflfle A J PROBE •.. a•on to suspetl something is WT'Oftl Of nol. '' .. I think that'• unfortunate bttausenoone should have to put up· with that kind ot thtna.'' he added. Anot.ba' wU.oeu cloeel«I wttb U.. Jury Tbwwday wa1 aUomey Richard Donald, Conrad 'a· former counte.I and ~ a mate ln the t.ranucilcms t.ha.t never canMt abouL race , was jolted into the windshield by the impact of the collision. She suffered cuts on her head and a leg. The girls were released after treatment. The driver of the truck, Leslie A Chapman, 55. was uninjured. Pohce were Wlable to furnish her addr ess immediately. The collision occurred while the girls' car was turning across the opposing traffic lane. Police are investigating. Services Held For Teen-age Crash Victim Mass of the Christian Burial for Sean Patterson, 14, a Laguna Niguel boy killed in an Ortega Highway automctblle accident, was celebrated Thursday al St. Edward'i1 Catholic Church in Dana Point. The Dana Hilla High School student was one of two boys killed lut Friday when their car missed a curve and overturned into a gravel pit. The accident was undiscovered for 11 how's until another passenger in the car recovered consciousness and reported It. The deceued, of 23691 Sidney Bay, was buried in Ascension Cemetery in El Toro. He ~ aun1ved by his parents, Mr. and Mrs. John A. Patterson; a brother, Brian: and three sis· ters, Susan, Sheila and Cheryl. .Bandit.Hits Coast Market A gunman who threatened the female clerk with an automatic pistol took 990 in cash from a Caplstrano Beach market ThW"J· day nlaJ'lt. Oranae County Sheriff"• Of. flcen sald the robbery oec\U'fed at PJtul'a Market, 26881 Camino de EstrelJa, where the clttk was ordered at sunpolnt to emptytbe caab ~ter and put tbe meney lD. paper bq, 011\cen clacribed the rwnnan u a mah ~Mntcan·A111tr1can, about 15 to 111.-n of qe, ..... JDS u Oll\'t lrHD mUiury jacket, dart blue alackl and a dark bhM watcti c.ap. ~ preparing the Los Angeles for the presidential visit. Capt. Lawrence Burkhardt, a spokesman at the submarine base here, said the Los Angeles had a larger crew than was re· quired for the Carter mission and "we wanted lo present a good ap. pearance .. so the crew m embers judged most overweight were re- lieved for the da) When a reporter told Burkhardt that the relieved men seemed rather bitter. he responded. "Then I would s ug· gest they lose weight." Closure Due IF or librCtry J In San Juan The San Juan Capistrano Branch Library will close for two weeks, beginning Tuesday, while library staff conduct book inven- tory Library officials advise patrons to use the San Clemente Branch Library during this time Patrons can also use the Dana Niguel Branch Library when the new facility opens on June 6. Dana Niguel is located at Mariner Drive and Niguel Road JSUt off Coast Highway in Laguna Niguel. The San Clemente Branc h Library. 233 Avenida Granada, 1s open Monday through Thurs· day lOa.m. to9p m .. and Friday, Saturday I until S p.m. The branch will be closed on Sun- days. San Juan Capistrano Branch Library will reopen on Monday Voters in the South Laguna community of Three Arch Bay vote Tuesday whether to tax themselves up to an additional 65 cents per $100 assessed valuation to finance park plc.1yground im- provements. The possible tax increase. to a maximum $1.50 per $100 as· sessed valuation. is a one-lime boost only for fiscal year 1977· 78. After that, the lax rate would re- turn to the present maximum Sl per $100 AV. Actual tax now is 85 cents per SIOO AV. The Three Arch Bay Communi- t;\· Services District tax override dect1on is the first since 1970. when residents of the private community voted a $1.80 tax rate to finance a traffic s ignal. The purpose of the district is to raise money for security, lifeguard service, beach sanita· lion, storm drains. operation and maintenance of the park play. ground area, and recreation pro· grams. There are 701 registered voters in the district, about half the total population. Drew Harper, Three Arch Bay manager. said the $86,000 the tax. O\'erride would raise would pay for new playground equipment basketball court, large level playing field. children's play areas -and new electrical imd sprinkler systems. \'oting at the community clubhouse is from 7 a .m . to 8 p.m. House Bombed BEIRUT. Lebanon CAP) An Israeli armored unit punched across the border and blew up a house in the southern Lebanese bor~er village of Varin today, a radical Palestinian guerrilla group claimed. KALEIDOSCOPE Councilman B. Patrick Lane didn't agree. After much talk: about alternative dam sites and how they would impact the in· c1uslrial area. Lane said: "I think we would be a damn sight better off to encourage industrial by the freeway or TRW ... He voled no on the dam loca· lion but Councilman DiGiovanni was supported b;y Mayor Donna Wilkinson and Councilman William Walker. Walker said the city should en- courage creation or an •·auto row.·· a collection of automobile dealers, aJong the freeway fron· tage. and he said utilities would • be too expensive to put it at TRW area to attract industry. Front Page Al PHANTOM. • Investigators believe that the rock thrower may be the ·same man who has set a number of fires in the canyon area in recent years. A man answering the rock thrower description was hunted for three days in the summer of 197-4 while firemen fought a number of fires deliberately set in the bone dry Santa Ana moun- tains. But sheriff's officers working on a new plan conceived since lhe attack on deputy Allen believe the rock thrower's days are num- bered. "1 can't tell you a thing about 1t." a senior officer commented today. "But we believe we can track this man down and end what has been 10 frustr ating months or nonsense In this general areu. ·· Our showroom 1s a virtual kaleidoscope of colors. The reasons are vaned-· We know that color coordinating 1s lhe primary target when buying carpet Quality 1s usually second m line. and because we have such a vast selection of qualities, 1t is easy to coordinate color and quality to each ind1v1dual s taste. However . we know that a volume of samples looking at you can seem very confusing -but we feel that showing just a few samples is not a lair representation of the carpet business. Our huge selection gives our salespeopte every possible option 1n working with people, helping them to f ind the perfect choice So if you are In the market to select your carpeting - select Alden's to help you, that's what we're here forl I. t f · DEN'S ••••••••••••••••• 1~lllMS ·installation· custom. draperies linolllln • wood floor , I ( ' 1 ' J l \ ~ .. A• DAJL Y PILOT L/SC Friday May 'l7 to'" r-~~~~~~~~~----~~~~~~~- F our Ageneies R.nch'i II \[\I; I 1111 \\Ii\)' l Joh Counseling "1:~1\ 1 ! Ii. _' 1 · In San Juan Employment counseling and job placement are nom ottered to South Orange County residents by four sponsoring agencies at a single San Juan· Capistrano location. The state and county employment services, the Youth Employment Service and the Summer Youth Program have representatives at the Capislrano- Laguna Regional Occupational Prograhi CROP> employment Qffice, 26900 Acjachema St. BEATRICE LEON, A LOCAL state employ- ment representative, and Jose Lopez, a county personnel specialist, work with a state job bank and can determine eliglbilily or applicants for a number or government-funded programs. Carl Adams represents the Youth Employment service <YES), sponsored by UC lrvine. The Sum- mer Youth Program, directed by Joyce Mendoza, is sponsored by Saddleback College. YES offers job counseling and placement to south county youths 17 or younger. THE SUMMER YOUTH PROGRAM serves economically disadvantaged young people, 14 to 21, who live in the Saddleback College dlstrict. The dis- trict encompasses the communities or Irvine, Laguna Eeach, San Clemente, San Juan Capistrano, Tustin, Capistrano Beach, Dana Point, El Toro, ·Laguna HilJs, Laguna Niguel and Mission Viejo. Summer Youth Program applications must be filed by today. Additional information on counseling or job placement is available by calling the ROP employ- mentoffice, 496-3514. L /fl. Boyd / Reining In The Reindeer II two men get into a violent jealousy fight over some girl in a. singles bar, it's almost always after 10 p. m. Or so a proprietor or such reports. You'd thlnk liquor might be the key here, that it takes unW that late for the scrap· pers to get too much to drink. But this owner says no, tbe trigger almost invariably bangs on the question of who will take whom home. Our Love and War'man nods, knowingly. Reindeer in northernmost Finland are rigged out with fluorescent collars now. Before• the Reindee r Grazers ¥sociation start- ed the practice, about 1,700 reindeer a year were hit by cars. What you and I call a tidal wave is not a tidal wave, say the s cience boys, testily. It's a seismic sea wave. The native M :Jamaica prefers his glass of cola at room temperature. · BLOOD Q. "Whal kind or phobia is it in a person . who can 'l stand the sight of blood?'· A. Hemophobia. Hemophobiacs do not make good surgeom~. bullfighters, butchers. etc. In a related matter, please note, the world·s ophldiophob1acs outnumber all those other people not so identified. Ophidiophob1a ia the rear or snakes Q. ''In San Francisco's Chinatown is a city-block-long golden dra~on called 'Gum Lung.' He only comes out on parade night to celebrate the Chinese New Year. How many men does it take to make him dance?" A. Three shirts of 22 men each. Over the course of lbe 18·block parade. they individual- ly work their way in and out of the dragon with rutreet. SHE, YOU.I, Who wrote the following lines? "She's skinny, you're thin. I'm slender. She's a tramp. you're a flirt, I have a warm affec- tionate nature. She 's childish, you're im· mature, I'm young at heart. She's erratic. you're eccentric, I 'm capricious. She's hid~ bound, you 're old-fashioned. I revere tradi· lion. She's slovenly, you're untidy, I like a house to have that nice lived·ln look." A tail or a comet, unlike tbe Lail or a kite, does not stretch out directly behind its path, as commonly believed. Just looks that way. A comet's tail i9 always on the side away from the sun. In fact, it's the radiation from the sun that pushes the tall out that way. There's no friction to make It drag back. Dana Hill,s Band Set for ·.~arathon Under the direction of Leon Badbam. the Dana Hills High School Dolphin band will present its second annual band marathon today tbrou.rh Sun-day. · The Dolphins wm attempt to perform con- • tinuously in the hicb school mall for60 hours to beat last year's record of 48 hours. The public is invited tonieht from 7 to 9 and on Saturday and Sunday from 2 to 4 p.m. and 7 to 9. - Accommodations have been made for the girls Jn the chorus room and tho bo)'I in tbe band room. Parents will chaperone the group and provlde mealJ. 1'bll year•s goal ls to raise '10.000 tor ¥Oiforms, parade transportation, addJt.looal muslc and new equipment. · Sponsors 01' anyone wlshlnr to make donations may call \he hlab school at '96-66$8. T~1-deductlble chccu abould 6e made to Dana Rflla Hip School Mualc Department and be malled to the DolphJn 'Band Marathon, llualc Department, Dana ffuts Hllh School, 33333 Golden Lantero, Dana Point, .8262t .. n 0 "'Go home'? You're a1kin1 me to go &.o a place where ainety per cent of all accldenta occur?" Water Board to GToW? The Irvine Ranch Water Dis- trict is considering expandine the size of it.5 board or directors and allowing the public to elect two o! the directors. A public hearine has been scheduled June 13 to give citizens a chance to comment on the pro- posal. which could be put' into ef- fect for the Nov. 8 election. CURRENTLY, ALL FIVE directors are elected by land- owners, with voting riehts as- signed on tbe basis or land values. The Irvine Comfany holds the vast majority o the votes. If the new plan goes into effect, two more members will be added to the board and two seats would be chosen directly by Irvine registered voters. A spokesman for the district said the plan is being considered to allow "greater representa- tion'' among Irvine residents. THE CURRENT SYSTEM was initiated when Irvine was primarily agricultural. Now that it is evolving into a residential area, district officials see the need for change, the spokesman explained. The new system is now permissible due to a bill in· troduced by Assemblyman Robert Badham in 1975, that ex· panded some of the volinc to all resident.5. Board President Laosin& Eberling explained that as tho ratio of re s ide ntial to agricultural areas increases, the number or popularly-elected directors would increase, too. Voting districts would be forme4 representing both residential and., non-residential areas. THREE CURRENT directors •. come up for re-election irt December, including E. Ray Quicley, Charles H. Olive r and C. Orville Reinhardt. Those seata., and two others, will be on the November ballot, if the new system is approved. The board is being suggested for expansiQn to "spread the workload," Eberling said. Orange Coast EDITION I • Today's Closing N.Y.Stoeks VOL. 70, NO. 147, 4 SECTIONS, 44 PAGES ORANGE CO UNTY, CALIFORNIA FRIDAY, MAY 27, 1977 N TEN CENTS1 Jury Eyes Diedrich-Conrad Land Link By GARY G RANVILLE Of Ille D••IY "ilot Sl•tl The Orange County Grand Jury's probe into political cam- paign practices swept out Thurs- day lo delve into real estate transactions allegedly involving federal indictee Gene Conrad and county Supervisor Ralph Diedrich. But Diedrich's attorney today said the Fullerton supervisor had no part in any or Conrad's real estate deals. '•As a m alter of fact,'· Fullerton attorney Michael Rem· ington said, '·Ralph referred Conrad to me with a warning that J watch my wallet. He (Diedrich) said he didn't want to get in· volved in any way." "Unfortunately," Remington added, "I did get involved. And 1t cost me a few bucks." Conrad is the former paid eat 0.11, Pilot Piiot• t>y lll<IWnl Ko ...... LONG, LONG TRAIL A WINDtNG AT SAN ONOFRE PARK All Available Camping Spaces Snatched Up Quickly Camp Fills Up Cars Wait at San Onofre It 'Aas f1r;l ('Oml', first served al San Onofrl' Slalt• Park today and the first <:amt• last nili(ht and slept m front of the j.!atl'S. Sex 'Rater' Swpentkd CAMO RIDGE, Mass. <AP) A student editor al th e Massachusetts J nstitute o f Technology was suspend<'d and three other students were pul on probation for publishing an article rating lhe sexual performance o( 36 MIT men. The article, which creat- ed a furor on campus. rat- ed the sexual performance ·of 36 male students on a scale of zero to "fo ur asterisks. The authors said they rated the men on the basis of their own experiences with them. Trudeaus Split OTTAWA, Canada (AP) Prime Minister Pierre Elliott Trudeau's office announced this afternoon that he and bis wife :Margaret have separated. He will have custody of their three sons. Areas i n Newport "Beach ebeduled for Monday trash pick will not be serviced on tho emorial Day holiday. accord· nf to Jake Mynderse. director ot eneral services. The next pick p ln those areas will be Thu.rt· 8.1· ,, Thls morning when the gate'> opened lo the newly refurbished park. 150 cars, camper.;, lrul'ks. trailers and other a.-;.,orted veh1cl~ were in hne for the 290 available campini? spa<'<'S Parks officials expe<'ted all the· 41va1lable camping spa<'ec; to bC' taken quickly. Camping c;paces in the l\\n ot her stale parks at San Clemente and Doheny were "sold out" under the state's reserva Uon system a month ago for the Memorial Day weekend. Although camping spaces are gone. day-use spaces were still available. police informer who turned political financier last fall when he dumped more than $53,000 into various campaigns. Early this year, Conrad's ac- tivities and those of the Irvine- based firm he heads, Pension Funds of America, fell under the scrutiny or a federal Grand Jury as well as the county Grand Jury. In April, the federal jury in- dicted the burly ex-Chicagoan on ~even fraud related cha rges re- Penalty Measure To Brown SACRAMENTO <API The Cethfomia Senate sent a death penalty bill to Gov. Edmund Brown Jr. 's desk today for acer· tam veto The 27·10 vote came after lengthy debate that focused more on charges of political motives than on the minor amendments wh 1ch were the only issue technically before the Senate. The vote was the exact two· thirds majority required in the 40 seat house. "l am convinced the punish· ment should not be the death penalty I am convinced a better punishment w(\uld be life im- prisonment without possibility of parole,'' said Sen. Milton Marks of San Francisco. one of only two Republicans to oppose the bill to restore capital punishment for treason and 15 categories of murder Sen. John Briggs of Fullerton. a Republican candidate for gov· ernor, said Brown ·s "heart bleeds not for the attacked, but the attacker. He continues to speak out for those who commit <'rimes 'Every day in California, over five prople are executed not by thr slate, but by the criminals." Hriggs sa1d. Rng~s also charged that the Dl•m ocrallc governor made a dC'al with Democrats in the legislature to override his veto to prevent the political embarrass- ment of facing a death penalty in· 1tiat1ve on the' ballot next year. Democratic floor leader David Hobcrt1 of Los Angeles angnly replied to Rriggs. "No deals haH• been m<Jde .. ''I'm proud of the governor on this issue," Roberti said of Hro"'n s pledgr lo veto the bill as J m alter of conscience ··sen. Briggs. you are running for the governorship You want the headlines.'· Roberti said. The' Senate approved an N1 rher draft of the death penalty b1 II on a 29· 10 vote March 31. Today's vote approved amend· ment.s made by the Assembly to s1mpl1fy trial procedures and limit the manner in which prior records can be brought before the jury. The Assembly gave appl'oval on a 54.23 vote Monday. <See VETO, Page A2> • lated to $1.2 million worth or loan fees for loans allegedly never made. Like Diedrich, Conrad has de- nied the two were ever Joined in business ventures. And Remington today em- phasized that point. ·'Naturally I 'm concerned because anything Conrad was in- volved in spooks me a little. But that's hindsight now that l 've Jost a few dollars. However, Ralph had nothing to do with any of the so-called transactions that never were," Remington said. He admitted that Diedrich has had past dealings with two wit- nesses who appeared before the jury Thursday. The two witnesses were real estate brokers Stephen Berck and Bart Rainone. Diedrich, who is out of town and was not available for com- ment, showed on a recent conflict or interest statement that he re- ceived income from Berck and Rainone's firms last year. "Yes," Remington said, .. that's true. So, big deal. Ralph's a wealthy man with extensive holdings and you would expect h i m to do bus iness with brokers." Remington said, "The jury ob· viously is following whatever Ralph did whether there's a re- <See PROBE, Page A2) eto een A,.Wl ..... I• SEN. GEORGE OEUKMEJIAN FLASHES VICTORY SIGN Death Penalty BUI Author Puts Brown on Spot Controversial Ship Goes to Work Today QUINCY, Mass. (A.P l -The fi rst of 18 American· built natural gas tankers 1s being dedicated here while controversy still sim- mers over whether such ships a r e answers to the energy shortage or potential sources of flaming disaster. The ship to be put into service today will carry 125,000 cubic meters of liquefied natural gas. Supporters say thal"s enough to serve an American city or 500,000 people for a month. But critics say it Is also enough to cause a catastrophic fire 100 times the size o( the wreck ol the Hindenburg, the hydrogen-filled German dirigible that burst into glames in 1937. The greatest damaae could oc- cur, scientists say, if the ship's tanks were ruptured during a col- lision at sea. The liquid gas would pour into the water, and if it did not catch fire immediately, would evaporate into a colorless, odorless cloud of gas. That gas, they say, would float close to the s urface. If the wind eventually pushed it to land, any name, even a cigarette, could ig- nite it. The new ship, called the LNG Aquarius, is the first of 12 li- quefied natural gas tankers be- ing built by the Gen eral Dynamics shipyard in Quincy. Six others are under construction atf shipyards in Newport News, Va., and New Orleans. The 936-foot-long s hip, which (See TANKER, Page A2) Tennis Courts Reservation Rule Changed . Recreation supervisors for the city or Newport Beach have in· st.ituted ~ new J'.U&rvatlon system for the city-owned tennis courts. The new system is as follows : -An arriving player places h is racquet on the waitlag board in the lowest numbered position available. -When a court is avaDable, the player with his racquet on the low~st number chalks bis name and the time he starts playing on the playing board. -All the other waiting players move their racquets forward one number. -Players can use the court for one h<Jur provided there is a name and correct time entered on the playing board. ...,.,u the name and correct time are not on the playing board and another player arrive•, the peo.. pie on the court hav6 oilly 15 minutes to pJay. . -Players already on tbe courts may not take a poelUon on the wa1Uns bOard for a minimum of two 11ou:nJ. -WaiUn1 pla)'ers wlthout partnen may-~ bold a court. .. 59 Still Held by Terrorists ASSEN. The Netherlands <AP> ·-Gasps of relief and quiet reu- nions with parents marked the end oC four days' captivity for 105 Dutch children held by armed Asian extremists in a village schoolhouse. The mass release occurred after half of them came down with a stomach virus. But fiv e South Moluccan separatists continued to hold four teachers today. including two women. in the school and refused to surrender. At least 55 other hostages remained the captives of seven other separatists on a train 15 miles north or the school. The South Moluccans, who want the independence or their Pacific island from Indonesia, have demanded the release of 21 · fellow extremists jailed for ter- rorist activities and a jumbo jet to take them to an undisclosed location. "It was fascinating to see the reaction of the children." a Red Cross sJ>()kesm an s aid. "Only· three of them cried when they saw their parents again." He said while many mothers had tears in their eyes or were openly crying, the children were shy for a few awkward moments before breaking into hugs, kisses a nd "just ha ppy children's talk," The Red Cross said one little girl's Cirst words were: "Mum- my, I left my coat in the school." One girl said s he and her sc hoolmates were never · threatened by the extremists but were.Jeslricted in their move- ments and had trouble sleeping on the cold hard floors at night. She said they spent much o(the time playing games and watching television. Ambulances rushed the ailing c hildren to a hospital where 26 were admitted. Another 79 c hildren and a teacher -also ri!- leased -were reunited with families W'lder the watchful eye or Dutch psychiatrists. Hospital oCCicials declined to disclose the condition of the hospitalized children, but uncon-. firmed reports said they were "reas0nably well:" The children had been suffering from vomit- ing and diarrhea. Coast Weather . lncreulng low cloudi· ness becoming more ex- tensive tonight and conU· . nulng t hrough mid· morning Saturday. Mostly sunny from late Saturday. morning through after· noon. Lowa tonight 50 to 57. Highs Saturday 66 to 70. INSIDE TODA W M emorfal Day W eekeml marlu Ut4 bf-ginning of .um· m1r ,at Orange County'• ,ammemnf Jm'M. For.a look .at wba1 Uteitrc f)lotmbsg, '" . P.age Clo/ tM W11~. laMJE: A2 DAIL V PILOT N F ro.Page Al TANKER ••• cost $100 million, will be operated by Burmab Oil Company o! Endand to carry 1u from Jn. donesla to Japan. The giant. black-bulled ship carries its cargo in liquid form U\ !Ive globe-shaped tanks. The tanks protrude above the deck, and from the air, the ship looks like a long, narrow carton filled with eggs. Boston ls the only U.S. port where liquefied natural gas is de- livered. The Coast Guard con- siders the tankers so dangerous that all other traffic is halted when they enter the harbor. Other docking facilities (or such cargoes are being prepared in New York, Providence, R.l.. and Cove Point, Md. One or the most outspoken critics of ga.s tankers IS James MacKenzie, a director or the Union or Concerned Scientists. "If and when an accident oc- curs . the re would be an enormous conflagration with people being injured for miles around," MacKenzie said. "It would be a devastation. There would be a huge fireball in the s ky visible from miles away." "It has a potential of being very hazardous under certain conditions," said Robert Reid, a natural ga s e xpert at Massachusetts Ins titute or Technology. "But if it's handled right, it's about as s afe as anything. There are lots of other dangerous gases we handle on our waterways.·· Rolf Glasteld, the chief de- velopment engineer for the new tanker. said he believes the ship is a safe way to transport fuel. "No question about it," he s aid. ''And no effort has been s pared to make it so '' F rona P a ge Al VETO ... State Sen Gcoq~e Deukme- j ian. author of the bill. met privately for about an hour with Brown Thursday to try to con- vin ce rum to change hi s mind about his pledge Jan. 6 to veto a ny death penally bill "as a mat- ter of conscience." Ocukmcjian said the meeting was "constructive" and hinted there was still a chance that Brown might reconsider. But in a pr e-r ecorded telev1s1on interview broadcast a few hours later, Brown repeated his 1ntent1 on of vetoing the OeukmeJian bill. Brown said he i;till intends to veto the bill, even 1f politicaJly damaging, a nd e ven though capital punishment may be re-· instated anyway either by a veto override in the le~islature, or a ballot initiativl· ··1 think it would he better not to have 1t. l think a t each point where it can be stopped, we s hould try t o st op it," the Dcmocrat1c j.?Ovcrnor s aid. Stereo System Stolen in CdM I\ Corona del Mar woman who h.•fl her apartment unlocked and unattended for two hours Thu.rs day returned to find her stereo system had been taken. Wynn Louise Colhn~. 34 of 420 Goldenrod /\ve. told oHtcers she lost $3,100 worth of stereo eqwp- m cnt as wl'll as some camera gear in the break in The woman told officers sht' was out of her apartment for about two hours heJianning Jt noon Neighbors said they didn't notice anythinl? out of the or din;ary atthc t1mc. Two Teens Held MERCED (AP ) -Two Sacramento lecnugers have been arrested here on charges of kid- n aping a yountt Sacramento woman at gunpoint. the highway patrol reported. The two boys . ages 14 and 16, were arrested Wednesday after a chase on Highway 99 which ended when the youths' car went over an em- bankment and into a ditch. OAANOI! COAST N DAILY PILOT "-"·-,.,.,,oe .... .,., ,.....,_ lldll.C..y "•t• ~-t"'-"' • .,., c;.,,.,.,~ T-••IC"wll Editor T'M-•A M ......... M<fMtlfl91tlli!# o"''""'·""' 111t"""'"·...," ·~ ........ -... 0'"0 l OllOf• Seniors Strain To HearNeWs By JOANNE REYNOLDS Of die o.Hy l'ttltltlff The nearly 20 hours o! public testimony and city council discussion on the Newport Beach Senior Citizens Center produced some interesting, sometim~ moving, scenes. ONE MAN WHO attended four of the council meetings is blind. A civic leader from the bygone days when Newport Beach had only a few thousand perma- nent residents, he is well known to his fellow seniors. They all made sure he was led to the podium each time he wished to speak and they saw to it he was taken to a front row seat when he finished. Someone always sat beside him to narrate the things that could not be perceived by ear. *** There were as many as 100 old people who attended some of the hearings, and ,bearing proved to be their most common problem. They'd sit in groups straining forward to hear what was being said. asking one another when they couldn't quite pick up a phrase. And they were not shy about letting a speaker know he wasn't being heard. •'Talk louder,,, someone would shout as the rest nodded their approval. *** ONE MAN SPOKE of bis friends in lbe local veterans oC World War I barracks. "Some can't talk. Some can't hear too good like me. Others are blind or have trouble walking. "Some of 'em are so bad off, they have lo be carried into the meetings, but they wouldn't miss, they want to be there so bad. "And I feel sorry for 'em and I thinkth~Yot!Jitbl to have a place they could go all the time." **• THERE WAS an icy confrontation between Coun- cilwoman Lucille Kuehn, the primary proponent of the center. and John Wilson, owner of the private school on the site. Why, Mrs. Kuehn demanded, had Wilson persisted in seeking government-owned property for bis school rather than private property? Wilson snapped back that she knew very well he'd done some looking for a new site with the Irvine Company. The school owner objected to the questioning, telling Mayor Milan Dostal he could see no purpose served by answering. Mrs. Keuhn interjected: "The purpose to be served is to determine if the public is carrying a tax burden in support or a private enterprise.'. *** BACKERS OF THE senior center complain that council assurances that the Carden School lease will not be renewed again have been heard before. They say councilmen said the same thing last year when the school owners got their existing lease. Councilman Ray Williams is adamant that no further extension will be granted beyond June 30, 1978. That may be, but things could change. Between now and next June, four council seats wilt come up for election -the ones held by Trudi Rogers. Pele Barrett. Milan Dostal a nd Lucille Kuehn. With at least one of the remaining councilmen -Paul Ryckoff -firmly behind the school. that matter of the lease e xtension will remain m doubt in the minds o( many until after that election next April. Tie-in Possible -. Attempted Assault, Burglary Probed Newport Beach police a re in- \' e stiga ting an attempte rf burglary and an attempted rape lo see if the two cnmes are re l att>d. Both casc5 occurred early Thursday morning within three blocks in Central Newport and both cases anvol ved hreak ·in~ lhroui:ih bathroom windows The first case waa r eported shortly after midniJ,lht when an I~-year-old t;(' Irvine student told police she frightened off " would-be intruder by screaming. The woman said she was dry- ing off after a shower when she saw her bathroom curtains move and a man's hand come through the open window. Alter the man ran off, the stu- dent and police found bricks stacked up outside the six,:foot high window. ' About five hours later, a IS. year-old woman reported a rape attempt inside her apartment. She told police she was awakened when a man put a T- shirt over her mouth, but she squirmed away from him and screamed, frightening him off. As the man ran out of her apartment, she said she noticed he was naked. Police said the man apparently got into the apartment by open- ing an unlocked bathroom win- dow and climbing in. The suapect in the rape at- tempt is described as being five feet, 11 inches tall, and weighing about 175 pounds. The woman said he had shoulder-length, cur- ly blond hair. Class Saves •J Survirors 'Physreally Fit' Grace Ellerbrock of Leisure World HY3 she and her husband, Byron, survived history's wont ulatloo disaster two months ago because of a physJcal conditlonlna clus she bad taken. THE B.ETDlE D couple, part ol a bandM of people who survived the collision of t.wo Jumbo jets 1n the Canary Islands, were hospitalized in Ft. Dix, N.J ., upon tbeirretum to this country. Mrs. E llerbrock wrote a letter lo Diane Edwards, Leisure World exercise director an4 an instructor In the Sa.ddleback Valley UJ\lfted School Dlstrlct's adult ~ucaUon proaram. thanking hor for the condiUonlna class. "IF TllEBt wu ever a living tllltlmonlal to your ccm- ditionin1 clU1es, this must be it," Mn . Ellerbrock wrote. "When one of your senJor citizen.a can Jump from the wing of a 747 jumbo Jet and dr11 a 200·pound man (Mr. Bl· lerbrodl) bareroot across a field wltb no more than abruiOOI, Cuts and bruJHS, it's IOm~thiDI to be Cl'ateful (or," she added. ''WEAll£ MENDING. rt wt1l take time, bUtyoucan be certain whesl r get home rube back lo your das -'beain· nen only' p1'0bably." Mn. Ell6brock1a husblnd IUSlained a broten pelvl5 and other lnjuiiea in the crash, whltb claimed 575 Uves. ID· cludlag2'7Leisut"e World restdenta. . # Carter . Dives in Sub LA CAPE CANAVERAL. Fla. CAP> -President Carter, a onetime career submarine of- ficer, slipped beneath the surface or the AUantic today aboard the nuclear-powered; hunter-klller sub Los Angeles. When the Los Angeles began· Its dive al 8: 15 a.m . PDT, Carter became the first president to cruise in a submerged undersea vessel since Dwight D. Eise- hower dove in aboard the nuclear-powered Sea Wolf 20 yearsago. · By coincidence,' Carter had been senior naval officer in charge during the construction of the Sea Wolf. The Los Angeles took two to three minutes to complete its dive in waters about 35 miles off the Florida coast. Carter had begun his Atlantic cruise some three hours earlier, eager to take the helm of the Los Angeles and perhaps willing to let wife Rosalynn take a tum in the "driver's seat." Aboard nuclear subs. the in- dividual who mans the helm is said to be driving the ship. Accompanied by Adm. Hyman G . Rickover, ''father of the nuclear Navy," the President and Mrs. Carter boarded the at- tack s ub Los Angeles at Port Canaveral for the eight-hour cruise. Carter, an Annapolis graduate, joked to reporters ·that when he was a career submarine officer, the undersea craft were called boats. He said they've grown so large they are now known as ships. .. Do you have any last words?" a reporter inquired s hortly before two Navy tugs began nudging the Los Angeles into a narrow channel leading to the oceap. "No," said Carter. laughing heartily, "because they won't be last words." The President was whistled - not piped -aboard the sub- marine and, as he disappearf(I down an open hatch, the pre- .sidential ensign was raised from the conning tower. As soon as the Carters got in- side the sub, the Pres ident s hucked rus blue-gray suit coat and donned a tan nylon ·windbreaker he carried ore Air Force One when he arrived here from rus holiday weekend retreat at St. Simons Island, Ga. The President and First Lady were taken first to a wardroom where Rickover briefed them on the status of his beloved nuclear Navy, which boasts 108 sub- marines and six surface ships. The admiral told Carter the Los Angeles required refueling only every 400,000 miles, com· pared to 5,000-6,000 on the con- ventional subs on which the President served. F roa Page Al PROBE ••• ason to suspect something is wrong or not." "I think that's unfortunate because no one should have to put up with that kind of thing," he added. Another witness closeted with the jury Thursday was attorney Ricbard Donald, Conrad's former counsel and reportedly a mate in the transactions that never came about. Co1n1nand Tops · Singlaub Ge"3 Big Poat WASHINGTON <AF» -Maj. Gen. John K. Singlaub was named ch1ef oC staff of the Army•s big- gest command today, less than a week after being re- lieved as U.S. staff chief in South Korea for publicly •challenging President Carter's decision to withdraw American ground troops from there. Singlaub's assignment as chief of s taff of the Army Forces Command headquartered at Ft. McPherson, Atlanta, Ga., was announced a day after Carter said the general would be given a job of "equal degree of responsibility and stature" to the Korean post. Singlaub has returned to Korea to clear up personal matters and will take over his new job on June rt. The Army Forces Command is responsible for training; equipping and insuring the combat readi- ness of all Army troops in the continental United States, Hawaii, Aslaska, Puerto Rico and the Virgin Islands. It is also responsible for supervising the . training of the Army National Guard and the Army ·Reserve. · Phantom's Activities. Probed by ·Deputies By TOM BA RLEY Of tlw O:iilly Pllol St•ll Orange County Sheriff's of- ficers are becoming increasingly convinced today that the so- called Phantom Rock Thrower who eluded capture after stab- bing a deputy may be responsible for a number of other bizarre in- cidents in the general area of his anti-auto activities. They believe that the man who was challenged by deputy Dave Allen Wednesday night may be the intruder wbo has carried ore the carcasses of several dead goats in recent months from a goat ranch in Santa Ana Canyon. And the rock thrower who has terrorized Riverside Freeway motorists for the past eight months -smashing more than 35 windshields -may be the same man who has smashed bee hives in the canyon and who bas broken into the pro shop at the Green River Golf Course on several occasions, they said. Investigators believe the man confronted by Allen may be liv- ing off the land and making his headquarters in the rough t,er- rain near Featherly ·Regional Park and the Green River Golf Course. They believe that his periodic bouts of rock throwing along the Riverside Freeway may be in· Banks Hike UxmRates By the Associated Press A number of major com- mercial banks raised their prime lending rate from 61h to6~ percent today. Among banks increasing the rate were New York's Citibank, the nation's sec ond-1 argest com· mercial bank , and Chicago's Continental Il- linois National Bank & Trust Company, the na- tion 's seventh-largest bank. Bert Lance, director of the federal OCCice of Management and Budget, said he sees no reason why banks should be raising their prime rate. Lance said that banks "are aw ash with cash." d1cative of his need to vent his frustrations at a civilization that may have driven him to loneli- ness and exile. The attack on Allen, who is now recovering from knife wounds on ~:s right arm and neck, has given them their first real description of the rock thrower. The Mission Viejo deputy described him as a short, bearded black man, dressed in dark clothing and wearing what appeared to be Army boots. Allen told bis fellow officers that the man repeatedly warned him to leave him alone and em- phasized his demands by tossing rocks at the deputy while the pair scrambled through brush and scrub at the side of the freeway. Allen said he spotted the rock thrower while he was driving home from duty Wednesday night on the Riverside Freeway. The deputy said the · man he described and subsequently chased was piling rocks on the center divider of the freeway, apaprently preparing for another session of windshield-shattering. attacks on passing cars. ' Fellow officers rushed Allen to the nearby Canyon General Hospital after the chase ended • with the hunted man slashing the deputy in the neck and arm. Other officers and the Anaheim police helicopter took up the pursuitofthesuspectin vain. Investigators believe that the- rock thrower may be the same man who has set a number of fires in the canyon area in recent years. A man answering the rock thrower description was hunted for three days in the summer of 1974 while firemen fought a number of fires deliberately set in the bone dry Santa Ana moun- tains. But sheriff's officers working on a new plan conceived since the attack on deputy Allen believe the rock thrower's days are num- bered. "[ can't tell you a thing about. it," a senior officer commented today. ''But we believe we can track this man down and end what has been 10 frustrating months of nonsense in this general area.'' KALEIDOSCOPE .. Our showroom is a virtual kaleidoscope of colors. The reasons are varied--: We know that color coordinating is the primary target when buying carpet. Quality Is usually second in line, and because we have such a vast selection of qualities, it is easy to coordinate oolor and quahty to each individual's taste. However. we know that a volume of samples looking at you can seem very confusing -but we feel that showing just a few samples ts not a fair representation of the carpet business Our huge selection gives our salespeople every possible option 1n working with people. helping them to find the perfect choice. So it you are in the market to select your carpeting - select Alden's to help you. that's what we're here fort l t ! · l66l PlACt'.NTJA AVENUE • COSTA MESA. CAU~. 92627 • PHONE 6A6-·U38 -6A6 -2355 • • Saddlebaek EDITION VOL 70, NO. 147, 4 SECTIONS, 44 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA FRIDAY, MAY 27, 19n Afternoon N.Y. Stoeks TEN CENTS Jury Eyes Diedrich-Conrad_Laiid Link By GARY GRANVILLE Of UM O.lly 1'1119i Stlltt The Or ange County Grand Jury's probe into political cam· paign practices s wept out Thurs- day to delve into real estate tra nsactions allegedly involving fed eral indictee Gene Conrad and county Super visor Ralph Diedrich. But Diedrich's attorney today said the Fullerton supervisor had no part in any of Conrad's real estate deals. ''As a matte r or ract ," F ullerton attorney Michael Rem- ington said, "Ralph referred Conrad to me with a warning that I watch my wallet. He <Diedrich> said he didn't want to get in- volved in any way." ··u nfortunately," R emington added, "I did get involved. And it cost me a few bucks." Conrad is the for mer paid eat Goats, B ees Deputies Probe Phantom Acts By TOM BARLE Y Of, ... O.,ol y Pilot St.off Orange Co unty Sheriff's of- ficers ar c becoming increasingly convinced today that the so- callcd Phantom Rock Thrower who eluded capture afte r stab- bing a deputy may be responsible fo r a number of other bizarre in- $4 Millio n Lake Fill Plan E yed By WILLIAM SCHREIBER Ol IM 01ily Piiot Stllft T h e Californ ia W ater Resources Control Roard will de- cide on June 16 if an ambitious. $4 million plan by the Mission VieJo Company to fill its man- made lake is acceptable. Co mpany offic ials spent the day m Sacramento Thursday, de· tailing the plan drafted by con- sultant .Jack Raub to water board staff members and two directors. Th<' cttmpany proposal bas1cal- ' ly calls for extraction of about one billion gallons of water with an extremely high mine ral con- tent from the lower portion of the San .Juan Creek underground basin near San Juan Capistrano. T his waler would be pumped from wells and then piped 1l m ilcs uphill to the partially ft lied lake bed. located near the corner of M arguc rite P arkway and Alicia Parkway. Company offi cials t old the water board that the expense 1s just ified on grounds t hat an estimated $28 million per year in wages, new home sales and taxes arc on the lane 1f the lake project is not completed in a timely man- ner The state water hoard ordered the company to halt the filling of Lake Mission V1eJO March 2, declarini:: that the use of import· ed water for u recr t'alional pro· ject was wasteful in the time of drought. The 125-a cre basin is one-thi rd fu ll. The estimated cost of the com· pany's groundwater extraction system would cover renovation of old wells. drilling of new wells. the 11 mil es of pipeline and pumping equipment <three pump stat ions > and electricity. (See LAKE, Page A2) BanlaJ Hike Loan Rates By the Associated Press A number of major com-. mer eial banks r aised their prime lending rate from 6 'h to 634 perce nt today. Among banks increasing the r ate were Ne w York's Ci tiba nk, the n ation's second-larg e s t c o m - m e rc i al bank, and Chicago's Continental IJ. Jinois National Bank & Trust Company, the na- tl on 's seventh-l a r gest bank. · Bert Lance, director of .the fed e ral Office of Mana.gement and Budaet , said he sees 1\o reason why banks should be ralslng their prime rate. Lance said that banks ••are awuh wilb cash .'' cidents in the general ar ea of his anti-auto activities. T hey believe that the man who was challenged by deputy Dave Allen Wednesday night may bel the intruder who has car ried off the carcasses of several dead goats in recent months from a goat ranch in Santa An a Canyon. And the rock throwe r who has ter r orized Ri verside Freeway motorists for t he past eight months -sm ashing more than 35 windshields -may be the same man who has smashed bee hives in the canyon and who has broken into the pro shop al the · Green River Golf Course on s everal occasions, they said. Investigators believe the man . confronted by Allen may be li v-. ing off the land and m aking his headquarters in the rough ter-· rain near Featherly Regional · Park and the Green River Golf , Course. T hey belie ve that his periodic bouts of rock throwing along the Riverside Freeway may be in· (Stt PHANTOM, Page A2) Redistrict Plan Mo ves Supervisors IC you live in Mission Viejo or El T oro, Ra lph Diedric h of 1-'ullerton ts now your represen· tatlve on the Orange County Board of Super visors · A redistn chng plan a pproved by s upervisors March 22 went m- to effect Thursday, correcting population im balances among the rave districts. As a result what had been Board Chairma n Tom Riley's fast-growing fifth district. cover - ing all of Southeast Orange Coun· ty has been split between Riley and Diedrich. T he redistricting, which leaves e a c h supe r visor with a bout 344,000 residents in his distri ct. also places all or Fountain Valley in Super visor Phil Anthony 's fi rst district. The city had been split between R iley and Anthony. The plan reduces the number of county cities divided between supervisorial districts from 11 to three. Huntington Be ach is one or the divided cities but almost all or the city will be in Supervisor Laurence Schmit's second dis- trict with a s mall portion in Riley's fifth. ,. Costa Mesa, Newport Beach, Irvine, Laguna Beach, San Juan Capistrano and San Clemente re- main in Riley's district. So do the unincorporated areas of Laguna Hills and Laguna Niguel. Even tho ugh popula tion figures have been put in balance by the redistricting, county figures show the districts vary in the numbel" of registered voters. Riley's fifth district bas 185,627 registered voters , while Diedrich 's third baS\,.172,•17. Scbmlt's district bu 166,668 re-- gistered voters, Anthony's rlJ'St dist r ict. 134,996 and Clark's fourth has 151,046. Although auperv1son• omces are non·partlsan. Democrats out· number Republicam la re~ tlon ln Anthony's, Schmit s and Clark's dJatr1ctl. Republicans are ln the m-1of'lty In both Diedrich's and Riley's dl.stricts. accordlnc to county naura. po lice informer who turned political financier last fall when he dumped more than $.53,000 into various campaigns. Early this year , Conrad's ac- tivities aod those of the Irvine- based firm he heads, Pem ion Funds of America . fell under the scrutiny of a federal Grand Jury as well as the county Grand Jury. In April. the federal jury in- dicted the burly ex-Chicagoan on seven fraud related charges re- lated to $1.2 million worth of Joan fees for loans allegedly never made. Like Diedrich, Conrad has de· nied the two were ever joined in business ventures. And Remington today e m· phasized that point. •'Naturally I'm con cerned· because anything Conrad was in- volved in spooks me a little. But that 's hindsight now that I've lost a few dollars. However, .Ralph had nothing to do with any ot the so-called transactions that never were," Remington said. He admitted that Diedrich has bad past dealings with two wit- nesses who appeared before the jury Thursday. The two witnesses were real estate brokers Stephen Derck and Bart Rainone .. Diedrich, who is out or town and was not available for com- m ent, showed on a recent conflict of interest statement that he re- ceived income from Berck and Rainone's firms last year. "Yes," R emingt on said, ·"that's true. So, big deal. Ralph ·~ ·a wealthy man with extensivE holdings and you would expect hi m to d o bus iness wi th brokers." Remington said, ''The jury ob- viously is following whatever Ralph did whether there's a re· (See PROBE. Page AU eto een Penalty ·Measure ·To Brown Dllltr l'llet,....•r Rk M,_ 11.~ttt LONG WAfT-There was a long, long line a winding back up the highway this morn- ing as the wouldbe campers waited for San Onofre State Beach to open for the three day weekend. Charles Alan Crow, 19, of Westminster waits for the gate to ope n. He was first in line and said he had been waiting s ince 4 p.m. Thursday at the facility south of San Clemente. Camp Fills Up Cars Wait a t San Onofre It wa." rirst come. first served at San Onofre State Par k today and the first came last night and sle pt m front of the gates. This mornin~ when the gates opened to the newly refurbished park. 150 cars, campPrs, trucks, t railers a nd ot he r assorted vehicles were in line for the 290 available camping spaces. Parks officials expected all the available camping spaces to be taken quickly. Camping spaces in the two o ther s t at e parks a t Sa n Clemente and Doheny were "sold out" under the state's r eserva- tion system a month ago for the Memorial Day weekend. Although camping spaces are gone, day-use spaces were still available. Nudity, Race Bias Bug Pizza Parlor GLENS FALLS, N.Y. (AP) - The owner of a local pizza parlor has had to contend with com- plaints about both nudity and racial discrimination s ince he put a replica of Michelangelo's, David in front of the shop. · Lorenzo Amato said he was s urprised when he s.tarted re· ceiving complaints about the tour-foot nine-inch statue. "People started to make calls telling me it was obscene, that they were going to knock it down, that it would hurt my business, so I painted black pants from the w aist tothe knees," Amato said. But painting the statue result- ed in 150 complaints that it was discrimination to paint the statue Disney Fi lm Set in Viejo A free, captioned version 'or Walt Disney'a animated film. "101 Dalmatians," will be shown at 7 p.m. Wednesday in the Mon- tanoso RecreaUon Center, Mis- s ion VleJo. The film was originally scheduled to bo 1bown at the the Mlsslon VieJo Beg,i~ Library. Weekly proa1""am1 luturiq captioned IUnu for the deal and hearing Impaired •re spomored by UM Santiqo JJbraf'1 Syatem; a cooperative of nine public libraries la Orange County. 'lbe latest rum schedule may be ob- tained by calllna Davtd Boule at M~-4481, extenalon Sl . hair black and half white. "I didn't know what to do after I painted it black and people s t arte d to compla in," s aid Amato. He said local police told hlm. the statue was not illegal and a priest told him it posed no re· ligious conllicll. ·Then Amato acted with results fr o m a s traw poll and whitewashed the statue, which is the way il remains. . Asked whether he thought peo. pie reallied the Michelangelo's; statue was a work of art, AmatO replied: "Apparently not. They thlnk it's obscene." Amato's next worry is a statue of the Virgin Mary be wants to place ln front of the shop. "Mary has halt of her bust ex· posed,'' said Amato, "but I re- fuse to put a bra on her because It would look tunny. but beforel do anything else, I'm goinJ to take another poll" Body Disco~ered SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -Tbe body ~ a master watchmaker baa bee!l fomMI bound and C&Qed t n the bathroom of h h apartment·..workahop, police. said. 1be part1aJ1J decompe>Hd body at Jama-olstmf •1. aa dilco•ered Wednesday b1 the apartment man•••r who said he w• ~med because OliteD hadA 't biHrl seen for more than a w k. CUSD Voters T o Consider Bond, Loan A $39 million local bond and a $10 million state loan election faces Capistrano Unified School District voters Tuesday, with the county registrar of voters pre- dicting a light voter turnout. Polls in the district 's 56 con· solidated precincts will be open from 7 a.m. to 8 p.m . The dis- trict's 41,106 voters live in the communities of San Clemente, Dana Point, Capistrano Beach, San Juan Capistrano, Laguna Niguel and part of Mission Viejo. 'School officials say passage of the bond and state loan election is needed to build schools for the 8,221 new students expected to move into the Capistrano school district in the next five years. When school opens in the fall, district officials predict 16,355 students will attend the district's 20 schools, which have a capacity 0£16,171. In addition to 14 elementary schools, three junior highs and three high schools, the district is operating with more than 80 portable classrooms. District officials say county planners predict the population of the Capistrano school district will grow from 82,809 residents in 1977 to 124,645 in 1981. If the registrar of voters' estimate of voter turnout ls ac· curate,abouteigbtpercentofthe school district's voters wlll de- cide what school facilities · are available over the next five1 years, as the district's population (See VOO'EllS. Page AZ) Drug Firm Faces ~ha~ge MILWAUKEE ~AP> -A pharmaceutlcel firm was charged In U.S. Dlatrict Court here with man"Ufacturini Laetrile ~r unsanitary coodl·' tiOOI. · Federal prosecutota said the Laetrile, believed by some to be effective a1alnlt cancer, wu adultetated and cOUld ban a.- cootaminated at tbe Moslllee . Re•earch Corp. plant In. Manitowoc, Wla. The ebarsea Hid the Aabataaoe WU~ packed and be1d u nder &&D· sanitary coodWom. SACRAM ENTO CAP) -The California Senate sent a death penalty bill to Gov. Edmund Brown Jr. 's desk today for acer· t ain veto. The 27-10 vote came after lengthy debate that focused more on charges of political motives than on the minor amendments which we re the only issue technically before the Senate. The vote was the exact two- thirds majority req uired in the 40-seat house. ··1 am convinced the punish- ment should not be the death penalty. I am convinced a better punishment would be life im· prisonment without possibility of parole," said Sen. Milton Marks of San Francisco, one of only two Republicans to oppose the bill to r estore capital punishment for treason and 15 categories of • murder. Sen. John Briggs of Fullerton, a Republican candidate for gov· ernor, s aid Brown's "heart bleeds not for the attacked, but the a ttacker. He continues to speak out for those who commit c rimes. "Every day in California, over five people are executed -not by the st ate, but by the criminals," Briggs s aid. Briggs also charged that the Democratic governor m ade a deal with Dem ocrat s in the legislature to overr ide his veto to pre vent the political embarrass- ment of facing a death penalty in- itiative on the ballot next year. Democratic floor leader David Roberti or Los Angeles angrily r eplied to Briggs: "No deals have been m ade." "I 'm proud of the governor on this issue," R oberti said of Brown's pledge to veto the bill.as a m alter of conscience. "Sen. Briggs, you are running for the governorshi p. You want the headlines," Roberti said. The Se nate approve d CTil earlier draft of the death penalty bill on· a 29-10 vote March 31. Today's vote approved amend- ments made by the Assembly to simpliry trial procedures and limit Qie manner in which prior records can be brought before the jury. The Assembly gave approvill on aM-23voteMonday. . C o ast We ather Increasing low cloudi· ness becoming more ex- tensive tonight imd cooti· 'nulng tbrougb mid· morning Saturday. Mostly sunny from late Saturday morning through after - noon. Lows tonJght :sc> to 57. Highs Saturday 66 to 70. I NSIDE T ODA W M•morlal Dav Wuk•nd morkl Uw bfgfnning of .um. mer .ot Oronge Co1mC~'• amUHrne'fd porb. For. o look at tohat t/ww'N p/on#lng, H fJ • P.ageCJ of Ille W~r. ··~- --··-· SB Pilot Logbook Voice From Past Lashes Trustees By WILLIAM SCHREIBER Of 1•0.Hy .. 11«$1•11 GONE BUT NOT FORGOTTEN DEPARTMENT - former Saddleback College Trustee Robert Bartholomew has acidly voiced his displeasure with the present college board in a letter to the Tustin weekly newspaper. Bartholomew. you may recall, is the John Birch Society member who quit the college panel last fall to move his nursery business to Montecato in Ventura County. In the finest right-wing rhetoric, his letter lashed out at the current board majority, calling the trustees ··fuzzybrained" for scrapping one satelbtc campus site near Tustin in favor of another location 3.5 miles south. He said he had hoped after his de· parture that two other conservative trustees. Frank Greinke and Donna Berry. would be able to "keep some common sense thinking and reasoning before the rest of the board." He said he was mistaken. 11AATH0L0Mr:w He went on to accuse the board or· selling out to the lrvlne Company in moving the campus site and said the only thing trustees haven't done is to rename the district the "Irvine Company Community College Dis· trict." Bartholomew said it is "quite apparent they feel said company owns the district." ''It is apparent that neither the Irvine Company nor the Norrisa Brandt-Larry Taylor combined (two of the four trustees who favored the site switch) has anything but con· tempt for the Tustin area students and taxpayers. So what else is new," he added. Taylor, of Laguna Beach, has fired off a reply to Bartholomew's Salvo, say- ing that if Bartholomew had all the facts, he would have voted to switch sites as well because of the large cost savings. He s aid an an interview that Bartholomew has little to be proud of since he calculatedly res igned his seat the day after the deadline for making an appointment, leaving his constituents without respresentation for four months. * * * ONE OF TllE SADOLEBACK VALLEY'S fire depart· mcnt captains has ended three years of service at Mission Viejo Station 24 with a promotion. Orange County Fire Department Capt. Tim Sappok will assume the duties of dispatch chief in the department head· quarters in Orange in the "very near future." Sappok said his present assignment is the longest he has ~ spent at one station since joining the fire service. He is a Mission Viejo resident. The new chief follows the valley's former battalion chief,. George Toussaint. to the county headquarters. Toussaint, of Lake Forest, had been posted at the Laguna Hills station and is now a ru111sion chief for operations in charge of four north county battalions. * * * SAP POI( GRACE ELLERBROCK, a Laguna Hills Leisure World resident "ho sun-ived history's worst aviation disaster in lht' Canary Isla nds in March, credits a physical condition ing class with her survival. She wrote a letter to Diane Edwards, the Saddteback Valley Unified School Distnct's Leisure World cxercis<' director recently noting that. '"If there was a hvin~ tes timonial to your conditioning classes. this must be it. "When one of your senior citize ns can jump from the win g of a 747 Jumbo jct and drag a 200-pound man <her husband, Dyron l barefoot across a field with no more than :ibrasions . cut.sand bruises, it's something to be more than ~rateful for." She went on to say she and her husband, "ho are hospitalized in F't. Dix, New Jersey, are "mending." ''It will take time, but you tan be certain when I get home. l'll be back in your class -'beginners only' pro· habl~·" Fro• Pa~ ,, I VOTERS MULL BILLS. • • swells. Capistrano Unified tru~tees have said that if the election faib , the district schools ~ill be forced to operate on double session or perhaps year-round an the strug~le to educate the grow- ing number of students. There hng been no orgnnlzed opposition to the election. Both the local bond issue and the state loan measures require two-thirds voter approval. District officials have called the local bond·state loan financ- ing or school construction the most equitable wuy lo provide housing for the expanding stu dent population. OR ANOE COAST ~" DAILY PILOT TI!e O._ , ... ,, C)Ally p,.,., wl"'-""'""' M"'Wfltftil~w,.p,,. \ 1\1ktt:M1\nitdb'llN ()r~ Cott i ~btltllfnq Comp•ny S.,...'4oedll'°"' ••• l'Nttthl\td ,._.onct•y fhrc>4i19"1 FrlO.Y hw CO\ta Mo•• H•*""" II•"'"· H•nll"'l\Oft 11uc-111r""" •••" V•U•y, ''"'n•. ~"ctdlttt~" V•H•Y •rid ... ~ ft•M.h'\outh c~1,1 • 1•nvt• ,-,.qt°"""' •d• lton I\ "'"'".,.~ Satu•O••• ....0 SundtY• l.,. t:::~~=!~~w.~~~.~~))O Wt•• 8•• ........... Wtt<I ...... .,. .... nc1 P\il)ll\fl<'< J•t-11. c ...... Yko l'ft•~M lrwl<knot•IMI.._< n.-uteff'llt ioltor T"-•A.MVf11N• IMIWIOll\0 Edit~ °""''" ""' ............. .. At\l•lenl Moi""91"' Cdltllf"I leddteb11elt Yel~ OHtc:e 2Jllll l,e P•I II-et !..tfl Oi ... Fr-•Y OffkH C..~Mt .. UO,_.fl..,St""" -·~111 .. e<ll 11PS1Mc11flleoott .. et• l-""wcll: llMG~\tlff\ TelephOn• (714)I0-4321 Cl .. tlfled Adnrtlslng 142-5171 ~•Y1lwy-Oftl<9 Mt .. StO ,_,_,..o.- 4lf.OIJO ~ "11 OOM9f CM" .._,.,..._ c:.oi.. ........... -· "~~-........... _ .-1\twlol .,..., .. •• "T•"' ...... " .. """'" ,...., .,. r..., ...... w IMvl tM< 1al -"'"""" el °""""'-· =r .. W''s::::~ .. :".., ... ~::, ~':. -·~,,: ., _., ..... -"''•· ... 1111 .. , ..,...._., ·-™"· They sa)" at places a heavier financial responsibilJty for new ~chool constr.ucllon on people moving anto the district than alternative funding methods. Because the Capistrano school district receives state building aid. district taxpayers will have the sam e 90-cenl tax rate, whether or not the election is ap· proved, said Ted Kopp, president or the board or trustees. "As 1 see it. this is really the way tD go." he said. "It seems ironic that a two-thirds vote is re· quired to pass a bond issue, when that enables us to do what must be done and do It the cheapest way possible." Kopp said district voters should understand that if they ap- prove the bond issue, bonds can be sold only to 10 percent of the district:S assessed valuation and can be used only for school con· struction -not for teacher salaries, educational materials or anything else . Election returns will be com· piled Tuesday night at district of· fices, 32972 Calle Perfecto in San Juan Capistrano. Results will be available by calling 496-1215 or 837·5181. FroMPa,,eAJ PROBE ••• non to suspect iJomethlng is wrong or not." ··1 think that's unrortunale because no one should bavetoput up witll UaJt llJnd ol thlnl," be added. Another wttnc.a closeted with tbe jury Thursday was attGl"MJ Rlcbard Donald, Conrad'•· former counsel and re'POrteill1 • mate In lbe transaCtloriS.1that never came about. . --- 59-Stifl Hehl by Terrorists ASSEN, The Netherlands (AP) -Gasps or relief and quiet reu· nions with parents marked the end of four days' captivit~ for 105 Dutch children held by armed Asian extremists ln a villa1e schoolhouse. The maas release occurred after half of them came down with a stomach virus. But five South Moluccan separatists continued to bold four teachers today, including two women, in the school and refused to surrender. Al least S5 other hostages remained the captives of seven other separatists on a train 15 miles north of the school. The South Moluccans, who want the independence of their Pacific island from Indonesia, have demanded the release of 21 fellow extremists jailed for ter· rorist activities and a jumbo jet to take them to an undisclosed location. ''It was fascinating to see the reaction of the children," a Red Cross spokesman said. "Only three of them cried when they saw their parents again." He said while many mothers had tears in their eyes or were openly crying, the children were shy for a few awkward moments before breaking into hugs, kisses and "just happy children's talk." The Red Cross said one little girl's first words were: "Mum· my, I left my coat in the school." One girl said she and her schoolmates were never threatened by the extremists but were restricted in their move- ments and had trouble sleeping on the cold bard floors at night. She said they spent much of the time playing games and watching television. Ambulances rushed the ailing children to a hospital where 26 were admitted. Another 79 children and a teacher -also re- leased -~ere reunited with families under the watchful eye of Dutch psychiatrists. Hospital officials declined to disclose the condition of the hospitalized children, but uncon· firmed reports said they were "reasonably well." The children had been sulf ering from vomit· ing and diarrhea. The parents of children return· ing home were told by the Red Cross to give them hot baths and send them to bed. The children were also told not to drink or eat too much at first. .. LAKE •.• The company contends that the degraded groundwater, which is usable only on a few hardy crops. will be adequate for recreational use in the lake and. mixed with the good water already in the lake, could serve as a water sup- p I y in time of extreme emergency. The extensive company study of the proposed groundwater ex- traction notes that the San Juan basin contains an estimated 28 bi1Jion gallons of water and is currently saturated to its max· 1mum. But the study noted that about 4.5 billion gallons of groundwater located nearest to the coastline has been gradually degraded in quality through the years by the (low of dissolved salts and m merals from the streams and creeks thatf~ the basin. By removing a portion of that poor-quality water, the report c·ontends, there will be space ror h1~her-quaUty runofr or better water from other parts of the un- derground basin. Accordlng to the study, extrac- tion of about a billion gallons at the lower end of the basin will cause the rest of the basin water to seep downstream and fill the extraction zone. There is no indication in the re- port . that the company is plan· ning to pump more imported water to the basin to replenish it. It is appar ently counting on natural runoff and seepage lo recharge the basln. The company project bas the endorsement of T.J. Meadows, president or the San Juan Ba.sin Authority. Meadows said that the basin is now so full tbat runoff water can- not be absorbed and is running into the ocean at a rate of about 3.S billion gallons a year. He aald removal of degraded water at tbe lower end of the basin will make room for storage and use of tbe better water and wlll cut down on the use of lm- ported water ln the basin region. The company study also noted that the ertraetlon plan is a step toward achieving a goal of the State Department or Water Reaources -that of upfr&Cline the entlreSan Juan Basin. l,\ul the Stud)' also Doted that. far more than a bllllon caJlom wfJI have to be .. nu.shed" fro111 the basin to fully revitalise i.t. . ·Woman Browm LAKEPORT (AP) -An Oakland woman1 Janice; Bowman, 23, d"'1'DOCI •h• her ftttiln• sear apparentt7 iot· m•Hed and drew her llito deep wa.ttt, police said. • AP Wl,.plloto LNG TANKER TO BE DEDICATED IN SEA OF CONTROVERSY OVER SAFETY Ship's Capacity Gives Rise to Concern Over Possibility of Giant Ares First LNG Tanker Sails QUINCY, Mass. (AP> -The first of 18 American-built natural gas tankers is being dedicated here while controversy still sim- mers over whether such ships' are answers to the energy shortage or potential sources of flaming disaster. · The ship to be put into service today will carry 125,000 cubic meters of liquefied natural gas. Supporters say that's enough to serve an American city of 500,t>oo people for a month. But critics say it is also enough to cause a catastrophic fire 100 times the size of the wreck of the Hindenburg, the hydrogen.filled German dirigible that burst into glames in 1937. The greatest damage could OC· cur, scientists say, if the ship's tanks were ruptured during a col· lision at sea. The liquid gas would pour into the water, and if it did not catch fire immediately. would evaporate into a colorless, odorless cloud of gas. That gas, they say. would float close to the surface. If the wind Toro Marine Found Guilty .Of Murder eventually pushed it to land, any flame, even a cigarette. could ig- nite it. The new ship, called the LNG Aquarius. is the first of 12 la quefied natural gas tankers be ing built by the General Front Page A I PHANTOM. • dacative of his need to vent his frustrations at a civilization that may have driven him to lonela ness and exile. The attack on Allen, who is no\\o recovering from knife wounds on his right arm and neck, has given them their first real description or the rock thrower. The Mission Viejo deput) des cribed him as a s hort. bearded blac.-k man, dressed an dark clothing and wearing what appeared to be Army boots. Allen told his fellow officers that the man repeatedly warned him to leave him alone and em- phasized his demands by tossing rocks at the deputy while the pair scrambled through brush and scrub at the side of the freeway. Allen said he spotted the rock thrower wh.ile he was driving home frora duty Wednesday night on the Riverside Freeway. The deputy said the man be described and subsequently One of two El Toro Marines chased was piling rocks on the tried in Orange County Superior center divider of the freeway, Court for the strangulation kill· apaprently preparing for another ing of a fellow Marine was found session of windshield-shattering guilty of first degree murder late attacks on passing cars. Thursday arter less than three Fellow orficers rushed Allen to hours of jury deliberations. the nearby Canyon General The jury returned that verdict Hospital after the chase e nded in Judge Kenneth Williams' with the hunted man slashing the courtroom after hearing deputy in the neck and arm. testimony that Marine Robert Other officers and the Anaheim Jones, 22, played an active part police helicopter took up the in the killing of Marine Patrick. pursuit of the suspect in vain. Michael McCone. 20. Investigators believe that the Co-defendant Terry Alan rock thrower may be the same Corfield, 21, was sentenced to six man who has set a number of years in state prison earlier this fires in the canyon area in recent month after being found guilty of years. second degree murder in a A man answering the rock separate trial before the same thrower description was hunted judge. for three days in the summer of Judge Williams set June 20 as 1974 while firemen fought a the date he will sentence Corfield number of fires deliberately set to what could be life in prison . in the bone dry Santa Ana moun- lt was successfully alleged in tains. both trials that Jones and But sheriH's oHicers working Corfield killed McCone last Nov. on a new plan conceived since the 17 after a dispute over a attack on deputy Allen believe narcotics sale and then dumped the rock thrower's days are num- h!s body in the El Modena area. bered. --- KALEIDOSCOPE Dynamics shipyard in Quincy. Six others arc under construction <itf shipyards in Newport News, Va .. and New Orleans. The 936·foot·long ship, which cost SlOO million. will be operated by Burmah Oil Company of England lo carry gas from In· donesia to Japan. The giant. black-hulled ship carries its cargo m liquid form 10 fav<.· globe-shaped tanks. The tanks protrude above the deck. Groups Urge Smoking Law W ASIUNGTON I AP l · Two former U.S. surgeons-general and 10 organizations opposed to · cag.irctte s moking have peti- tioned the federal government to regulate cagarcttcs more.· strictly th<in saccharin :.md to require doctors' prcse r1pt iuns for cigarette sales . The petition riled with the Food and Drug Adm1nastrat1 on Thurs- day asked the agency to assert JUrasd1ct1on over c1garctlcs on th e ground that tobacco contains drugs and therefore 1s under . FDA 's authority. The FDA has proposed rules that would ban the use of sac· charin as a food additive but permit its sale as a single ingre- dient, non-prescription drug. The FDA is soliciting comment on the proposal and may make the rule errective in July. Movie Slated On Therapy The Professional Community Management Social Services of L~i9Ure World in Laguna Hills will present a film entitled "Journey Into Self," Tuesday from 1:30to3 p.m . The free presentation wiJl be conducted in dining room 1, in Clubhouse 3, 23822 Avenida Sevilla, and will feature Dr. Carl Rogers, an internationally known therapist and author. Refreshments will be served. For adrutlonal information call Rowena Gordon, Saddleback Hospital, at 837·4500. Our showroom 1s a virtual kaleidoscope of colors. The reasons are varied-: We know that color coordinating is the primary target when buying carpet. Quality is usually second in line, and because we have such a vast selection of qualities. it is easy to coordinate color and quality to each ind1v1duars taste. However. we know that a volume of samples looking at you can seem very confusing -but we feel that showing just a lew samples is not a fair representation of the carpet business. Our huge selection gives our salespeople every possible option 1n working with people. helping them to find the 'µerfect Choice So if you are 1n the market to select your carpeting - select Alden's to help you, that's what we're here fort l I ! ·DEN~S : iiisiiilitiaii : ·custom d rs plries hnoteum • wood floor 1663 fllACENTIA AVENUE • COSTA MESA, CAUF.. 92627 • PHONE 6-'6·'4838 -6-'6·235-' • s OAlL..V PtL.OT A.13 Friday's Afternoon Prices· NYSE COMPOSl'l'E TRANSACTIONS Goods· Offered ~I' Ind)~-----)Wt-V. ~n •l tfZ NI• .. l!mMrt 1.a 4 4 ~~·ti; .,., t.t• • ~ t•~-"" ~:~~ '"' : 'f ,=::.::~ I::&!'~ : ': ,.,.. ..... ~l.. eo 1 ' It , • ._. •. .• c.11-... .-Tt "• ",., __ .. ~ ,~MC •• '-!? ! IO ""'· . ~Sv t ii to ti '914 .•..• C.-lllW 1, -.. .,... .-, 10 S~-'-' tN ".. 110 .,._ • v. c;mo•u • .aou.e • 2•14 • -. 11~rc111 to • u• ~~-. " ~ 1 ' 11 ~ ... • c.mso tAtt ISJ 31~-~ ntu uo • ,, n...,. .. ell 1J , .. 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TW4 4 S7 10 -"" U.S. Selh Used Property By SYLVIA PORTER People ln the market for a used car, aircraft, plumbing and beating equipment. a typewriter or office machine. medical items, textlles, hardwJre, turnltu.re and other iteml D:UIY (and the government has a aood buy iD store. A variet.y of penonal property ii continuously offered for sale by the !ederal government, wlU> tbe General Se:rvices Admlnistratlon (GSA) and the "Department of Detense the principal aaeocics enaaied ln selllna it. THE CONDITION OF THE PROPERTY ranaes from ,-ood to poor; lt may be new or used and could require re· pair. Some is not even salvageable. having only scrap value. Sales of civil agency j>ersonal property include a long list or consumer items. Each of the 10 GSA regional offices conducts sales and each office maintains a malling Usl for tbe geographical area it serves. =~~~~~1i 1U m;; ~ RuuTOQ " I " 10''> • RvduS .1~ /-s" ll'•+ ~ TW4 Pl . 3 21••-h T'.,,""' " 1 .. 1 u"" .... , To obtain a mailing i~:~~ I 'h ~ m:~ ~ list application for the ~~~,:~,·lt~ ,1~ ,~~~r· GSA list, write to the ~~:~:1nL 1~~,~~.~· GSA, Federal Supply _,, __________ """'Ii--------..... SCA Svc 10 '° 3"•-14 SCMCp .IO 6 70 21"'-lt SOSCon .50 ' • tl'l; ·~ S.blne .50 t I 2•'h-Yo S.to<11n .16 I 7 s-.-•,. S•lew11v2 2011 o •1 -.,.. Soo•Cr. lit 6 22 1011, .• , .. StJoM n I JO 17 63 ~4'1')-VJ SIJoLIP I 12 ' 7 11 ........ TrOPof1!0. • 11•n+"' Service, Personal TranOllF 21 4 "4 11'11.-Yo D t Money's Worth Tranwv 1 «> 1 m ,..,... "" Property epar ment. m~~s i ~ .~ ~ ~::; ~ 5555 S. Eastern, Bell, ' 'ilLSeF 1.50 9 41 .._,,___ ~ TrlSoM I 2 + 'o CA. 90201. i~l:r.~~ 60 4 ~ ,rt:::;; The Defense Department handles sales of its own pro· SI P•ulS le .. 22 12~+ .,._ SIRl'QP I"' 9 371 Jll 1-:i., S.t.nt J1 5 I •'o ... S.mbos •I .. H• •+ Yo SOIPGE I 20 8 SC U' o •••• SJuanR 9" & \ 1>• .. ''• i~~~,.~~ .. ~1: ,i~ ~!~!-; :: perty, including large quantities or commercial, industrial i~S:& 1 ~1~11~ :::~:1~ and consumer merchandise. s .. ncs.rs 43 ... ,. '• SFtlnd 2 1 79 AO'•-"" SFPlnd pl SO 6 10'•-'• S.nFelnt 60 • 1)1 •q• 1-"4 ~~?~~el 60 8 1~ 1~:.;~ ;~ ~:~~~If, ,. '1 ~ ~:= .. ~~ SotvEIP 80 6 2 '"'-''t Sa•BM .J01D 1S1 13-. "° Suon 8 JO l '•-~o sc1111.,1er"P • 1 61 ••. SchrPI011711 133 3l'• '• S<hllUBr 68 8 811 ll'•>-• 1 S<lllumtl 8017 416 61 -·~ SCOAln ~ S 1b U\'lo ,,_ S<o1Lad l627 1 s~ •. 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WoodCo 40 ti • ,_.,.. • , WOOCIPel JO I) m ,. _, Wol•lll I «I• 93 21\11-"• Wolw pf 2 10. • I 31 + V. WorldAlr 10 • Siio ~~',1:~rz ~ 1i : ·~ .... : ~ Wyltln .6012 2S U'ltt • • Wyly Cp •• 2J 1~+ I/• -X-Y-t. Xuox t 6010 xAA& 0'11 •••. Xlre .1M 6 0 2'~; v. Va1H .OSto 6 11 U"•-14 Z•ltCP 98 6 1J 1''41 ... Z•Pfll• JOI> S 1' 11 ..... Zey,..Cp 3 U 7') • . . Zl'1tllllll I 11 2311 14''o-''lo Zurnlnd .4 t l3 1'1'41-V. . Index Indicates Growth WASHINGTON <AP> -The gov· crnm e nt Jndex designed to f'ol'eshadow future economic trends rose Jn April by flv.e--tenlha of 1 per· c~nt, t.M third straicbt monthly Lo· creau, the Commerce Vepartment said today. At the ume time. the acency re· vised aha.rpl.y upward the March Ln· dex rrom 1.4 percent to 1.9 percent.. the bluest moolhly advance since the 2.a pettent aatn ln July 1975. The lain ln th~ Index for the thin! conse.cutive month lndJcaLcs tho na· lion •1 economy abould contin.ue to IJ'OW to monlba ahead, even thoujh the Aprll increue wu much smaller than the Jla.rcb advance. \ , ... ,, PROPERTY DESIGNATED AS military surplus is sold through defense property disposal sales offices. There are five: Columbus, Ohio; Portsmouth, R .I.; Memphis, Tenn.; Ogden, Utah, and Pearl City, Hawaii. A centralized malling list is maintained for sales conducted by these offices. To obtain a mailing Jist application, wnte to DoO Surplus Sales, P .0 . Box 1370, Battie Creek, MI. 49016. When the classes of property specified on the applica- tion are placed on sale in the geographical areas designat· ed, the department mails invitations for bid that contain description or the property. spe<:ific locations, dates and times for inspection as well as other detailed information about the sales. Notices of sales to the public aJso may be in newspaper, radio and TV announcements, trade journals. notices in such public buildings as post offices, and through announcements in the Department of Commerce publica· tion, Commerce Business Daily. SUBSCRJPTl9NS TO TIRS publication, at $75 a year, are obtained by writing to the nearest Department or Com· merce field office or the Supenntendent or Documents, Gov- ernment Printing Office, Washington, D.C. 20402. Personal property is sold on a competitive bid basis, in quantities to encourage participation by individuals as well as businesses. No priorities or preferences are given. Property is frequently sold by sealed bid, with invita· lions for bid mailed to prospective buyers. SPOT BIDS ALSO AllE USED, with the bidder submit· ting an offer during the saie. Awards are made item by item as tbe sale progresses. Those on mailing lists receive in- formation on the property and instructions for placing bids. Provision may be made for bids by prospective purchasers who can't attend the sales in person. Public auctions are another vehicle used by the govern- ment. These follow traditional commercial auctioning methods. CataJogs are provided. Government·approved auctioneers are in charge. Values Hunted Bank Projects 1llore Spending Bigger incomes and greater spending power will be en· joyed by Southern Cahfornia l'esidents between now and 1980, says Security Pacific Bank, but increasingly .selective and value conscious consumers will become more prevalent .des pi le their increased buy mg power. Thal assessment is part of a major economic study on Southern Californi a, entitled : Southern California: Economic Trends in the Seventies, which the bank will re· lease Wednesday. The bank's study says that, assuming no business downturn, the anticipated gains in employment between now and 1980, coupled with relatively moderate consumer price inflation rates in the 5 to 7 percent range, wm mean greater purchasing power. FOR A SHORT·TERM, THE BANK'S research points to the current drought pushing up 1977's consumer prices by around 6.3 percent, higher than originally forecast but below the recession era's double·digit rates. Looking to the end or this decade, the bank's study says the picture appears more eqcoraging for local residents. '"We are estimating that real disposable income per capita -what's left for spendmg after truces and such -will rise ( CONSUMER J about 1.8 percent per year between now and 1980. "That would be slightly higher than the rate recorded in the first six years of this decade and would mean that consumers would have more money lo spend," says Richard W. Ayer, assistant vice president. . What will people buy with their increased incomes? "Home furnishings, major appliances and building materials, automobiles and auto supplies should do well over the next !our years, prlncipalJy because of the in- creased number of new households being formed 1n the next few years and the Southland's continued dependency upon the car as the primary means of urban transponatlon." says Ayer. THE STUDY ALSO SAYS THAT although people will have more to spend between oow and 1980, they wlll demand value for their money .. "Consumers have become much more selective and value conscious, and thls trend will become even more widespread rui higher education levels and increased con- sumer actlvlsm expands the ranks ot •aware' con· sumers," Ayer says. While sales attract consumers, he says, "they wUJ pay full price for more expensive or top-of·tbet·llna products which utey believe ofter either value or fashion appeaJ. Recently, for example, better Jewelry and expeQ.Slve leather products have been selling well." Mercury Savings Seeks Two llitings • Menury Sam1s & Loan AssoelatJcm. Huntiniton B~acb. bas announced lbat 1\.1 appllcaUons for llat.lng of Ua stock on the American Stock .Ex.change and the Pacific Stock Ex.ehan:.e h ave been filed. The bsoC atlon's stock ls O\U1'enU.Y traded over the t.Ounltt. Mettu.ry Savina• operates seven omcu ln Orange and Los M&elea cou.nUoa and thrOG oUlces ln Santa Clara County. Tbe elneth office la ~ to open. by Jeareod in the Lake.F~ a~a. . ,,,,,., J