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1977-07-07 - Orange Coast Pilot
~ed Pilot DAILY PILOT Computer Eyes Reeord . Ir * * * 1oc * * * In Transpac. Thril_ler THURSDAY AFTERNOON, JULY '7, 1977 --------"-Ol._>t_. N_O 1•. J SEC fl ON$,• ~AGIS .. • • • •• 2 Viejo Pilots Killed • Ill .Crash Nevada Site Neutron Bomb -Tests Admitted WASHINGTON (AP> -The United States has conducled underground tests in Nevada with the n eutr on bomb, a government spokesman ~aid today. "It's a matter or procedure that weapons are tested before production," said a spokesman for the Energy Research and Development Admimstration. :~e neutron bomb, which is de ~mputers Try To Pick First ..... Transpac Yacht By ALMON LOCKABEY O.lly ~ilot llo~t1119 Writer : Computers were humming tOday as the leaders in the Los 6ngeles to Honolulu yacht race t'll_s'.Sed the halfway mark in the fa!test and closest ftrst·to-rinish iece in the 71-year history of the btepnial classic. Computer feeders are trying to predict the first yacht to finish and at what time -and by how Q'luch she will break the elapsed Ume record of nine days and nine hours set by Windward Passage ln 1971. Computer man Tom Wilder, of-fl c i al measurer for the s~nsoring Transpacific Yacht ~fub, has fed coordinates and average speeds into the machine ~nd come up with the following predictions: Drifter will finish about 9 a.m. PDT Sunday and will be followed by Windward Passage aboul an bpur later. Merlin will finish about S p.m. Sunday, followed taf>out an houri later by Kialoa. · Ragtime ls expected to finisll a\out cocktail time on Monday unlesa she picks up the pace. RacUme was r1rst to finish in the 1 lut two Honolulu races. Regardless of who finishes first, accordina to the coO.putalion.s, it appears that the rlnt yacht wlJl lop a full day or mdte from the elapsed time t"teord. . '!"J..luf!o1 breakdowns or a C'9ffl'AI (Jf the weather, Wilder's computer mu M tl&bt. The lead yt1eh\f have all averated more <S.. :YACHTS, Pase Al> signed to kill people with massive doses of radiation while leaving minimal buildings dam age. is des igned as a warhead for the Lance missile, which now carries conventional nuclear warheads. The Pentagon is seeking funds to put the neutron bomb into production. The ERDA spokesman said the neutron bomb. known as the enhanced radiation warhead, "is under development now. Nuclear weapons are tested in the dev- elopment stage before they go into production." He declined to say when testing began, how often the weapon has been tested or the results. He said the tests have been conducte d under tre aties requiring that nuclear tests be conducted underground and that no radiation escape. President Carter has not made a dedsion on whether to produce the neutron bomb. But he has asked Congre:;s to approve production funds to provide him with flexibility in reaching a de- cision. The Pentagon noted recently that "in the case or the improved Lance warhead (neutron bomb) versus the present warhead, we have succeeded in reducing the area exposed to fire thermal (radiation), fallout and the total of blast by a factor of more than 10." Tbe Pentagon added that •'by confining these effects to small areas, the military effectiveness is maintained, while minimizing the unwarranted hazard to nearby populations, to U.S. and allied forces, and greatly reducing the destruction around the immediate target area." In Las Vegas, Nev., ERDA (See NEUTRON, Page AZ) Permission Granted IMLAY CITY, Mich. CAP) -About-400 workers at Hamill Manufacturing Company bere no longer have to raise their hands to I 10 lo tbe bathroom. The recently imposed rule req&&htng a supervisor's permtsstoo to leave tl\e ~ork area "Was resclQded Wednesday, ac- cordln• t.o a United Auto Wortcera ~ocal 481 1poke1WOmaD. The flrm .llso a~ to 1Jve back pay t.o a number of Work .. Who 1114 betft •UiPendid,.. ·~ '° ralletMil'Miiidlo'' Where, Two Perished I Biplane OfWWII ' t~ ~) ~IY Piiot SIAff Photo ORANGE COUNTY FIREMEN PROBE WRECKAGE OF TRAINING PLANE AT AIRPORT CrHh After Takeoff Ctalmed Lives of Two Piiot• From Mlaalon Vl•Jo Lands in Taiwan Chinese Ml.G Pilot Asks for Asylum TAIPEI, Taiwan (AP) -A squadron commander In the ChineseCommunistair'forceflew his MIG19, jet fighter to Taiwan today and asked for political asylum, a spokesman for the Nationalist Chinese Defense Ministry announced. The defect9r, 41-year-old Fan Yuan-yen, was quoted by the spokesman as saylne there "are no human rights at all on the mainland" and broadcasts about people enjoying such rights in Taiwan reinforced his decJsion to defect. Informed sources said he would be rewarded with about $700.000worthofJOld. · Fan's plane IS no prize ror Western intellieence officers since lt bas been outdated by later modehl. Military sources said be brouebt documents concerning Chinese coastal mlUtary Lnstall- a tiona and other defenae information. · People ln Taiwan· welcomed newa ol li'an'a de(etUon. Some Hid they c:ontldtred it lroa.ic in Utht ol U.S. Preaideilt C...._ decision to ae8 the nonnallsatlori of relatlons with Communiat China. ThtJ Defense Jlllnhtry apokesman aaid l'•liiOkolfrroM the Chbltslan mlli~ air Oeld Ila Fuklen Provmce, e"°"ed UM Formosa Strait ailcl UcMi at Tainan, in ioUUt'wut T•an. SOurcf"!t said Fu waa a~ cotnmanct.r ot 1he Commmmt Cblneae lit .ReconnatHaac• Wins. Hetoldoftlrid~==-~ tla••atwl8ilpil .. that he bad "no choice but to nee toTaiwan,"thespokeamansald. He said he had been planruog his move for "quite a long time," the spokesman continued, and headed for Taiwan while making an "inspection" miht. Fukien province la across the FormosaStraitfrom Taiwan. The Nationalist ~overnment offers rewar"8 In gold tode(ectots who brin'-their planes or navat vessels with tbern. Fan was the third Chinese alt rorce»Uotkn«>wn to have defected to Ta1ftan. one new over to a MIG15in 1962 and one ll\ an EL28 bomber in 19M. • DOUse 'Flaine' Mesa Water District Okays Rate Hike A cllslomer rate increase that could average about $1 per month was approved Wednesday night by directors of the Costa Mesa COunty Water District to offset what they said are rising service cQSts. The hike to be reflected in the next two-month billing is the first imposed by CMCWD directors ln three years. However, customers who keep their water use to a ~inimum will be able to rtlalntain their current bl-monthly minimum $6 water bill for 1,000 cubic feet Of less of water. 'rbe new rate schedule adopted Wednesday rug'bt imposes highet costs on more excessive use oC water as an ecncouragement to ~om ti1tthe current drougbt. If a customer uses 2,000 cubic feet ot water over a month-lone perlod. lt wW cost SB.60 when bis bl-rr>onlhlY bill comes due. Dlatricf Oftfclals said ii is rare for a resklenUJl customer t.o use aa mltcb u 3..000 cubic feet of water pet month. but that Would ral•• tM bUl f(Om l~ cw-re.qt $12.IOupto$1S.90overtjoda)'1J • ~tae price bike Is dictated by Ule •~• p•r aere--foot coat l ... tOi' ll~ttao Water DiatriM ~~~"l"lfchas.,_ b)' tht CIC~ to'iUpplement local well uppllea. dlltrtct offtd•1• explafMd. • • Explodes BY WLARY KA YE Of Ille O.lly Pll91 St.Ill Two Air California pilots were killed Wednesday when their small Stearman biplane nose dived into an open field near Orange County Airport shortly after takeoff. The pilots, John H. Giffin, 33, and William Fred Reiner. 30. both of MiSsion Viejo, radioed to the control tower that they were having engine trouble on the test flight and requested an im- mediate.return. The Orange County Fire Department crash crew was im· mediately summoned by tower controllers. but before the Wotld War II training plane could be re· turned to the runway. it crashed into a field off Red Hill Avenue near Bristol Street in. Costa Mesa. Witnesses said the plane bounced once on the field and then came to rest several yards away, where it burst into names after the fuel tank exploded. The men, who were seated single file in the open cockpit, were trapped inside the plane when the explosion occurred. Firemen found them still strapped inside their seats. FAA Investigator Edward - Perlis said It was impossible to te.11 who was flying the era.ft at the time or the crash, since there are dual controls in the cockpit. He said Reiner was in the front seat. Perils said the men had been ·experiencing trouble with the plane's engine for at least a week. The men had bought the (See PILOTS, Pate AJJ . . l 2 DAil YPILOr s Tnur.Uay July7.1971 Seventh Heaven? Number 7 Not So Lucky in Hiswry .. ~ . ,.,, -. ----~ f 'rone Pag~ Al PILOTS .•. :· old plane rttenlly and were re- condltiorune it for recreauonal use. Nf:W YORK IAPJ Tod11y, July 7. l~ 1 7 77 tr you pol xtort' In .~. ~·ua.~ Chat ~~v~n 1 a lutky one, you to find their peta. "There waa more excitement at the pound ye- 1,,.,d~ ~ill\r u .U.C.tl4l open1n1;''\he 'rrmes .said. War .veteran who had helped to survey the northern lakes, died 1 • ..ad~ io.a ctt,.,10... ''He ta~~ According to Perhs, the men had taken the plane out oa another test flight last Friday, When they were JO miles out.. they noUfied the control towu ()/ engine trouble and requested ap immediate straight-in approach, Perli1 said. 9nlli:hl think th1a "' your lucky d,ay But m•Y~ you 'd better thlnk twice A~ l"t'1'1nr1t"tf in lhu Nl'w York Times of July H, 11177 , twn• 11rc tome or tht' thing:-. thltt huµ~11l'd on the last 7 7 77 100 yc:ur:. ~ato More thll1l 700 unllcenat.'<1 dog-s Wl'n' drowned by the New York C1h· dog pound, as owners Of lost dog~ :.t·urricd al>twt try mg -1lMa Germon bark Auauste arrived tn London "with her bulwarks and stanchions broken, her rigcing carried away, and otherwise damaged, having been m colhs1on." Otis Hodge's machine shop and foundry at North Adams, N. Y., was destroyed by fire, at a loss of $20,000. He had $8,000 insurance. -Capt. Joseph Griffith, a Civil Scottsboro ~a~e . . Sobbing Witness Swears to Truth WINCHESTf;R, Tenn. (AP> - Weeping profusely. the chief witness in the 1930s Scottsboro Boys rape trial told a federal court jury today she told the truth in testimony that sent the nine black men to prison. Victoria Price Street. 70, is suing NBC for $6 million, alleging the network's movie ''Judge Horton and the Scottsboro Boys," libe led her, slandered her and invaded her privacy. "It tore my health up," s he said. taking the stand in her behalf 1n U S D1str1ct Court where her suit is on trial "The worst part of it w.is they said 1t was all hl's and I know that JUSt wasn't so " Mrs Street :-.;rnl :-.he saw the made-for-telev1s1on film when 1t was telec ast 1n April 1976 because a friend called her and "'rom Page ,\ l YACHTS ... than 10 knots ror the first half of 1he rac e. The northeast tradewinds arc expected to increase during the last half of the racc . g1rnerati n g bag following seas that will push the yachts beyond their hull speeds. First to finish is only one aspect of the Honolulu race as well as other long distance races. Seldom do the first finishers figure in the handicap standings. Handicap leaders an this race have come from the Class D ranks in Division I for c onvention<.1l heavy displacement yachts. Quadri. a C'&C 38 sloop skippe- red by George Gianandrea of Paradise Harbor, has held the fleet lead for three straight days. Second 1s Troublemaker. a one- tonner sailed by Jim J essie, Metropolitan Yacht Club, Oakl· and; third is Cottontail, a CF-37 skippered by John Arens, Balboa Yacht Club: fourth 1s L'Allegro, a Cal-36 sailed by Peter Arapoff, Hawaii Yacht Club, and fifth is Outward Bound. a Carter-39, sailed by Jim Lenthall, Dana Point Yacht Club. Class leaders in Division I CLASS /\ 1. Lightning, toJd her to watch a horri hie show. "I did," she said, "and it just tore me up. I don't know what kind or a movie could do that." She broke into tears again. Her lawyer asked her whether she ever sought publicity tor her role in the rape trials. She said, ''No, I just want to forget it if I could." She also denied the authenticity of several specific episodes in the movie. Under .cross-examination by an NBC lawyer, Mrs. Street said transcripts of the previous trials were inaccurate, called several statements bare-faced cfles and said she could not remember her testimony from the 1930s because "il all happened so long ago." In particular, she denied that a pair of step-ins exhibited at the rape trials was the underwear she wore when she allegedly was assaulted. ··My main step· ins could not be shown at the Scottsboro trial. .. she said. "They weren't fit to be presented. They were all tor:e ,up and covere<f with blood".' 'SO l throwed them in a trash can." When the lawyer read trial testimony in which she identified the step-ins exhibited as those •he wore, she said she couldn't remember the testimony. The so-called Scottsboro Boys were tried three ti mes and all eventually served prison terms. Only one, Clarence Norris, is known to survive. He was found recently in New York City, still living in violation of parole from Alabama. He returned to his home stale and was pardoned. After the four-man, two. woman jury was seated Wednes- day. lights in the federal courtroom dimmed and her lawyer, Raymond Fraley of Fayetteville, Tenn., showed the movie. Mrs. Street, now married lo a tobacco farmer in nearby Flintville, flinched slightly as an actor said it was clear she was a whore, and Fraley hailed the film for a moment. 'Lazy and Evil' wu as well as usual at breakfast, and died at noon of apoplexy," the Times said. -A horse named Idalia stepped up to the starting post at Monmouth Park, N.J ., a favorite because she had already bested her competition, Zoo Zoo. But Idalia became unconft-ollable, tried to bolt and lost the race before it s tarted. "A more sorrowful looking set of men than ldali"'s backers were never seen on a race course," the Times commented. -Austin Spencer, a 78-year- okt veteran c6 the War of 1812 who Jived with two daughters and a wife in he r 80s, had seen not.rung wrong with maJcing a little whisky at his home at 208 West 36th St. On July 7, 1877, be learned better. He was arrested on a charge of running an illicit still. -Two deputy sheriffs showed up at the Episcopal Church of the Holy Saviour at Madison Avenue and 25th Street to confiscate ornaments, the organ, furniture and the like on behalf of the Rev. Dr. Abraham Carter, the pastor, who said he had not been paid for some lime. The church also couldn't open the next day, Sunday, for services. On 7-7-TI. the deputies had taken the keys. It was a lucky day for Philip Donohue of Elizabeth, who spent six hours buried in a colJapsed well the night before but was rescued at just about midnight, as July 7 started. But it was the opposite kind of luck for a man named Daniel O'Leary, who chose 7.7.77 as the day on which his boast that he could walk 520 miles in six days would meet the moment of truth. He had been walking for five days already and covered 741t'z miles on 7-7-77, but it wasn't enough. Just after midnight, he quit -481h miles short. However, a word of encouragement comes from RQ8erL .. 8allt director or· the Astrological Metaphysical Research Center in Coral Gables, Fla. A child born today "would be unusally sharp of mind, genius quality," he says. Ball also says the stock market has risen every July 7th. IC that claim is true, some investors will be in seventh heaven today. From Page Al NEUTRON. • spokesman Dave Jackson said he could neither confirm nor deny that a neutron bomb had been exploded this year at the Nevada Test Site. There have been only three announced nuclear tests at the site this year, but it is generally known that many more have been conducted. Jackson said he is unable to comment on any specific test because it is c l assifi e d information. Lawrence Carr. St. Francis Yacht Club; 2, Bravura. Irving Loube, Richmond Yacht Club; 3, Sumatra, AJ Martin, Los Angeles Yacht Club. CLASS B Rubber Duck, John Keever, Califorma Maril· 1me Academy; Silver Fox III, Bob Kelleher, Long Beach Yacht Club. Washington Burns In Sluggish Heat CLASS C -l, Saga cious. Charles May, San Diego Yacht Club; 2, Racy. L. W. Taylor, St. FYC; 3, Ariana, George Thorson. Los Angeles YC. CLASS D -Quadri ; 2, Troublemaker; 3. Cottontail. Handicap leaders in Division II (ultra-light displacement): l, Tinsley Light, Henry Graodin Jr., St. FYC; 2, Sweet Okole. Gregg Gillette, Waikiki YC; 3, Free Spirit, Richard Ettinger, St. FYC. OAANQll COAST s DAILY PILOT ::r~~~~.'r.:=:.::.; (.GMI -ltMf19 C•-""Y ........... ,_Mo -·-"'-llCltY t1'r""911 l'rtllrf lw CAKte :=-v~r.~1.~:"·=·=-=~::. li:":~~S:.<:'~ A:r~;:; •"'<-""*'"""" ..... r,, .. ,,. Wttl ... JlrtoC,CMe.._. ... ~u~-. ._, ... ... ...,_ ............ -. -•11.cw.r, ""9~-0e'* ......... ,,._.It .... ...... . "':::::.:.~ station was knocked out. The National Weather Service held little hope that a line of thun· dersbowers mov· .1g into the area from Pennsylvania would dis· lodge the stifling heal. The Potomac Electric Power Company said demand at 4 p.m. Wednesday broke the record set four years earlier. At that hour, a spokesman explained, many peo- ple returned home and turned up their air conditioners. But other 1~GREE READINGS COMMONPLACE-T•ble, A4 residents, still in their orfices, kept usage high downtown too. The company aaid it could meet the demand. In suburban Maryland, Montgomery and Prince Georges county officials appealed to resi- dents not to uae water uotil Fri· day. That'• tbe e1rlieat that a water treatment plant, disabled by a fire Wednesday morning. waa expected to be back in opera- tion. WhUe IOmCI areas or the two C()Untlea aUD had water early t,o. day. Olhen had onlf a re. drips to show when they turned their fauccu. S1anmer Dream. 0•11y l'llot Slllll Plloto It's a dream come true for ice cream lovers Holly Langston. 9, of Costa Mesa, and Karen Wright of Irvine. They won a month of ~undaes at an Orange Coast ice cream parlor. It adds up to 200 scoops of ice cream and 744 cups of topping. Bring on the hot weather, say the girls. They're ready for it. Gaille Caused Fire? A malfunction in an clel'tronic gam e has been blamed for a $30,000 fire thal gutted an oceanfront eatery at the Newport Pier early today Fire department spokesman Art Morton said investigators believe the e le ctrica l malfunction touched off the fire reported at 3 a.m. at Perry's Pizza, 2108 West Ocean Front He said the interior of the building and its contents were de- stroyed by the fire which was spotted by unid entified fishermen on the nearby pier. Morton said the fishermen called in the alarm to the fire de· partment and then attacked lhe growing fire with agarden hose. Morton said they helped keep the fire in check until the first of four fire units arrived at the scene. He said the £ire was doused quickly after that. No injuries were reported by the fishermen or the fire fighters. The fire department crasli crew was alerted and was slan~ ing by, but the two pilots were able to land the plane without in- cident. "There's no doubt they've bffil having trouble with that engine, but there's no way to tell now ex- actly what that trouble was," said Perhs Giffut worked part time as a real estate man for Century 21 and his boss the re, Brian Ghereault, said today Giffin told him of hts engine trouble last Saturday at a fireworks show. G hereaull said Giffin ex· plained he was having trouble with the ''magnetos" in bis engine, that they kept "cutting on and off." "He was a lot of fun to talk with ... was a very positive person who liked flying very much. That was his life right ther<'," said GhereaulL Both men were married and had children. Giffin und bis wife, Karen. had one daughter. Cindy. who will be two in September. Reiner and his wife, Ruth, had two children, Carrie, 6, and Dan- ny, I. The two men have been friends since at least 1972. when they worked together in Miami. They both flew for Southeast Ajrlines during the early 1970s. Remer Joined Air Cal in 1973 as a copilot and was scheduled to be upgraded to a full pilot later this year. Giffrn came to Aic; California the following year. A neighbor of the Giffins. Mrs, Wilham J . Morrison. said the G1ffins and Remers were very close and spent a lot of their recreational time together. · The famihes had built a cabii\ together in Lake Arrowhead and had recently bought property there to build another cabin, she said .. · Introducing thejVC 3060. 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An uP·to-the-mlnute cass•"e mechanism with lull aulo-.stop and cue/review faeilitles Oronge COast EOITlON I VOL. 70, NO. 188, 3 SECTIONS, 36 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA Today's Clo Ing 1 N.Y. Stoeks THURSDAY, JULY 7, 1977 'Ill '\ C TENCENT$ l:omputer Prediets Transpae Winner IJy ALMON LOCKABEY ~ 0.Wly ............. Wrl1W Computers were humming ay as the leadert in the Los Anaeles to Honolulu yacht race passed the halfway mark ln the fastest and closest Cirst-to-firuah r~ce in tts 71-yearblstory. Computer feeders are t.ryme to predict the first yacht to finish and at what time -and by how much ahe will break the elapsed lime record of nlne days and nine hours set by Windward Passage 10 lW?l. Computer man Tom Wilder, of- f i ci a I measurer for the sPonaorlng Transpacific Yacht Club, has fed coordinates and average speeds Into the machine and come up with the foUowing predicUona: Drifter wiU finish about 9 a.m. PDT Sunday and will be followed by Windward Passaee about an hour later. Merlin wlll finish about S p.m. Sunday, foUowed about an hour later by Klaloa. Ragtime is expected to firtish about coc.ktail time on Monday unless she plcks up the pace. Ragtime was first to finish in the last two Honolulu races. Regardless of who finishes first, according to the computations, it appears that the first yacht will Jop a run day or more from the elapsed time ·record. Barring breakdowns or a reversal of the weather, Wilder's computer may be right. The lead yachts have all averaged more than 10 knots for the first half oC the race. The northeast tradewinds are expected to increase during the last half of the race. generating big following seas that will push the yachts beyond their hull speeds. First to finish is only one aspect ol the Honolulu race as well as other long distance races. Handicap leaders in this race have come from the Class D ranks In Division I for conventional heavy displacement yachts. Quadri, a C&C-38 sloop skippe· red by George Gianandrea oC Paradise Harbor. bas held the fleet lead for three straight days. Second is Troublemaker, a on~ tonner sailed by Jim Jessie. Metr0pe>litan Yacht Club, Oakl- and; third is Cottontail, a c,.31 skippered by John Arens, Balboa Yacht Club; fourth is L'Allegro. a Cal·36 sailed by Peter Arape>ff, Hawaii Yacht Club, and fifth ls Outward Bound, a Carter-39. (See YACHTS, Pa'e A%) 2 Viejo Pilots · Killed • Ill Crash • WWII Biplane Hits Near Airport, Bu171$ BY IDLARY KA YE single file in the open cockpit, oc1Mo1t1rP1101s1111 were trapped inside the plane Two Air California pilots were when the explosion occurred. killed Wednesday when their Firemen found them still small Stearman biplane nose strapped inside their seats. dived into an open field near FAA Investigator Edward Orange County Airport shortly Perlis said it was impossible to after takeoff. tell who was flying the craft at The pilots. J ohn H. Giffin, 33, the time of the crash, since there and William Fred Reiner, 30, are dual controls in the cockpit. both of Mission Viejo, radioed lo He said Reiner was in the front the control tower that they were seat. having engine trouble on the lest Perlis said the men had been flight and requested an im-experiencing trouble with the mediate return. plane's engine for at least a The Orange County Fire week. The men had bought the Department crash crew was im-old plane recently and were r~ mediately summoned by tower conditioning it for recreationaJ controllers, but before the World use. War IJ t.raining pl'ane could be re-According to Perlis, the men turned lo the runway, it crashed had taken the plane out on into a field off Red Hill Avenue another lest flight last Friday_ near Bristol Street in Costa When they were 10 miles out, Mesa. they notified the control tower of Witnesses said the plane engine tr°"ble and requested an bounced once on the field and immediate straight-in appro11ch, I o .. ,, l'ilot St•tt ""°'° then came to rest several yards Perl is said. WRECKAGE OF WORLD WAR II TRAINING PLANE EXAMINED BY RREM!N AT ORANGE COUNTY AIRPORT away, where it burst into flames The fire department crash l Two twalon Viejo PHotl Perished When Old Aircraft Crashed end Burned 8hort1y After Takeoff after t.be{~ta.nk exploded. crew was alerted and was stand· • · t The men, who were seated <See PILOTS, Pace AZl 17 Your Lueky Number? Think Twiee!. NEW YORK <AP> -Today, uly 7, Is 7-7-77. If you put store in umbers. and share the belie( hat seven is a lucky one, you ight think this is your lucky ay. But maybe you'd better think wice. As reported in the New York imes or July 8, 1877. here are ome of the things that happened n the last 7.7.77 -100 years ago: -More than 700 unlicensed dogs were drowned by the New York City dog pe>und, as owners of lost dogs scurried about trying to rind their pets. "There was more excitement at the pound yesterday than at any time since its opening," the Times said. -The German bark Auguste arrived in London "with her bulwarks and stanchions broken, her rigging carried aw3y, and C Officer's Killer 'Sentenced to Life By TOM BARLEY Of Ow O•llY Pilot Sl•ff • Condemned by the judge as a liller "who 1s unfit to live in our society," transient Bobby Joe Denney was sentenced today in ttfe lo prison for the killing last :Nov. 19 of Cypress police Sgt. Donald Sowma. "Our society deserves better than exposure to your kind of criminal,•' Orange County Superior Court Judge John L. Flynn Jr. told Denney, 32. And the judge made it clear to Denney, the son ot an Oklahoma Co ast sheriff. that his prior criminal record should also be examined by prison authorities if and when the question of his parole in con- sidered. Denney was found guilty of first degree murder last month by a jury which cleared his wife; Velma, 25. of identical charges. It was successfully alleged that Denney shot and killed Sergeant Sowma when the officer challenged him while Denney was burglarizing a doctor's office and nearbyartgallery .... --·: It was unsuccessfully alleged that Mrs. Denney remained out- side the building and maintained walkie-talkie contact with her husband while he robbed the premises. t Today Judge Flynn denied a motion for a new trial made on the ll'QUDds that Denne)' shot the officer ln gel! defense and that the jury was improperly in· atructed. ''He showed no regard for human life," Judge Fl~nn said. "He must receive the maximum punishment." otherwise damaged, having oeen . in collision." -Otis Hodge's machine shop and foundry at North Adams, N .Y ., was destroyed by fire, at a · loss of $20,000. He had $8,000 insurance. -Capt. Josel?h Griffith, a Civil War veteran who had helped to survey the northern lakes, diod suddenly in Iowa City, Iowa. "He was as well as usual at breakfast, and died at noon of ape>plexy," the Times said. -A horse named Idalia. stepped up to the starting post at Monmouth Park, N.J .. a favorite because she had already bested her competition, Zoo Zoo. But Idalia became uncontrollable, tried to bolt and lost the race before it started. ·•A more sorrowful looking set of men than Idalia's backers were never seen on a race courte," the Times commented. -Austin Spencer, a 78-year· old veteran of the War of 1812 ·.vho lived with two daughters and a wife in he r 80s, had seen nothing wrong with making a little whlsky at his home at 208 West 36th St. On July 7, 1877, he learned better. He was arrested on a charge of running an illicit st\11. I Ptlly f'llM S!Mf ....... DRY WALL WORK!RS MARCH OUTSIDE UNION HEADQUARTERS IN IAVINE Wiidcat ltttk• ContlnuH ~'Ph• Extension of Contrect 1 strikers spe>kesman Terry Lewis uld. ''But we still heve nt least 500 ()ff the job." -Two deputy sheriffs showed up at the Episcopal Church of the Holy Saviour at Madison Avenue and 25th Street to confiscate ornaments, the organ, furniture and the like on behalf of the Rev. Dr. Abraham Carter, the pastor, who said he had nol been paid for some time. The church also couldn't open the next day, Sunday, for services. On 7·7-T7, I See NUMBERS, Page A2) Anaheim Firm Lays Off 700 Missile Hands More than 700 employes at the Orange County-based Autonetics group of Rockwell International Corp. will be laid off in the next six months, a comp.iny spokesman said today. Dave Newbro, a spokesman for the Autonetics Group, said pro- duction of the Minuteman Ill guidance system8 produced in Anaheim will be ended because the Defense Department has de- cided additional spare missiles aren't needed to support about 550 launchers. Production of the Minuteman missile sys~ms began in lSSS, and Rockwell spe>kesmen said more than 1,000 of tile land-based guidance control systems were produced in Orange County. Newbro said another 250 employes at other Rockwell divisions Involved in Minuteman Ill productions also will be laid off between now and J anuary • 1978. "We're atartinr wltb 70 employee this month in k Anabelm,'! be said. ''and it will n peak wit.ft llbQut 400 la.id off in Oc· t4ber." He said the company will at.- tempt to relocat~ employes within the A\ltonetlcs group and other RoclcwelJ d1vtslons. ''We're preaenily buUdln1 the final 10 guidanco cont.rt>\ syat«n>,,J and ex~t those deliveries to take ~c:e belore Nov•mber.'" Newbrosaid. Minuleinlft Ill ml H ile& are the land based pan f \he paUon's triad 1tl•tetlc force, he 01t- platned. Land·bHed ~mber1 . and aubmarlne-launched mit- sUea are tbe Othet L o ·~· of tbe ltrategk force. AoclrwWJ Ol'llclala Mid Woauc· tiOil enrplo)'tl wowcl be IM·ttrst. t.o hlaWGU. --.... '!? DAil Y f'ILO r c Thurlday,July 1, 1971 ... $30,000 'Wasted' Grand Jury Hits County Physical,s <.'uunty 6(0vt-rnmt'nl c-oulcl huv1• uvt'd S30.000 dunn11 tbe pwit year by not rt•qulrlna n"w emplO)'f'C tn t11kc phy1ic•l u - amanauona thut .:o bt!yond J<1b related requlromenu. That wu a conclution ruched by the 1976 T1 Oran1e County Grand Jury •ftt•r studyln1: tht' 1•ounty s contro\'ers1al physit'c1 l exam contract with the Onmae County Health Tesllna lnatitute 10CHTl1 t. It 1s likely a s1m1lar amount will be lost m the current fiscal year, the grand Jury said. Its comments were, to a large dearee. bused on proJecllons that 60 percent ol those who take the eluborate physical exuminations 1are applicants for Jobs described •• requiring "hght physical ef· fort." And under terms ot the OCHTl <'on truct. those prospective worker11 are given the same physicals as those headed for Jobs requiring heavy physical ef- fort The OCHTI contract originally expected to brmg the health test- ing r1rm $275,000 a year in county business became an instant con- troversy .when awarded by the Mesa Boy Struck By Auto, Critical A Costa Mesa youngster rl' mams in critical condition in thl' intens ive care ward at Costa Mesa Memorn.tl llosp1ta) today following an accident Wcdnesdi.ty night which left the youn~ pedestrian lying JO the street with head injuries. Michael Ngoe Nguyt•n, fi , of 1848 Mission Drive, was struck by a car driven by Gregory Jay Smith. 29. 2729 San Juan Li.Inc. Coslct l\fr~a i.tl aboul6 15 pm Traffic investigators said 1t ap- peared the youngster was run- ning across the street at the in- tersection or Mendota Drive and M 1ssion when the .icc1dent oc-curred. Jn,cstigator D <1v1d Walker ~aid the boy, son of Lien Nguyen. was either in the crosswalk or very near it when he was strul·k by the car. "The driver said he was driv- ing south on Mendoza, and when he got to the intersection he looked to the left," Walker said. ''When he looked to the front again, the child was right in his path." The intersection, which is s ur·· rounded by apartment buildings. has stop s igns on Mission for east and west bound motorists but no stop signs for traffic on Mendoza Nguyen was treate d by paramedics at the scene and transferred to Costa Mesa Memorial Hospital. police said. Smith was not cited by police. Water Board Okays $3,998,930 Budget A 1977·711 budget totaling SJ.998.9311 was ;.ipprovcd Wcdncs day night hy th!.' Costa Mesa County Water District directors. Estimated revenues calculated by CMCWD financial . analysts amount to S4.056,0<IO for the com· mg year. The year·end balance is expected to tw about S57,000. ac· rnrdmg to operating cost proJec lions. The CMCWD. created 17 years ago from a merger of c;evcral -;mailer Harbor Arca water de· livery ageoc1es. has marnlaml'd a strict pay-as you.go polll'y over Frona Page Al YACHTS •.• sailed by Jim Lenthall, Dana Point Yacht Club. Class leaders in 01visron I CLASS A -1, Lightning, Lawrence Carr, St. Francis Yacht Club; 2, Bravura. Irving Loube, Richmond Yacht Club; J. Sumatra. Al Martin, Los Angeles Yacht Club. CLASS B -Rubber Duck, John Keever. California Maril· ime Academy; Silver Fox HI.° Bob Kelleher, Long Beach Yacht Club. CLASS C -1, Sagacious. Charles May. San Diego Yacht Club; 2, Racy, L. W. Taylor, St. FVC; 3, Ariana, George Thorson. Los Angeles YC. . Handicap leaders in Division II <ultra-light displacement): l. Tinsley Light, Henry Grandin Jr .. St. FYC; 2, Sweet Okole, Gregg Glllette, Waikiki YC; 3. Free Spirit. Richard Ettinger, St. FYC. Body Found LOS ANGELES (AP> -A body believed to be one of 28 persons killed in the so-called "trash bag" burders has been unearthed inside a Culver City garage, sheriff's deputies said this afternoon. <Related 8tory, A3). OftANOI COAIT c DAILY PILOT ............. ~-""""""" '"""'c.. Vl&.e"""'*nt-._ .. ....., ~·" .... ... .., '::.,a...-r.r::e o-r.:..~ ....... -=:i*' the years. No tax rate has been levied on CMCWO customers for the past several years. However, CMCWO directors Wednesday agreed to raise the district's basic S6 per 1,000 cubic· feet of water per month rate by 10 cents per 100 cubic feet used over that. The new budget for the coming year includes a $200,000 rund for repair or the district's damaged 42 inch pipeline lo I he San .Joa quin Re~erv0tr m the hills O\er looking Irvine and Newport Beach Shifting, unstable soil underly- ing its crossing point in San Diego Creek has caused several breaks and leakage in the water main. Only Wednesday, a new leak was discovered. The budget also allows for replacement or major portions of older water lines on the c1tv's eastside. many of which are held together with rivets instead or modem connectors. Completion or a new water well on Segerstrom family land near South Coast Plaza is also in· eluded. along with runds for purchase of a fifth well site in the city's northerly area. The site will be on the old Bab- cock Electronics Company pro- perty near Harbor Boulevard and Sunflower Avenue. The district obtains its water from four wells it has developed in Costa Mesa. It also purchases water from the Metropolitan Water District. · * * * Mesa Wat~r District Okays Rate Hike A customer rate hfcrease that could average about $1 per month was approved Wednesday night by directors of the Costa Mesa County Water District to offset what they said are rlsina aervtce ce>1\.'5. Tbe hike to be reflected in the next two-month bl1Un1 ii tbe flut imposed by CMCWD direetors in three years. However. customers wbo keep their water use to • mlnlmum will be able to tnalntain their c urrenl bi·monthly minimum S6 water bill for 1,000 cubic feet or leas of water. Tbe new rate schedule adopted Wednelday nlsht lm,posea blgher coats on more Hceaslve use of water u an ecncouragemont to combat ~currentdrou•bt. U a c~mer uaa 2,000 eubtc Ifft of ~ over a month-lonC period. it wUl coet •.eo when his bl~monthJy bill comtt due. Dlltrict olftclalt 11ld lt Is rue (or a "'1dential cuat.omer ti> use at much u 3,000 wblc fett ot water per month, but that would raiae the bill from U1 cutrent '11.80 uP to $15.90 over eo d•YI· Ta.e pric. bib ts dJctated br ti•• llO per acre·f oot cost lncre..e lot lle\n>POllt.U Water Dlttiic.'t .... purtbutd by tbe CllCWD to IRiPPl•.-.at IOcil Well ••ppUH, ~·dlitrlcl offlebll Gpt11Md.:: Board or Supervisors ID 1975. One reason for the controversy was that one of the firm's foun· ders was Dr. LQuls Cella. a political benefactor to at least four supervisors who approved the pact. Another board action that drew criticism from the now departed '76 -77 jury was Board of Supervisors' 1975 decision to con· solidale planning into a super 3gency. the Environmental Management Agency (EMA>. As a result of the merger, the Grand Jury said, engineers are now directing the planning func- tions. The jury also noted that "a number of competent planners have left county employment an~ there appears to be extremely low morale among those who re- main." "Because or the many vacan- cies an already overburdened staff 1s required to work over· time." To make matters worse, the Grand Jury said. "The fragmen- Lallon of the planning functions has resulted in a political power struggle within the agency which is hindering the search for solu- tions to the substantial planning problems of Orange County." To help correct those flaws. the jury recommended that all EMA planning fWlclions be consolidat· _ ed under a director "whose background of education and ex- perience is that or a professional planner." Other yearend recommenda· lions by the 1976·7"7 Grand Jury include: Providing the Commission on the Status of Women with the budget needed to support a coordinator for commission pro- jects. Lessening the apparent in~ . ter·departmental friction between the county Probation and Mental Health Departments. -Combining certain functions of the Sheriff's Department and Marshal's Office to eliminate duplication or services. Closing McMillan Reception Center for minor juvenile offen- ders unless its costs can be brought into line. Youth Facing Charges After Fatal Accident Merle Donald Tally. 18, of Costa Mesa. has been charged with felony manslaughter in con· nection with a June 29 auto crash in Fountain Valley that claimed the hfe of a 14-year·old Garden Grove youth. Greg S. Beavers. a hitchhiker Tally had packed up o n Brookhurst Street in Huntington Beach, died Saturday at Foun- tain Valley Community Hospital from injuries he suffered in the accident. Orange Cou nty Coroner's deputies said. Tally, originally arrested for felony drunken driving, is listed in fair condition at UC Irvine Medical Center in Orange. Police said Tally's compact sedan slammed into three other moving cars before it overturned on Brookhurst Street. Three other motorists suffered relatively minor injuries in the collision, police said. F,....PageAI NUMBERS. • U1e dei>utles b8a taJcen the keys. -It was a lucky day for Philip Donohue of Elizabeth, who spent. six hours burled in a collapsed well the night before but was rescued at Just about midnight, as July 7 started. -But it was the opposite kind of luck for a man named Daniel O'Leary, who chose 7·7·T7 a.a the' day on which his boast that be could walk 520 miles in alx days would meet the moment of truth. He had been walking for five day1 already· and covered 74Y. miles on '1·1·77, but it waan't enough. Just after midnight, he quit -48Y. miles short. However, a word of encouragement comes from Robert Ball, d1rector of the A1trolo1ical Metaphysical Reaearch Center in Coral Gables, Fla. • _ ~ A child bom t00•1 "would be unu.eally sharp of mind, genius' quality,•• he says. Ball al.so says the atock market hu riMD eYfJt1 JUiy 7th. If that claim la true, 10me investors will be ln MYeDth heaven today. Mees Wood Stolen: Lunibtt and bardware valued at $411 were taken from a con1trucUoa tlte at 13'15 Monro.ta Av•. tn Cotta Mesa 'POllce Wei today. Employes al Construction Inv•tmenta of Ml11loft VleJo told pollca the" 1 ....... coppt'J' Md nalla ... taken from tile buUdia1 alt. umeuaMTueidq nltltlot Wb' ... .......,~. .,. -•• J Target Practice Kim Viktur, 9. Jason tiardner, 8, and Fernando Beckham, 6, all students of the Mardan School, practice putting out candles with squirt guns, one of the games to be offered Saturday during the school's country fair. The main attraction will be an auction of celebrity mementos beginning at 10 a.m. The fair opens at 9 a.m. at the school, 695 W. 19th St., Costa Mesa. Proceeds will benefit the school, which serves children with learning dis- abilities. F...-PageAI PILOTS KILLED IN PLANE CRASH. • • ing by, but the two pilots were able to land the plane without in- cident. "There's no doubt lhey've been having trouble with that engine, but there's no way to tell now ex- actly what that trouble was," said Perils. Girfln worked part time rui a real estate man for Century 21 and his boss there, Brian Ghereault. said today Giffin told· him of his engine trouble last Saturday at a fireworks show. G hereault said GiHin ex- plained he was having trouble· with the "magnetos" in has engine, that they k ept "cutting on and off." "He was a lot of fun to talk with .•. was a very positive person who liked flying very much. That was his life right there," said Ghereault. Mrs. Morrison, who· said she last saw Giffin at the annual Fourth o~ July block party, said he had lived in Mission Viejo's Granada Homes for about three years at 25582 Valtavaiso. Reiner has Jived at 26652 Morena Drive for about two years. Both men were married and had children. Giffin and bis wife. Karen, had one daughter, Cindy, who will be two in September. Reiner and his wife, Ruth, had two children, Carrie, 6, and Dan· ny,l. The two men have been friends since at least 1972, when they worked together in Miami. . Introducing theJVC 3060. Take Along Stereo Sound - For the Beach, Mountains, Desert -Anywhere. See the world's first portable AM/f M Radio-TV-Cassette Recorder . and you may win a trip to one of America's great sports spectaculars. JVC Model 9475, FM/ AM/SWl/SW2 Stereo Rod"io. Cassette Recorder Just$20QOO JVC will pick up the tab for two free tickets plus an e!(citing trip of your choice to the World Series •.. Super Bowl ..• NBA Playoffs ... U.S. Tennis Open .•. Indy ·soo'". •. KenturtkY .f{C's 9475 is oackecf wlth features that mal<e It • best t>oy. lta blQgeet feature Is stereo aound. for recording and playback. It .wt\ f'900rd9 atet90 FM dlr'ectty from the t>ullt-tn tuner. Two big 5 .. duek:one IPNktft.. Two -left and rlght-built-In condeoMr ~. Two easy-to-••• rnetera. An up-to-the-minute cassette mech&n1$m with full auto-stop and• cue/review facilitles. Derby Trials. . Come in for your free entry ~orm. There's nothing 10 buy Bvt there's a lotto see and hear with . the new POrtable JVC 3060. It's an AM/FM Radio. It's 8 TV. It's a Casserte Recorder. All in one I You've never seen anything like It. Thurtdax.July7. 1m OAILVPILOT A 3 u1-y Urges Vote Funding Reform Plan ll10ASY GUHVILU ..... o.i • ., ........... f. meuuro ~bat would k•= ~cy of lhc»e who do bu db tGUnty 1ov1rrnmeot all but ot JouJ polltJral camp&lina wa8 madt1 public Wedne•day by th~ now depart~ 197f 7T Oranae County Grand Jury 'l'bo prOl)CIMd ordinance would prohibit elected county otndMla from votillc r(M" four yeara 00 any la1ue involvinc a peraon or nrm that bu contributed '350 or more lo thew polWcaJ campa11n1. If mM:ted, aucb an ol-cllnance would deprive county * * * . 1upervl1on. for eumplo, or about IS percent or thelr campalsn tund aource. unleaa they aftd t.boir 1ources are wllllni to for•10 dotnc bualne11 with one anotbet tor tour year•. The Grand Jury's proposal was 1ncludod ln It.a hefty year-end nport. It foUowed by a few days Lbe Indictment ol county Surrvisors Ralpb Diedrich an Phllip Anthony aJon1 with four other men on charaes related t.o alleg- ed violatJom of 1late campai&n reculat!oos. * * * Jail Brutality In rec:omnumding UroitaUons on what special lnteresta can give to a campaign, the Grand Jury scorned exi!Une campaJp donation pracUces. First, the Jury quoted U.S. Sen. Russell Long CD-La.) when Long said, "When you are talking in t erms of large campaign contributions ..... the distinction between a ca m.pal'n contribution and a bribe ls almost a hair's line difference." Then the Grand Jury saJct that supervisors and olhen who deny cam paigo con tr ibullons influence their decisions * * * Denied 'Insufficient Evidence,' Grand Jury Reports Reports of brutality in Orange County Jail have been ex aegerated, according to the 1976·77 county Grand Jury. The Grand Jury's labeling of press and other allegations of jail brutality as exaggerated came in the Jury's year-end report to the County Board of Supervisors. In its final 171-page report, the jury said. "every complaint (of jail brutality) was investigated m detatl.'' ·'The jury found insufficient evidence to substantiate any crimmal violations on the part or deputies.'' Having said that. the Grand Jury laid to rest press and others' allegations that deputies m the county jail mistreat inmates. Those allegations came to a head early last spring when a stale Assembly committee held a public hearing in Santa Ana that was punctuated by complaints of jail brutality. Ch ief instigators of the complaints were former Jail inmates, member:. of inmate families, a local newspaper reporter and jail acl.Jv1sl Tom Miller. When giving the jail a clean bill of health, the Grand Jury co nced ed that ''ph ys i cal restraint required in some cases was quite strong." "But.'' the JUry added. "provocation at times was intense." The report also pointed out that the Grand Jury's endorsement of Jail operations is fortified by a recent state Board of Corrections report on Orange County Jail. ln a written report highly complimentary to the Jail's administration. the board said Jail policies and procedures "met or exceeded state requ1rcment.s in all areas." The Grand Jury also noted in 1ls year-end report that a number of inmates who testified during the jury's inquiry into the jail ··comme nted favorably on conditions in and operation or Orange County Men's Jail " In its report clearing Jail dep- uties of allega t ions o f mistreatment and abuse. the Jury did nothing to backtrack on an earlier report that cited instances of physical and sexual 5 Counties Probing ~Trash Bag' Killings ··.LOS ANGELES (AP> -Police SllY the murder of a Hollywood man last year may be linked lQ ~ 28 "trash bag'· sl ayinJS bei~ iOvestigated in five counties. t ""T . ~ he possible connection ~41rfaced Wedn esday at a §eeting between police and eriff's officials from verside, Los Angeles, Orange, • n Diego and Imperial counties. ::officials in the five counti~s ate comparing notes on the dtalhs, which .span 10 years. by cbecking files and looking for ~irnilar backgrounds of victims ~d causes of death. Many of the flctims were dismembered. sturred into plastic trash bags and left next to well·traveled highways. Pa.trick Kearney. 37 . and David Hill, 34, turned themselves in to Riverside deputies last week in connection with two or the deaths. They reportedly are working voluntarily with officers to solve the other 26. Los Angeles homicide det· ecllve John St. John said that John Woods, 23, was found shot to death June 20, 1976 in his apartment. St. J ohn said several other un solved cases in the Los Angeles area are similar to the "trash bag" killings, but no concrete evidence has linked them to the two in custody. Frasier Fest Prolific Lion Remembered . ( . ~ . .. 1 . :: .. (> . .. . .. ,. " J . J . ,. . - By WILLIAM SCHREIBER Ol I._ o.i1y l'U.C Sl~I Five years ago next week, Fl'asier the Sensuous Lion went to the happy bunting ground, leaving 33 fatherless cubs at Lion Country Safari in Laguna Hills. TO MARK THE ANNIVERSARY ·of the old Celine's passing, Lion County Public relations whiz J erry Kobrin wanted to stage something really special -something "befittingt.beexcesses" of the pride of the geriatric set. Frasier was lionized by the press during his golden years -with Kobrin's assistance. , Saturday morning, and again next Wednes· day (the actual date of Frasier's death), the dry hills will echo with the mournrut wait of bagpipes played by members of the Clan Fraser Association. The clan will gather in full ScotUsh regalia atop the little knoll above the wildlife park Saturday on their way to a semi -annual encampment in the mountains above San Juan Capistrano. Kobrin said. attacks on inmates by other inmates. The jury recommended in that earlier report that added dep· uties be hired to patrol the inner recesses of the jail as a safeguard against inmate- agamst-inmate violence. To reach its conclusions on Oran ~e Count_v Jail. jury members "made numerous announced and unannounced visits to the jail." Closed hearin gs featured .. sworn testimony by inmates. former inmates, relatives, dl'P· utics and various jatf administrators " "Sworn testimony by inmates revealed most written allegations were exaggerated and unsubstantiated," the Grand Jury said. It did point out, however. that needed corrections m procedures and some practices were made by 1a1l officials, some of them in response to Grand Jury recommendations. Recommendations included in the Grand Jury's lengthy closing report on county jail included: -Adding psychological testing to the hiring screening process that lakes m new sheriff's dep· ulies who usually spend three years on jail guard duty -Speeding plans lo add inmate telephones in the pre-booking and roof (recreation> areas or the jail. -Making sure that meals served to inmates who are not allowed to go to the jail dinmg hall are served hot. Obtaining approval from the Jail watch commander before forcing inmates to submit to "skin" searches. -Studying the feasibility or t'Sta bl1shing detoxification centers for alcoholics as a means or culling down on repent arrests and Jailing of drunk!> Lesbian Cops Fighting for Jobs in Idaho BOISE. Idaho <AP 1 -Sax form er city policewomen, fired in March after an investigation into homosexual activities. have filed $10 million lawsu1ls to try to get their jobs back. They say othe r police de· partmenls refuse to hire them because of their ·'badge of infamy." Two women were accused by the department or homosexual activity. The others were told they were guilty of violating dep· artment rules and of conduct unbecoming an officer. Their difficul•jes in finding employment are recounted in af. fidavils filed in U.S. District Court in Boise. According to court records, the six women have applied to the Idaho State Police. the sheriff's department of Canyon and Ada counties, and the Caldwell. Nampa. Meridian and Fruitland police dt!])artmeots. The women said the law enforcement agencies failed to respond to inquires. Fruitland police chief Harold King said be told former patrol- woman Janie Townsend she would not be hired since Boise police chief John Church refused to reveal the reasons for her dis- missal. Besides Ms. Townsend, the fired women are patrolwoman Mary Morris, animal warden Teresa Silva, and dispatchers Judllb Baker, Lavonne Woody · and VardellLaunen. ·•All these women now must live and seek employment with a 'public badge of infamy. suspicion and disl9yalty' ,'' •ays a brief by attorney Michael Donnell)'. Bandit Wonnded •' ••approach naivete.•• ••Much of the money contributed to political campalp.a in tbis county comes from tbe business community or from business related sources," the Jury said. • 'Tbe concept of the free enterprise system for the business community is being eroded when ils managers feel that in order to reduce uncertainty and avoid ri5ks they m uat or should pay the completely unnecesaa.ry cost o< a so-called rlgbt of access (to elected ortlclals)," the jury continued. In ita closing report, the Grand Jury alao aald the Board of Superviaors should overhaul the county's lobbyist control , ordinance. And what the Jury proposed as an overhaul wouJd all but do away with lobbyists. For instance, the proposed overhaul would ban lobbyists from doing anything that m.i.ibt put an elected official in bis debt. Also, lobbyistJ would not be permitted to "deceive or attempt to deceive" any elected of:ftciaJ about any matter pertaining to Just Catting Around Whatever happened to Sir Rodney? As you can see, he found an intriguing 600-pound steel metal sculpture to walk through at Laguna Beach's Festival of Arts grounds Wednesday. Sculpture is by Harold Pastorius Jr .. and is tilted "Two Holes in One." Pastorius uses Cor-Ten, a steel that gets a rusty patina leelstaUve or administrative action. And lobbytata would be banned from altemptin1 to lnfluence "the introduction ot any, ordinance or amendment" aimed at se-curing his employment as ita advocate. And to make thine• even toueher for a lobbyist, the Grand Jury'• proposal would prohibit him Crom accepting "any payment in any way conU.O,ent upon the defeat. enactment or outcome ol any proposed county leaislative or adminlstraUve action." Tu:o Sailors Released ByCubaru MIAMI <AP> -Two Florida sailors and their 27-foot boat Sea Ration have been released by Cuban authorities after being imprisoned along with a crew of Californians Sunday, Coast Guard officials have announced. The Sea Ration was r_eported anchored oft the Dry Tortugas by the Coast Guard whose spokesman said the boat's two crew members, Howard Bradbeer, 29, and Jack Hanst, 31, were in good shape. The two men were last seen in a Havana detention center by former Laguna Beach resident Donald Reidt and his crew who had also been picked up over the weekend sailing in waters near Cuba. Reidt and a youthful crew of four, including Newport Beach resident Robert Skafle, were released along with their 46-foot ketch, Musica early Tuesday morning. They sailed into Key West and told Coast Guard officials· Bradbeer and Hanst were .still in custody. Jn Wednesday's announcement, a Coast Guard spokesman said a third American boat is believed still in Cuba. Reidt said he beJieves the third . vessel is a fishing boat whose two crew members are both Cuban- Americans. He told the Coast Guard he does not know the names of the men nor the name of their boat. Reidt told the Coast Guard that the Sea Ration's crew was involved in a shooting incident th at prompted the seizures. Summer Sale Venetian by Heritage 20% off Armoire Re" S9I9 Sale $749. Night Table R~.1t. ~Sale $259 .. ea . Bed-King Size Reg. S405. Sale.$339. Triple Dresser 76" Relf !799 Sale $649 .. , ... . Twl'n m~: .. . ,. . ~ . '· .Mirror _ ·~ · · Re~. s139. et1. Sale $119. ea . SEVERAL OTHER COLLECTIONS BY DREXEL HERITAGE ON SALE AT· 15°/o ·• TO 30°/oOFF .:.!.l_O~YP_ll_0_1 ______________________ .-.,__._... __ _ Spraying Of Planes Approved WASlUNG1'0N (AP> Three a1rhnu and thl' Acrtculturt Department hav~ resolved lholr dlfferenct>M QVf'r eofforta lo fumi&atf' aircraft tha.t. havti become hav1·ns for Jur.ane&4e beetJH. The spray1na proicram involves West. Co1&s l bound fll1hts l eav1n1 from Washington 's Dulles lntemallonal Airport. which hu been encirclt'd by swums ot the flying beetl~ United Airlines baUted at the ~praying l~t weekend when it discovered the :.pr1&y contained DDT. anmsed1ctde banned Crom commercial use five years a&o. But United, along wilh Amencan and Trans World, agreed to have the spraying resumed after federal oCficials assured the airl- ines the procedure would not endanger people'!> health or aircraft equipment. l •rael As.wure d Al'WT,.__.. Oaildren Killed Michael Creston Moore of Newcastle, Okla .. was to be charged with second-degree murder today in tht: deaths of Melissa Isaac, 6, right, and her brother Martin, 3 .. The children were asleep in the back seat of a car M<><?re is a~ cused of stealing, then igniting. They accompanied their father, Melford Isaac, on his morning newspaper delivery rounds because he was afraid to leave them at home alone. He and his wife are separated. Prison Fire Kills 5 A rson Likely; Inmates Save Pals DANBURY, Conn. <AP) - Fire swept through a three-story cellblock at the federal medium security prison here early today, killing five inmates and injuring about66. Danbury Fire Marshal Fred Tomiano said the blaze was "very likely" set intentionally by igniting clothes in a washroom. But inmates who were housed in the damaged dormitory denied that the fire was set and attributed the blue to an electrical wiring problem. THE FIRE BROKE out about 1:30 a .m. and was brought under control at 2:50 a.m. ll came less than two weeks after a fire in the Maury County Jail In Columbia, Tenn. Cyanide· I aced smoke from the plastic padding used in one of the cells killed 42 persons in that blaze. A 16-year-old runaway has been charged with that arson. Tomiano said toxic fumes from fiberglass paneling spread througbout lhe cellblock in the Danbury facility. However, the cause of the deaths was not immediately known and autopsies were scheduled for later today. Actmg Warden Anthony Young praised the inmates for helping to get prisoners out ot the cells. "THE INMATES DID a terrific job. I tell you, we would have l0$t a lot more lives," Young said. The prison, d8'igned lo hold 500 inmates, bad 839 pri59rm-s. he said. About 80 inmates were in the cellblock at the time of the fire. Several inmates said they were trapped inside the burning, smoking room for up to 30 minutes because the doors were locked. "WE HAD TO FEEL for the bodies. that's bow thick the smoke was," said inmate Darnell Kinnard of Washington. Danbury police Sgt. Robert Lovell said when the first fare trucks arrived they had trouble reaching the fire because they couldn't get through lhe gates. "When we first got there at least 18 people were trapped. We needed a hook and ladder to rescue them. We could hear people screaming to get out," Lovell said. prlsonus. •·u the inmates had stood aroupd and watched. there would have be~n 72 dead men," prisoner Richard Evans said. Oaalfenged WASHINGTON (AP> President Carter is reassunng American Jewish leaders that the key goals of U .s. Middle Easl policy are to 'win a lasting peace while guaraoteemg the security of Israel. Carter met with 53 Je wish Fear Stalks Sub11rb H E SAID TH E gates were finally opened when Danbury fire department Capt. Anthony Ligatto threatened to drive a fire truck through the locked gate. "The wait seemed like three hours.'' Lovell said, "although it couldn't have been more than five minutes." Rhodesian Prime Minister Ian Smith gets a taste of deja vu as the new, all- whitc Rhodesian Action Party forms to thwart his party's move to black majority rule. Smith's own Rhodesian Front wa s formed in 1962 for the same reason, but has moderated over the years. leaders al the White House Wednesday, telling them he believes a peace settlement should provide for full diplomatic Police 'Ecstatic' Over Arrest in Nine Rapes ( I N SHORT J relations between Israel and the Arab nallons. He also said he has reservations a bout the concept or an independent Palestinian state located between Is rael and Jordan. .\uke S u i l .'Wi.rPd CONCORD. N.11 <AP > /\. federal court has d1sm1ssed a multimillion dollar c1v1I suit brought against Gov. Meldnm Thomson and the New Hampshire attorney general by Seabrook nuclear power plant protesters. U.S. District Court Judge Hugh Bownes said in has ruling Wednesday that Thomson and Alty. Geo. David Souter did not. as the suit claimed, conspire lo arrest and confine the l.414 dem· onstrators "as punishment for their oppos1t100 to the SN1brook nuclear power pl ant.'' lku!e Laws Hit PRETORIA. South Africa (A P ) Foreign M mister P1k Botha has urged repeal of South , Africa's laws barrrng interracial sexual relations and marriage. Agriculture Minister Hendrik Schoeman made a similar appeal earlier this week. "My personal opinion is that these laws arc not necessary for our survival," Botha said m an interview published t.oday. His office confirmed that the report was accurate. The laws are fundamental planks in the ruling National party's apartheid policy of racial separation. E rror Blamed ANCHORAGE (AP ) Mishandling of frigid liquid nitrogen apparently caused the break in an L·sbaped section of pipe that has forced a two-day shutdown of the trans-Alas ka pipeline, say two industry sources. Repa.tr work on the pipe was expected to be completed m time for the oil flow to resume today. On that schedule, oil movement would still be a half day ahead or the timetable set by Alyeska Pipeline Service Company. LOUISVILLE, Ky. (AP) - Fear remains in Villa Ana, even lhougb police have charged a man with nine neighborhood rapes. "I know wives who kiss their husbands good-bye, then sit wailing at the kitchen table with a gun in their hand until it's time to wake the children for school," says Debbie Gibson, a neighborhood leader. JEFFERSON COUNTY police announced Wednesday thal Ron Hood, a 28-year-old chiropractor, had been charged with 36 count.s an connection with the assaults, which have taken place in the last year. He was being held today in lieu of $495,000 cash bail. A II of the victl ms were housewives with children. Most attacks occurred in the ear ly morning hours when husbands had left for work. Jn each case, the assailant threatened harm to the victim's children unless she submitted. Hood has been charged with nine counts of rape, 11 counts of burglary, five couot.s of sodomy, one count of first degree assault, eight counts of second·degree assault. one count of sexual abuse and one count of auto theft. "WE'RE ECSTATIC over this arrest," said police spokesman Bob Yates. "It's been the No. 1 priority for the police de· partment for the last few months." "We're all relieved, but we're not going to let down our guard," said Mrs. Gibson. Since the first assault was reported on Jul y s. 1976, residents or Villa Ana, where five of the nine rapes occurred, have been "living in pure fear," said Mrs. Gibson, <1 mother of three FDA Ban U r g ed Relief Claim Hit On Aspirin La~els WASJilNGTON (AP) -The Food and Drug Administration (FDA 1 was urged today to stop manufacturers of aspmn-based pain relievers from claiming that the drugs provide relief for symptoms of arthriti~ and rheumatism. A federal advisory panel also recommended that products containing acetaminophen, the chief aspirin substitute, carry to take aspirin with certain labels warning that excessive prescription drugs. doses can cause liver damage. THE RECOMMENDATIONS to the FDA followed the scientific panel's four-year study of the over-the-counter analgesic pain relievers and fever reducers. The panel said aspirin and acetaminophen, the two most commonly used nonprescription pain relievers, are safe and ef· fective but should have tougher warning labels about their use. The group recommended that labels warn against taking aspirin during the last three months of pregnancy because al could prolong labor and cause bleeding. The panel also said consumers should be warned not T HE ADVISORY GROUP said the FDA should prohibil aspirin product label claims for relief of sy mptom s of arthritis or rheumatism because such claims may lead people to self· treat these diseases without first seeking medical attention. Concerning acetaminophen, the experts found no basis for claims that 1t was safer than aspirin. FDA Commissioner Donald Kennedy told a news briefing his agency would seek public com men t on the r ecommendations before making any policy changts. Much of U.S. Swelters "'"' .... fie,. ., ., ~ 10 .IS ~ ~ .. ,. 102 74 14 4S ,, •2 •l ~ ,. ... ·" .. t2 9l T1 .. IO .. 74 n ,. 100 7> .. " IOI 7J )00 ,. .. " .. 1• ., ,. ., 11 •S 7' ~ ,,. ~ n .. ,, .. 1J thunctentorm 81W ll•t F"orl S"11\l'I, "''-.. 001no d•m•oe to t•~n 111111 windows CaHlondca Mor~ clOucli wlll N11Q e rOund In lh<f mornln9 Frto.y, and l""t>ereturH wltl <001 sli911t1v Ovtr Southern Ce1ttorn1a. wv ,...,,,,., lorKeJl•rs. Hltftl f!Wr.S.y ·~ Ille CN$1 ••no.cl ''°"' tl'lt -· '°' •t tN IM>echu to Ille m 1e1 IO~ o•er the roe"•' •l•ont and downto-i..J Af199le$ Intend •ell.-, ltfYlpertturH hltlt,.~90> Ill Ill@ "'°""'•"''· h•9"S -. 11Mr tO. T-atw._ Jn the 11'911 dftHt rte<Md 100, with h'QM II\ t"9 t-dtwrl ...... t!O C...tal 1t'eatllft- Somt tit~-clo.M1NU .... , ,.,,. ....-.. ,...._ LIOllt Yll•l•bl• Wll\dl n11M and noomlft9 '*'" HiOll• "'~· '°'· (NJltl 1-.ivr•t Wiii f4"1P b•t•••n •• eftd 11. lntortd ltftll)tr"1-.-111 ,.,... tlt-n '° ..... as; ,,,. ........ ,,,.. ............. 114 ., . The olher four rapes occurred within two miles of Villa Ana, a subdivision of Valley Station southwest of Louisville. "YOU'RE AFRAID TO just go across the street lo a neighbor without locking your door," said Mrs. Gibson. "I thank smce 1t all started everyone 1n \he neighborhood has gone out and gotten a gun and a lot of people have gotten dogs " Mrs. Gibson, who demanded g reater protection four month:. ago at a meeting of Jefferson County Fiscal Court, said that despite the arrest; she will continue lo press for the formation of a neighborhood association. "We're not going to have guards, but we'll try to muke it a more ~ecure neighborhood with better street lighting and block captains aftd a system of calling your neighbors if you think something is wrong. "People have been afrrud to come to Villa Ana." she said. ··We want to let people know they have nothing to be afraid of." Inmates in a prison courtyard yelled to reporters viewing the damage that the guards did not help open doors and rescue Bryant Loses Agent In Gay Rights Tiff MIAMI CAP> -Singer Anita Bryant's talent agency is dropping her because of her battle against homosexuals. "It's not in keeping with her career or my professional standmg," Dick Shack of the Agency for the Perlormmg Arts said Wednesday in reference to a soon·to-be published book by Miss Bryant about the Save Our Children campaign. MISS BRYANT, WHO does television commercia}s for Florida orange juice. helped organize the group that waged a successful campaign for repeal or a Dade County law that made it illegal to deny job and housing opportunities to homosexuals. Shack ts the husband of Dade County Commissioner Ruth Shack. who sponsored the law when it was put on the books last January. He said his agency. which has represented Miss Bryant for the past 16 years, has had no formal contract with her since last September but continued to handle her affairs through verbal • agreements. Miss Bryant could not be re· ached for comment. We'll tell you whereto go Whether ir's a rip on a fine restauranc, a clue ro lead you ro a painring you've waired a lifecime to see or a mini-review of a movie or play, Weekender helps you pl.in mo~ fun in yoor weekend. Weekender brings you complete news. features and listings of the arcs and entercainmenc events scheduled each weekend along rhc Orunge Ct>asr. And, you'll find helpful advice on fine area restaurants penned by Norman Sranlcy in his OUt ·n· Ahout column. Daily Pilor staff writers regularly contribute reviews of films and performing arts attractions to help you malcc your best entertainment choice. You'll find <he mcsc complete array of theater l\dvcrtising Of irucr-esr to Orange Coast residents in the pages ofWeekend~r. Finally, il <omplete events calendar guides you to :irea amacrioM Jow oc no-cost fun • • To plan more fun in your weekend, ~ Fnday ttad Qtieter Planes Sought LOS ANGSU:S (AP) -A Callfornl• concr•••m•• baa propoMd a M blllloa ltc*al aubl&d,y,.. alt- :; llne~•toreplace •• mo1tCiftilelr uflUnc : aircraft witll 4lOltter plan•. The propo1aJ by Glenn Andenan. Kbeduled to go before the HouH • Public Wort1 and t Tran1portatloo •. Committee next week. ......w..~ ~ would allo.proride up to • $400 millio0 foe reducing • ('-__ s_t_a_te ___ J . and preventing boualng developments near airports. ~. An derson . a :~· Democrat. said Wednes- • • day at a Los Angeles ~ Chamber of Commerce news conference that replacinl noisy planes would provide at least 20,000 jobs locally and would produce aircraft that use 30 percent less fuel. ·Access Due SAN FRANCISCO (AP> -Pretrial hearings for three young men accused of kidnaping 26 Chowchilla school children and their bus driver must be open to press and public, the California Supreme Court has ruled. The tribunal Wednes- day denied a petition which sought to keep the hearings closed. It also turned down a change of venue request by one of the trio. The three men are ac- cused of commandeering the bus al gunpoint and then took their captives by van to a rock quarry east of Oakland where they were locked into a buried moving van. Al'WIN ..... DISPUT£ SETTLED Actor l•• Major• Even Bionic People Need Cashin Hand LOS ANGELES (AP> -TV's .. Six Million Dollar Man" has agreed to a settlement with Universal Studios and will return to the show, a spokesman says. Actor Lee Majors said through the spokesman, "This 1s the best kind of settlement possible - when both sides win.'' Tlie agr ee m ent was not immedjately confirmed by the studio or ABC, the network wbkh broadcasts the series . Production has been held up and the studio had filed suit against Majors to force him to return. Majors' personal manager, Jay Bernstein, said Wednesday that amicable agreement was reached including motion picture deals for Fawcett-Majors Productions, the company set up by Majors and his wife. Farrah Fawcett-Majors. PRODUCTION ON the "Six Million Dollar Mein " was expected to begin immediately for the new season. Singer Thwarts SUicide Threat LOSAKGELES (AP)-Singer Stevie Wonder convinced a muaiclan friend, Lee Garrett, Sot. not to kill himself Wednesday nl1ht after Garrett made suicide threats apparently because ot ••money problems,'' said sheriff's d eputies. Garrett phoned a social case worker at the Southwest Community Hospital Wednesday arternoon, saying he was contemplating suicide, deputies said. Garrett, a composer, then locked bimaelf in the bathroom of h.ia West Hollywood apartment, armed with a .22-caliber bandgwi. Five hours after be holed himself up in the apartment, Garrett was convinced by Wonder to give himself up. Sheriffs deputies noted that Garrett "apparently had some money problems.'' Deputies confiscated the gun and left Garrett in the care of a physician and friends, includmg Wonder. •PWI ...... AID TO FRIEND Stevie Wonder 3 Nude Theaters Ruled Legal in U LOS ANGELES CAP> -A Superior Courljudge has ruled that the Arches Theater in Los Angeles and the Hello Doll and Toy Theater in North Hollywood are legally theaters and can offer performances by nude dancers. Judge Charles Philips Wednesday barred the Los Angeles Police department from continuing to make arres ts at the two locations. because nud e 11 WORKMEN pedormances are allowed under stale law in theaters, concert FELLED BY GAS halls and similar places. "Arresting the performers of today's 'Toy Theater' may lead to the arrest of tomorrow's 'Oh, Calcutta'" Judge Philips said. Attorney Joshua Kaplan, who is representing the theaters. srud the ruling could convince a Van Nuys Municipal Court judge to dismiss misdemeanor complaints against 35 theater Tllu'-Cfa ,Ju 7. 1977 SUMMER · ADVENTURe 7th Annual 35 Day Bike -Camp AlonCJ To Disney World, Florida PHONE 1714J 776-2266 * Cyclists * Non-Cydiats * MoPtds Depa1ts Jwjy 15th Bicycle the Americas Club 10002 BURGANDY PLACE ANAHEIM. CA. 92804 SEE AMERICA BESTI BIKE ITi --ESTATEJEWELRVS:--J FINE CRYSTAL, CHINA, PORCELAINS, BRONZES, I ! FURNITURE, SILVER, OILS, ORIENTAL RUGS, I AND MORE ! ! ~ I 1 million dollars worth "~ · I Friday I MOGUL JEWELRY ~ Ni ht This important sale includes several ~ 9 : museum piec8$ of fi~e anti~ue ~ogul July 8-8 pm i jewelry together wrth 8 fine daa· " i mond solitaires from 2 to 6 carats INSPECTJON: i set in beautiful antique platinum~ FRIDAY, JULY 8th ~ mountings. Also several ~ozen Noon· 5 p.m .• 1 · 8 p.m. ~ I fine bronzes and porcelains, : i . . ~ Property moved for conven,.nce : i all from prominent Leisure ot ui. to: • j I world.~~~-~ Newport Galleries I i. Lots of gold chains, large , ~ Ltd. ! i diamond, emerald, ruby W 2542WEST COAST HIGHWAY I I and upphire solitaires Newport Beech, California ~ I fine ladies & gents§ resuuranu In Southern California. i watches and Contact us for info on our Saturday and ! much ;:s Sunday night sales this week. I morel TERMS: BankAmaricef'd • MasttWChatge : Drug Suspect SACRAMENTO (AP> -The principal of a suburb~n s chool was among 42 person s rounded up by sheriff's Bernste1n said that during his absence, Majors had starred in "A Matter of Convenience." which has company made for NBC. Jim Stacy and Barbara Hershey also starred in the film. employes. I · ~ . Penonalchack ·C•;~;;;;:;Oterma c.nb .. rr•~ I I CONSIGNMENTS ACCEPTED UNTIL 5 p.m. FRIDAY j An Levine • Auctioneer i ------------it11nn111111111n111111t11re11•11•••··--"""'"''IWll .......... tllMMIUlltUlllllUllllWNtlllllHlllllllHlllflHll1i S AN FRANCISCO (AP) - Eleven workmen were exposed to a heavy dose of carbon dioxide gas whicb escaped into the engine room of a ship in drydock but only one required hospitalization. The men were working on the Pacific Bear, which is being converted to a luU con tamer cargo ship. Part of Fourth Loot Recovered deputies in a marijuana LONG BEACH CAP> -Seventeen of 30 fireworksshowatVirginiaCountryClub. rajd. skyrockets stolen during a Fourth or July fireworks Warnings that skyrockets explode like hand Authorities said show have been recovered. and fire officials say grenades in two seconds have been issued, and the Wednesday that Dee they hope the rest will be found "before someone officials say they wish the 13 still missing will be Ward, 44, principal at the gets blown up.•· . returned soon. John Barrett lnterm-The officials said they found the skyrockets m "There's no way someone could light the fuse YOUR DAILY PILOT CAN BE RECYCLED. Orange Coast College operates the official recycling center for Costa Mesa. e d i ate School in front of a fire station. The powder. sulfur and metal and get away from the blast.," said arson squad Carmichael, was booked devices had disappeared during a commercial inspector Doug McClure. for investigation of ----------------------------------------------------------_:_--~----~-------------~----------------------:--------cultivating marijuana .---------------------------. and contributing to the delinqu~cy of a minor. Poll Set? MERCED (AP) - Merced County s upervisors may ask their elect.orate whether to continue to slay out of the state's decade-old land conservation act. The Williamson Act was enacted in the mid 1960s, but M creed County supervisors have refused to participate for fear that state reimbur1ements might not match revenue the county would lose from lower asseased · valuations. Control End• OAKLAND (AP> The resignation of Joseph W. Knowland, edit.or and publisher of the recently sold Oak· land Tribune, baa ended bis family'• control of the daily newspaper - an era that spanned 62 years a~d three generations. .. Knowland announced his resipatioo Wednes- day. Anewpubliaberwlll be named soon, Hid William J. Keating, vlce president of Combined Communications Corp., wbicb purchased the 103·year-old Tribune OD 'JulyL :MURDERER • ~SENmNCED SUPER SUMMER SIDEWALK SALE AT SOUTH COAST VILLAGE SATURDAY,' JULY 9th and SUNDA y I JUL y 10th No -it's not Christmas in July. but so tremendous are these old fashioned values that when SANTA ANO MRS. CLAUS (betteve It Qr not) heard of the event, they decided to fly In for the occasion. After alll Everyone loves a summer salet Greet Mr. and Mrs. Santa Claus on the mall each day of the sale from 11 to 8 p.m. SOUTH COAST VilltAGE 1ocatect .. s.iiflDwer. a ~-.u::.,.,.,_ ... _. ~ ~ .. s.to AN 0 ita $0uth Coast Plaza Mall .48 . • . . -f' • DAILY PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE . Pa-rk Picture Brig~t Complaint.a or wesllldo Colta Mesa resident.a that th~y·ve been aborwban1ed in parkland allocations should be atUlod by l ut week'• acuon of the OraJlie County Board o1 Supervlaon. 'lbe aupervlaort, after approvU'lif u. S6 million development plan ror tho 2M-acrc l"alrvtew Reg1onaJ Park, chipped in an eddJtlonal $3 miJUon t<> purcha~c 139ul"rc:;southoflhc ... uirvif'wpurchue. The new acrea.:c. frntatively cal.Joo 'l'al~rt Park. wlll extend alonat the Santa Ana River, the city's wesh"m bounctary. ull thtl way to 19th Street, m~ar th!! new Canyon Park which the city iis pur chasing. This action preaumubly will aettle thu longst..andi.ng debato ovtt ~ible development of a mctrma m tl1e area. The approved development for Fairview Park mcludes nature s tudy and wildlife areas along with p1cruc and family recreation facilities. The first phase, expected to cost $3.1 million, will mclude access roads, parking for 850 vehicles and a 15-acre lake for fishing and boating. Biking. hiking and equestnan trails and camping facilities will be developed later. While the new parklands will be for the enjoyment of all county residents. principal bcncf iciaries will be the neighboring CostaMesans. Good Business The second phase of a long-fought campaign to improve the commercial and esthetic image of the Costa Mesa business community will go before the city council for a hearing soon. Councilmen must decide which way and how soo.n th ey must engineer the removal of certain commcrciaJ business signs which do not conform to requirements and restrictions imposed by a sign ordinance now nearly three years old. Just as in the past when the ordinance itself was being debated in u series of studies, hearings and a great hue and cry about the spirit of free enterprise, Lbe July 18 council dUcusslon could be pretty lively. The issue at hand wm be-essentially-how to set a value on a non-conforming commercial sign and thus force its owner to replace it, sooner or later. No matter what method of amortization is chosen, we only hope the council continues to move ahead with the sign control program. Ultimately its complete implementation will enhance a Costa Mesa commercial community that needs all the enhancement it can get. And that's good bU!iness for all of us. Support Needed Recently. the Harbor Area Girl 'a Club found itself embroiled in a dispute with parents of club members who live in Costa Mesa's eastside. The parenta were angry because the club had sold its facility on t.be eastside, Grace Cottage, and then announced it was halting bus service for eastside members. The problem of shifting populations of children a nd restriction of funds is not a new one to local youth groups. In the case of the Girl's Club, the dispute resolved itself after a meeting between club directors and parents during which the financial reasons for the changes were explained. While the dispute seems to have been settled, the problem remains of how to provide the most benefit for the largest number of children considering the limited financial resources and community support the club recei vcs. Part of the answer was obvious to some or the parents who agreed to join the club's board of directors to help provide some of that needed support. But that still leaves the balance of the community served by the club to become interested enough to lend a hand when it's needed. • c We Are All Minorities .. . Special Skills Secrets Dear Gloomy Gus Don't Mix Prejudice With Law (SYDNEY HARRIS) Watching with awe an interna- tional ~ymnasl the other night, it occurred to me that unless you have personal experience in a craft or skill, you can't even tell what makes certain people especially good al it. To take the most commonplace example, we imagine that :.i g ood waitress needs most of all to be fast of foot and dexterous or hand. But ap- pearances are dece1v1ng, and these are not the mosl 1m portant requ1s1tes. One of my daughters wailed on table nights. during a college term in Boston. She came home with a truly massive amount of money, most of it made in Ups. Since she had been totally without experience as a waitress (as her mother would fervently attest>. I asked her how she had done so well. ''It's the eyes," she said. "You have to keep using your eyes, and see who needs what and when. Lots of waltreases are fast on their feet, but they waste an enormous amount of energy by not keepine their eyes on their tables. A cmtomer re:illy ap- preciates it most when you an· licipate his nuida.'. TAKING A wholly unrelated field, most observers imqine that the arm is the moat lmpor· tant element m a good tennis player. Yet any competent tennis pro will tell you that the legs, not the arm, are perhaps as much as SJ 1 have lived at my present address in Costa Mesa for more than two years. The other day my insurance agent called to ask if 1 had moved . Suddenly l 've discovered that mall ad- dressed to me (correctly' is not being delivered. but stamped by the Costa Mesa Post Office. "Return to Sender. Not Deliverable as Addressed." Why? BAFFLED percent of a good game. Anyone can learn to stroke well with practice, and some of the most mediocre players have the lov- eliest strokes. But their feet don't get in the right position in the right time, so all their style and grace goes for nau&ht. EVEN IN the esthetic area of musical performance, the layman imagines that a concert pianist or violinist achieves greatness by the dexterity or the fingers in rippling the keys or touching the strings. But the greatest performers have not been those nec~sarUy with the most dazzling tecbnlque. A Schnabel at the piano, or a SzlgeU on the violin, may make occasional mistakes with the finiiers,1.but it is the ear that makes me difference. A great performer hears the music in- side, and translates its spirit, not just the notes written on paper. And, 'despite mechanical im· perfections, a Schnabel or a Szigetl remains a far better in· terpreter than a virtuoso with impeccable fingering and a deli· cient inner ear. I am sure that gymnut would explain her own success in a way surprising to u..c; earthbound creatures. To the Editor: Jn Ms. M:iry Moore's letter to the editor published June 29, she asks whatever happened to the unspoken motto of her youth when a good day's work was rcwardl'd by a good day's pay regardless of race, color or acer!? What happened was that the Mary Moores o( the world • j.!f'l'W Up Tho issue is not whether the government 1s forc:mg someone to hirt-a homosC'xual any more than the issue is whether the govcrnmt'nt 1s forc ing someone Lo hire a black person. The question 1s simply whether an individual ought to be denied housing, empl oyment or education simply because or a difference in sexuality or skin color. Surely, Ms. Moore must realize that a minority has the gr<.'att.·~t need for constitutional protection. ALL LAWS are d1scrim· inatory, whether they preclude minors from drinking or homosexuals from working. The question to be answered in each instance is whether an underlying rational basis exists for the discrimination: e.£., l().year-olds are dlscrimlnUed against because they are not permitted to drive automobUes without posing adangertosociety. The homosexual issue revolves around the question of what rational basis, if any. exists, for discrimination aeal nst homosexuals . All the homosexual asks Is for an equal opportunit y in housing, education and employment. Is this so un-Amerlcan? What t.>v idence does Ms. Moore or Anita Bryant have that suggests homosexual.a pose some greater risk to society t han heterosexuals? The inflnlte perrnutaUons available for the categorbation of people make clear that we are all m embers of minority 1roups Rule Rohs Handicapped ~ACK ANDERSON) ( MAILBOX ) ~nen lrom ,..,.." •re welc-. Ti.. l'ltM te .......... l•ltffl te llt 1,a<e WellMl-lli.t It ... -..4. 1..aner1 •I MO -rdl et len -411 h .,...,. prele<eft<t. All letttrt M•ll met ... ._.,,,,...,_, malli,,.add,.neutum"-'Mwll!llttN"' ... """' It s111flcltftl rtateft I& ......... ,......., will not.,. llllbflslw<I, of one sort or a nother. Enlightened people :ill over the country should indeed run scared every time a minority ls threatened. They may be next. WE ARE all armcted with various prejudices. Let us not elevate these prejudices to the status of law nor enshroud them with either the American Flag or the Constitution. Ms. Moore has obviously forgotten that bigotry and hatred we re not th e principles upon whl~h this country was founded Tht> invidious discrimination that befalls homosexuals is totally inconsistent with our notions or fair play andjusUce. Why are the Ms. Moores of the world unable to realize that all people are the products of ancestors victimized by the bias and prejudice of a bygone day? Must hatred and bigotry be perpetuated by the descend ants of its victims? I hope not, and 1 resent the implication that to do so is the American way. Let 1ilS judge a person by bis deeds, n8t his sexuality. LEONARD FELDSO'IT Water Late To the Editor: lt seems to me that e•eryooeis talking a lot about the uraent need to save water, and yet no one has ever thought about reverting back to study the veey si m pie laws that govern its now. IF THE water preaure was reduced 10 percent, the amount of water consumed per CllJ>ila would also be reduced proportionately. without any noticeable inconvenience to aoyone·s needs. It is my contendon that U this very simple idea was canied out. millions and mJlllons of 1allons of water could be saved. especially in the domestic use, where wate r la wasted unnecessarily. FREDE. DELA TORRE Oa11r•••DNU To the F.d.ltor: Re: Your "Clusroorn Dre.II .. editorial, wblch 1 tblnk tended to confuse your readert: Tbe reality at Dana H.l11J Hitb School Lt tbit. Tbe P.E. tNCberl wear 1hort1, some women classroom teachers wear abort slthU and some other claaaroom teachers wear hlkln• lenctA ahorU. The 1tudenll oftn wear shorts, aomeUmu abort aborta. The cheerleader• wear t.belr abort outrua on certain dayt. Now. lo tbJa •vil'Oluilw •11¥ poealbJe b~ could l do ~ ~otea wearing hiking shorts in thl' classroom? The answer is obviously none to anyone removed from the V.ictorianAge. WHAT possible good could come from wearing hiking shorts? Well. on warm days and on days wben the air conditioning fails . I would be a more comfortable, hence more relaxed, and hence more ef· fective teacher in the classroom. Would I then be a suitable •·model" for the students? I believe so. especially since a teacher·s dress is a trivial part or the example he sets. Far more important examples are the teacher's interaction with the students. the visible actions of the teacher both in and out of the classroom, and fin ally, any ad- d lt ion al verbal philosophy imparted to the students. Why are hiking shorts an issue in the first place? I don't know. Ask the CUSD administration. They raised it. LEOW.QUlRK DHHS Science Teacher Pa11cmaaAfd To the Editor: The Am erican Legion has requested a halt in sb.ipments of American military equipment to the .. Republic" of Panama. Sixteen armored command cars and armored personnel carriers were reported to have been shipped to the Panama National Guard recenUy. Why is the federal bureaucracy permitting such shipments to a pro-Marxist, military dictator who has threatened to force us out of our vitally needed Ufe-line between two oceans? Why does an ••outside"' orgaaisaUoo such as the Legion have to brine this farce to our attention? Aren•t we paying our people in Washington enough to look after American interests a broad? RALPH E. WINKLER Mltjor. USAF. RetJred Le.t Tm:pe.,ers To the F.ditor: Today as I sat In our shop watchl.Qg the trattlc flow by on Baker -now by our shop and ml11 us that ii -I thought again about the rtstd t1ln ordinance of thJI lf'eatclty, We know where the city hall is on Fair Drive becauae there·s a much-needed waterfall in front that we all pay taxes on. We don't even have an addr ess near tho street. How can we be opeo to the public when the publlc can't fincl us or aeo our ls.inch name on a bWldlna that <l back ln a field tho dlltaoce of halt a block? or eoune in the •ery front of our Oeld facing th• street •~ a sign teW11a •hlcb way to South Coast Plua and anotber •lan teUlng you tbe fNevt., to Lbat Beath I& ahelid Dd left. but where'& our lfp'I the illegal sign situation we had stirred up. We were given 24 hours to remove the sign or s uffer the consequences of padlocking our door. lf Costa Mesa doesn't help th·~ sm all business people keep their businesses in Costa Mesa, we aod many others will be forced to move to another location a,nd pay the taxes lo another city. All we want is a name or number Jorge enough for thc- public to sec before they end up in Irvine or on the Long Beach Jreeway. CAROLA.LCORN Poor Movie Mlr To the Editor: Since our family chooses not to attend .. R .. rated movies. 1 was delighted last weekend to find that the Mira Mar Theater in San Clemente was showing two fiJm!i ratt-d "PG:· Consequently, my husband and I attended the early show Saturday evening. The two films W('re '"Airport 77 .. a good ··PG" film and "Hustle,. an "R'' rated film advertised as "PG:· H contained cuts of pornographit- f1lms within the movie itself and was shown to an audience of junior bighschoolers on up. The J:inguage was terrible, but the p1 cturl's were worse. I am sure that had parent.9 or many of these children known what their children were viewing they never would have allowed them to attend the movie. I am sure the owner of the theater believed the same thing as the rating on the ad in the showcase had been taped over with plain paper. WHEN WE questioned thr m:inager that evening, he sa1rt that be thought the film was PG, but when we showed him the showcase, he said be dldn'L know anything about it. Isn•t It eoouah that many PG films aren·t always the best for kids, without. drawing them into a theater under false advertising a nd exposlni them to such de· grading films? 1 do know that. jt is very dlfflcult for independent. theater owners to compete with • the blg chains and they do bavo . difficulty getting good pictures. · • Wouldn't lfbe better to !!how only one good ntm than throwing ln a •. second one that children are not .• : supposed to be allowed to see? • JEANNli:'lTE D. NIMLLE ORANGE COAST DAILY PILOT Dange r Cited In Increased Cocaine Use WASHINGTON CAP1 Cocaln• pote• moderate baalt.b problems that cQUJd hMv& more i.erious CODMqacnc • lf the lllesal drua becomes readily nallable, 1overnmt'nt health experts <'On lend The NauonaJ Jnaututc ol Orua Abuae released a ritudy ol ('()("aine Wednesday that took four yearis and S4 million to complete THE REPUllT SUMMAJUZE8 ALL that 1s \.no~ n about lhc drug and concludet very httle 1s known . .. Despite the mllaal spurt of lnt.ercst an cocaine when 1t was rarst isolated an the last century and its <'Ontrnued medical uses u an anesthetic, our knowledge or coca1n(' as a drug or abuse is still modest," saJd Dr Robert L. DuPont, the 111stitute's director The institute estimates that almost eight million;"meracans have tried cocatne at least once and aoout one m1lhon ha\'e used 1t an the past month. ll nut<.>d evidence that the drug 1i. becoming more popular DuPONT SAJD COCAINE IS NOT a safe drug and should not be likened lo marijuana, the popularity of which has led to a movement to de- criminalize its use. "In a sense, cocaine as radang on the coattails of marijuana now," he said. "Cocaine is not like marijuana and. is significantly more dangerous." The study said cocaine ia not physically ad- dicting but can cause psychological dependence. Continued use often ~--.....,.__...__....._..,_ results in irritation of .oco~aha e i• no t l i ke Jt1arfj11ana and h 11lpltl«!antly mor~ dan- gerous.'' nostrils and nasal membranes and a perpetual ••runny nose." DuPont told a news briefing that cocaine's limited availability and relatively high cost may be responsible for the drug's being considered ·~---~ only a modest hazard in the United States "Were it more readily available in larger quantity, more serious consequences of use might mcrease." he said. COCAI NE IS T HE PRINCIPAL active ingredient of the coca plant, a shrub found in the And ean mountains of South America. It was purified and isolated in the 19th century and is used medically as a stimulant and local anesthetic. Illicit cocaine 1s sold as a while translucent crystalline powder and the institute said current street price ranges from SOO to SIOO a gram. High price and limited quantities contribute to cocaine's reputation as a "status" drug, the agency said Cocaine is usually inhalt'<I or "snorted" into the nose where it is absorbed into the blood from mucous linings. Cocaine, often mixed with other drugs, also can be injec ted into blood vessels HEAVY USE, THE REPORT NOTED, can cause sleeplessness. anxiety and sometimes paranoid delusions and hallucinations. Although death from cocaine is rare and unpredictable. the report said, it 1s a hazard and c:an result from snorting or injection. "This 1s in contrast with lhe widespread street belief that cocaine is without significant hazard." said lhe report. F ROM MAY 1975 TO APRJL 1976, 57 cocaine- relaled deaths were reported to a federal agency that gathers drug figures from two dozen large metropolitan areas. The drug institute said six deaths involved the use or cocaine alone while the rest involved other drugs as well. The report concluded much more research is nt•eded to determine the incidence, prevalence and p.1tterns of cocaine abuse. More also needs to be known of cocaine's physical and psychological ef. f Pds, it said. Bettor Convicted MERCED (AP) -A Stanislaus County man 11Js been convicted or second-degree murder in the ~hntgun shooting death of a man dunng a dispute O\ l'r a bet in a pool game at an Atwater tavern. Sentencing of lsabello Rivera, 21, of Patterson, ''.is scheduled for July 18 after a Merced County ~uperior Court Jury issued its verdict. Rivera was convicted or killing Rene Saenz, 27. of Atwater on March 7. Julyl5-24 Save50~ Resutar Admbaion 12.00,'°' off wtth thlt coupon • Free Ampf\fthcaue EN!erUlament Nlahtly ... *' McDonald• Dly wtth Ron.1d McDooald. July 20 1iOO p.m.-'rOO p.m. ... Pep.I CbaUeap 0.Uy 'f --tl Roy Rose.rt &: l>;\Je Evant .. July 16 &.17 ... '*"ire ~ 1f. Jim Staffon:lit July 21 July 20 :t'Kcnnvltosm~ lf.J•PclJd.anolf. . July 2J July 18 EnJOy the P&ir! ~tUlruntnr Camlval 4H-f'PA U .tock Art1-Cnftt food ~ DrirW. M~y tluouah 1nunJay I Z 0001'1 ... mldr'!llht Fr/id.1y, Saturday and Suni.Ji\V h) o.1n.-mWfnlchr Marina Stranded Folsom Lake Marina at Brown's Ravine east of Sacramento, bottom right, lies isolated several yards from the present shoreline as water continues to drop because of the drought. The lake holds approximately 240,300 acre feet of water compared to 866,800 in a normal year. There is apparently no relief in sight. Part Two of t·he Big Dress story. It's the continuing update of a very important shape. This one, by Jessica for Gunne Sax. Neat because it has a reversible wrap vest, full sleeves, ties, a large flounce; calico, plaid and pindots. Red on putty-color, cotton challis, sizes 5-13, $46 Young Attitude Dresses " ~~weotJM MEN'S aOTHING SEMI-ANNUAL SA.LE .. Starts Friday, ·July 8 Hours 9:30 to 7:00 REDUCTIONS FROM 20%·to50% SUl1S•COATS Regular Now 85.00 : 81.00 110.00 87.00 135.00 108.00 185.00 133.00 185.00 148.00 210.00 181.00 Others to 50% off TROUSERS, PLAIDS & SOLIDS 20% lo 50% OFF Selected Fumlshlnga ~ PrlCe Afl Merchendl1e From Our Regular Stock t ! Thuraday, July 7, 1 en ·~w; ........ YOUNGSTERS MARCH TO MUSIC OUTSIDE SCHOFIELD SCHOOL IN UTAH IN 1889 One of M•ny Old West Photogr•phe on Dlapl•y •t Smltheonlan lnetltutlon Old .West Pictured Smithsonian Shou:8 Plwtographers' Works W ASIIlNGTON <AP) -Some of the best evidence or what life was like on the American frontier in the years 1855-1900 was recorded by largely unknown photographers being · honored at the Smithsonian lnstitution. T h ey were itinerant photographers whose cameras recorded the wagon trains. towns and early settlers. MORE THAN 100 of their photographs are on view at the Smithsonia n 's Museum or History and Technology. Eugene Ostroff, curator or photography who organized the e xhibit and wrote an ac- companying 32·pap Wusttated f catalogue, says the pbotogr_apbs • .. offer insight lpto oar Mritage I · . . often preseryect by s._. ae- :a cident by heirs• ~rariaas tw" "museums... · * There are m~~.dann.lbg for ; gold. wagon trains, If' pklneer • encampment in tha wWIJrnesa · 4 with everyone PoSibt_ ~«lly. · holiday parade&. wbele ftinllies- working in the fidd:s .homest.- eaders relaxing Jp -woodeo 1 sbaclc.i after cl~J ... ),. • • /I. • " · THERE ARB ltEMM • t early Western ~. salooos1Uall • saddlery s hopa. bJltc~ers. .!: .,. .. ....,.. r bankers, lawyers. ·~· " • other businessmen · • , • ARMED At«> ft~Y Inonescene,c~d~ng ~ Ferme9'Her111itRelw)a J dance outside th$' c jo , t' 1899; in ~er,, the=ot 1~ .TOE OBSTA~LES TB.ES}; poses ror a ptcture e ·~ W.otograpbeflt had to •v~rcome .aone-room, wooden dcbciOI ia 'fere en~s.;:041s fo·?-the f! Arizona. • ' equipment · iltUi&rpost ideal Birthdays, Wi!d'4Sn~ .allcl • '.Situations wu ~be~e, and ~funerals are dutif~.teeaASed. the photograph.-. had~ make , There is an occasional ~bato of a extensive preparations to take ~local event. of note. such as a one picture -sometimes even 1 hangine. slowing down an entire wagon r • II train, the Smithsonian said. The exhibition offers some glimpses of their makeshift darkrooms in tents and covered wagons and their studios in early Western towns. "From the photographs in the exhibition, we can see how early Western Americans used their tools, built their houses, attended schools or relaxed and eajoyed themselves during their leisure hours." Ostroff says in the catalogue. "EACH IMAGE REVEALS another perspective of how American pioneers lived, worked a nd relaxed . With these retrospective glimpses we also c~n share, in a small way, the pioneer1• vtew of, the unbroken, ,, 1 • t n &S.. 0 f \ ~ b e 'b 0 t • r . .-un~mfoMle, ana, plai~ the'· , ' · awts-0me IJlount.ol.Jt•.ianga.~ the contoured ma~GJficence or water-cat\red canyons, the lush lor~sts and-fresh streams. , "Photog~hy b'comes a sal~le~~,~~abline us to lli•PIM -the es~bllshment of the -West.·J . rnajor, aspect of Ameri.Caa ~ \bat could be andwM~~:· .. .. -BURNED . Yf)YI'll . ·' snu 'UN •. ~ NASHVILtg re .. ~ w ~ • Zlnmer. the 16·»•~ ~~ W)econsin blllaWV a~ · sta&ting tllQ . .lrfa~ eoa,iQ' nre, ma1• be •nawa~ !ttfat qahideo-l~ed ...,a hoe» a.. .. p~dding of Jll*'-4aQladon ,cell . • .killed 42 pertsons, says bil attorney• becaYSe Of "so , mueh pain." ' 1 • • ' \ cotton· terry totps at cool savings. Reg. S25.QO · 14.90 Thick, thirsty cotton terry styled in a dashing short sleeve top , . wjt~ (o~r.poc~ets, button front. Perfect topper for swim trunks or tennis. golf and walk shorts . . ' silverwoods . ' : ).. . 45 Fashion Island Newport Beach ·PIN~INltt SEWING BAR8ER . I . KITCHEN SURGICAL ETC. "Cot • problem• Thin w"t" lo Pel Ou1'A, />of Wtll Ct&l Nd I•, gttting IM O"ltOfrt Gftd toft ~Mid to iqltlt' J.Mqultld j11 gou1"'mftlt and e.dlNtt. Mod 11<>1tr qwstlOfU to Pat Dvn11, Al YC)Uf Sfnlkt, Orong1 Coa1t Dod11 Pll<X , P 0 Boz I•. Cono M11t1, CA m'21. M ntaJt~ l1tl1r1 GI po11f,,.. WW k Oranllred, IM pholtifd inqwrtdl or ~It~ not meludJng fM rrodn'1 full aom1. oddreu Md buabwu "°""' ~ '"'m ~r cannot l>4! conalderrd Tlaitcoh1n111 appeon dot. l11ucept Satlnda~." Pa,wr rt~•~• L .. l'lre DEAR PAT· Cun you tell me the solution I • ~hould use to mukc new11paper log11 for campfires? • We find old wood 110 scarce and valuable to the • forest that Wl"d rather take paper logs aloog when : we go camping N.M., Costa Mesa t'old old ne" i.p!'peri. into root Ion& and balr·loch • chick Stttloni.. Soak overnight ln deter1ent aad • "uer. Roll t-ach section around a oae-lncll rod, • i.queeze out eACei.s "aler and s mooth sides. Slide • ''°le papt'r logi. orr llu~ rod.i.. Dry t.horouglaly before : • irning. .\nother method produces green flames. • L.ssolve one cup or borax ln one gallon or warm • water. Soak ne"spapers (unrolJed) ln this solution • and drain ofr exceH. Roll wet papers, one or two • sheets at a time, around a metal or wooden rod. Tie : rolls with "ire and re move rod. Staad up to dry for : about three weeks. . Short Breath'• tlu!! Be•t DEAR PAT: My youngster is taking swimming lessons, bul he's still not entirely "water safe.'' We have a new pool and there is always the danger a • child may fall in. Is there a difference in the rate of • ·breathing for mouth-to-mouth respiration for a child and an adult '! '• J.M., Newport Beach If you are giving mouth-to-moutll respiration lo • an inrant or small child, blow SMALL puffs of alr ; into him about 20 times a minute. Twelve times a ::.minute Is advised ror adults. A child's lungs may ·::rupture lf too much air is blown io at ene time. •• Watch the chest rise lo make sure you provide the :4 right amount of air. Berore beginning, clear the ·! patient's mouth or foreign matter, keep chin tilted ·!·up and pinch nostrils shut. .:·Teen Queen Entries Opett · DEAR PAT: Where can I write to find out about ~ entering the Miss Teenage America contest? • L.J., Mi ssion Viejo Information and a contest entry form may be . requested by i.ending a selr-addressed, stamped envelope to: Miss Teenage America National Headquarters. 1165 Empire Central Place. Suite ., IOI , Dallas. TX 75247. · llolding Depo•ft Challenged , DEAR PAT I think I've round an apartment • that ( want to rent, but l won't be able to take oc· : cupancy ror a month. l told the landlord that I wouldn't pay the fi rst m'Onth's rent or any other de· . posits or fees until J 'm sure I can arrange to move. --H~ said there wouldn't be any problem if I gave · '• him a S25 "holding" deposit which would not be ·~ returned if I didn't rent the apartment. He also said "that I would have to pay for a credit check when I rented the apartment. J thought that au deposits now had to be returned Am I obligated to pay for a credit check., T S., Huntington Beach Although security deposits aew .. ust .be rerundable, providing a vacated rental property ls lert clean and undama,ed, tbla does Mt apply to a "holding" or "bond" depotit. This fYpe of deposit means that the apartment will be beJd for you antll you pay the nrst month's rent aod other required deposits. ll does not have to be rerunded lf yoa back out or the deal. As A YS told you by pboae, suggest to tile landlord that this SZS de'°slt be applied lo yOtlr rtrat month's rent. Ask the landlord to give yott a reeelpt for the deposit, noting on It that this amoaat wtll be applied to your nrat month's rent "'• YP.. 1qake rlrm rental arrangements. ,. There ls nothing unusual in your prospective . landlord's request that you pay for a credit check, unless be charges you more Ulan $1t or $15. .. iiiiiiiiiiii :· . . . .. • ·. .. .. •• "IF YOU'RE I HOMEOW• · ~. . . . .. I you shOUlcl find it easy to borrow at The Associcites~' BORROWUPTO $50,000"' THE FAMILY CIRCUS ll) Bil Keane "look, Mommy! My hands got OLD!" Abe Reborn Lincoln 'No A.theist' COLORADO SPRINGS, Colo. (AP> -A book on the religious life or Abraham Lincoln says be became a Christian arter his address at the Civil War battle field at Gettysburg. The book, "A Heart That Yearned For God," was written by Frederick Owen. a retired evangelist and biblical scholar . Owen quotes Lincoln a!I telling friends after the Gettysburg Address, "When 1 buried my son, l was not a Christian. But when I went lo Gettysburg and saw the graves of thousands or our soldiers, I then and there consecrated my life to Christ." . The idea that Lincoln was an atheist apparently arose out or a campaign smear in the 1846 congressional race, Dr. Owen said. Although Lincoln made a prompt rebuttal, the reputation pursued him throughout his career, he added. THE FIRM OF JOHN W. GYORKOS A LAW CORPORATION Announces lhe removal ol 1ts olhces IOI' the General Practice ol Law. to su11e 202. Huntington Executive Park 16162 Beach Boulevard Huntington Beach. Cahforn1a 92647 -Phone (714) 848.0707 JOHN W GVORl<OS · FREO C FENTON ARTHUR J . FOLGER -SAMUEL CUBETE ALBERT A FIORE -AONALO H MARTIN. ol counsel NOWIN PROGRESS! ADDITIONAL MARKDOWNS Hurry -Prices Effcctiv~ Only A~ lon9 A' 9uontitics lo~t1 ,. Handsome a~cent pieces ·1n black;· brushed gold or verdlgreen wrought Iron The circulu et•gere, 74" t•ll O ur exc lu~1\c 1n1crprclJl1on 01 .m .iu1hen11c European detor w11h i;l.t\\ shelves lor your ob1et\ d ar1 The rope tw1$ted pyr•mid, 74" I.all A gracf'lul \howoH poe<:e wllh glass ~helves 1ha1 mJl..c .1 be.iu11ful scllini; lnr your IJVOllll plJOI\ .. nd CUllO\ The winding s1a11c.ue. 82" 1•11 A \l11l..1n>: \nov.1 ,1't• lor ~n indoor );Jr den from 11> rh•ltc .11e IWl\ltng top lo 1he l'11•gJnl fll'dt•\IJI bJW Tne grill work b•kcr's r•ck, 71" 1•11 A m.irvelou~ clccorator .iccent with lour deep 24" w1d1' ~nrlw~ lo com- plement .1ny dl•«11 YOUR CHOICE= 2 S. Thursday July7.1977 OAJL Y PILOT .4' 9 ~. iao.-c..y COME HOMI TO RI FURNITURl-56 STOIU rN 6 WESTUtf STATIS ~ -, SHOP 7 DAYS A WEEK • WUKDAYS 10 UNTI. 9 • SATURDAY 10 UNTll I • SUNDAY 12 JO IJN'Tll.. S • ANAHEIM. 1172 w. Uncoln. n•t2:31 . HUNTIHGTOH lllU.a4. "'31 llMch 81vd • &2$-2173 COSTA MESA• 3115 N. Hertlor lllvd. • ~711 lA HABRA• 1720 W. Wlll1!1e< • •1-0'Tll riiii·~::;, FULLfRTON. 3105 't'Oftla Llftela lltvd. • 124«111 SANTA ANA/TUSTIN• 1703 E. 17lh S4. • 5'U201 WHTMINSTER • 150119'ach Blvd. (7141 .. 1173-C)pening Soon g,,.,,,._ ... .,.,,_,...-~~ EARLY BIRD SPECIAL e IMMEOIATE INSTALLATION '• ON IN·STOCK MERCHANDISE Whlle they lat. Values to $8.99 sq. yd. Only o few balance rolls • re111aWRg. Select from blue, fffW, CJOlcl. brick or ie"+ugrHR. I 000/o ftYlottf*•pl ... I J ' I 000/o nylon cut and loop or t.dured pluslt IR ouortecl colors. Still some left to Hl•ct from. Hurry lft!I! . · .. . .\ j0 DAILY PILOT Thurlday. July 1 1917 Senators Cash· In on Lect11re Trail . . . WASIUNGTON <AP> -Seo Herman E. Talmad1• (0 -0a.), earned $25,000 above his MOatortal aalary laJt year by 1lvlnc apeecbea belon col.Jc-a•. buaineu 1roupa, union and lob· bytn1 or1antuUons. The aum la lb• maximum allowablt under Seaate rules Clo.e behind wH Sen. Robert Packwood (R·Ott.), who wu paid '24.289 In almllar fees, ac- cordaq to Senate record a. DANIEL MOYNIHAN <D·N.Y.), who waa elected to the Senate IHt ye ar and lberefore wu not aubjecl to the Umlw. earned '165,393. He made nearly 100 appearances cbarlin& up to sa, 750 per speech. As a ae.oator, be I.a subject to a celling of $2,000 per speech and TA&.MADGI the total limit of $25,000. Other big eanaen on the 1976 speaking circuit were George McGovern <I>·S.D.). $23,800; Jake Garn <R·Utab>, $23,6SO ; William Proxmire CD-Wis), $23,500; Daniel K. Inouye CD-Hawaii), $23,300; Birch Bayb CD-Ind.), $22,008; Joe Biden Jr. <D·Del.), $21,833; John Tower CR·Tex.), $20,500, and Hu.bertH. Humphrey (D-Minn.), $20,000. In all, members of the Senate in 1976 earned more than $750,000 by giving speeches and writing articles. U new members or the Senate are counted, the total rises to nearly $1 million. THE FEES RANGED FROM NOMINAL amounts up to the maximum $2,000. The most frequently reported fee was an even $1,000. The senators appeared before groups as diverse as state medical societies, colleges, relig· ious organizations , the American Wholesale Grocers Association, the Fertilizer Institute, the Air Transport Association and the National Milk Producers Association. In 1976, senators earned $44,600 in salary, a figure since raised to $57,500. GLENN Reacting to criticis m of senatorial speech-making, the Sena!:_e a few years a~o set a ceiling of $15,000 on the fees. That was raised to the current $25,000 limit, but a new Senate code of ethics which taJces effect Jan. 1, 1979 lowers it $8,625. 'Brave Lion' Opens at GWC School's out, and children's theater is in full s wing. Already in the books is the Laauna Moult.on Playhouse production of" Aladdin," and next week- end "Story Theater" bows in at the Westminster Community Theater. Thia week's offering for the youngsters is '"The Brave Uon," opening Saturday for five days and 10 performances in the outdoor theater near the Act.ors Playbox at Golden West College. DENNIS KING AND LEE Griffin. specialists in children's theater who previously st.aged "MUD" and "Oz" at the colle1e, are direct.lng "The Brave Lion," an adaptation of "Androc:les and the Lion." Intermission Tom Titus Steve Sugita takes the title role with Sheri Goldstein and James Cook in major assignment.a. Others in the Golden West cast are Donna-Jean Cunniff, Laurie Sondag, Derek Osgood, Peggy Bolinger, Terri Griffm, Dan Ostto. Marilyn Perry and Charlie Petersen. Performances will be given at 1and3 p.m. this Saturday and Sunday as well as July 15-17. WINDING UP ITS FIVE-week stint at the Harlequin Dinne r Playhouse with final performances tonight through Sunday ls "Natalie Needs a Nightie.'' The sex farce plays at 8:30 nighUy preceded by a buffet dinner at 3503 S. Harbor ·Blvd., just north of Costa Mesa. Reservations 979-SSll. -Other productions on a predominantly musical schedule up and down the coast include: ....:.. "Jacques Brei ls Alive and Well and Living in Paris at South Coast Repertory, 1827 Newport Blvd., Colla Mesa. Performances nightly, except Monday, at 8 p.m. with a 3 p.m. Sunday matinee. Reservations 646-1363. -"'MY FAIR LADY'' AT Sebastian's West Dinner playhouse, 140 Aveolda Pico, San Clemente. Performances Tuesdays through Sundays at varying curtain Umea. Reservations 492-9950. -"Stop the World, I Want to Get Orr· at the San Clemente Community Theater, 202 A venlda Cabrillo, San Clemente. Performances Thursdays tbrou1h Saturdays at 8 :30 until July 23. Reservations <&N-0465 • ..:.."Norman, Ia That You?" by the Huntington Beach Playhouse at the Edgewater Hyatt House1 Pacific Cout Highway at Westminster Boulevara In Lone Beach. Performances Fridays through Sundays at 9:15 followlnf dinner. Reservations 828-0583. * IN CONTRAST TO THE OTHEas. some senators accep~ no fees In 1976 for maldng s peeches. They include James B. Allen (D·Ala.), Oklahoma's two Republican aenatora, Dewey Bartlett and Henry Bell moo; Lloyd BenUen <D·Tex.), Harry F. Byrd <Ind-Va.), Clifford Case <R·N.J .), James 0 . EuUand (D-Mlss.), Ohio's two Democratic senators, John Glenn and Howard Metzenbaum ; Ruasell Long <D-La.), and William L. Scott (R-Va.) SOME OTHER BIG EARNERS included Minority Leader Howard Baker CR· Tenn.), $15,100; Edward Brooke (R·Mass.), $18,000; Alan Cranston <D-Calif.), $15,650; John C. Culver <D·lowa), $19,800; Robert Dole <R-Kan.), the GOP vice· • presidentlal nominee. $14,875; Gary Hart <D·Colo.), $13,050; Mark 0 . Hatrleld (R-Ore.), $16,200 ; William D. Hathaway (D-Maine), $18,975; S. l. H•yakawa CR·Callf.), $13,581; Ernest Hollings (D·S.C.), $14,200 ; Charles McC. Mathias Jr. <R·Md.), $13,300; Sam Nunn (D·Ga.), $13,842; Jennings Randolph (D·W. Va. ). $19,500; Richard W. Schweiker CR-Pa.), $16,900, and Harrison Williams (D·N.J.), $19,250. Vice President Walter F . Mondale, a Democratic senator from Minnesota last year, earned $14, 750 Jn speaking fees. p ,,.,._... Sen. Edmund S. Muskie (D-Maine), who said be would be hard pressed to afford living with the new ·li mtts on fees, earned $18,550 last year. $15,650.IN FEES Alan Cranston $13,511 RECEfVED S. I. Hayakawa Henry "Dad" Miller: 100 years old. First Half: soldier in Spanish American war, family man, inspector at PG&E. Second Half: learns golf at 55, wins Senior Nationals at 84, sinks third hole-in-one at 93. Dad Miller thinks the second half of life can be even more exciting than the first . We couldn't agree more. So we offer all sorts of savings and retirement programs to help you start planning for it now. Maybe that's why so many people save at Glendale Fetlernl Savings for a great second half. . .z • \ 'Sun and Shadow' Reflects Star Thul"lday July 7. 1977 DAIL y PILOT A l l Shm.mrs for Bikers SACRAMENTO <AP) -Showers wlJl be provided in the basement of the Department of TranapottAltton headquarters here with an eye toward interesting people In bacycUnt \o work. Autobiography Airs French Actor's Career on Two Continents The C&llComia Highway Commission approved a $22,000 appropriation to build eaght showers and 120 clothes lockers lo the basement of the dep- artment headquarters. ., 808 TltOM.U LOS ANGELES <AP > -''SuA and Shadow'' ... ms .a apt UUe for lb• autoblCJsrapbr ol Jean· Pten. Aiunon1, ~ P'rencb lldor' wboM Ult &Dd c.,... baw known ampJe perlodl at botb. Illa snmlabal career u an 111011 atar mded lo \MS wblD be Jamed lb• ....... ~b ~.and bbl Hollywaod cu.er never ...., ... .., the momentum. · Kia m~bllclled maniq• to lbe aodc Ilaria Moat.a trqtcally wtUI ._.death tn 1151. Hi.a second marrl11e to actre11 Marita Pavan experiMCed divorce and reman1a1e nmag IS Al.SO •um BtJNSBINE in Jean- Pierre Aumoot'll We. Hil wkle, v&rted career bas included fllma. •use and Lelevbloa ln France, the United Stat.ea, Encland, Caoada and elsewhere. Re hu written plays and short 1toriea, baa known the areal f1cures of show busiaeu oo two continents. O.p!te the shadow d hJa autobiography's title, he bas remained a life-loving opUrn.i.st. His attitude appears m has film performances as well u his writLQ&. He keeps a house outside Paris. but bome is here in Pacific PaJuadea. ••MY WIFE IS DOING TELEVISION worlt, a nd my eldest soo uuttending UCLA." be explains. Besides, Los Angeles 1s a convenient baae for hts own career; be waa leaving shortly to perform "'Gigi" in Forth Worth. ·"high wheelers" antique bicycle and carriage display at Fashion Square Saturday• July 9 "Sun and Sbadow" (Norton, $9.95) was publ11bed 1n France, where ll was awarded pnies by the crlUca and tbe .French Academy. •"THS F&ENCH FOUND IT DIFFERENT from the uaual actor'• autobiography," said Aumoot. "For one lhinc, I wrote ll myself, without any 1hmt. Second, l dJdn 't 01enUon every play and film I appeared ln. They entered the book only in conneotioq with anecdotes or people I thought would be interestin1.' · Surprtainaly, Aumont wl'Ole the book ln a mere six moatbs, working on it during the day while he waa starring lo a Paris play. ''It wun't difftcult," he remarked. "After all, I have written seven plays, of which five have been produCed in Paris. And t.bb boot bad been tn my blood ro.-a ICJlll ti.me. All my Ufe I have taken notes about people J have met and things that have happened to me. "Sometimes I put down key word s, sometimes I wrote five ""''""··-~, .. or aJx pages. AUMONT ·•Also, l had five years alone between the death of my first wife and tbe marriage to my second. Instead of playmg ba.ctgammon, I fought solitude by writing." AVMONT'S REMINISCENCES RANGE from Colette to Al Pactno. He recalls vi.siting lbe aged French writer at her St. Tropez estate. After helping her plant the garden. he asked if be could take a shower before dinner. He writes: "Get undressed and stand over there," she ordered, "My planta need water:• ''Tbere was no way to say no to Colette," be writes. "l had to stand, naked, in lbe center of her bougainvillaea, and let her sprlnJcle me with a wateringcan " Dismll}'ed by her abandonment by Laurence Olivier. Miss Leieh proved' erraUc and sometimes violent durin1 rehearsals and tl'youll. During • quarrel scene at a Saturday malnt.ee, 1he 1uddenly became violent and pummeled Aumoot onataae. Then she fell into a deafenina silence. AWD<lllt launched into a desperate soliloquy. trying evoke answers from her. Finally sbe told the a ence, ··An actreas has to thiok before , "and walked off11t.aae. · t the evening performan~ Miss Lei&h bad to replaced by an understudy. Au.moot continued e play amid the offstage screams of Vivien Leigh, "struUllng lite a wounded animal against the stagehandS, who were lrylne to keep her from matil'lg her entrance.•• Dr. Clark · To Lead District A Kansas City com- munity college president is tbe first black woman appointed to bead a California community coUegediatrict. It bas been state policy ror more than two years now to encourage employes to find a lternatives to lbe automobile. WAN'l'ED DIAlllO NDS • GEMSTONES Jewels by josephs 11 searching for diamond• and gemstones from pr1vate lndlvldual1 and estate1. Careful examination and evaluation by our experts. HlgheSt prices paid. Call 54<>-9068 10.9 dally, Saturday HHI, ~unday closed. Aak '°' Betty Gra.ce « Frank Vand91'Wall iewels by . ioseph South Coast Plaza• 3333 Bnstol, Costa Mesa• S.W-9066 If s HAWTHORNE CHRISTIAN SCHOOLS for the right start in life Kmderprten tllrv 8th Grade • All-day dams EIWlll~- Fa11 Semester Starts Tuesday, Sept. 6 Dr. Leadie M . Clark will replace Charles Wilson at the helm of the North Orange County Community College Dis-· Regl1tratlon Fee ONLY $20 -Reasonable Tuition trict. Dr. Clark will work with Wilson for one year beginning July 15 before auuming the chan- cellorship full-time upon Wilson's retirement July l , 1978. fOllCKI ~ ~ ~ : * ..... A'lf. Tron~ 1,Y'.>1oble -(~...,,of ::ill f0orll\ a• ~<>one -lii<jt ~llC ~mdord -•eo:l,;nc;i ..... ' d Q.°s; ~ [..i!h oll0'1in). -•t·n~. 7"11imehc. ·~· ~ FOUNTAIN VALLEY• 16835 Brookhurst ''"' nonh ol Warner I 714-962-3312 1 •Wf. '"A PT1Yafe School ol 01s1tnchon rounded m 1~2' Ice cream social llam-3pm AUMONT CO-STARRED wrrB VIVIEN Leigh Trustees approved a in a musical version of .. Tovaricb," and confirms four-year contract with what Anne Edwards has written in her current Dr. Clark at a yearly Leigh biography about the actress's denngement. salaryd$49,SOO. _________ __::__ ________ _:__..:,_:_ ____________ _,_ __ __..__ ______________________________________ _ I l___ Santa Ana Fashion Square SANTAANA/ GARDEN GROVE FREEWAY AT MAIN NU DI SIS B EAT7LJO SAN DIEGO (AP) - The official figures are in about San Diego's biggest attraction. The zoo was visJled by 14,394 persons on the Fourth of July, Sea World marine park by 16,229 and Black's Beach had 25,000 visitors. '------------------The beach is "clothing optional.·· ~aunSELF ran SAVING AT am DF NEWPDnT OPEN A TIME DEPOSIT AND TAKE HOME A 17" SONY COLOR TV OR A LITTON MICROWAVE OVEN ONLY AT BANK OF NEWPORT. Choose as your REWARD either their color Sony or Litton microwave 1n lieu of Interest. Take 11 home immediately or have It delivered. A greal way to REWARD yourself. All Bank of Newport 1n lieu of interest Time Savings Programs are based on maximum allowable interest, and we can also arrange to have your funds transferred from other financial irrstitutions for you. BEl\E'S BDI! SONY KV·1712. Speciacua vtewlng la your REWARD with fNery show. Sony's KV-1712 features a big 17" dl8Qonal screen, famous Tr1nltron color, and auto- matic fine tuning •.• superb craftsman- ship In a handsome, trim walnut cabinet. LITTON 420 MEMORYMATIC. Conve· nlent meals are the REWARD with Utton's 420 Memorymatlc microwave oven. Touch controls set full and var1able power temperatures for up to 99 minutes or automatic cooking. Open a TI me Certificate of Deposit at Bink or Newport using any or CALL &31·3110 t1'le8e 3 plans •.. 1 Depolft$1,500 2 Dlpollt l2,500 3 DlpolltSS.000 (Otherln lleu 67 months at 7 ~% 30monh at o.&% 19 montha at 6.0% ~=,.:~. Substantial lntereat penal UH rwqulr9d for •arty wlthdrawala. atao nalablel ------------------------I --·-· I 1 am encloslng the following fund• to purehaae ~ a Bank of Newport Time c.rtOlcate of Otpoalt tor ~ ~ S • maturing ~ month• from the time I accept tither• Sony 11• portable color tel.vision aet, or a Litton 420 micro-Newpo wave oven. I underat.ancS that •ubltantlal l"",.st rt penaltlea.,.. tequired tor early withdrawals. MAIN OFFICE: Dover at Slxt•nttJStreet, Newport Beach CORONA DEL MAR OFPICE: CO.St Highway near MacArthur, Corona dtl Mar LIDO OFFICE: Thlrty.MOC>nd StrHt at Lafayette, N.Wport Boch ~-'l>!C NAM& ADDRESS THE PR·ICE USTERS! C711'$ 2650 (IOl/11) Mn/ti 2950 (tta/15) • l7'11S 35so (DS/11) 12 DAILY PILOT QUEENIE By Phil lnt•rlandi Water Cleanup Set Marine Habita.t Upgrade .Eye~ By KATDY CLANCY OI""' D .. ty ,_ ltefl Oranae County water pollution .. experts hope to clean up contaoiinated local waterways by the mid 1980's. They ~ looking for ways to Improve the marine habitat ln Newport Bay, along the Orange Coast shoreline and in the area of the Bolsa Chica marsh in Huntington Beach. ORANGE COUNTY of Govemmenta to two county • agencies -county government and the 12-melhber Newport- J rvlne Waste Management Planning Agency, Smith said. Working with $262,000 in federal grant3 the two agencies have been completing the flnt portion of their planning effort by identifying water q"Uality problems. DONALD MclNNlS Beginning in September they will begin seeking solutions to the problems for presentation at Newport Beech Reeldenta Heed Unit• public hearings startine next • April,Smlthsaid. oc u •i d IF/' "And ~w ..• up, you're dead!" Ken Smith, director of the county waste management planning effort, told county planning commissioners Wednes· day the local effort is not channeled toward stationary sources of pollution s uch as industrial plants, already gover· ned by existing law. The Newport-Irvine agency is ni e ,,, ay handling the planning for a 100.000 acre area in the Newport For the Record Instead, Smith explained, the effort is emphasizing pollution caused by urban run-off. Such pollution could be caused by fertilizers and pesticides washed off lawns, oils washed off streets, leaching from septic tanks and sediment washed from construction or sand and gravel operations, Smith said. aimed at possible changes in grading codes, for example, or revisiom to land-use plana. Bayandcen1ral0rangeCounty. N Leade Smith said the agency, which ames rs includes Costa Mesa, Newport Beach and Irvine city officials along with nine other groups, was formed primarily to elim- inate Newport Bay pollution. . . Two NeWport Beach community leaders have been appointed to the 1977 Campaign Cabinet of United Way of Orange County North/South, ac- cording to Robert W. Clifford, general campaign chairman and president of Air California. LAS VEG•S Marro-lt<fnM!\ h.~ued htrt' l"'C I ude J .... '· ,.,, ll•OE R ELLIOTT •t>dul 8••" Moh•med, 1• dnd(hr•)I•~ Marit. H llotn of Huntonoton 0..a< h TR•ILL YOUNG Mark Adam, t8 El Toro, end Cynth1• L , 18. L•n\lnQ, Mi<;h. ROBINSON-ROBARE ~war, 68 and Fra..ces M4~. U , l>Olh ot Hunt· "'91"" 8"ad>. Jllfte1, tt77 OHAIR·SCHUL Tl -f"Otrf\l L., SO, and eartwtr• J•M, 3', both of Co\la Mew MUROOK•·CAROINEL Takao,30, Huntongton 8"acn. ano MMO(!ry C , 3t, Orange. J""•'· 1'71 MURCHISON·CREEOON Huqh RodPrlck, "· •M Bevt'rl.-Ann. "'8. l>Oth ol New-I llM<n BRENNING 0AV4l0'> • M drlol\ RO. 1) and (ynlh•d AM, II, Doi" ol Hunt1nqf°" BeMh LYBARGER BOWLES C >I••" O-tniet. n . .tnd (hr1!.h"• l yn,,, 7'f. bott.ot Co.ta_..., STEARAMN HERlRl'Rc;ER JI><~ S•nct•lr. U. New-I o .. tcn. il<ld Ilk•, ~-lrvl,,.. FE MINO-BIRO -Jonn AnclrpW, Al, •"" Ceuh• Ann<'. 28. t>Otn ol Hunt· lngt°"BH<h VM4 BUSKIRK·TALTON -Od11i R, 71, Sant• Ana. •ncl Mary Hall, ~. \Nntmlnsltt. J-•.1'71 OEHM-CALLISON -Howa<d C. Jr, JS Co\t" Mt>w, •nd fkovtrlv •nn, Ji>. Norw.-U• llP8ANf( HfNC'IER~N FdwMd Arton. 3', and Sl>orl•Y AM, n Doth ot Nowp0rt O.•cn YOUNG-EGGEBRECHT AIU· •nd@r W , 51, ~n Cl~m@nu•. dn<J (16'1CP 1.,42. ~J ... nC•Po>lr""° PERRY OE MELLO Tnomas JO.~P•t. 31. (°'la Me••. dl\O L yn<ld Suv JO. Or-. RU!. BRY•NT -Oof\dlO C•aus. 41, "nd SyMa J..,,., 40 t>Otn 01 Founl•ln 11•11•~ HANSEN-RIEKER -Mark David. 12. Capl\lr""° Be&eh, Md PalriCI<> M • 18. Sdn J""" OPISlr<>no. REE 0 °8R•NOON -B'"'I' 01md. H La H•D<•. -co .... •• s .. II. Coua /lltt\rt LOVE PITTS -Llmelt Coy, 32, and Ptn~topP "'1/tferry,31, t>oth of •r-vme. J .... s,19n Smith also said the solutions for the contamination problems will not involve recommendations for additional study or the building of new waste treatment facilities. Instead, the solutions will be The clean-up campaign was the result of a 1972 amendment to the federal Water Pollution Control Act, which set a 1983 goal of makine waters across the land safe for both recreation and marine uses, Smith said .. It also set a 1985 goal for making all navigable waterways free of pollution. In Orange County, the planning effort is channeled through the Southern California Association Among solutions being sougbt by officials of the two agencies will be elimination of pollution in the Newport Bay, the San Joaquin and Bolsa Chica marsh . areas, along with improving the near shore marine enviroment. The effort also will include a study of wastewater elimination and sewage treatment capacities, Smith said. ... Mrs. Martin C. Bergeson has agreed t-0 head the leadership division. A former teacher, she was 1975 president of the California School Boards Association. She will be responsible for advance and special gifts and her recruitment of a corps of volunteers to assist the United Way in its fundraising efforts in behalf of 76 human service age'!_cies. MILLER·STEWART -De""'' Cnar IP\.,-« .. Bellflowitr, &nd Lula Ma~. ., Hun111'91on Buen. WILSON AL DAG -Ronald Albert 41. •nd ~rud OUlllP. •S. l>Oth <>' Huntington BH(h. Donald A. Mcinnis, president or Northrop Services, Inc., will bead the public employes Oc JY/' P' _ • A • D J:: · division among civil service and other public ,,, o~en . race in ir eruy_age_ncy_emp_loyes_in2_3cit-ies. __ _ J .... ,, ,.,, 1tN1GHT HARASYN o ... re• TAMPA, Fla. (AP) -Patricia Udall, a park ~·;~~;'U.!i.~='"""' ""0 H• 1 "" ranger from Tonalea, Ariz., and her copilot, ioscPH-OLSON -oav10 M><h.J•t Nanette Gaylord, from Denver , have won the fmal !:.:t~.:~noa c:.rr.er•ne 21 born °' running of the 2, 190-mile coast-to-eoast Powder Ju ... 1. m1 Puff Derby. OAV•OSON·WATSON -J•lltty Oranf,eCoastpilots finished third and fourth. LYM, ?O, -Wandd Sue, 19, l>Olh ot• wn 1m1ns1..-The erby, a proficiency contest instead of a cRuz TORRES -Ju.Jn """"· 30• speed race, was a commemorative event to mark dnd 8•roar• Je•n, .c?. bol h of w .. 1m1ns1e.. the 30tb and final derby. The women covered t ""'£.uur~~':.''J:me, Eaward, virtually the same transcontinental route between ".,..,J_M•f'lNlret,1•.Dotno1Hun-Palm Springs and Tampa as the first derby fliers 11no1on~¥h. did in UH7. ~~~:·=~~.~.O::~:~~';':~ The event is being ended for lack of funds and Mm. sponsorhip, otncials said. LOHMANN·BASH•M -Thomas H., J nd 1 · · Fr n. •nd e.rb.lr• ~-J&. t>Otn 01 Hunt n seco p ace were seven-time wanner an 1ngton Brach. Bera of Long Beach and her copilot, Joyce Failing, -« of Rolling IIllls, a controller with 'the Federal Aviation Administration. A sister team, Joan Paynter of Bakersfield and Shirley Tanner of Newport Beach, placed third. In fourth place were Thon Griffith from Costa Mesa, and her copilot, Kay Brice of Norwood, N. J . Eileen Wickoff from Vanderberg, Calif., and Linda Schreck of Lompoc, came in fifth in their first Powder Puff outing. ... Derby officials said 140 women took oU last Friday and 127 finished. The others dropped out with mechanical problems or be<:ause of adverse weather. The order of finis h was announced Wednesday. ' . FOR THE PROFESSIONAL TOUCH: DECO INTERIORS IMTBUOR PUHHIHG AHO COHSULTIHG c-.... sehdloe of w ................... u .. ., ... fl~ ..-.stery, .......,.., ....... _, KCfttoriH. Visit Our Oeslgn Studio 211'2 ~ .. "'-~ Mh.-Ylefo ......... """ .. 1~,.,..., . ....s--., ...... .-i 4tS·0202 M°'"'9y "-s.lwdlly 130-0400 Deatlu Elsewlwre Open Space Grows Western Federal Savings Presents AUSflN, Tex. <AP> Fa1an Dickson, 73, a liberal Democrat who once ran for Congress on a "Bring Lyndon Home" theme, died Wednesday. Di c k so n ran for Congress in 1968 to convince then-President Johnson not to run for re· election, and withdrew when Johnson decided not to run. NIAGARA FALLS, N. Y. CAP) -Chief Elton Greene of the Tuscarora owner of restaurants in Seattle, Portland, San 'Eraricisco and Honolulu. SACRAMENTO (AP> -Memorial services 'were held Tuesday for Reginald Carrier Price, 67, who is credited with making the initial recommendation for construction of the proposed Peripheral Canal. Price died Friday in Bethesda, Md. ' By 646,254 Acres SACRAMENTO (AP) -California land entitled to a tax break as "open space" grew by 646,254 acres last year, to a total of 1S mtllion acres, slate Controller Ken Cory reports. Under the 1965 Williamson Act, an owner who agrees to keep farm land open for 10 years gets a lower property tax. The state refunds part of the tax loss to counties, cities and school diatricts. Cory said the state paid local agencies $16.9 million for fiscal 1976-77, about a million dollars more than in the previous year. The lion's share of the money went to Kem, Fresno and Tulare counties. Indian nation, known for :---------------------------------, bis opposition to the acquisition of Indian lands by the State Power Authority, died Tuesday in suburban Lewiston. AKRON, Ohio (A P > - Anton Vittone, 60, executive vice president and board member of the B.F . Goodrich Co. and c hairman o f B .F . Goodrich Canada, Ltd., died Tuesday. SEATTLE <AP) - West.Coast restaurateur N. Peter Culls, 64, died Wednesday ln a local hospital after a long illness. Canlis wu the nafAMllT CCK.OMtAL fUMHAL HOMI 780t Bolsa Ave. Westminster 893-3525 rACIAC VllW MIMOIJAL rARK Cemetery Mortuary .Ch1pel 3500 Paciflo View Drive Newport. Californl1 ~ ... ~700 W.CotMtCI MOITVAIJU LIOuna Beach 41M-IM115 l.lguna H1111 tea-0933 s.n Juan C.piatr.no <485-1778 a Definition of Savings: Twelve Free Customer Services are available to Western Federal savers: Checking Account, Safe Deposit Box, Travelers Chequ~s, Notary, Save-by- Mail, Money Orders, Note Collection, Travel Aid, Lonnges,•Community Rooms, Western Federal News, Personal Records Book. Ask us. WEsrERN FEDERAL SAVINGS , . . 2744 East Coast Highway (3 blocks S. ofMncArth\1r) 92625. (714) 644-7255 10AM-6PM JOAM-4PM • .. Floating ltluseuna Tbooms A Malloy of Fort Lauderdale, stands near the former presidential yacht Sequoia at the Washington, D.C. Navy Yard. Malloy submitted the winning bid of $286,000 for the yacht and plans to make a national tour with the vessel as a museum. He will sail the yacht to Providence, R.I. where the national tour will begin. B.earded Man Gains Benefit SACRAMENTO (AP> -A man fired because he refused to shave orr his beard is entitled to state unemployment benefits. a state board held in a precedent·settlng opinion. The state Unemployment Insurance Appeals Board. acung after a senes or court decisions granting constitutional protection for growing beards. ruJed Wednesday against the Los Angeles Hilton Hotel. THE HOTEL FIRED ABRAHAM Thaw or Granada Hills, who worked as a Hilton maintenance engineer for seven years, on Sept. 1 after he refused to shave off his beard, the board said. Four of the board's five members ruled that ( J Thaw had not been fired 'IJIE UW for misconduct and was ...... _______ _.. e ntitled to jobless benefits. The maJority opinion by three board members, two of them appointed by Gov. Edmund Brown Jr. and one by Ronald Reagan, read in part: . . " ••. THE CLAIMANT WAS discharged for reasons other than misconduct when there was no showing that requiring the claimant to shave off his beard would either enhance lbe employer's business or affect the claimant's abillty to carry out his responsibilities as a maintenance engineer." The three members signing the opinion were Don Blewett. a former Teamster official and Reagan appointee who is chairman ot the board; Muilyn Grace, a rormer retail clerk union me01ber, and Richard Marriott, former mayor or Sacramento. Marriott and Ms. Grace are Brown appointees. A FOURTH BOARD MEMBER, Reagan appointee Harry Grare. agreed wilh the board's de· cision upholding an administrative law judge's ruling in favor of Thaw but disagreed wllh the three-member majority's reasoning. ' And a fifth member, Reagan appointee Carl Britschgi, a former Redwood City assemblyman, filed a dissenting opinion, stating It was "properly a prerogative of management" to issue "reasonable grooming requirements." In the statement issued wilh the decision, Lionel Riave, the board secretary, said recent California court cases "have established a body or law which grants constitutional protection to lhe growing of beards in certain circumstances." HOME CARDIN Tells how to plant It Saturdays in the or how to fix it DAILY PILOT MAKE A CHOICE ( 1 ) Y 04J con choou, the ~~~ustor •o c:IO-ect ond prepare yo<1 cloim, but th;, 1J much the ~ OS c"°°"'9 it.. lntemol Revenue S«v.ce to direct ond ~· yo;it income ICJ<. There ii no qood rooson to e1pose your. lntore't to IM jeopardy. (2) Whot see!Nld to be normol claim proc?icn od\dy rtllnQUth oontrol and au!hority ne•dleuly ond ore serio111 niistdet for the paicy tdder. Mott mi11ol•1 cannot be COl9Chld. (3) Y°' 0"9 .,_. to !pie yo11t cloim ptofessionolly prepared by °" ~ • ~lft~lo\-for pc;iktlolderi.' the 11'11011 ~-. , .. ftaa decb:tiife). " Paid tom ..... ...,.,.,, ...+ich .... f(JI """°' W.est "' 0 ma.irtwm ..........,.,, (•) Cllp ond 1ove this lolf CfmClllan. Y OAI <'Oii odf tcM "" ~ If )QI ---"" c.ol ,11e f'nl .. ~ i.;,... 0 lou. ' . . . ' . Deposit Needed Thurld.y.Juty7.19n DAILY P1LOT ,t J 3 Park Drinks Price Upped WASHINGTON.(AP) -U you buY a soft drink or a beer in a national park this summer, you'll have to put down a nickel deposit on lhe container. The National Park Service has instituted the deposit system in more than 200 parka in an effort to cut littering. Starting Sept. 21, a deposit wUl be required on all bottles or cans sold on any federal property. · The system was put into effect early ln the parks because officiaJs said these containers make • up a substantial portion of lhe litter found in those areas. ( 842 • 4321 ·)Direct or collect, to aubacrlb• lo YOUR hometown paper, the DAILY PILOT A,. Wint .... PlUMllM• HU.TIM• .AJICOMD. m ... ,_ .. ,__ Wv1c~ tn Vour Ar•• -C.11 MISSION VIEJO 1'9'11 C..mlno C•plllr•no IS.n ~ Frwy •t Av•ry Ph•Y.I 495-0401 COSTA MESA 1516 N~WPOrl Blvd. 642-1753 SI ~le. ~'11U7 f~mm1g;11 mn M A great place for kids. SALE ,..ICES fFffCTIVf JULY 6 THRU JUI. Y 11 Executfve Olffces: 7812 Edinger Ave., Huntington Beach, CA 92647 Southern Cslffornfa Regfonal Offices: ---·-- 4140 Long Beach Blvd., Long Beach. CA 90807 8955 Valley View St., Buena Park, CA 90620 Q 20715 S. Avalon Blvd., Carson, CA 90746 • 1001 E. Imperial Hwy., La Habra, CA 90631 1095 Irvine Blvd., Tustin, CA 92680 .Ji~"° 235 N. Citrus Ave •• West Covina. CA 91793 UllOUI Our •••m tell• you everything you want lo know •bout your team In the DAILY PILOT DIVORCE s 100.00 ~--........ llllfC.Llllflu,a . ......, 494-fm • su.oa1 63 ~year forxour money. ..And ~u don t even have to leave it a week. Suppose you open a regular account with us , tomorrow. Any amount. Then later you decide you need cash and you take some or all of your money back. . Your money still earns at the full 6% rate, from day-in to day-out. There's no withdrawal penalty. Anytime your account balance is $5,000 or more, the interest rate jumps to 6'h%. With the same liberal withdrawal terms. And whatever the rate, we compound it quarterly . No minimums, no tie-up, and 6%. It'll pay you to call us for the details. Available to mdividuals, corporations, and organizations residing in California. COMMEl\.CIAL Cf\.EDIT COMMERCIAL CREDIT PLAN. INCOR..POR.ATED COSTA MESA ANAHEIM HUNTINGTON BEACH ORANGE 370 East 17th Sir.et 650 South 10675 Golden Weal 1111 Town & Country Rd. 645-8700 Broolthunit Street 847.7771 Suite 2& 774-6740 547.5871 • • STOH .. S. M-F 10.9 SAT. 10.6 SUM. 12·5 SHOESAHD SOCKS • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • e Men's Leisure Shirts .••••••••••••••••••••• 1.99 : ST A 110NARY AND HOlllES _ittle League Socks ...•.................. so· :::hildren's Knee Hi's •.....•............•.. 25" Ladies ~onty Hose .. .. .. .. . . . . . . . ... 4 /$I Suede Wollobet> Shoes . . . . . . . . . . ........ SS Ton Moc Toe Sondles . . . . . . . . ............ SS 3rown Chfords .........•.....•.•....•. 1.29 f.Strop(hild-en's Sl1~s . . . . . 2.50 INFANTS' AND CHILDREN'S WUI Shirts , .. " ..........•...... ~. 2.99 Children's Blov~es ............•..... 1.99-2.99 Assorted Tops .................... 1.99-2.99 Assorted Chldrt>n's Sloch . . . . . . . • . . . .... 2.99 Assorted Chld-en's Jeons ................ 4.99 Long Jeans . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ............. 4. 99 Infants' 2 pc. Denim Suits .••..........••... $5 Infants' Tops . . . ....•.•...... 1.99 T ~dlers' Slcxh . . . . . . .. . .. ........ 2.50 MEN AHO IOY'S WEAR Men's Ronnel Pajamm .•................ $5 Men·5 Knit Shrt\ .......••..•.•.••. 1.99•2.99 Boys' Shirts . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .....••. 1.99 Men's long Sleeve Shirts .................. 2.99 ASSORTm USltltlfE UNDEIS SHAMPOO 32 OZ. SIZE 2~ $1 $177 24 OL bottfM crom11 rnte ond Litt.Me ant1tep1ic ~11ts 98""' Jhompoo. F.Uf f<09'once1 for "-sh. sWttv hoir. by mmiom on context. Men's Unlined Jackets ••••..•••••••.•.•••• 3.99 : Men's LeisLre Knits •••••••••••••••••••••• 2. 99 : • Men's Blue Jeans .............. : •.•••• $5-7.77 : Men's ~ers ........................... S6 : Boys' ~s ................ : •••••••••••. 3.JJ : Men's & ~·Beer Cops •...••••••...•.• 4/$1 · • : LADIES SPORTSWEAR AMO UMGBIE • : 2 pc. S.kiri 5-NimSlits .......................... SS Memo &:x*s & Pods . . . . . . . . . . . . ..... 1r.99• Memo Hol~ And Refills ........•....••••. 25" All Occasion Cads ...................... scr Cuffets ••••••••••.•.••.•••••..••..•••.• 77• Novelty St""er ..............•.....•.•••. SI Novelty Sharpener .....•....•..•......•. 77• Oil Cola Pc:ints .••••••.•••..•....•. SOO/o off CAMERAS AMD ELECTRO MIC S ! Women's Button FTont Shirts •••••••••••••••• SS : · Women's Polyester Pants •••••••••••••••••• SS ! Misses' Printed T-Shirts .•.••••••••.••.•••• : I .SO : Misses' Polyester Shorts •••••••••.•••••••• Z.SO : Honk_;. Sleeve Loce Trim Tops •••••••••••• $4-SS Olympus EC2 & 35RC CC>mefos • •...•.•. U0.$11 Kodak XLIO & Xl33 Movie Canle'a\ •... SSO.S77. • CB Reno By Midland •••..•...••..... 600/o off • : Ladies· Bross;eres ...................... , • I .SO ·: Petgrloir Set ............... · ................. 4.tt • : Assorted Lodies' Ponties •.•••••••••••••• 4/SI : Ladies' Pewtties ........................... 4t• • : DRAPERY AMD ltUGS • • • • • • • e • e e • • • Tonto Apache Dropes •••••••••••••• 5.77-4.77 Pueblo Drapes •••••••••••••••••••••••• 6. 77 Loncoster Tier Curtains •••••••••••••••••• 1.79 Assorted Photo Rugs •••••••••••••••••••• 2.77 Oneida 81/i x I I 1/z Room Size Capet •••••• 15. 77 IOUNO WICIEI BAI OF HAMPEJS ASSOITll SPICES Sm. 2.97 77c Med. 3.97 LcJ. 5.97 ' N~ wich., hornpert ..;th IW ol flll'POle ct~ Few twn.. atf, boot. -sMdy honc:JM. : HOUSIWAUS • e • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Nut Bowls •..•......•................. 1.99 CB Wost~ets ••••••..•• , .' ••••..•••. I .SO Nopkin Holders . . . • • . . . . . . • • • • • • . . . . . . I O' Conning Lids · .................... 3/$1·4/$1 GARDIH SHO, 112" x 50' Gaden Hose .................. I.SO 5/8" x 50' Gorden Hose .................. 2.99 Meln0t Spri'*'er & Bose .................. 5.77 21/2 Inch Plants •••••••...••.•..•....... 3/SI WOODGUIN 6" STORAU CHEST BOSTON FEIN $1 $299 Multi-~ staoQe bo.olH ;,, Altroctive ho<dv plonts thot woodtone color. d•ooe lonq C1otefJ fronds. Perle<t for horqnq. ... ; A l' DAILY PILOT Thurtday July 1 1977 Punch L !ti. Boyd Six-footers Hard to Find Wouldn'I be wise for a single girl to set her heart on finding a t all, blond. handsome man. Odds run 13 to one against her getting a six footer. They go three to one against her m eeting a blond. And as for handsome. don't know the odds exactly, hut they're about the same as for beautiful A study of various records shows the average cowboy 100 yc•ars ago worked the range only i.even yc·ars before settling down. And his average age, 24. Q. "How m any books had Marilyn Durham written before she wrote the bes tseller 'The Man Who Loved Cat Dancing'?" A. None. Did I mention seven out of 10 en mes in this country are committed by people under age 25? tinder early English common law, any neighbor who heard a "'human cry" was obhgc<l to investigate, and if it came from the victim of a crime. to pursue, and if possible, subdue the c riminal. Our Language m an says this legal t erm "human cry" evolved in the vernacular as "hue and cry." RATS! In the polite soc1et1es of 100 years ago. '"t rousNs" was considered a vulgar word as was "legs." And m fact. piano "hmbs" were clothed. What nonsense~ Today, between the TV ads about feminine hygiene and hemorrh- oids, you hear the game s how wits deliver the explicits of sex a nd s catalogy, the lewd winkings of 1a1lhousc lingo, the rape of simple comfort an conversation . Clearly, those Victorian l ady tongues of yesteryear were so dirty minded that they had to bend double backwards. And clearly. too, these loose· lipped TV talkers with the cravings of whip- and·spur deviates are so dirty minded that they have to bend double forwards. Whatever happened to that prince of d ecency and r eason. Hu ckl eberry Fann' Aren't there any Mark Twain mentalities left? Where's Will Rogers? Rats' Addrf'v.m,.1ttol M f\nvrt P Cl "ow t\IJO,CMtA Mfl~91til6 2700 W. Coast Hwy. Cat Rlnnidel Newport hocJI filiRM fol~ ~~ and~ k ~yea iiltli ~ 645-1924 cax:enre12 'oullr Balboa Marine Hardware ~usell I 1f nterrors s4a.2sos ·chess & Games Specl ... "' ...... ''°" Travel.Bag AIR TICKETS • TOURS • CRU\SE8 63 I• I 97 6 • • O.Mwal f pound-wise ·slammer kids and you can't ·knock It · Kid-teated ·01ldden Spred Latex Enamel gtws you a non-yellowlhg. durable enamel finish Perfect for freqll4fntly bumped Ind tctap.cl areu. Reg. 14.99 SILE PRICES GOOD THRU WED., JULY 13th finishing touches Ilka Iha pros Glidden spred Latex Gloss House & Trim Paint '" mad• tot extra eaay application. Holds up to all the seasons like the champ It Isl Reg. 14.39 green power for dlchondra your best partner the workmate Gives you an extra set of hands and then some! Strong 29" vise grips and holds materials up to 10" wide. Secures Irregular or circular shapes tor easier, safer and more accurate cutting. Model #7900 · winner returns! special spred FOi' a Uke-new hc>u .. Without mov- ing _. 1pread on a ooat Of GlidcMn Acrytlc Latex Spred Houae Paint. Go.a on euy. dries l&ll and looks gr•t IOI' a long, long time. !Ug. 12..89 7~J. shave & a haircut. a little off the sides Enjoy that professlonal looking manicured lawn. Mclane lawn ed.gef' gives you that with little ef- fort. 2 hp engine. rugged design #100..2R. Reg. 129.95 11095 cut to the quick ... with extra power Ju1t Ht thl• Mclane 7·blade. 17'" groundlkHper to the desired height and wowl Easy to control with front throw. #17-3RB7-SP. Reg. 278.95 22495 • lasting finish In flying colors Smootij a.._rn:I eaay wine thl• race ... Olldden Spr9d Satin Wall Paint goa on eaay wfltl roller or bruah and g!Yee you lo~aetlng beautiful r9$4.lltl.. Reg. 8.99 .. Blacksmith's Tune v Still Played Today By DENNlS McLELLAN Of tlv o.t1lr ,.llel SI.HI The steady clang or hammer s t r1k1ng anvtl pierces the sWlness of the sunny morning at the Sant.i Ana He1ghu horse stable. A Jet soars overhead, momentanly muffling the bell- 11 k e sound-a sound heard throughout the ages. But, as it continues to d o 1n this computertted age of space. the rhythm1c tune of the blacksmith returns, steady as ever. Up the dirt road, past the pad· dock where \horoughbreds are being put through their paces, Bob Shirley pulls another U- shaped piece of metal out of the coal-burning forge. Once again the rhythmic clang of m e tal s triking metal punctuates the morning 's activities. "Some of the old blacksmiths actually have a little lune they play on the anvil," says the tan, mustachiod Shirley, his eyes squinting into the sun. ''Some of them can really make a nice tune." THE 34·YEA R ·OLD Huntington Beach man is one of the new breed of blacksmiths performing the ancient trade out of the backs of modern, fully. equipped trucks. While horsepower has replaced horse power as the predominant means of transportation the need for horseshoers, or farriers as they also are called, continues to grow.· It i s not a dying art, emphasizes Shirley, one ohix or seve n servicing the Orange Coast. "There are more horseshoers now than there ever were," he says. "That's JUSt because the horse population is Increasing." It is estimated there are some e ight million horses in this country, with California -and more s pecifically Southern California -in the lead. Shirley, whose blue and green- s t riped polo s hirt contrasts sharply with the traditional leather chaps he wears over his jeans, ls, perhaps, typical of today's horseshoer. He works for a handful of trainers, usually shoeing five or six horses a day. IT TAKES AN hour to one and a half hours to s hoe a horse, he says, which includes trimming the hoofs, making the shoes and nailing them on. Horseshoes rarely wear out, he notes. The main reason to have a horse shod is because its hoof grow:; out, which may cause the horse to stumble. The Los Angeles-born father of two was attending Kansas State University with hopes of getting into veterinarian school when be took up the trade to make extra money. Veterinarian school fell through and Shirley. who later attended Cal Poly Pomona's horseshoeing class, decided to go at it full-time. "I just don't enjoy working indoors," he says. "I like working with horses and being outdoors, so this seemed lo be a good field." Shirley says he occasionally gets "some funny looks when people ask me what I do. You know they're thinking 'How dull.· ··Ah, it's fun. I like going to the s hows too. Seeing ode of your horses jumping a six-root fence -you feel like you're a part of it. .. WHILE SOME LEARN the business by apprenticing, many attend a school where they team , among other things, all about a ' horse from the knee down. ·•H 's pretty important to understand how the leg operates," says Shirley, adding that when working on a $40,000 thoroughbred, "you better be s ure you're doing the right thing.'' While the occupation in the past bas been dominated by men, there are some women·entering the field. Although he's never met her, Shirley says there is a woman horseshoer in Yorba Linda who calls herself Calamity J ane. "But it's a lot or hard work, .. 'he notes. "Sometimes the horse pulls on you and you have to have a little weight. If you weight 100 pounds and the horse pulls his foot, you 're going to go with it.•· Surprisingly enough, he says, it is a safe occupation. He says he has been kicked only once - ''and it was my fault. "They <horses) have it done every siJ weeks so it's not like it's something new to them. You have to respect the animal and in that sense be on guard. They are fairly predictable." Shirley, who never finds his job boring, says it is "very precise work. There is alwayi. something that's new." He attends the California Farriers Association clinics held every several months and says it's not uncommon to see more lhQn a hundred horseshoers present. "I really enJOY it ... he says. getting back to work. "You kind of feel hke you're going back'into history a bit." Heidi, his black Labrador, hops off the back of the truck where she has been sleeping. She s tretches lazily, sitting near her master. The rhythmic clang of metal against metal is heard once more. . DAILY PILOT PHOTOS By RICHARD KOEHLER BEA ANDERSON, Editor ThurSday, July 7, 1977 The process of shoeing a horse, illustrated at left and below, takes about an hour. The hoots are trimmed, the shoes sized and nailed on . B1 Experiments Yield Pick o' Crop, MERCED CAP> -Fred Anderson loves trees and things that grow. Indeed, be has spent much of hls 84 years tinkering wlth nature, evoking new "Varieties Crom the slow-working genetics that beain ln the spring. As • result, bis patented hybrldS dominate the $30 mllUon American nectarine induauy and produce fruit all over the world. He also bas developed 1•netlcally dwarfed peach treoa Next day she started practicing the craft under the direction of one of the dozen skilled men and women whose work ls vital to Anderson's .CO·acre experimental farm near here. "She catches on quickly," says Anderson. He is most pleased by the aptitude she has shown ror selecting promlsina aeedllngs and scoins. That is the very heart of plant breedlna. Called by one expert tbe "Luther Burbank of tOday," Anderson a sturdy sht feet tall, spends houra dall)' on bis orchards, puts tn a full workint day under the bluing Catuornta tun durint rush seuona, and expects to patent a halt..ctOzen treea annua1l)" durlnl the foreseeable future. Full ot projects aJtd trYlri1 to step up product~on tvel'I now, he baa eiven no thousht to retirement. Wh•n And teon made one concKlton to aae tut year and 1att drtvinf, Robin gayt cap a ob ln Colorado w beCame blt driver and ~~ U th Inga work oui w;ll, lbe be U.• Ode to Cel'r/ OQ Ida *'Mt; science or business,·• aa Burbank himself describes It. Nearly anybody with the tim~. money and basic skill can cross breed 10,000 tiny fruit trees and produce perhaps one or a ba.ndlul having promise. The art comet in plotting the proper crosses and making the proper selections. Anderson down1Hdet bis own talents. "I'm wrong as often -. l'm right,·· he says ... Th nurseryroeo are the ones •hcf really make the eelecllons. 'lbejt come around and say 'I can selJ; that one.' Even wben I tell the~ the tree'• faults, they are Utelv to warn it lr\ywa1. So l patent h and ..U them tbe riahta. They di) the 1Jraftin1 aod erowlni lhemaelves. ''Only ~ perctnt of my trees have m Bde money tor me and the. nurafrymen." Neverthele3S, ht collected a record $250,000 l royalties lasl year, coverinr:; most ot the nctt.rinc, a~ aprlcot> peach, diefT)', plum and' ~can trees on wbJch bl• PttentJ.. have not Nn out. A latte J)CJdio8: ot &be fl'OU II plowed Ntk Mt• bla qperimeal llatlOIL. I llZ DAILY Pll () T Grant · Taken A cloaed circuit telev11lon vldeotapci •plem for prenatal and ~tnat.al care hu bet'n purchased by UCJ lledlcal Center throuf&h a irant from the Oran1e County Chapter, The National Foundallon- Jhrch ot Dimes. The equipment lurnlahea important an.formation to high riak mothers and to mothers I)( newborns. It IS CIVen .an Enchah and Sparuah and is available to patients oo a contmuous basis. According to Dr. Deryck R . Kent , assistant professor, Department of Ob/Gyn, UCI. two-thirds o( the more than 3,000 babies delivered at the center each year are to teenage mothers. D.tllr Pll .. PMIO by l.9e P•yrw Surveys md1cate that many or these young women have taken unprescribed drugs durin g their ptegnancies, and many have poor nutritional habits. Dr. Deryck Kent demonstrates This TV education program will provide ad- d I ti on a I counseling ttirough presentations shown in the clinic area W:-hile p atients are ~iting to be seen by the doctor. closed circuit TV videotape for Dorothy Sutherland. Special emphasis will be given to effects of drugs, alcohol, smoking, poor nutrition and mrections in pregnancy. "A thorough und ersta nding by expectant mothers. and mothers or newborn babies, of what they can do to reduce the risk or damage at birth and to increase the health of the newborn would materially reduce the number of infants who suffer from physical or mental defects," said Dr. Kent. ( Coast Calendars Full JlEAClf·OUT: A Lire PJ anning work s hop, sponsored hy the Orang(' Coast Colil'J.:C basecl community service. Reach -Out. wtll b e conduct"d at 9 a.m. Satu- rday and Sunday, July 16 Service Vo lunteered Work Cited Nineteen individuals and three church groups have been honored by Fairview State Hospital for outstandrng volunteer service during the past year They were cited at the annual Volunteer Recogn1t1on Lunc heon in the Fairview auditorium for working With deaf-bltnd clients, those with medical handicaps and for service in the recreation area. Several individuals were honored for their work in bringing religious services to the hospital. These included Cary Cook, Bruce Lindsay and Jerome Shannon. Also honored were a group of Christian Science volunteers, Temple Sharon and Christ Lutheran Church, Costa Mesa. Recognized for their work with the deaf· blind were Lawrence Howard and Roxie Rad am; for assistance with recreation act! vities. June Thomas and Shane Ber Ii. Volunteers cited in the blind program were Linda Lundbom and Nadine Lo Verde; in the child development area, Diane De Nola and Joanne Uchytil. . George Mathews was honored for his work ·in the donations department and Lori Luck and Tami Moss for their contributions to the Work Activities Center. Renee Rigdon was lauded for he r contributions to the care of clients with special medical handicaps and Cathy Eskridge, Laurie De Fusco, Gary Shintani and Luz Marina Ortiz · received honors !or donating extra time and being extra thoughtful. Speaker was Dr. Ralph Rucker. director of the noo.natal intensive care unit at Children's Hospital of Orange County. He desc'ribed the transport service for premature babies which operates out or Children's Hospital and the UCI Medical Center. "These two units care for 600 babies per year." Dr: Rucker sa~f the 25,000 babies born in Orange County pTr year, 2000-2500 are premies. Fifty to 70 percent or these will be ill. .. The service grew from a simple transport ol infants wrapped in towels to the sophisticated equipment that is used today when "it was reaUied that transport is an Important part, ... ' Dr. Rucker said. . "" Reeptratory problems are the most frequent, he noted, since this ls the laat ayst4!m to develop in in!antl. and 17, in the faculty house on campus. Open to the public. the sessions will focus on learning more about ourselves in relation lo obtaining life goals. This will include learning to take credit and responsibility for what happens to ourselves in the future. Further information is available by calling 552-8257. SUMMER READING PROGRAM: The annual program for children. sponsored by the Newport Beach Public Library, ends Aug. 27. Any child who likes to read is welcome to sail through summer with the crew at the library's four ports (branches) to enjoy Adventures Afloat, this year's theme. OFFICERS' WIVES LEAGUE: A day at Hollywood Park is planned Friday, July 15, and the group will have a luncheon m eeting Wednesday, July 20. in Mr. Mike's restaurant, Santa Ana. COSTA MESA WOMEN: A summ e r bonus, a potluck salad a nd dessert luncheon. will take place at noon Friday, July 15, in the clubhouse. Card games will follow . W AC'S ASSOC I · ATION: Estelle Man beck Is the president of the Queen City Chapter. On her board are Ruth Shepard, Jean Earnshaw, vice presidents; Helen Murphy, treasurer, and Catherine Steffes , secretary. MESA HA R BO R CLUB: Officers Rick Bell and Sig Swanstrom of the Costa Mesa Police Department will discuss Rape Prevent~on at a 10:30 a.m. meeting Thursday, July 14, In the Costa Mesa Country Club. REUNION: Mater Dei High School's Class of '67 will have a reunion Aug. 27. Further information is available by contacting Rick Muth at 997·9465. Drugs Affect Newborn By JUDITH OLSON Of ... Oellr rl•S'--" The young woman Is a heroin addict and pregnant. She ls about to deliver her baby but she has no thouabt for any problems which may lie ahead because of her druar use. According to Dr. John Ryan, a resident in obstetrics and eynecology at UCI Medical Center, there are definite risks ror tnlants born to heroin-addicted mothers, however. He told members or the Orange County Chapter ol the March of Dimes at its 38th annual meeting that newborn Infants go through withdrawal much as addicts do. "Immediate recognition of the withdrawal symptoms ls necessary if the child is to live." The infants may s uffer from low birth weight. restlessness, vomiting, nausea and tremors and have a hlgh·pltched cry which indicates that they are in pain, Dr. Ryan added. Fifty percent of Infants surrermg from withdrawal require treatment for 10 to 20 days, be said, and 25 percent require care up to 40 days. The treatment consists of preventing deb· ydration and traditional measures of drug therapy. Dr. Ryan, who is conducting a seven-year study of 50 women In the Orange County-Whittier area. sald that one major problem facing heroin· addicted women is obtaining enough money to buy drugs. "Many resort to prostitution," he said, "since the cost is so high." List Falls Short AT WIT'S END By ERMA BOMBECK Marge poured me a cup of coffee and said, "Have you noticed how quiet it is around here?" "Yeah, where are the kids?" "This morning, I posted the Six Commandments for Summer on the refrigerator door and it's working out great." On the refrigerator was a page from a yellow lined tablet with the following declarations: 1. THOU SHALT NOT SPEAK THE FOLLOWING WORDS EVER: "There's nothing to do." 2. THOU SHALT NOT WATCH TELEVISION LONGER THAN FOUR HOURS ATONESIITING. 3. THOU SHALT NOT COVET THY NEIGHBOR'S BICYCLES, SKATEBOARDS. SWIMMING POOL OR ICE CREAM. 4. THOU SHALT NOT PLAY IN WATER IN HARD SHOES OR CHANGE CLOTHES MORE THAN FOUR TIMES A DAY. 5. THOU SHALT NOT KILL ... THY BROTIIER, TIIY SISTER, THY PLAYMATE, THY PARENTS. 6. THOU SHALT MAKE THY OWN GOOD TIMES USING IMAGINATION AND CREATIVITY. Marge's 5-year-old came Into the kitchen and said, "Mom, can you go in the er.awl space in the attic and get down the sled? I 'm using my imagination and creativity." When Marge returned, her daughter tugged at her slacks and said, "Would you mind turning on the oven and going to the store to get some chocolate chips? We are having a fair and lam keeping busy." "Mom," said another son, "a dart fell behind the bunk bed and I need lf to keep myself oc· cupled." "Mrs. Roth," said a neighbor child, "I don't want to punch in Ralph's face but he's hogging the skateboard and won't let us have a turn. Tell him to share." "Mom, would S'ou aet the ice water? It's on the top shelf of the refrigerator and I can't get it without a chalr." "Mom, could you take the knots out of my shoes so I can play in the water?" "Mom, could you call Debbie's mother and see lf I could play wltb her Frisbee?" I watched as Marare tiredly added another commandment to the list: "THOU SHALT NOT INTERRUPT MOTHER WHEN SHE IS ROCK.ING BACK AND FORTH HUMMING TO HERSELF." JONAS CARRIE is here for Foll woolgoba&ne qoop Addicts spend from $10 to $100 on their habits each day. Dr. Ryan added. . Studies also are under way on the effect of heroin on the female reproducUve cycle. Prellm· inary findings show that women on the drug are subject to toxemia, retained placenta, absence of menstrual periods and infertility. Dr. Ryan said these problems may be caused by the effect or heroin on the brain. '·But accurate data is hard to get from the subjects." he noted. "Direct observation is necessary. A heroin addict will tell.you what you want to hear. They are very manipulative." Some heroin addicts are given methadone, which Dr. Ryan said is "more physiologically addicting than heroin." Its advantage is that it makes the mother more responsible for her own body. he added. "But there is nothing else much good about it." The area of heroin addiction and poor health in infants ls a new field but Dr. Ryan said that evidence already ls ln that heroin users take poor care of themselves and are subject to emotional stresses. Their children, therefore, immediately have several strikes against them without counting the errects of heroin on their bt<lies. When bis studies, and others on the transfer o( narcotics through the placenta are complete, there will be a much better picture of how babies born to heroin tlSers can be helped. tll~ ~,411? 1-IA~()lf()S • Hair Design •Skin Care • Sculptured Nails Manicure/Pedicure • 1120 lffllM ll•d. Newport leech 171 41 642-1414 Leeos QUALICA A F~SHOE STO RES or\g. 8.99 to 11.99 or\&-12.99 to 14.99 rig. 1s.C}9 0 & '1\ore ~Save $1 extra with any two ~ r sale shoes and/ or bags. ~ •Select groups. but sizes are incomplete! Clearance Handbag Groups at same reductions lnrerm1di8fe reductions have been taken. Muter Charge • Benk.Amerlcard FASHION ISLAND, Newport Beach Anaheim Shopptno Center Costa Mesa. SOI.Ith Coast Plaza Huntington Ctr .. Hunllngron Beach Laguna Hiiis Mall Glitter Captive Ele1ant hut for wlot~r even1n1a include Jack McConnell '3 lurex c ap with black feather pompons <left), pa1sley jewel· ed cap by Kurt Jr. (center) and Frank Olive '!' gold and black brocad e c ap w1th matching !,Carr < nght> Captivatrng ca p~ were shown ln New York Thuflday.Juty 7.19n DAILY PILOT .. Women 'Growing: WASHINGTON CAP> lnternaUoaal Women·s -Or&anllera of the Y e a r n a t l o n a I nation's lint federally commission will choose apoosored conferences between 400 and 600 ad· on women say that ditionaldelecates. . attendance bas been · Congress provided $S better than expected and million to subsidize the that more than 100,000 state-by-state meetings women eventually may and bold the national Backers of the toe• conferences aiy attendance at the first '5 se11lona baa far exceeded expectaUons . They say some of the beat attended sessions have been in states witti small populatioos and hl areas without a strooa women's movement. take pa.rt. More than 82,000 .tk'i~::~~.i'.'."!:iw,~• women or varyin& ages, ethnic origins and interests at.tended 4S local conferences held earlier in the year. Another 11 sessions are ac beduled for this summer. A National Women's Conference will be held in Houston in mid· November, and the 56 state and territorial conferences are electing 1,442 delegates to the meetin_.. The Orange Co.st women named as dele1atea to represent Callfonla at tbe National Women's Collference la llou.a&oe lD November are Vivian Hall, Irvine, and PrtscWa Oalla, Laavaa Beacb. conference, -which will develop recommendations on enabling women to become full partners in U.S. society. "When you think of il in terms of a national referendum on issues facing women, it ls really impressive," said Lee Novick, coordinawr of the state meetings for the National Commission on International Women's Year. More than 1,000 women, triple the number anticipated. attended the first session, held in VermonL Save $20 to $80 on our Recollections Collection Classic turn-of-the century masterpieces designed to adapt to today's totally uninhibited environments. What better way to begin our Annual Home Sale than with outstanding savings on this marvelous collection. Each piece is crafted to make a solo eclectic statement or furnish an entire room with visual excitement. Come in and see the complete Recollections furniture collection today. $99 to $599 reg. $119 to $659 a. bar reg. $659$599 b. ~at~hing bar stools reg. $159 each $139 c. leaded hall tree reg. $389 $339 d. rocker reg. $179 $139 e. dining room table reg. $579 $499 f . dresser reg. $319$289 g. mirror reg. $139 $119 h. side chair reg. S 119 each $99 j. arm chair reg. $129 each $109 recollections furniture shop 141, 142, 143, 144. 199 -may co we deliver-free-to most areas-just ask Home ... DAILYPILOf Thur1day.July7, 1971' Happy Lifestyle Belabored AnnO ·RUFFELL'S UPHOLSTUY W.....Y•W.t ...... ltll ...... ~4. DEAR ANN I •m 11 penon o( 11mpll• l1&alt! I don't nHd much Lo m 1&kt.< roe h•PPY i\ CIAll "' a,.wr. two tood batlt'baJI lN1m11. a freeway und a tunk full of aal!I A 11unny l11&y tn early JUM A bnak run at 1unrlse A pr\ltty c1rl who smiles when 1 look ber way. A ahort story by William Faulkner None of these will PIAY the rent&<' I havt! lo work wluch I hate, but J reall~e a pen.on must be l>ract1caJ Whi.t 1 need to know lS why should I kill myself to meet :>omeont: else's der1n1t1un o r ~uccess" To me, s uct·t:~s 1s ha v Ing enough money to prepa r e t o m or ro w ·~ meal. Since I was old enough to talk I was told 1 waa brillllllll und would rn11ktt a lot of money and havo lh\' world un a 1trln1. So here I am 23, netlln1 S80 a week. but l 'm acinwoely happy ancJ don't want for a thlna. My father (who has ulcerl) 11 u hamed of me. My mother (her life Is lhe beauty salon and clotheal thinks I'm a dlaf race. I respect your o p nlon and would af pr eel ate your opinion o my hfeatyle. Am I wron&'! Are lhey right? Where do you stand? - JERRY IN YONKERS OEAll JERRY: The moat reveaJlng part or your letter can be found in fo111' words. "work - whlcb I h•te." Why does a smart guy like you hate work? Doa 't you r,aUie money 11 oaly ooe of the beaeflta of laborf II you bale yoar Job aad view It as ~metb.ta1 you mut do 10 yoa eaa eat the aest day, you are •Htl•I your tlme and rrobably rlppln1 of your employer. Thia country wasn't ballt by men wbo wanted notMng more out of We than a cu ol beer, a tank full of gas and a story by Faulkner. And It's a good tblng, beeau1e U everyone thought as you do we'd still be Uvlng In caves. There would be no progress in tbe sciences or tbe arts -or in any of the areas t.bat separate us from prlmltlve people. Al a penoa who bu worked very bard for IQH)' yean (tad I didn't need tbe money) I eaa tell yoa, my young friend, that work un be tremeacloasly rewarding ud wonderful fu. My Idea ol bell would be a life of lelsare. The bappleat people I know are the busiest. Tbe most miserable are the idJe rtcb. I'm llOf'I')' about your dad's ulcers but I'll bet your relationsblp with him bu a lot to do with why you bate work. Anything HE likes, you probably bate. Toe bad you didn't get tliat pr~em resolved earlier. Sinc:e you are only %3, It's not too late. DEAR ANN LANDERS: Recently tbe Idaho Statesm an carr ied your column about venereal disease. The quli was beneficial to a large number or readers but it ignored the gays completely. Landers the names of yo ur contacts 1bould you become Infected. Thia Isn't ftnklng. It's a publle service. How much do you know about pot, LSD, cocaine, s peed, meth, Yo ur per sonal viewpoint or the gays is well ldlown, yet we do exist and have a right to know how VD affects us. -GAY AND CLEAN uppers and .downers, DEAR G. AND c.: glue and herorn? Are a~ Since you young gays are these drugs dangerous. Get Ann Landers' new generally more active bookl t "Straight Dope s 4tJ' u a I l y t b a n e • ,, · c .. t • ......_,41.ozn • be"tt1texuala, the only on Drugs. For each addJ&iooal advice I have booklet ~rdered, send a --------------------for you la to get a dollar bill plus a long, complete ~y sl-c t.J self-addressed, envelope check-up at least once (24 cents postage) to Ann every six moot.ha _ and La!lders, P.O. Bo~ 11995, don't hesitate to reveal Ch1cago, lll. 60611. Nuptial Dates Chosen Faeta-Kelly Sharon Faela of S<tn Clemente and Michael Kelly of Founatin Valley plan lo marry Aug. 21 in Portola Valley. Miss Faeta. daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Samuel Faeta of Sunnyva le, attended De Anza College and received her BA degree and teaching cred e ntial Crom California State ;::::::=======:::::::::::::;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;::=:=;:;~University, Long Beach. Currently she teaches dance and physical education at Dana Hills High School. SU MMER CLEARANCE SALE Stcrting Friday, July 8 Srrir·q & Sumrr>er Formals Aw;rtcd Sport~weor, <iwrmwP.a & Cotton Dre;~p·, Vra lrdo Plaza 34?3 Vra Lrdo NumbPr 13 ,, ., ~fht'111Jtw· .. ~111rti1I 675-0321 Hours 10·6 Sun 11·5 Her fiance attended C alifornia State U niversity. San Jose, attended UC Irvine, and earned a BS degree in marine biol ogy at CSULB. His parents are the William Kellys of Fountain Valley. ••• Mindak-Elliott St. Boniface Church, Anaheim will be the setting for the Dec 31 marriage o f Karen Attention: Aduns.:c:o · Teenagers-Children 1~1 RllUl fl~I • .\ Nl\\ CONClrT IN "PlR!>()~AllllO Wl<ROROt!E CO-OROINl<TION" t 111 1'<)11 '"~I A'I "l't'OINl\llNT I OR 1 lU ... ~l;llA 110" IN llll 110\11 l Uf\IGNING "WAl<DROtl[ 10 rn 1111 1\11\(.1 YOU UCSIR( l l!>OIVIOIJ ~L 111 LI' IN \llOPPIN(, \lolfll OR MlllOUT YOUR Pl<RTICIPl<T ,_ (l(U•HllOAl\LANO ~-7/11 .,Ill LL ~HOW \UU ltOW TO IJP041[ YOU~ WAkl>ROO( .(?-...... ~ / WANTED! CONTEMPORARY YOUNG WOMEN FOR fRE£ HAIRCUTS-,.._,.$. ~~ ·. Dont By Fully UcenMd Professionals Attendinq Advanced Technlqw Stminan For Cuttinc) ALL WI H9UlllE IS YOUll TIME! ly Appoinhneflt Only GLEMBY INTERNATIONAL Call Mon. thnl Sat. -July I I· 16, from I 0 a.m. to 5 p.m. Mindak an d Frank Elliott. N ews of th e forthcoming event has been announced by her parents, Mr. and Mrs Joseph Mindak , Anaheim. His parents are Mr. and Mrs. Frank Elliott. Newport Beach Miss Mindak is a graduate of Mater Dei High School and Is a senior at California State University, Fullerton Her fi a n ce a l so graduated from Mater Dei and the University of Southern California and has been commissioned as a lieutenant in the Marine Corps Aquarius Michael Kelly, Sharon Fa eta Get Things Done FRIDAY, JULY 8 By SYDNEY OMARR ARIES (Mar ch 21 -April 19). Accent independ ence, or ig· inality, ne w s tarts, correct judgments, self· esteem and confidence. Lunar cycle is high and aspects are favorable. TAURUS (April 20-May 20): Get behind scenes, utilize ability to put clues together for complete story. Aura of romance is present. Member of opposite sex offers intrigue, but not security. GEMINI (May 21-June 20) : Friend could be conciliator within family c ircle. Be receptive to intelligent suggestions. Your surroundings are more important than usual. CANCER <J un e 21-July 22>: Perceive dif. Accent on finances in co nn ect i on w ith contract, partnership, mar ital status. LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22): What you've been doing will result in future contacts, bids . But now you need new approach, willingness to lie low, to gathe r material , to reinforce legal procedures. SCORPIO (Oct 23-Nov. 21): Go slow. Emphasize basic issues, work, health, getting together with those who share your purposes, goals, interests. SAGITl'ARIUS <Nov . 22-Dec. 19): Vibrant lunar aspect coincides now witb change, vigor , physical attraction, improving relationships with offspring, young persons . S urge of c reati v ity becomes evident. CAPRICORN <Dec: 22-Jan. 19): Stick to facts . You're making p r ogress , des pite comments by envious individuals, including so m e members of family. Continue to build. to construct. Get rid of foolish burden. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20 -Feb . 18): Be perceptive; give fuJI rein to intellectual curiosity. Ask questions, move around via s hort trip, get letters written -and mailed. Relative with weight problem wants to cry on your shoulder. PISCES (F e b . 19-March 20>: Money, costs, purchases, financial obligations are very much in picture. Good news, connected with val uables, is indicated. --~~.' ~ .. learn to be your own interior decorator limittd enrollment In master's home decorating course GYaUable now YOU CAN DO IT YOURSELF! Learn how to put a room tOQether like a orofessronal ... how to decorate for your family's style of living. . . how to get the most for your decorating dollar ... how to use things you already have ... how to "re-<lo" and "makEKlo" ... how to mix furniture styles .. , how to select the right colors ... how to choose fabrics you can live with . . . how to avoid making expensive decorating mistakes ... YOU'U GET rERSONAL ATT&mON Your instructor will be Master's expert ASID Decorator/Designer Nancy Cartwright. She'll help with your individual decorating problems. and she'll take you on a color closed c1rcu1t TV tour of over 400 beautiful "idea" rooms. CLASSES START JULY 18 And they'll be held right 1n our downtown store. You'll attend one 2 hour class a week for 6 weeks. The enrollment fee is S35. which includes your Decorator's Manual student workbook Use your Bank Amencard or Mastercharge CHOOSE THE CUSS THAT'S CONYEHIEHT FOR YOU Mondays at 7:00 P M Tuesdays at 10·00 A.M Wednesdays at 7:00 P M Thursdays at 10:00 A.M CALL JEANIE GEORGE TODAY TO ENROLL C714J 492-4153 coll anythM during NCJUfcr stott houn MAOTm)~ t Z4 AHflHIO Def Mer• San CletMttte Fr" ,,...,,_ c-w, Jwte 23rd !erencebetweenfantasy liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii• ~~==========================~~ a nd deception. Be willing I ...------------------------------. to anticipate, to sense, to Ask for Barbara Ieitman 759-1229 / . ~-~ '~~"' ~·~ If you bought o new air conditioner without shopping the ads In the Dally Pilot, you lost both time and money . The latest bargains on the most up-to-dote equipment to cool or heat your home ore found routinely in the Daily Pilot. The best plate to buy or sell afong the , Orange Coast, Js the DAILY PILOT be prescient, but refuse to be manipulated by selfis h, immature individual who wallows in self-pity. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22>: Be realis tic about financial, business - and emotional - ''a rrange m ents .'' Emphasi s is on publishin g. communication, long. range pliu..,. VIRGO <Aug. 23·Sept. 22): Dig deep -you s trike pay dirt if willing to put aside preconceived notions. Fine clothing for women and c.hUd1en. WE CARRY SIZES TO 10 ••• AAAA TO 8, BUT NOT ALL SIZES IN ALL STYLES ANO COLORS ••• BE EARL Yf famous brand women's shoes greatl~ reduced Reg. to 56 AMALFI 40 AMALFI 40 AMANO NOW NEWPORT BEACH 9 fMHION ~.~Y CfHlfl NOW ,. . ~ay.July7, 1971 DAILY PILOT ., Bayes' 63 Snaps British Open Record! bo1~ ol a round that included ab: blrcUM and an eaalet Tbt prevloua Open rffOrd ol M wet Mi lbwt by Henry Cotton 1n ltM and tqualed etibt Umes, tho la1t :;;Y '• Ancel Gallardo w. . lta,• .. w will be 28 ln five daya u4 com• from Edmond, Oil.la., bu won Juat over '80,000 to fer Udl )'Mr and already bas plead up a couple of tournament vlctorlea, locludlos the lmpo~ toumament pl.ayers dlvlllco tlUe. C.bl..aia Hau ol Taiwan and New Father Spanks Angels BLOOMINGTON, Minn. CAP> -Minaesota reliever Tom Johoam bad aomet.hlnc on his mind and it was more than just cetting another ouL Johnson. who burled the final 2'AI 1n.nlngs to pick up bis 10th win of the SeasQn, arrived in the third inDine ot the Twin.I• 4·3 victory over California Wednesday night alter a guellng session at a local hospital where bia wile gave birth to a daughter by Caesarian section atgametime. 'l wasn't sure what was golng to happen," said the bard- A..,,e& Slot~ . AllO..... .. ICMl"C•Hl•U tOI July 7 Olllo<nl• •I Ml,,,,.,ot• 5 · "P "'· July IOllfornl•.tlTUH S lOp "'· July •C.llloml•-' TH•I S JOp ITt, throwmg right-hander, now 10.3. "I couldn't go in with her either becauseofthesurgery." The Johnsons, who already have a three-year-old s on1 welcomes the daughter ana content~ Tom rushed off to the park where another emergency was developing. "I hadn't thought about pitching," continued Johnson. "l guess I was still in kind of a daze out there." Lyman Bostock's fifth homer of the year, a screaming line shot to lead ofr the eighth inning, gave the Twins the 4·3 advantage. "I didn't reaJly know if it was out, but I was hoping," said Bostock, who golfed a low fast ball from losing pitcher Paul Hartzell, 3-6. Johnson came in with one out in the seventh and was nicked for a run in the eighth, he surrended a walk and single and pinoh-runner Orlando Ramirez raced home on a fielder's choice that tied the scoreJ-3. The Angels threatened in the ninth on singles by rookie Thad Bosley and Don Baylor, but Larry Hisle's diving, st\oestrinc catch of a Rusty Torres Une drive ended the game with California runners stranded at first and third base. "There's more to baseball than hitting," said Hisle, who bas been mired in a batting slump the last week. "I think center field is a little easier to play too be.cause you don't have to worry about the ball slicing as much." Butch Wynegar also homered for Minnesota on a disputed caJI in the seventh while Rieb Chiles and Craig Kusick also knocked in rups. "I don't think Wynegar's home run made it over the fence," said Angels manager Norm Sherry. "What can I say? The umpiring was terrible." Sherry and Jerry R e my argued heatedly with umpire Al Clark on a disputed seventh inning call at first base when Remy was called out although Kusick appeared to have been pulled off the bag by the throw. Remy appa rently directed some ill-chosen words at Clark and was ejected. Sherry got into the act in the bo ttom of the inning when Wynegar's home run bounced back onto the playing field. The teams complete thei r two-game series tonig ht. MINNESOTA llo,tck If Ford. rl H1\lfl', t f icus10.10 Wyngar c Sm•1ey. '' Crornkl,ctn (~HtW.ptl T~rr,.fl.Jt') Cni1«.l>I\ CubaQr, lb Gnme1., ?o l b, h bt 4 I 1 I 4 I I 0 • 0 1 0 4 0 I I J I I 1 J ' 1 0 1 0 0 0 1000 1000 0 0 0 1 0000 l 0 I 0 CALIFOltNIA •Dr h DI Bt:>•l•y.cl ~ 0 I I RtMV. ?D 3 0 I 0 Guroro. 2t> I O 0 O B•vlor. 11:1 JO I o Solall a, lb 1 I 1 I A~mtfJ/,pr 0 1 O 0 Rlo«•.11 1000 Bond•.rf • 0 I 0 Alktn1. di\ 2 0 0 0 RoJ~$,., on 1 o 1 o Chalk. 31:1 J 0 I I Mlln!it~ ~' " I 7 0 Et nbrn.c 1000 Floru.l>I\ 1 O o o "Yot•I 1'I •I • "Yol•I ll 3 11 l Calllornl~ 000 001 110-3 Ml"M\OI• 100 000 lh-• OP -Cel,tornt• 1 Mlnt'les.ote 1 LOS C•hlo<nl• 10, Ml,.....Mll• J 10 -Ford, ~alln JB 5m•ll~ HR -Sol •It• 6. WVMO•• s. BoilOO s se --· R.,,, ... ,. RoJ•O""'· Clwlk s . Eltl\t !M"'..,· A~y SF -Cl\ilt• IP H • E• 88 SO IC 8rt fl 6 • 3 l I 1 t<•rlttll IL :hi 2 1 I 0 0 Rtdfern ~ ' 7 1 l t 8ur9f"f"le1eir-1 , 2 1 o ToJnn~ 1W.1(1.)J 1 ' 3 I I P 8 -~r T -1·15.A-106'0. Howard Clark of Enaland were second with even-par 140s. nrt.nc an ernllc round that Jncluded alx bJrdJea and six boaeys, Cbi-san carded a pair of 3$s for a second-round total of 70, malcblna bl.a openlni-day carc1. Clark shot 68, two under par, in the aecond round over the 6,875- yard, par-70 AUaa courae in balmy, unusually warm Scotti.sh weather with temperaturea that reached lnto the upper 70s. G aJ;lord Burrows. an Engll~man playing out of the United Stat.es but not yet a U.S. citizeo, opened with a two-under 33 in the aecond round. U.e faltered comln& bome, however, sbootine a 39 that tnduded four bogeys, including a string or three in a row from No. 14, and ·finished at 72-141, one over par for the tournament. Gallardo recovered from an open.inc-round 78, eight over par. with a second·r.ound, five- under-par 65 over this 1orse shrouded layout that overlooks the Irish Sea. "I just tbrew the tournament away," a disgusted Johnny Miller said today~ sboothli a four-over-par 74 in tbe aecood round of the Brit.lab Open 1olf cbamptonsbl.P. Mlller, the defendlnf champion. bad a 31-bole t4tal of 1'3, three over par. Extra Innings Giving LA Fits LOS ANGELES CAP> -Los Ancel es baa reached the mid way point in the im season with a 54-27 record, the best in baseball. While it was. satisfying to Tom Lasorda, the ~gers manager was wr.apped up in a 2·1 Joe& to the Houston Ast:ros. "Those are games we have to win," said Lasorda of Wednes· day night's 14-inning defeat. "We've got to win extra-innlng games at home.•• The loss, which ended the Dodgers' four-game winning ,.,._. atrealr, ~as the sixth in nine extra-inning games this season for Loe Angeles. It was alao the fourth defeat In seven meetlnp with Houston, a club that ia 17Y.a games behind the Dodeers In the N atlonal Leaeue W eJSt. "I have no idea why we play the A1tros so tough," said Lasorda, alluding to 10 one-rull decisions between the two clubs1 the past two seasons. Jose Cruz flnally ended the Do.dgera' longest 1ame this DetlflenSlate All~ .. u•ecne1 i Jul" 7~''°".iLos~I•• 7·np,.,. Jul" IS..~•ll.os A"9flH 7"151),n\. July •S.n O..VO•I l.osAnotllt5 7:2Sp.m. season with a 14th-inning home run, bis seventh of the season. The Dodgen' Rick Rhoden and Houston's James Rodney Richard battled through 10 innings Wednesday night, both leaving with the score tied 1·1. Rhoden, who took a 7-1 Dodaers Stadium record into the, game, provided Los An1ete.s witll its only run in the third inninl when he hit his first home nm C1f the season and only the second or his career. HOUSTON'S ROGER METZGER COMPLETES A DOUBLE PLAY AGAINST SLIDING RON CEY. .. I bad just one good swine against Richard," said Rhoden. ·'To bit a home run off him you· have to be lucky, and that's what I was." Yoo Roll 7s Today Wimbledon Champ Displays Humor BEVERLY HlLLS-Virginia Wade showed her tennis prowess last week by capturing the women's s ingles c rown at Wimble.don. And Wednesday she showed a s ense of humor, voiced det- ermination and proved quite articulate as she met with the Southland drum and bugle corps-or, if you will, the press and TV reporters. Wearing a t ·shirt wh'.ich advertised the World Team Tennis all-star matctt, in San Diego Saturday night, Wade said. ··my shoulders seem a bit too big ror the t.shlrt." Then looking at the resl of her upper WHITE WASH GLlltN WHITE anatomy, she added, "but I don't think anything else is." Does winning at Wimbledon make it difficult for her to keep driving forsuccess 7 "Not at all." she says. "I am looking forward to 1978 already. I'd like to make it two Wimble.don wins. "I believe that I am as good as anyone in t.he world. Believing you're No. l Is a big part of success. But you have to !\ave the guta and toughness to work for it. l had the guts to try and improve my same prior to Wimbledon. Fol" six m.on&hs I worked on the fine pOtnts ot my service and I belle.ve my service was better tbanltwuayearago." Many t.hlnis went into her llnU· 1ual drive to bag a Wimbledon crown after 15 years of di1appolntment in that tournament. Win, It was the centenary year of the tourney . It is Queen Elizabeth's silver jubilee year and Wade is a Briton. And, Wade adds, "those who had given up on me made me want to do it." She said she didn't feel she played above her ability in the tourney, although she does admit she played the best tennis of her career. "I was so eager to do it...but winning Wimbledon didn't surprise me that much.," she says. "I know that alter I beat Chris Evert in the semifinals, I thought to myself, I played really well. "I had beaten Chris Evert on center court at Wimbledon and l was in the finals. That was t.he only night I couldn 'l get to sleep." But as she knows, moments of glory are just t hat : moments. "Those things come and go," she :says. "Now I'm looking forward to more tenrus." PS-Wade and Billie Jean Kine will be at Anaheim ConvenUon Center Sunday night at 7:30 ln a World Team Tennis match between New York and San Diego. OF HONORS-Ed Newland, UC lrviae water polo coacb, will boss the U.S. polo squad that competes In the World Vnlvemty Games neirt moa&b. Compe<lon takes place In the Bwgarian capital of Sofia. THE LUCKIEST DAY DEPT.-That would be today, ot course. You probably have to be numbere·oriented to come up with it, b~t today should be considered the luckiest In a cenlqry. That's because today is July 7th-or, using the code of day, month and year, you roll aevens; 7-7-77. Cunningham To Be Hired WASIDNGTON CAP) - Gary CUnningbatn, president or the UCLA alumni association, will get the job as head coach of the Bruins basketba11 team. replacing Ge ne Bartow, Washington radio station WTOP said today. The announcement is to be made next week, the station said, citing a source close to the UCLA situation. Cunningham was the pick or John Wooden to succeed him when he retired, the station said, but declined the offer then because of personal reasons and because he was just starting his job with the alumni association. Cunningham served as an assistant under Wooden and Bartow, who resigned recently after two seasons at UCLA to join the University of Alabama at Birmingham. Houston got even one fnnint later when former Dodger Joe Ferguson hit his 12th home nm ol the year. The clubs then batUed nine • scoreless innings before Cnu hJt. • his homer, prompting Lasorda to ask, "where waa that lively ball' tonight?" · The Dodgers were coming orr a · four-game sweep in San Francisco in which they scored 34 runs on 60 hits. HOUSTON .. , .... J Gonr.1•211 4 0 1 0 CO ellJb 4 0 I 0 J .Crurrl 6 1 2 1 W•llOft lb 4 o o O F•'OUIOnC 6 I 2 I G•rclntrcf s 0 O O FuHtr If 4 0 2 0 H-trdlf o o 0 O A.Meltrn SOIO RlclwlrOp 3 0 I 0 • .,,....llpft 1000 S.mbltop o o o o Ctdenopn I 0 0 O McLollnp o o o o LOS ANOlllfS Mef1h•r21» •usMllK Smll.hrf CeyJO G•rw.,11> Mond4iyd 8tk~lf HOU9llp M ot• Oft Gum.,.p Pow•llPll Loc>el Pf" 'V'H~C Allod!'flp Htltll Burke If ••rllW 6 0 20 6 0 20 S 0 I 0 4000 4 000 sooo 4 0 1 0 0 00 0 I 0 1 0 0 000 0000 0 000 , 6 0 I 0 3 I 1 I 00 00 2 000 Tot•ls 4' 110 2 Totals ... 1 9 t Mou11on 000 100 000 000 01-2 LM An~I., 001 000 000 000 00-1 OP-+4outlon 2. Los AllQlltt 2. l08-ffput10n ... LM A,.iK 10, 28-AUIHfl. HR-llodtft (I) Ft'lJUIOfl 1111,J.Crur 17). • Rlcft.,d S.mbllo M<LQlllln IW)·JI '"'""' ... HO<f91\ c. ........ n.,..11 T-J: 21. A~7S7. I~ H It Ill aa so 10 6 f l 212 l 1 00 10 l 1001 1 10 71 114 2 O OOOJ 2 :I 1 I 0 I Grid Star Dorsett Faces Assault Rap Dorsett. "I know UU.: it I hadn't · been Tony Dorsett, nothin1 1 would have been made of it. I ' ·don't know ii Uie ba.JUnder knew • at the time when he started it who I was, but he found out later." "Dorsett jU1t reached aCl"Q8S the bar and punched me," said the bartender, Sammie Emerl~kt I 26. ''The police were consul tea but he didn't 10 to JaU. I just de-} cided it was best not to put him In ' jail. I had to eet !our stitches : under my eye, however:• • Donett ls due to report Friday to Thousand Oaks where the ' Cowboys open train1ng for tho 1977 , National Football Leque season. I l J • • l .,..., NII ....... REBELS STEVE RAKHSHANI, CENTER MARC JOHANNES. .. . l.iegion of Backers Sticks With Seaver CINCINNATI CAP> - Superstar pitcher Tom Seaver has received a mountain o{ mail ~ioce changing uniforms two weeks ago. Seaver said the flood or fan ~ail "compares to 1969 after we he Mets) won the World Series, t the tone is totally different.•' · A samplinJl: -··Thank you for being Tom Seaver. And for JO years or good ~mes.•• · -"DearTomandNancy:lam 1Javing a hard time accepting what happene.d ••• Nothing Ulyone has said will kill the deep (eelings or affection, devotion and admiration we have for Tom Seaver." -''How could a game like 1aaseball make a single girl weep? -"We hope you will throw a no-hitter in Grant's Tomb (Shea Stadium)," wrote a New York Mets fan from Queens. The trade that put the five-time 20-game winner in a Cincinnati Reds uniform has produced one Of the biggest fan reactions in de· Cildes. "I haven't seen anything like it since Johnny Bench had the tancer scare," said Bernie ~we, equipment manager or the world champions.• 'Even now Ire's still gelling 30·40 letters a day." About 98 per cent of the mail is favorable, according to Seaver. 1 Some are emotional, many from the East Coast express appreciation for a decade of thrills, and a majority contain sports columns and editorials backing Seaver against Meta boss M. Donald Grant and sports writer Dick Young in the disputes that led to his departure. "Some people have sent me Young columns and say he's right." said Seaver, who spends an hour a day quietly reading the growing mound of mail. He has sent 'thank YoU' notes to many. •'At first it bothered me to read them." said the three-time Cy Young Awanl winner who wept when he made his last visit to the Mets clubbouae. ·"The pain has subsided, but the relief is still there from leaving a very unhappy situation, 0 he.said. "Here's one." smiled Seaver. "It just says: ·~ get 'em'.'' Graharkewitz Hired < LOS ANGELES -Bill Grabarkewitz, former Los Angeles Dodgers infielder, was selected a coach Friday for the National League club's San Antonio, Tex., farm team. A seven-year veteran of major league baseball, Grabarkewitz played his first four big league seasons, 1969·72, with Los Angeles having come up through the Dodgers• miaor league system.. His .best season was in 1970 when be batted .289 and bit 17 homenmsin156gamesforthe Dodgers. ,.. ., ___ ...... ---·--· G~d Stars CO.Bide; ~outh Tabhed ~y 2 Orange County's annual showcase of prep football talent la on display tonight at Anaheim's La Palma Park where tbe 18th North-South All-atar game unfolds. fense and possess lethal p~;.w.bel'e W~tmioster fallbaelt games. · T ~ane Gerardi (230) has moved IC there is an edee on an to that area to help open eome individual basis-perbapa thtS holes. . . · · ::..· North has the advantace wttti The pasdlnf game matches KJckoff la at 8 and the ~bels or South coach Bill Workman or Ed1aoa (Huntinaton Beach} High are two-point favorites. The South trails in the series with 13 •Josaes as opposed ·to four Robbie Martin of Villa Parle Bl-11 Rak bab ainl · and lrl argerum in the backfield. (bound for Stanford) acainat The versatile Martin ts de. Katella (Anabetm) Wah•s Dave ceptive for hl5 size (S-10, 175>. Wllloa. victories. Three ot the Jlebe:Js• big guns tonieht include All·CIF 4-A quarterback Steve Rakhahani or Ed.lsoo, All-cIF '·A receiver Ken Margerum of Fountain Valley and St.eve Steinke. another All-havine rushed for over 1.000 CIF •-A ace from Fountain yards, caught over 40 passes for Valley. who, among other field 700 yards. returned 29 pllDts for ma.ls, k!cked a pair of 52-yarders 430 yards and completed five oC uaseruor. .10 passes All·CIF selections ~re .--He'll ~used at flanker and his abundant.. .however. on both sides counterpart from the South is and the winner figures to be"the c L · 1 i'" side which can operate~ thE! entury e.ague r1va JI ae /•west iiil!takes anertwoweeks M~rk, a ~hppery 17S·pouqd "t . tailback Wltb excellent moves. o practice. · He prepped at Oranee'a ltl Proceeds from the game go to Modena High • Children's J:lospital o~ <?_range Merk has additional auets County. going for him with the blocking of Both teams rely on an J. Westmlnster High fullbaek Doug oriented offense, use a 5-2 de-Boswellandachangeatti&htend WhUe Rakhshanl (ticketed for San Jose State) bas Marierum to throw a~ Wilson ba1 four lethal targets and each figures to give the Soatb secondary problems. They are Martin. tight end Hoby Brenner of Fullerton High. Bruce Heiser of Los Alamitos Hieb and Jlm Teaban of Anaheim's Esperanza. who toiled under North coach Pete Yoder du.rinithe regular season. Yoder says the Soutb's aerial game ts his team•s bigaeat problem, but Margerum and Rick Ward of Santa Ana Valley appear to be Rakbshani's only targets with much of the emphasis revolving around the running exploits of Merk bebiDd Boswell and Gerardi. . The North, meanwhile, bas solid rlmners In Steve Fo_sel of Los Alamitos and Don StoclOla of Esperanza. But it's the passing of Wilson to multl-targets that may prove the undoing ot the _ Rebels. SNtlt~ 171 M¥0-na't\ WR ,7:10 C"8rry T lU Fr061 G 710 J,,_s c 1Jll C.lwrt G •710 ./41,_ T :ns Geranli TE 190 RallNhani 08 t•S M«1C TB llS ~I FB 11S Rlcll Werd f'I.. NertllOffe- 17$ M•rtln WA 10 P.Wllseft T n s Cart..,. G 220 M.,...s C ?IS lyM.ky G 166 Van Divltf' T 218 Br-TE 195 Wiiton OB 11S Slodola TB •8S F119t'I FB 180 Tr.t""' FL s..ai~ DE~ 20S 0 T Mcc.tllll 200 NG Grill 200 OT~ 20S OE Fitll'-tfl lB Ser-rt% its lB U~ 220 CB Cr-110 CB CNce Its SS Mollice HS FS 0..Wenl 1IS M«tll DlfeftM OE ~ 210 DT ~ 225 NG Br.,._ 200 DT Kalli 111 OE Hardc:Mtle 215 LB KenlOOI 211 LB L-.gh 20S ca Rt'Y-...et 115 C 8 Aguay0 11S SS Smllh 180 F S JKOllS 19S McEnroe i Gets Cone ·f MterLosing COSTA MESA AMC & JEEP sOUTH STANDOUT RECEIVER KEN MAR,ERUM. ·Major League Stnndings· Classy Marks 1977 MATADOR WAGON v ......... .... ,_.....,...... . ...,.. A7A887H1~~78 $ AllEJUCANLEAGUE NewYorlc Baltimore Boston Cleveland Milwaukee Detroit . Toronto East W L Pct. 46 35 .568 46 36 .561 43 34 .558 37 39 .487 38 42 .475 36 <t4 .450 30 49 .380 West GB !'4ATIONAL LEAGUE Eut DITilloll W ?.. Pd. GB Chicago 49 29 .628 Pliiladelpbla 46 32 .590 3 St. Lou1a 44 ~ .5'3 61h Pittsburgh 42 38 .525 8 Montnal :n 43 .463 13 New York 31 49 .388 19 West Division Dodlall S4 2T .667 - CinclMW.i 44 35 .551 9 In Spikefest KOBLENZ, West Germany (AP) -lloustoD McTear of the United States WOD t.be J.00.met.er dash in 10.29 on a eonvational cinder tract Wednesday night. Re was hind by Oilers owner A. Ray Smith and ls OD tfle jol> regular.ly when the Oilers atbome. · Legend Bays he will be years old tbls month. but that .isn •t easy to prove-or disprove. if anyonewantstO. Paige•s famed career dates back to 1926 when bis pitching WU llmlted to th8°"old Ne League and the barnstormf:ag teams of that period. · He didn't get to enter the major leagues until 1948 when BUI Veeck broqgbt him to Cleveland. Despite bis age at that time. bis arm waa IW1 terrific. .. Let 'em argue, .. the late ( Rall of ~ame l jtlciber. Dizzy Dean, ooce said: ~e belt pitcher I ever seen is 01• Satchel Paige. My fllltball looks like a change of pace alongside that li 'l pistol·\\allet Saleh shoots up to the plate." Bob Feller. another.Hall of i Fame pitcher, agreed. "'The· pre.war Paige was the best pitcberleveraaw,"hesalcl. Paige. who lived In Kamas City for_.., years. now lives In a Tulsa motel. "I em betp ptayerw morefn tbe mtnor l~es th eau ln the lbajors, • be said. other old players a be belpingtheseyoungplay • "What we need to do: · raise some more players, we candoitiftheold base players will go to the am t.o w n's and s bow the youngsters how to play ... A whole team of little leaguers marched up to his desk earlier this aeuon. He signed and gave each one the little white bu1ines1 card. then added, "look on the back. That's where my secret ts ••• . Each boy turned the card over and read Satchel's alx rules for a happy life: 1. Avoid fried meats whlela angry up the blood. 2. U your stomach clisput8I you. lie down 8Jld pad.f7 Ii with cool thoughts. 3. ~ the Juices flowtQt by J•n&lme around 1ent1y a you move. 4. Go 'lflY u,bt cin .tees· • lacbas~onln~ ty. The IQCid" ramble al:D't restfUL · • 5. Avoid rmm.ial at all tlmee. Chicago Minnesota Kansas City Angels Texas Oakland Seattle 47 32 45 36 43 36 39 38 38 .Cl 34 45 35 50 .S95 -.556 3 .S« 4 .506 7 . .481 9 .430 13 Al2 lS Houstm 37 45 ,451 171h San Diego 35 49 .41'1 20~ San Francisco 34 '8 .415 201h Atlanta 30 $1 '.370 24 Teammate Johmty Jooes was ~ clocted mthe aametlme at an bdenlatlonal tract and field meet in Koblena'• Oberwertb S&adlam. Olympic champion Don Quarrie ot Jam~a won·tbe 300 metenln3>.85~odl. alaelldof Jones• 21 seconds flat and the 21.aa by teammate Mlllard • Quarry Begins Boxing Return L Hampton. · Mike Bolf of Kenya won the 800·metera In l!.U.U.. Second was American Hark En1eart in 1:'8.10 and third wa Samuel 1'.iffUl'llltof Keaya In t:aa». Jlolt BeUacbmJdt. 31. iMmth at tlM lfantreA1 OlfmPiel. hilh uaped 7 fee\. •~ llicbes to ~ aa Eat German recllri:L BeaVhelcht 3tJrrl . • : SKOREK FACES STARS TONIGHT AT ANAHEIM CONVENTION CENTER. f i Deep Sea Pro Volley ball Fishing Chamberlain NEWPORT fjl,fl'l unOfhlll -I• •"'111!rS' I twrr.>cuda, I bonito. 60 ~;:lr~ ..::~:r•l.n~ ~~~~~r~od6 • b.lrr•ct.HS.a.' bot1tto. tlS ba1.s. l& rocll <Od I hdilibUt. 171 m~(lil,rtl, 1 wJ•ut• \ •• ' .,.. b.t\\ SAii PlOllO IP9rll o• C•ltl -SI • •no•ers. IS be>ftttO 114 <•h<O be\,, AIJ roe It <Od, l h•nbt.lt. 310 m~ckerrt 111114 SL und11,.1 tU '"''lie•• I vtt101111(;1•1•. / ht'Hbuf eie.s c•••CO ba,., 1/i t111tktri I, lO Ill"" °"'~ 16 roe• COd UN Oll!GO tM .... clNI PIHi -329 an11••~. 6 vtl1owta11. •1'dlO<Koro "l lM\\• 148 bilrrilcud.a, 88 b.lrracucta, ' whHt SH bft,S, 1 rock coo. I dolpltln t bd~:~A :.~:c':!:~ 1~~1~:.1.·;· r:1~ °""· •• mec•tr.t, 1 ot&<k sea Dass, 1 Wf'HteY•~' LQilO 8£Aa4 tS.tmellt PIHi ·• 37 ano~rs I Slnd b.tU, J UllCO llot5S. S8 m•c•eret, ~10 rock eoo touun·s Wharll -'1 .,,QI•"· SOl c1llco Dass. , tl1 bonito, 1 yell-tall, 3 send ball, 1 "'ltDUI. 11 rotl< Cod. ll• DI ... beU ""ISSIOH ••v -1S1 a(t91t"5' JO lll~rore, I wNI• SH tlllss, 6S bonito. H b•rr,.cuda. tll <.tll<o t>•u. 60S m1cktrtl.8'1 roc~ cod se11L llEACM ,,. •ncil•rs t.151 rot' (00, I~ """'""'''· 1 "•llbut. I ~ calico °"" e .. ,. 116 .. nolers 12 f°'oruto ~ \~nd bl'"· l hahbut 1S '""''tr.tore• ·. Cale ndar h Tl>w•CllY Ulllf 11 ~ Feotl>-llll lllh Or.•noe Coun1y I All ''"' Nori" Soul" 11ame al • An,..,,.1,,.·.i.• Pai,... P"'" tao m.l Co"" IN•• Oprn 8asl<eltl.l11 al f'Sfdl"l(t' ... ,on '~SCSl(ll? 8-arr>ef \t\ ' M•''" C4'll•nder' et 7~ FCA vs I Vanouarlh•ll.lOI. • Hlrl>or JC 8.uk •lball l •aQUP IOr,..,a~ Co.>~ Coll-_. El Camino I C.olle<H' •111 k Hunt1n91on Beacn Summtr 8n,••tbdll Leaqu~ .tt Muntin9ton ~ 8•,ICh Hlon IHunllnglOll Beach VS LOi " ~rnlaos at 6 30. Merina vs Fountain r "•lltv el I 0 1 Hunnnoton B~Acn Summer Be~MJb.111 ltaQlie 11 EOl•on H<Qh f E d l\On ,,. WHlml1>,ltr a 1 6 30. E•l•nCl&v• V<llA PM• •17 •SI. Corol\<I otl M., Summer 8.sllttWll ~ lt'"9W II COM l'lob IV&l..ncla v• ., ~•clflC• ft 1. ,.._,, Harbor vs · W•r..-n a16 11 CO\lf ~ .. al Foolh•ll I ., I JO. (OfONI cltl M•• ., El Toro al I <SI I ..Uf<o Lt•ll.,. B•••b .. 11 1san1a :(s!~t~F::•;s~;~:,:~; ~:~;'."~ :,, om I • Thorov9n1>rocl Bes•Da11 •Oco n ', r View al l.t Mlrlld#, I p.m ; Cosl.o ,,,.~_. CaP1elr11 vs or,,.,.,el Modena •t VIOt Park Hlvn IS )Qp.m.l. Tr.Cll Atl-<om.fl mffl at Cosla ~ Meu HIQh •Sp m.l Prkley tJi;ly II I C.errlfos Cati~._...,., Niketball !Golden Wot C.611-"'LA Hartior, •Op m l S,M• """ Hlon o.n••111e11 1c1n.,.,., vs v•...-siry II,, -port HMl>or vs Senlf_._ ... Gllh -SOll!lelt An-Im at !..ld· ~ Ol•bacll ..,. s.oalet>t<• Stirs •I A•.rY t Ptrk •cio..1>1--r111·JOp.m I. M"r<» ··-" -GolO•n WHI lt~tler\..,. Vt:: lrvtne Alhl&Uu. I Pm ""''rican Le11lon B••&ball •N•-••t Stanlon11·0 1. Herl>o• A,,. BaUD•ll ,S.AI - Ec1 .. 011 vs FCKinleln Vallt'r at FV Rec (tr. S: JO; Botw Gfenclt vs Estancia at rew111111e Ptr• • .s:•; w"1"'1"'t.,. vs !l Nl'WIMlrt Harbor ltTtW1"'11• l>erti, 8: J to&MI Mell "'' Hunlll\Qton leecll at llon5 Perk, J· JO; U1 Oulnla vs Corona , c»I "°¥ 9l Lions fllflt, •· Duels Skorek Two or the most important forces in pro volleyball meet head-on tonight al Anaheim Convention Center ~7-2 Wilt Chamberlain of the Orange County Stars and two-time Olympic gold medalist Ed Skorck of the El Paso/Juarez Sol. 'Tm aware of how awesome a hitter Skorek is," Chamberlain says. "But l like a good challengj! I'm looking forward to facing him." Some volleyball observers have gone so far as to proclaim Skorek the greatest hitter in the world, and it might be an accqrat.e description The 6-5 veteran played for his Dative Polish team in four Olympiads and captained the 1976 squad which defeated the Soviet Union and won the gold medal For the past two)'ears Skorek has been coaching and playing in Italy. and in May he was persuaded to play pro volleyball for the El Paso/Juarez club which had some definite weaknesses up front El Paso/Juarez coach Tom Read calls Skorek tb.e best hitter-blocker in the world "I played against him at least a dozen times all over the world," Read says "When we go into an arena with him on our team, we'n go in with confidence " Confidence or no confidence. Skorek basn't been able to singlehandedly turn around tbe Sol's fortunes yet. El Paso/Juarez Is still in last place of the International Volleyball Association's Eastern Division with a 3.5 record Because of that, Orange Cou nty coach Dodge Parker feels safe in predicting that his Stars will notch their second straight win tonight "I'm not worried about the outcome of the . match." Parker says, "but it should be some great volleyball for the spectators It's exciting to see a playerofSkorek's caliber" Skorek may be the most skilled hitter-blocker m the world, but Chamberlain is the tallest. Despite Skorek's 6·5 height, he gives away nine inches to the former National Basketball Association star Though only in his second season of pro volleyball, Chamberlain is fast becoming one of the league's most effective front-line men. "His blocking ha~ improved at an.. incredible rate.'' Parker says. ''And he can go higfl enough lo hit over anyone's blocks." Tars Play in Miami A doun Newport Harbor HJgh water polo standout~ and their coach, Bill Barnett. are among the favorites to compete Aug. 1-5 al North Miamj Beach in the 1977 National Junior Olympics water polo tournament for 15-and· under. Winner• of the Southern Callfornia Reatooals. Barnett's crew leaves J uly 31 under their own funding. Among Jhrnett'a winning dozen are James Bergeson, Jeff Fults, Mike Grier, Keith Kenworthy, Peter Gorman and Greg Stevens. Also goalies Ken South and Drew Cree, Casey Stromcren, Giles and Jim Alllson and Graham De Vries. • :.• ThursdlY· July 1. 1 m DAILY PILOT Alamitos Los Alamitos Racing Entries Race Results llllrT.._ "'"'"'"': 7:0 Pl•ST ltACI "° yerdl .id Cl<timlnt1-!'« ,,,.ldtn1 $1100 Cl.,,,,1"911'1ceWJOO C,....oue County tC.111 &old Rec>IY IT,...WNI TlllrO H-18rOOl151 1..klutd Amber 10.lombe) Jelt Con.,•land IM'rle'1 0.1Qlesterear1M11c ... 111 AllO<le &ae>r IClerbM) w., Fancy t Aoutfll ColOr Me Clil• !Hetti ~r. r .. o...n1Mv1•11 .. w.. .... ., C-,TreclltJatt "111ST ltAC• -S.!O yar~ > fHr o1 ... Cll!ml"9 ~ uooo. Peu•inGHr lllleullll ..... •20 OH·Al-llOl 8oo ICMdoUll IO J 10 OH·C-tmeln tlollylffl s . .io 7 00 Tl--tt,. Also llan -Of' K-r. CIWrlle 121 RICll, AncnlDr, ~ llevts. Gren 1n SOii, SUrt1n~al, nt.WllM4tof 10 1n S<relehed -1..11190 lot.Ive, """ 1ie Klg~·~=~':'.!"::C;:0un11 :~ U IE-.c\I lt-IJ .. a'ltt ~ & OH+ t 1, Alamlta IN. ,_14 m.• 122 u EUda ,.. .... , ... our & ON·1· t 19 C-lmelll, 11t10at.40 m HCONDllACl -J$0yaro~ 2fHr old maldena. Clelml119. P\lrst JJroo. Clalmlnvlltl<• S4SOO SIECOND llACI ->SO yarch. h•tr old5. Ct.imlng. F« "'-ldfM. Pu,... SlOOO. AllolaWddlfl ICrM98rl Ml. s.,..,. Rnoe<I ILIP ... m> MrTCl !Dll~I Tlmo-110. It IO UO HO J10 IJ .. Also ".,, -Tv•clo Co, °" My Ci;tre, E•M Ott, 8unnf llunny llunny, Jet a 8reeie, C,..I_ H1t1 Ch•rm, C"8rver VIiie Scra1</>ed Mtd•ll•I Hortn COUftl f . Credit Cllerot U l(QCU l·WlntM W11 .... & .... ,. S.reull"-"\.NleJleUt A ttendenco •· 70t Marilyn Doty, 2•, a the superintendent of the Burtonwood golf course near Vancouver, Wash. She started there as a waitress. SAVE ON GUNS & AMMO EXPERT GUN REPAIR '30.00 OFF COl.U&IY .O&llfOL 1JJ6- ,... ..... S4.25 _ .... __ '45.00 OFF WA.L-,../1 .,....no .. GOLDEN WEST ARMS 17101 I U CH llVD. SU11116-A l ... w_ w--' 51.tw -"""l:l:::Y HUMTIHGTOM HACH 148-3311 M IH Tippy Tammy tCr•verl At•m ltOJ Stnno tClerllMI 111e Go Jet t Mltcheill •«> HO HO 11' Mluk•tJeMoore lllOUQlll •to •.IO ----------------------------------------ltt Emntft/tMrll IC.lerlsw l • 10 e.t Y~rWallet I Hartl 81ueWlllte 1Aclalrl in Tlrne -tt.• :~ Al$0 11., -"•>I Jetaway, 8enk on lmlCloC OeUler IPIHtllnel Tine Juanln t llr-al V8"clf Ecl\olMYlfll ttle Me.,,,,.. OI~ Aptll Foot • 11' Joke, L~ Oec:k, Here Tl1, Wltll a 11' Polley tn SCratCNd -Clwrollff Counly, War llldl no Hl1j1H lltOOllfleldl Clllt10...lllOli\lfll ::: Calll, lmdle Oeuler. ltlcllnv HIOll. THlltO IUCIE -400 verds. 3 vear old•, Cl•l"'lf19. Pllrw uooo. c1e1m1nv Pf'IC•PJCIO 'tlot Lips Houll....., teroot111 t 11 llmfts~IOelOmbtl m NoctumelMOonlMylell 111 LH M1ri.1w..01 111 Proper'°""' 'C!HltMI 1n VelvetSledQtt~I 111 Act t IHartJ Ill Oelle-IKnltflCI 117 Gf'..,.., De IAdelrl rn s1 .. py Sl>ifte • Oomlnoueu 111 f'OUllTH ttACIE -350 Hrds. hear .id.s. cr.trntno. Purw UlOO. c.1.irninv prlc.SI0,000 Mr.AlamllOt~IDelombel tit IE IPlendldo 11rto 1 cam 1" Some kinda Hol"M t 8rOOlltl It? Htr Bo I Hartl 119 NofthColiotry IMVlell 119 81rda Limit ITrMsurel 11t l'I "" ltACIE -aoo v•r<H. 3 vter olds & uP. Clelmlnv. PwH ·'3.!0ll. Clllml1111prkes.!OO THlltl) ltACI -"°yard• 3 ., • ., Olds a uP. CIMrn1n9 PUrM S1JOO. TheOlllerOnt IAdalrl 1UO S.<IO 360 Step1t>C1eon. ITreasurel • 60 300 TooTonto&eo (8roo"I 3.<IO Tlmt -11.26 Al$0 !tan -Geor9v .i.1, Rosr Jov. Alaque, Flyl"9 O.•ld SCrttctood -Tull Ro U I->-TM otllff OM & 7-Stea .,..o-... lfsu1.• f'OUltTI4 ltACI! -4-tOy.,O\ 3 ve•r olds. Allowance. Purw UIOO Moor• TroUbln I Lipham I JUO I 60 S 60 Hustlint-tAdalrl • 00 310 Rocllelle Tiny tWarcl I J oo Tlrne-n .n Al•o lt.,,_.,...,,.,,..oor•, Tim~ 10 Bt- Bolcl, First Vlk, M•<> B•C"· Tlt•l's LaclvC...,mo Noser ale,,,., "I f'TH llACIE 810 yard• 3 ve•r olOs & UP Cl••mlng PurM 11$00. John•s Rocket tHertl Copy lltlgN ICttrf-1 flew World t~l JU11111<e Pe I Hirt) Confeo.t•Jet IMyleS) w1,,qn I.Mt& 1 Adalrl GoJet1c,......, MkfnlteSC-lal l.,_.l 121 uo J:IO 140 119 MllStr•tSlmlTr ... utel JOO 160 tn IE"91• i..nctlng 1c..111 J 60 119 Tlme-47.00 , " Also Ran -~l<llllQ Se•. JIHlv • 122 MM>, z1p·n Go, Eevie Dancer, e111 "' SN1 SIX1H ltt.ea ->JO .,.,.els. 3 yMr old n111n. Cl1llnlnt. Pur .. sno. ClalmlnvP<1UIJOOI Bu•leGh11...-.rl ttt AunKlllrtklrtl tie Rebetu,.. 1c,.aoer1 "' GYPlf'sMoon •W•rOI 119 Cr<'m1Gll1 IOelornbe) 171 OroPrl$1Mylul 111 Ticly'SClllrger •TrNsurel 11' MlnL-EouslC!erl-1 ttt To Fly 1 Brool<SI 119 For A F-eux More IBrOOlllletdl , 19 SIElllENTH ltAC• -J$0 YMCIS. 3 veer olds & UC>. Fllll., & m•res. A 11-•nce. Purse 14500 Cntr!llf' Easr tW.,.01 Cr>ar!l*rGolClerlswl T.,., Moon Witch •Harn Tro1Vt'llf'9Won\lin ffrHtsurel ,Apt To Fly t AO<llrl R1oad_.. tCre-rl , " "' 111 11• 111 111 EIGHTH ltACE • 110 .. ,a .. 3 vur olds & uP. Cl•lmlng. PwM $JOOO. C.lolmlnq price i«IOO Si;re Gt•cl t Rouqlll Game Coov tWerdl Mr. 8lrc15on!1 tHartl Oul>t!'S Pelleni !Cr~) Golm Its P11oet>e • T rHSur"e) Okl<evt Reh...., IClerktel Of\ Ttw ~ 1Mlt<IWl1) Byrd 8rlln1Mflffl 111 111 118 t l7 119 , .. 119 11• Scratched -Olclceys Retuno, Mortal Loci<. W.. Ritt .... Tiny Kllat ken SIXTH ltACI! -fOO yerd> 3 re•r Olds. Clalmu>Q. PurMU.aG Hef,;11 ITr-el 10 00 6 •O 3 <a Fentastl< Ftiqtlt IW&rOI 6 10 • 00 Oept h C.llar91r t CardOu I 1 IO Tfme -:I0.«120.'2 Also R.,, -Moc>re•s 0ut'1, Ml\s R~ocla c;o, Moon's Kinda Man. Cl•arro's Aochl, BuMr·s Bunnr. Have Nut~. H11 DI--.! NoscratchH SJ ludl 9-....wt & 2·1'•Rt11t1c Pl1tttt • .-iutt.• SEVENTH II~ -aoo verd•. J v-eer olds & up. Allowltn<e Puru 14$00. Brull P¥r IW-1 •IO 3 00 1 80 AclYlll>QSolUllOft ILlphaml 1 IO 710 GoBl•byGo(CardoH ) 1 <IO Tlme-:io.n Also R.,, -Ol<"•vs Fl.-.1 Jl•tl\, Miss Strew Min, Mr. E111bo Nos<r.tcllet ~IGN'" ••a -JSOyud~ J yedf olds • ...,, Oalmlng lor F1111u ena Meres. Purw'3500 RougllMJnnt. ITrNSUrtH Wiid Ceil\ (.Adllrl Mia A9lt.1tor !Hartl Tlme-11.G 13 00 •JO ) '° •..o J 10 • 60 AllO Aan -EU. 81_.,, Never Nappl"Q. Ml ""'• "-Angel, Rosy NINTH ltAC;IE • 400 yards 3 y~ olds & 1e1 Cl-"11-PwM U100. c1elml1>91Jf1ceuooo NoSMSOf'115l~l Lt'O·s a.nr 1w .. c11 Punhn Tlw'9M IMylesl Jo.,_s, QWM Tu. MJ<lw1y Rebel 119 Scratchld -Al'ls.s Go l..loht, Youno 112 et He.11, OrOCI O' Honevm-t, 1..1111e 119 Rtptlca l..t'O Priem tTrHlutel Tre111c Et>CI •Br001111e<c11 CNlrll• BuOet t(lerluel Wlnas.-IHart) 119 U EUC\a t.Reuwlt MIMle a t-Wll<I 119 c..11, ""'Ma.• Oid1-BUI~· I Oelombe) Btu I an·s.Cflt,,. 11<111111111 119 119 "' 119 NINTH llAC• -J$0 yarO•. 1 '"" olds. AllowMC.e. Puna ueoo. Wl~Wl-IWercll Area GoH Results INN'SltHULTS 81GCANYOHCC ... -belt cl .__ -1 ttlel Mr and Mrs llHI....., wlllt Mr and Mrs. JaCk Alll-and MT end Mrs. Joe M<Cormlcll wllll Mr ...0 Mr._ Cllucll Jefh. 5" J Ille) Mr end Mrs. Harl.,. Wltllams wltll Mr and Mrs Tom Ell1tet1 -Mr -Mn MarlnuS C.onstent wlllt Mt •t>d Mn Oen OeMltle,'7 Ml'tlS flllQ laurne't'-1. Rkllanl Dul· Iv 1 80I> lllrlle 3 Jan Oi;Bolse. Womens fl~ t-y t Mr._ RC>Derl Forbes 2 ,,. •• lllcllard Smltll; 3. Mrs WM .... Famttt 5ANTAANA E•ct-cf>emplonsll~ second --.....,_,Ott S.111'1; Ptklfl def lltrglll..-Roef\m def Cltldoln; 5"ears *' FtnnM O Smllh def Sloen Fassna<llt ci.f Brek"•us; Htwttt dlt ~ Lutr Otf F••on: Mlllonev .w E-. e. Smlln def K lnrtt. ""-Ol!f DeWitt. UVl"91lon O.I Wrl9"1; MMlln def Relnl>old; Mc Ker lie cltl Rutan: Woods del Karte; HolllSIHdl!IO..-. All·slar flloht-Slmoson def Tedstrom: Corfman clel Jonnson; Hamltl clef Wr19ht. LAGUNA 81ACH OA IM .. tNy ........... a...c-11tel Le "' net-A m1111-1. 8ruce AQlilMldll .. ; 1. Wllllatn WrlQllt •7; 3, (lie) Fr81\11 Hr -9" CllarlH R•ufm8"; e fllvhc-1. H-ld OuM- tl; t. ltlel Glll'Md ltyer -D11nten er-: 4. 111e1 H, M. cur,..,...., Wett Fr-; C 1119111-1. k.,. ~r: t. Elmer Oet11111; J. JOMPlt Enrltltt. Gffr9e "'"' •ct ~. OWeld M<GulN lftd Din...,,.; 011191!1-t. f!lllett 1..ett111: t. am a.ttey; J. J1111 ... Gollt•; r"--'· a-111..i8"d: t. Harry Jefft1el; J. lhl llollert 8'1<11 -HenldFetll_.tM. Election of efl~~,..,,_ Geort• Kremeri llrst •let presl.-oel Cltllltld; HCond Yl<t prislcteftt-flrlftll 11.i; HCrefr,. 1 .. es11rer-4eor .. l'ewler. Wall Fra~ -f'ranll Itel"..,. elected ~CM llOtf'd of di-tors. WOMCfll't ltHUL T1 COSTAMUA R•d, Wlllte end 81ve Scrembl•··LO" tl'H1-t. Fran lewt•. Noretn Ortd1', Ctalrt 8rownlnp-,,,,.,., ll,,_....,. IS. •-net t ltlel ... ncy TerpSlr• • cnrls Jenkerk. Betty 8t•1temo••. Elolu 5clitts -Betty Jo St•v• &Nt>ar~. Cle!• 0.Long, ana Pat 81.cltltetter St..,: '8COllO tow n•t Carorvn PU....,, Pf\yllls Wttson. Fran Grotent>uls, Frltll '"•omM S2•. Most nel birdlH •·A ll>Qht !, '11t1 Frenkle Durst, 51\lrl~y Fl ..... S~llV OWslef, • blrOln; 8 lllQht 1. Mllllt Hayn. live: J. 'll•I Marlon Voss, Fran Grotenhula, Noreen Grady, tour; C fllQl\4 • 1. Frllrl C.f\eOmen. tour: 2. lllel Jean Patrk l<. EIMnor• Grettn,ttne: 0 lllQllt t AA""Y Kent, '"'"· ltAHCHOSAflJOAOUIH Ri-r _,,,,., ·'-oron """" Perry 6'; A 111Qftt • t. tori! 10w net -Ellten Vrecttlllrn SJ. second to• net -Jenni Stasko SJ l~l\'d low Ml Ja<lli" Kroll S4. 8 1119"1 first •-Mt Pl'tll O-r S1. wcot>CI low Ml Ellen M<Klnt•y SJ; l"lrd low ,.., . Jun Worl<man n. lourtn tow net Connie Ounlec> S4, filth tow ,.., . Rosa Roblnson SS: c lllont ll"t IOW Ml Lou Wlll•Y 48, Setond tow net Marvel Bri91'it 49; '"''cl IOW Ml - Bttl't' VIUQll<lrl S3. lourth tow Mt .. • Off Holen S>; 111111 low ne1-Tll'• Eltnor.S.. Flelcl ,i.ot tourney· .ti flltM I f!vonM Hal9 ll. 8 1110"1 -t. Marvel Brlont ~: 7. a..tMrre JOMt 11. c fliqhl Ote~U. Low net lour1'eY ·A fllol't-t Sue Ewtri 10: 7 .JHn __ ....,. Tl. 3 Jacl<le l<roll 1J. • Kathy Perry H B f1i9f\I • I. ltlel f'tlil ()oepper anti SUP l~rl 16, J. SU. 0-77; C fl'9flt I DH Holtft n. 7 c-Bltnttt 76. l •11•1 Tin• Etmore and Mery WIUent>vrv 17. Pro Soccer· WILT THE STILT THAT'S RIGHT I! WILT "THE STILT" CHAMBERLAIN ... playing with the ORANGE COUNTY STARS, will be up at the net against the El PASO SOLS this Thursday, July 7. This Is going to be a classic as the SOi's hitter- blocker Ed Skorek, world renowned Olympic gold medalist. pits his power against the awesome strength of Wiit Chamberlain.Get In on the action with professional volleyball, fast, furious and.., co-ed. MAKE THIS SUMMER HAPPEN ..... WITH THE ORANGE COUNTY STARSI ICIDI UNDIJt 14 • ONLY 11.00. lndudle FR& WI. T POITB. Rrtt game lfortl at 7:30 PM. at the AnoMlm ConYenHon Center. Tickets on aal• al the ConYentlon c.nt.r 10 am to 6 pm. Coll 53.).$59~ • I I ' . .. . • rnurMMr, July T. 1971 Buried in Paper? Guide (Jan llelp Out J By~ ~IMC'la&M Pr PlalUf'd b) pll•• ol paper" C'onfu.ed ovrr what rf'cor<b you 1hould kttv and what you can throw away" The sonmmeont hH luucd It.II 1917 edJUon of "Guldt1 to ltl'Cord lletenllon Rcqulremenla," U1tin1 the rulH aet hy ev.-ry federal department for record kHpinir by pt"<>ple ran1tn1 trum papaya handlers to Importers of nonhuman prim.tles. The \'OlJme IS oraanJ1ed by federal aeency. hut ll also h .. llll Want to Bet? ( NEWS TO U E J I ndtx t o help you locate requlromonta by subject. H c0&ts 12 and can be purcba1ed from the Public Documents Department, U S. Government Printing or. lice, Waahln1ton, O.C. 20402. Order item No. 022·003-00915·9 a.nd make th' check payable to the Supertnt e nd ~nt of Document. 11 you need something Tess com phcated. the government u(ter , without charge, "Keeping RecordtJ What to Discard." Tbe bookltJI 1s available from the Consumer Information Center in Pueblo, Colo. 81009. Ask for item No 625E NEW CREDIT BOOKLET The Federal Reserve System bas issued a new booklet explaining the equal credJt opportunity act und how it affects doctors, lawyers and small businessmen. Here's Friday's News in Advance This ls the board's third publication describing the effects of the act. Like the others, it can be obtained without charge from any of the 12 Federal Reserve banks or from Publications Services. Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System, Washington, D.C. 20551. The title or the new pamphlet is "The Equal Credit Opportunity Act and. . . Doctors, Lawyers, Small Retailers." By JOHN CUNNIFF Earlier pamphlets in the series were "Th e Equal C redit Op p ortun it y Act and. . Women" and "The Equal Cred it Oppor tu nit y Act and .. Age." APa .... ,...,AMlnt Wanna make a beP Here are two forecasts or government s tallst1cs lo be released Friday morning -The Wholesale Pnce Index (WPl> for June will be down four-tenths or 1 percent, the first monthly drop -not just a decline in the rate of advance -in 10 months. -The unemployment rate for June wtll rise three-tenths or l percent over May, to 7.2 percent, although a chance exists It might come out at 7.1. THESE NUMBERS ARE products or one of the computer p astimes that has dev- eloped in recent years, the for e - casting of important government statistics on which many business. government cuN'"" and other decisions wiU be based. There is more than an academic interest in s uch forecasts; many practical business decisions can be made by anticipating the numbers. Consider. for exa mple, the advantage in the stock and bond markets. Julius Shiskin, commissioner of the Bureau of Labor Statistics. recently stated his concern aboul possible leaks or some numbers to securities market investors. Invariably the numbers are cited as among the reasons the market 1 r ises or falls. SBISKIN'S FEAR was that the nombers, heretofore released at 10 a.m . were getting into the bonds of some investors a few m inutes earlier. permitting them to use th1'i information at the opening of the market. also at 10 a .m. He now has changed the release lime to 9 a.m. on the theory that news that has been publicized for a full hour is so widely known that it cannot be used to unfair advantage by a privileged few. But. while the commissioner's eoncern is commendable. the fact is you sometimes don't have fo wail for the facts. Sharp estimates of the numbers are widely circulated throughout tnvestment circles. THAT WPI FORECAST, for instance, com es from the Georgia State U niversity Economic Forecasting Project, which has come within one·tenth of 1 percent of the actual number every month this year. This uncanny accuracy is actually within the Limits of the sampling error, or the error that government statisticians are willing to concede because or ac- cumulated minor imperfections in the gathering and processing of data. Donald Ratajczak. who heads the Georgia State unit. uses a price sample only 15 percent as large as the government's. He has nobody out in the field, as bas the government. He uses published prices and som e estimates. VARIOUS BUSINESSES contribute to and make use of the data. All the major banks in Atlanta are customers, he says, presumably because the WPI, a m easure of inflation, can influence bond prices and interest rates. The Georgia group doesn't manage to pick up discounting from published prices, a common occurrence in the competitive business world, 'and that brings up a serious concern a bout the accuracy or such measures as the WPI. "The fact that we're able to duplicate their findings indicates they are ·not p ickin g up dis counting eith er." ~aid Ratajczak. ALBERT SINDLJ NG ER, c hairman of Sindlinger & Company, a Media, Pa., market res earch firm, a l so ha s criticisms. He bas stated again and again that the government's seasonal adjusting techniques are bollixed, forcing them to Juggle the figures. Even so; be h azards the for~cast of 7.1 to 7.2 percent une mployment, based on bis projection of the unemployed, made from a telephone sample in the 'Veek or June, when the government conducted its study, and adjusted by the government formula. Sindlinger claims that for 18 years his r aw count or the employed never varied from the official count by more than l percent, but that in April and May 1974 something went wrong. He maintains it was and is the governm e nt 's season al adjustment techniques. IF ·THE GOVE RNMENT didn't have to live with a formula that forces them "to make the raw count fit the seasonal (or adjusted) figure." it could have shown a 6.5 percent jobless rate for June, he said. Those are the forecasts. They come with no guarantee of any sort. It's your dollar. to win or Jose. ,. HOME IMPROVEMENT - The government says Americans spent $29 billion on upkeep and improvements for their homes last year, an average of $515 for each residence. The total represents a 15 percent increase from 1975 and officials said the higher spending was due to the fact that people found it was more economical to fix existing homes than to buy new ones. If your home needs work, the government has a batch of bookle ts to help you do it yourself. Among those available from the Consumer Information Center, Pueblo, Colo. 81009: -"Fmdin~ and Keeping a Bank Reports Sakof 27 Branch Offices SAN FRANCISCO CAP> -The Ba nk of Ca l i fornia ha s announced the sale or 27 branch offices for $22.15 million over the value of net assets to the· Sumitomo Bank of California and Wells Fargo Bank. The branches will continue to be operated by Bank o f California until the deal is approved by banking r egulatory authorities. SUMITOMO WILL take over 19 branches. mostly in the San Francisco and Los Angeles areas, and Wells Fargo will acquire eig ht branches. in cluding one in Santa Ana. Bank of California spokesman Robert A. Huret called the deal the largest bank transaction involving branch operations. He said Wednesday the deal involved $135 million in loans, $50 million in fixed assets and reserves, $70 million in cash and $255 million in deposits. HURET SAID THE branches sold r epresent less than 10 percent or the bank's total assets. The bank announced plans to sell 33 of its 74 branches May 11 . The 11 still on the selling block are scattered across Northern California. The Bank or California, which also bas branches In Oregon and Washington. is a wholly-owned subsidiary of BanCal Tri·State Corp. It has total assets or $3 billion and deposits of $2.5 billion. YOUl 1'1tESCllmON IS YOUR .. ASSPOlT TOHULTH lyTlllY GUHT, l.~ Insurance Fraud Tops State's Crime Tally? When you are sick you ~hould l!o to a phyi;lrian. Aft er a rarerut analysis of your problem. he prt!- 1crihe~ the one particular rnedicnt1on his jud11c· ment dE'C1dcs i11 best for involved with ot.tter people in other ac- cidents. And you trace those names and the numbers keep expanding. "But all lJ'le cases have a common characteristic: fraud.'' The state atlomey 1ieneral's olfice bas not yet entered the investigation, which has been mostly done by the s tale patrol and local dis trict attorneys. Richard Silbtnnan, secretary ot businea and transportation. called the fraud "iicanUc'' and laid public hearlftl• were being planned for the neartuture. Fohl Recalls V am To Add Ranel Pads Healthy House." 60 tents, No. 067E. -"Imaginative Ways wtth Bathrooms," no charge, No. 593E. -"Protecting Your Housln1 Investment," no charge, No. 594E. -"Simple Home Repairs," 6S cents, No. 070E. -''Simple Plumbina Repairs," ascents, No. 071E. -"Tools and Their Uaee," $1.95, No. 072E. BRINGING BACK THE booze -The Internal Revenue Service Is temln.dlne overseu· travelen that the duty-rree limit on aleoboUc beverages ts ooe quart. 1be beveraie must be for persooal use aod lta import mu.st not violate the laws ol the state where the person returns, of· ficiall aaid. rr you bring back more than one qua.rt, you'll have to pay both Internal Revenue Service tax and customs duty as follows: -Brandy, $10.50 a gallon tax plus 50 cents to $5 a gallon duty. -Gin and liqueurs, $10.50 a Alftska-bound Tanker gallon t.ax plus 50 cents a gallon duty. -Rum, Sl0.50 a iallon tax plus $l.7S agallooduty. -Scotch and trlab wh!aky, $10.50 a callon tax plua 51 cents a saUon duty. -Other whisky. $10.50 a gallon tax plus 62 cents a gallon duty. -Champagne and sparkling wines, $2.40 lo $3.40 a gallon tax plus $1.17 a gallon duty. -SW! wines, 17 cents to SZ.25 a gallon tax plus 31 'Al cents to $1 a gallon duty . The SS Overseas Chicago, one of four San Clemente Class tankers to be used to carry Alakan oil, is to leave from Alameda Friday for Valdez, where it will take on its first load of black gold. The $32 million, 90,000-ton vessel is under long-term lease to Standard Oil of Ohio. It was in Alameda for a final hull-cleaning before taking its first trip north. Ov~r The Count~r NASO Listinqs MUTUAL FUNDS Vptr and Downs Nd- Wr 1<)nt W No11r~ P('I r,. ''""' c ,, (f Vt•().l P1 T,.rrlo 1 I ROO'\ lnot T,.mpol M•U (p tntorf'1 W11t\I SJ .. 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"' "''' . . ., "'""I n ' I N 'tt ._ ~ .ur\ ru Ill " ~tit H tit&. em1 •Ult U.tf UI "\ i.1 I'd U' •'' Wll'ft ~~ "I ilt1 Ht'. "'"' t'~U l.n '!L IM-.... Mf 11~ !Om.JJ ~N L::,:: t:J rn ~:,:;, 0 : S) rn rm llC9fll ll ~t N &.~9'9!11. a.tl T~ 1 • fl..: 11 ... 11 .. t ~if\ a ttn 10 <f Nl • t .. e H• 1 ..... , .U OT 1 1 lllff•Mll ,.~ 11WHll (Ori 100 1•1 f'.S I'll.. I ! t. .. 6) ftt "' ... to: I 11 fler.tm • ~ l,~l) -~ 'If•\( Ir.I '"'1 \I.I ... <• 'j .. , al .. ~ lill ~,..111 •... ~fi •• ..:. ::a: t ~ l~O:. ::: ~ it ,;.~;. c...!!.;-·.-.ui. • !JI! '°"' ,, ,. Ill-'1ht a ~---'* ee. ~,,.. ..... $tette0 t,M NL ...-~ llMl ,. t llL4I r M.M , .. , P9t lfl '10 II ti LD -.tt -. Thur.day'" Clo in@ Prle NYSE COMPOSfl1E TRANSACTIONS ~.Juty7. ,;.,, N CateJalag Colee Pepsico :Wmts Pizza Hot, Too •1 •&TON •oe11owrrz Aa if be didn't already have eDOUtb •'Juok roocl·· to 1.U. what with Frito. corn cblp1. LQ"• potato cbJpe., l>oritoa tortllla chlp1, all washed dowD wltb Pepsi.cola, Donald· Kendall has decided to add pizza to bi. repcrtolre. Kenclall runs PepalCo. lDC., tbe COmpanf fOUDded on Pepsi-Cola, longtime runnerup to Coke in tbe tot\ driDk business . Kendall bas been runn1DJ 1t alnee 1983. He bu n~ver worked for another company, having Jolnod Pepsi tn UUT as a fountoJn •yrup salesman. UNDER KENDALL THE 80FI' DIUNK company bas jeveloped a strong appetite for other companies. It cobbled up Frito.Lay, the Texas snack producu. lo 196S. It d11estod North American Van Lines, a moriq rompqy, in ljlp. !t made a meal ol Wilson SpOrt.i.nC Goods lo lJ'lO. AH llloog the way it downed Monsieur Henri Wines, a major wine importer. So Ye.9, the corporation that SUPPlles Pepsi·Cola and P'ritos a.tao btii,a you Yago Sant'Gria and Wilson tennls balls. To this happy famUy Kendall oow wants to add tbe Pizza Hut restaurant chain. He bu offered PepsiCo stock worth more than $300 million. wb1cb ls fine with lbe people who have built Pizza Hut into the naUon'a largest baker of pizza pies. The y'r e ready to sell out t o Kendall. What they're selling is one ol the most suc- c essful fast -food o perations around. Expanding at the rate or Money Tree 400 new units a year, P izza Hut has more than 2,700 places op en, which makes it, in terms of number of units, the third largest restaurant chain after Mc Donald's and Kentucky Fried Chicken. Acquiring Pizza Hut will do at Jeaat three things for PepsiCo: t -IT WILL PUT IT 1NTO TRE pizza.making business, which is one ot the fastest-growing food categories. Jnto it already are Pillsbury (Tootino), Quaker Oats (Celeste) and General Mills (Saluto). 2-lt will put it into the restaurant business. which ha:. alrc?ady been entered by many companies: PiUsbu~ <Burger King), General Foods (Burger Chef), Heublein (Kentucky Fried Chicken) and Quaker Oat.a <Magic Pan). Moreover, with Pizza Hut, PepsiCo gets a company that owns outright more than half of its restaurants, a high proportion, although not as high as Ralston Purina's virtual 100 percent ownership of the Jack·in·the·Box restaurants. 3-Piua Hut's annual sales of $310 million will vault PepsiCo over the $3 billion s ales mark, enough, in fact, t<> top, for the first time in history, the dolhlr sales done by archrivaJ Coca-Cola. The two son drink giants finished 1976 with Coke at $3 billion and PepsiCo al $2.7 billion. THAT WILL PROBABLY PLEASE Kendall, who has been chasing Coca-Cola for his entire working career. especially since he started out In fountain sales, where Coke was always dominant. However, Kendall still has a long way to go to catch l.f> on the earnings side of the ledger. Coke netted $285 million after taxes last year, which was more than double the $136 million earned by PepsiCo -and Pizza Hut's profits of $2(\ million will not close that gap by very much. The Coca-Cola Company does not make pizza and it's not in the resta urant business but it does make the Minute Maid juices, Hi·C fruit drinks and Butter·Nut and Maryland Club coffees. And it still whips Pepsi-Cola In the s<>ft drink market. Forces Pull Stocks In Both Directions NEW YORK CAP> -Stock prices were mixed today, caught up in the midst or conflicting forces in the economic news. The Dow Jones average or 30 industn als gamed 1.7!) points to909.51. But gainers and losers were evenly balanced among New York Stock E xchange-Iii.led il:1suei. DowJ011e•Aeerage• M'haf .'ito~h• Dfd f'hw V<1rJ> 1 ~P) Ftn•I Oow JOO•" .)\l'tf'•Ot~ STOCKS Ol:xn ~IQip\ l,11>1 lO t"d '¥'-9 1~ 111 '1 •vl H 10 ff!1 .J'5113~1.., .hl\J IS lltl " ~ Pt JI llSW U ~I~ ;IO ~1 JI/ 71 )<)t II lf'lt1U Tr,•" V••'• U St• llp• and DotDn• Cl\Q Pel, ._ I > Up 20.• • I .. 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J!O ~AT AMl!JI 0 10 lffW VOR~ •APt AOV.t"<tod Otc ttn< d l/4'(h" Of"tl Tolftl •'·"'-°"tw ltll 1>10" N•W 1011 I""* Pr•v TO(Uy 0.Y ,.. 7•1 l~I 111 m Jn llt4 "" .n " ~ I• Sto~lal•Tlw Spodlglal , ·-·---.. -· ··--· ... . . . .. ·•'<I• IH C'1"11Afl0t l'Wwf-1\ AllJCA\flMUOMOOUCr()N STMWARS • ., , MMX HAMJU HAAru50N FO'\D CAll.J\lE FISHEi\ PETER CUSHING ""1 ALEC GUINNESS \MI• 1 11i Ulo•"tl,~J,.,.... '°"..X~"dbf Nf.M tl)' G(....,fl.GE LUCAS GAl\Y KUl\TZ JOHN Wllll/>MS ·~· f'l\INl~O'fOClUIC,. JroM:OIOf\8 ~ [~Gr·.:.:..::·:::·~·1 ~'t!.L """'..., ~flllliWu~ LdlllJ. cD • .. -:~·., SHOWTIMEs--OAILY-10:~12:45 ·-·-~ -3:00-5:1S-7:30·10:00-12:00 MIDNIGHT MAY THE FORCE BE WITH YOU NEWPORT-~ CENTER u 111u oA • w nwooo • WAlA IN aA .. QAIH , .. 1Ct It IO MOHOAl' ttw\f $ATU•OA1' fl'-<-... H .... yt l tJ•» te 1·• LA lllUOA 4 ONLY llUNOA•S. HOllO•YS,, ... 2 00 Q,,,, ~~ 1,::.;~e:~ UNOA IUI e a1 0 MnnOH _,¥m . .': .. l IXOllCIST 11,r:1 HHnlC Il l \.~!!9 tM-2400 _ IT'5 AllVI Ill ..... . , . ......._ 1 lll~J t ·UIO ........... _, MUW e .a<-UNI .. SIG THI Dl.,tNJ _, llO , .... , OINI WlUlll • HTll llOYU (91,,~,~1 YOUNO PIA~INITllN rNI MUIDll 8T DIATHtll'OI _A_e_lllNI\ ftlllALlcNI PlUf i...----J TMll IAOU MAI UiNDID lll'OI CATAL:.INA ISL;AND ! '"'ISLAND JIOL/DA Y " j 9 A.M l>:>ily From 81lboa Pav1Uun Round l rip .. ~ 11 00 Under 12 ... SS.SO ... .-. FOR U SERVATIONSA INFORMATIONCALL67l·5245 "NEW YORK, NEW YORK" PG NoP- "THE SORCERER" PG No P- "A BRIDGE TOO FAR" PG No"- "ANNIE HALL" PG "YOUNG FRANKENSTEIN" PG .. SILVER STREAK" PG "FUN WITH DICK & JANE" PG "THE STING" PG "MURDER BY DEATH" PG "EXORCIST II THE HERETIC" R "DEMON SEED" R NoP- "Th€ Other Sid& ol Midnight" R "BLACK SUNDAY" R No P- Wl\L T DISNEY S "THE BOATNIKS' G"GNOMEMOBILE' "ROCKY' PG 'HUSTLF R 'ANNlf HALL (G 'YOUNG FRANKENSTEIN' PG .... "STAl WA.IS• INt "AlllDGf TOO FAR" ll'Gt .. ROCKY" f PGJ .. ST. IYES .. '"PIOl'l.I nu. T TIMf FOltGOT" "WILUDS"' IP'GI •1tu1r 11t1 "UllD"IRI • "FAMTAmc ANIMATION FEmYAL" IP'GI THEATRES-ORANGE CO SlJlll tmZOIS Sl.51 SO. COAST PLAZA ·~HE DEEP11 CP'GI l :JO.l:40.5:5M:OO-I 0: I 0 S . COAST PLAZA l41t•11111S1 ~llll """"""' --rHE SORCERER'" CPGJ WICDA YS-7:30-9:30 SAT/~1:30-3:35 1:40.7:45-9·50 l:J0.3:40. 5:50-l:OO.IO:IO CINEMALAHD Ul4 St llMller Aullt• '3H5'1 lallrW• .. AIRPORT '77" 4:00.7:55 "W.C. RB.OS" 2.'00-6:05-' 0:00 Tomlin Honored BERi.JN CAP) Arr.encan comedienne Lily Tomlin anc a Sov:et film about two resistance ftghters shared toi: honors Tuesdar at the end or the Im Berlin fthr. resti\'aJ Miss Tomlm won a Golden Bear first prize as best performer for her non-romedy role in Robert Benton's feature fllm "The Late Show," which was warmly received by Berlin cnUcs and audiences The Soviet film .. Ascerwon," directed by Larissa Schepttko, was chosen a.stop feature film of the 1977 competition It depicts the slruggles of two resistance fighters and stars Vladimir Gostjuchin and Anatoli Solonizyn. The second-ranked feature rum was French d irector Robert Bress on's "Le Diable P robablement." w~ CJ to L.A. MARMADUKE by Brad Anderson BOOMER • • -- MISS PEACH 7-7 C••n~, .. Moot•'"-tfldc,,f• ... "I said I'd open a new bag in a minute!" FUNKY WINKERBEAN WHAT UJOULD YOU 51¥-) WAS il-IE MObT Dll='FIWL.T Fl\RTOF -rnE. RooTINE ~ by Tom Batiuk by Wm. F. Brown and Mel Casson W~AI QI iOtJ fHINK 0~ .. AWT o t N€€D ro R&ACH / fOLJe ~f, ~ rr rr<OM Ut"ice.? ?Hcrr5. I .. ·/.} .A? J:M~ A~ l CAN UNOU'5TANO, iM!Y'~E THE FAULT OF 5oMt! GtAY N~MEC'~~ ~ltEA6 .... DOOLEY'S WORLD 7-7 DR. SMOCK DELIVERY ROOM by Mell MOON MULLINS by Ferd and Tom Johnson MOTLEY'S CREW HOW'~ '<OU GE.fflN' Al.ONG WI'™ 1HE ~S5 I MR. Pi<E51DENi? 1 WOULO DE5CRIB€ WW RElATl()-15 Wl-rH 1~PR~5 A? COROIAL. TODAY'S CRDSSIDID PVZZLI ACROSS l E v1dence of an 1n1ury 5 Mo&t recPnt 9 Athenian poet 14 Breakwa1er 15 Opponent 16 Public squa1e 17 Variety of gypsum 19 En11ances 20 Italian nativP 21 .. Brunswick 23 Proceec1 rapidly 24 Harness 54 Oo business 56 Shrink 59 Sohtarv 62 ·· 1sme! • 64 Cafe patron 65 On the let l 67 The .• of the coin 70 Essential hqu1d 71 E•pPrtencP 72 Parallel 73 Orshonei;t 74 Solon 75 Aelua11on DOWN racing horse .48 Aouatoc 27 Lesser; Preli~ animal 29 European 51 Tool 31 Death 53 Rubber nu11•r 35 In past tima 55 ApnearancP. 37 Helped 57 Yields 39 Evil being 58 Ontario rivf'r '40 Vehicle 59 Rules <42 Cessettes' 60 Marine I"" innerds 61 •· ..• • 4A Tater r.hance' .. ~ 45 flood anc1 words sprin!J 63 HP11tng 47 Rate ~pparatu• 49 Noun sull••PS 66 Sub1ect "' 50 Pelts whh hi11<1sh1p rocks 68 Mate an1m.11 S:.> Commun1ca-69 F~male tton ~mmal YPsterday·s Pu11il! Solverl ~ ,\ R [ E II S E E OP T R f s T A IC o 0 v IF D R E c l AV AN T G U A R D AN QA HE L • HA R L E y p A N T S D E T E R C E N ~D I M T E R N t t• I I'll "' ,._,., t t E 0 E L I R I U M T R E ,.. E N ~ GE E 51t~M u .e :. . ME T ERSE SO U D Al E C 0 R N 5 • :. A N T A l ·~ 1:. :~ t '" I V 5 .T I!:,.. I N l ~ ~I~ 1111 T E T 'A l u ~ I ft ".t .~II I It It 11< IV :. I It I~ I " I" ~' .v I"' D IY N 1 tlPQant 22 Join 1n 1 7 Comnlrw1on m;unmnnv .I Nrw Mr.••t" ;><, Utrri ulY 76 El~ctrnn11; II K 1c ~had rlPvorl' r, So ~•ltclc 7R Mec11c~I: f; ln5er1 Abhr l British :in A"·"' w~apon ~ 1ncicfom 8 Worn 0111 32 Manrlatorv 9 Belq1~n 33 h11 eommunuv :W fnotballer- 10 .. Ifs 111st hr.P 3!'> T akr~ Mtoon 36 Trnt l \ Anim:tl't.. rtpn 1., N I 38 01$SllM1" • umNir;i 41 0fll'rrc1 p1ef" . l I Ft--' Im ,_ 43 Se111n11 nl ·"' uvQ g ~VPnt m1l"u 111 Bone co1v1t1es 46 Comprehenc1 GORDO Af<:E•,J'r Yo....'L' T r;.ED oi=- ..:5T1..'DEA.ll::5 AAJO TEA.CH£fi?S Wl<.!TIN,S '!CL' /HAI 4RAC.J.l>JtOS HAVE EIGHT LE:GSr BU.Of 7.T JUDGE PARKER TUMBLEWEEDS ,( I ,u .u. OM , IRMA THERE'S A MOUSE tN MY l10USE . : '"' .. / WH~N "THIS 'TOWN G-e'TS ME: UOWN1 I 1lJIW10 SONG-. If MAKf.S ME F~EL. 9E1~. . l ~ '.~n ARE YOU AFRAID OF MICE TOO? ~ .. by Gus Arriola 1TIL 7HE tN'<.:v.t tE 7~)( PE.JPLE T._"\:),< AN~i1 ,/wc ALE.<3/ by Harold Le Doux by Tom K. Ryan ~ ~ PEANUTS "This is madness," she cried. DAIL y PILOT 81 I by Charles M. Schulz "But I love o you." he said. e i EVEN NH 1Vf'EWRITER HATES NH STORIES ' by Roger Bradfield H£ GM:5 A Vt.RY CONDENSED SUMMARY OF-THE NEWS by George Lemont DELIVERY ROO M by Templeton and Forman .---------------...... --------.... ,,' ...... ,' iHAT'5 1ME ', I WORD fl.JAT c.a¥C.S ', ~ .:TLJSI BeFOl<E 1 ' ALL.·OUT W>R. ,,' .. " .... , t .......... .,,.:..--- ! ; . I THE GIRLS "I had th•· :1°·-..l awful dream i..~t night-in it. I was seated here having lunch in just my slip." DENNIS THE MENACE • f 8 f DAILY PILOT Thurlday, July '7. 1977 Ladles Getting Tattooed SAN DIEGO <AP) For \ht man punted about a praent for hit w"• or 1lrlfrltnd, Joyce Nf'meth u11nta • 111\ c.l'Uflcaw tq "Tattooa by J oytf'." Mrs Nemeth. a D ·YHr-old mother of t'llfo, ••YI sher ll It was ume that tatlOolt -Jofta 1 rnalt buUon -were ftmlnJzed And what better place to attack lb.-problem lban ln tbl• Navy town, with more than its s batt oftalloo par Ion cat.wtna to Hllort. "THE DRAMATIC INC&EAIB IN women l{ell1n1 uttoos is dellnlt.ety related to tht women's movt'ment," aaya Mra Nemeth, an art.lat wbo 11ve up a teactunc career to open her fuhion bl• tattoo salon. "Until about five 1ean •eo, women were Tonight's TV Highlights CBS fJ 6 :30 -"Send Me No Flowers." Rock Hudso n is a hypochondriac who thin.ks he's dying in this 1964 movie comedy with Doris Day, Tony Randall, Clint Walker and Paul Lynde. KTLA 0 8: 00 -''What Did You Do in the War, Daddy?" James Coburn and Dick Shawn head the cast of this military comedy from 1966. NBC ID 9: 00 -"Farewell to Ma nzanar ." A TV movie from 1976 dep- icting the treatment of over 110,000 J apanese-Americans who were interned in detention camps early in World War II. (TV DAILY -LOG) THURSDAY EVENING 6:00 u ( (11 (31) (j) <nt lfews D (lo> ~3) nJ flll News U V~111 to the Bottom of the Sea tt) Gomer P)le 0 Cl! ( lt (l;) News 0 eunsmo.. m l'artnd&• hm1ly m Abs Sln1tll and Jones W ClaSSK Country ~I love Lucy m Electnc Compan, €!> Loo& at Me -6:30- 0 Mcme: CC, {W) HSend Me Mo floftn" (tom) &4-0ons Day. Rocio. Hodson (6J m Andy Gnfftth MJ Me~ Grllf111 Show (ITT) m> Mr Three SollS (3) Didi VIII Oy\e ~ mz-<CSJ Cl)) a.rt~ fll)Town Talli l,)t) (}) flews e!> Man Builds, Man Destroys 7:00 m E1Mr11ncy OM oo o3J mmNews e Liars Clu• I {) Mr Three Softs <s) To TeU Ille Truth O Coft<entr1tioft m I lo'le Lucy m Tiie FBI ( 1TJ (1)) Family Mf1i1 w Cllildre11'1 rrwcra• 2' Ma1'ef 'l RrD m ~etl/lehrtr Report (•ztl Cfl) The P1rtrid11 Family 13t1 Crou-Wits W Real Es!Jlt & You -7:30- U Andy 0 Lowe Ame11un Style 11) Tiie Odd Couple 0 Tiie Go11c Show ()) Candid CalMI' O The Joktr's Wild 6~ ~~ (() M.tlcll 6'me mee.ntc!Md (OIJ CD) The lltn F1flll W Today's Coollnt ® Hota11'1 Heroes fD Chlnnel 21 Toni11rt (~Cl)) Sl'tdy knell m Price Is Ri&lll ar wrs Ctvb ell Orana• County Sum•r 8:00 0 (JT.l (})) Tiit Wahons (R) Ot1m's cousins amft on Walton's Moun!''" saying lhty have lost their farm in the Dust Bowl and wish to hve with the Watton family unlil they un find work u aIJ (() m o llit1tti11t1s ot Ille Rvssbn DMtt F ltStiiral Orson Wtllts IS host of this ~ leatUI• 1n1 many of the lt1d1n& Soviet dancers. music1111J, pantomimists and dance 1roups 0 Mo.it: CC) (211r) "What Did Yell Do ii tflt ~I Dlddyl" (com) '66- Jamts Cobur11, OKk S/lawn. ()) llofie: (t) (Ztlr) "l\u4•r lay" (dra) ·~J-Jamts Stewart. Joanne Dnr, Dan Duryu, Gilbert Roland. a oo <ID> ca OO> wtic.m. Biel flotttt' ''What Ever llappenecl lo Arnold" (lhr) On the eve ol bis ldlllf debut Ill I IClioof pljy, Afl\Old dlsappt111, only IO tHPPtal dl1S lllet 111th Ult 111nou~t tllat he's dloppin1 out al xllool to cat a !Ob and SllPootf hrs family. Cl Motla: Cl:) "SlllllMlrtllllt ..... (dra) '73-Klll Maldtn, OIMa HllSSeY. Cllristo,olltr M1tckm. •""-"-"*""'~ CHlem fellow natllfal4tl JOlr3 aM frank Crlipead as llltY lladl U4 :i.\'"n:t~' *'· a llatll: CCl (lllr) """ t..et ........... ( .. )'$$-~ 8oplt. Gent TlfrMY, L" J C. . • Tiit,..,._ .,,..., ........ 4;30.; .:=z.::- 10:00 0 (CJll CD CU Bamaby Jona (R) 01v1ng lOf a reported hcstOfical find, a SPinish &alleon sunk hundreds of years ago, e1uses the death of an npenenced SCUBA diver and arouses Ote wspmons of members ol his club, who hlfe Barnaby to deter· mine 11 the latahly was 1cc1dtntat. U0"-00 Mowit: CC) (2hr) '11111h1111te1" (dra) '74-Ken Howud, Stefanie Powm. D CD® (121 (J)) Wcshldt Medical "The Mermaid'' Or. Parker finds ~1msell embroiled in inlerna· l!C)tql pohhcs llMn he reluses to d1SCha11e 1 stnously in1ured Eut lu10pean lrom the hosJ>llal al lhe request o4 the man s aovernrnent f3) Marcus Welby fD Mm~ Tllutr1 -10:30-m m mNtws 11:00 o m B (l)01tews II ID) CJ) <Ill Im News 0 ((21) ~) LM Mltric.tll SIJle 0 lrOllSidt m Ftrl!WMd 2tfl"'1 Ii) MucitS Wei., (IJJ) (l)) Tiit R.Mlch Show <al All TMt Glrtten m "°""" ell Madleil/L1lu11 111*t -11:30-u (Im Cl>) Cl) CIS Late Mowie: Koll' II @ Cl> G a>.,_, t.11111 Cl) Me.le: "hell. Tlltlt & Ready" (ICIY) '45-Chestet Morns. U CD ID (ta CJ)) S.W.U .t Thi T1lonQy llrpt S,WI m11tt"'""' a Thi 700 Clu-m c.,tieMd UC £"nin1 News €D Glllllla 34 12:00 D Twili&ht loM O Morie: CC) "AM S-tbt Dan· ness" (dra) '71-PaMtla Franklin, Slnclor lies. m etoss.Wlts a> lhvie: "lo''"'' Stoolpl&ffD" (dfa) '49-~d DuH. -1Z:30-. U Dfl&r* m Mowle: "lll's Do" Aclir. (com) '53-Jane Wymen, Ray Milland. 1:00 D @ Cl) TllllfrW e M.llicbf si.: -u.-.,..i," "TM Ctilat If Dr. Ka1tt." "Mr. W ... TaWa" -1:30- CD MoN: "Tiii Slnft1t Dtalh tf Adolpll Hillt1" (dr1) 'O-G1l1 Sondtrpa1d. ludwi& Donath. 2:00 D IMic ....... hit tf Ille m Aii.1111" S • ''TMro ltt.'' Ftlat" ~Mfettlll" ~Pwt• 10 " -2~ 8 MtM: ""* _, 1lrK,,1a" (llor) '&0-Plltt Cuslllft&. huna ug about what people would think if they sot tattooed." But while women are aetting more tattoos, they ahy away from lradltional ones -draaons, the 8tatute of Llberty, the word Motbei::, or the name of a aweethe&rt. "WOMEN WANT TfONGS 111AT won't look Mnylblng like what they've seen on sailors," said Mra, Nemeth, whose cu.stomen are almost all women. "They want delicate lines and brifbl colors. They want art rather than a simple tattoo.• Mn. Nemeth, who said ebe learned tattooing from her grandfather. does her flowers and butterflies freehand and charges $25. Why the newfound popularity for tattoos? "Fw some women it's purely a sexy thing," Mrs. Nemeth sald in her salon, which features plush carpeting, hanging plants and stereophonic music. "FOR OTHERS, IT'S AN expression of individuaHty, of personality. And others want to be tattooed because ll's decorative .. .it's like an orig· in al piece of jewelry that can't be stolen." Ben Davis, leader of the "Wllmington 10," serving a 34·year prison sentence for the firebombing of a store in 1971 , wipes his face during a news conference in the McCain, N.C., prison. Your world looks good through your Optlcol Market contact lenses. You see things noturolly, the woy they're meant to be seen, with o noturol amount of peripheral vision. You look good, and natural, to others ... the woy you wont to be seen. Contact lenses ore almost Invisible to others, they don't become dirty or tog up like framed glosses and they're ldeol for the active sports- minded lndlvlduol. For good looks, It's THE OPTICAL MARKET SOFT CONTACT LENS PACKAGE: s1e9.so with a 30-day trlal plan. Look around. You'll see why. More reasonable prices at The Optical Market. HARD CONTACT LENS PACKAGE: sag.so The old 30's style revolving ceiling fan has never lost its charm. It's a breath of fresh air in any room. Saves energy too. Operates at light bulb economy, cuts air conditioning costs. With graceful, wood-tone blades. Quiet, dependable 2-speed motor. Easily installed. 36" CASABLANCA CEILING FAN, Model #CF363L. 99.99 52" CASABLANCA CEILING FAN, Model #CF523L. 129.99 light and swag kh C>Qhonal. Energy saving Is a breeze! Use nature's own breezes to cool off your attic and your house. Cut down air conditioning cost as much as 25% with a pair of 12· turbine ventilators. Cost nothing to operate -you save money and conserve energy, Complete with adjustable 12" base. TURBINE ROOF VENTILATOR, Reg. 29.99 each 22.88each Want the woodsy look? Pick up some or these pole._ Edge garden beds and temrc:e slopes With them. And you'l'e living the rustic Ille. Pofnare 8' long ror convenient pla~ment PEELER POLES, Reg.4.49 3.88 Color covers Beautiful jewel-like cofors resun when the sun shines through these corrugated plastlc panels. Choose assorted aolld colors. Wlggle molding. special nalls and glue available. ORNYTE FIBERGLASS PANELS, 26"x6' Reg.3.99 2.88 26"x8' Reg. 5.49 3.&e Roll up these savings Plastic rotl up shades in assorted colors let you control the sun In the patio. family room. bedrooms or where ever you need to. PLASTIC BLINDS. 3' x 6' Reg. 5.49 3.88 4'x6' Reg.6.49 4.88 6'x6' Reg. 9.99 7.88 8'x6' Reg. 13.99 9.88 Make your own rock garden Ute white rock to accent your landtca?lng In a dramotlo WJY· ChOOM from .mall, rnedJutn and larl)e size • rocka, eo lb. bag. WHITE ROCK, YOUR CHOICE SIZES, Reg. 2.49 1.88 • Now s126°2 MOMTH PLUS TAX The cap cost on this lease is S6666 00 for this 42 mo. open end lease. The residual is S3473 30 with a tolal lease obhgation of $9083 66 15.000 miles per year. The initial payment of S392. 16 covers first and lasy payments and license fees. No. s295· , .. Pt.USTAlf I LICENSE • EPA MILEAGE ESTIMATES: -38MPGHWY. -31 MPG COMBINED -26 MPG CITY T-Cel1..,,.,'8fftlle-.. 1VN ... nv.,,,,.._ to rf>.lKJ <"OfV!tb'\t. oot1onal eQUlomll'\t ar'W! "°""' dnv"'Q rwbttt' "'''' "~--·j~i ' IUpt'tC>I :.41U OFFER ON THESE CARS GOOD THRU MONDAY-JULY 11, 1977 "-"'•'I P1lW'f • ~ MllRQ .DIS MUTO .RS The difference between a . . Mercedes-Benz lease and any other is the Mercedes-Benz. The car you lease does make quite a difference. After all, you don't drive t he lease, you drive t he car. And when you lease a Mercedes·Benz you drive some· thing special indeed. Whichever Mercedes·Benz model you choose, you drive one of the world's most respected automo- biles. A car wijh legendary engi- neering, meticulous craftsmanship, outstanding performance and safety. • Something else: you'll drive the car you lease for two, three or even four yea rs. Most cars look out of date all too quickly. But when you lease a Mercedes-Benz, you drive a car with classic lines and timeless- ness that is never out of date. We have several leasing plans to offer you. One is certain to make it more convenient for you to drive a Mercedes-Benz than you might have thought possi-® ble. Call us today _for the \ surprising facts. '- Ask about our m any convenient leasing plans. THl.S . MAYBE THE BEST ~ TIME IN YEARS TO BUY 1977 TRIUMPH A BEAUTIFUL SPITFIRE WE NOW HAVE THE .. LARGEST SELECTION IN OUR HISTORY TO CHOOSE FROM • BAUER MOTORS JAGUAR.· MG-TRIUMPH BRITISH IN 2925 HAUOR ILVD. -LEYLAND ·COSTA MESA • Between Adams & Baker 979-2500 .ONLY FOR THE THE BMW 630CSi DISCRIMINATING IMMEDIATE DELIVERY IS HERE NOW! DRIVE "THE BAVARIAN CREAM"-THE ULTIMATE DRIVING MACHINE THIS WEEK'S 1969 IMW 2002 REDUCED s2995 SPECIAL Automatic with air conditioning & AM/FM TO 0 .._.LY -radio. A one owner car. (ZRV449). n 1975 MBZ 280 SEDAN. A one owner car with stereo. power windows & air cond. (538MVI). 1971 MGI ROADSTER 4 speed trans .• AM/FM stereo & 1974 PANTERA 5 speed. AM/FM w/cassehe. Michelin radials & low miles. A superb classic! (955LOZ). IOw mUes. In excellent condition. , ~ (1820EN). • .. 1973 IMW 3.0CSA Automatic. sunroof. air cond & low miles. (351 JPS). We also have a '74 automatic of this model. 1974 IMW 2002HI 4 speed, air conditioning. sunroof & stereo cassette. Hard to find model! (506MCF) 1961 PORSCHE 91 Z In superb condition! Has 5 speed 1rans. & chrome wheels. (vtPM257). 1974 IMW 3.0Sla Electric sunroof. pwr. windows. leather Interior & factory mag wheels. (388KLF). . 1974 MBZ 450SE Full pOWer. 8 track stereo. cruise control. air cond. & central locking system. ( 1380) 1974 IMW 2002 4 speed. AM/FM & only 23.000 orig111al mites A super sharp car. (030KYTJ. • -• 1975 IMW 2002 Automatic. air conditioning. stereo. sunroof & metallic palllt. (0154). A rare jewel' 1975 IMW 5301 Automati c. stereo & air conditioning. A fine one owner car. (062NIF}. I I ___ o;._1L_Y_Pl_L_O_T __________ T..;.hu1llday July 1 1971 Aucdled •11,Judge Slayer Given 2 Life Terms SAHI'A CRV7. tAPJ Rkbard Sommt!rbaldt!r, ronv1cted ol bludaeonln« two Santa Cru& womtin to duLh. has bffn Hntenced w two roruiocutlvo five \ears·t.o-bfo p~ terms by• jud1e who wants t.o ltto~p him 1n pnton "u lon1 at l4'1ally possible '' Sommerhal<kr. 30. wna convicted June is of k1llm~ \fary Go rm,m. 21. of Lukl• Oswel(o, Ore and Vu•kt llt-zorf', :I I of Santu ('nu IN o\N •:MOTION·STKAINt;U vu1ct1, Santa Crul Supcr111r Court Jt.tdge Harry Uuu~r aa1d Wednesday, "In my op1 nion the defendant !il:9uld be kept rn prison as long as 1t i.s legally poas ible lo keep tum. He shouldn't be released until he lS an has fifties at the earliest !:io mme 1 haldt:r s open·cnded 'ente ncc will be reviewed by the state Adult Authority and a dt•tcrm1natc sentenrc sN in the near futun· He I a 11 v (' '> () r t h l ' slain women f1l t•d SOMMER HALDER claims this week :.ag:.11n~l authorities lotahng S4 million, arguin~ lh:.at officials should not have paroled Sommcrhaldcr on two pre vious rape charges "WE FEEL IT WAS an abuse of discretion that the state paroled this m an when they did," said altor11ey Marvin Lewis. The s uit names as defendants the slate or California and Santa Crul Cou;>l v supervisors. Denver Bristles On King Statue From AP Dl!>patche..., The sculptor is sumg the city of Ul·nver. and tht• ctty Is suing tho sculpto1· and the foundry that cas t an 11-fool bronzo statute of the late Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. threaten1..'<l to chop il down The statue in City Park i..hows King with his hand on the shoulder of Emmell Till. a t4·year ·old Wack lynched m M1ss1l!sipp1 in 1955 Sculptor E. Rose filed a $3.5,050 t'la1m 1n Denver District Court against the c·il \ hach d foundatwn that commissioned the !.tatut• the mayor, the City Coundl anti the foundation's director:-. The Martin Luther K111~ .Jr M e m o r 1 a I I'' (l u n d a l 1 o n meanwhile. filed a countersull saying the st alue does not look like King at all and that "poor workman s hip and .i "lackadais a ca l approa<'h caused 11 to lose S25,000 in granh and <'Onlributions oc1HG Th<' foundation saacl 11 nwerl Ho!.e money, but cl1d not hav<' 1t to pay. • Rhode Island Alty <:en Julius C. Mlchaelo;on, who gives radio Lips on prc\Cnling burglaries. apparently does nottakc hrs own advice The Michaelsons arrived home from a trip as burglars were pilfering their liquor cabinet Police believe the thieve::. snuck an through an unlocked frnnt window A yellow pillowcase PEOPtf; bottles was lying on the ( Js turred with s eve ral _ lt v1n)! room rug The ---------doors to the liquo r C'ab1net were open and a hottle lay on the noor next to it. The burglars apparently ned when lhey heard the family's approac-h. • Robert Redford in the movie ' A Bndge Too Far" is cast as Mnj. J . A. CookofColumbia,S.C. and leads his troops as they storm a brldge. The former maJor says he never led thnl kind of a cnarge but it's s till a ·wonderful p1clure." "I wouldn 't have run toward the: lead as Redford did in the rno\rle," says Cook. "I wasn't t~ lead sco·1t. I never even c4(.rled a rifle in combat.'' : Cook. 27 al tbe time and c ~m mander or the tbl rd uo .. oao B ttallon or the 504lh Regiment of the 82nd A l>ome Division, Is now with the South Carolina E~pl oyment Security Commission. • • /.u Joy Aaron has gotteil orr In n fast start et Cal S'lo«ne Los Angeles. • College officials believe the 12·year·old girl is the youngest person ever enrolt41<1 at the college. Sh~ bas been laking health an~ botany courses for ttb .. e weeks. • '··She is one of 30 lilted Junior high school stadenla in the colltl•'• Pre-accelerated Colleg• Etll"ollment Pro1ram, which permlta takin1 coUece' cOVMtfor creditduriq the rummer. PUllUC NOTICE ...... o .. AMa1t1CA\n AlfDIA .._. ....... '* "''" ~V.lt1l Te 0. let.tlM .. lllo ..... ~ C-. .... ,. ·~ ~ c. ....... the -111-.1 <•Ill• •I ifl4! 1MttW<llM Of ............ , -"""_., A-. Ce1u Mtu, Or•llt• C•u11ty, t.llfonll• •u1111-Ot-c .. 11 r:>.11y I'll* July I lt11 PVBUC NOTICE $-¥111 ITATIMINTO .. A8,.NOOHMINT O"UHO" "ICTITIOUS IUllNISS NAMI T ne loll-"'9 ,,.,.01\l "41¥9 •111111• -•d Ille, ... Ol the O<llllO<a butlftOU n1mt ALLISON MORTG AGE IHllfSTMEHT TRUST •• 4440 \Ion t<•rmitrt Av.-'1\.af· \ulf• 300, Nf'wOOrt t1••tt f' (.•ttftWJUtt91660 Tn" fl<hht"'\ nu;inr\\ f\1uot '' lt-t '' O '''•OU'*"' w•' •11.-0 In Counh' on July >I i.11o M•l~n ku•r•h•m ~H \of'I f.-o' Cll>M•O S." OMIOO C•l1for"1 .. tt110. O•v•d 8 H•vt•r Jr 10"10 ~lf•q10 •-. Lo. 'lngolH, C<tlll0<nl• 9001• Arlhuf J Hill llS PromontO''t Otlv• Wn t Newport Reac:ft Ce1uorn1• t'lMoO G1v1ft M4tler 4li South A1mo,.u, L01.Anoett>. ~lllO<n••900>0 Rober1 E "'°"9an. 11 8rM• w "''"' Drtv• CorOI\-' Gel Mat (AUto"''°' "lUO Fot~\1 E Ohon 1.a l 1MO 1 \I,_ r~t•ClO't Bf..;t"f\, (Alitorn•.a "1660 "'' bu\1tlt'\\ w•\ c.on<fuc dtt'd by • t)u· flt',-,fru-,t r.a"1nM1t1t'r Tru\lt't" '"·" \IAIL"""'nt INd~ fllt'd w 11n ,,,.., (Our\lv Ch '• of Or N"Of' Couoty on Junt' 8 tq// AONl!W,MILLEll &C•RLSON 1tl S. ,,.__, s ... 1t !MIO LHA., .. l•,CAtOOll PUBIJC NOTICE ....,,, l'ICTITIOUS IUllNIN M,....-ITAT•MINT T ...... ,°"""" __ ••• •"9 ....... ....... l'l lllST N E WPOltT ltfALIY INVISTD111$, 4 .. 0 Von 1Ctrm1n 'Av11111t, 11111• IOO. NtW-1 8H<h, Ctil .. tllllt2MI Mtllll 9u•-u i Sen OoOroonto, SM 01..,., c.11-.. •no. Otlllft.H.yl.,. Jr., 10'110 .. lleQIO "e.d L.et.Anoolt .. Celllo•n1•'002• At111w Hill, fli P~tOtY DrlW W..I, N_,..,.. ...... (lllforllle .... Otvlft AAl•IH1 4H Seulll ltl"'fltU, Lot Al\Oelot, CelllO<'nl• t0010 111-11 r Moroen, '' erNltwai., Ori .. , CorMleet MAr, (111-•tatlO "Ol"KI E . Olwn. U Liner• l•lt, N•w.-ort IM«h, Calll0tnlet>MO Thlt butl-111 COftdUCted by t bU\I MUlrlill GevinMllltr. Tr111IH Tiii• •1111-nt WU Iii@<! Will\ Ille Coun1y ci.11i 010.anoe Counly on J...,.. • '"I 1111n1 Publl\hrd 0..t"Qt Coasi oa11v PllOt. Jun• t•. 23.JO. Md July I, toll h01-1/ PUBLIC NOTICE l'ICTITIOUS 8USINESS NAMI STATIMIHT ff\1 futtowm9 pttr\Ol'I 111, do1nQ bu~~ '•u~u COUNTRY VIEW ESTATES. 4000 81rcn St-•, SI 101 Nt .. l>Ofl Bttch. CA tJMO Th• Jonn MAft1n Corno4n., CA C•hlorn1• eot.,or•l1ont •ooo Blr(:f'I Slrffl SI IOI Ht,.DOrl BtACll. CA Tl..O Thi\ °""~' '' (Of'lductf'd nv • cor-po;1110t' fho JOlln Merlin Co JON'I M•rhn, Prec.idenl TfHI \tet.,,..•f'lt W& fllt'd Wit" OW (OIJM'f Cl•''-~ ()r11nqe Courlly on Jli.llM IJ 1011 PUBUC NOTICE SU .. llUOltCOUltT 01' TMI lfAH OflCALll'Ot!MIA ,011 TM• COVMTY 01' oa•NOI ......... Ill NOTICI ~ MIAIUNO 01' "'""'°" '°" l'ltO..n• 0" WILL ANO l'Olt LITTlltSTISTAMIMTAlllY Eslelt Of CAllllllll! M 11501111!:. tU MA81!L N 8ESOlllE Oe MAlll C. BfSORE. •k• CARRIE N 81501111!. OKH•.0 NOTICE 15 ttERE8 Y O llll!N llltt OONALO 1-< Bl!SORll IWIS l1IM "9rel11 • fMllllon '°' Pt"Ollitt• ol Wiii w lo<'' -net ftf ~lt•t TKl-llry to IM HllllllM< reftntncie to whkh I• mHe for furl,., IM'1l<UI.,... lnO lhtt .... 111'11 tnd plat• OI hterl119 lht Hml IWI~ 1iee11 .. 11or JUiy 1t, lt77,•t 10.00t.m .. lntrw courtroom Of o,,.,_,,,...nl No. Joi A id coutt, •I 100 Civic Genter DrlV<t Wot, In lh• City or Stnt• An•. C111torni1. PUBLIC NOTICE lllCTITIOUS IUllNID Mt.Ml ITATIM•lfT '"" to1i-1,,. .,.,_, .,. _. ... IMltl· .... , lllAYCO AUTO lfh'ICa, U.0 H.troor 111..i , ONtt Ma_., c;.11..,..,.0 .,.,. W•t1tr11 DulHS Ser•ICH . t C.lllOffllt Cirpwetlon. UfO H1rw ••Vf .. i;..t.e ....... eoau ......... t2U1o Tlllt. IMlll-• 11 c-..ctH •• • c~ ,. ••• ton '#MW" Oultr's ltrvlc .. 8111 It. IA\llc, 11,.~ktrtftl Tiii• ,....,_. Wit 111.0 wltll t"9 e-tv Offt ofOrenta C:-y 011 JIMI 11.1tn 1'11111 flvl)ll-Ore"119 Cotti 0..lly Piiot, Ju11t u , 90,..., J\lly 1, 14, "" uu.n PUBUC NOTICE PUBUC NO'l'ICE ~l• IU .. atO.. COUlllTO" TMI Sf A Ta OI' CAU l'CNI MIA l'Oll TM•~MTY0"011AMOI .... Mttl. NOTICW OI' MIAllllMO 0" ... TIT· ION l'Oll PttDeATI 01' WILL •ND l'Oa Lt"'las TeSTAMINTAtlt'I' AND AUTMO•ll•TION TO ADMINIST•tlt UMDllt TH8 INOEl'IND•NT ADMINllTaATIOM O"ISTAHSACT l!>lalt OI MARY NEMITH 5MlfH, 0.tHsef. PUBUC NOTICE •tCTITIOUl IUllNIU NAMtllTATIMINT The..._,,. l'ff.,. I• ...... ..,., MU .. C INTUlllY ,, SANIAN A ftfALTY, ~ ( $olllh lrhlol S-1• M t.CA C.t r v C Htftttll. 16Ut Oulrll w .. 1m111•ltf, C•lllor,,.•ta&> Tlllt l)u)l ... U II C~J ... by "" Ill --~I-I O•'YC ... _.,_ Tiii• tl•l-nl .... , lllH Wllll 11\1> Co\Ultv Ca.ft 9' o.-~ly"" J""" tt, ,.,,, 1'11Ut "ublh,... Or-C.CMltl 0.llY. Piiot July1, U,21,ll, ltfl 2 ..... ,, PUBUC NOTICE O•led June '7. 1'17 WILLIAME HJOHN Counly Cl~rl< NOTICI! IS Hl!REIY Ollll!N tMt ALLAN JAMES SMITH llH llled Mftin • pelltlon fOf P~te ol Wiii '"" lo• ltll•n THl.,ntnluy end 1u"'°"liallon to Mlmlftllter Uf\Otr t.,. ln!Mf>entllftl •-lftlstr•llon ot 1!1te1" Act reflftftU to Whlcll 11 m-for lurlller pel1kulaf\, ond thal tM time end place of .,..,11191,. ... ..,. h•t betn -------------1 wlfor JulvK, lt77,et IO·OO•.m ., In lhl l'ICTITIOUllUSIHIH NAMI! ST•TIMl!NT .. AULD McCl.AllV,Jll AtlO<MY•ll.tW l'ICTtTIOU5 8USINl!U NAM! STATfMfNT t "• tot10 .. 1nq PtrW'I'\ 1rt> dO•no ous• M U•\ ISO! Weslclllt Or1v1 S"llt JU Newport S.~h. Cahfor1N~ tlHO T•I 0 141 Mt·JJlO AttorMy tor Petlll-r WIDOEOH HOMES • llmlled p•rtntr\1110, IOOl1 GArheld Avenue t-4 unl1noton &t~n. C&lltorft1a •~ Pnlhp H MCH.,mn. 1t)1 Sam.Jr Orivt-CO'lll Ml'W C•htOfnt• 9162& Dell SOmbto, 14)9 Sant.,,.,11• l•• '"Ct Cor~ Mt M1r C1'l1fotth l 9161S ------------l fht'°'"'f"ll'' t\COndu<IMbv•••m•I Puhlt\..hr-0 Ofc>f'\Qlf CO.ii.I n.ulw Pilot Jurw lO ~ iuty 1 1 "" •IJJ I PUBLIC NOTICE Sl.S.U ~U .. ElllOll COURT 01' THE STATE D'CALl,.OltNIA 110111 THI COUNTY 01' oaANOI Ho.A·tllU NOTICE Ol'HEAlllN00' "ETITIOM "011 .. ft08ATI 01' WILL ANO CODICILS AND "Dll LITTlllll ed .,.,,,,.,..,,p 0.lt SlmbfO rn1, ,,_.""' ... "' w'\ 111'"° *'"' '""" (OU"h' (l•rti of Or M'\Ql> C""Ckihh Junt 11 "" 1111110 Pvf)ll\....0 OrM"qt' Co•'" D•llY Piiot JUM )t 1'\" lt.41'11 U ltll PUBLIC NOTICE court,_, ol 0..jMrlme"I Ho 3 Of Slld court, •t 'OOC1vlc Ccnlt'r Ori•~ Wt o,t. &n lllf C1ty0l S.nl• Ane, C1llfMnlA D•l~d July I. 1911 WIU.IAMf SIJOHN, Countv C~rk SILVAS&EATOM 11 .. W.5-•ANll•• S.ftl•AM,CAmeJ Ttl: Ot41•1~ AttOtfttYJ ler: "9lltl-r Publls...., Of-C:.OoHl D•1ly Piiot. July 7,1. 14, It/I 1' ... ,1 l nt 1ot1ow1~ ~non " dol119 D<l>I ......... BARNETT MOIHOl'GI!. COM P'INY, W E lllh SI., S..11• 8 , C.olle MtM.CA llOyd •••rwlt, 14U t Jell•W lld ::161. ""'"" CA•711A Tnl\ t>vM,..., I• t-uded "' en In d1¥td u•I LIOyd O••nell Thi\ , ••• .,.,....,.. W•t f1lfld With tht Co""'' Citn ol Of-County Otl J.,,._ l ,.,, -------------.. ,.11' PUBLIC NOTICE ----------~-~ l'tCTITIOUSIUSIMISS NAME STATIM,ICT T~ loU-inq PfflOft ll dol~ bUil• fteS\AS Pul>ll\MG Df•"9t Co.t\I O••IY Piiot. July7. "·fl l&. IUT PUBLIC NOTICE SANOERSREALTY INVESTOllS ------------~ 21SS E astCotst Hwy •• Sulte?U, Co•Ofl• l'ICTITIOUS IUSINEH ~IMa•.CA.t'lUS • NAME STATEMENT TISTAMENTAlll'I' EstateolOOROTl-<EA C RYl'H dhO k nown u OOROTl-<E A QYAH 0.CUW<I. NOTICE IS HEREBY 011/EH llWll "ICTITIOUSIUllNaU -------------1 Sttve11 Ooct<uon Sa11dtl\, Jtt fl><• lollow1119 "'"""' "dOlllO bu>• MARY G CREUTZ tit\ hi~ Mftln 1 NAM81TATl,,.INT Promon tor.-Ori Vf' e.,. Newoort ,..u ·~ Buch,CA.~ SEARCI-< ANO ASSOCIATES 1.0 Pul)llSl'\fd Orl'nqto Co•'' C'>•••• IPUot. 1'"11492 Publ•\l\ord Drano-CO<lSt Odlly Piiot, 1608 ,, Jun• t•. "·JO. 6NIJUI~ I, ••II Ju,..16 n ,>o•n<IJUIO 1•71 petition for Prvbele of Wiii end Codie II• ,,,. fot!Ow1119 penons •rt dolllO llusl· llld IO• l•w.tnce OI Lon ... 1 ..... .,...n MU••: lary reltnoe• 10 wlll<ll I> mlde lor AltllNGOALE WEST. S..lte J . turlher 1Mrlicular\, M>d l,..t tllt llmt 1021 H""111 ~rl.,. Way, Sont• """· and p11ceo1 N-Mill!l l1>41 "'""' "•s .,...,, C.lllornl•t2* This business'' conouctoo by an In· Ntwoort Ctnttr Ofl•• Sullo to•. a1vu!ua1. N..,.pott O.tcll, CA t2Mo0 Sl-11 O. Sanoets R1c1W1rd T"°""'' Coot<, 24191 5,,, Tnls ,, .. _, WH 111.a Wllh tlle Andr9' ~.Miu ion Vlt lO. CA •1•1s PUBLIC NOTICE SU P~RIOll COUltT 01' CALI ,OlllHIA COUNTYOl'OllAHOt: ~'· N-r "., • ., OROFR TO Sl-<OW CAUSI! FOR CHANGt;OFNAMF In I~ Malltr ol lt>f' "pollu 11on al Ml TC HELL ARAOY ROOT. • minor By DAI/ID THOMAS ROOT, Ill• lelner For Ctwinor°' n•m• OA\/10 Tl-<OMAS ROOT ~1111.,,,..r, on !N>n.tll 01 'IP1>41<ont Ml fCHELL BRAD\/ ROOT .,.,, 111"1 • Pt'llllon In 011' <OU'1 for 6n Of~ •UO.if'ICJ ~11t• 1oner to t hen9.-fill\ narne tr om M ITCHfLL BRADY llOOT 10 ALEXAHOERBRAOY ROOT 11 I\ l'IOrtOV Otdt"°" ltl•I •II ,,.,..,.,, tntf'rf'Sted In tM M•tt•r •fot•Wir:I "POe•r bf'for~ tn.\ cout1 In Dfl>ert......,t No. J 11 1GO C1v1c C•"t~r Ori•• Wot. S.11ta AN C•llfo«llA on Auou•J • .. ,, at lq)Oo'CIOOA M .• ....., ....... ..., thfor• inowca.uw , •f any they helve, why woo c»lllMJtl for CIWlnqf"' ntmt ,,.,uld not bf>qrN'led It ·~ ""H .. r Of"(l.tltNtd rn•t • COPY o• tni \order 10 \"OW c MIW be' pubO~n.d tn Oe11v PllOt. • ,,..,.,.,.,,., of vener•I ClfCUlauon. publl•t>ed Ill 1111• COUf\IY •• 1 .. a,1 once a Wttk for four (Qn\~tutlvtt ..,. .... a.., pr.or tottt.d.,yot ulo hilAr•no O•l•d Juno 11. t911 lil>UCEW SUMNER JOOqieOftl'I<' '>u11<erl0r CO<lrt DAVID THOMAS ROOT fnPropf'i•~ •UI W. C•nhH'f ll•d Sulk 700 Los An99lft, CA-S Tel. U tl) lo1!>-t0ll AltMMy tor P et1110t1f',- on t..••11 ol M •I< "~" 8r•dv 1toe1 Appfittlnt PuDl1c.,,_~ °'" ''\Q4 f n,,," O.t1 't rw1I July I I• 1l 18. l'UI PUBLIC NOTIC F. NOTICE TOClll!DITOlt~ $-aS9" SIJ~l lllOll C.OUlllTOI' TMf ST ATEOllCALlllOllHIA 1'011 THfCOUHTYOl'OltANGE Ho A0tll1' in ltH MMl .. r of ,,.. E t .,,. o f "r"lf1EIH l SrHLO~\HERCO AKA l>O&fPf LO<H" \(Ill OS~UfR(o '"'' .. ROiif Rf srHL QS~P £Re; Al( II PAUL SCHLOSSl\I' Re; 0• .. ~W'd t.follc~ 1 ~,,.b., ••·n 10 cr•cMOf"\. na witn't r••""'' 10Mn\t tnt-\.tld d,. <~df'nt to ttll' ''''0 flcJ1m\ 1n 1"t OffkP OI thP ( ,,.,ac of •tw Mof'*'~•d COUf't or to or1-,1·nt ,,_.,.,to tl'W" vN:h·f'\lQn.d •t lh\ Clllcroll'ERMl\HllH"'NOllER INC tfJOS'\ Vttnlur..-fU-.,d 'u1lf' '<'!() Encino~ CA,1.t.36 wn1c"fl1Ht"roffiCfl\th•ol.c.• ot bv~ir.~" "' tP'M.• undfio"1Qnf'd In •II m.,u,.r~ r,.ot,11n1n.Q t • ,.,d c.,t,,.1r !.uc" clA1M\ w11n tt1 N-CM\My VOlKM r\ "'"\1 tw rueo or 11n''if'nl1·d #II\ AIOI",. .4'1'1 ~ltf'l'n tour-mnntr\' .,,.,., lhe tin t ouDll< auonof "~' l\Ollc• KAREN J SCHL OSSRf fH, E u cutr1111 of Int' wtll of \"•dOt'<Pdrnt If lllM'IN& HANOVE II, INC AUorntw'·.,·LA• 160U ll11"u' .. lllvd Suitt too E J\UflO, CA '1•lt hi·, .. IOOO Pubi...,,,.,., Orttf"IQP ro..-,1 0 .. ,1~ P11ot, July I H )I ?I , 1411 11tJ-71 set lor JUiy I~ t911. al IO:OOe.m . In tnt Rleherd D. AdtslleM, '971 L• Seine, couttraom ol 0~1Mrt_,,I No J of 'Old Northrldgt, C.lllornl1 tl>U -----------cour1.at 7())(1v1cCf"nt1rDrlv,Wt\I In J•me1 Loewenberq, 1ino FICTITIOUS BUSINESS lht Coly ol Sdnla An~. (elllorn1.1 Laku llO•e. Clliceoo, llllnol'606S1 NAME STATEMENT Oeted J.-w 21 191/ Mlcl\MI c. Bl•llM•.,,1, ~ Hot111 'II• 1011-1~ p•or•Ofl5 •r• clolno D<iw-WILLIAM E. 51 JOHN Mltlllo•n ... n .... Chl<•Qo, lllinol• neu o• COvnlYC.ler~ 611611 PACll'IC PETS 1100 Allele ClllEUTl'IHOCllEUTZ Tlll\bu>llle'lll\conducl.Oby •n un• PUBLIC NOTICE County Cieri<"' Oran0t covnty on May Tiiis l>U\lneu 1• condu<1~ bv •" 1n. U. 1911 dlvldu•I •1u11 Rlc11.iro T. CoOlo PubllShad Or-Coa.1 Dally Piiot, Tnl• \IAtemtnt we> llll'd with 111tt June 16, U, JO, -July 7, 1'71 Counlv Cir•~"' 0.MO.. (nunlYon Juno ts.~n "· 1'" PUBLIC NOTICE l'llUI PuDll\l\O'd 0.drlQ< ron\I OAllY PllOI JUIY 1 11 71 )R 1•11 )900 ti P1•kw1y,Ltqunal-<lll•.CA lt'6tSAHVICfNTI 8LVO ln<orporel..S .. _lellor1 other tn•n . Jae~ l:r,,..,I l eon•rd, 11511 1114 SUITf 10l IMl1,.rltllp, ,.ICTITIOUS 8USINISS loyol1, Ml••IOn 111•10. CA 91615 LOS ANGELES, CA.-· Rlc-dD Ad .. llek NAME STATIMENT Si iiy Lvnn~ ll'l>M•O 7U11 Vi• Atto,....y ..... : p .. 111... This st•l-t w•s IHtd Wllll lh• '"' 1011.,..,,119 per..,,, IS doi119 bust LOyol•, Mll'lon \11~,n CA 916/S Publl\......, °'""""' co .. 1 o •..• Po lot c_., Cttt11 OI Ofange County on J UM """ dS PUB UC NOTICE f hiS *"'"""'Is CO<>dUCl~d by •n 1n-JUM lO. and July I /, "" "· '"' LOUM'IC OOG GROOMING ..... , -------------- dl•ldu•IJ..:>. E U ona•d 11l1·11 Publl\hecl Of-Cot>! D•ll~7.r::.~ :,~~~h Bl..,, l-<unli1>9t0<> S.1<h Cel Tiii• >l•l...,,.nl w•s 111..s w11n 1i.. PUBLIC NOTICE JuM7l JO•ndJutyl I• 1917 Loul~ F (.ft,..dy, IOI Anh• Ln Coun!Y Cl..,. OI <Xancie County on Junt 71l0·11 HUntlnolon Beath, C•I 921>41 l'ICTITIOUS8USINUS NAME STATEMENT The foUowl no p•rlon " d otno OU\tn.tn~ ,.. ,.,, •--------------! Ttus bu\tneH ts condvclrd bY Mt .,, AUTO EMPORIUM, JIO B•o•· dw•Y L-Ote<ll.CA '76SI Aobt rl N Wlltlitr)Of't 1,)41 C~nn""W•v El Toro,CA~U) s-ts1•• chv101.1a1 '~C:.!.~':/!:~:,:;::.. PUBUC NOTICE Tno\ .. ~<:"~:. c.::~·~~1"1 ... 1n '"" ,...,11 .. Publlu..cl 0.•"'19 '°"'' 0.lly Pilot 1"'6·11 ,.M tollC)llllo•f"9 Pl'f''°"' •'• Oc)u\Q nv\' County Clefk Of Ord'\• County on JlH"t -------------nessas lllCTITIOUllUllNESS 11 1~17 Ju•• 1 ••. n. n. 1~11 T ht\ bV\UW"''' •\ Condue:ttd Oy •n 1nfj1v1d\ktl PUBLIC NOTICE POLLO LOCO 347• W•\t F.r\I l'AMflTATteMaNT 1'17711 St"'et ~l"AN· c..11torr""f"f1lOJ 1 n~ toho..,.nq l)Pt'MJn\ •r•OO.no 1>Ui1 Publi'"""<' Ori!f'ot Co.1t O.:t1ly Pilot RohPrt N W1l•er'°" H ERNANDEZ AHO Pt(ASSO. ntH•> JunelJ,)Oo)n()Julyl I• 1•11 1'5111 FICTITIOUSIUSINl!SS 3674 Wttt Fir\! Stt"'t S•nl• An• ADllENTURE COLOUlllS 1404 • NAME STATIMfNT ~1110tnla'7103 W•\lml,,.lor Av• S•11IA Ana CA ffh\ ''"'"~' w." f1lfol1 w 11n tfW' CouMy Cwl'li"' o.-counlv on J""" lO 1'11 P UBLIC NOTICE I "• IOllOW1nq c»rW>nt 1r•cl011>9 bu\I R ENE H ER HA H 0 El I t t •1106 ,,.... .. 51\allm ... 51 AOI "· CO•t• Ma .. CA l •••• , .. .,..,,,,. Peshll ,.,,, ----------- G ANO 5 LANDSCAPING .. 0 t'ltH P•mmy Ln. HUf\llnQlon S.oteh CA lllCTIT10US8USINESS ,,,,., Publ1-.tvlil Or •f"lq' Co•" OAllY Piiot. Ju•v 1 " n. 7'ft ,.,, C~nlor SI #A Co.la M<!U CA 't1677 ICAY HERNANDEZ '1& ~.11m1r •1UI NAME S~ATEMENT• ~_,,., w P•rtiOna. 680 (~nle .. St St Aot A CostAMfola,CA 91:'11 VIVldn R•vmono Feth, •le Tl'l•fotlow~nQperton'\f.,t.:ddln9au-.1 ::A Co>laM-,e,CA •1n 1 FELIX A PIC'ISSO 3'7• West Junlr>t•o Or .• Co•laM..se C• 111616 M '>dS C•r• Scoll DI.Irr• '46/4 Go'den FlrslSI. ~1 .. Ana CA 'I/OJ Tnl\bu1irwss .. c-1Cl..,bye llmf1. CHRONOMETRIC"> WE')f Jll6 PUBLIC NOTICE Glen, trviM, CA Thi'\ bu\lnt!tS I\ condu!ftd ,.., ,. f'd o•rt,.,.s.h1p Pullman Av~, Sta 101, Coi.ta M•w. CA Tr,,I \ OUilnf'U h tondu< t •d &v • ~nl"r~I ~rlnitrShip VIVI di'\ F~i., ~261b NOTICI! TO CREDI TOU wstt1 \UPl!ltlOll COURT 01' TME STATE Ol'CALIFOllNIA,.Olt TllE COUNTY Ol'OllANGE No A·tlnt Q•M••l~rlnerWP R-'""'""'""'' Tiii\ \lal.,.,,.,,t wot\ 111"° wltll 11,. Tno,,..., R S.llr.>r~ll• 1000 ~pril c;a,.,,w P&r'"'" Tn" '"'•'"""I ,.~, lilod wllh lh~ Countv Cito•• al <Xar>9" County on JUM Cl•<lt. Hunllnglon ll••" n. (.A ~1~4'. fht\ iMlt>rnt''1t w1'o,. t1h•1I wilr\ IM CovntvCltorkDfOr~CnuntvonJuru 10,1971. R lcf\ard F MArtlf"l1t, SJU FltQM County (lfof'k ot Or6n<l'lf Countv ,,,.. Junv '·•ctn ~11W Avt • S~ntA M et CA YI 10.t i1. 1•11 l'llJIO Pvbl1flllrd O•dnOf! Cod•I Dally Piiot, ft11s bu,ln." 1 .nnn111 '"~ nv " F71071 Publl'llt'd 0.•llQI Co• I D•lly Pllol, J\IMl6,)3 lO.•<ICIJuly1 19'1 9•Mr•l~=:~'Ps.11ar~111 In ,,,. ~tit• ot ll>C l:\let .. ol J UNE HINCKLEY !llSHOP AICA JUNE H AfSMO P . HAR IE TT f JUN E ~llNIC I f Yl!ISl-<OP. 01'CU"'d f"ubl1\h\"{1 (')-~nt'l" (CM• I 0.111"1 Pilot, Jvflt' lb, 11, JO. And July I tt)) 1601·11 f ht .. \Mtpm•nf w~h 1,1.-o w iin ''"" JU••· lO. and July 1 1 • 71 IY/I /IU.ll -----------)"°-'-'-'i -------------•~;"'.~~~Cl••• ol OtMIQI' Counlv on Jun1 Pl'BUC NOTICE PUBUC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE l'ICTITIOUS IUllNIEH NA,,.lnATIMINT I h• tollOwfnQ """°'"Ill dol1>9 buSl· ""' ., CENTltAL l'Allll( 1-<0Mf$, e Omit· td pet1.,.rtlllp, 191 .... Kii Boui.v.rd, Sullt UO. '"'"""""'°" llte<h, CA ftM7 F1m11v Home Bulldto, 111< •• • C:.•lllo•nl• Gor-•tlon. tlttl lucn lloulf'varo Su••• UO Hun11,.9to" Beech. CA '7t., fhls l>uolf\H1 11c.....,uc•..S11\1•1lmfl. .., '""""'• l'AMILYHOME 6UllDEllS,IHC C Loul'. Gra11a<110111 Prt\ldtt'lf f nl\ \1•1-t WI> lhed Will\ tlle Counly Cl•l'li0f Or-C-1yo11JUM "· "" ..,,, .. Publill\NI Ot•n~ Coen D•1lf Plloot, JIH\t 11, JO & Jut~ I t•, 1911 1M0-1' PUBLIC NOTICE llltoU P~bhshed OrAnge Cu~I Oiitll'f Pi•ot, Juri• lO, ~ Jvf'I' 1 "· n ,.,, JJn II ---------PUBLIC NOTICE "ICTITIOUS IU,INESS NAMI STATEMENT '"' ll>l'°"""O Pl'r\or,. '" OO•no bu" n«H •s HA L VERSON \VENTRE ENTERPRISE~. 1~31 Port Cl••ldgot NtwP«f BH<ll, CA~ Etlc Al~ H•lvtrwn lqJt PMt Cl•rl<lge, N.8 , CA 91bl>O Stt YP l """''" 111· Ar,1." A"' N 8 . CA9)660 T'hh bu\iN\\ ft., (Of"IOUI 1•(1 ~y 4 ~ner•I pertnenll•P Erft A H•fwr "°" '"''· s:ttt...,..,,..rit •• , f•lfrd .,,,"' ,,,.. County Cftrk ot Of"t\nQf-CO'mtv on J1.tn .. 21. 1411 "71014 Pubh"-d <X•~ Cot<t D•llY Pllol Junt lO, end J uly I 14.11 t•I/ ISIO fl PUBLIC NOTICE Not•<• '' IM"r'fb1 given to trechloH nev•no <ltlm• •O•lntl tnt H id do ctdt ni to ttl• 'I.lid clelm~ '"Int Olfk' of IM t llrk ol tlW elor•"'kl cout1 or to pr•••nl thMI to IM ""°'"IQMd •• 11-. olllc• of O•v10 N 8ARlllY. Ill p 0 Ba• llOO. ,, .. W•lnYI Gro::; A~. Ros. mtM, CA "''"· ~ t t9t wn• tt the place ol ...,,'"""or n-. unoerslQned ;., •II mell•rs IM'r'l.tlrMftO to Mid Hl<lt~ Sucri <••lm1 •ltn '"" nt cet s•r v YOUChl'" mint Ill' I lied Ot" prne<1led I \ • •fof'~"••d wnt\fn tour rnontnt •lt•r ow ftr\t punhcAhonof .,,, Ml•c.._ o,.,,.ct Jul ft ,.,, (MARL(') N Pl~H(\I' E•f<utorotttM ,,..11n1 _,,,, d•O<IM\t OAVIO N 8AllllY Ill ., .. ,,,.~ •t Lil• ~ °"'9HIOO 1144 WllM oro .. A•• 111 ...... -.CA•tllt Tit: 11u1 sn.ttzt Pubh~Nr-d Or~Qll" (OA .. t O"tly P11nt. Jufy I IA 11,JI 1"11 PUBLIC NOTICE NOTICE TO CREDI To•s SUl'ERIOfll COURTOl'TMI STATE Ol'CALIFOllNIA l'OR l'ICllTIOUS 8U51NESI THI! C.OUNTYO,OllANOE NAM! STATEMENT N•. A·tltU Th• 10110.,;114 Pl!•'IOM •••dolno llU\I E ~··1· ,... DELMAR .A HICK Els. n,.~\ J!i; Otc.-,.·~t'd RECMAR PlAHICS. 3301 West NOTICE IS HE REBY (olVEN to t~ c .. to•. Sa"1a,\n1. CA. 9)~04 crtdllo" of IM abovt n•m~d dl<edl!nt RECMAR CORPO RAflON , 11 tf\"I au ~r'\Of\\"av1nqc1,,1mt.,•~lno c a n rornf,, Cl"lrpor •l fOn, ''0' w ... , IM \Aid ttc<•dt'nl .,~ rr.quirtid to tllf' (astor, ~Mli&An,i, CA qJIQJ U'f'm wft" •"" l'W"C~\.8rv V')UC ..... r\. th TMs buS•,.,.~ •!. cooou<teo t>v "" • •~ off Ir• o• lhP ctt r~ ot tn. ebov• corpor•tk>n •n•lllf'd rou'1 or 10 prf'\~ nt lht'm, W'1tl'\ RECMARCOAPOllATf0H Ill• ntc•"'"V vovc" " lo '"" Th1o;. \totftno•l"\t wa' f1tfd wllflrl •f'le uno~r••ii~ ttt t~ Olflrf" ot ltUSSE L County C.l•rk 01 O•MQ< Counly 011 Junt W K IOOE'll. JI" ton •"'1 Kidd•• 11, 1'11 Alttw"n•v' ,,, L•w 660 N,..,iwpt>rt C,.ntt r ,.1..., Orlv• Suit• ?llO N•wOO(I Bu en Pub"''""' °'""Of' Co:nt Ot11tl'f' Piiot C•tlfnrn1.\ Q-)6'i('I whl<h i\ ,,.., ol•tf' et JutH.>0 enctJuly7 If )I ,.,, 1e..i1.11 but•n'""' ot ,,.,. undtt 1Qn1td 1f\ •" "'•"_., .. C)l"rl~1n1l"IO tn tt.-1 t.,.l.tl• of '-•Ht 6t <f"d,.nt w1th1n teur rnf'W'fh\ ,..,,,.~ tf"f Pl.TBLIC ~OTICE fir 1ot C>Ubt1CAl10ftOf thl\not1Ct 0~1•1' Jun" J~ "" oo•mAM NICK~•~ A(tm1nt,lr19lr•• l"ICTITIOUS 8USINl!S! ot "" £<1,,l•ntl,.. NAME STATEMl!MT •IJO"(' "•-dO< ,,..,_ nt Tiit followi"9 ""°"Is 001no "'''' ltUSSELLW ICIOOElt MHH" JIOHft"l\dlCIO<le< ARCO MAftlNI! "UIL OOCI( •tte•n•yuH,.tw >4•61 .._.,, Place, O.nt Po4fll. CA wo Htw,,.., C.nlt~ Or1 .. 92't9 11111• JOO Rf901141fd S. Doll, ?'42(.tlle Grendl NtwPot1 lffc"· CA t2MO v 1i1a. sen O-t•, CA. •un T•I H 141 MOo4JOO Tiit\ ~·II COl\du<Wd l>Y •n II" Allor"•YI for Adl\'Mn"lr•lr•• dlvldual. P11l>l•Sllfod 0.-c°"'' Oo1ly •110' "IQIMlf S. Doll Julr I " 11.11 1911 tt&I ft This Jiit-i we~ llltolt wllll IM Co11t1IY Cltrto OfOr..,..~fy on J une ------------- "· 1'71. "1"" Publl.,., Or..,ga eoest·O•I•• Ptfol. June 'Q..and July 1. U, 11. 191/ PUBUC NOTICE \II r<tAI l'~lJlt' <1t1\1·n1w1l 1n ltu' lll'"!IPJfWI h !\llli Jt"l'1 to I.hi: Fr1fi•r,il f.11r Housing \rt of l!H111 "'luch mJkt::. 11 1lh.·i;<1I to ,,d, ertl:.l' • .1ny p11• lt>rence, l1m1tat1nn 01 Ull>(nm1nJt1on bii-.cl! 1111 rac.!, rolor rch1:10n. sc' or nullonetl ur1.:111 ur Jll 111lcnt1on to rn.akt JH\ 'lk h pr1:h.-rt•ntl' hrn1t.1 llun ordlst:r1m1nat11111 TROPICAL Reul E.'ilull' HARDTOAMD DUPLEX In ' lm,1· in l::a:.I S1tlt: (.'o,.,ta .\le:.a :! :.loq chJrmcr on J l.iq;e l'Ur ncr lut 2 2 UR uo1b. <! Ldry room~ Good par!.. mg Interior m'ipechon ~~!: !.~~ ~~: ....... · I ~~!:: .~~ ~'!': ....... . Getter.a I 002 ~...,... I OOZ ........•.....••.........••..•...............• P l!:NINSULA home 4 Or 5 BR 3 ba all amenities Lovely neighborhood, a ffow steps from the beach. $195,000. OTHER prestige waterfront homes with pier & noat from'385,000 up. Bill GRUNDY , REALTOR J4 I llo y\1rl• Do ,,,,. N B 67) 6 16 I Gen.ral I 002 G4tMf"Cll I OOZ ....•••.••............. ··•··•···········••···· IMVl!STOR'S S'ECIAL S46.500 (;u<inli:d i:atewa) pro tect:-. lavt~h grounds ~ llh 110111 ~rluded entry to l''t:cut1ve II\ rm Sun~h1ne gourme ~ k1tt'hcn o'erlook s pr1\all' l'ourt yard. Sp1ral1nl( ~lair l'ase "1nds to bdrm complex O" ner Jn,iou:., -.ubm1t anv orrcr The fmcst 111 t"nhm II\ 1ng Call «twck: 1147·6010 IEACH & OGE.AM VIEW Sensuous bachelor con dominium with beach & ocean view from mai.tcr bedroom suite plu:. secluded lofl den Cathedral linng room hosts Swt.'<lish fireplace & overlooks prl\ ate cockla1l balcony. $83,900 Please call 962· 7788. ,.Q.. KEY V 1 RE:ALTOP.S H 'I h1:. new!'>p.aµt'• will nut knowtnl(ly .ic1 l'pt <1n' ad\'ert1!\1n.1: for redl PARADISE \\1th nrrer You'll kick "l'•ll'IOu~ -1 bedroom youn.l!lr 1f you pass this l\llh puul. JJt'llU•. '"" f>lll'by C'all nowtWi 7171 C1t11N ''' 0 • t \ f '• 1 HU '" • [ill lflMUI ""~~!t~~J~!~ . · ~ldtl' wh1c·h h in 'iol,1 ' ttono(thl' l,1w tr al Jlr n1nd1lleomni: & • '' ., · ' """' '' 1 lam•" !I"'"' ~l·m1111st·enl le&· I Houses for Salr or lhl· South Se:i-. Local-, , , •••••••••• • • • •. • • •••• •. t"ll m a pn mt· n·~1d•'ntu1I · · ' umts for .only $94.900. Low down. 9 1·, Cup rate, always rented Call now 549-8655. G-1 url.'a Full l'fll'!' ~1!1 .. '>1.XI ··-· v I 002 t.:1\LL 751 3191. ···•••••·•·•·····•••··· FIX AHO SAVE t:;:: SELECT $36,500 tPROPERTIES l 'harmini:: hun11ulmv • '" qwet trcl' hncd .>lrt•t•t 1''rwt tree!\ too! Pri ml' .tre11 closl' to :.choob anti :.hopp1n1:. don t m1':. tht:. deal Cullnow75:! 1700 (>ptNF14Q•1'Sl.lf-1 f '• f [ell~IHill] OLD CORONA DEL MAR Th1' ~oph1,1 il'att-cl anti l'\(' 11 tnl'( prOJIC'fl ~ 1-. 'wl:ihlt• for «ll l11vt•rs nl 1h.1l 'l.ICt:1al \'illai:t· Ii\ the Sc•J fcatur1ni: :1 htlrms, formJI dining runm 3 f1ri:plau~~ PJrt1al 0<:ean '1ew antl pn\ Jk guc!>l <1uartcr:. AMAZING VALUE The i:ourml•t k1tt·hcn ~ NEAR THE hJths .1rr tlnnl' m l'lt·i:.mt BEACH 1111111111<·11 111t· 1 n Jlt:.lll'Jlh prit t•d .ot \ I l'JI hont•'t h.11 i:.1111 • '! s:.'fi.'i,IJOO Call tiiJ 8.'i:iU 'tor}. J bdrm ft it·ntll \I • ·"'" "• ., . ,,,,, r, ~,, 1 home 1n p1•,1t•t•lul ! - ne1ghhorhnotl 1ustl ~ • · ~ minutes from lhl· watc•r , • S e r I u d e rl 11 •• r <· n 1 ' · retreat. i:!ntl lln•11h1rl' 111 lamlly room ,\ <11, t111ct1Vl' horrw plannl·<I for grJr1ous l1v1ni: Priced .it ouly ~.!JOO Don't m•~~ out. <'all 1\111\ for mon• df'tail~· ('all 1142·2.SJ.5 t lf'1•. 'I •' I f, In a Social Whirl $1.62 per DAY Th.11 ':ill \f\11 jllt\' for ,1 .Ill rl;1y at! 111 l hi• DArLY PILOT SERVICE DIRECTORY Ill> IT"\()\\'' 642-5678 Serving Set! -(\~ D/A _ DUPLEX EASTSIDE COSTA MESA l::ash1de location duplex tor the 1nvrslor or owner / l<1n1llortl Seller wtll lc&\'I' a l1Jl ol lurmturl'. C:ill now or 11 ,,.,JI be too IJlt' S.16 2313 I tri r ?• ' '• I I ~CPER OUPLF.X FOOTHILLS FIXER SI05,000 l..1r~t· f"am1ly Jlomc ~t·!.tit'd m lhl• l"ooth1lb "\eed:. 'omc TLt.: Brin~ )our tooh & paint brushes & makl• SSS. Uoublt• door entn Step down formal Ii v1ni: 1nom ll11i::l' '"pur.111: lam1ly room ton• SeC'ond 't11r.> hu:.L' ma:.lt'r •I mg ~UPERB HOMES OCEAMVIEW NEAR HI SCHL 'I rcml'ndous mtns1de hm \\ I BH. fam. rm .. dining rm . 3 BA Greal view from both le\'els Room for pool. Fu II grown trees. lrR. lot A barRa1n at $255,000 JACOBS REALTY 675-6670 ~7.500 \\'JllTTI ER Ito-all) :! """ h:.i:" hcaul '>h111111~ oak I Ir.. h\) '>h:Jkl• roof Fl' Ill l'J un 11. J , Jr i,;Jr dblc hJ~ <1Ulo door open('r ~'cr)th1ng 1n the'" hom ... ~ <1rl• Quahl\. uml = t 1 o,, nt·r 1 ftent s29smo. urut =:!. 20d. li:i: den. rl•nl S325mo. Set• all thi: guocl1es and you will buy 11 <;rl•:tl lrJr rri:.1lt\-t: tplc or hl•J.:tnn1ng 111vl':.lor. < ' a I I 1\ g t• n t J a t• lo, 714 ~HJ :J:Jti5 or 714 Mll-!1557 1 here art• thrt>e more 1---------• OCEAMFROMT·HB bedrooms lor your plc;1surc F1, this 1ntn your dre11m & ... a1·e Only SIOS.0011 lur lh1' Z.100 i.q ft home Cal I no" 752 1700. I H-'f 'I flf V• fl\,, f4 f lf•I J 1 ['11Rftljl 3 BR + POOL S74,950 I >11pl1•\ ~7.:1.0Ull ·l + 2 ll r 1.11ol:L)~ 5.'i!l ti:!21 \IJtlll'l' IHm1I\' •HORSES •KENNELS •STORAGE •OR?? 111:1).!hhorhnod ~Ull'l 'l • l'l'l L..: II \1111: rnom \l.1.,,1\t' .. r1•nl' lrplt F111 mJI din "Jm1h rm "'' 1look-. puul' "ii11t•n . I ' It• 1· <• 11 \ l' n I l' n e l' l..1ttht•n J IJmah '>Ill' \ hugt.' 112 5' 3311 \ l l11l lnlrm' Sporkltni: I ri:•· " J br ::! ba homt• in 1111 I 11 rm p 11 u I l.'I 1 l'l i: d j.lt.'r b;1y t·nunt) arc.1 '' ,\r11on.1 fl.ii::;tone S1>lo.5<JO EZ l'Url' yrl \ 1\CANT & &u721tfordeta11' WAITING' Call f.i!.t ~IH67171 ~ <>1•.r······· ....... ~11,,,. C~~AMfs~ -1ema1w1 R·2 MEDITERRAMEAN llwre·., room to uulld ELOQUEMCE .11111lht•r ur11l on lht:. lar)!I' WITH lot Thl' l'X1st111i: hnml' ,., OCE .. ...i VIEW " l'O/\' :! h<'droom with ,.." hard,~ond floor'\. 2 tar $3000 for Own~~~f~1~!~~J,t in <''now Big 5 bed rm Eastbluff home Large yard with teahoui.i:. Price s·edueetl to Sl48,ll00. Roy McCardle Realtor 18 l 0 H•wport 548-7729 Costa MHa THE COLONY PLAN 100 $85,500 (.'harmtnl{ nil tie 'i.ll' 'trl'l'l 'r" plu~h l·ar J)l'l 1ng Bril'k 11replat.c Uuilt·•n book "helves Country kitchen Ex· 1ens1,·e use or \\O«KI & "all paper llul{c separate master wmg. Plus 2 more roomy bedrooms. Beaulrful wood drtk & patio cover O\•erlooks mani<'ured !(round . Call now 752-1700. ' J.:<H'age & its only ;1 ~hort \\alk lo the park /\n\ 1011s ownn "111 hel µ t mam•e al ,1 IO\\. low µnee of S>4.!JOO l'1\Ll. EASYLIVIHG Spect<tt·ular two Mory. :J bdrm with a i:rc11t \'iew n! the nteun It 1s a Relax on wknc.ls . Exl'l' :i t•ustom l'hnrmer and bcdrm. 2 hath home 111 hrun«I new m Newport Univ Park Carefree• llc1ghti.. flurry b<!forl' rl sard Priced to !-ell 1s,old' 516 2313 i105.000. StZES 9240 8-18 "" 1lT""; -1Tf c.i.-r .... SNAf PY llNOf at Ille loe>. !lien sams sllape 11 c!ote IO Ille "aist abM 1 w1Wfl1111 s~rt Sew !Ills ler111t11M. ddt&h!lul drns 111 crept, fl'5e'J P11nt10 Pattt1n 9240 Mrssn' Silt$ 8 10. 12 14 16 18 Solt 12 (b11$1 ~) ·~ J ,.-dl '~inch lab11c Send SI.ZS kw tK1i o~•n Add 3S. l0t -~ "'""" tllf lirit ct~s ai111!l~. l11ndhnt ... ".: . Hand~ ind hU<hOmP1 (10 chet \et for voursell Rt•~ fOI "marl ~•vrne Lh>Chtt q round and oul Cimerolt hnldPI\ I 0 · 01e s11t. hot olate 11111 ol bedspread cotton OI htivy cord 1n two col0ts Pal· tf!n 7109 dNectrons SI.ZS lor each pat1t1n Add 3SG exh ~ttt1n !of llr$1 cli\• 111mart 1NI handhn1 Stall lo: 556·2600 t:;::SELECT tPROPERTIES !i'i&itill m& Gerwral I 002 G....,-d I 002 •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• HARBOR VIEW-SANDPIPER Beautiful 4 bedroom, 2' 2 bath home with pool & jacuzzi. Lovely lands· capin~. You'll fall in love with this on<' S225.000 with land .4 COLOWB.1 IANICR CO. 644-1766 2111 SAN JOAQUIN HI.LU AO. IN NIWPOATCENTlft G •• .,.. I ooi G••"" •··•·········••······•· ........ , •..••.......•. Thur9day. Jurr 7 19n DAILY PILOT C3 ~~:~!.~~~.~~.~ ....... ~~:::!.~~.~~ ....... ~~.~.~ ....... 1~~::=.~~.~····••1 ; GfMf'OI I 002 GtMr.t I 002 GeMret I OOZ G.Mr.. I 002 .••••..••••....•••••••••••••••••••........•••. ··········································•••# I . \\' I ::--; I. I· i N TAYLOR CO. IU-:1\ l .'J'l>l\S ~Ill« c· l !H() COIOMA D!f. MAR-3 UNITS 3 Studio-type units w/some ocean vu from bedrm. Owner's unit w/2 bdrms. • 1 lh bath & f rpl. 2 Other units w /2 bdrms 1 bath. Cptn~ & drapes thruout. electric bit-ins rn kitc hen. Lge community pool & Jdscp included in SS0.00 mo. assn dues. Great buy at $175.000 21 I I San Joaquin HN11 Road NEWPORT CEHTIA. M.I. 644-491 O GMH.t I 002 &.Mrol l OOZ .............................................. TWOFOROMI! LogwHi RancMft• $73.000 SPACIOUS BLUFFS E-PLAH Very anxious owner is offcnng lh1s most popular, large multi-story condo on beautiful wide greenbelt. Jlighlv upgra~ed with new carJ?eting, new del p1so hie entry & all m exceptional condition. 3 Bdrms .. lge. family rm .. frplc. in upper hving rm. & lower family rm.; 2 baths & powder rm. Check the competitive properties & you'll find that this lovelv home •is priced literally thousands lower at $149.500. May be seen anytime! GMHaf . I 002 GMtt"af 1002 •...........................•.......•.•.•.•.•. 2 rharmine bungulowi. on R·3 lots' Qwet tree hne<l :.trcet. Pnme area "No charge" for fruit trees! Close to schools & shops. Investors chotce- come liteul them! 2 for I low pnre-$73,000! Call now. 646-7171 WITH VIEW Nearly 2 acres nestled amoni &iant oalts only 2h miles to the s urf with a remar\abte custom bwlt 3 bdrm + den + ra mlly rm home de· _________ .....,_,.,....._....._. .... ..,,....,_,.111o signed lo max11nue rhc A CHOICEOF2 OPH''''"" l \tttl 'Ofo#"' t • [~,IHAUil CATALINA. ISLAND IS A'WAITIM' FOR YOU to gaze upon from thl1$ rare front row townhome panoramic, hill y ranchland view. 1\bo 5 HAPPY <'ar covered park111g + HOME room for campers. boats. elc. The rorral can ac· Lovely home on corner commodate as many lut. steps to pool and horses as you could e\'er greenbelts Warm .ind want with room to spare. l'07.Y fireplace and man) OFFERING PRICE upgrade:.. Jn,tuntly up· S220,000 pealing. tall now 101 Cal164 ... 72 I l your personal prev1c\\' 979-1050 CENTURY 21 rJn NIG[L lll\ll[ y Ii. l\SSL:JCI AI £5 with sweeping ocean ______ ..:......;..:::;~ We 're open lil 9 for you views! Plu:.h curth lone ·A LOT carpetrng and drapes FOR ... LITILE ---------- und REAL wood pant:I· "' mg provide a a.tunning $56,000 Hrand nt•w honH•:. Monn.1 ll11thlancb Cul\' one i.tory cottage will\ ot·ean v1l'w-3 hedrms. firepluct'. 'hakes & Ille orrerl'd at 5H6.500 Thl other 1:. 2 'lory wrlh \J('t'Jn VICW :1 bedrms .. haths. i.h:ikt roof & wood l'l\kr10r lll•al Liie 1n en try Jlld k 1tchen. Auto ..:arai:e d•>OI' opener. Many fine !eaturci., ~1.500. PETE BARRETT -REALTY- 642-5200 - THINKING OF RENTING? outdoor indoor con· How's this for \ alue? trast' Three bedroomb, 3 Park like seUmg · com· baths. formal d1n1n~ mw11ty pool · beautifully room PLUS wet bar decorated 2 story, 2 make tl11s a special bdrm,11ibathudultcon· showplace for you .md do m 1 n i u m • Sp 1 r a I your fncnds' Near the slaircast• enclosed pool. Mluna. Jacuu1 & garage Pnccd for qwck tenrus courl.!\1 You can't sale: Don't wail, call top lh1~ townhome de now 1142-~ signed just for YOU• IJl'tN '' '>• P u• , • ;;Quail ~ [ ~dlijijl TREE LINED Stn•ets for you·• (.'ute starter home 111 otdcr establtshed Soulhl'J'>l Santa Ana' Only $55.000' Red C;irpet. 754 l:..>02 \\'h~ not con~1dcr bu) 1111: th'' IJr~e 'l brdr1111111 1•KJI hom1• "11h mJll' t'' cll 111~ fcatur i:" • 0 Th1• o\\ner mav e\en helµ \\llh f111ancing und that might e\ en uc a heller ~ ,·uluP lhon rcntm~. Call "' liilPlac• Prap...ti•• A..._ v 752•'920 "' nn: dfl'an5 ••OO ou.&1rn NIWl'OllT HACH ~lust sell this beautiful 3 bedroom. <! huth Costa Mi:~u home. Gourmet kitchen . tompl \\ 1butcher block counler tops. & continuous clean- ing O\en. Sculptured shag crpts. Heavy shake roof Large Varel. Hurry priced only i76.000 Call 546-5880 4-PLEX Only :I' a yr. oh.I !'ride o! ownership units with over 4,600 sq. !t .. all un der a hl'uvy shake roof. air rond11Jo111ni;:; µri vale p<!llf>S' $2 I0,0011 .,.QuaJ~ .. IPlac• Praplrrii•• 7S2·1920 1•00 OVAil St. NtW f llA04 WOODBRIDGE Bro<1dmoor home 2 UR + den + dlnmg rm + eating areoa 111 kitchen Gorgeous brick frplc Low ma1nt ya rd . g ,500• Balboa loy 'rop. . R.altors * 675-7060 * SUPER TOWNHOME 3hr. l' aha. $58,000 ·lhr I 111ba, lfi.'i,SUO 4br Jba. 9)3.500 Crawford & /\ssocrnle:; 957·0701 SlfK & FINO• ,~HERITAGE REALTORS C-2 PERS~ALITIES R I G G J E H H S A R U H T R A A D S U M H E 0 D S Y E H S A R U H T R A S H I V G R T E Z Z 0 W D A H A S W V 0 A L Q A D B I l L C 0 S 8 Y C R B I R H T E H A Y T X l E L E D S E E R D D R 0 E 8 A N I D N A N A H I Q D 1 8 J 0 N I G E Y l R M W R A B 8 J H G R E S B L G E R A 0 E AH E H W R A D I R' A E R t G X N F L l E C E 0 R l I N R L R Z R C £ 0 D G L Y Y L S R H A K H D l X A Y 0 S L N K E H N E E H H L H R E T N M S R A H l K H I R 8 A E E G 0 S 0 S E K E H N E D Y A E L R I E 8 P E J H 0 R M E R S E L C M l l D Y E G A C S E M A J D H A L ln1trvctlon1 Hoddtrt WOfdt ti.low 1ppetr forward, bacl<· w.,d, up, down Of dltoon1ttv. F11\d udl •1111 bo• It it1. ~ 81l1 Cosby Arthur Ashe Mitton 8erl1 _ John Glenn G1rald Ford Davfd &rfnklil.Y ~ Diana Rtgo Ann Landers RoH Kennedy :0 Lena Horne Della Reese J afl'les CagnaY, TOlllOrrow: Parts Of A Sh1p 1002 Gewer.a . ---- COSTA MESA R-2 Tht:rl'"' room to hu1ld another w11l tHl this lurKe lot. The cxt:.tlllt; honw 1s a rozy 2 bedroom wrlh hardwood floor.s. 2 car 640-6161 ~ COATS& WALLACE REAL ESTATE. INC. garage & its only a bhorl 1712 111~hland Dr walk lo lh«' p:irk 1\rl\ ;'\jp\\ port llcal'h ious ownl·r will lwfp Spal'IOUs :Jhr. 21 2 ba. f11~ance ut a low .• low ,ery lrg ram rm & ~rcat pn_c.e. of S&I !k~I l l\LL hack yrd Ownrr's :inx 556·266o 101t' 5159.500 CrJwrord «;:::SELECT & A!>s<w1ak-. ~1~1 u101 I PROPERTIES W,111t l\c1 lh·lp' 642 .~ljill $©R4l)µ-~r.,~sl Thof Intriguing Word Gome wifli o Cliud/e 141••4 It, (LA'f I ,OU.AN ----- I I I I I I I SCRAM-4.fTS An1w4tn .In Claulflcation 5100 ~eMt"ol I OOZ GIMral I 002 ···········~··········· .•.......••..•......••• CORONA DEL MAR DUPLEXES 2 DUPLEXES -located within walk· ing distance to the beac:h. One unit -2 and a 1. The other unit 2 and a 2. ExceUent location Priced lo sell. ·····················•"llli-.... 11 macnab I Irvine raalty &: IDlll ILlllS GD. OVER 50 YEARS OF SERVICE DOYER SHORES- 4 l.,ROOMSI Located On Sanua'go l>rive In An Executive Area Of Pr~Uctous Romes. Secluded One Story French Regency Wlth Upper Bay Vlew. Gate(l Court.yard Entr,;. All Large Rooms. Llvlng Room With Marble Flr~ace. FamJly Room For Informal Entertalnlnu. Wet Bar Formal Dlnlng Room. All Elect.de Kitchen $285 ooo Including Land ' .· . .... ........ .... . . . . .. ' f • • ----· HouaesforSciN House1ForSa'9 DAIL ( r1L 1JT __________ T_hu.;;..r..;.t<l.;;..•;;.ixi.;..;;..Ju.;;..1._r.-1 . ._1.,.e_n .•..........•.......... ~~!.~.~~ ........ 1~~!~!.~~•~•••••••• ~:!.~~~••••••• !!~!!!.~~~••••••• Coda Mffa 1024 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• C:OstaMHa I 0%4 Huntiftc)ton IHch t040 lr'f• I 04 In_, IO« °"••• 1001~• eooz •....-ea 1002 C:orwdtlMar 1011 ..................... .. ............................................... ·············•···••·•·· ...................... . ............. ······ ··· · ······ · · · · · · ··· ········ ···· · · · · · · ··· ··· ······· ....................... * SP ARKLIHG MiSA VERDE SUPER SHARP 4Ur. Hunti'")tCNt Con Coroor condo; pool. n:t . 2 BR, H1 ba '66.500 VllW MAHSIOM OVER THE IA Y T.1-.ll•ful Kmg;; Houd 4 lx.•droom thut ha' ,1 'II'\\ th.it ~on't c1uit' Bt><1m 1 · t' ii I I\ ~ '\ • II t• \\ l' I t II ll io. t f ll l. l 1 0 fl . c·harn1111 r kill h1•11 1 with .111 ovt•r thl' -.mt.. '11·w ol ttw Turr11n~ BClbmJ 1 ncl .in 1111 ·r l'cl 1 hit• .1111011nt of ~toraJ:P .1n·;.1 Tt11 ... p1 np1•1 t v h,1i. room for a lt'n111~ t•ourl Pn.'Mmlt'd al S298.0UU IJ,_.lf)UI: li()Ml:S HEAL TORS'. 675 6000 1443 Ea~t Coast Highway Corona dPI Mdr .11~0 111 M1 w V1 llh·, di ~46 5990 1002Gewer.at 1002 1!1: ..., LIM fees LIKE HEW ;1!3~J1";:~·u'~~·~~u;l 2 ... •In & fam rm on large lndi1cpg, quiet ar'-"a, OWMf will earry fiounc Wt. Home has new ap· many decorator xlrns Ing on thlJJ c11armin& plianc~. cpts. paint, Op.!n Sat/Sun 2 !I by 759·022{. lrvlnit Turac• borne. 3 hardware & much mort-. owner Sl09,500 54!1 S726 Bttdrms. •hllko roor. $81.500 -----MeredffhGcrdent Ac RE 113$,000 D.J.fttmtra Inc THREt: COSTA MESA 3 Bd by owner Sll9.500 leyMcCardle 549-3161 HOM~S. priced from 54S-6S20. ......,. 111 O Newport liS,SOO lo $70,500. 3 & 4 541.7719 COJte Mtta Condo new Eutside Costa Br. II• paUo & yards, 2 FRESH A.SA DAISY Near Newport's Back 1·--------•I M a,2br.l~ba.Frplc, W/boat & trlr acce1Js. Churmml(&dt'lightfully flay! Zoned A l , for dthwhr. trash compel. Great Wntem R. E. ask tk.'Coruled 30r. 2Ba beau· horses! Price includes AUractlvc Duplex, eu. un· Sl8,000. 631-2950 for Peggy.147,11632 ly. Decorator sharp & )mull rental unll' it 2br, 2ba, rrplc, crpt'&.,._ _________ 1•---------1 sparlchnl( bright..1''catur· $108,000. Red Carpet, Walk to bch, $200,000.,. MES4DEL MAR 1ng wull:. or mirrors. 754.1202 640-7463 BJ OWNER Immaculate 3 Br, 2ba. µlu.~h carpelmg, & lush land i.cap1ni:. Only l•--------·1·---------1 C,luarmini: dean 3 Br, 2 din rm. new cpU./drpi. SO!l.7SO. Ahk tu ::.t~t: 1l OCEANFRONT Ba. dining rm. new cpts Encld pallo $114,SOO Oµn NOW' DUPUX NEXT TO IEACH & d.rps. covered puuo, Sat1sun 12.4 2111.1s Anta .! lidlln.ii ea uoil. ~ dbl car garage w ,work l•l.1•1•83•1•··134-0 _____ 1 :.ll-eµing rm & bath m COM bench. Corner lol, fncd guragl' furnished. '". back yard. Room for 11dy for summer/winter boal or RV p;arking rental. $21!9.SW Tl11~ hpuc1ous hunny $63. 700. 64S-70S4 or associated BROKERS--l!EAL T ">R ~ 2\i2C, Viii lalb.,' to•' l•A. ! home featurei. 5 I urge 642-0676 for appl bedroom:J each wathj~-~~~~~~-· SIW95DOWN EASTSIDE FIXER ~reat Realty 846-5573 private balh. Family room with wel bar & super c\ll>lom kitchen. 'The paint 1s fresh 111 & out. New carpets, drapel> •••• ••• •• ••• ••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••• ---------1 &. shutters. SpeclacuJar JBr. 2Ba. Mesa Verde b) OW!l{:r. Open dally. 2917 Royal Palm. S4S 19Ul. HWTY! 1;1t<::tl local1on on J larl(t: t'Orner lol . .mne<l R 2 tr you have a gvod 1m agmalJon or thoui;hl of bwldang. lh1s may be the place for you. Deller hurry. call 64!1-0303 Salt: b~ uwnt-r. !>harp. newly decorated Condo 2 BR. 112 .Ba, on ex elusive court. ai.!>umable loan. 9'•'~ ml. 19847 So. Kinu.swood Ln. 963-3498 or968-2543 THE BLUFFS OPEN FRI. 1·5 2323 VISTA. HOGAR J Rdrm:-. ~ halhs . m xlnl tondition! OfforC'd al J lov ... SI 17 .000 ('ome visit Fncla~ or l":tll for showing at ~·our 1·on vt ·rllt..•rwt• 673-4400 Division of HcriM>r ln•~stment Co. Getteraf I 002Gnterol 1002 ··••••·······································• -------------NEW ON THE MARKO A FAMILY HOME WITH POOL Please!! fireplaces & shlJo door:i. Abo fealure1J-4 car gar .• air l'Ofld . hot water. c1rc pump & all on double lol BY OWNER 3br. P•l>a ~.soo. 1778 Creslmonl 5S!l-S423 alt 6 daily FORESTE OLSON SUPERCLEAM Unng ,my reasonable of fer on th•:. beauurul 3 bdrm . 2 bath .Mesa Verde home Vacant 1mmc-d1alt• pos,..t·s,.rnn 1•os s 1blt .. Listed ul ~.0011 with 3 lighted palios.r---------· Home offered al $.130,000. Principles may call for appointment. ~1 •II 41•un .. I bdrm, 2 ba home. Up graded cplg .. patio. Con". to shovp1ng & l>t•hli. 9>5,900. 209 NARCISSUS 673·7130 By Owner ffJ) 833-9781 Hester·Brown UAll R --------... Lowest price m Harbor ____ View Hills. 3 BR. ram. INCOME ··--c-.. Good starter unlli. 2 El Toro I 032 I lousl.>S on a lot. zoned for •••••• ••••••••••••••••• another. Income now $10/mo. Pnced tu sell E N T F. R 1' i\ I N E ll S $85,500. OELIGllT RoyMcCardle 3Br. 2Bu. up)!raclL•d, frplc, wel bar. BBQ, Realtor 1810Newport Ownr/Agt. 581·6298 or 541-7729 Costa Mesa 67~ -Fountain Valley I 0 3 4 WESTSIDE 1.EA.LTY,IMC. 14 .. 2323 BLUFFS FOR 595.0007 k~:doo need 5 w 0 r k. Yes. wt' ha\e a 3 HR, Agt.644·7383640·835L ON THE "Cream Puff .. , dCl' own ----------• ..•.•.•.•••.....•.•..•• ~ bdrm fam, 2 ba. cust drps1eopls, self ctn oven smooth cook top. d:.h wshr, mu.•ro l>Olanan fir. pool. r1r1.· ring. spnnklers, auto garage door $89.SOO. llO', finance avail. Owner847·1689 BY OWNER·3 br. 2 b.i, '>Uper clean, prime area Sunken l1v rm, lplc , 1>lush crpL'> Trash com· µIr ·M1cro·Wl1Ve. OW. man' mnre xtras . ~71,900 Open llou::.c Sat1Sun. 15872 Tullow. 111:1. tm-6i23 homt: Clo:se tu swim· OCEA.H MOUNTAIN Gotf Coune rrung. tennis, shopping & VU the answer tn a truly HARBOR VIEW lflLLS carefree• hfestyh• l11gh Ta~leful decor w /new •1uahty & lmH•.,t pncl'cl t•pt.,. drp:, &. wallpaper, in Bluff!, ,el off th1l> sunny VALLEY 640-9900 l-ht•er1ul home w Ii! patio .it pool lkaul1fully bo P . IOOJ lndscpd. l:t1mplcte Bai a ~n1nsula pri\ .itv ;JBr. 2•2 Ba. ••••••••••••••••••••••• JJJOt:ll•d f;,m rm. (ormal tlm rm o(f I~ hv rm. REAL -<2ukt ,e,·luclt·cl 'treet on Quiet cul de sac. prci.tage area. 5 bedrooms. de- cor al or µanelang belw~n the hvmg and family rooms. 2 way fireplace, rec room or h brary Terrazzo lilt:. covered patio. pool. Sl!l~.000. UKK, eal l >10-1720 Sls9.SOO. Pool homlc', 2 sty w /S bedrooms, nice neighborhood. 2l, Miles lo beach. owner has bought new home & must l>ell Agt 540-0555 or 51H·5986 1-UfincJlo.. Beach I 040 - ••••••••••••••••• •••• • • I' \Cl FIC S.\:" OS Dt<ane S&S Resale Spec1alL,l!> :1. hmc. upgraded 4 Br 2 Ba. 4orSbdrmmodcli.ava11. hcut cd r11tercd pool some w pools. 961:1· ttiO'i l'orrll'r lot 587.500 8172 Pennml{t.on Propertll'' ~lallo} Open Sat Sun 1 5 FlllSTTlM! av • .ulub~ ror rei.llle' I A Deerhold Park Home Plan 3. Over 2000 sq. ft. or !(l'eat laving with central A C aod all the racllltw" or tM de51rable com muruly. Call to see und delluls. RA.NCH REALTY 551-2000 NEW·N!W!! and close to the 1iu1 lo. & pool 111 Woolibridgt• Great new townhomc. all sel to mo\ l' m' 2 Bdrm-. , 2 bath.!. A bu) at $83.900' ~~~000~ VILL~ REALTORS COOL POOL &SPA go with this i:rt•JI I bedroom 2000 "" ll ram1ly home uf \\Oil derful ln'me Uon l IN the summe1 :.lurt without set>mg th1i-. supt•r offormi: Call for dt•tull ... RANCH REAL TY 551-2000 UNIV.PARK J I WILLOW TREE Open Fri. thru Sun 2·S. J BR, 2''2 ba, Cam dm rm 2 covered patios SUP E fl SHARP DECOH• Green 6 UR, !-'am rm. 4 Ba. 2 •lY. •.500 Nr Jeffry ltd. I rvanc Cenler Dr ~ l22 SklMl'r MS-2200 s.s3 950:J GREENTREf IYOWHY Brookfield mdl. 48r, 21~ ba. Open house Sat/Sun 12·5 4392 Mar3arlt11 . Ul,SOO. P~ __ LOCJ111M1 hoc.h I 048 ••••••••••••••••••••••• UNIQUE LUXURY 3 blocks to Woods Cov•· heot'h with excellent llC'-"lln view through llllllurc eucalyptWI. Open lloor plan :! Bdrm . i balh Newly remodeled lrom 1ru.1dcoul, but lo•di. ur adct on potential left Sunkl•n lub, s t ain ed glui.:. -.ky l1 g hlb . grecnhou:.c wmdowi. & 3 deck:. Greul apt . poi. .. .,1biht1e-.. Privacy & tharm for SH9,SOO. HORIMS REALTY • 494-8057. LEASE· OPTION ;'l.1•w decor. 3 bedroom. wh1lt>water \'ll'W. Walk to \ 11·torta Bl'urh. G re11 l lt•rm'> Sl5~.SOO. ~ Jtt ! Aigg • 'l. \1\A) ALMOST •.. o«eanfront. at•ross theo .,treet Crom Wood!> Co' 1· Beach, om• of Lai;una ':-. n1ce:-t beaC'h 11reui.. Charm tolla!'le + ~uc:.l .ipl IJriclo. pal10,, bl!amcd t·eihng:., bdwd rloori.. 2 frplcs + view dl'Ck. All on R·3 lot ,\,k· mi: S?KS.ooo belt&mt \le\\ c·cnt <Hr. ~f 11-up)i(rades galore' Prit'l'd :0 u'):j'u...:i(P©. under Sl00.000 -"6 OO@IDil~~ EVELYN COPELAND 4911-2aoo REALTOR 552·0434 4 BR·l BATHS Rancho Son Joaquin 4 Ar. l 1 • .. Ba . fa mlly room. dining. Locall'cl nn one• of th<· finest cul-de·Sa« ' I r <' <' I ~ I n N l' w p o r t . Q u a I 1 t y «On~t ruction Qua I 1ty neighbors . Complete privaC'y. 1\eross from Cherry Lcike. This property will sell this Wl'<.'k If you are <• riualified buyer. call 645-8031 &SDDl: Hlull' 11\erlook1ng .J a~mmt• Creel.. OUT OF YOUR GOURD! Opn H'4' Si\T SCN ~ON 15 IJOOSanlip11>l'r Ur TARBELL "#I In California" ---\1.,'t {)..l!">-9!!50 -2Br+den New San Joa BY OWNER Jbr 2ba. qwn model Nr Racqut'\ super L'lean Many xtras Club Best gotr cnur ... c SJ::AWINO pool & JllCUlll Sl07,500 R.E. PR01"ESSJONALS 963·8311 903· 7653 \'It'\\' L~e II\ rm ha' tx·am cell . rrpl. "alls ''' 1o:l.1'~ leacl Lo palm & 14th hou:.c, lam rm .. bltn k1lch laundry area .\ hu.,v. $126.500 Open House Sat /Sun I 1-4 2242 Heather Ln. Newport Beach 5169,900 O wner-/Aqt. -------------G~n~rol 1002Gnteral 1002 .....................•.••...........•..•..••.• , RELAXATION FORMULA Sauna + ponl + outdoor shower + c-oven•cl patio t•quals a great wav to • unv. ind al C'nd of da~. we han! a .t hdrm . 2 huth homt• m Mesa del Mar. Costa !\1(',a, that offt"'r'-this & more. S84.950 _/~~DO R EAl.,T\' '; j ~ If you ·n· huggl•d hy l-1eetwoud M:1t· anti .\uur ('OllV('rSal1on IS Iii CIWlll'll out by Ch1caAn ~end vour tcenai:crs & tlw1r music to live Ill '., ol lhlh magnifH·enl cl up lex They ran hav1· their pri vale Ii vcs. and yt•t !Jc home. while vnu l·an en JOY the quwl·& i:rac1ou~ living 1n this spacious owners umt with a round kitchen, open living & d1rung rooms Both units are 2 BR I ba. xtra storage space & parkm~ Can also be used as m· t·ome property with Will· ter summer rentals Located on popular Balboa Peninsula. Some water view from patio. 759-0761 fly owner Pnn only &i.1·5347 1:11~ 1314 ~:l!l,5<HI llelow markt•l duplt.•x 111 uld Cd~ lly ownt•r s1s:1.11110 l'r1n uni) 640·7R04 Costa Mrsa 1024 ...•.•.•..•............ S BDRM IUCCOLA HOME OM GOLF COURSE OPEN HOUSE FRIDAY 10·2 Fa1rv1ew to Paulanno to 1\t11d1~on to Cheyenne to 3 116 LIMCOLN WAY 5 br, & fam rm on 1. tevcl. A!,'t. 832·8752 546-2018 MESA VERDE REDUCED I & fam rm. Sll4.UIMI I & Cum rm. S'i l.!1541 l 1a\\ford 6: \!>~H< •alt-' !J5i OiOI THROWOUT THEASPRIH! DOWNTOWN 20H I Separate homti~ 13 bedrm. 2 bedrm) on clc· s rralJle R ·J corlll'r lol with alley Owner ot· rupwd-<-all for deta1b. 531 ·S800. evcs008 77:!5 Westhaven Realtors Inti RE Network 2000 Sq.ft. S89,908' . lh1~" "ll"rlo.hng k1td1t•11 f,11111h rm 1 Bit :! M \ l ~4.900 Opn Jlse Sat & v1cw. Bv owner $1117,UOO Sun. 15872 Tullow Ln, Ph7Jt.ii25 M1ssmn llt'alty 494·0131 tl97-H723 LACUESTA '1 HEUROOM. W.\LK TO T llE Ol' EAN l'.\LL HEAL F:STATE BY McVi\Y.8'12 !1371 Hwttington HarbOur 1042 . ...••..•.............. ISLAND LIVING ~H1 :!':bu W4terlroot homl' Concrete deck & '.LS ho<1t dock Wh~ ~c-tlle lor a <.:ondo "'hen 'ou l'Jll hu) 1h1!> homt· tor ~1.000 l'u1n·ll IUL) St111~l't l.kh .!1:1 592 1:11<1 or i I I K-tn 2ll-t8 Open 11·5. Below ~larkel i---------• OwnertAgt <tllr, :11w . * PA .... ORAMIC * FtV rm, lmrncd Ol't" ,... 552·8481. 675·3531 5021 •l B1 . 3 bath. lge cornet Dutcher lot. Unob!ltructablt' BYOWMER THE WILLOWS ocean view. Better Homes Rlty 494-0748 l'lanl05.1Hr II\ •dmrm.i-------•-• Open hoube Sul Su11 12 S. 14881 Grnn•\ l<'W L.inc S'72.500 Ph 552 5900 or 552 .tiOC)( I UNIQUE OCH VU IN MYSTIC HILLS 1o·anta:(\lC mtns1de hm w .i ram rm chnmg rm . :1 H\ & e\en 4 BR Wh1lewater 'IC\\ from bolh lc' el~ ~lalure lre\·!> on lrg lot. Hoom enoul!h for pool J)on't miss yoor c-ham·e I,\ 3311 Via Udo. Newport leoch ~-673 7300 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1022 Corona del Mor ! No more headaches O\ l'r which house to buy. or responsibilities or yard work. This 3 BR, 21'!1 Ba Townhome. bltins, I•--------• QUIET CULDES~C Calif t:l.1~~1c Exlra lrg I 1 \ rm h It n". l.111ol,c.1pl·cl. c·o\ d put10 ''"' l' 111 no" 0\\ lll'r "111 ta·l11 I 111.1111·1· Shu\\ n UNIVERSITY PARK Atlrat'l1\ e \·111.illc I Twnhse :1 Br 2 B.1 alnum, new 111u,.h cpts, xlnt cond Conv lo school. shop'! & recreation lmmed occpy. Open llouse Sat 10-4PM. Sun 10.2. S84.SOO By OWlll'r. 436·4952 1714) Turtlerock Broudmoor -t $255,000 JACOBS REALTY 675-6670 "'!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!.!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! Beautiful rustic duplex, 2 = BR. & l·BR. beam ce1l., Getterol I 002 garden palio. $149.SOO •••••••••• ••••••••••••• PAUL MARTIN Getter al 100 ..•...............•.•• ---------1 Re.al Estate 644·7383 LIDO ISLE MINI ESTATE Real Estate THIS IS YOUR LIFE ... atrium & 2 patios will be a PLOP. PLOP. FIZZ, F1ZZ relier. You have a pool, tennis court:;, rec. rm., nice landscaping with no work. 759-0761 $275,000. ~:~pcei:1lly lari.:c· hom1· surroumhnl! pal1u vool Pcrfct·t ror indoor· nuldoor llvini.: and enter 1.11n1ni; l"lex1ble S ll\.'<lroom homl'. ideal for the ramlly who wants two scparat<' w1ni:s S1luatcd on t"o lnl!> .ind lwo l!reen straclas. POLYNESIAN LIVING CUSTA MESA pool home. 3 Bcdrms. 2 hath. Lari:e enclosed lanai. OCH VU HIDEA W 4 Y Bachelor or artist 's 2BR, 2BA w told CdM charm. lluge lot w /room to build. Just reduced to Sl22.SOO Consider lse /opt. and you·ll love spending (. ryth" ba\h home Wlth lots of Jt in lhis 3 bedroom, 2 ve ~n room on a larse lot. Yota C Want HALPIHCHIN REALTORS 675-4392 Prime area. Hurry and P r o r e s s i o n a l I y call landscaped, decorator Many J:orgeous plants 5 .. 0-3666 need cutting back """ ii~~-·. -_FOR~ Sp:r;';"":~.~~~~ily _ _!,_6.1 .. illi.WI!!!!!..._ 4 BA.CK BA y CONDO • 1 jacuui. 2 frplcs .. fee Dr. SBr, xlnl country mirrors, wet bar 1n the family room ... self clean- 1 n g" kitchen, 4 bed.rooms, dining. fa mil)' room. 2 fire.QJaces, $147,SOO, BKR', call 54().1720 .:~.r~lf'!!i~~.:::::=~·~!1-~-! .... l~~I rm.; ocean view, pool. Pricereduced.192!1 Lanai land' $298,000 clb Joe. Many xtras. VIEW PAULMARTIN J.V.Co.548-Ml.4/759-1677 fAABl!l I $89,500 Real Estate 644·7383 ;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;.-.-.-.-.-.1 ftlM;U. ~·~!~1t~ 3 \~~!~rf~~1~ POOL HOME OCEAN CANYON VIEW $77,777. "#I '" CoUfomla" & ~lrs Immaculate .. Inc 2Br & den, So of Hwy, 1 MES A VERDE - here. COLLEGE PARK blk to beach, $2lS,OOO. spacious 3 bedrm and i------- Th1s 3 bed rm, 2 bath OWner will carry. Sh.own family + large dert and On the Fairway - WATERFRONT home in College Park ~a5p7~.ooty,Ownerbkr wel bar. Upgraded of Mesa Verde Country HOMES "Cambndge Es tales" is u•.r '"" thruout. Juat listed at Cub. One of a klnd quali· REM.ESTATE spotlcss•Origlnalowner,~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~ 177,777. Hurry, call t}' built home. Shake 631-1400 hasabeaulifulpoolwlth 548-5880 toof, stone fplc, 4 SUPER LUSK eneTJysnving$olorheat. PUBLIC bedrms, 3 bath. family Cul·de-~ac slreel, Can· and formal dining. Large 4 bdrm. & ramil.y tastic coflditlon, great 100xl25 Lot. Call for de· rm.; needs family who sized bedrm$, $86,:500. &alls on this beauUful ex· appreciate& hlChlY de 54 .. 4l4t NOTICE --------•1 ecutive ho,ine. C.a ll s1rable Eaatbluff loca· UIH! ... v-01 ~1151 tion. Asking $157,500 -~ ""' WEHEMD SPICIAL Very good hack, Cust.Qm C. F. ColesWOrthY MIWHOMI built hom•.~1thci Mesa UALTORS 640..0010 ~Hiii Verdo sect~ ol. Costa '!~~ HERITAGE • REALTORS CUSTOM HOM!::. 5 bJk, tu bch .. 2300 sq.ft Sngl story, oversized 4 c<1r gar, used bnck f111a.., & Palos Verdes Stone fpk. an~ lonw tlp.-n llou'" S,11 & Sun S:.!!11 1;1,.n,.111111• l)r. I Ill IUll .!lol; hr. reduced $5000 by anx Canyon & O<-cun View. 2 111u!> seller. move m at on Yr wood & ,::lass beaul) ,.,. \n\limt• ~52·lti60. 30r, :!'' ha w/beam,.. ll•.1\ ,. llll'SSage t> a ll e I I II .g . v I e w Huge entry kilch .. too Irvine I 044 1---------•1 m.any xtrn features to •••••. •• •• ••••••••••••• halcQnll'" Vacant SHlO 000. Unve by 12!'i;; Cerritos <off Tt>mpl,· llill ~I Owner //\.Cl i59 O:l.'i8 list. All this for under UNIVERSITY p ARK S120,000. A~. 7l4·000·33S_'.! Executive home. t'en S & SPARK trally locale<! in pre· HUNTINGTON &tl{!lous area. Minutes to shopping, schools & CEHTRAL.AIR transportation. Priced Attention discriminating for im01ediate sale at on· htzyers who want a lovely ly $129,500. immac home in mint condition. Manicured 4 ANCHORAGE front & rear landscpang. INvaSTM_...S Painted inside & out ""' "'"' w/spac1ous fmly' rm w / "-==='=7=1=4J=4='='-=7=7=l=I brick rrplc. Xlnt noor - plan for your rmlys en· joymenl. Vll"Ulted ceil· ings. Lge liv rm. Sff this one now. 545-9491. IU.CHHOME Yellow doll home neat beaeb. Galley kitchen ar)d large family dining. Crackling brick fireplace. 3 BR'll, + a studio/study . Tree studded rear lot with brick firePit and BBQ. rn ' the$60's. BKR962·S5U. BEAUTIFUL AD.AMS 111 the great community or WOODBRIDGE of Jrv1ne 4 bedrooms, family room and dining room. Also central A/C. Call for dctatls. RANCH REALTY 551-2000 -----~~---~ ...... t 044 lr'fMt I 044 ·········•··•··•··•··•· ...................... . CHANCELLOR SHARP 4 BR. lkaut1111t l'lan c l'h.rn t-ellor liome. luutlt .. I w1th 1 _________ _ exlras wh1t•h 1nl'lud1• plush, upgradt-d ca rr>t·t ing, new drapes , dinmi: area, frplc .. lge. sunn~ kitchen; 2~ baths T much more. Priced to sell al only $97,500 red hill ~ 552-7500 POPULAR Charmer Plus l 'nlieri;omg complete rt'- h ,1b1 ll talion. lhill 2 bdrm., den, l ~ ba. has oak floors throughout. French doors, garden bath & much more. (252' $165,000 •:'°4"t·~~· .... . r,, , ... ~ . . . -•. ~-. ·-· ' -...... . . --,..::-. ...... CAMBRIDGE Model in ---------GREENTREE; 3 bdrms. PLUS fam. kitchen. Ex tra large yard with beautiful J3wns. Home 1s in .. MINT" condition' &11,3()() LAGUNA CHARM By owner. choice N. End, lovely shingle home w /guesl cottage + new Enl(. Cottage rental. Street. to street, ocean view, unique property. Prine. only. $285,000. 49'· 7473 or 49-H213 Lacpt0HIU1 1050 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 21 Mowoit-Dr. Yeaa. a Br. ram. tln. & G ... nl _, ~bla iueet quarters. --------i .. •••••••••••••11111111 .. BR,t'iiBa,c>ppOrttm.Jty Atkin• $165,000 Agt MJ:SA DEL MA n ' SUPER SHARP 38r Dui>lelC, adult area, cen· trnl alt, 2 car aara1e. 5 1,500. l.J, & Aasoc. Rtoltors 76a.7U9 130.~046 caa 110111 ILlllfS ca. OVER 50 YEARS OF SERVICE GBm.IMAHs• ISTATE SAM JUAM CAPISTIANO to aa9' before being Ji.t.-67$4800 Owners I Asen ta offer «t. 64CMK1.o ~ 6"-48M xtra atlarp s BR home. open HouN Set/Sun « Eastllde Detixe Tri·Plelt Applonty.$C$.64'15 l>y a,ppt. Owner Unit aeparate hie --.-=---=-------• Sl.19.000. t42.a72 IOOM TO GltOW SBr, 2.Ba. lg rncd yd, prime loe. 5166.000. Owner "2·'°12_ Lagmo ..... 1051 ••••••••••••••••••••••• • ~'!:!:~!.~~ -~~ ....... ~~~~! -~~~-~-....... {~4!'!!!!.~.~ ........ ~:~~~-~!~!~···-~~.~~.~!~!~ ..... . C~ Othet-R•al &fate Thura<tay July 7 1977 DAIL y PILOf ... ....... MH,u•I IOSl S.C:..,_.id9 107'5-Ch•wfe 107' --~ 20001ncomtProperiy 2000 ·•••••················· ······•·········•··•·······•····•········•···· ••••.••........•......••.........••....•..••• , ii;;,if.t:.t;••••••••••••• Houtu Uftfwwillwd Hoatt Uftfwwbhed Hoatt UllfwWllled &ch~ 2800 •••••••••• ••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• \hl'.'w \IH II II\\ I 111' r •Ill h I 111 I' lo U 111 t I 11 ('n\4Ah iAft 1i "'Ufltt11ttdlt\L1 "P•' 11111• ~"' 111.1 ... 1 l\1ur1' "'' 'i II• •Ir""'" J•, l~11h liin11I' '"""' rit'f'I lJl"'ul l1111n1 f.,, 111 tlnor, uultlut1r "' IH~ t.'ln •• \1• l'l""' "• • 4 ~· houb \I.all) • '''·'' I\• I hu> ,ti )Iii:! AIU lllt: Hll 1.-. ••I 1 ... rnlll ul I ..... u II.. :\Ii;: II t I Ot-Jt.,_1111 I .Ull 1 h I"""' .... ~111 .. 1 11 ..... hfl 1•1 .. 11 llur .. 1 't'\1111.: 1111111111·• lr\1111 11\1' " I \\ .tll.111~· dl'•l onl"l' '" 11111n•1 111 h nn·d rc-.11 ' 11 d '"' ptl\JI )• ~.'1'1. ~ Hiqwl R•olty 130.SOSO O b.4040 PAIMT IRUSH SPECIAL U1111,., \ '"" lil"nlfl""' I .\ 1111.11\l 1>1 u'h ,\ 1,,1.,, •• 11l , .101.1>:1· 111 ,, i.:1 ... 11 111 \ t·~lllll'lll tl('j)"I I ; 111 ' tl.1, Ill lh1· ll1,,hl.111d \tu .. \ 'I'll lhl' '"·1•1<,1·1111 lfrdut t•d 111 ~:I '1:,41 RC. TAYLOR CO. 955-0350 BY OWHER S9 I .500 '> \'r old hlfl I .1.:11111 '\ 11.!Ut•I 11111111 pr"' lncbq>tl 1111·11 1tl ""wl µalto, :m1. :.111.1 1011•11 <llJO beJ II\ \ l't 11111.! It\ rt II \I bt'll'k 111111. 11111 1111. tile lo.11 . d1 ~po,a l <lshw:-.h1 ~"' ,11111'. n\eni., Ian t•p1,., l111lly I Ill, :t 1·ar l.!Jfilgt· I pt g I tr old ptl ~IH \II ,\II" Jib urr "hilt•. plunih1nl.! & 1t·ram1t 1111'. hJlh" ,'(. ~howcr.. I 'l•rlt.'1 I t·rnuJ :!S tti:? f..1 l·:!--\rJtf.1 1 <.: r 11" n \ 1 II ,. \ I " t.JPlala. h•ll ht hll.. \ 1 1,1 l'lata ltt LJ 1-~,lra<l.1 ~ btugo RIG.AMT .AND MEW two uciffRg uw h-... lltu.ted °" • blvff o•...toolllllig HM oc.-froM .d ""'" of oc""" heh J.cra l berow J l/1 bethl with fl""..::• In "'• f.mfy room. I•~ Jundedl with path to beoclt btlow, In -. of SCMI Ct.me.de'• fin..t ... -. For the nt01t d h crlmlnatl119 tute ... S270,000 and S27S,OOO '''"'' \l"I I I 493-8812 -.01 I'll 1. \ta·:-.' REACll 1!17 :! ur.1 , .. I 'I "'' I \I 1 I 'l '\ l'l'I l.1.11 ~~~~:.~~~ ... !?.~91 ~":~~:.~~~ ... !?.~! HEWPORT HGTS. i _____ _ St24,900 MEW OM THE 1•11 ,11f.'lt1lh Nt•wpnrl llgl. Vorn1•r loca1111n I' 11' I 1111\ flt'' 11: 11 t: d I hJI 11111 1'1111 k IJIU~h • .1 1 1• ,. t 1 n ,.: (; I .i ~ " ''"'"''''I t.111·k lrpll' !'>11 JI "'•" 1 r ..:uurmt'I lo.111 h••lf l n111u•· ~ll'I •I"""" '"·"'''' ~u1le l>d11o:hllul \IUOd 'lllllJ.!ll• 111.1 ,,., l1.11h llug; ~1·11.11.tl« 1.11nrl) 1 m . 11111' II \1 tll IH• ..:nnl t11m1111u". 1.;ll 1111w t.11• i Ii I 1f, '1 I • ' 1 " • , *BLUFFS* C11 w111;1I .irt•J 4 BR, :Iba u11I u1111 I 11t.1ll) rl'dl't \Im 1· 111 n•;1tly Sl49.SUO HASTINGS & CO. REALTORS 640-556 MARKET A Family Home With Pool Ilk.:!' z Bil. family room 1t1ning. Loc<1lcd on one or lht' r1nc"l t·ul cle Sa(' streets 1n Nt>wporl <Ju;1 II ty con .. 1 ruction tluallty nl'q.:hhor~ Complete privucy. ,\cro,,,., from Cherry l..akt' Properly will sell ltus week If you <1rc a qual1f1l·d huyt•r 1'<111 I> I S -K 0 :1 J . S I ti 'I , !I 0 0 C >wncr. /\..:t -----Completely redone HluHs 1·ondo. srngh.• levt:l :J Br.:! JJa. w fplr & !>Unkcn h\' rng Rm. 432 V1!.la Suerte Open Daily I 5. SI 16,500 1\gt 64_5 9'J50 turn right 1 Call t·\ e:. tor '",., •• ~ ,1ppl 17M>4!1St.M18X n l;n u 111ouo .... ort1pa11y BYOWNERR2 Doll Hous£' Dr<'am l..oca· lion ( I FEl':I. LIKE II/\ R G J\ I N I N c; ! > :.! II f ,. l ', ••. , ... I 60 I LIDO Bdrm. 1 hath. 7620 sq ~l W .•l1rl 111nL C'1J11 H:.! ULil LD/\HLE LOT LOOK AT THIS I t111n1111111m 111,uriou:. :.! Hack alky. m1 to bl.·uth. BRAND "'1-;w :!111 d1·11 fl H. ,1, ,1, l 1 mm,. d Hnng money and !-.larl :!lla. lrpk, "'"'""' tlull X.'!Ml,tltll> o1)l·n U;11ly IO:! 'our prOJl'l'l ~;;.uoo. hou;.\• \t"r11 .. , t 111 111 ...,..,.,11 11\ hltli.: \1u'l r111i; bwner .\g\ SUI :IOl l l,.1gun.1 "'11:u..i fkJ.!tnn.11 ·11-111ntt1•1 liiS woo '•---------1 l'k SR'I '1511 II\ "'' 1wr 1• ___ _ 66l·061Mi ur H:JI !llK't 1---------•1 OCEAHFROHT .-.....~ 1 Br .!' h.1 humt• 11n fre Ralboa duplex. 4&3 br l.11111 l'ltt"l' lo l11•at·h ~ashore Real E:.tdle .bl..1111.! !'IS:! '>UO C.tll 67558011 ..... ,. nuel Shores h-lt. it 1 I or 1:;11 '191HI f"'W -:I 1-------1 San Clemente l·:lcizunt·l· .1houn1h 111I111,. 1076 •I bdrm . :!' · ha 1 ll'" home 1n l•\I 1•11111111111111~ Ind utl1• f.1111 1 111 • :? flrC'pl.1!'1'' 1;11"1111 Ill ma:.tc•r lt.11h ch .. r :.!f~Mt "'l· fl 11[ luxun 1.! 1:.i I --••.•...••......•...•... "25.om SE.\\'lt·:W 1 Thrtll1ng 111•1•,111 Iv \'alll'y \ 1cws .Jw I h1•lm\ SpvJ.!lil:<" :-.. .. 1\ I hr :! h.1 2 lrpk'>. 11µ1!• ... ,,., S:?S!I son !>-Ill >11.J I 111 iii.II 71\20 .ift 6 Golfers Special PriCl-d l'lght 1900 Ml .f\ Jbr, 2ba home• Ocean \'lt'W, frplc. formal t'n· trv II~ j!Otr COUfH' St:J9.SOU --"l"'lr"!"~-':"."":~~ 1----------1 Broker l!lll 0:;<111 Lab forest 1055 .••..•••........••...•. !.(Ike 1111111 I hdrm home EAST BLUFF! ( 'h,11 lnlnl! 3 lll'dl nl :.:•I li.ilh I '11ntl11 Ill I'" 111"\l' ,1r1 .1 S\H•tlt"h I 111•pl.11•1•. l1t•.1ul1lul • 11111 ... cd 1'1JO• I\ ,orol l..11 i:•· 2ncl floor 111.1,,\11 ~u11l•" pn 1 li.1lh ll\111\'r \\Ill hC'lp l1r..incc \\llh 211·, down Sl:!.).ttlltl. World Wide Brokers, li73 4~f> Octot :it111 dl·~1,.:n ----------1 thruout 2 patio .... fl\ 1 dock. ii ltoh1t· C<1I .i;,o ~q. fl lllt-d & ('Jhlllf'lf.'d ~ame nr hrihb" mom \II 1n ltlnl cond By t11\ m·r Sl65,500 0J)C'n Sun Ui.!."1 1:-.lamar<· ll:li 11517 111 hi'S·S.'tl'I Minion Viejo I 067 ..•••••••••........•... CORDOVA LA FAMILIA O PPORTUHITY hill t 1 ffil'. rc,1 I t·stall' ,.all· ,,,,,..Ol \\ho require' -.ub,l.;n11.1I income. 1s Ol'"l'''r,otd\ nl•1•clcd b~ lnnl! 1•-,t.1hll'lh<'d li)c·al lir11kt•r Uulslanll1ng t•a1 r11n~' .11 :.i11Jhlc on ~Cnl·rou .. 1·t1m m1:.::.run ... pht \ rn.1rvl'lou!. up· portunttv 1111· th1' c·agl'r pn•ll'~ ... 11ma I \Ir lla:;t 1nJ::. lilll ~!'>61) COTTAGE NEWPORT HEIGHTS 2BH l nu,ual lktJ?hl::. homl' at ~~.(MMI C.:;111 us toda\. HEAR RIVIERA BEACH {;rrat 3 bedroom. 2 hath homt' " bcauurul u1·1•an & canvon ne1\ Short ":.ilk 0 \u on•' of San Oemcntc's most dei.1ra hie be;H•hes. On 1' 2 Lots to m~ure view & pri\'acy. New listing . VIEW TO CATALINA Out.standing 2 bedroom. 2 bath adult con dominu1um Sauna. 2 decks w super ocean view + hghh ol the city below Call lor more feature's BERTH,\ ll F:NllY REt\LTOHS 21!\DelMar 492·41<!1 GO JUMP mto the comm pool of this I~. 3 br. 21, ba. Sea\·iew Townhome. Elegant lll slr. suite w frpl & balcony. Up· graded cpts, cust. win· INVESTORS OPPORTUNITY IN SAN CLEMENTE! 8 1''urnished Units. always rented. l':xcell e nt con d it ion l ow maintenance. $257,000 Pacific Shore Realty Old City Plata ll 1 W. A vcnida Pahzada San Clemente 492-5300 lncom. Property 2000 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Other Real Estate ....................... ---------- Mobile Homes ForSale 1100 .....•••...••.•........ \lob1I home 20x43 520,500 I blk Crom ocean. Sl35 mu .. µace renl. 963·46~ 8\ 10. :! Hr. ~ Con\';11r. 111 adult park, S3-IOO ~6173 BEACH PAD DUPLEX Perfect ~tart.er units rn Garden Grove. S.W.000 4 UNITS • \nolher starter properly JU!>l a little b11:i;:er 1n Signal Hill, S74.900 4UHITS Just rl'<luced to Sll7,5t10 in Garden Grove 4 UNITS Nice buy 1 11 Ln~ Alamnos. Sl49,500. 4 UNITS ................ ....... (:qata Mesa 3224 Hwi1tlnwfon leach 1240 lnine 3244 ••...•.......•......... ·•··••············•···• •.............•.••.••.. LAGUNA BEACH 2BR.11ll wood & alass ht.n + Ira o!c. z.oned for real c11 t 11 t c No end, oeca n 1t1dc c>( hwy $170,000 eqw\li: for units or? f ' liGRODZKY, RJtr. 494-1611 Trade Up? We have hste<J a number uf propcrlicM, in difrerent pricerani;es. up to $2 and SJ mill io n m i n i warehou.'IC.'ll. Let u.s tailor an exch11nge for you. Century 21 Sporow Jnvelitmelll Division 963·7866 PS SST! 1-:XCllANG r-: & build )Our c!>tatc. INCREASE book val ue bas is & depre.-1at1on I N · CHE/\SF. lcaverugt' Defer cap. gain:. Tax. !'hone for appt. 675-4961 'l'UltTLEROCK·4Dr, fJm VACM'T 3 br. 2bu .. Cpls, IELOW M~RICET rm & dtn rm. pol)I & ko clrps, ~h1wr;h. dbl iar'-Sharp 3111 . :!Ila,''"' rusrac.SS75mt> 64 1·41!11 546·1'7110 locallon. $400 mo. A\iuil now i\Kk tor Dun !S-\11 80llO Consumera 8ewore! . New Woodbndi:ci condo 2 BR, i 1 ~ bu $345 Mo ;\J::enl tj..10 0020 Bt!forc you pc1y somr 3 BR. 1'' HA l'~odo in agene1c~ ror the "r un family .irc.1 3 \ r.. old around" coll ll1ghly upi:r•dl·d CONSUME RS GUIDE (.;omm pool 5425 Bkr •S...tiful Ho"'e * Many ha\C.1 and a re glad 962·4Hl 3Dr,den. f'am Hm.2 Ba. they did tOO's or hse's, EXEC HOME nr park & pool, ~o .vet>. plex's & apl ''\ avullable ~ $450 mo 551 12titi NOW' Al Beach or .. Up Brand nl'W patio home. 2 to 100'!> ol NEW llslmgs br, :! lrn. hr H'k rplc. COLLEG !-: PARK fornwr each day s m a 11 \\OH'n wood:., "l'l bJr mdl . 3 br. 2 ha. furn fee/FREE life bervicc. up~raded plu!.h trptl!. k1tch, air. be11ut1ru1 cpl & f~!IOO pool. isauna. JIH'Utt1 , dr!J8. Incl'!> :1 pool:. & 111 •Con1U1Mr1 Gulde 5475 963 7Rl1H dbhsc. $-150 ~51 :nu INSTA .... 1 ... 1. Super area. 41n 2hu. Ir!( "' " tam rm w,frplc. IJltm, UugeEa~u.tdc3br,o\t!r-Nr p ... ri. ... i.hµ'i: r sited dining urea, over Goldt'n"t:'l & llctl ::.l25 2000 ::.q ft Lge lenced mo. Call tw7 l&l!I HANCllU San Jouq11111, J br den. 2 ba, :.upcr Ufl grades. \ 1cw S!i25 L~c ~ ti537 oock yard Must see lo 3248 believe . f'1repluce. new ATIR .\l-rl \' ~: 3Br 2ba LOCJUna Beo ch rugs, drDJ>t.'l> thruoul. On-Cvrd palw. 111n'. lard ••••••••••••••••••••••• ly $'50 mo Call 642·0282 W /\V bl\1n,, cpb drps 3 Br 2 Ba end ol qui1•1 ror 11ppt to sc.-e. S395 t213159ri 007h street. <keen vww. /\rd• ----- ------Beach Heights. S.175. 2 Br l Ba. gar , patio, Sharp I h··drm, :! hJ, l'J>\!'t, HEGENT RE \LT't bltns, & yard. Su per drpe!, frt•sh parnt. pat 11> 496·9501, 497·3598 t'Vl'~ elelUl. small c hild OK, no fenced ':ml kids & pet pell. $325. Avl July 9. OK. Sl!}S. 96:1·451>7 Agrnt 2 Br I'~ Ba, ll>lt· \ •t·w, 545 .. 1355 Nofct• dN•k, walk lo hch & 1 luntmgt.on by the Seu Walk •,l block to beach 10x60 w Jlgc e nc losed porch & wl lge deck and li:e COVt'rt' por<"h +patio N~ o clubhou:.e & pool PRI CED ·ro si-:1.1. 536 n n or 551 ·6042 Tiu:. one 1s a !.IN•pcr THE CALLISOH CO. Custom hou::.c 3 Hr 2 U.i, BE.\l'UW \I.I\ way under market, 111 2810 Newpo11t Blvd 1 ti dbl 1'<l\""'ll()''1 I•', :.hops. siso yrly 194 :i22:1 W l Sl21 890 fpk. ent yar • gar " • • e!>lmmster a · · Newport Beach. Ca " clec opnr, close to 19th Harcl lo lend -.pat mu' 1•n1l ~ Br 3 Ha. 1,.:l· Ol'l',1n \ 11 HAPLESISLAHD Rfll!Es & llarbor 5425 mo un1l in,.,, 1u~l\l dc.-k Arch Ul'al·h Hi.;1, J\rt•alpndeofo\lnersh111 tote 54855911or631·2372 Bealh\lalt. l'n-.1ll' un J ~;;;mo. lyrbt'.4!1'J 1111 1nplex 1n a presl1gmu!o Wanted 2900 • ,,id~ :.! hr :! ha hul(l' , , arc,1 S2-t!l.500. •••••••••••••• •••••• •• Gorl!e<>U~ 4 br. re.id) lo rna-.ler ~11111• '" l'rhuit.~ :Ilk :..tia Sl·cluded, rn·ean lrv111e 'leadows 5 • 1'1. Mini Warehouses Prl\ part) "ants i\pl move into. rJmily :.ized J?Orl'(l'OU-. .:.irclt'n urea \ 1e\\. ~alk lo ~l'h .\.\ ,111 ~lx66 Upgraried,owm•r, Tht':.t' <1re rt•;i I bu1ld1ng. any a r ea, hnme. Top location Poob & lenuii. l't1Urls 1111w.s;so mu l!llt1lll:! S37 ,!lOO. 552-31n5 moncvmakers • Located S?'.!.OOO du li! 131 433· tb89• Agent S46 <1141 Ste1"' lo beal'h ~501 mo MOBILE HOME,, from 0We5l Covina lo San ans. devii.e "''"I L Hills )250 -C.Olle~e Park :i bdrm :? 8'1b '"" OC)Ufta I l•·rc·,. a late model 12xti0 Uicgo Rentals f d t I -••••••••••••••••• ••••••, , LA..,D ha. en yar . patio. rp . V~ry nil'f.> 3 ltr. :.! bu homt'.· Vl·ry sh"rt' .·i 111 , ., li.·t, lbr Iba w /wsh r. t.lryr & " ••••••••••••••••••••••• dhl iear $395 631-02()11 c d l 2 u ' arlult /pet purk (l\1N trom H ar~t"" l<> Hous~sfurnlshed · · --- -pt:., rp!>, nu pain. 1·vt:. drp~ DW rre~hl\' W3l Try for S?SOO d"n Occa~1de ••••••••••••••••••••••• EA~ SIDE 3Br, l Ba, lg car gar· palm, conv .. lo pa;~lc•d. 'r"nr.-'o yar1i. IOAC)Cord LandM II Manv drfrerent size BatboaPettmsula 3107 lrpk. 2 car garaJ?C', lg srhls & "hops. SJbS tovelv neighborhood. Re!>ales. 1rnn:eb al d1Ht•rC'nl ••••••••••••••••••••••• tncd yd. wlr,grdnr pd, _!J63 ~5G7 Ai:t Nofee Sl!lS ~·15671\gl "Jofet- 638-8502 pncf!b. Sl15 Ut1I pJ1d Hach sm <'htld OK. $495 mo SI 40 Util Pd! LOCJU"a H iquel 3252 ---Century 2 1 Spar-ow Ou11lcx Fe(' &16 S.>i5 I' t r"r many n1 1r .. \Valk to '--ach 20x57 2br a 1u. .! • · ' ' ••••••••••••••••••••••• ..., lll\e!.lment D1v1s111n llomclmders 5;7 0822 I b h Sm II I 2ba. JO'screen & glas~em 963•7866 · $185 Furn! a.1 Jl ca<' : J , l'l' J Ck. 2 ha fJmilv hom1• rm. frplc. 536·7955. call Hewport Beach J 169 Pool! Lge 2 Br pal, ref. f HEF.1 Lile Sen l nl .\\ail 7 15 $175 mo l'.111 <1fl6 ----------••••••••••••••••••••••• many m ore avl' Sm all tj..15·49oo . 4!15·5525 ATTEMTION BUILDERS 110 x GO H-2, ready for build111g. Prine. only 20lh & C hur c h , CM StiS,0011. Owner Ma) Subordrnale 5-lS 0137 12 UHITS:-C .M. rec FR EE/Life S<?rv Unt. *•Consumers Guide Li:e 2 br, I'• ba un1b. 2 y 1 ;, o Id . con v . I <H· SIS0.000 GSI equals SJti, 100 ~ton Summit tll'IV 2 ht . den. on•au 'u clbh~•· pool, SIOO 1\dull)o. 1711 • 491i·373S Tom I.Re. Rllr, H42·lti03 - --~ BY OWNERS· 1!1 allrac Acreaqe for sale 1200 live hal·helor units 111 • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • C~l--l ~1 C~J 6J] 2950 THREE ACRES FJnla:;t1c ha,, lht" :J bedroom. 2 bath homt· \\llh beautiful pool ~ JOCuzz1. Plenty of room 8 UNITS.BALBOA i duplexc..c;, all 2br , 2ba. <I t·ar encl. garage. BJ)' \IC" SIS0.000 dph; Tom Lee. Rllr. 64:!· 160:1 lor. hor:.e~ & etc. Term.:. 'l'Wo 4 plex. 2 bdrm , 4 yr:. BKR nld. d w n twn a rca lil4) 676 5717 5:Jfi 5006 Oll522·2080 ----- u ... DER THE DUPLEXES, H.8. " :! <.luplcxes. blu<"k lo OLD OAK TREE beach. 1:.1> 3hr. 2b:.r. l'lll'I Oak t rees hke you'\ 1· gara~e:. SJ6S.OOO ne\'er seC'n CO\'er lhr~ Tom Lee. Rllr. 642 lll03 gentle rolltn~ ;; acn• - parcel on pawd roucl' 3br h-.c 4 ,,ni;:I strv umh <111 ul1l's aHul T1·rm.. nr t omplet1on 2 Jbr~ UKR 2 lbr. WS.000 171 1) 67i-5ti!H :!522 Santa i\n;1 \\l'. I ~I oR s22.05.10 tj.16 :nn STEPS TO BEACH 645-4900 Wl' have summer rentals *•Cons"'"'"" Guide hy week or by m onth! associated BROKER S -PEAL TORS JOlS W l olboo & 71-1661 221 Via Lido Nord. Lido bit" I bdrm' $2SOO. mo. i\ui:;u!>l . Ca l l l:H3>2i0·4547 or <2131 93-1 0920 3 Br. Lido l~lc. ,\,ail for Only $275! La rge 3 Br house. f11cd yard, nice~ Small fee 645·4900 • "'Consumers Guide •2 br tnhsc Me~a \ rrde Pal 10. pool. S.'l:.!5 mo W D hkup. 1133 89i.:.._ 'le"o del M ur $-100 mo 3br 1•.bu Furn rm. trplc. "Rt !>Si mot :>umm<'r or yrl). 12131 ;\lcsu Verde 3 br home. 7!12 241fiorli7S·4J.16 f;1m rm, l>ltM. lrpk, pul10, bl•;iut yard. $125 Houses Unfurnished incl i:rdnr 830·3&10 Slit>. lari.:c I Br. pool' Nice urea' Small IN'. unl ~IS .. t!IOO • •Consumers Guide ~ HH l'flmlo. • 1•t'. rlrp' relr1.:. puol lt 0111" dubhM'. S35tl mu hi la!>l & tlt'p !fl'.I il!&t \\alk to bt!at h, ll11 horn•' ~1!1a Fl'l' Prirk L11.e vartl. l11•aut1ful ly decor.itt•tl 3B1 :.!BJ. lam rm. L'P s.52:1 rrlll \111 incl d. a\a1l Au,.: 111 l:!Lll ~11s1-:sor12111:m1 :iw.t Mission Viejo 3267 ..••....•.............• I lomefindt•r,. 5.Y; Ult.!:! Super 3 twdrm" ..! 11a1h " ram rm .\ l' 1 ftl' Occa~ Vil'~· :!hr. ~HS ,\II d r p :. . I 0 \ 1• I ok. L:nt h'l' nc1ghl>orho1>tl S" llomehnd1•1 ~ !'J:ii 118:!2 91>3-4567. Agl .. no I• 3 BDR~t . 2 Iii\ ~:!!J ~1 0 Cle~ 3-Hr, Fam 1!111 UNTIL SOI.I> greal \ 1ew, qu1l't 1'111 •It· l'allfii51105 )o3l'. S IOtr V,1r:1111 lOJ·08i I ······················t Collrge l'Jrk 4 UR. ll'd ='iEAR REACll 3 HH l'On Balboa Island 3206 yrd. SIJS mo do Dbl gar. poob. tenm!> ••••••••••••••••••••••• 557 1a:,1 cuort. be Ph·!Jti:! 6:111:. So Ba\ 1-'ront J Br. 3ba r.im 1 m d1ninl! rm. Yrl) &•pt SllOll or rurn Sl200 :<.o pl'l' lii'S 0525 "'••w:.!Br I •Ua 11 ... • ltpk, did 1•ar i:.11 lg I.ti Balboa Peninsula 3207 :\EW 2Br Dµlx. nit·c a1 ca. 'IOI~·. drp~ <'Pl~ Pnl'I PJllll i:,1r li2iS mu atlulls. ;,.ui 1-12.> WALKTOBEACH ~;x!:Ji:;'" ll'1' 11111 "· Shaq> lt>ntlo 'I RH 11 · - Bu. pool It pit-l..1tf, 01\ Newport Beach )269 $-125 mo ~;u; 1!J:i:!.tll t. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~:.\STSlllE.:.: Br I Ha. l~e '1:.!5 ~·rl~ :'\"pl 11..:hl• ••••••••••••••••••••••• k1tth. nu:c shJdc trrc~. Jllr. l~m rm. :.!lf.1 t lh~Jt TRIPLEX, C .M. "~" \ 1"w, :• L>r·, '°"'0" Kid• Sml ""l ron·1dt•r·•d S350 Hunti-on '"' • • -....,.,., ~ • ,,... ' •' .. ""J' :.loragl' Grrnt local10n. newer 3 o~ Opl"<. Fee mo. 1m· ut1I Ort\e hy 134 Harbour )242 S:!SO vrl) lkl'.trl ltorll 40 ACRES St.t.950 Full cai.h pri<'l' No. Ci\. 40.!!0. or I 20 Ac r e. p a rce ls. E i'. term:.. Sep. 40 acre dt' eds. O wn r /ag l hr. 2ba. frplc, yurd. <2l llomdincler" 55i·082:! E W1l«on t hen cal l ••••••••••••••••••••••• home. super 1·111111 :t 2br, lba. pntios. end. . Bruce. 548·0301 Oceall\'U condo 3 Br 2' ~ Hdrms garu"es. $170.000. Bt>ac•h cottage Sl!l5 Ulll --Ba. nnol. tennis Boal I " TonZLcc. Rltr.642.1603 paid. Fct• 2 Br. 2ba Condo. frplc. 1 "I 53.,·5-nlo(?l1l SllOO/mo. on I w \.uli·r 7 I 4 if>l-0· lt 27. Businffs Properly 1400 ••••••••••••••••••••••• TWOOMOHE Two Easl,.,ide CostJ :"11 esa houses. S-IR. 750 each musl buy both 3 FOR SALE B e d r o o m . a n cl ::? bedroom. Hy :.ippornl SUPER l\1 /\RK ET -mentonly. 12.100 sq.ft. Gross annual I IQ .1 ~ i;ales Sl.250.000. Liquor Cl• UDI license optional. Cull L. Plac• . • Ashcr aft, 644· 7270 Prap•rti•• 752-1920 " «4tbt SIHit/c 1•oo OUA•l n NtwP01n 1ucH ~ REALTORS 1800 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Homefinderi. 557-0822 0 /W, lr;.r~h compactor. ~ipav -· ' _ Condo. n e 11· sh J 1 11 -----Brand l'icw. 645·2062 2 Br. 2ba Townhome 2Br+dcn,\ll.'" Corona ct.I Mor 3222 d3}'S. 645-3567 cv. Soprr Plu:.h Wl'l bJr 2 WAT EH FHO°"T 11<1'11.~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• Easl1>1de 2br. 5275. Kids balconies. Formal 0111 __ <.:.tll 6:!1 I IC"' <~unml vine covered 3 Br. ok. Unt Fl'<' rm :"n"'"· Vo4;'1. S:l!l5 ;\'ewport ~hort•s :1 rm :! 2 bu hm Cozy red brick . llomefmders 55i 0822 mo C.:<~11 \Ir d:.on Jt ba. 2 palm' 'rl) ~.oil frplc. p\ t patio. S575 mo. --8911263tl i\Jtl " \"' !15 ~-~3 (;allt:W4 6397or673~i>31 1 Jflr. 3ba Condo Frplc. o • .,,. ' '" )) "JASMIHE CREEK" PLAN II 3 Be<.lroom. 2 bath. Cam i· ly room Includes use of clubhou:.e. pool & jacui1i & lennr~ <"Ourts. Call for appt RISO/month. pool. 2 car ~ar, lgc µallo. Clean. lar,:: .. J hr. :.! ha .! Nu:c·clean Nr Sl'.hb. Irvine 3244 bnck lpk~. lol'Jlc<I 1111 S350 Call 540·35~ ___ ••••••••••••••••••••••• tine upper ha.1 t·ul tit• KIDS ;fETS OK RENTALS !-o,1t· Great ne1ght11wh111xl Eastside twnhsc $395 mo. :? DR. 2 ba . . S.11 01450 SlfJ5 mo. J\;.:cnl lilfi AAI 1 675·8258 or 646 4848 3 or::? HR. + O. 2 ba . S52;. ,, t .,1 ., Sharp l tor. family-Mesa Verde Highlands home lluJ?c bcdrms. 2 frplcs. wash /d r>er. r efrig , 1o?arden111ir Jnclud. Qw<"k possession $435 Call Stan Meyer. Bkr. 546-4111 or eves. 549-1366 3 BR. 2 Bu ... 5395157;. 4 Bt . t"l'Wpor ,, ior<"• .. ~ 3 BR, 212 Ba s-1501550 blks to bch, pool & tcnn1,, 4 BR,:.! Ra. Sl!IS 673-225:! COST1\ MESA 3BR. 3Da ~ Eastbluff ~•nr.:ll• levPI homt.'. 3 Bil. lam. r m , hke new' Al!l 64<1 1133 Thill h11:hi) 1111i:r.1t.lcd 3Br. 2rld, honll' 11111·orner lol ha), <tll lhc l.tr<e>, t.11:. hwasher. up.:r:'lrit>fl tarpel t·u.,lum drupes 1n th· rm & r,1m·rrn. bhn<ls 1n k1ld11:n. mi.tr bdrm 11 1 rclreat. rn1r1ored "ardroh(' dour:.. )ohdrng gla::.s ctoor11 . co~1·rcd patio al•ro:-.:4 whole b:11.:k of house, t'\trn walk., and ~lisl'.ion slone fcnn• 111 rl' dow lrealm cnu.. Heady ----------1 lO go ror only $96.500. SOUTll Of JllWAY-3 Bit home. Ha r dwood noori;. brick fireplace. S1tuatt."fl on corner lot. By appt. S.SSO/month. Sharp 2 br condo Mesa BE A UT :\T A R I N /\ ll lG TI LANDS New sin.Ille ramtly homC's, un bche1·able low price~ 2 Slv. nil amenilres W<tlk brke to bch. W. V1tlona tn Valley rel. L . tn HtdAeCrl.'st Open n a rly. 9U11•411T I ~U• ..ousr ~Ul TY 11630••,..,..Ca.laMoMI 645-9161 AA Realtors 307 N. El Cam ino Real San Cle"' 492-2100 "r v or d Fu I I~ BONUS l:ind:ieapefl, :.pnnklc1s HOOM Fantastic Ocean view tronl & reer Mounturn BO..._.US Harbor Estate bcaul. 3br new from front & back f"'W 2ba. nu crpts & drps. } nrd By Owner. ~li,500 GAH1\G 1-~ Enclosed cour l yard. OpcnSunday l r1 XJI 2551 80..._.US ~torage for boat or t r lr. 1aft. 6 wkd;1v•>1 Bruker!> 1""111 'I t C 11496 7408 l~o:..t L', •• any x ras a • 11\Vil~ ' · r or 496-9162 --•-------1 Sharp 3 bedrm homf'. ------------1 ntc'<ff C.:ht•rry La kl• in the San Jumt Madnd Dt•I l..1.iti. brand c 0 u n 1 y <' 0 r r 1 do r Capistrano I 071 new. bt>uullfully lndsqxl. On•rs17ed ""R , 4 car ••••••••••••••••••••••• cover<'d p!ltlo. planters, J:ar. Reu l p r ide ot c-.sa Capistrnn o, 2br. uut.o spmklrs. air. pool own<•rshlp condition. Do C.Ondo by own. $52,000. 1'i1C(J yard llp~rafled )OU llkO lots or bonuses'! 499-27Ss FOUR PLEX <'LOSE TO WATER -in Old Corona de! Mar. 2 Bedroom upper unit with ocean view. Beam cell· in~s. ho rd wood floors. No childr£'n or pet s . Jl25/mo. COLE OF NEWPORT REALTORS 675·5511 Verde. Patio, pool. S325/mo W /D hook up. Slv. & refr1g. Garage. ~2·4610 -------Duplex 2 hr, 1 ba. i;:arai::e. S!.50. I older child ok No pets. 2178 0 Placentia 54S·7983 2br. 23IJ Avoc11do St • $275. + ul1I No pets Nosngls. &t2-4~ '+523 CA,..PU5Dl·IR\11'4E Sl9~.:_ti~ - NEWPORT SHOH ES Rancho San Joal]Utn, end 2 Br. 2ba. new paint. l~n unit. 2 Br. den. 2 b:i, lake ms. pool. walk lo bch~ & golf course view Im Sl9S 548·36.">7 mac. S450 644 ·57'1 or ---- 675-5364 no 9 Verde KIDS ;PETS OK Dix 2 Br unil m Tn·plex. -----. d Pool. Jacuzt1, 2 lge Br'-., Frplc. Rar. patio & rear New Wood hr 1 !( e · 2'"Jt Ba. f'P, $400 642-'1312 --------• yurd. No ch1ldreo1pets. Sycamo r e Pt a n . ---- Pref middle age adulls Landscaped. draped, 4 BLUFFSCONDOS or o I cl c r . $27 5 I mo. br, 3 ba. $52.~ mo. 752 2881 Lease!! starting at SSOO &12·5872 . ----i UNI V, P ARK, grnblt Month Agcnt844·ll33 4one BedroomApls. 2 Br. Begonia , hardwood Danorolftt 3226 Rutgers, :J Dr, f\'am Hm. NWPTC RESTCONOO .... 4 Enclosed Garages Ex· noor. fplc, gar, hltns. ••••••••••-••••••••••• 2'h Ba. nr tennis & pe>0ls 4 BR, children OK, POnl, cellent Loc ation 641 SJ50. 675-11929 aft 6Pr.t & Close lo o~na r olnl S49S mo. Agt. 752·01!18 tennis. wa lk to b<'h Yrly 1 Shalimar Do Not Disturb wkndt . Marina Ntw 3 &c 4 bdrm TUR""',,. ROCK Vl"'W 3 llSO. 64()..1751 l h r u out. P h d n · Call Now~ 645 7221 ----------1 &;l.3-U>84. eves 75~·127 1 CEMTURY 2 I Exec home, ocean vlow, 4 UyOwn cr. Pnn<'only Weatcllff RHlty Bt 3 Ba. den, Jacunl, 3 Br 2 Ba.-Cordova. 180 ---------$184.000 to sell. S8~0 deg view. JJe cut de sac 1---------•1 least'. 493-5610 lol, o.bove tennis ctls. Best of 2 Wo;.1.a.. SUN HOLLOW ' br, 2~ M&U\1 ut>aradei., YA or I ftA ('01\VCnllo nal. S72.SOO Open Sat /::iu n J 4, $81-1'749 Me.,,.,t leodi I 069 ••••••••••••••••••••••• UDOtSLt •Br. Tenant.a '130.000 . horn 'r .. 1 2000 t~ , .. &.;J:> "' MARK L WILSOH N 1 c e 2 B R • 1 B 8 • es 0• case. Br. F am Rm, 2 Ba, lge $170. 1 Br at Beach ' Many w/aarage, stove. N o 2200 sq. I\. No pets. '650. --' · •· I s 11 f REALTOR pots. Ava il. Aug. l , (7lf}752-8Sll Ywu, nr lennu ex poo s . more avl. m a ee, 645-5557 &4C).7il04 • SS4S mo Aat. 752-0IM !.~~Lire Serv. Uol. 2 Br 2 Ba, 2 s ly. duplex. ---------• ..........,.,.,.., bllrui. rcJlig, gar, cpls. ••~Gt.Ide ~ S32S 499-2360 Fomtaill Volley 32l4 1465 COM lge 3 Br hst, lge l.1v Rm & 500 5qJt Fa m Rm. ('fl UA1l f ~ll ul Thu•Mll y July 7. 1977 ..._., U"*'-"""" ~nwnh ''""l•h•d ApertMefth u.rtww. .,_..,,..ttb u.m.... ••••••..•.•............ •···•••·····•··••··•·•· ......................•••••••••••..•....••.... M.wpori leecll 120 "-•,.,t .. ec.. l76t Coate Mn• 3114 CotteM.M .•..•..••••..••.......• , .....••....•.....••••• •·•··············•••••• •...•...•...........•.. 'f~l (11q 111 _. I ht I r>,t 11 101 "I I I 1 uf ill' •• '"' \ \11 \ I • I ... II • I ' 'I II I IJtlllJ~# w A THFROMT \1)(1 16o01ld \11·w IU\1111 .. .,,) I lllt SI ~-· lllU .: 1111 Jl:.llO Mu > · '\)5MflSHlr1G/ )276 ..................••.•• San Ju. Ccapi1trono 1278 ····•••••••··•·······•• IM CHARMING SAN JUAN lHl.J 1:111 :\II\ H~.AI T Oii .,." Ullll 3 Br:.! RJ. ~ <! Ur 2 Ha . t Bdt n• hJlh , uudu ••••••• •• •••••••••••••• ~ Guruge. Rel· Jrea ,, 1 1 11 ~!A.I B.11 h1•lu1 \pl He:.µ lWil !lull) 848 ll311 l p .. 1.11 r, ''""'"''''"' 1Jl•1111 .11111 '\11 11..i,. onl.-----------.1 1 ,JI 14,11 ••.:•· 1 •• r~·un..: & l'1:n 14.11, UJ> \" 1.Yo of Ofonge Counl~'s t.i: 2Ur I Uu. encloi.ed 1,•,11l11r-. """' 1n, 18 8 mOSlbeoullluloponmenr i:arul(l'. 2 blk:. Lo beach I'·'''" Wun 1 1 "' Ion.:, Capistrano Beach I commu~es.A reloxlng w.1lk lo :.lore:. & bu:.. S26(1 •. tll hlh ~t . .J1 d.1\' ••••••••••••••••••••••• serr1ngwtrhstreoms rno ~)5131 1 ·1 ·1 11, 11" • ' •• "' •11! ~''" ""1u"•· ~ 'to'' :. hr wotertolls, and mojesnc "''l'i..1·n1I• II "'' ·'"""''r olu1>l1•" ·•Ill " I' "·' Apartmenh Uftfurn.. Swnmtr Rental• 4200 Office Rental 4400 Money Wartt•d 5030 Lott Ii fouftd SlOO ...•..•.................•....................•................................•...•......•.. ·•········•·•••••····•· .....,___. h h 3169 .. CdM dlx t rin i.wle COM DUI'Lt:X, t'qull> LOS r Vurt f'ood+ ,..... CIC PYI' E.hi11rnl condo. IM" Ultl"'1 \ (" .impli·p' • 11,1•1 .,100_00,1 "1 .... d 11.·mJlt'. lr\1ne •t•11~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• l11•u.n11us _., fir .... Ila 1<' '"" "'' • ""' \: ( di ..... UM ,, " $1Mntolumotli5WUO ~.000$30.000 s~:n1'1> t>rY, nen Y .,..., I llJ<il u·:s LI oo ·\IU~A l l' 11 •H' t' v n " .it •· r Tl 1 1i13 llS3 "" 41 \1 ..J...) \11 .1 nu:e 2ncl rlr 11111 i br ,. rumn111ndt0a '1l"14 111 :! p, l Offll'C' rcct'pl1ou & Loll Dllrk cray ltH'l)alc- :! h.1 f µ ti " .:.ir ll\l l1<1) llilltrnJ J ,I "" :! n·:.lroom:. 72U i.q II 111--' Sl25 mo "" llll utll 6J,i.1de Or llllmc·il "' ll1tJI ~'nl Valle} 962·3200 Moti~1, Trutt cat Spky&J:t~·l~ll _.. \lalurt! a1lll~ unh cp). Jul) \ui:. ~e11l o.idl 5035 lO&lw _ ·--• t>i:t OtW 1 $1200 mo IH4 9ij.'i6 llenl l•r lea~e qownlown ••••••••• ••••• ••• •••••• l.ol>l Black female s col I Ur hw ,. 111ct' i:ardn, I B..ilboa hi. J Ur hiw 1\111l hlk heh gJr, $250 mll $350wk tl7J 12ti0 l'' '-'"" 675 ~5 <! Ur , huge deck. ,. 'lt!\\- lg1· LI\' Hm, I hlk lo beh gjl~~ b73· 1200 C\I!" l!J\STBLUl''P . Slunn1na 2 hr, 2 bu studio w frpk & bay view Patio Pnol .\dult:1 only No lll't~ L"l' at $450. 640·03<19 San Clemente 3876 OCEAN VIEW H rJ nd nt'" 21Jr,. ~15 S3l\S Near Pico Bch 105 IJel Rep osu 714 496 52i5 UCf:AN FRO T \PT ~'lne~l in Jdull II\ 111i: N11 peb pleJ"e :! fir. 2hJ S375 lip 01"h"':.h r. lrpln. carport All g.._, pJtd 492--1178 111 h1rnl .\nahe1m 995 112:°1 H.I. OCEAHfRONT Beuul 3br. 2h11 . i.let•p:. I'.! J\ug & Sept 1142 lli03 Newpo rl 8 e11ch 11car ot~:.in. L,.:e 3hr, 2ha, i:ur Avail now' 642 1603 Tr111ler. -.l1ll> 5. on bl.luc h Avail .July lb thru July :ll S:JOU H7:1 I llil V~atlon Rentals 4250 .•....•.•..........••.. I bl<x:k tn bt'ach I hr .ipt lum SllJO week or $250 111u vearlv Ultl md 1171 8-.171 K33 211{1 RJ.:ht Jl"rn"' from bc.it•h al Sl.•ash11re & 53r!I St Somt• 11c:ean '1ew Rest :.ud1ni: & \nlle}ball .creu 2 bdrm' '\'Jtlable Jww lhru Aul! Wt<t>klv r;il~ t.-12 Will 11 CJ ~t.:d1cal Lab P ror ue. vie. Moanolla a. In Offll'l'l> ,\mplc parking LOANS 9% dlJnapolb. H.B July 4.lh SI 15 $:125 mu mcl ul1I. Re" anl, 968"'827 %3 1243 or 960·3224 Also 2ftd TD La ans Plcno Encuttve Suites O<f1ce avail. Overlook~ u1rport & mountam11 ;\1rPQrl/Reg1stry area. ~ Mlchcl11on, Irvine 752.023.i Fairest Terms i.mce 1949 Sattler MtCJ. Co. 642-2171 545·06 I I PRIVATE PARTY Will pay more for vour 2nd T 0 642-3573 Ask u.., .1buut bl. 2nd or ·Tlw Complete Ofhcl'·· 3rd tru.~l d l.'NI toan11. l '<>n 9 Ofltcl.':. + \\orl. room, lury .!I 111\t''lmt'nl l' 0 II fe r I m. ' II 0 I l . D1v1s1on •11,;1 7!1tiii lcung1.> Grnd flour Xlnl prk'i: 45' ft Tup Cost a Mt.':la loc 2500 !.Q fl. or Annowicemenh / less <il4 )540 2200 or PLersonal& r.!L ... <71049-1-4797 oil .--.... EXECUTIVE SUITES Do you need an orfice w1lh per!>onulized ph.one coverage. :.eeretartJI i.en tl.'C!>, & easy al'ce:.' lo lw):. "! You c11n fmd Jll lht' PLUS a "arm rnendl) almosphtm: .ii ti66 Baker St CM Nr ()(" \trport (71 I l 546 ~ ....••..••.••.....•.••• 5100 ........•..........•••. SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS sickle Impel llhyme Typhu• SKIRl\llSll ~"'T wb1lc rem. lierm Shepherd, VIC l7Lla " Ir vine. CM Rew~r1~ ! 6.'11-0098 ~--Lost tlui.k1e 1sam1>)'AcJ l"emu le d u41 . Gray 1ltlk /whl. Med h't, ··t1e1kki" SlOO /rewarct ~ 4'l3ti & 646·6160 Lc.Nl . blk fem Cocker ail~ rloJ.t, K yrs old. 3 t<'bC IJllWi., "'ht muule, whl rur collar Vic. Wi111on ~ PlacenlJa, CM 631·~: Found Terrier fem dog 714 Vic Bolsa Chica & Edinger. 893·3991 ---~· r~ SlSQ ••••••••••••••••••••••• Dnnking problem~ (.;all Alcohol Helpllne it hrs a day 835-3830 PREGNANT '' t°Jrln~ confidenti.11 l·oun11elt ng & referral. Abortion, adoption & lra>ll tk••.111 , '"" trnm rrees. Feol\Jrlng pools. th•· 1111111, 11q•il1111i..111~: .Jacuzzi, sauna, bffllOrds. .!/Ir 1 llJ. l!Urdl!l'. p.illO, I child nu !Jt'b , s.!15 mo M7 1;1112 San Juan Capistrano 'JEW .! hr .!'• l>u lu\un furn 1·und11 l.,q:una, 01.•eJn\ ll'"-\\ alk to bch 9'(J() "k \dulh ~ .. t.t fiAl>!J 3878 Refttols to Shor• 4300 V1t>w 111f1l·ci. Jv111l<1blc in pn•:.t1i:1ou!> llunlln~ton Bcuch cxel'llll\e 11ark Incl rt>cepUorusl. reccp tum rm. corfet'. phone \t the h111rdrei.:.,•r ~ Shr 11nnQUllt'l'd her enj!agemenl but I lhmk 11 wa~JllSI aSKIHMISll kceplnl! 1\PCAHI:: 547 ·25413 Santa Ano 3 280 l' a I' u 11 l'<J(" h ~ 11; :111 on<! excnlng clubhOuse • •• • • • •• • • • • • • • • • • • •• • • t'.1 m1no l'a phi ra1111 111 11 wl!ll social evenlS. Tennis. \'.11·,1111 ''" I '• h.1 l onctu ·l!~l llX.'l'.J a fl er tipm gym, and volleyball or "' '"m1h ,ir•··• lltl!hlv c d IM 3822 TtleVllloge.Ma<eol 11pi:r11d1·1I $:'7'1 HK i1 •• ~?!'~ •. ~ ... :; .•..•••. evenAhiogyou·re"'A~ing '"•:! tli 1 ""' """' fa< FumlMe is avolloble •Ill, :!U.1, 'lllH 'I ,h.1111 di\ • 111111t1, nr S.• 1 ·~1 l'l;11J 1'11111 I!·" . .!. .. k, (ri··· 11·nt ::.:J'i~ ••Ill I lh.! Westminster 3298 ······················• ''"'"'' I lll·tli m 'h.1 lllll. I•\\ I Ill • tit I" l..t1b & pl'! (II\ \I ,111 1111\\ .,;111.1 .-.. , l!'~.7 \J..!e·nl 110 l••t -. ·~'~~ l 'Oltll'.\ l>t·:L ~I \I< 2 llr ·1 u" nhou"' I 1 pll l'u•I ft•nn1' c..._uru•· 1u .. i·.iu ,\ l'U1<.1ht1J 'll'14"' l lu"t. 111 'hlllJIJllll! ~ I 111•· h1·.H It t.~I ;!61 I One ond Two Bedroom Adult Llvlllg 0111ces open 9 00 ro 6 00 Now rennng I !Ir i:munct flcHir , pal10 l!lll , nr San lltci;o Fwy. Hdlt:.. nu p.:h S2HI mo fi7'1 021\tl .! llH. I ha condo 'IJ 1· Hunt llhr ~85 mu R 16·<1292 :-,, • .,. 2 & ;1 llr in f>·1Jln. \IC\\ \\,ill.. to lll':tl'h 509 1>4'1 .rn Jn• :.:11; lll!u:! 'il-:W :! h1 2 IJ,1. hlln,,, $.'l(M) mo <;.1rl 1eld Hl•;t1·h ~I ;;iw 2 BLKS HUNT CTR 1 I.Jr I' • hJ ri·de1 ne\4 •........•...•......••••..•••.•.•.....•....... :! Hr s tudio 53:!5 l>ts hwa~her l aundry tatil1t11·~. pool r\11lcllo ll:ll-!M:l2 or •19'.I !lli7'' 111 l!IJ·llt.il<! Santa Ano 3880 . .•...•.•.•.......•.•.• !°'1\11\M'l £lt'ill"h . .! l\r lpfc hllns. 1·arl•1·r '"1nw11 ~so 111 5:12 .• .. 110 • 110)1f; Sil.\ lllNC: • •:'h•t>d a rnomm'•lt•" Fn .... · l1!.l1ng Hl.'h•rrab !l<im Kpm 5;IO 21!11 :! llr I '~ 11~1 rpb. drp:., .t::M. !>2511 i~!I 11117 µd pJ!IO, blln~. encl 2 llr .1pt lo ,11r " malun· ~:,11" .D I It-mah· SIJ7 5<J + J UI 11 (.'J,.i \ IC 111rt,1 :~IK ltiOI South Laquno 3886 ~t F ,h,1n· I llr hrn1· " pool. W U :>1:>11 • 11111 ••••••••••••••••••••••• UB.~26120 un11wer111~ "ervu::t• Seey Lost & found 5300 :-irr\'l<:t• & photot·op1cr ••••••••••••••••••••••• 11va1I (714 I 1\42 26fj5 or Lost 61l2 dark i:rny mule 1\.17 27117 Wcimarancr I } r old Vic Balboa Pcu Ans to Business Rflttol 4450 I> am on It c w a r cl •• •• •. • • •.............. 673 ... 8011 or 675· 1806 LINDA & VICKI O\icall Moss• For the F. of It! Scrvinl! ull Orange Co. 113.'1·7313 •MICHELLE'S• Outcall Massage .. 4 DELUXE OFC'S t'onr rm . St'at 2.'l. all 11aneled. 'm wh~e tn re Jr I or:? 'r lt•U,..l' l.:.okl· F 111 e,, t J 1· 1.· J Kent lldrkm:. U)ST Blk mule Lah. '1c IOAM-2AM 73J.446Z N w pl H gt s <I r l' ,, • ~- Heward 548-6515 Spiritual Reodft- il-4 51'.\l-!l:t!IJ Lost Tabh) :\tanx 1 JI Hunnv tail Whl hind fL'Cl. ~0-8263 or 537 22'73 I) ... ..,... 1-, .. -,5 FOUN D . P .1cl..Jl:l' on c,.~,.,. '1"11 ,. •11 0 llanovl.'r Sl (' :\1 I "k 1815So. El Camino Real San Clemente Fully he For appl 49'.o! 7296 Condominiums Unfurnished 3425 q;t 1·111'1 t.!i&r .1dll' Pl'I' S!k."l K 1:! i:ttll l.j!I' q111el lll'-UrllJU" I'\ l'I .' It I :! lt ii ,qil 1111 I :ll'' .111..-tu ""l'nll" pn \ Fem tu -.h,111· :ihr ·111:1, ;! frplr I urn h'<· ~llKI llH I mt'.t h 'Mti 'U:!l! lie a dt II h ti near ajtu Tulber l in llunltnjllon lk.1ch S50 per month llnn~ ''"n (urmlun• Our rec-cpllnnt!>l "'ll .cnswt.'r ~our phorn· for Stu p1·r monlh 11.111~ l'tlul 11l t 11·l'. MASSAGE RGURE MODELS ESCORTS OUTCALL OHL Y 631·3811 • • • e •. e . e • • • e • • • • • • • e • • ( I ~ .i lK._•flt i!itJfll \ ltl' In 'I \\I'll rt 111• oll h Jiii • ·h.1 C1•·•1ft ht1ll Pool&_ .... tl//1 '·'' "'tl"10 tl\1) ..... ·"' t 10111 1111 111.1 .. utch .. p,•1 1.u 111.11 \ "'" I" t loo h '' .111' 1111111 '" ( ~•J.:Hr).t ,, .. ,U U\u l."'ll 1•r.t :!ilil '"'"'' l ll\11111 .1t11111 \,:t •• 1:. 1:111 ll.1 \' I lo•lol\1 Ill I ll.1 FI' d1·• I.. 111 .1111 11•11~:' 7 Iii I .1, n11 n • 'I!. n 111 n t,.I \ .!H(• ,1 ~1 I 111 : 11.1 1l11plo•" l-'rpl1 i.:.11 p.tlto l.11111 tit\ 111111' t • .ti Iii~ '•'Ill\ Townhoust Unfurnished \ 1·.t If\ ,:1,,!.1 I "11! 1· I Ill 3525 l111u-.t• Sm.di p1•I llh. •••••• •• • • • • •• • •• • • •• •• li7.t .~Oti:t l'\ t"' u1 \4 "'-ntl:-.. "·"' 1 ·1 .. nw111P p.11111ram11 '" 1·,111 , 11'" F1 11r.-1 ... ,,ut Costo Mesa 3824 d t•c'f1f ht Ulttl th'\\ J>Otll •••••• •••••• ••• • • • • • • • • •'111! 1 ""'" -.1 • • l\all•ll.1 FROM S2 30 '<.It ~•I.I" 1•1 I .,,, •" "1 \1.11 111,• ,11lulh uni_, "' 1•1.t f!t.J" 111 1, 1.,1ri:1• t ;!~.! h1 ••f•I l>,h11h1 ~·'' llllCJ Aporimenh htrnished ''·" 1111 • i'< ...,, oil 1'1 •••••••••• • • • • •. • • • • • •. 1.1 • .4!'; I Ba.lboolslond 3706 -,11•11 1111 •1111 ,11 ,,.. .. 11,1. ........................ h1 .\ d1" .... pit p.11 ltt ,, Ill I 11.1 ".11 t l'.111.. I""'' \dulh .,.;i~;, ,, 1•.1rl.n" ,, .. , 11111 I•'", 1·, 111q,11 1i:i;•1!1t" 1~n t:!Z"l _., \ .. Instant Mo•e·ih Balboa Peninsulo 3707 \ ••1ttr.olh 1111 l"mlJ ••••••••••• ••• •• • •• •• •• \It·'·' ,,· fh'"• I" nh'.'\C sm.111 'l11d111 1 .. 1 "f\ I ~'" 1 • , "·' 11 in 1 m . .11lull onh n•111 ,m11l..1•r p.11111 I!·" .111 1-11nol •.~: •. ~w;;1,,,., i.1111• lnrl•1111•1t """ Corona del Mor 3722 :;11~ '"" .111~1 l ll'fl l'l:!I ••• •••••• •• ••.......... \n~ttwttn Sl ( .ill \I Lt '" 1:.11 11 no , 11 .. 1. 1nv -.1 :!" ""'' i;.i:, lna5 11111 1•,11111 ) '""' hh '" lll'h ; I I Iii I l.1 I, 1·1 ,., 3724 S40.00 WEEK & UP •Slucl10 & I flll \111' • l\'&~I J1tlS1·n \\,1tl • l'hone S1•r' I lttl 1111111 ..!:liti N··" Pt>I t Ill Id ( \1 d~ ~n;,;, or i. \.> :t~kti SUS CASITAS •'Jll\ fu111 l.1tj!\• & in.ill I hr ~:!'• 111 "11iU \111111' 1111 fJ•·h 'I It 'ew11ort flh rl ' ' Faxhollow Vllloqe t..!1 \\ \\'1h1111 t. Iii :!11111 l'l II'\ llll l'' Vl I('\ •:.!111 111" 11h1111w " I rl'I ·I .t-t\1 p:1l IU ,'(. l'l\C' ~ara~(· '\J111ll,. t'llllli ltl & U\l'I' l'•>ol <\. n11·11111 JI\ :ttl ~:Sult· 2 Ill 11:1· I.II '"' 11<'1' ::-0111all \Jltl ~~,., ·~is 1~11 nr ~ ""' s.;::; .! 111 1111lt111lt1.il 111111 ""''" 1: .. r dr 1111111•1 fpl1 !lshw,hr .1111111' m.11111" 111 d'tl no l•l'l" .;.:12;, mu '.IC~ 11!1!11 ~11dwlh• "' Cl1·m \j,1 ...,harp. I Ht l)!t 1 ll'Jll. -ha~ bltn' 1"~11 lnrlrv :! hdrm un(urn .1111 \111111- 110 pet>. ~'I :, ~ hlUl5 """ Laguna Beach 3748 ......•.•............•• h11 "°·"" 111111"1 I llr dupll•x. ~ ~:ml SJ;l.'l mo ...,ummer lknlill :! llr \ 1clon11 Be11rh \ui: 15 t1 S.•pt 15 s.!00 wk Call l'li 1571 Hewport Beach 1769 ················~······ M5·l<lfJ'I (.111C11-'F DEP W \II S'l1 ''..;'IJI -.;(; ~ Hr l HJ i:ardcn .ipl Pool. n .-t 11r('a S?il.'i illl \Y lKI h Sl COUNTRY WOODS fo:11ljl..,1dc m•or new 2 hr. den. sk~ \11tht. all bltns Adult' nn pell\ S.1~5 11-16· l l&l or 645·!1513 :!!Ir I ltJ Frph ,. rpl!> cir~ 'In jX!li. S2/IS 711 l>d;rn Jrt' 962 41132 \1!1111 ! lot•olt<Hllll l1<•0Jlll 11·111111: 11" l'l'h ~Ill ~thli \\ Wil-.;on 1nq \pl I-" Hwitinqton HarbOur 3842 L \STsllH. 11j1I\ t111t 111 I ll.1 hlt11' r I> W, lnclr) hku11-.. I 111 ti p.11111 & l"t 1:;11 l'l11ltl 111.. ~!~I 11111 157 ll:!llH .tll til' .\1 \JlUl'l llfll'-. t•:;1~l ltilh l'I '' atl 11 t. 2 tit" l ll.1 i.:.11 I" t vii ''' l'l'I • ..;:12!> 51K lilK.! EJ•l -11h 11111" H•-o ·d 1·111·1 11;11111 I 1•11 \olllll \I I ii JI ol .,,..: ...... ,,, ol 11pl1·' 111 II" I 1ph- npt•11 lw.&IU Ill' , ... ,, \II "''' l.i:• I ho : h.1 • l'I· dr11' ' .• ' Jtt., ' \ \ .t' I "II\\ '-"10 fllU 1U, 1J 1lf • '" "'" """ {"ht hit .. n ul.. '" , ... , •. \le• -•Pl '· I'""'\\ .111.11 1· to I.' I\ 11; '\IK 1 I Ill ....•.••••...........•. HARBOUR LIGHTS 111 lt•r, d1·i.:.1nt adult .1p.1r111wnh l.1Jl'at1•r1 in ,.,l'fu1<1\ 1· llu11l 1ni.:ton l1.11h11111 Tht• l l.1rl>Our's 11111~ .1pa1 llltt•nt t•om11lcx Sp.1t•11111~ 1 111 . ~ Br & l Iii I "'"'' 110111 plO!ll' (111111 -::!~II ;J 11• n•m pl<-m1•11l•·d h' .. 1wh.111l1ni: ;.::.nh•n'."o '""-\(l n•:t m' .1 111·.111111111 rl11hh1111''' '' 'tl\llhl i.:, \ ftl 1.u·\,/ I I l.111:1· l•kol (.. .... ,t 111 .ill "• llUl1•1I 11I 1"'"11"' \\'1• 111 \ i1 • \ oll tu \ '''' I l .11 lu Hll' I 1~hh l'.111111 I"•"' If\\\ (11 \\,II l\t'I I 11 \11:11n 11111n ol 11H S,111 011"1!11 ~"'' l'\11 ""''·' ( "hll'il 111 \\ .11 n1·r I 11 \li.:•111•111111 ltiiOll S.I\ 11111111.. l ,.11w ii 111-1•• Ull l',11111 I l Ill I'·'"' l'l·• ll111111•r111rl1·1 ,·1 i tlll.!:! L~a leach 3848 II \\ \II-:\ 1111 \\ ..._ ~\' f \'fl\' \\. t tt I\ .,t t "'"'l'h•·•, '1•.H 1,v• hr .1p1' \\<Ill \11)! ht '"' 't .• h I 1• •• "" 11' '" ~"'' fk•I• ~:~t t11 'i:!!MI 1;\f, INf';;, S.•nw1h111i.: :-.111•1·1al • lh1 li•tt lk,1ut 11111•1111r \\111111 p;11whng 111111' 11 f! 11111 "'"" 11'1rii... j.11·11111 ltltrt ~;11111;1 1111! i:<ir 1·111 pd :.ISO mo !l!lli iOi.I 1·::0,.,l~tdl "''"" 111·1·11 :1111 uppel ,,, ... \II .,.,.,, I" I ~1i;:) "i l.1 01111 "''· :>~i 5~ l C\ l'!'I NEWPORT APARTMENTS I flH Slf1S + L""l 11 \dult ... no p1·h .!1"41 '\1.'wpurt llh 11 l \1 r.12 ih.11 b1•forc 5 E ::.1d1.· :! I.Ir hlln' ""' gm l'let IJ(i. l\1th 01\ no pet' ~8.) 1;<1i; 111).I l.arge 2 llH .! Ha. lrpll I> W. ~~1rba,1:1• tl•~P end )lllr Pre~lll!lllU' \le~.1 \'t•rth' urro:-~ fro m I' ark. S:l()(l 7~ I RKAA or 75!1 Oitll ....................••. \ ""' "' .:1 luol.111~ •H 1'Jll ,-.. \ 11f,1~1· l.Jl!Un.1 \pt 1111 C'hll 1>1 " :! Hit. :! ll.1 11 l' n l I): l' It' 1' I •' l l' 1<.-,1~111 .. 1hll• Jtlull,.. ~·~·" 11111 l'l l ;,:r.li ht"I !lpm ( ·111111 ,. 1·11111111 at 1:111 r 1· 1 " :i lilt.:! h:o pool j;11•11111 :o-1.-)11 l<llt W~ i57H ~ II II . I 11 11 m \ ,1 I' I '\t•1•ll1dl'<I. qut<•t wo111ls~ ~ICMI \1llh Mil ·l!l I ;;,;,I \ ll'14 .I 1111' k1ld1 halh 11111,.. "" '"' 51511 \IJl1111· .relit-1•11 !i!l.ltl \\I L~o Hi<JVel 3852 ..•••••.•••••.......... l"ondo on J(olf cour<;I" :lhr ;!11.1. I\ C, ,1\ Jll Aui.: 1'l :>12.'I mo *HO 6843 IX·luxe 2 lt.1 apl hc,1111 locallon clo~l' h t hc11l'h Poul. r1.>r room I rh1lcl 11k $200 up KJ1.:m 11:> Newport Beach 3869 .•..•.•...•.......•.... lit·h l'<ofl) .'I. f.!.11111' I IHllTI lolal ..,et·unl\ l't•rf1•1:1 II\ mi: or" k111t 1·t"11 l'i1l lor lh1• .id\ cnl 11r11u' .1dull !:>tar ltnl! ,1l ~_,,-, 1110 1!1\l:!ll:l:l 1 llrllm \pl \<lull 1111 ~t' ~IOU mu \V;olk tu twh l~l la:.I -t 5:i5 ..,l"l'Urt l~ tlep 1!19-'.!l!lti all !i 11r 14knd~ Apart~ts Furnished or Unfurnished 3900 .................•.•... TllF: 1'.:XCJTING PALM MESA APTS. .\1 1 i'-l"T f:S T< I :.; f'T !It'll Hat.·h . I&~ llH tnim~IO lit. up \dull,., '\11 l'l·t, 1:.i;1 :\h•"a 111 I o 1111-, l•:,"l 111 '\t•\\ 11111 l l\h ti 1lli 'llll~I lt1·~pi111'1hle " ~· l11 'hr fu1n :?hrh,,· l'U\1 ~1111 ""' 1i';5 1111r1 111 '"'''' ·.11; 111;. \\t1llll'\l"IJ~ll',\"l IHI I Ht 111:\1 \I \l E" .I l' .; 1.ike~ Th1• ljul''""111-. Out 111 F111d1111: 1'11·\T 1w;irr l'~;1ts11N Save SS by Sharinq ,\\I ~ \tra lltlnn~ 111 :i 111 hm1·. 1nehl!> k1l<:h, bath & i:1•11 I l1nni: .ire;i l,r)(-. 111 ~llll'Jl!I' l.otJ,! Ill~ an•;i l'11•wn11_, 11t·t·upll'1I hy \Ill! lo;ot h li:lll 1,2,·,,1 l"'' ;,,., 11;:11 ol1' \,I.. l;,r \l.111 H.1dwl111 \\Ill ,h,111· :! Ill ,, l1.• 1'.1rl.. ''""'"' \pt ,. 11 h ,,,nw lo Ill ,•17; Rooms 4 000 .!111 I • ll.1 \1 ~I.I• :'\I S C •., s.·,. 1•1.11.1 ••••••••••••••••••••••• :>-lU'tl:,.'f, -;1cer111i: ''"' ::i>ll S1U5 mu \ll ~"'>U "" Shitn kit b.1lh Sl111,.11 \11111 ~al • uni) l Jll .11l t 1>m ltl'f~ fl"-1 <I 55fi 110~111 11r ~111{195-1 HOCl:'llS S!5 "k up '"' h Goroqes fM ~ent 4350 ...••..•..........••••. 10\:!0 ~1ur.1i:c i:.1r:.JJ.tl' Cu,t.1 \1na s:?i l'Jll hl41n t ~. llJIJ 11211 IH:! 13'll :->\\'PHT BCll STnru . ~1.:1111' \on SI SllMl mo .Jl•t1 ~ W )t1ll 1..!l:l11i7·i701 Sl1111• •1Htn• sh1111 I rm<, :IC-.. <! IOO :.!I~ m ~'I ll 1\mplt• 1':11 l-.111 ~. "<Int < • M lo<:al11111 l• 11i :!!'! 14. 5-lll li333 (' M 1600 :.q It Ind $265 .\~11 :.!Oil :.q ll ut r S.'15 t>-lfi :.! I :m 1;79. 'fill!! r :\l'l'Ull\ l' ~1111\• 11fltl'I'' tor r •. n l " It h I II JO I> I 1 I • '-t-'•'rt-tltt• 1.tl ,4•1 '11 t'' ·" .111.1111,. i:>2 ii 7'i OFFICE SUITE (;11111111 111111! "1171 \Ii.I I .1<111. 1111• "' fl :!nit rh· ofr '>lllh-,I\ Jd 1111\\ I ))I I 11f1·, "••1· ·'""' I t'l l'P rm fill 1n 1 uph11Jrd ,lorui.:t· ,\ ~•nk Crpts dl"J>" lhruoul Employee &.. 1 "''"' prk i: Ele\· st·n 6.'> sq fl µt'r mu I 'r bl·. t>.t ~q fl per mo 2 ) ,., l'h 67~ 920<> l.tldn·n s:n ~.o " ... UIJ (; \ H \ 1: ~-F 0 II Cl) ••flh ~111 !17% STO It\ 1; F 1 n .1 i I•·' Industrial Rental 4500 lt1111111 111 111\1•1,\ qutl"l home :-,,, drug~. prh ur '111111\1111., Kitch 11rl\ l:h r ,. 111 a I,. s 1 a 11 m • 1 11t;:l 823311t•fnrc 111 :10 am {°•hl,l ,1,.,,, .'.111m1:! ..;1.1 Wt\NTJ-:ll '" I \'Ill 1'111'1 ,.::1rui:1· I ,p111•1• 1•,11 k 1.ulo I '111111•" 1, 11. 1i:10li H11om '"'rk1ni.: man OfficeRental 4400 Pn' ~·nu·ant·e l'htiklng ••••••••••••••••••••••• l>l'I\ lfli 201 I Summer Rental$ 4200 ......••....••••.•.•... SAN CLEMEMTE l1<:a1·h home .... l'1tnl1n' ;rnd apto; lte:.t•t 'e no" HERTH1\ II EN R \ HE.\LTOHS 2151lel'.\lar 4!12 11:!1 1&2 bdrms. :-<ewporl ~<ilh G11rage Step:. to heh $t-1·68W. tii5-75!l8 ""pl Reh. "lei)!> lo nee an I UR or:! BR. furn Start 1ng fmm Sl50 wk up t>t.2·~ BA I.RO:\ P .. :Nl'Sl11. \ blk tu bt'11t·h ,\: ha) apt slµs II. $1:15 jll'I 14 k 962 8680 t'\ ('" WESTCLIFf AREA \i~;WPOH r tn: \Cll 1100 s~ rt 1"" µvt UHl hll '401) pn mo 1)1:! 0'.!l~l 65 PER S9 fl lfi\7 W1':sfCLlFF NH AGT 541 5032 1501 WHtcllff Dr. "lcwporl Fmanc1al Clr Leosinq Offiu Space Call nn Site Mana11er 11141612 3111 ~Xl ll-16 DELUXE OFflCES l'om111I & tnclbtl ~van''>. :!(JO 111 :.!Om "'I fl \:-. lo\\ <II< 35' 'LI fl I.al! 'llll(UCI & ~l ll>l>IUn \'ldf1 ,&f\'11" lluntly to s I) rr" \ 0 111 1131 14C)lt ,\TT~;NTIO"I .\rlcst & C'r:ifll>mt•11 ~o lo S400 mu t l11I tnd UNIQUE rt"I <l1111t11 'Th~ Fa1· tor) 12s 1·: :m111 St, Ne14 port lkach or call 6i5·1it8l or 673·4271 11 111 ~·1 II ·S3W \'ery de Struble l nil ··.\ · 7!12 W :!llth SI C ;\I Call J atl. S .111ncler1< 1111 ti u y s Ii I:! 11:!1 :.! l'Vl''-. .'..tti 2:.177 Rentals Wonted 4600 ••.•..............•..•• ~;mpl1J_\'l'CI man. nun 1<mkr """h turn'<! rm. •1u1c•I a rc;1 Ca II 975-4:1Ktt '"k for Gr~11orv 11-5P\1 LOOKING FOR RESP. REMTERS? Solid malurl' rpl. "ant ln renl 3 or ~ br house 1•rcrer Mesu del Mar at ea Educ a led r<•riz1cd . adult fdmil~ or J :'\o pets Transferred to area bv company. opt. to lea!le re<fd 01shke Mo"ng' Call S.16·36B6 l'lea~e ro·nl 11" a 11H1m. 11,trl in w·~. & olcl t:erm shcp Will PH' 1111 to SMO 1!J3-li4IO.~ Miscellaneous Rentals 4650 ·•··············•·•·••· ·1 ra1kr ~p;.11·l' Costa ~lc-!111, Hx:lO Adult park. no Pl'ls. 9:1.'> mo 5411·1il73 BusinH1 /1nn•t I Rnanc:• DESK space at 1787S ••••••••••••••••••••••• Be ach BIHi n c 11 Talbert in II uni in at on Beach. S.'IO per month . Bring own furniture Our teeeptionist will an1wcr your phonAI ror $10 per munth Dully Pilotoffi1·t'. "2-1:121 H.I. Wtlhrfront TOO )fl ft off1~e •1>11('1' s Bdrm rull)' furn a\•ollable-t'ec1h<.' C•l Wo.sbtr dr)'er. tr • boll Hwy 10 NL•wpor\ Ht•h dock. sleeps 10 S400 Call llubh1l'. WI 11'157 week . S1!>011 monlh 774,..... or Kve. &75-8160 AJrDOrt Offf ce1 I ~ONT'IJ t'REB Buelne1s Opportunity SOOS ••••••••••••••••••••••• REST .A.UltANT & Codttoll Loun«Je Coastal 11rc11 Nftc-sn • vutnHnl. 1\00.000 Hatlltll. lnr l A RC Uc Pnnc onh , own a.gt 759--076tl 1'44·59111 H!lniwurl' 'llOre. NeWJ)Ort Beach 67S ssoo 15'1 2ltd & >rd T.o:, l.O.\NS AV AILA BL t Credit not JIT\portanl. 1n.ml8roktr Found :.mall hlk ll•m;1ll• Ooi: Jul) :! \'tl Jlr11okhur:.l & SJn D1ci:u F'N~ Mfi·425~ :.tfl l!pm FOUN IJ H1k1· V 1-.l.1 Conltil.'l F \ l'ohn• Dept !lfi.1 !172.S t''-1 :l 11 Found Wh11" malt• <;crm S h C p h l' I' cf \' I (" i-:u,l11lufli. Call t;.11 0:156 *KAREN'S* Ou'TCA LL ~IASSAG E fil'M 2P\I ,7J.089:1 EXCITING llE<.:OHDr.;:r; .\BOUT Dt::AUT. GIRts 5!1!Mil50 1,535.5363 •SHARON'S• VOUND White !'\amoyl•il lHITCAl.L MASSAG t: male d<J i::. \ tl' L ake 499 1221 _ Forest. El Toro. 770ll:J47 lin11d look 1n i: tri m or581-1010 hurhelor. W1M. 41. g~ FOL NL> M"' ltn·tl . incomc.!>cekstnmW/t' l'11cker ru:.l> l"ulor v1t 25·3.5 for datei-.. sport!>. llarhur \"1L'"-:.pl 1·om ll ll\ cl 1:na 1~2ti 8700 or plex CdM 6·1l 2917 "nil' I' 0 Hox 7:1115, l .oni.: I leach \\'hi 1-"llLNU Sm lllk .<. fem lcrn,•1 t' l'l' l.JC11lon1:1 .\ Sl.111·1 K-12 116i4 \ 11. SEJo:KIN<; W1tne"'t'' F\ •\monc obs('ntnl( ;in <11 ndcnl ,1t .\ll'!>J \"erd~ Ur West & 1\d.im" AH• . IOP~I. Thur~ Jul) 30lh l!li'i 1'1, rnnl.1d l>•uialc1 E ~m.ill,.oo<l il-l·l>t l 8221 Fnund \l ,1h' t nl rol' 11 C'ars. lni: latl ''ml r lo Sehnauter Hol,a Chico Edmgt•r 11<11; 4 130 LOST t:ockallel Utrd. \IC llAPBY RI HTllOA~ ~lesa Venle. CM. Harbor J11cl1 Hickey••'•~'•·'' 11 I\ d . po!>' 1 b I > lo Sue. Ttkki & Laur::i lirookhor~t. llB Gra} --. --~36 w yellow crest feathers. Personal Sentces S 0 oran~e & vellnw <'hl'l!ks. ••••••••••••••• •• •••••• unswrr!> 111 · l'ell' ' or Pl' l t· r Hew .1 r cl ' !'>IO·OS-12 or 546·0:17'1 Lust lllq~rt!l' 1.1n 11111: 17th Sl 1n C. ;\I . ,tli.11 Lulu bdwk Sent \al. rt'" l>-15·895J DIVORCE I .1•i:11I Typtn~ Ser\'lreo 1\tJC·Scn ·e F'11e l 'umplclc (.;uarnnt~<l 645-9580 l.0,.1 hrn Tcrrt1•r mix. ~ mall' 111· l'l"ll &----~lorr11 l'.1n)on ltd Orjlan Tcndtcr, play a !lf.Cl·3200 sonl( th<' first hr. No mu"•' cx11 ncle<I M" Lost 111 1 H' 111 " pl hom . 64r 'J48!l Beach & llunl Bch 2 ~. :· · lgl• al·ri. 111· pa111tini:s. Emo&o'f""nt & Mt scenes. ;i·,., I An 1~t Preporotlon l'i \'er.Y hurt & offers re ••••••••••• •••••••••••• ward for rt'l11rn. the~ are School• & hL'i r1rst works Instruction 7005 S3l).293R 4!3 827!> ••••••••••••••••••••••• LOST Shel1e 1m1n Swim l..e:.son:. p,t. All Collie 1. Julv 1 Tri l'OI ai:es \'uur pool or apl l)r ort'li male w r('(! ('Ollar mine 515·13.'>9 CH'S ~~~ij1°' Ph·o~e 1 all Jobi Wonted,-7075 ...•...•............. ,. ~"'T ; I ut V1clona Sl11 ltnn. Nwpt Man·, Sa p phire blue dinner rtnl( HEW•\RD' 1714159118'1111 LOST Mm mall' J>O(Xlle Cream} 14hl . front hot tom tooth rn1si.m~. Sub jt'cl lo !ltrokt·~ Nce<ls med1 t'al111n \'t l' Manners Viii . l>. I' f>lfi tall collect 714.324.3072 LOST· s haggy wht blk mafe Doa. "Raggs". Vic Crown Valley Pkwy. 4.99·1461 Lost July 3 med dog. Golden brn 21St le Santa Ana, ~ ,\lt'RAGTIVt:. Energetic femJlt' EJCpr tn tennf!(. golf. boating fishing. animals. C'ook'I(, drivm~. dispatch l'H. t•lc seek'S} outdoor 1•m ploymetil. &:16·~ • DAIL y PILOT C1 Add 11 Build 11 Diaper ii .. Hammer It ... Carpel SERVICE tt Cemenl 11 Ware It Hoe It Clean 1t.. Move 11 Prt•\\ 11 Ptttnl II Nall It Plaster It .. FIX It. DIRECTORY ...,11.u ll•poir c..,.. w••u ...••..••..•.•.•...•••• .•....•••.••........... .................•..... \l'f'l 1 \t\<C .. : ttn• \ltl ~" ~f\1\l'l "11 1"all t71U '1 .!t l'/ ~hftKtW'Gil ...........•.....•..... I 11r111•1 Marn v.111111)' v11ur11 IH;:\tc;-.: ,\ t 'ONSTHU(.' "' 1111111• lt1·1141lr" I. l'll>N I' l> I 1'11111 • lunmii luu liuur work Mu 70'.!ll .11 11111.ir1 11,n 11161' 1-1 n • •-~ , l U4S Ji>4G ~'"c .. . .•••............•...•• . ••••..•••.•..•.•...... G\'nrral llantl)t11a11, d1•a1u111i. cepu1r. 11.11nt 11111 w1tllpaper i:cn ·1 fix u11 J Wuugh, 642.0IJ(ll C ..... AcCMtttJC HcalfiftcJ Y.Lt-:<•l'1tl«AI. SP.I\ Vlt'•~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• ..............•••...... HcMn.clMnl'"J . .......•.....•.......• Wunt 11 R~ALl. Y C..:LEAN llOUSK' (;1111 Gingham Girl f'ree est 645-5123 • •WlNDOWS & HUUS~ l.1..E.ANING UY GOOD l\IAN • • S3ti-7711 ·•~re,, A 1.,, ... 11111 f ill:\ I' I> I c 11111 hUOUOI) \\OW.II~• "Udl Caibu,.t MGllLHMJ '111 llYl'"' , 1•il11111i-. te l \U..'\ '1S ht , 6 SMAl.I. J () li. '\ 114 ~ ICC13 lwulina. movma. <'lcunup J11up 'l'recwork lte1:1>i. llouscclt'arung by reliable tmll, Crt~ est 84:.! 45117 couple Referencel> <:1111 !163 S813 or 1-626-6126 •••• • •••••••• • • • • • • • • • • pmr ~ u.i r 1.1 l • ~.l»tillfl Hubbard !Metric: In~· 1•111 ~ IHOO l.ll' :tl71Jti n l\ 1 A. lu•n I 111111·11 , , t 1n,•h11111 \ ' ,, • 1 Cement ;cone:,_..• GtardeNn4J M~ fl!l71 llAULING Odcl .Jol>i. t..1w ~ludenl rh!edfl work llouaedeaning. Mature, Juu 4H4·5854 exPtiricncctl, reliable. $20, refs 536·0050 . 'It,,, ,, ,. ',, ,, ··""' . . . . . • . . . . . . . . • • . . . . . . . • •••••••••••••.••.••.•• .1 l:lH ..... •1:1;• U111 \l .. 11 H•·W :. >"• '" lkh11bll-1-:i.p1 .IJ1.1o1n1·~t :-i(•llflV & Jer Free haul ll<ind1 w1pen, grcJl 1"·11t•111·1• pou111111 ~ t;11nle11l'1 Hea1u11ablc 1111: l'll'anup,etcroru:.a cleaninl(. R!!ls Call C~ff h11"h111)( lwl ,·our uwn pri<·r~ 1"r1·•· , . .,, 64!1 S2:l0 hli· ilcm'>. Fences. bldl!·s 556-4982 or 842·0180 eves ·•••••••••••••••••••••• fo1111, ,,,1 111 1111,.\ '11ke •l'rnuvL'<l 557·2006 .. !Jr n I " "' \ I q w tilil '~LI Hamt C Servlc lroniftCJ 1'.mcl 1lnuh 1·11 \hu ~ w .. :l!:DING CLt:-:ANUl'S are • ••••••••••••••••••••••• \•Hllm l Ill .. ,1 \fl ' l' .. :\11-:,·1 WOHi\ \II Wa--lyM111nlen•nCl' ••••••••••••••••••••••• rib·/111+ Kmd' lt1· .. mmublet Free ~'I t.'t' l-Sl 64<! 9907 l' t\ H I' ET ST E A M l'LEANING I will do )our ironing tn my home Moi.t items 2Uc ~ 3u;2 CGrJNIS«•lu l"lt C;ill 7JOh6:.!5 \~ll'rLOWl'RH;l'.:.t.;1 11•,,..S(J•"T.WINDOW ....................... l'o111rl.'h• H1•Ju\e11alor,, r>n .:urtlentnl( main \\J!)h1nl(. l'loor w11x1nl( Mcnol• 'I '11'1.lml'••• & ,,ll'um , ,1 ... 11 deJns & rl':1tor1•'\ lo 11 ll'nancc Gt.'Orl(c S·lll·2UIS 1pll!lle-wax)G42·383.'> ••••••••••••••••••••••• • , 1 h h hrand 11t.•w look wc·11 , 1 1110t mi; tcnt'n .. w t ch·.ui stam~. l(n·a~c. uil Complete Maint, cln·ups, l•ror woman 34 wunls lo F'ir eplacus·Pl11ntcr11 'Jiil> IU nltn hletat·h l 'lt"an ~ ru'I Su tlon't u~c a car llprmklers. rotolll, new huu.sc sit wh0ile ~llcnd111i.: Brick Concrete Pali~ 111. din rm. hall $1~1 Avi: to rn~ur lht• .1rl\'ewny lawrui, frl!ccst S4!1-3:135 dasse.s. Kxp'd pct1' & Block Walls BBQ PtU r r11 .-r 50, cuud1 ¥1U. 1'111 ' u ~ I t R itil Refs Ests 646 0464 ., l',11·r t•l1m 1>et il<lu1 t';1ll t•un1 r 1•tt• He GeneralSttvlce• pun care. ei;pons e, ---·-------- • u >.Int local reh. Leave C'Jll l'l'llJll 1o; ~ .. ,,.,pr JU\t11at11r' hl2 >Wlli ••••••••••••••••••••••• your home withnut Free Es l: Blockwalls. llo ..... ork nl\w lr H1•r, l'htllq" l'cmi•tll Co llANOYMt\N llomt.•s & worry 673-052'7 slumpsto111·, brick ... '11 111111 Patio:. rnum Jildlliou;, ,\ph. Coosc 1ent1ou' Iles Com'I. Heas. lie/ f Ph 615 030·> bond lloh 750 !l:J54 1 11 .... 1lll'il \th ,di h1~ t'unl·rl'l•' \\Ork 751 :Jt>.'>7 t:rJtiman ~ Tri ,1 Dai l ' l'1lot r.i:!!IJ7? MolcMwy PaWlncJ/PaperiftC) Plcntw ,.«ttpair T,.. S.rvlce •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• Dmk, block, slabs, Crpk:s, Paint Your Castle swncwork 20 )'I'll cxpr. Average Extr l Stry S39S Vl-:RY NF.A'r l'A'l'<'ll rtemovin.i. trlmmln1: JOBS &TEXTUR!'; topping, Cr c11l, lk ,lni. In Ftttesl 1193 14:W ~11c1114 yrs Tony IW!I !112~ Refs. e14 S86·0M8 2 Story $4~. tnlr $C5rm Movlnq Prictslncl matr1·labor "'-lblncj Removals. tr1mmln11 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Guur/lnard. l'"reeeet. ••••••••••••••••••••••• prurunR. Cree est Lac ·d. f)tzpatrtck Mov1J1g. Low Ted &52 013' or 636-7085 Rep a 1 rs t fl e p 1 p 1 n g _ ruJly insured 642·2621 ratl!S Ins Fast quality Comm'I & Resldeollal No Dralnl> cleared, w11ter Tutoriftcj care. S46·0429 Evu. JO. b loo big or loo small hlrs, etc. all p1pe11 Heas ••••••••••••••••••••••• 6420709d ·rates Dick Morris ~-___ 20 yrs cxpr Rooms 768-7962 ENGLISH TUTOR Paintlng,IP.,.M'") SlS/up. Fully ln~rd & I.Jc Eastern prep school ••••••••••••••••••••••• Odd Jobs too (136.6!J9S Remodel & Repair teacher Former edit & PETERS PAINTING Co 'I & R d ti I N ••••••••••••••••••••••• reporter l natrut'llon In mm . esi en a· 0 Add-0ns, patio, tikyhghts writing. readin g, & t-:xpr'd Reas Rates. job too big or too small. & rprs Resid & comm 'I. comJ>. Raa·~u your child·s f'rcc .l::~t. Call Gene 20 yrs expr Rooms "~ 552.0.158 fr est 962-4217 l ukay # ~rade.s. & col board SU/up Fully lnsrd & lie. 298233 ' ' i.eotes. $10 hr. ~·3000. Bri11hten up tbe House! _Odd jobs loo &36-699S _ Roofing ll-l2AM Norm's Paperhanging. PalnUna. Palnll..ni ••••••••••••••••••••••• All kind.'<, Cree est. State lntenors. Extenors u-...a. Cl I he 330G86 835·3705 or Residential orComm'I Repairs Lie & Ins All ,..._..tery •mt mJ 675·~ .Spotless & Reasonable t>i>e! •·ree est Watt ••••••••••••••••••••••• --------Sam lynn Pamters Call anytime. 541 5930 ORI-FOAM SHAMPOO Point & Papenng, 24 yrs 673 8300 (,"lia1r $10, sofa $15, Auto ~erv'i: llarbor area. St • --Tet.vllioft Repair SlS. Dick Br own 548 9490 lu: 183281. Refs furn. HOUSE Exteriors. 10 yrs ••••••••••••••••••••••• S.ll!23:MI in CM/NB I'm small-CANOPY TVSF.RVICE WlndowCS.onln4J ---prices are sm all. 642·6799 1st RATE SERVICE ••••••••••••••••••••••. Knowle11 Pai n ting. Ron AtFalr Priceis960·l633 Int/Ext . comm ercial ----- 11pt s, resid ential & ,atios Tile OlOblle homes. 836· 1120. ••••••• •• •• •• •• •• •• • •• • •••••••• •••• ••••• •••• •• CU!>tom Redwood Patios CERAMIC TILE New or PAJNTING Int/Ext Ex-Covers-Decks Fences remodel. Fr est. sml Jobs p'd . honest, neat. Re.1s &IS 2333 welcome~ 2426 Jrt s !Jc d Dove964·1~5 SPARKLE CLEANIN<; Wmdows Our Spcclall> Free est NOW 646 6703 642·~711 Wunt Ads 1tern,,, ~111.Jll 11c111:. or Call Ill \ \1 tu ~ll'M ht CIJss1f1cd Ad to huy, -.ell 111\ 11,•m t>t:! 5671! b<md in' CIJlt~111.-u ,\u,., t.-1:! Slli l! or rent .somethin~. WJnt Ad Hl!lp'' -----Find what you want 1n Fmd what ~ou \\Jnl 1n Call 642·56'78 _Eaily Piiot ClussHledi._. _ Eally Pilot Cluss1Cieds. Cadillacs lo Go-Carts Whutever lhe fo'.iJ Roll ·cm orr the market With a Clus,1f1t>d ,\d Call No\\' It 12 ~i78 He4pWCMted 7100 HetpWant.d 7100 H.lpWonted 7100 H.lpWant~d 7100 HelpWant.d 7100 HetpWonted 7100 HetpWant.d 7100 H.lpWanted 7100 HefpWanted 7100 .........•.......................•.................................•......................•.............................••..•.......................•..........•....••..................•...................... Ad I ' t t' Huuys1t l.1\ 1• in slullenl to Comp;.inion for E Z Ii• m n11 ra ton 1·itre lor elderly lauy l>irecturAilult dl.'vc·lo11 hahy~il & 11.n lite p •f k & m r nt pro~ram . Ad hout~t~~~06/;alai) · dr~~k~/~~u:tmll:e 1n, 111 1 11 1 ' l r J l 1 ' <' , rm 1 • ' ha v e c a r & r <' f • s ... upen b 1try pruRram B:Jh),.,1tlt•r 111<' 111 :! li42·2237 plannm1: lmpll·mcnta· t h aid r c•n ugc, J 11on & t•\;tluallon <;kills !t79·5M4or5Kli ~211 11•4 ti M S -t I } r or hac-helor ~ io .I Submit Bank teller C'Xp'tl I' I ,,.,umc t o L n1lctl TOKAllAHK 1 'n1·hr,i1 l'Jli.\ .IO:.!IJ W :1:1:1 W Cou~L llw~. N II I l"n ard. Sant.1 t\nJ 1,.u; 71:.!t l'ull fnr appl .. Ad•ertisin9 Sales 11 \ou un• a ~hurµ, ag g r l1 s ' • \ t• l" x p • · r · d 'Jlcsperson & \\Jiil to ma kt· t1l lca~I $20,001.1111.'r I I :tll .tn illTOUnt o•\tl for kx'al puhl11-.1t111n l°Jll ~~ 1~31. Answer. Ser•. PIX Want to ""ork Jrternoons 11.\:°':K TELLER SA'llTA llARHAll \ ~AVINGS OFf'll' t-: l•:xall'rll'nl·c l'rcfl'rt ell t ':rll t-·or \ppmnt ml·nt 499-1306 COOK I lome >.tyle cook1111! lur retirement home 1n La.ieuna Reach Ill.\ 91511 COOK fur 1·11m hostpt E\1>°tl m m"lllUl1onal cuok 111.i Gu. Salary & hend11i. t\µµly Park St11Jl'rlOr ('11111 110 .. pt 1115 Superior Avr>. N II VOOKS. HARTENDEHS, DRIVERS P lime. Over 21 yr~ lmmed opcnini;l> Apply in person. Me ·n &b Pina Porlor 410 ": 17th St. CM DIRECTOR OF NURSES llN for D1reetor of Nurses in 96 bed conv hos pl. Will train quahf1ed nurse . Cd l>alJry & benefits Apply l'Jrk Superior Con' llo>ipt , 1445 Superior ,\\e .NR. DIR. OF NURSES SNt-• t•Xperience Pl'l' lt•rrt'<I Apply. G:irf1eltl l ' CHI\ 1111 ,, I' , 7 7 ti I (;:irl'1cld. llfl. K47 9071. Dishwasher Lunt·h. Short h1-~ l\t•ar Bnstol/Bakcr. Call ~>-IO·:JO.u Drapery Hcmm ... r or t.abler. exp'd Top wages 6-12-1843 ... l'I l'OIOl!S Ill N n & ~:quul ()ppor ~;mploycr c·d~t...irt·as' \o\urk r time "' II l111w.?.. '>llll'll "kntls Boal~ l•:\l>l'I , Jl'I 1-.1at. \11 a i'") tur l .. (f>t•r'ol t11ud1 up & tl·l1111r pt.·r~on o peral or,. l'lli': ('all m:l•<h:d . a11ph 111 p1·r,,011 Cooks breakfast, lunLh Urapcncs, Tabler. <.'"per, :'Ila Barker's ReslJurunt. l(ood wages, good work 212 1-; 17th St. c M 111g cood. 642·143!'> tly11, ~18 1:9t!O l'\'!> 1.kJttt\I:.!. Sl-1pJ:i1•k lloah, t7t•J l'l:11·1·11t1a , r11 ... t;1 \tc·~11 BOOKKEEPER \,>l. lull llOll' 1w1 m.1 1lt'nt 1·01"1 r ,., µ1 ·r cit' ~trahk LJll !.17!1 :r.100 f111 Coolcs & Waitresses Top pay & lll'ncfits Aµp ly :!-5pin, Ut•1111t.:~ \ 5~1 /\\t•ntda P11·0 , San ( 'll•mf•nh' \pl \lan;1gt•r lor IO 11n1h. I ·,,..,t11 \h• ... a lit•· mam 11•n.11w1·. , .1n ht• ac'I 1111111 .ni,: n11h 11r !fl,111111·n.1n• •' ·'I") IJ.I~ 4!11 1 l't)l "'ff E It <ti I( t. fo'RIDAY :ippt Hl'lt,1hlt• & neat phum•" \PT \l(;H \l.itun· l'OU 1 \Hl'ENTEll hll• l}PIOR , will tram 111 pit• nt•edt•tl for ;!.'i unit-. EXPERIENCED 11 th t' r du t 1 e' S .I (.; l. o " l ,1 \II· ... ·' J r c J. I' t Pu II t 1 m 1.15, l:!tiO ''""h C.dl 1'17 :!Ill.I nn i•r imc. I 5111n nt c ti I a I e (I" I! II In.:. Assembler /solderer , ~!fti·:r.!Gl ror appt We nl•l'cl a numht'r 111 (.;i,.,hil't ·"' 1tu ... tc~-. l·xµi•r <.;OUNTElt llelp fem pit (!1i0Cl Jl(.'•IJlil.! tor 1 m rrwcl Appl~ 111 pi•r:.un. 1\1 ill.• & f 1t Days & e~c11 App , , . 1 Mcx1l·an lk-.tu11runl, ~l47 "'' 8 899 w opcn1n1:!'; 111 nu1 c cclro W 1,1111 Sl CM li42 !lif>•I ly. "',ax ur~er~. . tnt'l'ha1111·al ol'>S l•mhly . . . !!Ith l:>l, Costu Mesu l>rt>Ssmakers, dcs1gn1'rs, ... amplemaker~. ;11lc·ra lion> 1n·r,011 . t1l t1•r, i.all''l>l.'s on l>arh•cH'. 1>12 2721 or r.12 5!1111 DRIVER SUHDAYOHLY 1>1•11\L'r Oatl\ l'1l11t bWldles lo l'arr;er' ll.- q 111 rt'" 'an or l.ir.:e w;,igun ;ind a l{()()(f d11 v 1n).! rl.'cortl. l'ht1ne f;.1:!·43'.!I. usk ror ll;irry &.'l!ley. Eflual oppor luni ty I<:mph>y~r _ DRIVERS llousc & Child Care. live 1n llcgin Sept. Turtlcrcwk area. Irvine Sal:iry ne(!otiable ~ l!.17:1 aft <ipm M;rna11emcnt trainee ----------1 Receptionist for Or. OCc. Fnst growing Mail Order PAl'll ll'[RS p/time, 5 days. must firm seeks shipping ""IUI type, exper pref'd, but room supt!r vlsor trainee. <.:lean packuging work. not necessary. 642·4S32 Joh requires typing Noexper nee 18&over. knowledge, some lifting, Xlnt working conds & HOUSECLEA:-llNG, purchasmg & receiving. pay Day, swing & woman tu 19-<15 yrs, 6 hrs Inventory control, record graveyurd shift:. p day. 3 day p1wk $4 20 keeping, hiring & firing RETAIL CLERKS SALES SUPPLEMENT YOUR INCOME HS$ SSSS PART TIME TEUPHONE WORK HOUSEWIVES COLLEGE STUDENTS p hr Must ha\·c refs or Shipping room 1;7:-, 117111 aft. 6pm personel Start S3 hr ll!lti 4357 llOUSEKEEPER. live in ___ ~ - or oul for :! you n g ~ -~ duldren. rd·,, a must. MANY FEE PAID 114·&14-1S24t1 POSITIONS £.Q~ o ffice · ~OJ overload 557-0061 3123 Birch Ht.NU UTOTEM COftvenienc:e Markeh. Positions open Isl, 2nd & Jrd ... h1ft , 111 Su n Clem ente & L.igun:1 Guaranlct'd llourh Wage Plus &nus s JO pm lo 8 JO pm Cull t;.Mi-<1223 or l'ome to 250 E lith St . Co~la Me:o.a ----------1 Bench. Other ureas h;ivc S ,\LE s ,.. A B I! Ir HOUSEKEEPER fExprd .\lso l''ce Positions ,ACICAGERS openings nh10. No ex per. EXP ";n nt•1· P ·T1m1· 5days Mustprovideown lrvlnePetnOlllMI n!(J'd. Apply al any of t:M :-.'TOil": ('ull Mun trans Bnghsh .speaking. Agency Female $Z so per hr to ourstorcll 6<1tHl~IU . S125 wk Hefs lrvinl' lllllE17th.CostaMcsa start Me ril raises 2588NewPortlltvd (;o\'C in Lag Bch 494.9359 Suitc224 s,•2.1470 548-5125 Costa Mesa f>42·7i02 Sale!>g1rl w1lh knowled~l.' ---------of art and craft !'.upphe:o. llOUSEKEEPER !..._~~~~~~!!!'!:~PEST <.; 0 NT R 0 L 40Hr. week. Apply t'n or M1rumum work. room & MAT UR E W O M AN SERVICE REP wanted, RM ft. VN Sat 2·5 P\t onl) 190 So board 646-8301 p l li me lo welcom e So Orange Co 831·1024 Full time. part lime, Coa:.t Hw~ Laguna ncw1·omers & contact dnys,8310220e\_e_s. ___ , days & PM Active Beach HOUSEPLANT Retail & Sen. Co. Full t1ml' ret1ul µos1l1on l'lant knowled!(<: & ahtl1 ty to deal w,thc pubhl' 10 rl'la11 t•n\·1roml·111 arc 1 •'q ct .. \Ill llllll' 'Jle" jJl'f!>Ull ~ll'=> exp rt'tfd Dc!l1Jln ,1 n ll " r h n u ~ ,.. p I :i n t knowll'<lJ:I' a l:ir~c plus l'art 11m1• .,en 11·c people lor plant r11n· lloul\e µ 1 on l I.. now It• 11 g e a MUST Fkxible hr~ Sun,,111111• Inn offers J good waKc & benefit pro gram for top people. 751 4760 merchants Flexible hrs. -----Gerfatr1e llehab llospt ..,-: 'ES 1 f Need cor, lite typing. Plastics Mixer Opr. OO·z.110 '"u.. I\ I hnl·:-. o an;., 5')7.309,s To tr ain In all phas~ of uulo. II 0 , hfc ell' Prd our adhesives & eoatinl( RN, permanent Pf1'1me & C..:.1 Full lram1n1: µr11 production 548 5125 On call position uva1I. All gram & romp 1-:01-; Mcd1c:il re<:ept Ophlh of- f1t·c l..ile typing Send rt·i.ume w. AcJ J943 C IO Ou1ly Pilot. PO Box l;,fiO Cos ta Mesa. Ca ll2<iO!li ----- MOTOR ROUTE: J h~ Ually J'1lol ha,. a large route w Mission \'1eJu are11. good for high ~chool or rollcgc student. Approx earnin~s $200 per mouth. Call 642-4321 and leaH· name and phone PRESSMAN A ll. Dick 360 w (I' 51. To a; 50 hr Peurtree Presl>, 714/644 7955 shirts. Call Sunt11 Ano 752-7990 l'sy1•h1u l ric llos p M3~1. EOE S•LES /ORGAHS?7? Att You The One Robbie's ROCJ & Mop Wt' art• look 111~ ror l'rlDll'r W 0 men need e ti r or l'e' era I h11(h encr.iy levrl Inst~ •rint.I' hou!>et'leonin(! service 1nd1\lduals for an eXl'll ,.., ,.. S.'8·0757 ing can.-er m the mull IC• Ex•"'r'd only ITEK & b W h AB..-D1ck 360 Operalor. SALES usincss 1' 11 re l P Growth Potenh:il S11I. Jut Irvine Co. Organ Exrhange located -in <lOI Su Cull(. regional open Xlnt benefits. needs d11(nif1t'd sJlt•s shoppms: mallll WP orrer Lo gun a Hills /M iss100 people to call on local a prestigious career, xlnl V1eJO area. ~JlSO__ _ bu.sioesscs offcrmJl very train 111 :.: pr" I! r am unique pfrlce products lughcl>l c·omm /guarn & REAL ESTATE Fu ll or part l iml.'. manyfr1ngebeneriti.. WC' depl. l-:\fll'r helpful. hut not ON' l 'o 11a1d tx-nehts 1flti 'at'dl1nn!<. l'nll• ln1trumt•nt., L orp Cashirr jHosteu w~1ntl·d 1111 Ol'l'anfronl dmin1: room Appl} 10 person lloh>I 1\ud1tnr. llotl•I l.aRUlla 425 S Coa."t 11 .... y 1.111( lk.1r h 4~ 1151 CUSTODIANS Imm<.'<!. openings for e-c p c r d t· u s t n d 1 a n 'I llo!lp1wl expcr pref'd Good bencfib A11ply 1n person. Personnel Dept . San Clemente C~<.·nt'ral l106p1tal ll~I Cnmrno rle Ill:> mare:-., San Clem Household furniture .----------mo\ mg cu. located in El Toro wants clrlveri. w/I yr e-cper. w comm 'I 1rn~1~ ~ Call 8.10 492ti HEEDEDNOW- t: x µ c ri o n c e d a u t o mt'l'h u n il'. t:xcellcn l company benefits. Apply in person to: C huck Arnold Theodon Robins Ford SALESPERSONS 751·9464 or cve.,/wknds req prnres:11onulism rn Opportunity now availa· 645-lO!IO lht' i11'1 or 11elhng & a b 1 e r 0 r I l c e n 1 e d r•---------i strong rlelerminolton t11 aalesperson5 \o join 11 Sales succeed. Some or gan ~ ASSEMIL Y LEAD ,,,,emhly or :1mall ell'<" Im ml•ch11nical dl'\·1ces Hf<lwres e-cµer m d1rect- 1ng \\:ork 01 up lo IO as -.l'mhlcr!I. Oay shin. b'11coswitth, Inc. 39Rukcr. CM 549 3041 ASSEMBLERS hlle mblers, prl.'c1~1on . male or rem 1 > r:.. min ••\per Good mJnual dex fl'rllY. i.:ond l'yes1~hl. "1ldl.'nng & m1crrn.co 1•\"llt'r Small compo 1wnt... llorcl \\orkinl(. de 1llcUl\'ll 1nd1' 1duul rtt'edt ti . Sm ii 11 co ".1:ood bcncf1L .... l(d. op 111>r.• uclvancl.'ment Cal <«mil : 5111 31130. MV USTM•NAGER CHILO CARE IJ1'~1r e lot·:il muture "'oman lo n1rl' lor rhlldren in my Harbor Vu homl! Wkdys. !t 6 now St•11l 2 6 pm 644-7WS CLEANING LAO Y 5' :-.l11(ht:1 11 wk GPM 2 JOAM llondablr N 8 ofc bldll 40 llr. Slt•artv \\ork 1;.u OtiOO CLEAHUPM•H JO lo 36 hr-, wk tiood ~UIJ pll·mcnl 1m·omt: for re- tired mun 5411 '.I031, l'M. CLEtlK lor Curd & 1111'\ Shop. plllml', exper Prt'- fd. NR aren 64Q.7373 Deliver) man tor I. A Time paper routt• 1-:urly A:\t llard worker a must . $450 per mo 49'HOSS . Uehvery. Ho mt· cleh very or The Rel(1sler m the af · temoon. Good poy ror a couple of hrs each clay Approx s:JOO·S400 mo Must have tlcpenduble car+ backup. S40·300I! --- DELIVERY·E11rn xlra money. early mormniz dell\'en· or LA T1mc11. Cl\I 11rc11 . Earn S300 +per mo 5-IS-0770 ------ l~'f>Prlence reciu1 red Clerk typi~l $\ hr. Senlor ('osto Meso Federal C1ti1en!' Program, 3211 Credit Un1nn. 642·055 hour.c; DELIVERY & STOCK Permane n t position, must be exper • Beols , Fine Furniture. Weslcllrr Pla:ia. Newport Beach Call Mr Sirlmnrco at &t2·0262 la.il>M \ U!A)f\\Oll VC '1~ Detail Shop needs help. rop Wll~CS paid. Engin "trameN. en~ painters. huH_,r.1 & polli1hers , up- ho)!>le ry shampooers. l'llf)Ck out, pick-up &. d~· 11\l!fY i\ppl,y at I 20&.Hlnrbor Bl, CM 1145·1030 AVON HIS> EXTRA CASH? f;.njnp aN Cood·hoU itrt' nexlb1• wbon you• an AVON ropreuo tjtJve. ()aU &40-TOU or ?lffdlh T·f3G9. BabytlUer /Ho1&1okftper, 2 chlldm\, 6 mo's at 2 yrs, t1ingle, non 1molcer. Live ~n 1 pt , II~ RARYSITTSR needed ro I dltld Mu.st ban ca.r an:ttu an. s CLERK /TYPIST ----I nsurance Co 1n Newport Beach nds bill· O.&i .. ry Dri .. r ing clerk w '!Id typinR Dependable, consc1en skills & lil kt•y. ~xpr. tious deln·ery driver for prer. but not nee Salary freighl ro ~10 0501 to moo or com mensurate --- w /cxpr. Gd company Delivery p1tlme. Yo,u~g he eflls 833-8-ISO mAn over 18. Fam1h~r n · wlbeach area. Llm ey s CLERICTYrlST ~flillress Wa re hou11e. Expandinl( Mortia11c Co !49-837_8 _____ _ in Orange County hJu1 an Dental Receptionist lmm~1atc opcnlnir for n Exper. Gd benenta. Npt recepl1on1st/cler k t)'pllt. lkh. 6«·9211 Musl type 5~·60 wpm --------P I ca 11 e c a 11 Cat ll Y Dental Chairalde Aaslat. Tom p!lon a t Un l ·Cal lrvtne. O't Uay w k. MorY£11llf'. 714·963 7873 Rewanilng mvolvemt nL E.O.E . for ex.per'd. HOA. l800 COCICTAI\. ~~au Boh~o 9.4, W>JTillSS Learn in 40 htt lhti m0&t Dtntal Assist_. cxclllnit. •lamourous, FUii Umc. expcr In front hl&hly puld profets Day 6 back ofc prcC'd. Xtay or eve ~""•ioos. Place· lie n«. Knowlodlt of In· ~~ ...Ut. Good job op sinoce helpl'\ll, S.l•ry ?O!· open. Mon-J'ri, 142.fllO Ctl7t4n51·t9U - So. Calli. Coc klal Wtltl'TIUI. Inc.. l'1 Sky JPark Ill, S te C lrVlnit CalnH. DRIVF:R. young clean cut fellow" J(ood dn\ mg re l'ord ref's who know~ S Cahl area to make de· h\'en es for MFG 1-'1rm. Summer emp ok 645-3180 F:lt!ctronic assembly & wiring. Work in plca11ant ne w facility Small rnendly Company Jo;x. pcrienct' prererred but will tram. Call for ap· pomtment 8·4. 645-3632 a.GIHHRIHG ORAFTSM•H ~:xper'd. Street plans De111gn. Tent. Maps. l\p ply in person w /work i1amples. Robert. l~ln. Wllllam Frost & Assoc. 1401 Quail St, NB Expert vinyl & tile ·n· 1taller. Call Bob o r Don, nt640-2700. lnspeclion RECEIVIHG INSPECTOR ~mull prec1s1on 111:1 c h1n1·lt & molded part' (or l'lectro mech:tlll\'31 dt>VICC!I Proficient u.-.e of meallur mt! lnslrument11 req'd. 3 5 Yrs exper. pref'd. STACOSWITCH INC 1139 Baker Costa Mes11 549-3041 f'::Qual Oppor E mployer INSTALLER TRAINEE for window tinting, i1tart S2 SO hr, raises to SS hr w1lh1n I ~ r Q\·er 21. toll & nent Vehicle req·d. Jo:xpcr helpful. 644-11494 JANITOR 2060 H.-bor, C .M. Hffd SSS For S""'9'Mr7 Beeline Fashions has 3 plllme openings. Ideal for women w /small children. We educate & supply sumple11 al no C'ost. Car & phone nee. Call for personal in· lervlew. 963·7470 ------ NEWPORT Ha rbor Yacht Club hu n position open for port steward. Must be exp·d Oper atin g sm. boats. malnl. of sm. boab. administering boat yard, slips & moor tnl(" 673-7730 for 1n- terv1ew. progr esalveom ce. keyboard ab1hly 1:. rc<i'd C.u:My & Company tr you are th1· one-<:all 1104 So. Coa5t Jiwy ~ O~~-hn_c ~~t. 586 7300 LAGUNA BEACH ~ ,\ _4_97-_2_45_7 I SAl.ES p/l1mf'. no exper nee. Will lram 5-9PM, Mon-Fri S3+hr ~31 0811 HEAL EST AT~ Pleasant, rchned broker o r assoc fo r ofc . s pecializin g in finer homes & residential In· coml' prope r ty. Op portunity to learn ex- changin& from award winner Call H AL PINCHIN. 675-4392 for confidential inter view. Equal Opport Realt.or. REAL F.sTATE SALES: Small Newport Beach of· rice w /money making team needs 2 more sales people Ask for Dick. Property House 642·3850 R&.a.ESTAn SALES ~f~t~~m LOS ANOElE~ PAl.M 9PAIN08 WOOOl.ANO 1111.1.8 NEWPORT 8E .. CH BULLOCK'S WILSHIRE, a leading rashlon special ty store will open Its f1r!>l SALES REAL ESTATE 100•.;, Commisslnn Desk ·-te l ephone secretary-~elp <IO yr, exp. Bill Thompson. Realwr 49S-1870 or eve~ 831-073'7 Sales Orange Co. s t or e In orr.ce e!>labllshed In NEWPORT BEACH on August lst. 1977. We ofler 1956, must increase i;taff REAL ESTATE S.i.ESHRSOH INOUSTIUAL an opportunity to JOln on Ex P 'd · • I l c e n 1i l' d • exciting roslUon forward salcspenon. Druwing T account organitaUon. he follow M ARTlN & ASSOC. ing areas for which we are accepting a ppllca· -~--M_s_-84_71 ____ . tlom require strong 11ell· i---------• ioi background SALES Accessories SLAP A SMILE <Handbag1> BettttJewelry) OH YOUR FACE Intimate Apparel & A BULGE & Foundations IN YOUR WALLET ·: Lutrna11 Tl ME/LIFE UBRARJES .. Has both full & part M ... 'S Clo ... • time pos.1uona a vail. UH Ulmf 4 Fun lovln.a a rtlculalt & ,...... indiYlduala who are "l'9' wwear eager lO ltltn how lO Milla Make Top 1$$$SSS en We Off..-: <Wl•Sty luilxp > Mo.tySa&.y ~AAIAI r~, ..-.~ .,... w15t•tn1 lftcenttnlHn" a.wornttt's Credit hll·Tlme Pe-r1on W• art •lto ueepUn1 a ppllcaUon• f or BEAUTICIANS in our Bu~aa.ton ~al~!f~tter Altanllod Otpt. CALL US TODAY AND START SMIUN 1Dlm5 T1Mlft,JPI UUAifll. IMC Equal Opp EO'Pln rn/f OAll V PILOT ....,w~ 71 •••••••••••••••••••••• :-. \I 1-:s I' llm1· c•\ l'nllll( (NjVilf' llh·~llf\' t' ul Ill, \\1,.h bll l'l1t1ll Thurldey,July7, 19T7 .....,w_..ct 1100 Am.._ 1011 . .............•.•..••.. ·~····················· T•lifphDiM S-... 1''ounta1n Vall1.1y P olice I( ) 0 u 11 k" m 16 kIn1 l>r'pt AU( lion. July 9th. rnll rll'\, h1t\ IOI run £c 10AM to~ t0200Shaler ... . . . . . 1050 ••••••••••••••••••••••• **I BUY** CclOc1 used Furnitun• & Appliances -OR I wlll ft'll or SELL ror You. MASTERS AUCTION 64M616 • 8ll·9625 • MJictllaMOUS 8080 Gwral 'OIO'GMlral 9010 ~.Sol./ ~Racr, ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• .... . •120 ·~ 9540 WANTED TOP CASH DOLLAR PAID FOR Youn JEWELRY. WATCH~. AKT OBJECTS. GOLD, ~ILVER SERVICE 1''1NE F URN & AN ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• •16VWCAMPER '72 AVENGER GT ~ft 1 so o c c • v w e Jfa .• Automatic, AM /FM Complete. $1.800. s.57"'518 radio. heater & Im v maculale tbruout ! Pop e Cl>::_ ______ _ top model with awtUD& at SCRAM-lETS ANSWERS 1 ,, I k 1 n i: 11 n l h c lkyclff 1020 l'h•11w 11tll u> I' LI mt & • •••••• •••••• , ••••••• •• I" 11m1• ah1f1,. II\ ~II Sl'HWINN ~ .. i:lrh bike t.r'l:Jlw b.•m11t• fouat $20,SCHWINN2t1"10i.pd l-'urn1\urc Stri pped & TlQU~_&IS-_2200_ OVERLOADED !! s~2~aro~ almo:.t every conce1v" 4 Whefl Orfua 9550 ble 1•1'tra available ••••••••••••••••••••••• \003PPM > 1973 CHEVY 4l4 ~tlo.h ,,,,, .. , ·"""'"''"'' "1 !'lul • boy~ $30 548·0709e\t.l '""'"' 'l"hth 11111n1n11 • Hl'limsht!d b) t:xptorts Sola SSO. Rocker, lots ul 752·~dys,S4S·G82Gcvt-wallpaper, F ender What.•er H h*e1 to get you !ft "'•" beClllftNI Sea Rap -WE WILL 1>o m OMLY $6495 AutomatJc. pwr 11leeriftG MARQUIS TOYOTA & bruku, air coiid .• MlSStON VIEJO c ustom cull & m•ny IUom«" l\11hu' I 'hon1 ~o W'Jt '7 l M 0 T 0 B EC A N t:, KlnR 111:cc Waterbed & Rhodes Bass. 646·6533, heuter, ILke new, $125 Or 646-0935 ____ _ No ....... Offw lefused 831-2880 49S.12 Io olher exlJ'u. Su~r low Sl-\llOtlSll \I \ht' h Ill 11111 '< r !'oho Jnn11111111'«1 h1·1 •·1ui.•.:rm1•nt loul I th111k 11 '"'' )W.I ll Sh.I H \tl'>ll 1't:t.t:I' llON t. SOl.H ITOUS M.11urc• frmJl1•1> w 1~ule>1> . od ur µhunt• c·x11 1111) I ll(lllUW'I 71 I !llill ;i:~I (irand Record, silver, .:ocld l'ond. $100. 645 9695 licycle luitt For Two olCtr. M0-91.26 Children's booklet: IO Fun MODERN 71." Sofa, 6' ideas. Send $1.50. 23652 Walnut corr tbl , ~Walnut Verona, Laguna Hills . 15 Yecr FlnanclftCJ AYaHoble Harrison's Sea Ray _ --m1leage·only 49,000. '67 Dodge ~• ton camper, (l.34480). w/slovc·sink·bubble top, HOW $3925 1 'olumb1a Tnmh•m Xlnt T.Ct.r ~roof Opr l'Ond. $125. &12·11223 & usk end tbb, vanyl swivel rocker w/oltom1rn. occ. chr .. 2 lamps. $390. 1142·9936 art 6l' M !'!'. •n· Ht.l I-I' I lll:\I!'> I l'.1rt llmt· !i 11"'., I' "k I 1. l'\I l'hum I\ 111n.: :-.hurth.and ~1 .-1101 I &·111·h .:,;· 11u:1 l1111m.'\J u114.•11111~:' .nu1l for ()c De._ _ lur "h.iq1, \o\t•ll ~wurnl•d l&lllding Moffriols 8025 11t•1w1111w 11111r11 )1 1·.1q.1 •••••••••••••••••••••••Moving, sofa bed $75, 2 Xlnt h..r1tl1h &. -..ii l'ull U ..... L •·~ ... 12 .. 18. club ch;urs $50 ea. lump ----------1 , ·It'" •·1·1·1 s.,., um"'"r ... " x base SJO· coffee table $100.$ 300 J1tr..-1tuu ...... ,... (22>. 3' "1o"xl6' (41. ' , .. Sc<'t I f'roo . llJ11k11IN1·~11<11l . r >.lO"xt•I'•" 14321• T S200. Mis~. 1l cm:;, etll ~Gtit 1-R.E. t-.(ju..i~por 1'.rnplo~ n hrackels 126 I. 644•0878 iUnt cond. t).l l·.t397 l::111Vl<•vt!r' I' .1 v i\ II l"t·t·' l..11 Rt•rndl"ri \)01•111 ~ 4mO H1rch !'>I Mt• II» '>cwport Bt· .. t h XJ:l 1:1100 l'allforappl l' .. IJb 1.5 TRAVEL AGENT 1'.xpt•r d (' Jll 759 1\131 TREE TOPPERS HARNWOOD · Guotl 't:lertion Will sell or lrede Also 1n~tall &t2 9-135 EARLY t\mer Sofa, gd cond , 3 matrh ·~ Mapll! tbl~. , 160 or bt>sl ofr !157 0825 & PRUNERS r\..---8040 Spanish llex.11wn table _________ _, l'tt'l'C "ork. l"ull or µ.iit :-;:?:•••••••••••••••••• w ti ehr:., chandelier. ti.mt• L1> lo SlOf) 1><'r ~dY .\KC reg1::.tered blond ~~~l~l~~d~;n~ar~~~~~r~ SECRETARY '.;'11 :~onn\ al ld'1 J male 'C()(:kt·r pupp) S w /slora~e&lope<cpunds Loni.: ktm. lt•mporJ1 \ '''"ljji,. "'~" :\lun thru mo. Ador.iblc t:l'ntle tor l'Utling. l:>mgle lll'd, 7 .r~s1.:nme11t throudi \ 1·J1 fo'r i 7 11m 10 •1 pm 101 es children 1>44·58M7 clr:iwrr drr,wr & mir • 1111 lur ,1 1'1·1 ~·1111n·I __________ , ror. 2 l'nd tbls. 6 IJmp:,. U1•pl ~··l ll'l.11' Sh <'!,, I\ p1:.l • LITILE PUPPY. l!JJ 1303 art ti JO PM 1\111111: 'krlb n•q" 1:11rnl TECHNICAL TYPIST Cute malt· wtll bt• \\ Jll."pll• ,I ·'l'I( "',\I ll'I nl C d I ll 111 ' I f I' 1 .111 'I) 111"1 lur h'dtnil'al & ~u:.taehuw<l I .. tl>l ol hl -.l.1li,IH'al clot·umcnts. tcr ~·l!l Ill \Jw,1 lYJ>l' 6.'> "pm Will 1ra11i 011 word prnn·ssmi.: AKC l'oodll' puppies. 1111y 0dm::.h Teak II\ rm. d111 r m , & u d 1 m s 1• l ' . ws hr dr~r. k1tth lhl misc hshld 1ltms 642·34 l!J office overload ,·quip l'rofll'll'IH'Y in toy,all::.hot.., · High 1'11:.t(·r twn bed, i.:1 ~11nrn.1r n•q 'd For 5:ill·&-155 complete Yt•llow, $25. 557-0061 Jppl l'onlJl'l Carol ---. , --Andmisl'.67:.18228 -;m11h, J\vrn Ftnancjal AKC 2 Iris h Setters, -- -:l72J lilrl'h SI Nlf . S.:rv11•cs, (714 1 GH·5llOO. r e ma le. li46 ·0142 or GarGCJ4t Sal~ 8055 ~;11u;d Oµpor Employer 645-2801 art 5PM •••••••••• •••• •• •• ••• • • -SECRETARY EXECUTIVE TYPIST F.1 .. h1ttn bl.ind It fo, l11 m l''P'' ill"IHil -.h 1111 '111p111l Ct1 •1111110 l'tll l·ll•ll•' l11mtop:.~k1ll• •·Ill 111.:.1 ·u1 1fft1 I :1 '' AKC !\lini blk poodll', malt>, 7 mn Trainrd, <111 shots. Sl:t5. 1>-15 7634 0 E Sht'rpc1o~ pups \KC. l]UJI . t•humµ llnl''> 1>15-1273 !!611 l!llll "', 11·1 '" pl 11111, I 1 • \\,11111·,, Foo<I I '111·k!Jal-. lld• (;11 -.kilh I• I"' 1:; \111111 .ilt lpm :-.ul's UOg Obedia_ncc Classes, 8 l II '"It I., w'll ., ,., 1 lllul' Bt•l·l IUi 2ht l'I lessons. ~. Mrsa Verde •1 ' II l . n. --· • "' H ;area 893·3098. 549.2371 \\ ,111n• .. ., tor u .. 1i.oa cof l•·l·shop Min 3)rscicp Also, U1'>h" ashl'r· middle ,1i:ccl woman. lmmed. AKC REC 'D. Whlc. w .~a· ble head Collie. Fem. 41 z mos. S90 or besl ofr. 548486l '•l'nl'rJI 0H1n• \o\fllk. ·• <IJ\S \H•ek . 1111 <.hllllhJncl re<i'd. B & n l.Jhcl h11· fHS 22SI Sl!CUTARY n1><'ning., On•r JI!. Call IRISll SF:'Ii'F.R .111ipm5Jl 8008.___ Puppies. AKC reg d. 7 t fl h" ~ ~ . p I II" I' I I\ \\';1rtl'l'S'i·exper'c1. i\pply v.1·ek.'1. 548·7827 11i;.r11Jgl·r i.,,.,l ·11111rnll• 1n p.·r~nn Uoh'::. Family ---- 1qi111g 11·<111111·11 111·.111 Ht•.,1,1111 Jill llWI so ~;1 frtt to You 8045 11hnnt'<; :\lc:l h1· J.!111111 ('.1m11111 ll1•.1I San ••••••••••••••••••••••• v ith Ci '111 "' \hit• lo ('knwnt1· Loveable l>lk whl mix ••01 k ""1lh 1111 n•rn.d hr ed female. IU 15lbs. 'lif1'1\i,tllll 11 .... ,, IOln W\l'l'llESSES IO\'CS kid!>, ITIU'>t have 111111•1 kn11.-lhlJ.!1' .I 11111'>1 l·'.'l.p 11111) 11\l'I' ~5 good homt' eves 640·911)9, I 'a II su~IHI f> 17 11 '>ll 1:..'l\ r: 171 h St Lmdu )'.EC'ltET,\HY llkpi l"ull WAREHOUSEMAN I I Ill ,. ;1 d II I t l ,. p l' !'>l'<·rl'li.iry,bkpi wr111i·Jn & WEIGHER ~•l'l'l'pt n•.,ponl>tbillly & !\1JlU1 c person lo weigh lollnw 111,..11 udaun~. & "arehouse bulk lc,muni.: mJnv anll'rc~I '1tamms Sc1ml' la fling. mg 1·orµ funr1111ns Gd Mu:.l bi' m·Jt & con~cicn· health. non ,..mnk1•r, non 11110.' 1\pply B AM·9 30 •lnnker, .:d work mi.: c·o11 ,\\I l.anwilt•n l.Jbs. :!I U! 1ls w prn)!rl'\."'i' <' 1•orp N1•\\ IJOl1 llh rl C\I S.:ml.or Ur~O)! JUh,n•'\Unll' \\\• IH•l•d ;,() f>l'Clple \\<ho Jrt' 111 .J;l:..'OH I .1w1i ( i·r~<·tJ .11 11.'J"l 10 lbs o1er-..,lt· l. ~Jn Ju.•11 < ·'11" "''ll!hl Call ~h Stone al '· .• 'f.!t.,5 751 ~HfS \.\'c l"Jfl tell you hnw to loo;e pounds &. t'JI 11 mun1·} at the ::.ame FREE·7 month o l tl Golde n Hctrievc r , Shephard. 612 0903 Free lo J:ood home. Collie & bl:ick llctricver mix lure. Approx. 2 years old Vt-ry loveable E.xcellcnl with children. minds well Call 581 0058 for Alu:c .. F n E E K I T T ~. N S Rcauurul White with blue e) e.. 6 week~ uld s..u; .. m1 2-SECURITY GUARDS llml' 5 IG\tens, unusual mark ---ings. 6 wks old. Bo x trruned. Free. 496· 7705 ~handis~ N:ashion Island, HB ••• •••••• •• ••• • • •• • •• ••. Lo,·eable Dover Shores Antiques 8005 community cat. Needs ••••••••••••••••••••••• home, neutered m::ilc Offi<•e cqwp, twin beds, M i s c h !.. I d 1 I 1• m s ! Sat Sun. July x !I H 5 119 LCXlnJ(llln l.Jn1• t'M 556·1116-1 L I I> o I ..., L ~; HA't'FHO'\'I ,an11qlll'" V.J»hcr tlr\1•1 "ola. 1•ham ... lob ·or i:oodt~. .. 'r1 SJt only !l I !JOO VrJ l.1d o NordNcwporl UCJ<.'h lllG 4 FAMILY S \LE Sal Sun. 2752 San Juan Lane Costa Mesa fri & S:il 9·5. Many in· teresting items Corner twrn bed umt. child toys. luwn turn. Other m1sr lll'm'>. Mission llay llr Dl:\l lH0515H Mo v 1 n i.: Su 1 c !\1 u 11 ) helong111g'> .:••I hl'rl•d thru lhl' years & now must go l'alH> furn , cl(•l'u bricks f.lcct uppl dishes. clothes & much mort• <1111 E ltilh St, CM. ~·n·Sun 10 5 Fill.SAT &SUN Hcellner w '' il.ir:stor & heat. end tl.ils. thr:. lamr)l,, man) other nacl' thm~s. 8252 T}ll!r Circle II R 1 Nr HeJch .\ Yorktown I !l68 t929 c:ARAGE~J\LE JJ.I ~: 16th St <.:0.,1.1 .\ksa Fri Sal Sun 3 FAMILIES t!IR32 Potomac Ln IGlcn J\tar) Nr Bus hard ' Adams. IO am lo 5 pm Sal/S un . Small ap- pliances. TV. Br set, sk:ites. misc \\\•1•kty pay & prnd va<' \l11t rrinj.!r hcndlh 1\l)ll\C' ,1\l•r:ll!I' w.ll:l'' 1,n1for111 & c•(Ju•p lurn1.,h<'d <:.11 & 1lhnn1• 11«1 ii. Call 121:0 "7:l !1151! 1<11 l1k:al appt E O E Wonderland &45-8999. . Hones 8060 Of Antiques! H I' c; ~: w a r c h n u s e nammed '"1th nver 500 lllll'>ll' huxc~. 111ckclo· dl.in JllJnos. circus or i.:an ... wall clocks, i.:rundfat hl'r clocks. fa.,cm.iltnA antiques. l>o berm an : Sh c p he r<I. • • •• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • free tn gel hm w ~p:it·c· 2 Palomino Pinto Gl'ldmg, \'rold male. 492· li!l8 (luarll'I horst• Ii ) rs :-._.,. y w;111kd l.1·1,!.il r xp m•r1•~;,arv 1; \H'l'k sum rn 1· r 1 l· JI I .11• 1• 111 l' n l XJ..'l ~Iii:!:! U RG ... NT, .\l . 1, mull• Xlnl 1:o~cl l'J·nf truinecl. "" · · a 1 Show W1mwr l'u:.h hut· younl(_ neutered, male ton Sl500. Ph 1)75 :l5tl(J .ueaullful. 534 4619 · -----:--For Sult• Quurtcr hor~l' One·eyed Silky mix Mustanl( mare \'i•ry female. 7 yrs. spayc~. 1tentle & wl'll trained shot s, Animal Assist English /Western ridini:. 537.2273 Call Mary Bahs 1\40 1995 Sen an• Sta i\ll1•ndJnt. exper'd Full or p llmr Apply ArC'Cl S!Jlll>fl, 17th I\! In llll'. C \1 )'.1•rnc1• ~1.11111n i\llen 11.1111. (·i.·pcr d Da) & '"'l'' Jo'ull & p t1m1• \p pl~. Shell S1:ition. 17th & lr\\Ol'. NII Ovl'r Sl.l")(),()0(1 Worth Amencan International Ciullcnes. ltl02·T KetlC'r- 1n1ot St .. Irvine. Tel 751 1777 ppen Wed thru S.rt !l1\:\1 lo4 PM. Visit' BRASS BED FACTORY Beautiful Sam nyed do~. altered male to good home 548-5669 Weimaraner Fem. 5 yrs. nds good home due lo I .I! selcclt0n ol pure moving. Lo' es kids :-cn1ce Slal111n ,..,interl llH1\SS Beds Reas 968·3035 •:!I Full & p llml' Some price~ Buy d irect & Free lo good homr. Norw 1•\per Top \I a.:c" + ~J~e' Elkhound. male l'> yrs «Jmm & ',I(· PJ' allrr I T llE WAAG BED lo,·ing & gentle. 963·7719 H Appl\, Cart•y's 4!33tNewportBI. Che\ ron. (iO I s cnasl ~2·27_1_2 ___ Beautiful Lab/Shepherd llwy. La.: ll<:h 1\11 phone CU)CK, Vienna regulator mix needs loving home. l'alls. _ _ wall. 3 wt!-. match ing en· _962 __ -6_138-------1 SEWING MiH·h oper's. graved fuce, weights & FREE KITTEN, female, Expanding mfg. need s _pendulum. 557.3391 7 wks. Orange tiger, exp. oper:ilors. 15110 Appliances IOIO house trained, c ute. _ Monrov:!: NB, 642·3472 _ ••••••••••••••••••••••• 960-3563. St-U PPING & W1ashen1. dl')'ers. Clean FEMALE kitten, 8 weeks, RECf~IVING lste models. $'1.00. 1 yr Black , 0\Jffy. t rained 40 Hr weC'k. Apply an guor . 1o·r ce dcJl~ry . 5411-:!985 person 10am t2. Costa M:1tr Chg. Will also buy. Mesa S\alloner:i, 270 E. 636-2840_. ___ , __ _ tnhSt, C M ___ _ i''RG HT DAM AG ED or Madeline Blinder 1;10 8277 HEED HELP? llelp your.;elt lo a I leaping sclcct1on of ~uahf1ed lloperuls in lh<' D \JLY PILOT llELPWANTEDADS -----Jewelry 8070 ••••••••••••••••••••••• SEHIOR HOO'POINT ~~. 3308 ---':;.,.._------i W. Wa rnel' nt lfarbor, ••••••••••••••••••••••• Sears Porta Potli. used once, 4 gallon holding lunk, rifty flushes. $60 840·1.244. 310 I Pacific Coast Hwy Newport leach 631 ·2547 Boats. Sail 9060 .......•............... $1850. ~om__ -HAIRS '72 VW POP TOP AUTO CENTER A"'f FM Ser •123 1"25BakerSt.,C.M. "Sa,67S/offe;. · 540.9109 Clvistion Cor Co. 549-1098 ,- AMC·JEEP #I in Collf. l:Ncorawr Item!> 416Hazel,CDM . July 10 Boats & Marine Equipment 1 4 ••••••••••••••••••••••• SOUTHWESTERN YACHT SALES FUJI 32, 3S. 45, 45 MKll Motorized 81kH 9140 WE OUTSELL ALL JEEP DEALERS INTllESTATE HUGE INVEHTORY' All Models New & tJJcd Leas111g Available CostoMesa AMC Jeep 2524HARBORBLVU. Sofa SSO. rocker. lots of wallpaper. Fender Rbodes bass. &16·6533: 0$-0935 Lasl 2 Weeks! Must sell cverylhmg! Table-s, mir· rors, clocks, shelves, <.'Oat racks, spoon rack:.. wine racks, teak ships, etageres, plant stands. oil lamps, glass shelvini:. features. All pr1l'e~ ::..lashed again• Nora :. lloml' Al'renl. 1128 So Coast ll'l"y, Village f·a1r, l.a.:u11a Bcal·h ( 'utlmJ( Torch. Gout.I cond. Sola. 91,;o.3570 Boats. Marine Equipment 9030 Shark 2.t Sloop S6100 *ZODIAC MorJ:o1128equ1pt S22.5 Port A Marint-Newport 30 race $24,400 lnflutable Hoa!:. Newport 30's (2J Offer ~ Colle~t· C M !sit.Ir 3011 Loaded SUM t714l510·2070 Erwrn32Dsleqpt S34 5 Col 34 Super S32,800 ••••••••••••••••••••••• VHF FM 15 c·hannel. syn· Fu11 35 hke new S.SSM the..ized marine radio <.'I 41 Charter or S76M lelc !., & re~. s.524 !>5. ~ale fUJI 4.SOwn Sll99S Save lo 2.'l', on Jn\IOUS Offer all munne l'lt•rlronic~ FUJ145Cru1!.l' S118M lld lllam aft tiµm 1:all Chaiters&Shp" 556·6..'>00 2mNewport Bl ············•··•·••·•·· Honda Expres~. 260 m1, xlnl cond SJOO. 548·2938 alt 5, S48-06n. ext 482 MOP E D. Batavus, gd cond. $300. Cull Sbawn, ~---~7828~~- tr~·J 9150 . •..............•.••... '7U HO Sporlstcr Xlnl cond Rebwl\ eng, trans, serru·rhop. S1750 or make orrer. 547 Ul45 b/3·921 l 5 L' d Wanted ~ood u::.cd 45 60hP1-----------•YAMAllJ\ 12 '"" urn, •) B J ""'"' 5700 mrlc:.. sharp, $250 ' um er""""' Lido 14, sails, .lr11aler 5'18·1Y709 <'VCS RJ7 7705 l'Over, 1976, $!,15() Or Of· ----- Calta Mesa 549-80'23 JEEPS "77" C J -5':,, <.:J ·7 's, Cherokees. Wugon~eri.. P1rk·ups. up to $1,200 d1~ OOWll:. 5 yr 50,000 mile warrant"~ available. C~ond Mtn Inc 2001 E 1st. SA 558·8000 Kin" :.z Ortho Sleep s100. Boats, Power 9040 b ••••••••••••••••••••••• fer . 542·0593 _...._ ----- 14' Layman FG. sailboat. $450. '7 4 Honda CB200 Xlnt Cond, Extras Never Used 962-8437 it TOYOTA Landcrwscr New brakes. shocks, xtru tires. S:HOO. 586·3240 Queen sz Style Hse $75. Mml cond 840.3709 7Xl0 metal shed w /wood fir. $100. You remove II.JI 2865 IRVINE COAST COlJN TRY CLUB Famtly mt>mbersh1p S600 or bc:.l ofr 644·2712 & 641 7118'.! S,\\'E on 1;1on;i Murl>hall lr<•Jtmt'nl:. lkJ( S:I. ~l'll for S? SO C.Jll 548 OS.17 Trad111onal Wedd1n.: dno:.s, with 'e1I. Sazt-lU. SIS 963·7i19 27' ffrojan Cruiser Twin v8's, rad.,:sounder , Painted , tuned, ready S7500 /\ Y616·9000 30' Sea Rays Demo By Appt. Harrison's Sea Ray 3 I 0 I Pacific Cst Hwy Hwpt Bch 631-2547 :.'7 L'hris l'raft. twin 283 :'\o Offer Refused Wood <.:hl'' Y Sdl /trade trl!asure chest, 1 run _531 @13. &16·1170 stands. planter~ S2:l plants lur SI Misc 968·75!17 !l55t Olympic Ur II 8 .\l111k lathe::. :.1, 10 12 ,\ut umn Ila it• Stroller ll•nr.,'lh Almost nt•1o1o S><J(J .m:1 u5:1 ,1r1 Ii !I :o. !:!' TE:'l'T W<1rd'" t·an \HS llsc•il :1 tlfllC'> Nd) new SB.'>. Wrought Iron Parrol l':lgl! ~5. Parrot stand SIS. Ph 840·4345 E>.pert Clotk rl'pa1rin~. reasonable also uov & sell dork~. Peterson·., 193 1088 28"0WEHS Express Cnnser T'I" 1n 2A3 Che' o; J U!>t O\ l•r haul1•d F.lcl'lrtc trim ta 11~ new ' .tr n 1 ~ h Shim l'r. pro11a1w "tm c ~ m l'n Hail lank. lll'l>th I inlll'I . Ill'" c·ont ruh !i~'>!JO Wtll l·1111::.1tl"r 11 Jtl 1111? m) l'quity lnr ski hool or ·· \71'1 I {i21Hl3-11:1 t·n·:> ur wk ends 21 ' Fanla'y Cab111 Cru1~er, twin :.crew:.. loaded . rully naugh l•1H·lo.,etl. tlyhrtlJ,le, liti !IW3 or ti-14 171.)0 Ext ~H a-.k lor Larry 673-1440 or 673· 1320 Ericson 35 full race/cruise, t 1 bags, loadl'<l. immac $37,000. p IP 67J f»44 73 Seoul II, 37,000mi, x lnt <'On<!. New all road ti~~~,. best orr. 645·3007 or 522·331l Trucks 9560 HOBIE 14 1976 llonda '550FourSS, ~··•••••••••••~··•••••• ''"l cond, l'Ustom :.cal. 7:1 ToyolJ I' l lA>C'~ll~ '.\Int tond, 492·727!1 art 6 bJrs. SlS!>Y bJr 045 295J .. w n l' d A ~I fo \I • . • , . rtllho +l'i-tra:. (,d l'Ollll. 1-:m 2·35 COM.\10rl0N. '71500 Ka"1"asJk1 !\lack 3 S2200hrm ·199 3\05 onl' ol the Caste:.t & bl'sl net.'t:ls motor work $225 ·-• t'QWppt'd 35 a\allable. Or Be:.l orf<'r 646·9400 16S11\eradO"• lOn $5300. 714 C.'73 7700 _ GAM . 2P M Mon·Sat. 32M m1~ !>000 on new Kl'n · motor Xlnt shal)t!. P\l Calii •. loaded,w/Newwrt _ -----ply. Call a fl fi, T om moonng. $\209 it llurley Sporl!>ter. ~-2680 or John 838-4917 ~·6680 Just reblt. Must sell. Before 6, ore 962·6693 Pcnown 12' sailboat Xlnl Best offer. 548-03.'>0 '70 D ts -p · k I \""' "' ----a un 1c up w p "'-!>hape, rlJ?J?ing & trailer~ '75 JID Sporlsler. Low rack, & tool boxes, $950. s:nl.&l.2·0154. ____ milragt', xlnt cond. 586 0198 • M' Catamaran w /ltlr. S2400 ofr 499. 114 I & '73-D -l---,, -U. 1 rf ~162 7275 a sun .o Ue~to er rnlleaj.!l' 't•rv l kJn l'.ill 518·0350 '711 Yamal1<.t 1T500 'lrct:l $16Sll l.'all 5~.17 1!2il SABOT· SI SO til5 1578 ll•ga I Many 't ras r~ :1120 '77 Short hcd Chi·'~ 1\ll lhl' l''<lra:.. kaoii m•. I londa :Jl;\1 5i00 ma S.1K :Jtiu ~' Columh1a Contender. Xlnt cont I Mu!..l Si•e x Int cond, must st-II t;.llMtl3ti $19!15 01 r 642·2455 15'•' Sea Spray Catamaran w /lrlr. m any 3l'Ct'SSOr 1es, $1150. 646.2963 SOL C1\T 18, xlnt cond . muny xlras. S'WOO 963·9355 ·7:, Yamaha J:o:nduro, pl'rfel·t rood , 360 mi, nevl'r br<•n m dirt. SSG9. 64ti-till711 llonda '76400 FOUll Xlnt cund XLNT L'ON D Call tii3·106f. •'72 COURIER# New paint & tire~ • <75837V> $1,595/offer Christian Car CQ. 549-8098 •'74 GMC Sprinh AM FM. u1r. Like new lff17266) $3.450/oHuc Christian Car Co. ~OVING )'.ALI': :! "" 1 n dn.',lll!r:.. I pwr mer" l't 4 dmmg rm chri. rl'l'Ord pLt~cr. 1 c·ou<h. I book 7til'hn,,lcr V,1ll.1nl, t·om pl td1. & all c4u1pmen1 SIUN~:y S.tbol. hkt> new "22m 900 372l lOnd . rJt'e ni.:ged . S450 llONO.\XR75 S32S llONDA 50. SHIU s.i1, >1!11 IO or 527 2l!r7 549-8098 71 Ford R.inchero-:-Air ~ I'S PB. radio. With s~. Xlnl cond $HOO or• r .. t;.it, 3213 or 833·9199_.....:_j '>hl'lf. Span (Jnl>1Le 2S t'hn., l'rall l".1' uhcr hdhoa1cl ti36 ~I 1·ompll·ll'I} rt•,..lorcd O'KEEf'E & Merrill dhl Olien St\ . dVOCado. -<Int rond S200 T"''" mat tress S20. 962 2til l ;ifl 811:.tol cont.I. \ 111'' ~ ,\ \1 rJd1cr L>ep\h lindl·r. lull cam a., S7800 675 1552 or ~-i86.'! 6pm 9' l Ft. d inghy. Ackerman -Ack· Wa·D1nk Uri:.tol Approx.' 200 yds usrd cond Lift f1llin.cs. new , crpl)!, good ronrl · · cu!;lom 011rs & l'O\cr. a\ ocado. S2 per yrl 111 \\Ith or without 4 II P ddg pad. 1137 71:.!S or 1-:11nrudt· A:->king S795 675-3t83 M;, :..ii;s Miscellaneous Wanted 8081 .•••.....••.......••••• $CASH FORS Cuod u~ed furn refni.ts Freezers & s l ov"~ 54l;·tYi'68 WET DRY VACUUM & 24' SEA RAY !'>undanrcr hr.ill•l 111•\lo \\ lrl1 S26,000 + rnve!ll t•d Boal l•1<11l1·tl. I rl'e Ill() l!al of Cut•I l'nt·1•d tu sell 'ill li.'l.1·25i5 ult i . dnys i14 .5 41l <&:IOU U Marsell us CARPET SCR U BBER 44 ' Trawler 1976 ls land forCASH M8·~90 Gyp:-.y Loaded New equip Ur1 :..lo l ~Ill 2!1811 26. l'E \HSON J\lberJ? dt>· l'liJ H:\1 \\' H60 S F.11nni.:. Lia~~ mini t·un1ht1on ~1i.:n. lull kcC'I sloop. Scott 1!tt-it121 639-5i24 ;>tt; !151!3 Columbia 26. Mark II. ex. Motor Hornes, Sale I VOM 9570 Ira clean. 6 ba)!s sails. 9.9 Rent /Storage 9160 ••••••••• ••••••• ••••• •• l::vinrudt' 2 boat ownl!r ••••••••••••••••••••••• Van Conversion Co. sell· w u n l s to i; c I L M(YfOR HOME.~ 1n1t 2 demos: l. '7i 17H 1542 3973 or e\'Cs FOR RENT t•ustom Chev .. bay \\in- 644 ~or 552·i45l 1-'rom SlSO wk. 770 06-H dows, gaucho & many e\- ?-; L'I n L;-"ALL s " lras. Loni? whl base. 2 '7i Naplt•!> Sahot, complete, Rcnl.23 r "'" • 1 ~. t:MCshor\whlhase.p1t· ready losa11. Sl75 loads of windows & windows. U bed. man~ tl9.t·S41!1 . M1mtcr spat•e 645·2283 rxtras %7 8267 Dir Vl'nlurc 21. s ip!> 4, all op twns. lru1ler mdd. S3SOO 642 11245 30' YAWL Aft cabin, new molor $4.995 A Y 646·9000 llOBIE CAT 16' full race. 2 sets of sails, w ttrlr. $1000/bsl _orr. 556·5637 bt.wn llam & I or come lo SO.CALIF'S LARGEST fleet of "New" Motor Home Rentals Ovl!r 140 1!177 models lo choose from: I8'to32'. Insurance included Dale's RV Rentals, Inc. • (714)559-4446 'I)!) l•'ord Van. Ii t•yl, aulo tran~. perfect cond . Makcofrer. 645·7735 .-, !71 FOHD AM !FM 11'tfJc,, P /S, A /C. 54000 tAt,. 644 2242 ______ .... ...__ ·al 2715CoveSt,CdM ---------Maisie Rent 21· Mini. Sips s adlts. l•ts~nts 8083 27' Cabin Crwser for i.alc 21· Clipper. retract keel, A/C. generator, PS/Pll 213 ~1 14112 1977 Chev Van :v~ t6,4-. Stereo cass. P /B, -2'1.'. spray foam insulated. Fully ritted Still on '¥ar· ran\y. Call 673 9149 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ortrade hrelines. hinged mast, 531.3425 .... ~ w-.1....d 9590 · 'l u · I 71i8 3674 sail cover O B & trlr. ---------·--........ os ........ Conn •• mO·mallc ccc --. ---Mustsell!847.~39 Trailen,TrCl\rel ,170 ••••••••••••••••••••••• organ ex<'ellenl cond1· 38'1'14' unfin molded ----••••••••••••••••••••••• 1~0.!!· S600. P P 532·t2~ fbrgls power boal hull, Newport 30, IB, full race ;5 Starcraft tent trlr Sip TOP ti8 Fender Kingman cabm & flybndge Deep gear, outstanding rood. 6, st v. sink. ice box DOLLAR acoustic guitar. xlnt Vpopular deslgn.$12,000 $22,000. 833·5846 dys: Hookups.$1350.559·1342 P.,ID cond Sl50. 6'7J..9067 or tradr for smaller boat evs/wknds 957•1666 " 675·8C174 25' TERRY Travel Trlr FORCLEAN Premier Drum Sel --;-8 'd • CAL20W(frlr.6hp0/B. Slp.oi8, refrig, stv. b:ith, w/Tama snre. 6 Z1ld 18 0':"n er, l65 r..~rc VHP.SsajJs.cvr.extras. A/C, access. Xlnl cond. cymbals. ~. 759·0874, (/0 Fish/ski Trlr. Like $&S95.&40-6772 $l200 963·2135 art 6PM !!.._<'W. $4700. 968 5935 18' Tn·hull + trlr, lOOhp Kl~ Xlnt cond. Mere 0 /B, pwr trim & $l50 Pvt Pty 642·1802 Wanted old travel trlr. Qmdit1on not 1mportun\. Please Call ~-0477 till. S!SOO. 846·6075 loats. SpHCI & ----Ski 9080 Auto Senice, Ports IMPORT CA ALL MODELS z.t' SEA RAY, 71 Wlcndr. load«l/mustsee 531-2700 ----32• Chris CoMlC ••••••••••••••••••••••• 17' Skl boat, J8, V dnve. w/trlr. Needs work, $800 or bstofr. 531>-1044 Glasspar Bowride.t. Nr new, 135 hp E vlnrude. Amerlc1tn trlr. skis & ecces, new batt/canopy. $2750. fl40..4380 N 8 Tr•uportetloa ••••••••••••••••••••••• 9110 & Ac:cessorf•s 9400 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ---SAVEWITll WE USED & REBUILT FOREIGN CAR PARTS' Ml!:ED . I Engines CLEA~ -'Transmissions USED CARS ~Ends MOW IFenders CALL PAPPY I Doors 1Bwnpers 540·5630 1 ioi0i~!h!r. IWJ-.; -"T3 182 SkySane, lllr• new. Anaheim 77&-9900 2626HAllOR llVD. YeUow twhitc. l OWner. COSTA MESA 9050 King eqllipmcnt. Low ~bit VW engine. 1!)65, & __ ;;..;;..;;.;.;..;...;o.;,;;.=.~-... Ume. Must see. D•ya, transmission 67& 87!8 CAil OUTLET , 56-9fm, eves. 613.fl832 ...:C\~"e.s:=.... -------· c.. For c~ C II n. S. / NEW Pahl For Or Mot ltMt 9120 T\meuputyuurbomc t14S HARBOR BLVD ... •••••••••••••••••••• Guaranteed & 11C4!nsed. <Harbor 4' Vitt.on-.> r :> Overbead ca mper, N>-3'742M7-Cl$ COSTAMESA , • beautlful custom Int. 642 A,53 -------t8QO, FleJdble. 54lM0'18 4/t.SOX16 5 off road Ure & -v 1ocn, Siil to60 an 6:00. II lug wbls. ~ea. Toyot. liliilll•••••••-...... •••••••• ••••••• •• -Land Cnriier 6 cyl ena, • ~ oood. Comp extu1ust • fJ'D01' ~a.lier. Eatrait . natem • mony xtra parts. new & u aed . 6419-\740 ~.t~~-~ .... ~~-~~ ~~·.~...... ~~·.~":!:.~ ....... ~:·.'.":!'!'.~ ....... ~-~~·.~-=~:.~ ....... ~~-~":,~~.~1..... """"''l Ju~ 7 '977 OAJLV PILOT C8 Wf WILL IUY o.t.. '720 HOftdo 9727 ,onche 9750 Volk.wCICJ9n 9770 Vofvo t772 Atlfoa, UHd Aados, UHd ...... Uaed YOU• DATSUH •••••••••• •••••••••• • •• ••••••••• •• •••••••••••• ••••••••••• •••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• • • llOM>A l'Ol rE c:Jwn'Olet 9'2 Pord Olda..... tf5S ~~~~~,.~,1 'tll'ile'' ;111T!lfimi ~ .. ~·'fl'lll'nlrnnrl~~~~sJ.· PORSCHE 924s vw SALE!!! oR•;6Jtv~MrY ......................................... !~.~~ ..................... .. --TOPC.AU ICl""L$ \\t· hu\l' ''" l'\C'l'lkul \h·llu\e,\nE\n•lltnt 63 <:he\.\ 1'11\,1 "U"On titiBmnt'OllOcHister 11ood 70 Olda Oelt11 88 4 dr, ~"' ,.. J 97]0 1 I Sdel'l10QOfVW L::\CLL~IVl-:1.Y\OLVU " ·ul•1 r.~ rudto. l·•ctorv IARWlCl(O.ATSUN lt7•D ... T .. U""' ~ "t'l·t1ot1µu,.,lh1• Good lnn~ u1r Nt.'14 condrllon.PP He:.tOfkr u ' u ., ,.. ,. " ••••••••••••••••• •••••• 1 humpion 11111 ~.ditiuu Bu:.l''> & Cam~r:. Lurgi;:.t Volvo lh·alt•r bi al.l'' 548 4116 S!"JO ~2til:? .ur .\lu~t ,t')I b:.l ofr. :--..iuJ111111"11I" ,,.,,,, 7101Door <'lu''" 114 1ul> "'•\Int HOW!!! llLLYATES inOran11cCounl>' l-:\c~•·.ill:i5109'J7 Ul-I J7S4t)-Jl75 ~utom11th"llh111t1111UJ JIC>"nl111 \\'1w111\"' BILLYATES VW-PORSCHE BU~~R~c'hASt: "i~)IJhbuSl.i Wtcn ,\CllCountn ~1u1rt· \\.:n i:.! 'lfl lrfrloudi;d.ldnl •\W~)\ \I 1 1·.~~.·n11 .... ~" \l ru1 v 11111~ VW-PORSCHE I'" I' 8 .!. ~i;awr luc full P"r.11 V•"' '\\I FM WE BUY CLUHCARS & TltUCkS !~~r.~?~~'5" ",;·~·AGUA• XJ6 '>.111J11.1n l'.1p"tru110 ;;a7~~ao"c,C4~)~4slo1 f't·~~~~-~,~·~. ~~ ~~~1111 c1 ... un~ l:r~::~:~1~1"~s ~~:~111tr> ~ot•~~~~.~~~~ &!~~~· "~"'r\lutArlhui 8l7·4800493·451 I 197lVWIUG •• • l).)t;ona11 )lonr.i coupe !:>qirt', rl'll M"' h into ft57 1 .. 1.uie'1t <;uud • v1uhl101' C rf "300 97 '"'''3 ••••••••••••••••••••••• &J.1111bun·\·Jhlull ,..,.,111 •111111111. oH·rh.wl 1.! 1111 I' ll<.111••1· IV I :.peed tran:. A 111\'l' 2025 S. M est omp l'l':.lort.•d l!:nt1rt• pc el'l l>• 4 ....,., lll·llOO I 'I • " n.ll.'Cl'ar! l<l8tiHEVI anc er l'Jr ltkt' Ill'~ I .hkrng 9i:! 1'11110 ~:·~s. AM CONN Ell CHEVROLET 1975 DATSUN 610W.AGOH ~.1...'_~,.~, I ' s .11 11I11··· IJlat k \\I F \I 1ad1u. Anaheim 750-2011 Sltia:> f;.&S ~165 '70 lialux1e 500, xlnt t•ond. rud1o, l(ood 1 o11d , r"' ,.. ,1111rn11t1.1 .. :1i;:!:111 ONLY $1995 1 ur. au· •·111111 ,\:.kin.: 53ti<lll60 .. I I \I a '.\ It ~.llil full I'" I \ \1 F \I 'I \'It' II 1.1cl111 ,7·,1111 1111 l'I' 11-11\ 11:11~· m !It 1 E 'l'.11.:.1 ... hJrp. hkt· "''" .ill ,1,,._ a~kini: •UllHI C'.11111.111 Iii.> 71!111 MARQUIS TOYOTA i5 MONZA LIKE ~EW ~Xl 75:.! rn~ MISSION VIEJO Autos. UHd l'wn <'Ile. 17.UOO ml. xlnl 7:! l'111tu a utomall<'. l'ilUIO " Irk tape. $1300 :>LS·O!l:l:! '"C 11 .11 ... , 111\ it ICISl\\11 ... o\ 546-1200 I ~1>n d,.111 1·01111 .111,., toc1~ m.111 "111 1 b & hw !iOCl(I' 1,11 I., 111 I ~('1•111•111 I' 11 II If II I 11 11 I) ~; \I 11 83 I ·2880 495-12 IO ••••••••••••••••••••••• •·ond Bc:.I o!r. 7Sl 6119::! GeMral 990 I '7::! ( 'ounl r) Sq ur r1· ~• 11as.. "l(n, muny ''' "' Im ma•• tiO.fl<IO m1 Sl49S • 72 Porsche 9 14 Iii! V\V l'll!d n llC\\ rl·d p.11n1 xlnl cund Sl ouo BL·l l:? & \It Iii')! fi:ll 1 i:Jl ••••••••••••••••••••••• til l·or\,u1 mu~I ~t.·11 by &12-·Hl2 ·7.1 Prnh• llunabout. AT, ,\M Jo'\1 ''•·rco, cbtlll ant Nr14 rdb \Int con d. S!~'OO C;i II 53!i 1107 '"' l\J)\11 9732 1'.'!t.it:\\'I> 1 lll.1ck on ldud< ''"l'IJ 15.t.OU milt· 1111111 c11111ht wn IRICKLIH 1 ht· 1111h nt•cd'I nod) , . \\ork I 7i I'~ :?2nd St \1,11 WE PAY TOP DOLLAR FOR HIFTY IM,OITS ONLY $4295 ...••••.•..•.•....•..•• • 7 5 J~ns~n H•aly l!l?SSvl wh111:w :.udclk II ('\I 9hJIJSJ7 75 1:rilnallu, Vii 1111 PS . tnll·nor. AM ~ \I :.tt•rt•u PB. s:lloo l'11-.111 COSTA MESA DATSUN ~Sl'd •.!ll'lUJ ~ ,,, n•o II Kiili IOI dft",IOI <•II Ina~ ur Jt·,1'.'\l ~~"15 liu) Ill le '"'' m1.1 1974 VWIUG .t 11 1u11 11" 1 or 1,i: • \ . X.lll :n:i.1 mu11uu1, 1\lu:.1 , .. 11. •hw Contirtffta1 9930 , • El'l>nun~ :.Pt'•·1al 1974 Pin· Copeland Jeep City ~out ~: ht. s \ ~ KOUIJ Copt"lond JHp C ity -'11111 I. hi S,\ >511 l!OClll I 'pet'tl. radio & hcall'l Lo" m1lea.:t' & C\lnc "' t1 u l'l\'Jn' 1988KW I lo 't'lat·atrun ~ or •••••••••• •• •••• • • ••• • • 73 llran Ton no \\. i:n .• ui:i: 111 St.i W.:11. 39.000 mr. tJ,t offer t.11.,,, 1111, l!ld )l,1rl.. I\ \II i.11.. \ raC'k .i1r dt·.111. 1.Jlut. l Bc:.t 111f1·r Ollt!r $2000 \\l.end:>io1;-,1:11·xt2-I:? c1•JI h1.1ut' )ll!.>t 0\\11rSl!llOl164-t;,ooJ:l C1111la11 1-;d Cook, MARQUIS MOTORS 'l\.'\(I.! \l,1r~llt'l l\1· f'I<. W\ .\11, ... 10'\ \ 11-;,f() .!K45 llAHHOH Bl.VO 540.6410 540-021 l MaJda 9738 ih f'11r,d11 '111 l. Cl '(Int ronl1 Yl'r) low mr rn.111\ t·\tra~ .i.1:! 7122 EH•, ONLY $2795 W:J 115:1 Jlt " fl..U ~JW AMC 9905 7:? Gran Torino St •••••••• •• • • •. •. •. •• ••• Corvette 9 9 32 Wagon (if~ld tum I \lu.,t ·75 l'inh• \\ .ig PS, PB. 831-2880 495-1210 WE'LL BUY YOUR USED IMPORT • tKu/. .• 1 111u .:.., \\l f\I 11111· 1l1.1n ,,.)!l.1 11.12 l'i:.!J ctr lii.l hl:t:! 1975 DATSUN 8210 FASTBACK ....................... miracle mazda COSTA MESA DATSUN :!S45 llARBOR BL\'D 540.6410 540.0213 1',11:•·r X c.nl\ 13.000 m1 \ulo, .iir -.lNco, I' :-, I' B. tit whl l'I• I' I' ~"~"I ll:J3 a ft ,; P \I 8uiclc 9910 .••.•••••..........••.• l!lih Con' th In ht'Julllul •11111flt111n & \11111 :o~ rlll h" I'\\ t \' llldOI\ ~. wll SISIKI Ph 1:.1:! 3J1J RM I ,\ulo trans. arr , V6. FonJ Cortina. -11,0lll• rm, I l'\ I. ti!! 'l't'a<:ht•r-. ' t•ar ~. ti4 I 49tl:! '69 LTD P S I' B \ t' 'I"\' 't I bt!llt.'d tares. lo nll I'\ I pt\' S32SO ~'iii 11~1. IH~ 2".flS AUTOMOllLE I' \Ill FOil OH M»l l \LI.~ \LES \l(j It \\1th 111 u111d 1 .1d111 ~ 2150 H--L--II ~ ht•Jlt·t Ooh 2H UOO _.._. •u. l'or .. rh1• ,·;, 'II I :.! O Nt'" en~ \p1Jt.·itf i:rµ 1-'dt'l lllJI!' ~lnt 111n!I Lot' ol \lras S'IOOO Call 113:1 0859 Jll;, il \/V/ 'lrct'l lt•gOJI U11nl' U~i;) Xlnl cond rbll ••ni: '.\lu,1 -.1·•· :s1:!011 5-1.1 7>1ll'J .it11;P;\I .........•..•..•.••••.. m.ii:-.. 'h'rt•11. air l·nncJ & 1>111 :.l 11 flll\)o! I ~52SWT' ~·or :..tit-,1,i..111i.; Si!l!l:i 1 1irt Fn\ Leai-111~ C;ill run~ "l'll 4!17·2255 l'\ l'' ·::i \\ il)(Oll. rebll CO£. \)I 1'')1 td llrcJ>.. xlnl ,·ontJ ~l.900 1bst orr Work 113·1 0511 . hm, !~Ol!'>d mile' •WK:'llXI-. 1 Sale Cosio Mna 645-5700 J•n< ,.c1 ''1 1975 MAIDA ;-,~1 l'ur,dw 11,1)11 Su1H 1 1.rkt• nc~ thruou! S'l-1511 l!H:?l:IO 1970 BUICK SKYLA.RK BILL YATES VW·PORSCHE ~.•n Juan (';1µ1stra1111 837-4800 493-4511 OHLY S3225 RX4 WAGON NABERS AutomalH . racJ1u &. .111 t'uncJ 01w II\\ 1wr 1·.1 r \1 11 h onl) .lli,lllJIJ m ilc~ 1SOONON1 \ K •• ll ' II m a ll l' I"' I Roll R 'il \'W l'11pltip C 111 µr ~tf'l•nni: & hrak"' 1111 s oyce 9756 til,000 m1. fully l!lfW"I•<"' .-u \\h1•l'I, ra<l111 & '111\ I rool AUTO CENTER 1 r!5 llakl•r St . (" ~I 540-9109' ••••••• •••• • ••• • • •• •• •• \Int ~;50 558!J~12 1.~701 l 1 • ,c,lOEAHRIN U.S.A. VWRABllT NOWSl225 Autos. Imported ........•.............. .Alfa Romeo 9705 TOP BUYER ONLY $2295 MARQUIS TOYOTA \llSSION \'I F:JO 831-288Ci 495-1210 ROY 77 CHAMPAGNE MA.HRS I R CARVER EDITION AUTO CENTER ......•..•........••••• H 5\ndt•r l>nu.:ht nt'" in 'Iii, 15,001m11 Xlnl nind flood hr,1. ,\ M FM 't~l"\'I) !lliX 11116:1 Set' u:. lll'!>l, & lasl' 'loµ llullar 1i.11d lu11111pt1rh COSTA MESA AOllS·ROYCl 77 SCIROCCOS 1425 U11kcr SI . C M 1).40 J•m~ortif I ... STOCK 540-9 109 ~wport llucll ,... DATSUN ~15 Jla1 hor Ill\ d i1, \IL1 Hom1•u \lllll' ('•hla \1··~·• :i1111i11t. lrT Lo n11 111 \ \l F:'ll rar110 !1'100 m1 1,;5 !15!1'1 7:1 llahun ·• 111/. \IL SI' "ELL \I'" I·. on 1-.H 1'171 \l;ildJ IHli llilJllC'I' 111,11111 l'ni:. Ill:\\ 1 .. 1..,, 11,.,.,i, 1ntn11r bo<.I\ "k \Int lrun.,p 1ar· "liJll 1'1rm :'IJ u,t S<.•11 ' • X:lO :>54..X --M0"44 ClOHO sur-iOAYS ~PVUF.H Rt•d"' blk lop I H old. 180011 m1 ''' r<'1 <\: ~·n ... ,. l.us:g r .id, U.1 \ ~ .)2!J 11302 l'' c•, liTI I > 1:? t;?:l 'lllSJ IH , ht !l,I\, '"" ·i:-.:111 Mel"Cedes Ben1 9740 ~;ARK I J\N ~: \lolor (9r (o Hull' llo~ 11 ~ lk'nl k\ , .. 1.·~ &. 'l'r\ 111· ; 1 "'WZ I 'l>tl \.\I I '\I lllJ): \\hi' Ill" I'll!: !'>Ille.I 1>1111l!t!:1 ·;.; ~pyder l.thr int '1.,pcl lllOJuplunkt. t:lm Fl;11A ll~' S'1!JOll ., .... , 1121:? 111;1. n.11 ,1111 .: ... uz .1 11 9707 \\I l"\I '>krc11 1a::.~ctlt: ''l\C•r 1 u ... 1 1n1 x:ll :l!Hi7 Audi .•••.••........•...•... ·~1 .\uch llHISI. \lnl I ond I .tr m ,, 11 .111 pan.''""" 1 .11111• ':l;!.'11111 5;,:! ri~r.7 i Ii U .1 I ' 11 11 II ll.11d1h,11 i.. \\I 111!-I p.11111 I "1111 1 11111! itil< Ill I.I 2 l It ~ \I \.I 111 •wl. \ t' :>..11111·111111 .. l.jlNI 'H"I :1!IK:l ;:1 \tkli Im l.S .111111. hlu1• ,111. \:'ti F\I 't<.•11•11, .. un ,,.,1, \Int t·oncl, l'I' s.!750 1.11 .. ;1:11 l!Yi5 :.!~OZ Xlnl 1•011.t :'\u ----------1 llll'' ,111111 flOlll'> l'Jll\OI' '72 AUDI \Ull• I d1 \11111 1·1111d Onj?inal n" ncr SIK!l3 (i7:J 7!13:! In\ "I Slilillll 11' I 111 r l!li ;1:i1•1 .111 ;,,. .. , '7:! i111 Z air. ,\;\\ 1":'11. mai:' l spcl <\Jli!15 ''91 13m1h-. 1<31 1116• I!> IMW 9712 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1976 iKoZ .11r '"·'~~ ..., ___ .._._.._._._...--1 i\:\I 1"~1 '""" ,h,11ll•. In a .•• , rnncl "i:!;,11 11fr :i>ti. t.1111 ..•...•..........••.••• L•ase Mew-Used OVER 100 MERCEDES ON DISPLAY House of Imports ,\(;TflUHld:o ~11mn:oES lH:ALEH tiHli:! "anl'lll'~lcr. Buena l';1rk 523-7250 I tn tlw Sanla ,\na F\\) 1972 :'tkn·1·dc-. ll"n1. :!5U ~ .. it.111 itl'd w air· & ... ll.'l'l'O l'JdlO. ,, r\ I El( • l'fll111n.1I 1·111111 1:i:11::r77 I\\ uwnr • liH I.Ill I> Ill < '1111\ 1·r-1un l ;.i t1>1lll SI I x11t 1i:l;J:'\Oh. -;,., \ \\' 171h'>t (\I •i i~ 1i.;1111:,11 COMCANNON'S HORSELESS STABLES l110kt'I'' nr ltnt' t'Ont1·m IMJI ar) fllll.l,S IWYn. Hl·:'ITl.1-:Y . 1u10111olill1•' ~i 11 I'. l'11.1sl I h\ \ •ii 111:1r1 W:lll Subaru 9762 ....................... iii SL II \HI .i '1111 \ C. 00 !\lt:rccdcs lllUSL llJ ,\\t F\I ''l'l l'I' J:Jtn Pio: !\lt'rccde~ 280SI. "''' lo S?-.~t!1 1;.1" 1•1•1.1.1rt1:1'\I .1 pprl't' 5:16 S<Mlti 7:! )lt.'n.'\-clcs llt•n1 ~xu '\ E \\hilt'." l'Onat· 1111 11111: 11\\nr Lu m1, \Int 101111 S'i\1;'>11 ; 11; K!)()() 52i i:.~ti Toyota 9765 ••.•.••.............••. ill llt\11t.1 \1;11 !.. II .111 \11111111111 :of >IMI I'll IK:?• i • 'KllZ 1111111 ,, •·und \I llZ J!Hi~ .i:w K I II \lu-.t ,di \II \\I I \I r iii C1•ht .1 \ \1 F\I .1 ,111J COMEIH &SEE THEALL HEW 630CSi HOW!!! COMPLETE BOOY SHOP MOWOPEH SADDLEBACK VALLEY IMPORTS fJ I ·2040 495.4949 CREVIER ''l'll'll t.qll Jll,ll!' 11('\\ ""' ~ h1.1l.t·' l'I' C.111 alt t.1' M 11:1:! :!i5'1 ur li75 IJ.13:! 1976 DA.TSUN 8-210 COUPE Jiit•._ 'Int l'lln<\ Ki llW \I I;\ 'I t "' 111 f 11) '\ m1 ..;:li!l~J Ph 8311 11:J:>n or 'Iii:! t•~~I l!.13 1~15; l':lcrlt' 15 l50SEL ::.II\ l'r i:r.1~ 21.mo m1. 'un roof, full) loadNl 111:! !1371 ·1:1 l'ororw :.! Jr Juto. I 11\\llt'I ~t;l~tll l'\I Ill~ Call 1~1 J.m:1 i:.! )l••1Tc<ll" Bcn1 :.!lill SK Volkswaqen 9770 1 'l>t.•t•1I. radm he.itcr &: \\hill' & t·oi.:niu.: 1111 • ori" ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1n t·\tt lll'nl tnnd1t1on ' " l5H!:IPKi':i \ lt"il !'>•" ll\\llr. Lo mi. xl11l • nml 19711 \'olk'"·'J:•·n 1 Jihu & Sl!l:xl ;~m K!lOO· 5::!i :.!l!•I • hcutt•r ,1:.l..111i: '1:1:;11 ing~ al ONLY $2995 COSTA MESA DATSUN 284SHARBOR BLVD 540.6410 540-02 I l fiat 9725 '68 !\>tBZ 2SO SL-: Cpt· :<.11.1 lOO ·lilt !'lean. clcc ~unruol, lll'\1 \'W lluj:J 11111,t llhll 1:1011 brk~. J\15\ tuned. Wuoucn l"uJI Sunroot. • 1Hf 1·11nd inter. Eves & WkncJ, !ll ~';() Ph(i1;,:.~l:.!l !)!)J 7Si!I ·75 Sl'IHOCCO :1;,r, m1 '69 280 st-: \ t' I' W, A)l "'~I" Irk l'\I "" ~1.11011 oni: mi. l'I. \SSY '\ll511 ~:\e~ 1i:l.51o'1:.!:' l'\lt 612 llAA &. I SI & llOADWAV s ...... r ... AHA . 8353171 'THE ULTIMATE ORIVIHC MACHIN( *USED BMW's• llJOCJlt·S H7'161.WB ili:!tJO:! 1'1~1 S H !l>ONIS j9;/SMI:!, ~SIHI '.'701'111. 1.'1~1Ut \uto \I\~ l!t!tO ••••••••••••••••••••••• MG 9742 i'~t 1·•1 ~(''\ 1)1-:Jt Xtnl ••••••••••••••••••••••• 711 11 l (; :<.I 111 • 01111 Poi ~··ht· 't'.th '"'' m1 " II\ I 11.: II t' " .. I ' 1~1-1 lJR!I 1~1 :!(Ml:! lsp ,,; ZKG 138 71 J II C'S Cpt• ·h pd ::211' \IT 1·111111 ·, 'pd \\I F \I tJ'S \ti.I' 511! ;1;111 lht ul 1 iii \IC..; (.'onvC'rtllJlt• \1 rlh hanll\111 '-15011 (',di '>411 2861 MGB 9744 ••••.......•..•.•..•••. \lnHt-.t 71 \'W l ampt•r Ill'\' 1111111 \tr"' l'.1ll S.IS<Jtil4.I 711 1;T Lu mi Slick l!.ltil \ \\ ~ ll'lbal k 1,ood .t' """ COMMONWEALTH : MOTORS,LTD. ' : 1441 S BltSlOI t ~ Sal"t• At\• , ,,. • S46 ·0220 70VW SQUAREBACK !,111.1211 Sl:Jllfl "h.11 µ :t.~Ll~ iii SI.} h.r" k Sport~ 1.11.c 11t'" 2S)I n11 :!:!m VI! ~MMI t'alllilli :!Ill 1 l'i:J lluu·k K~tatt· Wi.11! Full I''\' + K tr;1rk \)I F\1 Ori;. "" n ..;!51 MI h 15 .)4111!1 liaJa· Bog Zi·nllh l'arb. ru1" r.:111111 :S[1'15 ,unrf Xlnl rnnd Best or 1>1'.! •llfi'• .111 '1prn I' B l' al I l\•r ~·5~2 i;., \'\Y. dean mu't wt: l•J J jJpret' l!.7!1.l ')JI; H:J 17 CL,\SSlL b.I ~.lct tru St..cJan \\ h~UOU m1 Ong 0\0.111 i.;1\ mi: up t ream puff lo mO\ 1· to Florida SHUI t;l 1·2712 Ol I) 11 711112 'ill \'W t•amJ)t'r, IXIP lop itr~ut t·onrl 1 man rhlt ·1'.! I.I-: S,\BHJ:: Cu:.t Cix-. l'lli!. lent 1n1· 52700 Oni.: ownr m11\ln1t to i:>:! 9:rii ~londa A super rnr ut :-.1!\.ll1 6-11 274:! or 1;.a l-i88:? u: \'W Squan·haek :\1'\\ l'lli! .'V. t1rC',, Extra' SliOO ('a 11 .'i5 l 18911 Ii \ ·w l'up T1tp C.1 mpl'f' hkc• lll'W, lully t•4ui1J1Jt•d Sharp• H Iii w:n 'ii llegul I owm•r. 39,000 1111 J1r, stt•rcn, till "hi . l'lt-1· \\ llldOWb l[>:i t'n)lint• llt.-.1ul cond l'\'I S37l:IO Ph 1;.u; !Yl73 l'\ t'' \\ knd::. Cadillac 9915 77 \\\·~tphJhi.1 c';1mµcr. ••••••••••••••••••••••• \\I l'':'tt 11 trk noul(ht ii nc" 111 Ft'h R!<t nfr n73 '.!',n& • 1'' V\~ Bui! )lag" tiri•' 1974 CADILLAC \\I ")I !!ti k. Rq 011 .ell COUPE DEVILLE h X!}X .;i1r.111r •11;3 2!1!11 7 ! \ W \11\ l'nl urt>r Rub hi" Tup Cmpr rt'fril!. clhl l1t.'C] 'Ill\ I' prl',~Url /l'cf \I.Ir '''lt•m 1111 \l1eh I 11 l'' ">l.)IMI Cil;j llCH,!I •70 vw ! Dr <580BXO 1. 1 m ltlal'ulalc. 514!15 Copt"land Jeep City :!IJOI E Ii.I, S.\ 55K·80011 4 Karmann Ghia Coupes ill =i!l:I ~l=!lf.ml ·~ ll!l080 7'.! ~2!12:. Coll for Discount Pric~s Harbour V. W. . . llwil 111-h l>J\ l' ' Bn,.: nl'l.'d" n1·~ homt.' rnn Super Bcetlt.'. \Int roncl f~.f Ol"'I I·. 'q u • ., 1 t 1• I" 1 r •' m 1 ?>. t hro" n \I 1th l.in C'ahr1oll'l top <incl \ )1 1-'M 'tt>rl'O Ht~KB\ I $5188 Nabers Cadillac '''"" ll.11 1• .. 1 1111.I l .. ,1,, \I," 1 'Ill 1• I 1111 ;.; l';1clllla1· Coupe lit' VIiie. 1-'ully Loaded. low mile~. bl•aut 1ful St>SOll l!ro\111 w bt•1gc vinyl t11p. 1'11 l':irty. 871 707.'i l!lil) <:;.111 l'dV. \'1nyl lop. laclor) "" I' ~ I' II i; w:i) I' S<'ah gold ll·alhl'• interior. i.:ood r u d 1 ,1 I I 1 rt•., 7 2 . fl O O original milt•' ~11100 lli0-4;;n.l !Full••rton 1 76 Co up" l>l'\ illl' L>'l::le~ancl' Lo.1<11'<1 1m mat ITIIJl>I -.ell ~ i I 14 i68 9383 Closed On ~ndays radm. tw.itcr air lk~t cond1l1011 l'.111 .11t" I' :'II nHC'r i;7;, ~196 C\'I'' 557 73;17 I Kun I ~of•o 9772 '76 CPE DE VILLE ..••••••.••.....•....•. 1972 VW412 I~· mill'' 640·645-1 645-3661 i I ( oncl11'. \\hill T lup. \ll\I 31.!'>00 1111. S7,llllO Ill Oii l'r (>15 iK!J;j 'ill C..:oncllc, whl, T·bur. uulo. air. P 1.S. t>il'<' \\ 11d\\i> Tkll<'I' l hun nu. only li·IOO mi SHRSll 19!1 3-i9:t C0U9ar 99l3 ......•.....•.......... 1974 MERCURY COUGAR \utum;ct1t·. radio. lll'atcr. p\\ 1 "lt'1·rrn.i 111 Jk1•' :.1•a1,. nn) I top •:!'t7>1.l•.B • \\ holc,.Jh hlm•bo11I.. " ~!Ii.) uur pnt·t• •~ al"o ONLY $2975 MARQUIS VOLVO \llS.'>10:\' Vl EJO 831·2880 495-1210 Dodc)e 9935 •.........•............ 1;:1 Uo<l~L· Uart Good •·011 1.hllo11. ~101 lx_•,1 oiler li7:J-8i4li alt !I I' .\1 9945 ·;.~~~~;;~·1:~.;;;~:~~~·,;· ·:~1:~1~1l~\pd, good \'1111 1976 Lrnl'Oln !\l:irk IV 673.61SJ:J Creamy yellow, maJCSlll' velour 11H. moon ro11r. 'i:! Pinto Runabout. l AM/FM tape, ull xlras owner. Mag?S, A/C, auto. 11,000 mi. 640·4910 Lo ml 960-15.59 Maverick 9960 ......................•....•.................. ·73 )11\ VF:RICK, I dr Set.Ian. auto Iran-.. lo mi . new lire" Gtl \'Ond Sl.9511 1i 11, !l(lifl a fl 3:301')1 9950 ....................... •73 "l Cuda (l8J4l8l v .. aulomallt·, :11r 1.'<lnd . mags. lo miles. i!}r 14arranly al'allablc, huy or le.i~c S!S!l5 Copt'land Jeep City :!001 t: bl, S,\ 5Sl\.l!OOO ':'II :'thrtur) \larqu1s Hrou;.h.i m . .: door l'llill\ ah;int.~rlr ha.n:ttop. l.1t.·11.w " brO\\ n ':'>IOl.l u~" nn) I roof Uri\ en under ·, t6 ltii:! 43,000 m1 h\ 1 ,1rl'lul Pontiac 9965 O\\ncr. :..tr l·ond J>o\\tl• I••••••••••••••••••••••• h1 akt•' :.tl'l·rmi: "111 1'7U II< in. II. t• 1 \l' do~i. IOl'k::. d11\ l'I' s " l \I \ On\ . J • seat ·. Pa~,.,l'~l!l'r •wa·t xlnt, ~~nd :Sl450/0(r n·l'l1n1' 'Int l'11nd 1 5.'i!I9'-1• ~n~rnal "" ncr ~15:.!5 I~ Ponl•a•· l'oll\ t•rlrblt'. 64-1·734:! days. lil t litiSll ncw rour I ,p!I. mill? l'\e5. \\h1•1•b ~'I() i5!1 llifl!l Ford 9940 00 MerC'ur~ Colony P;irk ·74 Vt>nlura p 11. I' s. ••••••••••••••••••••••• station 14g11, new radrnls, :ur. AM f")I, aut•• \lnl orig ownr. Clt>an, '<Int cond. S\8.50. Ph.55:! l!l!l!I ~··• fe••Ml11t~e" 0....~ ..... , .,,,_.,._c .... , ,......._. cond S895. 54fi·R900. 5:!7·2297 '71 Flrt•b1rcl 1•:,pr11 \'I!. air. ~tt•n•o. lw"I 111f1•1 ?:! MO:\TEliO llr, .ill !\.Iii t!l~I "" r 1 uwn1 s1:1-::; 193 Ir.Ml 'li7 U; :'IJ,\NS Xlnt cond ,72 M . 1 . V·8. aulo. P1S. 1'16. air. en· Co Park. A C. ult whl. V 101> 5S2·9706 full power. ste reo \Int - cond . 641\ m 1 S49-S265 ~rbird 99 7 0 ....................... Mustang 9952 .....•••.•........•.... N TllUNUF.RBIRD 66 Auto 289 .)i.000 orig m1 .! o"nr:. :>..lnl tund i:J Gran Tonno. H pas'. $11!00 831 !.~ G o t 1-: v <' r y l h i n ~ Pcrf e1 I • $19!15 h~I nl r 19111!): ... l!ltili \ \\. l'.tmp1•r Gooc1 Engrn1· uul1• arr, PS. rat I. Xlnl 1·011d S!o!SO. 545 !l20J 68 :'lluslan~ .iulo. 1 ad10. heal. arr. need~ :.oml• work Offer' 675 3057 ,\n 7PM ·;4 ~1 w.lang 11 \' fi . .iulo. PS PH. air raclro. 117!! 5616, 6i 3 I U811 ·oo !\lustan)(. \'!I. auto. :Ind 75 Granada l8k mr Choe owner. mint 1·011d. Sl:?OO 1.Jm Loaded Xlnt l'Onrl ~!J.1.SJ.5.1 \lu.~l ~ell. 963 i!HU ----'68 :'11 ustanJ:. •• • ,\ I .1 ulo. 5550 or makt• oll1·r llJ I · J6.ll; '75 FORD ELITE .\ulomalk. full po"er. air 1·1Jncl.. AM 11-"M .stereo l:if)t.'. llll, cruise. vinyl toµ. s~c111I decor & ot~r extra!> (272MMOI. NOWS4625 NAIERS AUTO CENTER l4:!.5 Baker St . t' :'11 540.9109 '7S Cran Tonno Uro~hm \)I 1-°)I otlcn•11 liipl' \ C. I'S/PB. nl'W llrC'~, brk,, s hoci..~ Sharp. mis Call btwn 9-llam or 7 30 llpm :;.ia ·.til!8 '66 Mu.slang. good lransp Rebll eng & t ransm $50.839·1151 '65 & '!Wl Musluni: both need work. S700. 54fl·Ol 17 Oldsmobile 9955 .••...•.•..•.......•..• 69 Toronado. k,;.. lhan 36.000 ma. I ownt·r l'I' $1450 645-lSi!l '74 Old.' 98 Luxury Cµe Like r->ew 29.000 m1 Lob o( \lras. S4195 I-'\ t ply Call AM Ort'l'l'~ 612 3'JlU MSClll l!Y.! 81 'lt 9974 ..••.•...••..•........• VEGA. '76 HATCHIA.CKGT OE:\10 5 :.pwcl tr.in .... ,, 1 r 1• n n d . ,. t ,1·. tfi:'xl5 3.'>."I:! I W a:. SJj!I:. ONLY $3398 HOWA.RD Ctt.vrolet Dov<' & Quail SL~ ' NEWPORT BEACll 833-0SSS 1973 CHEVY VEGAWAGOH \utorn.1t1c. rnd10. hl'Jll'r & m ,1 I! \\ h ,. 1• I ' . 1 559 KIL\ I \ '11 p1· r runJhoul ;II ONLY SI025 MAIERS AUTOCEHTER 1-125 Buk'r St . C \I 540-9109 73 \l.i\l'rkk :! dr <iuto. r S. air. nr. ne" !trc!>. & bait Gd C'Ond 51350 PP 49!'1 3-193 &I Dclt:i 1$8 S..'9!1 or b-.1 7:? \ ·~·' .iulll Iran., In 1111 01 r Ca II 642 '.!!.1!13 or :! nl'\\ t1rci. Sl:!llll c•r hrsl (H6.j9'J.I Ofl f>.I~ tilJ:l .1n Ii ORANGE COUNTY'S OLDEST 9 '72 124 SPORT l'anar) )ello". with hlock \ 1nyl lop. tlS 000 mil<'~ \ \1 l"\I ~lcn·o 5 'IX'Vcl rlu.11 IJIP<'~ clrst· l>rJk<."' m.t~., \Int 1111·' :'llui.l ~l'll ~1950 \:all Tumm) ut 646·3818. 9 12 A:.t. or fti3 7111.ind le:ive message Sharp ti7 liT 53.noo m1 Wht blk int A \J nt )ISO\" b~I of1 Ii l:! iill!I C\'es STA.TIOMWA.GON ,\ulom11l1t Iran' on1• 014 ncr & lo\\ m 1 ll ,4l' 11991.Vll I t>J \111\11 w0Jg11n Ulli Hun' Xl11t Oni.: Engh:.h rJrk '\ccd~ l.Jod\' work •mu \It I PM. 1 l>W·2<J37 '77 SEVILLE Autoa. Mew HOO Aatfoa. Hew HOO ....... Hew HOO 2300011 i51l 124 SPYUt:H 3 'pd. ,arrtero 9747 ONLY $2695 MARQUIS VOLVO !\IJSSlON VIEJO 831-2880 495-I 210 7~ \ OIHI s W. Asking &I !!:I Uurado ln·Sel'Viee· Leuin(l ltoy CGrYer,lnc. ,A~ IFM. xlnl. l'ond Be,t •••••••••••••••• ••••••• Ofr<'r S.18 'il:?!l ·74 I. Mml Whit<.'. rilfl•h dm·en. S16,000 · ~> A\'11il Sunday 1<!·6 t..oudcd. rad1ab, ~ ail 1:1712 .\nclcle Wuy. ~ 21:10 no,.;; n ovt'c RM 15-li> J ambcm.•t• '\1·wporl lkat·h 1>10 fil4 ·rn :!m2 .. \1r. snrr. AM·l-'M .. .,.,,, ma115. s tlrk. J:l.IMIOm SiSOO. ri4ql.i71 ·~o U:\1\V 1600, 57M m1. A;.1 FM. FINE Ct)ncJ , S2:KX> 842·8121Hwf SP M 1!171 121 Spnrl~ L'onvcrl. 2 lop' AM f!\1 'lcrcn 20,800 m1 . \1111 n1nd sms 1971 800 Ha<·er. ICOOd cond St 150 752-5752 . 1:73 4flllli 75 1-"l,\'I' \ l!l Xlnt rnnd, m a I( ~ -. t ,. r I' o , n t• w rad1.ih 5tlt15 P h 496-o.wll "'113 OCS. lmmot'. IO m1, -.- spd. all extru. 72 Frat 128 sedan. dnl 714·7~-8211 rood .. lo m 1. Sl300 or best J -2tOOCS a~to, al ~~)'a, SS?-432.3, e\es, • 1mmac *17SO Cal - wk'ilay11, U0-7603 ·73 850 Spyder ron\l t'\'~ wknd1640-611$2 l!l.500 m l Ma1o1 whls. lug· ·-nuw -r a~lt(' rark. 8 lrk slcreo. "" '" ""'"• t un roo M1nl ronrl S2lSO P 1 P <'lssette. 4 ,pd. no~ onl,yowl~r 673-4285 paint. titn m\J,\l -.~ appr« &to S327 9727 Capri 97 IS •••••••••••• ••••••••••• •••••••••••••• •••••. ••• lrmd Hew '77 :..-; 1 -10311 lr\'lnc •Tht• Ral·qucl Chevrolet Club I 9'20 Autos. Hew 9800 AMtoa, Mew HOO, A.utos, Hew 9100 ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• * * . . . . ... . . . . ..... Rl·~~T :\ '77 EX E<'l'TIV I·: '.\101'0R IHH1 F FUCHI 11 l·:nn FHJFl>l •. \~HEH S28-88S8 or ;;:n.;;;;, X9'Hli77 l•.\I. 21:, ,.. lt • ,.. •••*****************•••··········· ! HERB FRIEDLANDER IMPORTS ! • .. ORANGE COUNTY'S IMPORT CAR KING" • • • ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1974 CHEVY CA,RICE COUPE Hardtop Auto m :111!" µwr .. tecrtni; br11kcs door locki1 & wmdow:1. 01r 1·und . 1111 whet'! & nnyl roof C720JOS 1. Prired to sell at ONLY SJOZS MAIRS AUTOClNT!R 1425 Baker St., C.?.1 540.9109 • • • t--~~~~~~ ~Ufl • llO ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• J c i I I t I I I , ( 11 t I t I \ ( I ' t I I ' VOLVO AND '77 TOYOTA HILUX Custom interior/paint special wheels -chrome grill and more '*045581 52499 ·~.~'.'.~l~~.~r. ~ /.U , " ' : 11, t .• ~ • ......... :i.....:··· . , ~ 2 YEAR OR 24,000 MILE SERVICE POLICY ••• OH MOST USIO CARS! . 51699 . '73 MAZDA RX2 · 4 lpffd . AMte,FMt:r # 2HN 5 15~'\ '7\0~~A \ ~ ,i:tvE 51899 '72 COURIER Pfdaip • rebuilt #~~~x s1499 '72 PIMTO . -'. . ,. ....... ....,. .. YOUR TOYOTA .... W• leliu• If You Co1Rpare 01r Custo•e Satilfadion, Coupled With Our Stni~e and P Dept. Opfft 6 Days a WHk and HOMSt Dealings EMPIRE Mew and Used Ccn You Will See For Yowseff HOW YOU SAVE! WE '77 LAJfoCRUISER WGM LEASE 4 wheel drive -warren hubs - ready for anything #74103 CREDIT UNIONS WELCOME! 51499 '71 DATSUN 510 wogon DTG #44101G 51399 '71 DATSUN 510 2 door· AM air· auto #674CBM 51399 '71 COROLLA 4 speed • AM radio fresh rc #9780 0 51899 AU MAKES AND MODELS! 51099 '67 SCOUT Ri~ hand drive Auto #808MIM . 51699 '72 CAPRI Automatic -AM dk brown #489FWY 51399 '71 COLT Air condition !s= 51499 '71 OPEL GT '69 CORONA 4 speed -AM 2 doorhdtop copper automatic 1t075CUX #363AVJ ___ ........................................... ____ EARLE IKE'S---..--~----......_. ............. • NEW CAR BARGAINS • . NEVER DRIVEN NEW '76 VOLVOW-NS Leasing company over bought. These units never driven on streets. You save. so hurry. #00224 #002229 #002582 #008950 #003826 f Huntington Be"ch Fountain Valley EDITION Afternoon N.Y.Stoeks VOL. 70, NO. 188, 3 SECTIONS, 38 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CAL1 FORNI A THURSDAY, JULY 7, 1977 7 Your Lucky Number? Think Twicet, NEW YORK <AP> -Today, July 1. is 1·111. 1f you put store an I numbers. and share the belie( that seven 1s a lucky one, you au&ht th.Ink this 1s your l~ky day. But maybe you'd heller think twice. As reported in the New York Times of July 8, 1877. here are some of the things that happened on the last 1·7-77-100 years ago: Teachers' Strike looms ll Fountain Valley School Dis· ~ttict officials don't compromise on a demanded nine percent pay raise and sign a contract, teachers will strike in Sep· tember. That was the warning issued today by teachers· association President YaJe W1shntck, follow- ing a negotiation meeting Tues· day. . Wishnick said the ses5ron with state-appointed mediator Doug Thompson offered little or no progress. Their previous year's contract expired at the end of June. A strike authorization vote is scheduled for next Wednesday if a break in the situation doesn't loccur in the next week. "We expect to have all teachers 1n school in Sep· Lem ber, .. C'Ountered district chief negotiator Pat Clark in response to the threat. "We've been in a 1 strike situation before." • Besides the nine percent pay I increase. teachers want an in· 11 cte~e in fringe benefits oHered. 1 The benefits. issue appears to b~ the major stu.mbli.n& block at 1 this point in the negotiations. I Wishnicksaid today. \ Binding arbitration clauses ' aod an agency shop policy are 1 other key issues, Mrs. Clark said. 1 Youth Facing Charges After ' Fatal Accident Merle Donald Tally, 18, or Costa Mesa. has been charged w\th felony manslaughter in con· ~ction with a June 29 auto crash i~ Fountain Valley that claimed ltie hfe of a 14-ycar-old Garden Qrove youth. . Greg S. Beavers, a hitchhiker T'8 11 y h ad p i e k e d u p on Brookhurst Street in Huntington beach, died Saturday at Foun· tain Valley Community Hospital rr.om injuries be s uffered in the a~cldent·, Orange County l ~roner's deputies said . · Tally, originally arrested for felony drunken driving, is listed in fair condition at UC Irvine Medical Center in Orange. Police said Tally's compact s~dan slammed into three other m'oving cars before it overturned Ol,\ BrookburstStreet. " J'hree other motorists sur!ered l't:;1atively minor injuries in Ute colli.sloo, police said. Worker Killed ,PAN JOSE (AP)-A San Jose c~structlon worker was killed Wednesday when a lO·foot deep trench caved in and smothered bim under tons of ql~t. Coast -More tlwl 700 unlicensed do1a were drowned by the New York City do& pound, aa owners or lo1t dop 1curried about trying to rind thelr pet.s. "There ~as more excllement at the pound ye. sterday tban at any time since its opening,•• Ute Times said. -The German bark Augus~e arrived in London "witb her bulwarkls and st.anchioM broken, her riggin& carried away, and otherwise damaged, having been in collision." -Otis Hodge's machine shop and roundry at North Adams, N.Y .• was destroyed by fire, at a loss of $20,000. He had $8,000 insurance. -Capt. Joseph Griffith, a Civil War veteran who had helped to survey the northern· lakes, died suddenly in Iowa City, Iowa. "He was as well as usual a~ breakfast, 01ily PllcK SU~ft Pl>Oto VISITORS TOUR HISTORIC-NEWLAND HOUSE Bulldlng Eyed as State Point of Interest I • I HB's Newland House Cited A 79-year-old Huntington Beach farmhouse, built by one of the city's founders is being recommended as a state point or historical inJ.erest by an Orange County advisory panel Members of the Orange County Historical Commission are asking county supervisors to seek the ,designation for the William T. Newland House near Beach 'Boulevard and Adams Avenue. · THE DESIGNATION WOUl,D BE made by the California Resources Agency. The Victorian era home was built by Newland in 1898, a report to supervisors said. • Newland, who was known as the "barley king" of Orange County because of the crops he raised. was among tbe founders of Pacific City. formed in 1901. The city's name w~ changed in 1904 to Huntington Oeach. the report said. NEWLAND ALSO HELPED organize the city's first elementary school and high school district. first bank and newspaper. ms wife, Mary Juanita. served on both school boards as a trustee for 12 years. Members of the Huntington Beach Historical SoC'icty have been restoring the home and it is now open for puhhc tours. The report said the home now sits on a one-quarter acre site. A proposal to develop a 20-acre park on adjacent land is being considered. The Newland farm once covered acreage surrounded by Adams and Yorktown Avenues, Beach Boulevard and Ne" land Street, the report said Two Pilots Perish In Airport Crtis'li. and died at noon of apoplexy." the Times said. -A horse named Idalia stepped up to the starting J)06t at Monmouth Park, N.J., a favorite because she had already bested her competition, Zoo Zoo. But Idalia became uncontrollable, tried to bolt and lost the race before it started. "A more sorrowful looktng set or men than Idalia's backers were never seen on a race course," the Times comm~nted. -Ai.tstin Spencer, a 78-year· old veteran or the· War of 1812 who lived with two daughters and a wife in her 80s, had seen nothing wrong with malting a little whisky at his home at 208 West 36th St. On July 7, 1B77. he learned better. He was arrested on a charge or running an illicit still. -Two deputy sheriffs showed up at the Episcopal Church of the Holy Saviour at Madison Avenue and 25th Street to confiscate ornaments, the organ, furniture and the like on behalf or the Jtev. Dr. Abraham Carte.r, the pastor, who said he had not been paid for some time. The church also couldn't open the next day. Sunday, for s~rvices. On 1·1·TT, (See NUMBERS, Paie AZ> Life Terni Due Police Killer Sentenced By TOM BARLEY OI tM 01ily ~l .. t St11t Condemned by the judge as a killer "who is unfit to live in our society," transient Bobby Joo Denney was sentenced today in life in prison for the killing last Nov. 19 of Cypress police Sgt. Donald Sowma. "Our society deserves better than exposure to your kind or C'riminal,'' Orange County Superior Court Judge John L. Flynn Jr. told Denney. 32 And the judge made it clear to Denney, the son of an Oklahoma • Publisher Accused > In Lawsuit A We st Orange County publisher an<t bls 'Und-.rgr°'1Dd press are acc~ed ln an Orange County Superior Court lawsuit today or distributing books that encour8'e various and costly acts of fraud. Working through the Consumer Fraud Division or the Orange County District Attorney's Office, the State or California is seeking an inJunction that would halt alleg. ed activities of Eden Press and Eden Underground N~ws, 15751 S. Brookhurst St., Westminster. A hearing on the preliminary injunction appeal is set for Aug. 18 in Department 19 or Supenor Court, Deputy District Attorney Jeffrey Roehl said today. Authorities then will demand an order for Eden Press and CO· defendant Barry L. Reid, of 16681 Evergreen Circle. Fountain ·Valley, to cease and desist from certain alleged practices. State officials charge Reid and his press have falsified birth C'erlificates and public seals "with intent to defraud." It is further alleged they have published a book tilled "Credit," offering details or a plan whereby readers can obtain "Triple AAA Credit" in just :.> days, "even though one has recently declared bankruptcy or is on welfare." Challenged also by the state is a previous book, "Paper Trip'' which allegedly explains how readers can obtain false identification papers of all sorts in some other name than that of the applicant. Reid waa unavailable Cor comment on the charges today. The young publisher currently is produ~lnJ a book by a mavericlc aerospace engineer's allegations that America's moon landi.np were • gigantic hoax perpetrated to inspire public patriotilm. sheriff, that his prior criminal re· cord should also be examined by prison authorities if and when the question of his,. parole is con· sidered. Denney was found guilty of first degree murder last month by -a jury which cleared his wife, Velma, 25, of identical charges. It was successfully alleged that Denney s hot and killed Sergeant Sowma when the officer challenged him while Denney was burglarizing a doctor's office and nearby art gallery. It was unsuccessfully alleged that Mrs. Denney remained out· side the building and maintajned · walkie-talkie contact with her husband while he robbed the pre- mises. Today Judge Flynn denied a motion for a new trial made on the grounds that Denney shot the officer in self defense and that the jury was improperly in- structed. '·He showed no regard for human llfe," Judge Flynn said. • "He must receive the maximum punishment." Rates Rapped St.amp Price Plam Flayed WASHINGTON (AP) -The U .S. Chamber of Commerce says a proposal to hold the line on postage stamp prices for individual consumers while raising t}1em for businesses is a case of ''robbing Peter to pay Paul." The organization was reacting Wednesday to a re· commendation by Postmaster General Benjamin Bailarfor anew ''ciUienrate'' on stamps: President Carter asked Bailar to consider a special citiz~n rate, and Ballar asked the Postal Service board of governors to support retention of the 13-cent stamp for personal letters while raising the cost of a first-class business stamp by three cents. The board of governors meets Monday to vote on the plan .. If it approv~s. the new rates would go to the Postal Rate Commission, which would have 10 months to act. Scottsboro Case Sobbing Witness Swears to. Truth / WINCHESTER, Teon. CAP> - Weeping profusely, the chief witness in the 1930s Scottsboro Boys rape trial told a federal court jury today she told lbe truth in testimony that sent the nine black men to prison: Victoria Price Street, 70, is suing NBC for $6 million, allegir(g the network's movie "Judge Horton and the Scottsboro Boys," libeled her, slandered her and invaded her privacy. · "ll ti>re my health up," she said, taking the sland In her bebalf lb U.S. District Court where bet suit is on trial. '1The worst part of it was they said it was all lies -and I know that just wasn't so," Mrs. Street said she saw the made-for-television film when it wu telecast in April 1978 becau.se a friend called her and told her to watch a horrible show. "I did," she said, "and it just tore me up. I don't know what kind of a movie could do that." She broke into tears again. Her lawyer asked her whether she ever sought publicity for her role in the rape trials. She said, "No, I ju.st want to forget it if 1 could." She a l so denied the authenticity of several specific episodes in lbe movie. Under cross-examination by • an NBC lawyer, ?,Jrs. Street said transcripts of the previous trials were inaccurate, called several 1 statements bare-faced lies and said she could oot remembel.' her testimony from the 1930s because "it all happened so long ago." In particular, shp denied that a palr Of step.Ins ethlblted at the rape trials was the underwear she wore whel) she alleCedlY was assaul~. l :l DAILY PILOT H /F Thur•day July 7, 1977 ~,OOO TafJ Physical Exam Racilig Winner Viewed Costs Couiity By ALMON LOCKABEY County aov mm~nt. cuuld have uved SJ0,000 durlnr tht1 put year by not requirlnr new ~mr.loy• to take pbyelca1 t11 · am na that 10 beyond Job· related rt'qulrementa. That was a conclu.sion rt'larhed by the 1976 77 Orunae County Grand Jury alter studylna the county's controver1Sial ph)'!lcal exam contract with the Oran,e County Health Testine InstJtute <OCHTI> It as likely a s1m1lar amount will be lost in the current fi1cal year, the grand jury said. Its comments were, to a large degree, based on pro1ectJons that 60 percent of those who take the elaborate phys1<.'al examinations are apphcants for Jobs des<.'nbed as requinng "J1ght physical ef- fort.'' And under terms of the OCHTI Neutron Bomb Test In Nevada WASHINGTON CAP) -The United States has conducted underground tests in Nevada with the neutron bo mb, a government spokesman s aid today. "It's a matter or procedure that weapons are tested before production," said a spokesman for the Energy Research and Development Administration. The neutron bomb, which is de· signed to kill people with massive doses of rad1at1on while leaving mrnimal buildings damage. is designed as a warhead ror the Lance missile, which now carries conventional nuclear warheads. The Pentagon is seeking funds to put the neutron bomb into production. The ERDA spokesman said the neutron bomb, known as the enhanced radiation warhead, "is under development now. Nuclear weapons are tested in. the dev- elopment stage before they go into production." He declined to say when testing began, how often the weapon has been tested or the results. He said th e tes t s h ave been conducted under tre aties requiring that nuclear tests be conducted underground and that no radiation escape. President Carter has not made a decision on whether l• produce the neutron bomb. But be has asked Congress to approve production funds to provide him with flexibility in reaching a de- cision. The Pentagon noted recently that "in the case of the improved Lance warhead (neutron bomb> versus the present warhead, we have succeeded in reducing tbe area exposed lo lire thermal (radiation). fallout and the total of blast by a factor of more than 10." The Pentaeon added that "by confining these effects to small areas, the military errecliveness is maintained, while minimizing the unwarranted hazard to nearby Populations, to U.S. and a lli ed forces; and greatly reducing the destruction around the immediate target area." In Las Vegas, Nev .. ERDA spokesman Dave Jackson said he could neither confirm nor deny that a neutron bomb had been exploded this year at the Nevada Test Site. There have been cmly lhr~ announced nuclear tests at the site this year, but it is generally known that many ·more have been conducted. Jackson aald be is unable to comment on any a~lllc test because it ia claaslfled information.. ' "'" DAILY PILOT contract, those prospective workers are given the same physicals as those beaded for JOblS requ.irlng heavy pbyalcal ef- fort. The OCJITI contract orirtnalJy expected to bring the health test- ing farm $275,000 a year m county business became an instant con- troversy when awarded by the Board of Supervisors in 1975. One reason for the controversy was that one of the firm 'a foun- ders was Dr. Louis Cella, a political benefaetor to at Jeut four superviJors who approved the pact. Another board action that drew criticism from the now departed '76·77 jur y was Board of Supervisors' 1975 decision to con· solidate planning Into a super agency, the Environmental ManagementAgency (EMA). As a result ot the merger, the Grand Jury said, en.1:ineers are now directing the planning func- tions. The jury also noted that "a number of competent planners have left county employment and there appears to be extremely low morale among those who re· main." "Because of the many vacan- cies an already overburdened staff is required to work over. time." To make matters worse, lhe Grand Jury said, "The fragmen· talion of the planning functions has resulted in a pollUcaJ power struggle within the agency wbicb is hindering the search for solu· lions to the substantial planning problems of Orange County." To help corn~et lhose flaws, the jury recommended that all EMA planning funcUons be consolidat- ed under a director •·whose background of education and ex- perience is that of a professional planner." Other yearend recommenda· lions by the 1976-77 Grand Jury mclude: -Providing the Commission on the Status of Women with the budget needed to support a coordinator for commission pro- jects. -Lessening the apparent in· ter-d epartment a l frictio n between the county Probation and t.f ental Health Departments. -Combining certain functions of the Sheriff's Department and Marshal's Office to eliminate duplication of services. -Closing McMillan Reception Center for minor juvenile offen- ders unless its costs can be brought into Line. E'roa Page A J NUMBERS. • the deputies had taken the keys. -It was a lucky day for Phllip Donohue of Elizabeth, who spent six ho4rs buried in a collapsed well the night before but was rescued at just about midnight, as· July 7 started. -But it was the opposite kind of luck for a man named Daniel O'Leary, who chose 7.7.77 as the day on which his boast that he could walk 520 miles in six days would meet the moment of lr\lth." He had been walking tor tlve days already and covered 741h miles on 7-7-77, but it wasn't enough. Just after midnight, be quit-48'h miles short. Target Praetiee Kim Viktur, 9, J ason Gardner, 8, and Fernando Beckham, 6, all students of the Mardan School. practice putting out candles with squirt guns, one of the games to be offered Saturday during the school 's country fair. The main attraction wiU be an auction of celebrity memento$ beginning at 10 a .m. The fair o~ns at 9 a.m . at the school, 695 W. 19th St:, Costa Mesa. Proceeds will benefit the school, which serves children with learning dis- abilities. 'Family' Float Winner Entry of HB Chamber Women Judged Best A float entered by the women's d1v1s1on of the Huntington Beach Chamber or commerce depicting "the great American family" has been declared a sweepstakes wmner in the city's Fourth or Ju- ly parade. The entry featured an expec- tant molher busy at the ironing board and a grandmother sitting in a rocking chair crocheting. Youngsters a re doing their homework while the father 'was in the den drinking a beer and watching television. The fl oat was awarded the prize for best theme in the parade that was dedicated to the American family. Other sweeps takes winners were the Long Beach Junior Con· cert for music and a float entered by the City or Anaheim which featured Disney characters. Other winners: Color Guard Basic. 1. Red Berets, Santa Ana; 2. NorwaJk Youth Band : 3. Signal Hill Police. Color Guard Drill. 1. Inland Empire Lancers, San Bernardino: 2. Squires, Orange; 3. Santa Ana Winds. Police Color Guard. 1. Orange police; 2. Huntington Beach Jr. Police Reserve. Coliege tuba group; 2. Glendale O.ei; 2. Compton Sounders; 3. Los Youth Band. · Angeles Drillettes. Drum and Bugle Corps. 1. Drum Squads. 1. Royal Aires, Squires, Orange. · . Huntington Beach; 2. Mater Dei; Junior Drill Team. 1. Em-3. LosAngelesDrillettes. merson Zodiacs, Compton; 2. Youth Floats. 1. Huntington Viii age View, liuntington Beach ; Beach YMCA. 3. St. Bonaventure, HWlt.ington Commercial Floats. 1. Bob's Beach. Big Boy; 2. Carl's Jr.; 3. Pioneer Senior Drill Team. 1. Mater Chicken. DMfY .......... , .... ,..... • Computers were humman4' today as the leaders in the Lo6 An1eles to Honolulu yacht race passed the hallway mark in t,be fastest and closest first-to-finish race ln the 7l·year history of the biennial classic. Computer feeders are trying to predict the first yacht to finilb and at what time -and by bow much she will break the elapsed Ume record of nine days and nine hours set by Wlndward Passage in 1971. Computer man Tom Wilder, or- fl c i al measurer for the sponaoring Transpacific Yacht Club. bas fed coordinates and average speeds into the machine and come up with the following predictions· Drifter will finish about 9 a.m. PDT Sunday and will be followed by Windward Passage about an hour later. Merlin will finish about S p.m. Sunday, follow~ about an hourllaLer by Kialoa. ; Ragtime is expected to finish . about cocktail t ime on Monday, unless she picks up the pace. Ragtime was first to finish in the last two Honolulu races. " Regardless of who finishes' first, according to th e computations, it appears that the, first yacht will lop a fulJ day or, more from the elapsed time. record. Barring breakdowns or a reversal of the weather, Wilder'& computer may be right. The lead· yachts have all averaged more than 10 knots for the first half ol the race. The northeas~ tradewinds are expected t~ increase during the last half of. the race, generating big following seas that will push the yachts beyond their hull speeds. First to finis h is only One" aspect of the Honolulu race as well as other long distance races. Seldom do the first finishers figure in the handicap standings:'• Senior Majorettes. 1. Royal Aires, Huntington Beach ;· 2. Riverside Majorettes; 3. Music Machine, Westminster. Junior Majorettes. I. Riverside Majorettes; 2. Sun Burst, Foun- tain Valley; J. Sun Seekers, Fountain Valley. Drum and Bell. 1. Riverside Majorettes; 2. Inland Empire Lancers of San Bernardino. Introducing the JVC 3060. See the world's first portable AMJF M Radio-TV-Cassette Recorder and you may win a trip to one of America's great sports spectaculars. Take Along Stereo Sound - For the Beach, Mountains, Desert -Anywhere. Marching Units. 1. Junior Marines, Tustin. Junior Youth Band. J. Santa Ana Winds; 2. Torrance Youth Band; 3. Norwalk All·city Youth Band. Open Band. l. Orange Coast JVC Model 9-'75, FM/AM/SWl/SW7. Stereo Radio, Cassette Recorder •• Lands in Taiwan Chinese MIG Pilot Asks for Asylum FukJen Province, crossed the FormON Strait and landed at Tainan, Jn southwest Taiwan. Sources said Fan was a squadron commander or the Communist Chinese lat Reconnaissance Wine. He told officers there that lif.e on the mainland wu "so auffertna" that he had "no choice but to nee toTalwan,''thespokesmanaald. ,. H• taid he had been planmnc Ill• move tor "quite a '°"' ttaie,,, tbe •J>Ok•man CODtin~ and beaded for Talwao wbUe mllldni aa "iupecUon" nl&bt. l"utlen lll'OVlftc. ii ac?Oa the FormoNStialttrOa> Taiwan. Tbe N.U.alllt .pemment otren rewaidllnlOlcttodefec:tan Who bitili M r pl1m1 « nav&I ., ..... da.u..m. P• .,. Cle tb1ra aaJAeH air or'ri~tobavedefected lo TalwliL OM' neW ov• in a MIGll 1o am and one ID aa a.a ·--·J· ' JVC will pick up lhe lab 10< two tree 11cke1S plus an exciting lrrp ol your ch0tce 10 lhe 'M>rld Senes ... Super Bowl ... NBA Ptayolfe ... U.S. Tenn11 Open .. Indy "500" .. Kenlu<tky Derby Trials. • Come ia for yoar free entry ~onn. There's nothing to buy. But lhere's a Joe 10 aee and hear With . ttle new portable JVC 3060. lt'a en AM'FM Radio. It's a Tv. It's a Cassette Recorder. All 1n onol You've never seen anything Ilka it. JustS20QOO JVC's ~75 Is ~ed wint fe .. ur• that rNk• it a best boy 111 bl09e1t feature 1s stere<> sound, tor recording and Pl•Vb**-Ir ewn reoorcis stereo FM dlrecOV from the bum-tn 1unet 'l'wo bt9 5" d~ •akert. Two ..... left anc:t nght -butlHn condeMef' rnlCfoPhOnes.. Twb tea-y .. to·••• me ter1. An up.to-tM-tnfnute ClllNtte ~m with full 1uto-et0s> el'ld cue/review fecllltl ... Irvine • . EDITION VOL. 70, NO. 188, 3 SECTIONS, 38 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA THURSDAY, JULY 7, 1977 ,. Today's Closing N.Y.Stoeks TEN CENTS Phy.sical Ex~Dl ·Law Cost OC $30,000 I County government could have havcd S30,000 durlne the past year by not requirlna new e rnployes to lake physical ex· aminattons that go beyond job- related require ments That was a conclusion reached by the 1976 77 Orange County Grand Jury after s tudying the count) s conlroverstal phys ical exam contract with the Orange Cou11ty Health Testing Institute (OCHTI). It ii likely a similar amount will be loet In the current fiscal year, the grand jury said. Its comments were, to a larae degree, bUed on projections that 60 percent or those who take the elaborate physical examinatioos ar~ appbcants for jobs described as requiring "light physical ef- fort." And under terms of the OCHTI Neutron Judged 'Unfit' Police Killer Gets Life Term By TOM RARLEY Of tf'Mt 0•1ly Pilot St•lf Condemned by the Judge:> as a killer ""who 1s unfit to live 1n our society.·· t ransient Bobby J oe Denney wa:. sentcncttd today in ·life in prison for the k11l1ng 0la!>L ov. 19 of Cypress pol ice Sgt ranspac 1Eyedhy ICoDiputer :: • By ALMON LOCKABEY • D•llY Pilot Bo.tl1119 Wrller ;:computers were humming <>day as the leaders in the Los ngetes to Honolulu yacht race assed the halfway mark In the astest and closest firs t-to·finish lJCe in the 71-year history of the iennial classic. Computer feeders are trying to redict the first yacht to flntsh nd at what time and by how ucb she will break the elapsed 1lne record of nme days and ntne ours set by Windward Passage 01\ 1971. J · Computer man Tom Wilder, of· fCial m easure r for th e 'ponsoring Transpacific Yacht lub. has fed coordinates and v~rage speeds into the machine nd cotne up with the following t.edictions: ~Drifter will finish about 9 a.m. 'J>T Sunday and wilt be followed y Windward Passa~e about an our later. Merlin will finish bout 5 p.m. Sund ay, foll owed labout an houri later by Kialoa. (See YACHTS, Page AZ) Donald Sowma. ··our society deserves better than exposure to )Our kind of c rim in at." Orange County Superior Court Judge John L . Flynn Jr told Denney, 32. And the judge made it clear to Denney, the son of an Oklahoma s heriff. that his prior criminal record should also be exammed by prison authorities if and when the question of his parole in cpn· stdcred. Oenney was found guilty of first degree murder last mllnlh by a jury which cleared his wife, Velma. 25, of identical charges. It was successfully alleged that Denn c.v s hot a nd kill ed Sergeant Sowma when the officer c hallehged him while Denney was burglarizing a doctor"s office and nca rby art gallery. lt ¥{as unsucce fully alleged that Mn. l>edne1 mained out· side the buHdlng and maintained walkie-talkie contact with her husband while he robbed the pre· mises. Today Judge Flynn -denied a motion for a new trial made on the grounds that Denney s hot the offi cc:>r in self defense and that the jury was improperly 1n· structed. "He s howed no regard for human life." Judge Flynn said. ""He must receive the maximum punishment.·· Union Pact Hit LOS ANGELES (AP > County Supervisor Pet,e Schabarum Wednesday termed negotiations with 65,000 workers "a farce" and said a new contract offer was "a sellout to the unions." 'rvine Youth Sports 'rh-aw 'Bias; Charge .. A gripe by Irvine City Coun· ciJwoman Mary Ann Gaido has leSI lo a policy change on how ~uth sports should be list.eel in c,U.y recreaUoo brochures. 'Mra. Gaido complained recent-ly that the sumrner brochure lis~ . ~ Coast contract, those prospecli ve workers are given the same physicals as those headed for jobs requiring heavy physical ef- fort. The OCH'l'I contract originally expected to bring the health test· mg firm $275,000 a year in county business became an instant con- troversy when awarded by the Board of Supervisors in 1975. One reason for the controversy was that one of the firm's foun- ders was Dr. Louis Cella, a political benefactor to at least four supervisors who approved the pact. Another board action that drew criticism from the now departed '76-77 jury was Board of Supervisors' 1975 decision to con- solidate planning into a super agency, the Enviro nmental Management Agency CEMA> Tests - As a result of the merger, the Grand Jury said, engineers are now directing the planning func- tions. The jury also noted that "a number of competent planners have left county employment and ther e appears lo be extremely low morale among those who re· main." "'Because of the many vacan· c1es an already overburdened staff is required to work over· time.'' To make matte rs worse, the Grand Jury said, "The fragmen· talion of the planning functions has resulted in a political power struggle Wlthin the agency which is hindering the search for solu· hons to the substantial planning problems of Ora nge County." To help correct those flaws, the <See EXAM, Page A2 ) Revealed Device 'People'· Killer WASHINGTON (AP' The United States has conducted underground tests in Nevada with the neutron bomb. a government spokes man said today "It ·s a matter of procedurc that weapons arc tested before production.·· said a spokesman for the Energy Research and Development J\dmin1strat1on. The neutron bomb, which is de signed to kill people with m ass1vc doses of radiation while leaving minimal bulld 1n~s damage, 1s des igned a ' a warhead for the Lance m.s-;t11., which now carries conventwnal nuclear warheads. I lliplane Grash·.Kills 2 The Pentagon is scekin~ fu nds to put the neutron bomb into production. The ERDA spokesman said the neutron bomb. known as the en hanc~ radt;1t1on warhead, ··1s under development now Nuclear weapon..c; are tested in the de\'· elopment stage before they go mto production " Viejo Men Die in County Airport Mishap BY HILARY KAYE Of IM O•tf• PtlOt Stt1tf Two Air Californta pilots were killed Wednesday when their small Stearman biplane nose dived Into an open field near Orange County Airport shortly after takeoff. The pilots, John H. Giffin, 33, and William Fred Reiner, 30, both of Mission Viejo, radioed to the control tower that they were having engine trouble on the test flight apd requested an im· mediatefeturn. The Orange County Fire Departm~nt crash crew was im· mediately summoned by lower controllers, but t)efore the World War ti training plane could be re- turned to the runway, it crashed into a field ore Red Hill Avenue near Bristol Street in Costa Mesa. Witnesses said the plane bounced once on the fi eld and then came to rest several yards away, 1¥here it burst into names after the fuel tank exploded. The men. who were seated single file In the open cockpit, were trapped inside the plane wbe.n the explosion O(curred. Firemen roupd lhern still strap~nside their •eats . FAA nvestigatot Edwa rd Petlls sad it was impossible to tell who wu fiylne the craft at th~ &e of t~e crash, since lhete are ual .conttol, ln tbe cockpit. He aid Reiner waa In the front seal~ ·l Perfis aald the men had been experiencing trouble with the plane's engine for at least a week. The men had bought the old plane recently and were re- conditioning 1t for recreational use. Accordmg to Perlis. the men had taken the plane out on another test night last Fnday. When they were 10 miles out. they notified the control Lower of engine trouble and requeslc<I an immediate straight-in approdch, Perl is said. _ The fire de partme nt crash crew was alerted and was stand· ing by, but the two pilots were able lo land the plane without in· cident. "'There's no doubt they've been having trouble with that englne, but there's no way to tell now ex· aclly what that trouble was. ' said Perils. Giffin worked part time as a real estate man for Century 21 and his boss there. Brian Ghereault. said today Giffin told him of his engine trouble last Saturday at a fireworks show. G hcrcault said Giffin ex plained he was having trouble with the '"m agnetos·· 1n hts engine. that they kept "'cuttmg on a nd off ... "He was a lot of fun to talk with ... was a very pos1t1vc prrson who liked fl:vm~ very (See PILOTS, Page A2) He declined to say when testing began. how often the weapon ha-. been tested or the results lie said the tests h::ivc been conducted under treaties requmng lhal nuclear tesLc; b<' conducted underground and that no rad1at1on escape President Carter has not made a decision on whether to produce the neutron bomb. But he has asked Cong r ess to approve production funds to pro~idc:> him with nexib1lity m reaching a de- cision. The Pentagon noted recently that "'in the case of the improved Lance warhead (neutron bombl . <See NEUTRON, Page A2> A Beauty Queen at 5 lroine Girl Little Miss Orange County Heather Mellema is j ust 5 years old, but already the blue· eyed blonde from Irvine has cap· tured three beauty crowns. in- cluding this year ·s Little Miss Orange County Litle. Next week. Heather travels to Palm Springs. where she'll com· pete against 125 other little girls hopinc to become Little Miss California. In between winning beauty contestS -she's also Little Miss Orange County1Cutle Pie and Lit- tle Miss Laguna Hills Mall - Heather keeps tlusy with tap dancing. ballet and roller skating lessons. Th.ls summer, when not ln her pre-kinder1arten summer school dass •l Basics Plu , Heather learned lQ swim and ride a two· wheeled bicycle, loo. " Heaihe~s mom. Mrs. Carolyn MeUerfta (known profe"lonnlly as CaroJ~n Devore> says •he tiasn'l pushid Jleathet 1n the com$)Cti~ ana •l•lm• lt has ~lven hei' da\Ulhl.er more self-confidence than her playmates. ... ~ --~ ---- ' DAILY PtLOT Permiasion Gmnled IMLAY CITY, Ml ch. (APJ -About 400 workera al Hamtll Manufacturtn.c Company hert• ru> lontirr havt' t.o ra)1l' lhotr h1md1 lo 10 l() lbl' bathroom The rt-ccntly tmpo11ed rule rt'qu1rlnM o 1upervbor'1 perml11lon to leave> the work are11 w1u1 rcacioded Wednttda.y. •r· . cordlni 10 a UnJted Aulu Workera Locail 48\ apokeswoman. The firm also a"rel•d lo gave back pay to a numbt!r or workers who hlld bt:en suspended for '"refusing to raise thelr hands." YACHTS .•. Ragtime is expected to Cmash about cocktail tame on Monday unless she picks up the pace. Ragtime was first to finish m the last two Honolulu races Regardless of who finishes first , according to the computations. 1t appears that the first yacht will lop a full day or more from the elapsed lime record. Barring breakdowns or a reversal of the weather, Wilder's computer may be right. The lead yachts have all averaged more than 10 knots for the first haJf or the race. The northeast tradewinds arc• expected to ~ increase during the last half of the race, generating big following seas that will push the yachL<> beyond their hull speeds First to finish 1s only one aspect of the Honolulu race as well as other long distance races. From Page A I EXAM •.• jury recommended that all EMA planning functions be consolidat-. ed under a d1rcrtor "whose background or education and ex- perience is that of a professional planner " Other yearend re<•ommenda· lions by the 1976-77 Grand Jury include: Providing lhe Commission on the Status of Women with the budget needed lo support a coordinator for commission pro- Jects. -Lessening the apparent in· It'• 7/7/77 Lucky Day? Guess Again NEW YORK (AP> -Today, July 7, is 7·7·77. U you put blore an numbers. and share the belief Uual aeven lS a lucky one. you mlaht Lhink this is your lucky day. But maybe you'd better thlnk twice As reported in the New York Tames o( July 8, 1871, here are &omeol lbo things that happened on the last 7-7-77 -100 years ago: -More than 700 unlicensed dogs were drowned by the New York City dog pound, as owners of lost dogs scurried about trying to find their pets. ''There was more excitement at the pound ye· sterday than al any time since its opening," the Times said. -The German bark Auguste arrived an London "with her bulwarks and stanchions broken. her riggtng carried away. and From Page A I NEUTRON. • versus the present warhead, we have succeeded in reducing the area exposed to fire thermal (radiation). fallout and the total of blast by a factor of more than 10." The Pentagon added that '·by confining these effects lo small areas, the military effectiveness is maintained, while minimizing the unwarr anted hazard to nearby populations, to U.S. and allied forces, and greatly reducing the destruction around the immediate target area." In Las Vegas, Nev., ERDA spokesman Dave Jackson said he could neither confirm nor deny that a neutron bomb had been exploded t.bis year at.the Nevada Test Site. '11flere have been only three announced nuclear tests at the s ite this year. but it is generally known thal many more have been conducted. Jackson said he is unable to comment on any specific test because it is classified an formation. otherwise damaaed, having oee.n in collision." -Olis Hodge's machine shop, and foundry at North Adams, N. Y ., was destroyed by fire, at a loss of $20,000. He bad $8,000 insurance. -Capt. Joseph Griffith, a Civil War veteran who had helped to :survey lbe northern Jakes, died suddenly in Iowa City, Iowa. "He was as well as usual at breakfast, a nd died at noon of apoplexy," the Times said. -A horse named Idalia stepped up to lbe starting post at Monmouth Park, N.J., a favorite because she had already bested her competition, Zoo Zoo. But Idalia became uncontrollable, tried to bolt and lost the r ace before it started. "A more sorrowful looking set of men than Idalia's backers were never seen on a race course." the Ti mes commented. Austin Spencer. a 7tlyear- old veteran of the War of 1812 who lived with two daughters and a wife in her 80s, had seen nothing wrong wtth making a little whisky at his home at 208 West 36th St. On July 7, 1877, he lear ned better. He was arrested on a charge of running an illicit still. -Two deputy sheriffs showed up at the Episcopal Church of the Holy Saviour at Madison Avenue and 25th Street to confiscate ornaments, the organ, furniture and the like on behalf of the Rev. Dr. Abraham Carter, the pastor, who said he had not been paid for some time. The church ;tlso couldn't open the next day, Sunday, fo r services. On 1·1·T1, the_deputies ha-d taken the keys. .:f It was a lucky day for Philip Donohue of Elizabeth, who spent six hours buried in a collapsed well the night before but was rescued at just about midnight, as July 1 started. -But it was the opposite kind of luck for a man named Daniel O'Leary, who chose 7.7.77 as the day on which his boast that he could walk 520 miles in six days would meet the moment of truth. lie had been walking for five days already and covered 741h miles on 1·1·11, bul it wasn't enough. Just after midnight, he quit -48 12 miles short. ter-departmental friction v ..... aud Sui·t Fi.led between the county Probation L' • ~ and Mental Health Departments. -Combining certain functions of the Sheriff's Department and Marshal's Office to eliminate duphcallon of services. -Closing McMillan Reception Center for minor juvenile offen· ders unless its costs can be brought into line. Ambassador Shot PA RIS (AP> -A gunman shot the Mauritanian ambassador to France today, but ofricials at the American Hospital said he was out of danger. He was the third ambassador shot in Paris in the past two years. The attempt on. Ambassador Ahmed Ghanah· alla, 36, apparently was the work of the Polisario Front. PROTECTION FIRM ROBBED ORLANDO, Fla. (AP) National Protection Services, a firm lhal spedalizes in security devices, was robbed of $1,100 in cash and other items. Among tbe other items were four burglar alarms, Orlando police said. The burglars apparently went th rough a window in to the building complex in wblcb the store ls located. There wu no alar m, police said. DAILY PILOT Agaimt Publisher A West 0 range County publisher and his underground press are accused in an Orange County Superior Court lawsuit today of distributing books that encourage various and costly acts of fraud. W orking through the Consumer Fraud Division or the Orange County District Attorney's Office, the State of California is seeki ng a n injunction that would bait alleg- ed activities of Eden Press and Eden Underground News, 15751 S. BrookhurstSt., Westminster. A hearing on the preliminary injunction appeal is set for Aug. 18 in Department 19 or Superior Court, Deputy District Attorney Jeffrey Roehl said today. Authorities then will demand an order for Eden Press and co· defendant Barry L. Reid, of 16681 Ever green Circle. Fountain Valley, to cease and desist from certain alleged practices. Slate officials charge Reid and his press have falsified blrlb certificates a nd publtc seals "with intent to defraud." It is further alleged they hue published a book titled ''Credit.," offer ing d etails or a plan wh ereby readet s can obtain "Triple AAA Credit" 11\ Juat 30 da~s. "even thou1h on~· bu r'cenUy d~lared bankrupte,y or is on welfare." • Cballenstd also by the state la a previous 'book, "Paper Trip" wblch alleeedly explains bow readers c a n obtain false. identiftcaUop papers of all sorts in some other name than that of the applicant. Reid was unavail able for comment on the charges today. The young publisher currently 1s producing a book by a maverick aerospace engineer's 'allegations that America's moon landings were a gigantic hoax: perpetrated to inspire public patriotism. 'Will' Judge Asked to Quit LAS VEGAS. Nev. CAP) - Attorneys asked Wednesday that the judge in charge of Howard Hughes' p"robate proceedings here for more than a year be disqualified from presiding over a trial testing the vaJidity of the so-called '"Mormon will." The much·delayed trial was set to start next month before Clark County District Court Judge Keith Hayes. But alto'r neys for Mrs. Barbara Cameron of Beverly Hills, a paternal cousin to lbe late recluse Industrialist, have asked Hayes to vol u ntarily diaquallfy himself from hearing the case because he is a Mormon and the purported will leaves one-twelfth of the estate to the Mormon chlll'ch. .. o.11., ,... si.tt ,._ DRY WALL WORKERS MARCH OUTSIDE UNION HEADQUARTERS IN IRVINE Wiidcat Strike Conttnuea DeapH• Exten1lon of Contract ~~~~~~~~~~~~ Frorn Page ,\I PILOTS ... much. That waB his life right there," said Ghereuult. Both men were married and had children. Giffin and his wife. Karen. had one daughter. Cindy, who will be two in September. Reiner and his wife, Ruth, had two children, Carrie, 6, and Dan· ny,l. The two men have been friends since at least 1972, when they worked together in Miami. They both flew for Southeast Airlines during the early 1970s. Reiner joined Air Cal in 1973 as a copilot and was scheduled to be upgraded to a full pilot later th.is year. Giffin came to Air California the following year. A neighbor of the Giffins, Mrs. William J. Morrison, said the Giffins and Reiners were very close and spent a lot of their recreational time together. The families had built a cabin together in Lake Arrowhead and had recently bought properly there to build another cabin, she said. Dry Wall Strikers lgrwre Court Ord,er By WILLIAM E. HODGE OI U.. O~ily Pilot Striking dry wall construction workers continued a wildcat walkout of most Orange County building jobs Thursday despite a court order designed to prohibit the strike. Last week, in the opening days of the walkout, striking workers were traveling to jobs encourag. 1ng other workers to join the wildcat walkout. Southern California Dry Wall Contractors Association attorney Norman AJlenby said Thursday the court order prohibits workers from interfering in other jobs and seeks to get workers back on the job. . "It freed everyone who wanted to go back to work to do so," Al· lenby explained. He said workers who continued the . strike would be liable for damages caused as a result of the walkout. The suit, filed June 29. seeks $1 million in damages from the "instigators'' of the wildcat strike. Meanwhile, striking workers admitted Thursday some of their members have returned to work. ·'There are a couple of people who've gone back to work." s trikers spokesman Terry Lewis ~aid . ··But Wt' still have .at lcal>l 500 off the 1ob.'' Other workers placed the number at about 390. Negotiations are expected t() resume Saturday between DiS· trict Council 48 of the dry wall wor)cers union and management. The striking workers have vowed not to retum to work until an ac- ceptable agreement as reached. The workers are seeking a raise to 4.5 cents per square foot of work. They arc now p;.ud 3.25,. cents per square foot. lntroduci~g the JVC 3060. 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An up-to-the-min1,1te' cass~• mechanla"' with full auto-stoi> and cu•lr•v1ew fac1t1t1es Lag1•na/South Coast A fternoon N.Y.Stoeks VOL 70, NO. 188, 3 SECTIONS, 38 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA THU RSDAY, JULY 7, 1977 TEN CENTS '.Blanket Parking Permit Due • m ~ The San Clemente Caty Council Jias ordered 1l8 caly attorney to druft an ordinance requiring residents to get permits lo park overnight in Jronl of their own home:.. The ob1ect oC lhe ordinance 1:. twofold. F1r:.t, Councilman Thomas O'Keefe said, 1t would allow a more effective burglary preven- taon proeram by letting police know "which cars that are (parked an neighborhoods) that shouldn't be.'' Second, according to Coun- cilman 8 Patrick Lane, at could provide an incentive for people to park their cars in their garages. Lane said provision should be made in the ordinance to require residents to furnish proof that they need to park their cars on the street. Support for a pros~ctive or- dinance was 4-1, with Coun- cilman Tony Di Giovanni angrily opposingil Di Giovanni likened the pro- posal to an invasion of govern- ment into people's lives that h~ said would cost them thousand; oC dollars in administrative costs. LB Utility Flap Umlergroumling Approved By JACK C'llAPPELL Ol IN 0.-111 Pilot St.aft In lhe face of both vigorous oh jcction and support, the Laguna Beach City Council voted Wed- nesday to proceed with a utility undergroundmg district an the Temple llllls Drive area. However. the council ordered that two pockets of the mo~t severe oppos1t1on be cut from the proposed undcrgrounding dis- trict. The council a(•tum rollowc'll ;m at times storm~ public hearing in a crowded l'hambers Mayor Jon Drand ancl Council man John McDowell who live in the area ,ubsented lhl'msl'I vcs from the• SJC Backs Airport Use Liinits l San Juan Capistrano city coun- itmen have endorsed a con· ~rpverslal law aimed at c ng use of the ci'1's tiny ntil it is phased out next year. ~ The proposed ordinance would eslrict use of the airport lo ccr- ain types of aircraft and require ilols to file "trap plans" prior lo akeoff and upon landing. The ·ouncil endorsed the measure on 4-1 vote. Final consideration as D two weeks Airport operations became a ajor issue after a May 28 acci· e nt killed 5-year·old Jcnmfer 'ell. She was s truck by an irplane that crashed behind her ome near the airport: Most coun cil discussion cen- "red around proposals lo bun ansient aircraft and place a de· nitc airport closure date in the wlaw. .Councilman Doug Nash was e strongest supporter of the ansient ban. "The transients r e causing most of 1he problems ut there. but they're not even stricted in this ordinance," he aid. 1 Nash and Councilman Ken riess also supported a definite phaseout date in the ordinance. l>ut city staff warned that the tnove could cause probems if louncilmen eventually decided fo amend t.l}e phaseout date. "Jr you put a definite date In the ordinance," City Manager Jim r.{ocalis told councilmen, '1You'll have to go through a 45- day process to change it." Councilmen settled for a res- olution separate from the law, calling for a June 1, 1978 closure date for the airport. On a three to two vote. they asked their staff to prepare the resolution for the next cOWtcil meeting. fdeanwhHe. the council a1so ap· proved a resolution settinl( fees ror airport use. bench during the hearin~ and did not vote. Vice Mayor Sall~ Uel lerue. who chair ed the M.·:.swn, and council members Carl Johnson and Phyllis Sweeney voted to proceed with lht· l e~alaties needed to form the district, which they revised to exclude Dunning Drive and Rim Rock Canyon Hoad. It is expected a "debt limit hearin!!" .selling forth precise costs for the proper! y owners. will be h<>ld within 60 da~ .s Estimated assessment costs for the underground avl!ragl'd $2,330 plus individuul hookup costs vurying from $ zero lo PROTECTION FIRM ROBBED ORLANDO, Fla. CAP1 - National Protection Services, a firm that specializes in security devices, was robbed of $1,100 in cash .-Mother itAtrns. Among the o&her items were four burglar alarms, Orlando pollce said. The burglars apparently went through a window into the building complex in which the · store is located. There was no alarm, police said. SC Orders Moratorium On Parlors Prospective massage parlors in San Clemente were temporarily banned by the City Council Wednesday as it sought further contro ls of adult businesses. The counsel ordered a moratorium on massage parlors until City Alty. F. MacKenzie Brown can draft an ordinance placing prohibitive restrictions on their operation. ..The object is to-discourage massage parlors through tigh_t zoning regulations that would give the council control over such things as hours or operation. building design, parking requirements, and a host or other details. ,The council did not specify . when the proposed reculating ol'didance should be ready for public hearing. The moratorium, which was passed unanimously on an urgency basis and is immedldately eCCectlve, is for four months. There are no massage parlors on San Clemente. Each of the council members baa gorte on. record stating he'd like to keep it that way. SI ,200 depend1nst on the electrical contractor and the individual properties involved. Payment or lht• as:;essment costs if spread over 15 years would be $319 a year including prancipaf and interest on the as· !iessment bonds for lhe average property. Opponents in lhe revised as· .sessmcnt district com prised about 44 percent of the proper ty area. The hearing itself wa~ punctuated by cheers and boo:. by the contending sides. J 1 m Long accused t he city council of "gerrymandering" the <See LINES, Pa~e i\2) Art-a-Fair Building UnderWa~ "We're building this morning, 100 people and a bulldozer are going over the place like a buncb of ants." said Ruth Harmon. member of the Art·A·Fair board of djrectors. Art-A-Fair won state coastal commission approval Wednes- day to site itself on the corner of Arroyo and Canyon Acres drives. The commission. on a 9-0 vote, fo und t hat no s ubs t a ntial statewide issue existed and de-· clined to hear the appeal brought by some residenUI of the area. The location .ot the art exhibition, one of three Laguna Beach summer art festivals, had been protest ed by about 40 residents who charged it would cause traffic, be noisy and increase the hazard of fire. The residents also charged that when Art-A-Fair won city a pproval for the location. adequate legal notice was not given. ... Through an attorney. they sought an injunction against the festival, but were refused. althouah the judge did order that the matter be brought back to court for review of the city processes. ln line with the judge's action, the city has scheduled a reconsid e ration or th e conditional use permit granted Art·A-Falr by the planning commission. A public hearing will be held at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday at city hall. The art festiva1 season begins (See PROJECT, Page AZ > · More Coverage Additlooat South County stories and photos appear today on Page 8108. "It's just another way of hassl-needs for parking space for two-, ing all the citizens of San three-or more·car families. "What about those homes with no phones?" Di Giovanni coun- tered. O'Keefe said details could be worked out later. Clemente," Di Giovanni said. "I Di Giovanni also wondered don't th.ink they should have to ..... whether under .the program over· come in, hat in band, and get a night ~uests m1~ht wake _the next permit to park their cars on the mornine tQ hnd their cars street." ticlteted. O'Keefe said the program to prohibit overnight parking witbout a permit could also make street sweeping easier. The councilman said current O'Keefe said that would be no res idents or the city shouldn't be problem._ All they'd have to do. penalized today because the he said. as call \he police and let town's original planner s di<ln't them know there would be extra The ordinance will be brought back for future public hearing before the council. take into consideration growing cars on the street. Skinaboard llp a C~ee~ Laguna Niguel skimboarder Steve Hart 14, t ake6 a fomble from his skimboard at the mouth or the San Juan Creek at Doheny State Beach P ark Wednesday. The youngster sets the skimboard on the edge or the river. then runs along the beach, leaps atop life bo~rd and whooosh. out onto the creek. He said he gets a prel· ty good ride -and all without a paddle. Neutron Bomb Tested which now carries convention~equirang that nuclear tests be WASHlNGTON CAP > -The United States has conducted underground tests. in Nev.ada with the neutron bomb, a government spokesman sa id today. "It's a matter of procedure that weapons are tested before production," said u spokesman for the Energy Research and Development Administration. The neutron bomb, whlcl\ is de- signed to kill people with massive doses of r adiation while leaving minim a l buildings dam age, is designed a s a warhead for the Lance missile, nuclearwarheads. conducted underground and that The Pentagon is seeking funds no radiation escape. to put the neutron bomb Into President Carter has not made production. a decision on whether to produce The ERDA spokesman said the the neutron bomb. But he has neutron bomb, known as the asked Congress to approve enhanced radiation warhead, "as production funds to provide him under development now. Nuclear with flexibility in reaching a de· weapons are tested in the dev-cision. eloprnent stage before they go The Pentagon noted recently into producUon." that "m the case of the improved He declined to say when testing Lance warhead (neutron bomb1 began, how often the weapon has versus the present wa rhead, we been tested or the results. He hav.e succeeded in reducing the said the t es t s h ave been area exposed to fire thermal conducted under treaties (radiation>. fallout and the total Winner Eyed or blast by a factor of more than 10." The Pentagon added that "by confining these effects to smaU areas, the military effectiveness is.maintained. while minimizing the unwarrante d hazard to nearby populations, to U.S. and allied forces . and gre atly reducing the destructjon around the immediate target area." Computers Follow Trampac By ALMON LOCKABEY Dtlfy Pllet eo.tl"' Wrll« Computers were humming today as the leaders In the Los Angeles to Honolulu yacht race passed the halfway mark in the fastest and closest. first-to-finish race in Ute 11-year history of the biennial classic. Computer feeders are trying lo predict lhe first yacht .to finish and at what time -and by how much·she wlU break the elapsed time record oC pine days and nine hours set by Wlodward Passage in 1971. Computer man Tom Wilder. of- f i ci a 1 measurer for the sponsoring Transpacific Yacht Club, has fed coordinates and average speeds into the machine and come up with the following predictiOl\S: Drifter will finish about 9 a.m. PDT Sunday and will be followed by Windward Passage about an hour later. Merlin will Cinlsb about 5 p.m. Sunday, followed about an houri later by K.ialoa. (See YACHTS, Page AU In Las Vegas, Nev., ERDA spokesman Dave Jackson s aid he could neither coi\flrm nor deny that a neutron bdtnb bad been exploded this year at the Nevada Test Site. There haye ~en only three (See NEUTRON, Page A2) '· • I -....... -..... DAILVfttLOT use Jack Fro1t Cua Crime $30,0QO 'Wasted' Ra•es Rapped Stamp Prke Plaiu FlayfHI, WASHINGTON <AP> -The FBI l1 Cl"edlUn• a blnt1rly cold winter und heavy anow ua po111ble facton behind u 9 perc:t>nt decrease In the: nation'" crime rate for the flr1t thr" maotht ol thla year ' . Grand Jury Raps County Pli,ysicals WASHINGTON (AP) -The U.S. Chamber of Commerce says a proposal to hold the line on postage stamp prices for individual consumers while raising them for bu.sinesses ia a case al "robbing Peter to pay The law tnfor cemtnt acency .aid today thut ncuret •bow lh4' large•t quarterly reduc-t1on 10 crtme \n tho 19 years It hu u sued crime reports. Altbough lhere were reducl.too:s in five or the •even major crime catecortes, the number ur rap ea 1ocreaaed fa ve percent and a11ravaled assaults were: up one 'percent from January throu&h March. County iovernmeot could have uvcd $30,000 durlna: the past year by not requlrlnf new employea to Lake physical ex- •mlnauons that go beyond job· related requirement.a. That was a conclusion reached by the 1.9"11-77 Oranae County Granq Jury after studyin1 the countS-'s controversial physical exam contract with the Orange County Health Testing Jnstilute (0Cfmi. It is likely a similar amount will be I08t in the current fiscal year, the grand j ury said. lts comments were, to a large degree, based on projecUons that 60 percent or those who take the elaborate pbyajcal examinations .Fro. Page Al UNDERGROUND UNES. • • assessment district in order to get rid of opponents. He accused supporters of the undergrounding of passing peti- tions and making misleading s tatements to some residents a bout inexpensive loans availa- ble to aid low·income families. Delores Sherman, also an op- ponent, said the additional as- :.essments would drive those couples on fixed incomes from their homes. continue to be in favor. We will com e back a year from now, two years from now and it will on)y cost more then," said David Red· ford. · Grant Cooper said that accusa- t ions of "gerrymandering" were without foundation because the Jaw is designed so that assess· ment district.s start large and m ay be decreased In atea to s pare blocs of opponents from the assessments. are applicants for jobs described as requiring "light physical el- fort." Alld under terms of the OCHTI contract, those prospective workers are given the same physicals as thoae headed for 1obs requirin& heavy pbyalcal ef. fort. The OCJn1 contract originally expected to bring the health test- ing firm $'l75,000 a year in county bualness became an instant con· troyersy when awarded by the Board of Supervisors in 19'75. One reason for the controversy was that one of the firm's foun- ders was Dr. Louts Cella. a political benefactor to at least four supervisors who approved the pact. Another board action that drew critlcism from the now departed '76·77 jury was Board or Supervisors' 1975 decision to con- solidate planning into a super agency, the Environmental ldanagementAgency (EMA>. As a result ol the merger, the Grand Jury said, engineers are now directtng the planning func- tions. The jury also noted that .,a number ot competent planners have left county employment and there appears to be extremely low morale among those who r e- main ... "Because of tho many vacan .. r cies an aJready overburdened staff is required to work over- time.'' To make matters worse. the Grand Jury said, "The fragmen- tation of the planning f\lnctiou has resulted in a political power struggle within the aaency which la hinderin& the search for solu· tlons to the substantial planning problems of 91'ange County." To help correct those flaws. the jury recommended that all EMA plannln,e functions be consolidat· ed under a director .. whose backeround of educaUon and ex· perience ts that of a profeasional planner." Other yearend recommends· lions by the 1976-TJ Grand Jury include: -Providing the Commission on the Status or Women with the budget needed to s upport a coordinator tor commission pro- jects. -Lessening the appanmt in- ter-de par tm en ta 1 friction between the county Probation and Mental Health Departments. -Q>mbining certain functions or the Sheriff's Department and Marshal's Office to eliminate duplication of services. -Closing McMillan Reception Center for minor juvenile offen· ders unless its costs can be broughtintollne. . ' " " Paul." I The organizaUon was reacting Wednesday to a re- commendation by Postmaster General Benjamin Bailarforanew "citizen rate" on stamps. President Carter asked Bailar lo consider a s pecial citizen rate. and Ballar asked the Postal Service board of governors to support retention of the 13-cent stamp for personal letters while raising the cost of a first-class business stamp by three cents. The ~ of governors meets Monday to vote on the plan. If it approves. the new rates would go to the Postal Rate Commission, which would have 10 months to act. Ex-stepfather Held In Child Molesting Laauna Beach police arrested a 29-year-old auto scrap dealer Wednesday on a warrant alle1ing m count.a of molesting a child. The case involved the man's 8-year-old former stepson. Ronald Paul Egardo of 2645 Laguna Canyon Road was taken into custody at his home oa the arrest wa r r a nt. He w as transferred to Orange County .Jail alt.er booking procedures in Laguna Beach and held on $10,000 bail. from home twice while li v'°' iil Laguna Beach. The warrant lists four counts of lewd and lascivious acts against a child and two counts of an ad- ditional accus ation involved when more than 10 years separ· ate the child and the accused. Brooks said. Arraignment is pending. From Page Al ••.Just because people may have a high income doe5n't mean t he y can afford it," Mrs . Sherman said calling the under- grounding a "luxury ... - Olga Dewitt said that the in· c reased costs could not be borne by "peoplewhohavelivedherea longtime." Ronald Cbilcote noted when the Temple Hills Community AIJ~ sociatlon conducted a survey of homeowners two years aeo. 62 . percent favored under grounding. He said the difficulty arose because the assessment district counted not people; but land area in its protest procedures. Officer's Killer .,~ Sentenced to Life Police Detective Gene Brooks said the case developed when the boy blurted out circumstances to an adult woman baby sittilli him. The baby altter then told the child's mother, who ls now divorced from Egardo and living elsewhere in Orange Q>unty. NEUTRON. • announced nuclear tests at the site this year, but it is generally known that many more have been conducted. Jackson said he is unable to comment on any spedflc test because it is classified information. She said the newer residents who have bought homes costing as much as $250,000 might have incomes to support the increase, but that residents who moved in before the fantastic increase in Laguna property values, could not cope with the assessments. Supporters stressed that more than a majority or the property holders wanted the district. ''We are in favor and we will FromPageAI PROJECT ••• July 15 and under normal circumstances, the summer exhibition would have been well under-way by this time. Mrs. Harmon said. For the last several years, A.rt- A·Fair had occupied a site along the coastal bluffs south of the Hotel Laguna. However, at the city's urging, the show moved to the Laguna Canyon area near the two other festivals. The city's thinking was that by Jocating all of them centrally, motorists could be lured from their autos which could be left parked in outlying lots and coaxed into inexpensive buses and trams. Retired SC Cop Returns . . He said opponents were fight- ing to keep Dunning Drive and Rim Rock in the district so the entire district would fail. Ending the testy bearing was a plea for goodwill. "Lets stop the fighting, we're all neighbors. we're all friends, let's Just keep it friendly;• pleaded Robert Deering. PenrUssion Gmmed IMLAY CITY, Mich. (AP) -About400 workers at Hamill Manulacturlng Company here no longer have lo raise their h ands to go to the bathroom. The recently imposed rule requiring a s upervisor's permission to Jeave the work area was rescmded Wednesday, ac- cording to a United Auto Worke r s Loca·l 481 spokeswoman. The firm also a greed to give back pay to a number of workers who had beiln suspended for "refusing to raise their hands.'' . By TOM BARLEY OI Ille O.ll'f 1"1194 Sutt Condemned by the Judse as a killer .. wbo is unfit to Uve in our society," transient Bobby Joe Denney wu sentenced today in life in prison for tbe killing last Nov. 19 of Cypre.ss police Sgt. Donald Sowma. "Our society deserves better than exposure to your kind of crimin al ," Orange County Superior Court Ju<tge John L. Flynn Jr. told Denney, 32. And the j udge made it clear to Denney, the son of an Oklahoma s heriff, that his prior criminal re· cord should also be examined by prison authorities if and when the question or his parole is con- sidered. Uenney was found gullty of first degree murder last monUt by a jury which cleared his wife, Velma, 25, of identical charges. It was successfully alleged that Denney s hot and killed Sergeant Sow ma when the omcer challenged him while Denney was burglarizing a doctor's office and nearby art gallery. Jt was unsuccesstully alleged that Mrs. Denney remained out- side the building and maintained walXie·talltle contact with her husband while he robbed the pre- mises. Today Judge Flynn denied a Fro•PageAI PILOTS KILLED ••• VIS• 1• 10· r's Purse are dual controls tn the cockpit. He said Reiner was in the front upgraded to a full pilot later this year. Giffin cam e to Air California the following year. A retl~ San Clemente police seat. o ff i c er assured th a t a Perlis said the men had been vacationlni Upland woman will K experiencing trouble with the catty away pleasant memories 1 plane's engine for at least a of her sta.v in the city. when he l week. The men had boulbt the turned bet lost purse in to police , old plane recenUy and were re· Wednesday. : conditionin& it for recreational A neighbor or the Giffins, Mrs. William J . Morrison, said the Giffins and Reiners were very close and spent a lot of their recreational time together. Lee David spotted the handbag : use. on a flUDel'l!larket counter and f According to Perlis, the men d rove it dlrectly to the pollce de-~ h ad taken the plane out on partment. WltbJn hall an hour of I another test flight last Friday. Audrey Dam's callA to her bank / When they were 10 milts out, and credit card companies, lhol they notified the control tower of The families had built a cabin together in Lake Arrowhead and bad recenUy boueht property there to buJld another cabin, s he said. purse. contalnlne sso. a enaine trouble and requested an checkbook and cbaree cards, was immediate strai&ht-in approach, Mrs. Morrison, who" said she Jaat ·saw Gillin at the annual Fourth or July block party, ea.ld he bad lived ln Mlasion Vlejo'a Granada Home1 tor about three yeara at25582Valtavalao. Reiner baa lived at ~ Morena Drive for a bout two years. backlnberhands. Perlls said. "Shewurea\11reUeved,0 s:qcl . The fire department crash Mias Davis's cousin and hostesa, crew was alerted and was stand· Deedee Blair of San Clem&~ ing by, but tbe two pllota were "It's comtortine to know webaye able to land the piano wftbout lll- mcb IOOd people 1n our PCIU•e ctdent. . 1epartment." . -t. . '.'There•s no doubt they've been OflANOIE COAST DAILY PILO'f F,.._P-Al havlna trouble wiUl that enable. but there's no way t.o tell now ex- actly what that trouble wu:• said Perlia. YACHTS Giffin worked part tlme as a • • • real estate man !or Century 2l Ragt.lm• 11 ex~ to flnllh and his 'boss there, Brian about cocktail tfme oca Monday Gbereault. aald tocJa7 Clfflll iold wal ... lbe pleb up ~ p~. him of h1a engine tr®ble Jut R•gtime was nnt to finish in lbe Saturday at a fireworks show· • last two Honolulu races., Gboreault said Giffin elll· plain~ he wu bav'1\~ trouble Bef ardlMa ~dr wbo fbllab• wilb the "mapetoa• lu bl• fl rt , accordtn• to the en•ine, ~t. U\e~ kept .. cuWne computatlont. tt ap.,..,.. tbatthe on and off." f1tst. >'~ wll1 loP • tu1J day ar ••He wu a Jot of fWl to taUt • more ttom the elapaed umo wlth ••• wu a nry poalU~e record. • person •ho llted fiylnc wry much. That wu hls life ziOt. B1ma1 br.ak4owne OT a tbtre, 11 said Gbtteault. • rttenal Ol tbe natbe:r, Wl..,._ Both "*' wne marrti4 a ' . eomput.tj' mq be rltht. The letct had ebS,drtn. Qifftn and. Id•_.,.. , ytohta haft all avergtd lllOf9 ltarea. had one dau1hter ClDdj, than 10 k:bOta for tbe t\nt bill ol wbo llbetwola~mti*. tJa• race. Tb• north111t Re!Mr ucl hbi Wlfe1 Jba~ bad ~:=~~·~·~: two cMl.drtn,iCUfti., Ud DU· tlr• raea. 1•••nt111 bl1 'n7. l . • tonwtii •• tbat will ,.._ thi Tbe t.o men 1aeft bliill flimdl )'Hlttl ~&Mir pg,.,.... =-~~~=~= ... ll!!'r ,. ...... Al!'fll!ll ~.m=:t.. ..... . -~----·-··" .. motion for a new trial made on the grounds that Denney s hot the officer In self defense and that the jury was improperly in- structed. ''He 5howed no regard for human life," Judge Flynn satd. "He must receive the maximum •punishment.·· The incidents are alleged to have occurred last year when the couple were livin& together in Laguna Beach. The youngster, who is 9 years old now, told police Juvenile of· ficer Larry Galat he had been threatened and abused to keep him silent about the incidents. Police said the boy ran Fourth Man Held SAN FRANCISCO <AP) -The FBI said Wednesday it has arres·· ted a fourth man in connection with the $23,000 robbery of a San Francisco bank on May 23: Introducing theJVC 3060. Take Along Stereo Sound - For the Beach, Mountains, Desert -Anywhere. See the world's first portable AM/FM Radio .. TV-Cassette Recorder and you may win a trip to one of America's great sports spectacdlars. NC Model 9475, FM/ AM/SW1/SW7. Stereo Radio, Ccllutte Rec~ Just s20000 JVC JVC's 9475 lt packed Witt\ fea1uree Iha? make It•• tiw. ltt blQottt '""'"' 11 eter•o eound, for t•cordlng end pta~ tt ..,.,, reoorde lt9reC> l'M dl'90tty from..,.. bllffMn tuntr. 1-big 5" clutkiont ~Two -'91 w rlght-bUllMn oondt!Mtr~ Two euy·to·••• mete/a~-An U~t~llt· CllHtte rntehw\t.m wH'-full auto-stoe> and cue/,.'f\t# faclllU.. I, Orange Coast EDITION -- •• .. Today's Clos ing N.Y. Stoeks VOL 70, NO. 188, 3 SECTIONS, 36 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA THURSDAY, JULY 7, 1977 N TEN CENTS . ~omputer Predit!ts Transpat! Winner By ALMON LOCKABEV 0.tlf ~1 .. 1 _,, ... W11ler L ('omputers were humming foday as the leadt.>r'> in the Los Angeles to llonolulu yacht race Essed th~ halfway mark an the stest and closest fari.l·l&fintsh ace an 11.s 71 y~a1 history Computer feeders are trying to predict Lbe f1N>l yacht to hrush and at what tame and by how much she will break the elapsed lime record of nine days and nine hours set by Windward Passag& In 1971. Computer man Tom Wilder, of· ficial measurer for tbe SPonsonng Transpacific Yacht Club. has fed coordinates and average si>eeds into the machine and come up with the following predictions: Drifter will finish about 9 a.m. PDT Sunday and will be followed by Windward Passage about an hour later. Merlin will finish about 5 p.m. Sunday. followed about an houri later by Klaloa. Ragtime is expecte<l to finish about cocktail time on Monday unless she picks up the pace. Ragtime was first to flntsh in the last two Honolulu races. Regardless of who finishes first. according to the computations, il appears that the first yacht will lop a Cull day or more from the elapsed lime recor4. Barring breakdowns or a reversal of the weather, Wilder's computer may be right. The lead yachts have all averaged more than 10 knots ror the first half of the race. The northeast tradewinds are expected to increase during the last half of the race, generating 1big following seas that will push the yachts beyond their hull speeds. First to finish is only one aspect or the Honolulu race as well as other long distance races. Handicap leaders in this race have come from the Class D ranks in Division I for conventional heavy displacement yachts. Quadri, a C&C-38 sloop skippe· red by George Gianandrea of Paradise Harbor, has held the · fleet lead for three straight days. 1 lecond ls Troublemaker, a one- tonner sailed by Jim Jessie, Metropolitan Yacht Club, Oakl- and: third is Cottontail, a CF·37 skippered by John Arens, Balboa Yacht Club; fourth is L ' Allegro, a Cal-36 sailed by Peter Arapoff, Hawaii Yacht Club, and filth is Outward Bound, a Carter-39, <See YACHTS. Page AZ> Missile Workers to Be Laid . . I Off1 N e v ada Site Neutron Bomb Tests Admitted WASHINGTON <A P) The United States has conducted underground tes ts an Nevada with the neutron bomb, a government s pokesman said today ··a·s a mailer of procedure that weapons arc tested before production." said a spokesman for the Energy, R<>search and Development Adm1n1stralion. The neutron bomb. which is de· s igned to kill people with massive doses of radiation while leaving minimal buildings damage, is designed as a warhead for the Lance missile, which now carries conventional nuclear warheads. The Pentagon is seeking funds Ito. put the neutron bomb into production. 1 The ERDA spokesman said the neutron bomb, known as the nhanced radiation warhea4 "ii under development now. Nu~\ &kl weapons are tested in the dev· elopment stage before they go into production." He declined to say when testing began. how often the weapon has been tested or the results. He said the tes t s have been conducted under treaties requiring that nuclear tests be conducted underground and that no radiation escape. President Carter has not made a decision on whether to produce the neutron bomb. But he has asked Congress to approve production funds to provide him with flexibility in reaching a de· cision. The Pentagon noted recently that ••in the case or the improved Lance warhead (neutron bombl versus the present warhead, we have succeeded in reducing the area exposed lo fire \bermal (radiation), fallout and the total or blast by a factor or more than 10." There have been only three announced nuclear tests at the site this year, but it is generally known that many more have been conducted. Heaven Sent? Watch Out for 7-7-77 NEW YORK <AP ) Today, uly 7, is 7-7·77. If you put store in umbers, and share the belief hat seven is a lucky one, you ighl think this is your lucky . ay. But maybe you'd better think ire As reported in the New York imes of July 8. 1877. here are me or the things that happened n the last 7.7.77 -100 years ago -More than 700 unlicensed ogs were drowned by the New ork City dog pound. as owners f lost dogs scurried about trying '° find their J>t18· ''There was mure excitement al the pound ye· .lerday than at any time since its f pening," the Times said. -The German bark Auguste rrived in London "with her bulwarks and stanchions broken, her rigging carried away, and otherWise damaged, having ocen in collision." -Otis Hodge's machine shop and foundry at North Adams. N .Y., w~ destroyed by fire, at a l(>as of $20,000. He had $8,000 . insurance. -Capt. Joseph Griffith, a Civil War veterQn.,who had helped to ~urvey the northern lakes, died suddenly In Iowa City, Iowa. "He ~as as well as usual at brea.ltfast, and died at noon or apoplexy." the Times said. -A horse named Idalia stepped up to the starting PoSl at Monmouth Park, N.J .. a favorite because she had already bested her competition. Zoo Zoo. But Idalia became uncontrollable. tried to bolt and lost the race before it started. "A more sorrowful looking set of men than Idalia's backers were never seen on a race course," the Times commented. <See NUMBERS. Page A2l Wood to Head Panel in NB Realtor Jim Wood was elected chairman of the Newport Beach Parks, Beaches and Recreation Commission Tuesday. Wood succeeds Mike Johnson who has led the commission for the past year. Io t h e first commission mMting of the fiscal year, two new commissioners, Joan Winburn and Kenneth Schwar;, took their seats. They repl~ Bill voo Esch and Evelyn Hart whose terms expired. o.;1, Pilot Sl•ll P!loto DRY WALL WORKERS MARCH OUTSIDE UNION HEADQUARTERS IN IRVINE Wiidcat Strike Continues Despite Exten1lon of Contract ~~~~~~~~~~~~ Cop Killer Sentenced To .Life Term By TOM BA RLEY Ol 1,,. O•lly Piiot St•ll Condemned by the Judge as a ,killer "who as unr.t to lave m our society," tr:.msacnl Bobby Joe Denney was sentenced today in life in prison for the killing last Nov. 19 of Cypress police Sgt. Donald Sowma. , "Our society deserves better than exposure to your kind of criminal," Orange County Superior Court Judge John I.. Flynn Jr. told Denney, 32. And the judge made it clear lo Denney, the son of an Oklahoma sheriff, that his prior criminal record should also be examined by prison authorities 1f and when the question of his parole in con- sidered. Uenney was found guilty of first degree murder last month by a jury which cleared his wife, Velma. 25. of adenllcal charges. It was successfully alleged that Dennev shot and killed Sergeant Sowm a when the officer challenged him while Denney was burglarizing a doctor's office and nearby art gallery ... It was unsuccessfully alleged that Mrs. Denney remained-out· side the building and DY.tintained walkie-talkie coDNct with her husband while-f(e robbed the pre· mises. • ·• Tod\y Judge Flynn denied a motion tor a new trial made on the grOl.lJl<i! that Denney shot the officer in seir defense and that t he jury was improperly in· structed. Dry Wall Strikers Ignore Court Order By WILLIAM E . HODGE Of Uw O•oty Polo! Striking dry wall construction workers continued a wildcat walkout of most Orange County Grune Device Blamed for Newport Fire A malfunction in an electronic game has been blamed for a $30,000 fire that gutted an oceanfront eatery at the Newport Pier early today. Fire department spokesman Art Morton said investigators believe the elec tri cal malfunction touched off the fire reported at 3 a.m. al Perry's Pizza. 2108 West Ocean Front. He said the interior of the building and its contents were de· stroyed by the fire which was spotted by unidentified fishermen on the nearby pier. M orlon said the fishermen called in the alarm to the fire de· partment and then attacked the growing fire wit.h a garden hose. Morton said they helped keep the fire in check until the first of four fire units arrived at the scene. He said the fire was doused quickly after that. No injuries were reported by the fishermen or the fire fighters. - building jobs Thursday despite a court order designed to prohibit the strike. Last week, in the opening days of the walkout. striking workers were traveling to jobs encourag- ing other workers to join the wildcat walkout Southern Cuhfornia Dry Wall Contractors Association attornev Norman Allenby said Thursday the court order prohibits workers from interfering in other jobs and seeks to get workers back on the job. . "rt freed everyone who wanted lo go back lo work to do so.·· AJ. lenby explained. Ile said workers who continued the strike would be liable for damages caused as a result oflhe walkout. The suit, filed June 29. seeks $1 milhon in damages from the "instigators·· of the wildcat strike. Meanwhile. striking workers admitted Thursdav some of their members have returned to work. .. There are a couple of people who"ve gone back to work,'" strikers spokesman Terry Lewis s aid. "But we still have al least 500 orr the job." Other workers placed the number al aboul390. Negotiations are expected lo resume Saturday between Dis· trlcl Council 48 of the dry wall workers union and management. The striking workers have vowed not to return to work until an ac- ceptable agreement is reached. Tiro Pilots Perish In Airport Crash into a field off lted HUI Avenue near Bristol Street in -Ooata Mesa. . Witnesset said \he plane bounced once on the field and then came to retl several yards away, where it burst into Oames after UM fuel tank exploded. Tbe men, wl\o W'1'e seat.eel ainal• file in th• ooen cockpit, w re lrae>ped lnslde the plane when the exploaion oc:curnd. Flremen foubd tbem •till 1lr appi!d Inside their aea'8. °tAA lnve1ti1ator Sdward Peril.I ,aid tt wu lmpoe1lbl• to leU who -. ftyiDl(j tb•~crlft at lhe tlm• Of \be cruh. amce then are dual cooti'Ob In UM ~. He said RiilW •u la~ lraal <fM ~IPac•~ • Anahei01 Plant Cuts 700 More than 700 employes at the Orange County.based Autonetacs group or Rockwell International Corp. will be laid off an the next six months, a company spokesman said today. Dave Newbro. a spokesman ror the Autonetacs Group, said pro· duclion or the Minuteman 111 guidance systems produced in Anaheim will be ended because the Defense Department has de· caded additional spare missiles aren •t needed to support about 550 launchers. Production or the Minuteman missile systems began in 1958, and Rockwell spokesmen said more than 1,000 of the land-based guidance control systems were produced in Orange County. Newbro said another 250 em ployes al other Rockwell divisions involved in Minuteman III productions also wiU be laid off bet ween now and January 1978 "We're starting with 70 empJoyes this month in Anaheim." he said, "and It will peak with about 400 laid off in Oc- tober.'· He said the company will at- tempt to relocate employes wilhin the Aulonetics group and other Rockwell divisions. "We"re presently building the final 10 guidance control systems and expect those deliveries lo take place before November,·· Newbrosaid. Minuteman JI( missiles are the land based part of the nalion·s triad strategic force, he ex- plain ed. Land-based bombers and submarine-launched mis· s ites are the other two arms of the strategic force. Rockwell officials said produc· tion employes would be the fir::.L to be laid off. Woman Hit ~y Car, Hurt A woman struck by a car this mornmg as she crossed East Coast Highway at Goldenrod Avenue in Corona del Mar he.. been listed as Jane Doe by Newport Beach police. The woman, believed to be in her mid-forties, wes unconscious following the mishap and was taken to Hoag Memorial Hospital where she was listed in a serious to critical condition. The accident occurred about ll a.m .• Coast , 4 '· . I ' ' I I ' • • l I • l2 DAILY PILOT N lhurlday July 7, 1977 $30,000 'Wasted' Grand Jury Hits County Physical,s <'ounly ''" \'mmrnt <'OU Id hlVl' uvf'd SJo,000 dw 111.: lht• 1ua"l vf'ar b) not rcqu1rrna nuw t>mploy..-. to take J.1hYlll<'11l t•x am11111lllK\111 thut l(o lwvond job relatc-d reoquirement11 .. That wa.s M \•onclU'don rl'aChl'<I hy thtt 1976 77 Orange County <•rand Jurv uftt•r i.1udy1nl( tht• rount\ ' C'llllll uvt•r\ldl ph\ "l'HI t•xum contra<'' wllh the Orangt' County llt>ulth Tei.tin)( ln1>t1tule 10CHTl1 It 1s hkeh a ~1m1lur amuunt will be IUCll in the currt>nt fiscal vur. the grand Jury i.a1d Its comments Wl'rc. lo a large de&rl'e, bused on projections that tiO perct!nt of those who take the t>IMbon&te physkul examinations are appht'anti. for jobs descnbed as rcqwnng "light physical ef. fort ·· And under terms of the OCHTI <'Ontract, those prospective workt•r:. are given the same r'h yiucals as those headed for Jobi. requiring heavy physical cf Cort The OCHTI contract originally expt>ctl'd to bring the health test mg firm $275,000 a yl.'ar in county business became an instant con lroversy when awarded by the Rates Rapped Stamp Price Plam Flayed WASIIINGTON IAP> -The U .S. Chamber of Com mercc says a proposal to hold the line on postage stamp prkt's for individual consumers while raising them for busines:-.cs 1s a case of "robbing Peter to pay Paul." The organization was reacting Wednesday to a re- com mendalion hy Postmaster General Benjamin Ba ii ar for a lll'W · · nt IZl'n rate" on stamps. President Carter asked Bailar to consider a :-ipL·tial citizen rate. and Bailar asked the Postal Snv1ec t>0urd of governors to support retention of the 13·C'l'nt stamp for pcrsonul letters while raising the cost of a first-class business stamp by three cents. The board of governors meets Monday to vote on the plan If it approves. the new rates would go to the Postal Hate Commission, which would have 10 months to act. Fraud Suit Filed Agaimt Publisher A West Orange County publisher :ind his underground µress ar<.• uccu:.cd 1n an Orange County Superior Court lawsuit today of distribulln~ books that (•ncourage various ;ind co:.lly acts of fraud. Newport Pier Swim Readied More than 75 swimmer:-. are expected to compete Saturday 111 Newport Beach's annual P1C'r·to Pier swim. spon:-.ored by thl· city's hfes:uards and lhl' Crab Cooker restaurant The compet1t1on geh unrler way at 10 am al the Hal boa Pier wllh the f1n1sh hne nearlv twu mile<; away at lh<' Newport Pier Swimmers. who must haH• AAU cards to enter . will compete in eight divisions rangmg from iunior boys and ~iris to masters men and womt•n Twilight Concert At Mesa School A .twilight concert by thc Harbor Area Summer Band will be presented Friday at Kaiser Intermediate School 1n Costa Mesa The free concert kicks off the eighth season of the summer band. comprised of more than 100 students from grades six through 12 in the Newport-Mesa Unified School District The performance wiTl begm at 7 p.m in the inner quad at the school, located at2130 Santa Ana Ave. Body Found LOS ANGELES (AP> -A body believed to be one or 28 persons killed in the so-called "trash bag•· borders has been unearthed inside a Culver City gar age, sheriffs deputies said this afternoon. CRelated story, A3l. ORANG!COAST H DAILY PILOT •-rtll ...... .. ,......,, ..... _j_ , .. , •• Cwtoy V1<•"'ttldt~I• ... -.. ~ ~•IC-t••141r T-... ........... i... ........ u1 ... 0.-.N LR\ -l' ... 11 ••11••...iMt ........ ~ Working through the Consumer Fraud Division of the Orange County Di strict Attorney's Office. the State of Cali forn ia is seeki ng an injunction that would halt allcg· ed activities of Eden Press and Eden Underground News. 15751 S. Brookhurst St.. Westminster. A hearing on the preliminary injunction appeal 1s set for Aug HI in Department 19 of Supcnor Court, Deputy District Attorney J effrcy Roehl said lod ay. Authorities then will dt-mand an order for Eden Press and co defendant Barry L. Reid . of 16681 Evergreen Circle. Fountain Valley, to cease and desist from certain alleged practices Slate ofric1als charge Reid and his press have falsified birth certificates ~nd public seals ··with intent lo defraud " IL 1s further alleged lhE'y have published a book titled "Credit," offering details of a plan whereby readers <'a n obtain "Triple AAA Credit" in JUSt 30 days, "even though one has recently declared bankruptcy or is on welfare." Challenged also by the state 1s a previous book, "Paper Trip" which allegedly explains how readers can obtain f a lse identification papers of all sorts in some other name than that of the apphcant. Reid was unavailable for comment on the charges today. The young publisher currently is producing a book by a maverick aerospace engineer's allegations that America's moon landings were a gigantic hoax perpetrated to rnspire public patriotism El>ells Slate Bahy S11mmer Newport Beach's Junior Ebell Club wants to see to it that babiu born this year get off to a healthy start. so club members have launched their Healthy Baby Summer. The program. operated in con· junction with the county chapter of the March of Dimes at Hoag Memorial Hospital is an effort to insure that mothers follow a pro- gram of pre-natal health care and that their babies are given regular medical check-ups alter they are born. To open Healthy Baby Summer the club provided gift packets to the three babies born at Hoag on the Fourth of July. The three boys, Ryan Haney Vann Patrick Ort on and Zachary Mark Smith, each re- cel ved attt certlflcatea, baby clotbea and stuffed animals donated b)' local merchanta. Accord.ln1 to Susan Russell, apokesman for the club, the three mothers were given a March o( Dlmef family medical record form to keep track or tholr babies' cheek\lps. She aald club members Will be foUowmc u.. inf anu • pn>areat as cloaety, Q po11UU• while en· cou.ra&1n~ mothers OI all t>abtea bOm alli Uili t\lmmet to like dwanta1e Of health care tA· tofmllkln prOVtded br lhe ch1b and &.he~ rADtm • Board of Supervisors In 1975. One reason for lhe controversy was that one of the rtrm•s foun. ders was Dr. Louis Cella, a political benefactor to at least four s upervisors who approved the pact. Another board action that drew criticism from the now departed '76-77 jury was Board of Supervisors' 1975 decision to con- solidate planning into a super agency, the Environm ental Management Agency (EMA). As a result of the merger, the Grand Jury said, engineers are now directing the planning func- tions. The Jury also noted that "a number of competent planners have left county employment an<! there appears to be extremely low morale among those who re- main." "Because of the many vacan- cies an ·already overburdened staff 1s required to work over- time." To make matters worse, the Grand Jury said. "The fragmen· ta lion of the planning functions has resulted in a political power struggle within the agency which is hindering the search for solu- tions to the substantial planning problems of Orange Count v." To help correct those flaws. the jury recommended that all EMA planning functions be consolidat· ed under a director "whose- background or education and ex- perience is that of a professional planner." Fro.Page Al NUMBERS. • Austin Spencer. a 78-year- old veteran or the War of 1812 ·.~·ho lived with two daughters and a wife in her 80s, had seen nothing wrong with making a little whisky al his home at 208 West 36th St. On July 7. 1877. he learned belier. lie was arrested on a charge of running an il licit still. Two deputy sheriffs s howed up at the Episcopal Church of the lloly Saviour at Madison Avenue and 25th Street to confiscate ornaments, the organ. furniture and the like on behalf or the Rev. Dr. Abraham Carter. the pastor. who said he had not been paid for some time. The chureh also couldn 't open the n ext day, Sunday. for services. On 7-7·77. u.e deputies had taken the keys. It was a lucky day for Phthp Donohue or Elizabeth, who spent six hours buried in a collapsed well the night before but was rescued al JUSt about midnight. as July 7 started. Out it was the opposite kind or luck for a man named Daniel O'Leary, who chose 7-7-77 as the tiay on which his boast that he could walk 520 miles in six days would meet the moment of truth. lie had been walking for five days already and covered 7411'.t miles on 7·7·77, but it wasn't enough. Just after midnight, he quit -481h miles short. Front Page Al YACHTS ••. sailed by Jim Lenthall. Dana Pomt Yacht Club. Class leaders in Division I CLASS A -1. Lightning, Lawrence Carr, St. Francis Yacht Club: 2, Bravura, Irving Loube, Richmond Yacht Club: 3, Sumatra, Al Martin, Los Angeles Yacht Club. CLASS B -Rubber Duck, John Keever. California Marlt- ime Academy: Silver Fox JU, Bob Kelleher, Long Beach Yacht Club. CLASS C -t, Sagacious, Charles May, San Diego Yacht Club: 2, Racy, L. W. Taylor, St. FYC; 3, Arlana, George Thorson, Los Angeles YC. ' C L~SS D -Quadri : 2, Troublemaker; 3, Cottontail. Handicap leaders In Division ll (ultra-light displacement>: 1, Tinsley lJgbt, Henry Grandin Jr., St. FYC; 2, Sweet Okole. Gregg Gillette, Waikiki YC: 3, Free Spirit.. Richard Ettinger, St. ·,vc. Auto Prize In Frmd Drive Membera of Lbe Newport Harbor Area Chamber of Commerce are looldnt lor people wUUn1 to lnves\ $.'5 in a new Cadillac Seville. The car la one of aeveraJ prltet, includ.lnf dlnnen for two at IQCaJ rostauran~. belna of· fered In the cb•mber'• latest bulldlna lu:nd campalsn. The tick.ti et • eleh ~ abt tor S25 art avallabt1 lhl'0'1lb the chamber offices at 1410 J•mbone l\oed. Pt1.MS .rill be awarded JUl,y 11 d~ UMt lllil N~ leHb P*C•l.ftl. t I Target Practice 011lr l'tlot ~l•tl l'llOM Kim Viktur. 9. .Jason liardncr. 8. and Fernando Beckham, 6, all students of the Mardan School, p ractice putting out candles with squirt guns. one of the games to be offered Saturday during the school's country fair. The main attr action will be <1n auC't um of ccll·britv mementos beginning at 10 a.m. The fai; opens at 9 a. m . at the school. 695 W. 19th St .. Costa Mesa. Proceeds will benefit the school, which serves childrl'n with learning dis- abilities. Fro•PageAI PILOTS KILLED IN CRASH. • • seat. Perhs said the men had been experiencing trouble with the plane's engine for at least a week. The men had bought the old plane recently and were re cond1t1onmg 1t for recreational use. According to Perlis. the men had taken the plane out on another test flight last Fnday. When they were 10 miles out. they notified the control tower of engine trouble and requested an immediate straight-in approach. Perhssa1d. The fire department crash crew was alerted and was stand- ing by, but the two pilots were able lo land the.plane without In· c1dent. ·'There's no doubt they've been having trouble wilh that engine, but there's no way to tell now ex- actly what that trouble was." said Perlas G iffm worked part lime as a real estate man for Century 21 and hts boss there. Bria~ Ghere::rult, said today Giffin told' him or his engine. trouble last Saturday at a fireworks show. Ghereault i.a1d G1H10 ex· plained he was having trouble with the "maftnetos'' m has engine. that they kept "<'utting on and off." "lie was a lot of fun to talk ' with ... was a very pos1t1ve person who liked flying very. much. Thal was has life right ' there." said Ghereault. <: Introducing the JVC 3060. Take Along Stereo Sound - For the Beach, Mountains, Desert -Anywhere. See the world's first portable AM/FM Radio-TV-Cassette· Recorder and you may win a trip to one of America's great sports spectaculars. JVC wrll pock up the lab for two lree 11ckets plus an exciting trip of your choAce to the World Serres Super Bowl .,. NBA Playoffs ..• U S. Tennis Open . Indy ·soo· .. Kentu(fky Derby Trials. . Come in for your free entry form. . . There's nothing to buy But there's a lot to see and hear with. the~ portable JVC.3060. It's an AM/FM AadlO. It's a Tv. It's a Cal$ette AecOfder. All '"one I You've never seen anything hke it.~ JVC Model 9475, FM/AM/SWl/SW2 Stereo Radio, Cassette Recorder Just '200°0 JVC JVC s 9475 is packed with features that make 11 a belt bW. Its biggest fHture Is stereo sound. for recording and playbld<. It even records atenro FM directly from the built-In tuner. TM> big 5~ duel-<X>ne speakets. Two -left end right -built.Jn condenser rnlorophonee. Two euv·to-se• m•~· An up-to-t~nute eaSMtte an'9m with full auto-atop and cue/review tac:llltles. Thur day'• t:lo-.in• Pric~ • •t ••• ... 0 ... f "" ~,. 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"' ' ]1• 0 0 11 )J TRANSACTIONS •• DAILY PILOT C'at~hlng Cob Pepsico Wa~ts Pizza Hut, Too BJ MILTON MOSKOWITL As ll be didn't already havo enou&b "Junk food" to sell, what wtth Frilot com cblps, ~y'a potato chlps. Doritos tortilla chipt, all washed down with Peptl·Cola. DonaJd Kendall bas decided to ad-1 piaa to hi.I r~olre . Kendall runs PepsiCo, Inc .• the company founded on Pepal·Cola. lOftlllme runnerup to Coke In the soft drink business. Kendall has been nmnin1 it since 1963. Ke has never worked for another company, havin1 Joined Pei>1i in 19'7 as a fountain syrup salesman . UNDO KENDALL THE SOFr DRINK company hu .tevetoped a strong appetite for other companies. It gobbled up Frito-Lay, the Texas snack producer. in 196S. lt digested North American Van Lines, a moving company, in 1968. It made a meal of Wilson Sporting Goods in 1910. And along the way it downed Monsi.,r Henri Wines, a major wine importer. So yes, the corporation that supplies Pepsi-Cola and Fritos also brings you Yago Sant'Gria and Wilson tennis balls . To this happy family Kendall now wants to add the Pizza Hut restaurant chain. He bas offered PepsiCo stock worth more than $300 million, which ls fine with the people who have built Pizza Hut into the nation's largest baker or Pina pies. They're ready to sell out to Kendall. What they're selllng 1s one of the most sue· c essful fast -food operations around . Expanding at the rate of Money Tree 400 new units a year, Pizza Hut has more than 2,700 places open, which makes it, in terms of number of units, the third largest restaurant chain after McDonald's and Kentucky Fried Chicken. Acquiring Pizza llut will do at least three things for PepsiCo: 1 -IT WILL P UT IT INTO mE pizza-making business, which is one of the fastest-growing food categories. Into it already are PiJlsbury (Tonlino>. Quaker Oats (Celeste) and General Mills (Saluto). 2-lt will put it into the restaurant bus mess, which has already been entered by many companies: Pillsbury (Burger King>. General Foods (Burger Chef>. Heublein (Kentucky Fried Chicken> and Quaker Oats (Magic Pan>. Moreover, with Pizza Hut. PepsiCo eets a company that owns outright more than half of its restaurants, a high proportion, although not as high as Ralston Purina's virtual 100 percent ownership of the Jack·in-the-Box restaurants. 3-Pizza Hut's annual sales of $310 million will vault PepsiCo over the $3 billion sales mark, enough, in fact, lo top, for the first time in history, the dollar sales done by archrival Coca-Cola. The two soft drink giants finished 1976 with Coke at $3 billion and PepsiCo at $2.7 billion. THAT WILL PROBABLY PLEASE Kendall, who has been chasing Coca·Cola for his entire working career, especially since he started out in fountain sales, where Coke was always dominant. However, Kendall still has a long way to go to catch ~ on the earnings side of the ledger. Coke netted $285 million after taxes last year, whi'ch was more than double the $136 million earned by PepsiCo -and Pizza Hut's profits of $2() million will not close that gap by very much. The Coca-Cola Company does not make pizza and it's not in the restaurant business but it does make the Minute Maid juices, Hi-C fruit drinks and Butter·Nut and Maryland Club coffees. And it i;till wllips Pepsi·Cola in the sort drink market Forces Pull Stocks In Both Directions NEW YORK (APJ · Stock prices were mixed today. caught up in the midst of connictin~ forces in the economic news. The Dow Jones average of 30 indul.>lrials gafoed l 79 1>oints to!Xl9.51. But gainers and losers were evenly balanced among- N'ew \'ork Stock Exchnngc-listed 1ssuc:. Do..rJotte•ll eerage• "h.>N voo AP, F1n..tl Oo..., Jon~\ .-Wf't••OfJ.. HOCKS ],J ·~" l~ Tr, U Lltf ,, \0 '"du~ ''·"" Utth •I ~1• 0""1' HIQto low <IC~ I& ~·JU q()1 H Ill » ]Ji. I I 13' 10 11~ f>A I•• ll 11).QJ 110 11 l•l71 ••1 ~?;'; • ~';J 1ll 10 0 '" 11) ... 113' JllOI• 0 41 ....... >oo d UOO <IOll.100 1 U?,lOO A.eerfcan Leader• llp• and Down• HEW VOIUC •AP) • .. rw V(lHfr A~\ Adv.an<• ~ e~~:n~" TOl•I IU""' New ,q,, "•O"""' New"" t~ SALIS Due to late transmission today's listing will not appear in the Daily Pilot. Wt4AT AllllK OtD ~f ._.,,, V('U>f' 1•P1 Aov~1n1 1 n 01 tUru·d ''"' f'll .. nO. 11 fC)l,ll •• N•w 1'411 h1 •" Nlf• t01 '1\w' AMEa ULES p,. f cd•v d.-\ 1'18 ,., 1'11 111 )96 111 ~k ClCI ,, ,, . " Due to late transmission today's llstfng will not appear In the Dally Pilot. Stoclu lft Tia• Spodlgllt . ' . l ..J' • I" • "ru'°'1()t1->... Alli\.AJlMlfO !>r~T(). STM WAJ\S , • • MNIJ< HAMILt HMRl50N f()N) CAMIE FISHEi'\ P€Tffi CUSHING '. ALEC GUINNES~ \l; n ... 10-Jl.Jlfit<IP1ty t.i <tuvc..'t)f Hv'lll~ G€0fl..G€ LUCAS GMW KUN' l JOHN WILLIAMS JJ>t4f>.I/'../#~· HIJ"lf'.D'f[~ lllll • ltOROlOll"' caJ t--.. "'-' _.. ··1 •• [?G -· " -I ~ ... ~ ) 111!.. "'¥1 . lil -" S HOWTIMES-OAILY-10:30-12:45 ~--3:00-5:15-7:30·10;00.12:00 MI DNIGHT MAY THE FORCE BE WITH YOU NEWPORT il!t CENTER FASHION ISLAND * NEWPORT CENTER • ••• •• • ••••••••••• ••• ••• • •• ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• • COAST HWY. AT MACARTHUR BLVD. '* NEWPORT BEACH * 644·0760 I.A llllllADA • 1.AKEWOOD • WAL• lH IA9'0AIH '"ICI I t '9 MONDAY tNv SATUR0Af •l•~I H...0.J•I U· JO lo) 00 LA llllllAOA 4 Olll y W NOA•S • HOllOAYS ,, )I) •• J 00 "AN IHCUDllU 5'1CTACU Of WAI' ,!l•ll~t~.-~lfli;l,,,.--;,..~~;:;:;:;_:11 A I RIDGl .,rgc> FAR 1'°> ~-·~I!!!! IM-2AOO . ,.O,U TIME FOIGOl ('°1 ieny, ........... 1'tA Y 11 DOUN'T H•~lN JO Y0\11" 41D .. u-I u:~~1•1 ~->--..,..°2'4i)O . RUIY 111 -t SHAW e .... COUIUNI lllN) THI Df.,IN J -.OY HO •AIMS &UIH AllUN Cl •OS H INH flHSAUtNl f'\Ul __ __, T,.I U OU HAI U.HOIG1N 1 _,_.,.,_,_----,. .. ,LU IT DOUN'T HUHN fO Y0\11' UllD(I) ,lU5 ltUITi-1 ....... c ........ .,.,..,. , •• ,,., "' .. '" ............. MN09'f41H aoftet'I eMl\. ... IR. ~ •>••tit ...... .....,.C. ,....., tV) W...-·aa.-•tl -•~I"', .... "Pl,O 11 ~ """'"" fO YOU- --~;.I ~::, : c "'" flUCIUH°I 1'hlll ~;;. k HAV~o::a.~ ~L~.lAVIL(lll ~ ......... _..,. __ ..;....;__;..;....J. 3. HlAKtRI IR(Al(H <'°> _,_ .. ~ -~O) fUN .::: ~~''; JAHllH'I --HO PAUU CATALINA ISt:AND! "JSLANn 1101.f DA Y,. 9 A M. 0.ily From BaJOOI Pt.Uioft "NEW YORK. NEW YORK" PG NoP- "THE SORCERER" PG NoP- ''A BRIDGE TOO FAR" PG NoP- "ANNIE HALL" PG "YOUNG FRANKENSTEIN" PG "SILVER STREAK" PG "FUN WITH DICK & JANE" PG "THE STING'' PG "MURDER BY DEATH" PG "EXORCIST II THE HERETIC" R "DEMON SEED" R Ho,,_ "The Other Side of Midnight" R "BLACK SUNDAY" R NoP.- WAl T OtSNfY S "THE BOATNIKS' G"GNOMEMOBILE' "ROCKY' PG 'HUSTLF R ·ANNIE" HALL (G 'YOUNG FRANKENSTEIN' PG "IUO$ MMMY SVPH IT.U- J:00.5.-0W:I 0 WAl.T~- n.W/DIS • l~l:eO.J:I0.7:1 .. 9:10 ._.,~. US l ~ "A IRIDGE TOO FAR" IPGI "A HIDGE TOO FAR" IPGI •1oc1CrlPGJ "ST. IVES .. "PEOll.I THAT TIMI FORGOT' .. vmARDS'' lf'GI .. RUIY .. IRI "'UllD"IRI ntEATRES-OAANGE CO SllOI cmmtS ~ .51 SO. COAST PLAZA "'THE DEEP .. INI l:l0.1:40.5:5o.1:00. I 0: I 0 S . COAST LAZA 1:10.1:40· 5:51).1:00-10: I 0 CINEMALAND Im s. MllllW ...... m IM>I 1111 Pt'""' .. AIRPORT •77 .. 4:00-7:55 .. W.~ FIB.OS" 2:00-6:05-10:00 CINEMALAND '"RUIY" 2:00.6:05-10: I 0 'IL.AC« SUHDA Y" CR l:lS.7:40 ~omlin Honored BERUN CAP> -Amtncan comedleun• Lily Tomlin and a Soviet lllm about two resistance f1'hters sb~ top honors TU t the end of the 1917 Berlin film festival. Miss Tomhn won u GoJden Bear tlrst prize as best performer for her non-comedy role in Robert Benton's feature fllm ''The Late Show," which was warmly rece1Ved by Berlm cnlics and audiences. The Soviet film •· Ascens1on." directed by Larissa Schep1t.ko, was chosen as top feature film ot the 1977 competition. It depicts the strugales ot two resistance fighters and stars Vladimir Gostjuchin and Anat.oli Solonizyn. · The second-ranked feature rum was French director Robert Bresson's .. Le Diable Probablement." S RR IS BORn PLUS (R) ' "Islands in the Stream ' .• Saddlehack EDITION I '\ Afternoon N.Y. Stoek.s VOL 70, NO. 188, 3 SECTIONS, 31 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA THURSDAY, JULY 7, 1977 TEN CENT~ Physical ExaDl Law ~ost OC $30,0001 I County government could have saved $30,000 dunn11 the put year by not r equlrln1 new employes to take physical ex· amanations that go beyond job. related requ1rement.s. That was a conclusion reached by the 1976 77 Oranee County Grand Jury after studying the county's controversial physical exam contract with the Orange 1 County Health Testing Institute <OCHTI>. It i1 Ukely a similar amount will be loet in the current fiscal year, the grand jury said lu comments were, to a large degree, based on projectJOns that t!O percent or those who take the elaborate physical examinations are applicant& for jobs described as requiring "light physical ef. fort.'' And under terms of the OCHTI contract, those prospective workers are given the same physicals as those headed for jobs requiring heavy physical ef· fort. The OCHTI contract originally expected to bring the health lesl- in& firm $275,000 a year in county business became an instant con· troversy when awarded by the Board of Supervisors in 1975. One reason for the controversy was that one of the firm's foun· ders was Dr. Louis Cella, a political benefactor to at least four supervisors who approved the pact. Another board action that drew criticism from the now departed '76-7'1 jury was Board of Supervisors' 1975 decision lo con- solid~te planning into a super agency, the Environmental Management Agency (EMA). As a result of the merger, the Grand Jury said, engineers are now directing the planning func· Uons. The jury also noted that "a number of competent planners have left county employment and there appears to be extremely low morale among those who re- m aio." "Because of the many vacan· cles an already overburdened staff is required to work over- time." To make matters worse, the Grand Jury said, "The fragmen- tation of the planning functions has resulted in a political power struggle within the agency which 1s hindering the search for solu· lions to the substantial planning problems of Orange County." To help correct those flaws, the <See EXAM, Pagej\2) •' 2 Viejo • Ill Crash Pilots Killed Neutron Bomb Tested WASHINGTON (AP) -The United Stales has conducted underground tests in Nevada with lhe neutron bomb, a government spokesman said today. "It's a matter of procedure that weapons are tested before production," said a spokesman for the Energy Research and Development Administration. The neutron bomb, which is de· signed to kill people with massive doses of radiation while leaving minimal buildings I damage, is des igned as a warhead for the Lance missile, which now carries conventional nuclear warheads. The Pentagon is seeking funds ! to put the neutron bomb into . production. The ERDA spokesman said the neutron bomb, known as the enhanced radiation warhead, "is under development now. Nuclear weapons are tested in the dt'V· elopment stage before they go into production." He declined to say when testing .began, how orten the weapon bas been tested or the results. He said the tests have been conducted under treaties requiring that nuclear tests be conducted underground and that no radiation escape. President Carter has not made a decision on whether to produce the neutron bomb. But he has a,sked Congress to approve production funds to provide him with nexibility in reaching a de· cislon. · The Pentagon noted recently that "in the case of the improved Lance warhead (neutron bomb> versus the present warhead, we bave succeeded in reducing the area exposed to fire thermal · (µdiation), fallout and the total of blast by a factor of more than jQ." ,, The Pentagon added that "by OQnfining these effects lo small areas, the military effectiveness iJ! maintained, while minimizing µ,e unwarranted hazard to nearby populations, to U.S. and allied forces, and greatly .~educing the destruction around \he immediate target area." , , In Las Vegas, Nev., ERDA .spokesman Dave Jackson said be 1'euld neither confirm nor deny ·t.bat a neutron bomb had been ~ploded this year at the Nevada 'j'est Site. <See NEUTRON, Page A2) Coas ' Daily Piiot Stall PMlo WRECKAGE OF WORLD WAR II TRAINING PLANE EXAMINED BY FI REMEN AT ORANGE COUNTY AIRPORT _________ T_w_o_Ml_ul_on Viejo Pilot• P..Ufted When Old Alr;craf\ Cr.-h" ·~ .fJurne6 Shortly After Takeoff Viejo ,City Chances Seeni Dini For the foreseeable future. Mission Viejo's prospects for cityhood appear bleak unless surrounding communities arc in· eluded. ... That will most likely be the conclusion presented to the Mis· sion Viejo Municipal Advjsory Council (MAC) Monday night by its budget and finance commit· tee. The council meets at 7:30 p. m. in ils offices at 27021 La Paz Road. The panel has been pondering the feasibility of incorporation for several months at the behest of MAC member Ted Keene. Royal Geis, budget committee chairman. refused today tQ com· ment on his panel!s findings to date. He said the report would be put in final form at a meeting tonight for presentation to the council. Committee member A.W. Werner did comment, however. Werner, who said he was "very close" lo incorporation drives in several desert com inunilles prior to moving to I'!f ission Viejo, noted that the lack ot tax base makes the move impossible al present. He said Mission Viejo needs more commercial development and additional light industry to keep a city aCloat wilhout pushing property taxes out of steht. "It is not impossible," he said, "e11>eclally if there is suCficient interest f'°om outlying com· mun!Ues such as Aegean Hills nd ~Toro.'' W emer sald he is hopeful the bud1et committee will rQcOm· mend • more eittenslve study ot incorporation for Mission Viejo bet or• tuliDJ it clat al tog et.bet. M AC Cbairman John Noble. when lAI~ ol \he probable cott~t•IOili -' the budlet \NiDll. Htd, "I eowcf.hett told tbem th t befOT~tbe)' ed," In ¥ ot :.Mtilloo Vie· Jo baa bfeft • udiecl in tM paal but the eonebaslCii1l·:bave ~ tho' aame'eviritliiii:: .. BftrY. .time lbntebOdy doWn the4:J• aiDbiU.., elt~ atu :tla!-,nO\td ~JI m.rnw, ~if'omHr the Ora n,. CMb' lioCal A1ewey "~~,. .. .. .sM•'" .-Iii~ \ Rates Rapped Stamp Price Plans Flayed WASHlNGTON {AP ) -The U.S. Chamber of Commerce says a proposal to hold the line on postage stamp prices for individual consumers while raising them for businesses is a case of "robbing Peter to pay Paul." The organization was reacting Wednesday lo a re- commendation by Postmaster General Benjamin Bailarfor a new "citizen rate" on stamps. President Carter asked Bailar to consider a special citizen rate, and Ballar asked the Postal Service board of governors to support retention of the 13-cent stamp for personal letters while raising the' cost of a first-class business stamp by three cents. The board of governors meets Monday to vote on the plan. If-it approves, the new rates would go to the Postal Rate Commission, which would have 10 months to act. Officer's Killer Sentenced to Life By TOM BARLEY I Ol llM D•llY l'llot Si.II Condemned by the judge as a killer ''wbo is unfit to l)ve in our society," transient lfobby Joe Denney was sentenced today in life in prison for the killing last Nbv. 19 of Cypress police Sgt. Donald SOwma. "Our society deserves better than exposure to your kind of criminal," Orange County Superior Court Judge John L. Flynn Jr. told Denney, 32. And the jud&e made tt clear to Denney, the son of an Oklahoma sheriff, that his prior criminal re· eord shoold also be examtned by prison authorities If and when the question o( his parole Is con· sldered. uenney was found gutlty of first degree murder last month by a jury which cleared his wife, Velma, 25, of identical charges. It was successfully alleged that Denney s h ol and Jellied SergeantSowma when the officer challenged him while Denney was burglarizing a doctor 's office and nearby art gallery. It was unsuccessfully alleged that Mrs. Denney remained oul· side the building and maintained walltie-talkie contact with her husband wb,lle he robbed the pre- mises. Today Judge Flynn denied a motion for a new trla! made on the grounds that Denn~y shot. the officer In self detense and th•t tt\e jUrf was Im proper ly in· str~cted. \. Transpac Eyed by Computer By ALMON LOCKABEY 0.Uy l"ilo4 lloat•"t Wrl1«r Computers were humming today as lhe leaders in the Los Angeles to Honolulu yacht race passed the halfway mark in the fastest and closest first-to.finish race in the 71-year history of the bienniaJ classic. Computer feeders are trying to predict the first yacht to finish and at what time -and by how much she will break the elapsed time record of nine days and nine hours set by Windward Passage in 1971. Computer man Tom Wilder, of· ficial measurer for the sponsorlng Transpacific Yacht Club, has fed coordinates and average speeds into the machine and come up with the following predictions: Drifter will finish about 9 a.m. PDT Sunday and will be followed by Windward Passage about an hour later. Merlin will finish about 5 p.m. Sunday, followed aboutanbourll~terbyKialoa. Ragtime is expected to finish about cocktail tlme on Monday unless she picks up the pace. RagUme was firs to finish ln the last two Honolulu races. )\egllrdJees of who finishes firs t , accord ing to the co01putatlons, it appears that the first )'•cht Will lop a full day or more trom the elapsed time (See YACHTS, Page A2> Biplane OfWWII Explodes BYIDLARYKAYE Two Air California pilots were killed Wecjnesday when their small Stearman biplane nose dived into an open field near Orange County Airport shortly after takeoff. The pilots, John H. Giffin, 33, and William Fred Remer, 30, both of Mission Viejo, radioed to the control tower that they were having engine trouble on the test flight and requested an 1m mediate return. The Orange County Vi n • Department crash crew \\a~ im- mediately summoned by tower controllers, but before the World War 11 training plane could be re· turned lo the runway, it crashed into a field off Red Hill Avenue near Bristol Street in Costa • Mesa. Witnesses said the plane bounced once on the field and then came to nsl several yards away, where it burst into flames arter the fuel tank exploded. The men, who were seated single file in the open cockpit. were trapped inside the plane when the explosion occurred. Firemen found them s till strapped inside their seats. FAA Investigator Edward Perhs said it was impossible lo tell who was flying the craft at the time of the crash. since there arc dual controls in the cockpit He said Reiner was in the front seat. Perlis said the men had been experiencing trouble with the plane's engine for at least a week. The men had bought the Q)d plane recently and were re- conditioning il for recreational use. According lo Perlis, the men had taken the plane out on another test flight last Friday When they were 10 miles out. they notified the control tower of engine trouble and requested an immediate straight-in appro11ch, Perlls said. The fire department crash <See PILOTS, Page AZ> 3 Children Hit by Traµn, Killed in LA HUNTINGTON PARK (A P) - Three little girls playing on a railroad track were struck and killed by a freight train today and a fourth was seriously in- jured, authorities said. The four girls, about 5 Ot" 6 years ol~ were straddliog the tracks, walking toward Union Pacific's "Tuna Fish Local, "bull apparently did not see the train • bearing down on them, officials said. The-engineer tried to stop the train but. failed, a Union spokesman said~ • · The glrls' identities were not yet known. The enalne« "saw their faces and he JU.t couldn't understand why they dldn 't ruove," said tho1 •poketman. • 'l'blt ft'lgineer is damn near tn 1boclt." The cbltdren were taken to SC.. Franel1 Hosoltol In arby LynWoOd. Tbi'ee of them WeNI I pronouncciil dead on arrival an<t :t &he fow1h -wu Usted in eertoualf condlUon, bOPtlLfl,Officiala &aid. 11% DAILY PILOT SB Thur.Oay, July 1. 1817 Seventh Beawen? Number 7 Not So Lucky in HUltory NEW YORK CAP) Todlly July '7, la '7 '7 77 If you put •loru In numbers. and •h•rn the belief lbat Hvm I.I a lucky onu. you mltbt think th1J Ja your lucky day But maybe you'd bc:ltcr think l•i~. Id reported lo tho Nuw YOl'lt Tlm• ol July I, 18'77. here er• aome al tho lhln11 that h•PJKmed on the lut '1·'7·77 -100 years ago: -More than 700 unllceo.scd dot• were drowned by tho New York City dog pound, aa owners ot loal dop scurried about tryln& lo find their pell. ''Thero wu more aclt~ment at the pound ye- sterday than at any Ume since its openlng,''thenmes said. -1be German bark Auguste a rrived in London "with her bulwaru and stanchions broken. her rigging carried away, and otherwise damaged, having been in collision." -Otis Hodge's machtne shop and foundry at North Adam!>, N.Y., was destroyed by rire, al a Joss of $20,000. He bad $8,000 Jack Frost Cuts Crime WASlllNGTON (AP) - The FBI is crediting a bitterly cold winter and heavy snow as possible factors behind a 9 percent decrease in the nation's crime rate ror the first three months or this year. The law enforcement agency said today that figures show the largest quarterly reduction 1n crime in the 19 years it ha~ issued crime reports Although there were r eductions in five of the seve n maJ o r crime categories, the number of rap es increased five percent and aggravated assaults were up one percent from January through March. From Page A I EXAM ••• jur y recommended that :.Ill EMA planning functions be consolidat ed under a director "whose' background of education and ex · perience is that or a professional planner.'' Other yearend recommenda· lions by the 1976·71 Grand Jury include: -Providing the Commission on the Status of Women with the budget needed to s upport a coordinator fo r commission pro· jects. -Lessening the apparent in· ter-deparlme ntal fr iction between the county Probation and Mental Health Departments. -Combining cert ain functions or the Sheriff's Department and Marshal's Office to eliminate duplication or services. -Closing McMillan Reception Center for minoc juvenile offen- ders unless Hs costs can be brought into line. Viejo Elks Club Gets Bloodmobile The Red Cross Bloodmobile will be al the Mission Viejo Elks Club, 25092 Marguerite Parkway, July 12from3to7:30 p.m. Donors must be between the ages of 17 and 65, in good health and weigh al least 110 pounds. People 17 years old mus t have a signed parental release form which may be obtained from any Red Cross office. For further information call 83S·S381. OAANQECOAIT H tn•ur~e. -Capt. J01epb GrUftth, t Qvtl War veteran who had helpc!d to aurvey the northern lakea, died auddenly in Iowa City, Iowa. ''He waa as well as usual at breakfast, uod died al noon of apoplexy," tbe Times said. -A horse named Idalia stepped up to the starUnl post at Monmouth Park, N.J ., a favorite because she had already bested her competition, Zoo Zoo. But Idalia became uncontrollable, tried to bolt and lost the race before it started. "A more sorrowful looking set of men than Idalia's backers were never seen on a race course,'' tbe Times commented. -Austin Spencer, a 78-year- old veteran of the War of 1812 who lived with two daughiers and a wire in her 80s, had seen nothing wrong with making a little whisky at his home at 2Q8 West 36th St. On July 7, 1877, he learned better. He was arrested on a charge of running an illicit still. · -Two ckputJ aherlfll •bowed vp at tbe Eplacopal Church o( t.be Holy Saviour at Madilon Avenue and 2Stb Street to confiacate ornamenb, the organ, furniture and the like on behalf of the Rev. Dr. Abraham Carter, the pastor, who s aid he had not been paid for some Ume. Tbe church also couldn't open the next day, Sunday, for •ervlces. On 7·7·'17. the deputies bia taken the keys. -It was a lucky day for Philip Donohue ot Elizabeth, who spent alx hours burled in a collapsed well the night before but was rescued at just about midnilht. asJuly7started. -But it was the opposite kind or luck for a man named Daniel O'Leary, who chose 7.7.77 as the day on whicb his boast that he could walk 520 miles in six days would meet the moment of truth. He had been walking for five days already and covered 74'h miles on 7·7·77, but it wasn't enough. Just after midnight, he quit r 481h miles short. Lands in Taiwan Chinese MIG Pilot Asks for Asylum ,, .. TAIPEI, Taiwan (AP) -A squadron commander in toe Chinese Communist air force flew his MIG19 jet fighter to Taiwan today and asked for political asylum, a spokesman for the Nationalist Chinese Defense Ministry announced. The defector, 41-year-old Fan Yuan-yen, was q11oted by the spokesman as saying there "are no human rights at all on the mainland" and broadcasts about people enjoying such rights in Taiwan reinforced his decision lo defect. Informed sources said he would be rewarded with about $700,000 worth of gold. Fan's plane is no prize for Western intelligence officers since it has been outdated by later models. Military sources said he brought documents concerning Chinese coastal military install· ations and other defense information. People in Taiwan welcomed news of Fan's defection. Some said they considered it ironic in hghl of U.S. President Carter's decision to seek the normalization of relations with Communist China. Th e D efense Mini str y spokesman said Fan took orr from the Chmtsian military air field in Fuk1en Province, crossed the Formosa Strait and landed at Tainan, m southwest Taiwan. Sources said Fan was a squadron commander of the Communist Chinese Isl Reconnaissance Wing. He told officers there that lire on the mainland was "so suffering" that he had "no choice but to nee to Taiwan." the spokesman said. He said he had been planning his move for "quite a long lime," the spokesman continued, and headed for Taiwan while makin~ an "inspection" flight. Fukien province is across the Formosa Strait from Taiwan. The Nationalist government offers rewards in gold to defectors who bring their planes or naval vessels with them. Fan was the third Chinese air force pilot known to have defected to Taiwan. One flew over in a MIG15 in 1962 and one In an EL28 born her in 1965. The Soviet-designed MIG19 is a s upersonic. single-seat fighter that made its appearance in Russian squadrons in 1955. The ·Russians delivered some to the Chinese before relations between the two Communist neighbors de- teriorated in 1960. and alter that the Chinese copied them and manufactured their own. A report lo a U.S. congressional committee in 1975 said the Chinese ajr force was believed to have more than 3,500MIG17s,19s and2ls. Frmtt Page Al PILOTS ••• crew was alerted and was stand· ing by, but the two pilots were able to land lbe plane without in· cident. "There's no doubt they've been having trouble with that engine, but there's no way to tell now ex- actly what that trouble was," said Perlis. Giffin worked part time as a real estate man for Century 21 and his boss there , Brian Ghereault, said today GiCCin told him of his engine trouble last Saturday at a fireworks show. Ghereault said Giffin ex- plained he was having trouble with the "magnetos" in his engine, that they kept "cutting on and off." ''He was a lot or fun to talk with ... was a very positive person who liked flying very much. That was his lire right there." said Ghereault. Both men were married and had children. GiCCin and his wife, Karen, had one daughter, Cindy, who will be two ln September. Reiner and his wife, Ruth, had two children, Carrie, 6, and Dan-ny, l. The two men have been friends since at least 1972, when they worked together in Miami. Reiner joined Air Cal in 1973 as a copilot and was scheduled lo be upgraded to a full pilot later this year. Girfin came t o Air California the following yeai:. A neighbor or the Glffins , Mrs. William J . Morrison. said the Girrins and Reiners were very close and spent a lot of their recreational ti me together. The famllJes had built a cabin together in Lake Arrowhead and. had recently bought property there to build another cabin, sbe said. Mrs. Morrison, who said she last saw Giffin at the annual Fourth of July block party, sllid he had lived in Mission Viejo's Granada Homes for about three years at 25582 Valtavaiso. Reiner has lived at 26652 Morena Drive ror about two years. FrauJ:.Suit Filed Against Publisher Skinaboard Vp a Creek Laguna Niguel skimboarder Steve Hart 14, takes a tumble fro m his skimboard at the mouth of the San Juan Creek at Doheny State Beach Park Wednesday. The youngs ter sets the skimboard on the edge of the river, then runs a long the beach, leaps atop the board and whooosh. out onto the creek. He said he gets a pret- ty good ride -and a ll without a paddle. FroaPageAJ YACHTS ••• record. Barring breakdowns or a reversal of the weather, Wilder's computer may be right. The lead yachts have all averaged more than 10 knots for the rirst half or the race. Th e north east tradewinds are expected to increase during the last half or the race, generating big following seas that will push the yachts beyood their hull speeds. First to finis h is only one aspect or the Honolulu race as well as other long distance races. Washington Burns In Sluggish Heat WASHINGTON (AP) - Washington is burning, spelled H·O·T. Temperatures over 90 on 10 of the past U days. Enough humidi- ty to keep mosquitoes happy. Enough bad air for a health warning. On Wedne s day , th e thermometer hit 100, the first time in eight years. The forecast is for temperatures of near 100 through Monday, with humidity over 70 percent. It's enough to make the city's newly opened air-conditioned s ubway stations a place to rest as well as wait for a ride. The jobs held by subway employes are a mong the best in town: working; in cool concrete caverns under- ground, explaining the mysteries of the new t rain system to tourisb and ~ommuters alike. Introducing the JVC 3060. Take Along Stereo Sound - For the Beach, Mountains, Desert -Anywhere. See the world's first portable AM/f M Radio-TV-Cassette Recorder and you may win a trip to one of America's great sports spectaculars. JVC will pick up the tab for two free tickets plus an el<citlng trip of your choice to the World Series ... Super Bowl ... NBA Playoffs ... U.S. Tennis Open ... Indy "500" .•. Kentu(fkY Derby Trials. Come In for your free entry form. There's nothing to buy. But there's a lot to see and hear with . the new portable J\IC 3060. It's an AM/FM Radio. It's a nl. ti's a Cassette Recorder. All in ooel You've never seen anyt~ hke lt. JVC Model 9475, FM/AM/SWl/SW2 Stereo Radio, Cassette Recorder . Just 5200<>0 Jvc·s 9475 is packed with features that make It a best buy. lls biggest feature Is stereo sound, ror recording and playbacl<. If even rec:ordS atereo FM dlrectly from the bullt.fn tuner. Two big 5M duel-cone ~kerl ?wo -,.n and right -bullt.fn con<1eoser mlctOphonea. Two easy-to-see met•rs. 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Dona.Id Kendall hu decided to add plua to bll repertoire . Kendall runs PepsiCo, Inc .• the company rounded on Pepsi-Cola, longtime nuuten.u> to Coke in the soft drink bualnesa. Kendall has been runnlnt it since 1983. He bas never worked fOf' another company. bavin& joined Pepsi in 1947 aa a fountain syrup salesman. UNOEll KENDALL THE SOFT DRINK company has :leveloped a strong appetite for other companies. Jt gobbled up Frito-Lay, the Texas snack producer, in 1965. It digested North American Van Lines, a moving company, in 1968. It made a meal ot Wilson Sporting Goods in 1970. And along lhe way lt downed Monsieur Henri Wines. a major wine importer. So yes, the corporation that supplies Pepsi-Cola and Fritos also brings you Yago Sant'Gria and Wilson tennis balls. To this happy Camily Kendall now wants to add the Pizza Hut restaurant chain. He has offered PepsiCo stock worth more than $300 million, which i.5 fine with the people who have built Pizza Hut into the nation's largest baker o( piua pies. They're ready to sell out to Kendall What they're selling is one ol the most suc- cessful fas t -fo o d operations around . Expanding at the rate of Money Tree 400 new units a year, Pizza Hut has more lhan 2,700 places open, which makes it, in terms of number of units, lhe third largest restaurant chain after McDonald's and Kentucky Fried Chicken. Acquiring Pizza Hut will do at least three things for PepsiCo: 1 -IT WlLL PUT IT INTO THE pizza-making business, which is one of the fastest-growing food categories. Into it already are Pillsbury (Tonlino). Quaker Oats (Celeste) and General Mills (Saluto). 2-lt will put it into the restaurant business. which has already been entered by many companies: Pillsbury (Burger King), General Foods (Burger Chef), Heublein (Kentucky Fried Chicken) and Quaker Oats (Magic Pan). Moreover, with Pizza Hut, PepsiCo gets a company that owns outright more than half of its restaurants, a high proportion, although not all high as Ralston Purina's virtual 100 percent ownership of the Jack·in-the-Box restaurants. 3-Pizza Hut's annual sales of S310 million will vault PepsiCo over the $3 billion sales mark. enough. in fact, to top, ror the first time in history. the dollar sales done by archrivaJ Coca-Cola. The two son drink giants finished 1976 with Coke at $3 billion and PepsiCo at $2. 7 billion. THAT WILL PROBABLY PLEASE Kendall, wbo has beerf chasing Coca·Cola for his entire working career, especially since he started out in fountain sales, where Coke was always dominant. However, Kendall still has a long way to go lo catch up on the earnings side of the ledger. Coke netted $285 million alter laxes last year , which was more than double the $136 milUon earned by PepsiCo -anlf Pizza Hut's profits of $20 million will not close that gap by \tery much. The Coca-Cola Company does not make pizza and it's not in the restaurant business but it does make the Minute Maid juices, Hi-C fruit drinks and Butter· Nut and Maryland Club coffees. And it still whips Pepsi·Cola io. the spfl drinJc market. Housing. Prices Slww Moderation Analysis of recent activity in California's real estate market shows that "the boom in home prices may be moderating and, more importantly. that there is no bus t t.n sight," says Security Pacific Bank's chief economist. Dr. Robert T. Parry, senior vice president. s ays precautionary practices by lenders appear to have reduce borrowing by speculators. ''Al the same lime, the recent substantial decline in tho rate of home price inflation has reduced the profit potential for many would-be speculators, .. Parry said. Using an index developed by the bank to average out wide fluctuations in monthly prices, Parry said the most recent reading shows that home prices in the greater Los Angeles area during the three months ending in May rose 12.4 percent over the same period in 1976. "Between June and November of last year, however • our index reading continuously exceeded 30 percent each month," he explained. "Further, It is likely that the index reading for the three months ending in June will show another decline," he noted. The downward trend -esP..ecially_ in Southern Call!omia where the home prices have been skyrocketlog - is ao strong, be said, that "it may signal the beginning of the end to rapid speculative gains," he said . Assessing other aspects or California's real estate market, be said the current level or homebuilding appears to be keeping pace with demand. He noted. however, that the recent influx of new residents from outside of California -183,000 last year to mark the highest number since 1966- may cause an upward revision in estimates of underlying deroand. • FY Finn to Merge Into J. Dole Corp.